Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, November 05, 1943, Page 1, Image 1

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    Troublemakers Rounded Up i
After Trying to Run Down ;
Guards With Seized Vehicles j
Score' of Injured Persons Includes One Guard in '-x '
Critical Condition; Barbed-Wire Fence Being Laid
O "t
THrDOUGLACOUMTY DAILY
VOL. XLVIII NCJ. 177 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW
Destruction of
Ffornal fitv
Mined, Report
A rt-i
Invaders Looting All
ounaings, names; wuns
BARI, Southern Italy, Nov. 5
(AP) Refugees aVrlving here
from Rome said that city has
been heavily mined and quoted
the Germans as saying they will
do to Rome what they did to Na
ples, "Eternal City or no Eternal
City."
Nazi engineers are mining all
large buildings. There are .tons
of explosives under every minis
try and all large hotels, bridges
and the main aqueducts have
been mined. '
Some of the mines, the refu
gees reported, are equipped with
time devices designed to set them
off after the city is occupied by
the allies, the same tactic that
resulted in heavy civilian casual
ties in Naples.
The refugees said the Germans
purposed to destroy all Italian
government records in order to
leave a chaotic situation for those
who came Into administer the
country.
City Feels Nazi Heel
They painted the following
word picture of Rome today:
The city has been mapped,
with squads assigned to districts
10 searcn every oumung, inuiuu
ing private homes, for machin
ery, works of art, jewelry, silver
? - ' ware, even automobiles and tires
and anything else that might be
(Continued on page 6.)
In the Day's News
' By FRANK JENKINS
AFTER Monday's diplomatic in
terlude, shooting war takes
the headlines again.
IN the Solomons, we invade the
big Jap-held island of Bougain
villeonly 260 miles from Ra-'
haul.
The invasion follows the pat
tern set the other day In the lit
tle nearby Treasury islands. Our
destroyers swing in close and
shell the beaches. Our bombers
dive in and drop their bombs,
then strafe the Japs in- the slit
trenches. The waiting 'landing
boats move in and their bottoms
scrape the sand. Only Jap mor
tar fire, quickly silenced, greets
them.
Our Marines pile ashore and
melt Into the jungle.
MEANWHILE our cruisers had
bombarded the Jap airfield
at Buka, on Bougainville's north
ern end. ALL the Jap airfields In
the vicinity had been so badly
mauled that the Jap air force
couldn't get into the fight.
. A Jap cruiser force STARTED
DOWN FROM RABAUL, but
turned tail and ran when our
naval force started racing In to
intercept.
AGAIN the Jap fleet declined
battle.
WHAT we're about is pushing
the Japs clear out of the
Solomons and so coming within
close striking range of the im
portant Jap base at Rabaul.
PLEASE don't jump to wrong
conclusions. We have the Jap
outfought in the far South Seas.
That, is being proved over and
over.
What the Jap is doing is LET
TING GO ON THE OUTSKIRTS
so he can concentrate his forces
and fight nearer home. ,
We'll win in the long run, but
we haven't won yet.
THE Russians have the Crimea
sealed off by land at Melitlpol
and Perekop. With all escape
routes by land closed, they're
moving Into the Crimea Itself to
annihilate the Germans left there.
(Continued on page 2)
Finnish Bid for Peace With Russia
Indicated in Preparations to Send
Special Representatives to Moscow
STOCKHOLM, Nov. S (AP)
The newspaper Social Demokrat
en said today the finnish govern
ment had instructed Juhu Paasi
klvi, former minister to Russia,
to be ready to go to Moscow
presumably to discuss negotiar
tions for a separate peace.
Paaslkivt played an important
part in the negotiations which
brought an end to the Finnish
Russian war of 1939-40.
'P'inland's fate will be settled
within a few days," the Social
bemokraten declared.
There was no official confirm
ation of the report with regard
to Paasiklvi either in Helsinki or
Stockholm.
The best information available
from the Finnish capital, how
ever, was that a new intensive
effort to get Finland out of the
war as a partner of Germany
was under way, and one Finnish
informant said that Paasikivi s
dispatch to Moscow did not ap
pear improbable.
The newspaper, which is the
official organ of the dominant
Josse Company
Will Move Into
Parslow Building
The Josse Furniture company
will be moved soon into the Pars-
low building, 111 N. Jackson St.,
L. W. Josse, .owner-manager, an
nounced, today. He reported he
has obtained a lease on the build
ing, and will occupy the business
quarters about Dec. 1.
The Parslow Hardware com
pany, operated by H. C. Parslow
and his daughter, Frances Lin
tott, is being closed and the stock
is being sold to a firm engaged
jn a similar line of business.
It is anticipated that the Pars
low company will complete re
moval of its stock within the next
fewdays and the building, which
continues under the ownership of
Mr. Parslow, will be completely
remodelled prior to occupancy by
the Josse Furniture company.
The Mode-ODay store, which
also occupies quarters in the
building, will remain in its pres
ent location.
The Josse Furniture company
was burned out in the disastrous
business district- fire last June
and has since been located in the
Newland building at Stephens
and Cass streets.
Aluminum Plant Grant
Based on Labor Guarantee
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (AP)
Representative Angell (R.-Ore.)
said today that the War Produc
tion board's facilities committee
had approved expenditure of
5250,000 for a site and utilities
and $4,080,000 for the plant and
equipment to produce aluminum
from clay in the Pacific North
west. The Oregonian said the area
production urgency committees
of Washington and Oregon and
the. War Manpower commission
still must certify that labor is
available for the construction and
operation before final WPB sanc
tion would be given, but that the
facilities committee's action
brought realization nearer.
The site has not been selected.
Unsalted Butter Price
Ceiling Is Reduced
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (AP)
- The OPA has reduced the max
imum price of unsalted butter by
three-quarters of a cent a pound
and modified the allowances for
bulk butter packed in wooden
tubs.
The changes are effective im
mediately. The action on unsalted butter
eliminated the premium which
this type has brought over prices
established for salted butter from
creamery to retailer. The step is
In line .vlth a recommendation
of thp War Food administration
fier surveys Indicating Increas
ed production and sale of unsalt
ed butter because of the three-
quarter cent premium.
ROSEBURG, OREGON,
Rome
Swedish social democrat party,
and has good contacts in Finland,
indicated that Passikivl would be
followed to Moscow by K. A. Fa
gerholm, minister of social af
fairs and George A. Gripenberg,
Finland's minister to Sweden.
It speculated that the United
Slates and Sweden had helped
arrange the parley, which was
prompted by the critical food sit
uation as well as the political and
military situation in Finland.
Passikivl, who has maintained
throughout the war that Finland
must come to good-neighbor
terms with Russia, long has been
considered by pro-allied groups
in his country as the only man
who could negotiate with the Sov
iets. He also is regarded as a
possibility for prime minister if
a peace can be arranged with
Russia. .
Gripenberg is Finland's ace
diplomat and a nephew of Mar
shal Mannerheim, who still has
the most influential word in Fin
land. Fagerholm has been a cab
inet minister for nearly ten years
Governorship Tops
G.O. P. Triumph in
Kentucky Election-
LOUISVILLE, Kv., Nov. 5
(AP) Simeon S. Willis, 63-year-
old Ashland attorney and former
Judge of the state court of ap
peals, will ..become .'.Kentucky's
sixth republican governor next
month.
His party, which had not elect
ed a governor in this state since
1927, also won the lieutenant gov
ernorship and five other state
cabinet posts.
The democrats, for years the
dominant party in Kentucky, won
only the attorney general s office
in Tuesday's general election.
One other state-wide contest was
in doubt, with the democrat lead
ing by a slim margin.
Unofficial reports from all but
nine of the state's 4,284 voting
precincts showed today that Wil
lis had defeated Democrat J. Ly
ter Donaldson of Carrollton, for
mer highway commissioner, by
more than 8,000 votes.
Willis had 278,000 and Donald
son 270,168.
Kenneth H. Tuggle of Barbour
ville, republican, had 205,191
votes to 264,406 for William H.
May of Prestonburg, recent state
commissioner of agriculture, for
lieutenant governor.
The republicans won strength
in both the state senate and
house of representatives but in
complete reports showed the
democrats would continue to
have control of both branches of
the general assembly.
The republicans carried Jeffer
son county (Louisville) In both
state-wide and local races for the
first time in 10 years. They also
elected one of three state railroad
commissioners and won in sever
al municipal elections.
The sweeping republican victory
was such an upset that even
Mrs. Willis said "I had steeled
myself for defeat I don't know
how I can stand victory." Neither
Willis nor Donaldson commented,
Foundry Union Votes to
Strike for Wage Boost
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 5
(AP)- AFL Molders and foundry
workers In 77 plants in 16 Wash
ington and Oregon cities voted
for a strike to enforce demands
for higher wages, union officials
announced today.
Balloting under the Smith-Con
nally labor disputes act showed
2,942 in favor of a strike, 4S4
opposed.
Union officials said, however,
that every effort would be made
to settle the dispute without call
ing a strike. No time for the.
strike was set by the election
The union demands a wage
boost from $1.20 to S1.2S hourlv
for Journeymen, from 88 to 95
cents hourly for helpers. The
increase was denied by the re
gional War Labor board June 10
and an appeal to the national
WLB was denied July 14.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1 943.
Planned by Germans
Russian Grip
In Dnieper
Area Widens
German Losses in Last
Four Months Placed by
Stalin at 2,700,000
MOSCOW, Nov. 5-(AP) The
Russians held virtually every
foot of land east of the Dnieper
today from its mouth below
Kherson and along its 650-mile
course through the heart of the
Ukraine north to Gomel as the
prize of their summer campaign,
which they said bled the Ger
mans of 2,700,000 casualties.
Marshal Stalin's resume of
four violent months of combat
listed 900,000 Germans killed, 98,-
000 captured and 1,702,000 wound
ed, thus hoisting German casual
ties claimed by Russia to an as
tronomical ii,()oo,ouo, or which
the Russians said 5,000,000 lay
dead.
Swift sweeps over the Black
sea sands of the southern Uk
raine brought the Cossacks to
the river banks opposite Kherson,
65 miles northwest of the sealed
off Crimea.
Official maps published today
showed the Russians in posses
sion of all the east side of the
Dnieper from Gomel to Zapor-
ozhe in the bend. South of Za-
poro.he, the only German hold
ings east of the Dnieper are lim
ited to the Crimea, a thin strip
52 miljbs long opposite' Nikopol,
and a 'minute bit of land in the
Dnieper delta due south of Kher
son. '
Berlin Reports Battles
(Moscow said nothing ot the
Crimea, but the Berlin radio said
"German troops were engaged in
heavy fighting on beachheads
south and east of Kursk and on
the northern approaches to the
Crimea." The Germans said a
tank battle was being fought
near Perekop and "in another
sector Rumanian grenadiers re
pulsed the Soviets in a counter
attack.
'Berlin said that two landing
boats were sunk off Kerch and
that three torpedo boats, a gun
boat and three landing boats
had been sunk in "the Black sea
and In the gulf of Finland," sug
gesting amphibious operations in
the Crimea, west of the Dnieper
mouth and far north to the west
(Continued on page 6.)
Douglas County's
Quota of November
Bond Sales Fixed
Douglas county has been given
a quota of $101 ,050 of war bond
sales for the month of Novem
ber, H. O. Pargeter, chairman of
the county war savings staff, an
nounced today. No goal was set
for the month of October, due to
the National War Fund cam
paign, but the quota plan has
been resumed and will be con
tinued, it is expected, until the
Red Cross War Fund drive
scheduled in March.
Compilation of returns from
the Third War Loan drive show
that Douglas county exceeded its
quota of Series E bond sales by
9.8 per cent. Sales amounted to
S572.487 as compared with a quo
ta of 8521,100. In other depart
ment, however, the county fell
below quotas, sales to corpora
tions amounting to onlv 84. 8 per
cent or a total of $500,233 as
compared with a quota of $590,
800. Total pales in all classes
amounted to $1,156,940, which
was 91 per cent of the 81,270,900
quota.
The county stood 26th in per
capita sales of E bbnds with a
record of $23.83 per capita.
Sherman, Curry and Gilliam
counties took top honors with re
spect to sales against quota and
percentage of sal.-s to Individ
uals. Sherman eounty led with
respect to sale of E bonds against
quota. Other counties exceedine
quotas In all departments Includ
ed Lane, Marion, Baker, Benton,
Clackamas, Harney, Hood River.
Jefferson, Lake, Lincoln and
Washington.
VOL. XXXII N0.1S9 OF THE EVENING NEWS
Japs Lose 14
Warships in
Week's Tilts
Attempted Sneak Raid
On Bougainville Fails;
U. S. Fleet Little Hurt
SOUTHWEST PACIFIC AL
LIED HEADQUARTERS, Nov. 5
(AP) Japan's navy, lured
more and more within range of
American ships' guns and bomb
ers by threatened loss of the
Solomons, already has paid the
price of 14 warships sunk or
damaged tills week without get
ting closer than 40 miles to the
U. S. marine beachhead on Bou
gainville. An enemy cruiser and four de
stroyers were sunk, two crulers
and two destroyers damaged out
Bad News for Japs Due
From China, Says F. R.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.
(AP) President Roosevelt an
nounced today that the United
States, Great Britain and
China had reached a complete
agreement for new military
operations in the Chinese thea
ter and that it would mean bad
news for the Japanese.
The president said he could
not give any details at this
time but that the presence in
China of General Somervell,
chief of the American army
forces of supply, meant that
supply problems were involved.
of a task force of 12 which tried
to sneak down from Rabaul
through darkness and blinding
rain early Tuesday and shell the
marines at Empress Augusta bay.
Forty miles out, United States
fighting ships shattered that at
tempt and, after a two-hour run
ning battle, sent the remnants
fleeing toward Rabaul. Even,
then, the enemy warships were
not safe. It is considered likely
that the survivors of the naval
encounter were among the three
destroyers sunk and two heavy
cruisers damaged In a bomb blitz
of Rabaul's harbor nine hours
later by General MacArthur's
Mitchells.
No U. S. Warship Lost
Headquarters, in releasing to
day preliminary accounts of the
naval battle the first of many
which logically may be fought as
Japan strives to prevent being
ousted from the northern Solo
monssaid the American war
ships emerged scarred but en
tirely afloat.
At dawn that Tuesday, those
same ships were attacked by 67
Japanese planes, sustaining more
damage but weathering the raid
and shooting down 17.
(Berlin broadcast a dispatch
from Tokyo quoting a Japanese
Imperial communique as declar
ing that five allied cruisers, three
destroyers and two big trans
ports were sunk off Bougainville
between Oct. 31 and Nov. 2.)
Land Resistance Crush-ad
The ground stabs into the last
Solomons holdings of the enemy
penetrated deeper. At Empress
Augusta bay, where the marines
surprised the Japs by landing
Monday 45 miles northwest of
the enemy's strong Bougainville
garrison at Buin, Nipponese sol
diers now have been routed from
Puruata Island near the beach
and from strong positions on a
cape.
Thirty miles south of Bougain
ville, American and New Zealand
soldiers have won complete con
trol of Treasury ( Mono) Island.
All organized resistance by Its
200 Japanese defenders was
crushed Wednesdav, one week
(Continued on page 6.)
Life Terms Given Killers
Of Liquor Store Head
SEATTLE, Nov. 5 (APILife
imprisonment sentences were Im
posed upon Bert E. Throckmor
ton, 33, and James M. Dawson,
3i, yesterday after the two sud
denly Interrupted their first de
gree murder trial for the shoot
ing of Manager James Lcathley
of a Ronton liquor store three
years ago to plead guilty.
Reich, North
France Given
New Pounding
4,000 Tons of Bombs Fall
In Previous Day's Raids;
Duesseldorf Still Afire
STOCKHOLM, Nov. 5.
Swiss dispatches gave these
figures today on allied bomb
ings of Germany:
There are now 8,000,000
bomb victims homeless In
Germany; 152,000 persons
have been killed In Hamburg
bombings and 42,000 In at
tacks on Kassel; 3,000 were
killed and 12,000 made home
less by the RAF attack Wed
nesday night on Duesseldorf.
How the figures were ob
tained was not explained In
the dispatches to Swedish
newspapers.
LONDON, Nov. 5-( API
American Flying Fortresses and
Liberators, escorted by Thunder
bolts and Lightnings, blasted tar
gets jn western Germany today
while Marauder bombers attack
ed targets in northern France,
U. S, air force headquarters an
nounced.
The daylight assault enmo
within a few hours after RAF
Mosquito bombers hit the same
gnereal area last night in the
wake of the most devastating 24
four punches yet thrown at the
Ketch.
Five aircraft were lost' "In- op-
orations which included the lay
ing of mines in enemy waters,
Since May the Mosqultos have
made 150 attacks on German cit
ies, 27 of them directed at Ber
lin. Duesseldorf Still Burning
The returning Mosquito fliers
said fires still burned In Dusscl
dorf bombed Wednesday night by
a huge RAF fleet which dropped
2.000 tons of bombs in 27 min
utes 74 tons a minute.
The Wednesday night assault
followed a raid by a record
American force of around 700
bombers on Wilhelmshaven, it
was disclosed. The two heavy
RAF and American attacks in
that 24 hours poured a combined
total of 4,000 tons of bombs on
(Continued on page 6)
Conference of
Educators to be
Held Here Nov. 8
A one-day educational confer
ence, replacing the annual teach
ers' institute, will be held at the
Junior high school in Roseburg,
Monday, Nov. 8, Mrs. Lula C.
Gorrell, county school superin
tendent, reported today. Two and
three-day Institutes have been
held In previous years, but In
order to eliminate housing and
transportation problems, Mrs.
Gorrell this year arranged a se
ries of district meetings, which
were held recently, and the Insti
tute program will be confined to
one' day, permitting teachers to
return to their respective com
munities the same day.
The principal speakers will be
Rex Putnam, state superinten
dent of schools; Dr. Frank W.
Parr, executive secretary of the
Oregon State Teachers associa
tion; Dr. J. F. Cramer, president
or the O. S. T. A.; Dr. Raymond
F. Hawk, elementary principal
and director of research of the
Vannort City schools, and Dr.
U. G. Duhaeh, dean of men, Ore
gon State college.
The program will open at 9 a.
m. Addresses by Superintendent
Putnam and Doctors Parr and
Cramer will be heard between
0:15 and 10:25 o'clock. Dr. Hawk
will soak at 10:30, following a
five-minute recess.
Lunch recess will be called at
11:30 o'clock, and the institute
will reconvene at 1 p. m. for sec
tional conferences.
A business meeting ot the
DoURlas county division of the
State Teachers association will
be held at 2:30 p. m. and the con
cluding address will be deliver
ed at 3 o'clock by Dr. Dubach.
To Facilitate Control of T 5,000 Internees , '
TULE LAKE, Calif., Nov. 5. (AP) Tanks, armored
cars and hundreds of troops surrounded 15,000 Japanese to
day in a forceful move to end
Acting quickly to meet new
administrative personnel of this segregation center for disloyal
ists, the army took over completely the entire portion outside
of the internees' barracks city itself.
Five hundred asserted troublemakers were rounded up
by troops with fixed bayonets at the cost of injuries to a score
of persons, and work went forward rapidly on the construc
tion of a high, barbed-wire fence to separate the hundreds of
barracks from other buildings at the center.
It was in this newly-protected area that from four to eight
thousand internees Monday massed, around the administration
building, and held virtually beseiged for nearly four hours sev
eral score Caucasians including
of the War Relocation authority.
A dozen administration employees are reported to have)
resigned in fear of more violent
Flier Tom Harmon,
Famous Gridster,
Missing in Action
ANN HARBOR, Mich., Nov. 5
( AP) Army Pilot Tom Har
mon, Michigan's all-America foot-
hall player who cheated death
in the skies once. this year, is re
ported missing In action over
China.
The second lieutenant's par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Har
mon, were notified last night by
Hie War department that their
son, a fighter pilot, was unreport
ed since Oct. 30.
Harmon, the solo survivor of
a' bomber crash In the Dutch
Guiana jungles last April, was
attached to the 23rd group ot the
449lh fighter squadron stationed
,ui the far cast.-- .
No hint as to whether Japanese
guns or an accident cut down
one of Michigan's greatest grid
iron stars was contained in the
telegram received by Harmon's
parents.
Harmon was transferred to
China last summer from North
Africa where he was stationed
after the crash of his bomber,
"old 98," named after his college
football number, In the South
American jungle.
Last to hear from Harmon was
his football coach, II. O. (Fritz)
Crlsler, who said the All-America
hailback of 1939 and 1940
had written In a letter tinted Oct,
14 that the Japanese pilots were
inferior to the nazl fliers.
Census Slated on Need
Of Household Goods
PORTLAND, Nov. 5 (API
Uncle Sam is going to find out
what civilians have In the way
of household goods and; what
they need most. : '
J. Fred Borgcsch,, War Pro
duction board Oregon director,
said the survey will be made by.
census Investigators who will go
to 7,000 homes representing a
cross-section of the nation.
WPB wants to know, he said,
the extent of hardships caused
by shortages and whether avail
able consumer goods are being
distributed fairly.
Roosevelt Says He's
Anxious to Meet Stalin
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5-(AP)
President Roosevelt told re
porters today that the Moscow
postwar peace agreement un
doubtedly will' lead to other Unit
ed Nations meetings abroad, but
that the question ot his own
prospective conference with Mar
shal Stalin and Prime Minister
Churchill was still undecided. H'
added he was still very pnxious
to meet Stalin because it was al
ways a good thing to know the
ol her fellov.
Comedian Carries On
Despite Son's Decith
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 5-(AP)
A few hours before Comedian
Lou Costello was to return to
radio after an eight months' ill
ness his baby son, "Butch" Lou
Costello, Jr. drowned In the
swimming pool at the Costello es
tate. But Costello followed the
trouper's tradition that the show
must go on and made his sched
uled appearance last night de
spite the tragedy.
recurring violence.
threats to the 250 Caucasian
Dillon Myer, national director
uprisings. '..
Floodlights every 80 to 100 feet
illuminated the 700-acre camp ,
which is enclosed by two barbed
wire fences 40 feet apart. Inside
(his 40-foot band, which soldiers
referred to as the "shooting
strip," the tanks and armored
cars circled the area slowly in an
unending parade.
The few Caucasian personnel
who remained and those whom
the army asked to return afte
they had been evacuated, were
ordered to stay in quarters for
reasons of safety.
Mayor A. A. Roderberger of
nearby Tule Lake, Calif., said
"Tule Lake is resting easy now
that the army has taken over."
Try To Crush Guards
When the soldiers arrived in
ternees seized a number of auto
mobiles and trucks belonging to
camp administration officials and
attempted to run down army "
guards.
The Japanese, who gathered in
an angry demonstration last Mon
day) were quickly subdued. No
shots were fired.
The injured guard was identi
fied as Edward Brobeck, a War
Relocation authority employee.
His condition was reported criti
cal. At San Francisco, Bert Coz
zens, field director of the WRA
In charge of the west coast, said
thousands of the Japanese gave
an open avowal of their loyalty
to the land of their ancestors at.
Monday's demonstration here.
The incident came at the close
of the mass demonstration dur
ing which a committee of 116 in
ternees met with WRA officials
to demand better food, oiled
streets, and the dismissal of cer
tain Caucasian administrative
personnel,
Cozzens revealed that a "Re
erend Kal," a Japanese Buddhist
priest from Hawaii, told his coun
trymen that "you must give your
all for Japan," whereupon sever
al thousands doffed their hats
and bowed their heads.
Sabotage Disclosed
Ernest Rhoades, former fire
chief at the camp, told newsmen
that all fire alarm telephones had
been destroyed, fire hydrants
stuffed with sand and broken
glass, and automobiles had been
damaged, one having been
scratched with the words: "To
hell with America."
Wednesday night a construc
tion employee was "roughed up"
by disgruntled Japanese, Cozzens
reported.
Dr. Recce M. Pedlcord, chief
surgeon at the center, told inter
viewers that he was set upon by
35 Japanese in his office during
the demonstration. One pulled
his glasses off, he said, but he
knocked two of his assailants
down before being beaten uncon
scious. Dr. Pedicord's removal
was one ot the Japanese de
mands. ..'
Two members of the Dies con
gresslonal committee were order'
ed to Tule Lake to report on the
p'.iair after Hep. CMr Engle (D.
Calif.) told Dies of the "riotous
demons! ration" in which he said
Myer was "held prisoner."
TURLOCK, Calif.,
(API Senator Hugh
Nov. 5 '
P. DonneU
(Continued on page 6)
Lv'y Fact Rnt
r U F. IUtxnll
Gov. Tom Dewey's reitera
tion that he will not be a can
didate fo.' the presidency In
1944 poses a hard question tor
the G. O. P. faction who would
nominate him to side-track
Willhlc: Dewey or. Dewey not!
sWtfjni"!f