w S r Ocr Job Is to Save Dollars Buy War Bond Evtry Pay Day VOL. XLVIM NO. 48 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW ;.; Day's o;-News ' By FRANK JENKINS HE war news as this is written is extremely scanty. Even ru mors are scarce in the dis patches. The genera assumption seems to be that it's the linal calm be fore the storm, but of course only the higher-up leaders KNOW. 11IE hope, naturally, that our 3 WW Isadora knnvw whnl'c pnfnincr , and where, and that the enemy ."is been kept in the dark so that hfc nay be caught off balance, but .?e have to remember that spies are extremely active on both sides. Whether we like him or not, the spy has an important place in warfare. THE always surprising Chinese claim to have TURNED BACK 'the Jap threat to Chungking. They estimate casualties inflicted on the Japs in the Yangtze fight ing at 30,000 which seems too good to be wholly true. But yet never can tell about the Chinese. Considering what they have to fight with, their record in the six years they've been at war is amazing. f IJOT the least of China's dif IfQ ficulties is the inflation that has accompanied their lack of productive capacity. The last esti mate this writer noticed asserted that in many cases prices are up 1700 TIMES above pre-war.) O INFLATION has many definl J tions. The latest and one of the easiest understood is that infla tion is what happens when peo ple's pockets are suddenly filled with new money at a time when there isn't much to buy. T HE navy reports that more than 1500 Japs were killed (Continued on paee 2) Sentiment For 3rd Term Ban on 0 Presidency Rises WASHINGTON, Juno 4 (AP) A proposal to limit future presi dents to eight years in office at tracted strong democratic and re publican support in the senate to day with the prospect that it may become one of the major talking points both for and against a pos sible fourth term nomination for President Roosevelt. 1 Minority backing for the propo t Sal a resolution for a constilu r tional amendment came from ( Republican Leader McNary of l Oregon, who told reporters: :"I think congress should pass f the resolution and submit the question to the legislatures of the various states for their conside ration." Republican National Committee Chairman Harrison E. Spangler said its adoption would be "a great thing for the nation." Across the political fence, Sen ator George (D.-Ga.) said he would support the proposal with the understanding that it will not directly affect President Roose velt's tenure In office. "It is sound in principle and I have always felt that some such restriction should be written in to the constitution." George said. The measure, introduced by Senator Bailey (D.-N. C.) in a form requiring a two-thirds vote of both houses and ratification ,by three-fourths of the state leg 'isla'Aires, provides that no person shall be chosen or be eligible to hold the office of president if he has held that office during all . or part of two prior terms. ' Its adoption, however, would not prevent a president from serving out the remainder of his term. Bailey said because of tin length of time required for action by state legislatures "it will not head off a fourth term, but It will head off a fifth term" for Mr. Roosevelt. Roosevelt Orders Miners B frel 1 to Work, Cites Draft Lil lity of Job Quitters Monaay Fid As Deadline For Strikers President Dodges Query On Use of Troops; Lewis Offers No Comment WASHINGTON, June 4-(AP) President Roosevelt, who has or dered John L. Lewis' striking coal miners back to work Mon day, laid down today as a simple rule that a man who quits essen tial war work thereupon becomes liable for army service. He brought up this phase of the coal controversy himself at a press conference, without saying whether he lias any drastic work or;fight order in mind. Meanwhile, nothing but silence came from Lewis, whose hold on his so-far personally loyal miners faces a real test in view of the president's order. First, Mi'. Roosevelt was asked whether troop protection would be provided for those miners who obey his older to get back to work. '; . He preferred not to comment on that because, he said, it was In a sense a bit "iffy." He hoped, he said, that the miners would go back Monday. Rule Applies to All Then, without any further questioning, the chief executive said there has been a good deal written about the induction of miners into the army. He com mented that there was nothing startling or new about that and that the rule is a simple one and applies to all, not only the miners. Mr. Roosevelt said that if any one is deferred because he is en gaged in an occupation essential to the war, he normally remains deferred as long as he continues to wor. But as soon as he stops work, he stops that work for the na tion,' and then becomes liable for army service, the president said. A great deal, he said, had been unnecessarily made of I hat feat ure in the newspapers. Asked about those miners who (Continued on page C) Senators Seek More Confirmation Power WASHINGTON, June 4 (AP) Resentment against some en forcement officers in the field strengthened senate support to day for legislation to require con firmation of thousands of federal clficials making $4,500 or more a year. Senator Bone (D.-Wash.) re ported hearing of a number of instances where feeling against OPA and WPB representatives had "lined up votes" for the meas ure, which President Roosevelt has denounced as "a tragic mis take." "In some states," Bone said, "some of these officials are open ly critical of members of congress and are seeking to blame them for their methods of enforce ment, and the allocations and re strictions." Community Tax Filings Still Being Accepted SALEM, Ore., June 4 (AP) The state department said today It will continue to accept applica tions for persons who want to come under the new community property law, despite a federal ruling that the law will not be recognized by the federal govern ment. The law, effective next Wed nesday, was designed to enable more wealthy federal Income taxpayers to save taxes by per mitting husbands and wives who elect to come under the law to make out separate tax returns. ROSEBURG, Lewis, Coal Operators' Parley Halted . i . .... i tNEA Ictepholot In one of the last meetings before the War Labor board ordered cessation of negotiations between United Mine Workers and coal operators on grounds that labor had violated its no-strike' pledge, John L. Lewis, left foreground, nervously paces around the conference table as coal op erators and their representatives sit In the background and discuss their side of the coal wage Is sue. The conference took place in Washington, D. C. The conferees were told by the War La bor board that any agreement on wages under a strike "coercion" would not receive official ap proval. The miners have been given until Monday by President Roosevelt to return to their jobs. U. S. Casualties In Attu Fights 1,535 WASHINGTON, June 4 (AP) Conquest of Attu in Aleutians cost the United States 1,535 army casualties Including . 342 men dead, 1,135 wounded and 58 miss ing up to midnight Tuesday, the navy reported today. The deaths represent a ratio of about five Japanese killed for each American lost. Known Japanese deaths, the navy has said, total 1,791 exclus ive of enemy soldiers killed by air bombing and naval bombard ments and cremated or buried be fore American troops took the is land. Small groups of Japanese still were roaming Attu, harrass ing American troops on Tuesday, the navy said. However, their activities have been confined to sniping, and wip ing out all remaining enemy troops seems only a matter of time. Announcement that eleven Ja panese had been taken prisoner increased by seven the number of enemy troops reported captured In the campaign. Election for Roseburg School Director Dated The annual election for Rose burg school district, No. 4, will be held June 21, A. J. Geddes, school clerk, announced today, the term of C. J. Grimm.school director, expires this month and nominating petitions placing him on the ballot for reelection are In circulation, but have not yet been filed. To date no other can didate has been proposed in op position. Nominating petitions are to he filed on or before June 14. Farm Butter Subject to Creamery Output Price WASHINGTON, June 4 ( AP) To "clarify a situation in which there had been some confusion," the OPA ruled today that butter mi. .nifacturcd on a farm Is subject to the same maximum prices established for creamery butter. The OPA said that it had not been clear how prices on farm butter were regulated. THE"D0ilGLR5:CO0N.TY DALY OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE Anti-Strike Bill -Passed by House WASHINGTON, June 4 (AP) The house on a standing vote to day approved legislation provid- ing stiff penalties for persons I instigating or directing strikes in I government-operated plants, re- 1 nnit'inu a h.ill.il nf .irm.ln,.n K..frt a strike could be called and strengthening the authority of the War Labor board. The action is subject to a later roll call vote. The legislation continues ma jor provisions of the senate-approved Connally bill and a sub stitute measure drafted by the house military committee. It provides that anyone insti gating a strike or directing a strike or lockout shall face a max imum penalty of $5,000 fine and one year imprisonment. In addi tion, it bars the use of union funds for benefit payments to workers on strike but does not interfere with the right of an in dividual to refrain from work. The measure represents the consolidation of a bill drafted by Representative Harness and Rep resentative Smith, following the general lines of the Connally and the house military measures. Removed from it was a clause that would have prohibited the War Labor board from Issuing closed shop or maintenance of union membership orders. The house retained in the bill authority for the board to sub poena witnesses, a section insert ed as the result of refusal of UMW President John L. Lewis to deal with the board. Punch Hole in New Penny, Business Plea JACKSONVILLE, Fla., June 4. (AP) The Florida Asso ciation of Commercial Execu tives has adopted a resolution asking Secretary of the Treas ury Morgenthau to have a square hole punched In the cen ter of the new white penny "thereby raving a lot of scrap metal and the souls of men from perdition." The organization contended that the new coin Is "filling the function of a counterfeit dime," being generally passed off on the aged and dim-sighted. A (I ' ulJJ: iff -j 4, 1943. by WLB Lieut. Geo. Webber Wins Flier's Cross Lieutenant George Webber, U. S. N., of Eugene, a former Rose burg resident, who recently was returned to the United States after 13 months spent overseas, where he participated In the evacuation of service personnel, government officials, and civil ians from Bataan, Corregidor, the Dutch East Indies, etc., was recently awarded t h e Royal Netherlands distinguished flier's cross with citation. The medal was awarded as a surprise during a dinner given by the Nether lands ambassador and his wife for six American filers who par ticipated in the defense of the East Indies. Lieutenant Webber is now lo cated at the naval air station at Norfolk, Va where ho is attach ed to the operations department and is serving as a pilot in trans porting ranking naval officers. His wife, the former Rose Con roy, also an ex-Roseburg resident, and their two children are also residing at Norfolk. Celanese Plant Blast Injures Forty Persons CUMBERLAND, Md., June 4 ( AP) A score of persons were treated in hospitals today for in juries suffered when a shattering explosion virtually wrecked one building of the Celanese Corpora tion of America's plant. No one was killed, but approxi mately 40 persons were Injured 5 of them seriously, In the blast which blew a huge hole In the roof of the celanese plant's three story, block long acetone recovery building late yesterday. Farm Workers Not to Be Drafted, Wooton Says SALEM, Ore., June 4. (API Other states will follow Oregon's policy of not drafting farm workers this summer, Col. Elmer v. Wooton, state selective ser vice director, said today after re turning rrom San Francisco, where he attended a regional meeting of statp selective service directors. He said no men In the lumber industry have been drafted for some time. VOL. XXXII N0.29 OF THE EVENING NEWS Allied Fleet Again Pounds Pantelleria Italian Navy Refuses to Give Battle; Guerrillas Score Balkan Victories (By the Associated Press) For the fifth time in five days, a British challenge to the Italian fleet to come out and fight was underlined today with the dis closure that allied warships twice again had bombarded the "Ital ian gibraltar" at Pantelleria. Gen. . Eisenhower s headquar ters announced that allied naval forces shelled the key bastion Wednesday night and renewed the assault at dawn yesterday. Allied naval salvos had pre viously battered the Island's de fenses Sunday night and Tues day afternoon, and on Wednes day a force of British and Greek destroyers boldly sallieJ Into Italy s own coastal waters to blast an axis convoy off Capo Spartivento, on the toe of the boot-shaped Italian peninsula. Despite these five attacks, there was st'll no sign of Italian men-o'-war venturing forth from their harbors, although axis broadcasts for the past several weeks have boasted that the f.iscist fleet was ready to steam into battle at any moment. Gen. Eisenhower's command said allied warships bombarded Pantelleria harbor and shore bat teries in the latest assaults, en countering "slight retaliation" which caused neither damage nor casualties. Synchronized with the naval attack, allied bombers also pound ed the Island, which lies astrad dle the narrow Sicilian straits, and RAF Wellingtons from north Africa flew across the Mediter ranean to raid the Italian main land port of Naples. Balkans Guerrillas Strike While the allies enforced a vir tual air-sea blockade against Italy, Premier Mussolini's legions were meeting bitter resistance from Greek and Yugoslav guer rillas in the Balkans along a po tential route for allied Invasion of southern Europe. Axis troops attempting to wipe out Gen. Mlhailovic's guerrillas have been driven back toward Croatia and Slovenia and forced to yield 1,200 square miles of ter ritory and 2t railway stations, the Yugoslav governmcnt-ln-exlle said today. News of the latest Yugoslav successes followed a Moscow re port yesterday that Hitler had sent Field Marshal Gen. List (Continued on page 6) Paternity Suit Faced by Movie Comedian Chaplin LOS ANGELES, June 4 (AP) Movie Comedian Charlie Chap lin was under court order today to answer charges, in a civil suit, that he Is the father of 22-year-old Joan Berry's unborn child. The action was filed yesterday by Mrs. Gertrude Berry of New York, whose daughter declares Chaplin promised her a film career but permitted a $75 week ly contract to expire last October, before she had appeared in any thing but camera test shots. The suit petitions that Chaplin be named father of the child and ordered to pay $2,500 monthly, beginning Immediately, for Its support, as well as $10,000 for Miss Berry s medical care and $5,000 for court and attorney's costs. It states that Chaplin and Miss Berry have never been mar ried, and that ho denies paternity-Chaplin, Instructed to appear June 17 on a show-cause order, Issued this statement last night, through his attorneys: "Miss Berry states her unborn child was conceived In December, last. The first claim made upon me by Miss Berry was In May, and was accompanied by demand for payment of $150,000. I am not responsible for Miss Berry's condition." Miss Berry said yesterday: "I spent many evenings with Mr. Chaplin at his home. We studied Shakespeare together. I worked hard very hard. Mr. Chaplin coached me In diction, voice control and all the other technical dramatic arts." Chinese, U. S. Airmen Batter Routed Nippons CHUNGKING, June 4 (AP) Chinese forces have smashed in to the Yangtze port of Itu after annihilating 2,00 0 Japanese troops in the area and have cap lured Nahslen on the northern shore of Tungting lake, a Chi nese high command communique announced today. The report said the battle on the upper Yangtze had turned in to a rout of enemy forces, which were battered ceaselessly by American and Chinese airmen. Fierce street fighting was report ed In progress in Itu, 23 airline miles below the main Japanese base of Ichang. In addition to capturing Nah slen, 95 miles southeast of Itu, the Chinese were reported to have retaken 10 other towns In the HupehHunan border region east of the Canton-Hankow railway. Japanese uttempts to land troops near Wuchwan in southwestern Kwangtung province on May 2ti were reported to have been re pulsed. Itu was the point through which Japanese forces retreating from Changyang were trying to make their way across the Yangt ze after being routed by the Chi nese. The attacking Chinese forces also were reported to have pen etrated the outer defenses of Kungan, a south Hupeh province town which the invaders had es tablished as one o the bases for their westward drive on the up per Yangtze front, now turned into what the Chinese assert was the biggest rout of the war. Warsaw Ghetto Erased by Nazis STOCKHOLM, June 4. (AP) The Germans were reported to day to have virtually wiped out the Warsaw ghetto by deporting 14,000 Jews to the east after three weeks of desperate street fighting in which 2,000 were shot to death and 3,uuo died tn tneir flaming homes. A secret Polish radio station, heard here last night, said the Jews in the walled ghetto, scene of other bloody pogroms since the nazls overran Poland, had given a Rood account of themselves by killing 300 German elite troops and wounding 2,000 others. The broadcast said the Jews de fended themselves behind barri cades as the nazl troopers march on the ghetto April 12. Resistance at ' the barricades continued until April 24, the re port added, and then street and house fighting raged for a week or more as the Germans pressed In with the aid of artillery, ma chlneguns, flame throwers and light bombing planes. Mines and bombs blasted en tiro blocks of buildings and fires .swept many sections of the ghet to, the braodcast said. Water, gas and electricity were shut off and the Jews finally were forced to give in. Police Chief Ouster in Vice Squabble Ordered SEATTLE, June 4 (AP) Se attle's controversy over vice con dltions was In the laps of the city councilmen today after Mayor Devin yesterday Issued an order for the dismissal of Police Chief Herbert D. Klmsey and asked the council to concur. Council upproval Is necessary before the chief can lie ousted. The order topped developments In the controversy brought to a head when the commander of an army air field ruled 74 blocks of Seattle's south end "out-of-bounds" for military personnel from the field because of in creased venereal cases. Federal authorities also have threatened to Invoke the May act, under which they could take over the drive against prostitution. OPA Strikes Out On 1-2-3; Avoids Red Face WASHINGTON, June 4 (AP) A six-page memorandum which said: "The drawers of all steno graphers are to be numbered as follows: 1-2-3," has been recalled, OPA officials said yesterday, be cause "It was felt that the public would not understand desk pro cedure and the OPA would be held up to ridicule." Government Heads Flee To Warship Refusal of Castillo to Sever Bond With Axis Leads to Revolution MONTEVIDEO, June 4 (AP) President Ramon Cas tillo of Argentina proclaimed over the Buenos Aires radio today that his government had been forced to transfer its seat to an Argentine war ship, as revolting army forces entered the capital. BUENOS AIRES, June 4 (AP) Army units revolting today against President Ramon S. Cas tillo's government of neutral Ar gentina, marched Into, Buenos Ai res and quickly seized control of strategic points about the city. Blood was shed in a clash on the outskirts. Gen. Pedro Ramirez, minister of war in the Castillo cabinet, was identified as the leader of the rev-, olution. Government quarters described the revolt as "a military move ment." Castillo assigned Gen'. Ro dolfo Marquez to combat the movement with "forces of repres sion" made up of men loyal to his conservative regime and "policy of prudence" In world af fairs. (Port authorities in Montevl' deo, capital of neighboring Uru guay, were ordered to be on the lookout for an Argentine navy gunboat, which was reported' without confirmation being used by Castillo and other members of his government to flee. .- (A Montevideo dispatch said conflicting reports from Buenos Aires left the Impression that the movement against Castillo was aimed at reversal of Argentina's' foreign and domestic policy, which has left her as the only American nation to maintain re-' lations with the axis. One source, who could not be Identified by name, said military leaders re cently gave Castillo an ultimatum to modify his policies within 48 hours. He said the president curt ly rejected their suggestions). ' Politics Are Factor The disturbances developed as Argentina was in the throes of political campaigns. Observers recalled that two of the official parties of Argentina -were scheduled to convene today to appoint candidates for the next presidential elections. They said this fact might be the main cause, or at least one of the reasons, of the military movement. Castillo has clearly Intimated he favored the election of Senate President Costas and Manuel de (Continued on page 6) New Accord Reached By Giraud and DeGaulle ALGIERS, June 4 (AP) Gen. Charles De Gaulle and Gen. Hen ri Giraud were reported today to have reached a new compromise under which Giraud will remain commander in chief of the French army, but in return will make a number of concessions to the Fighting French leader. Sources said Giraud's conces sions involved the replacement of a number of high officers by gen erals' from the Fighting French forces. It is understood that Giraud's command will be purely a head quarters job. He will not extend his activities to field command. Pendleton Slaying Laid to Card Game Row PENDLETON, Ore., June 4 (AP)Jesse Jackson, abou t GO. negro janitor, was shot and fatal ly wounded on the main street ol Pendleton at 8 a. m. today by Frank Stewart, 46, according tp Police Chief Charles Lemons. Stewart is in custody. The altercation, officers said, was the result of ill feeling which developed after a card game last night. No charge has been placed against Stewart, who was em ployed as a laundry night watch man. evity pact flant By L. T. Rtlzuuttla - Mr. Roosevelt's next "fire, side chat" with the miners may have to be without coal for tha fire. John LORD Lewis, in his portal-to-portal demand that keeps the government on a pillar-to-post marathon, evi dently wasn't impressed by the last chat not by an anthracite.