The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 25, 1941, Page 2, Image 2

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    1 ;
Thm OSEGON STATESMAN. Scimm. Oregon. Tudoy Morning, February 25. 1941
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PAGE TWO
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Seventh Week
Brings Action
"i Five Major Measures
Given Consideration
by Both Houses V
(Continued from page 1)
occurred last week when the house
.accepted the reapportionment
committee's report.
No" votes were those of Reps.
Adams, Allen, Brady, Bull, Edwin,
Gleason, Muggins, Neuberger, Per
ry, Rennie and Thiel. Rep.Rennie
explained that Benton county
LEGISLATIVE CALENDAR
3rd Readings Teds
r House: HB 89, 254, 269, 391,
411, 482; HJR 9; SB 13, 107, 119,
168, 239, 256.
Senate: SB 285; SJR 10; HB 85,
239, 287, 375, 384, 412. 462, 463;
, XIJM 5.
f Marion county salary bilL
Public . Hearings Today
i Senate: Municipal affairs, on
f League of Cities bill, l"pjn., room
f 304.
i wished to remain in the first dis-
trict.
Chairman Steelhammer of 'the
.' reapportionment "'committee said
the plan had received statewide
roval. Rep. Neuberger protest
ed the "arbitrary" division which
he said was not based upon a com
munity interest.
The bill to give Klamath coun
ty a senator of its own, by San.
Marshall Cornett (R-Klamath),
i would eliminate the district now
represented by Sen. Rex Ellis (R
Umatilla). Ellis pleaded with the
senate not to abolish his district,
asserting "I ask you to vote no on
this bill with a prayer in my
heart."
! Multnomah Delegation
! Joins in Killing Measure
J Multnomah county legislators,
; demanding a wholesale reappor
? tionment of the legislature to give
t Mufnomah county three more
K senators, joined up with eastern
Oregon members in killing the
measure.
(. Klamath county now is in a
j Joint district with Crook, De-
schutes, Jefferson and Lake coun
! ties. Cornetts bill would have
i split .the district, with 'Klamath
j county as one district, and theoth-
er four counties as another.
! The defeat of the bill is an in
: dication that there will be no leg-
; islative reapportionment bills
; passed this session.
Under the speed bill, by Sens.
1 Douglas McKay (R-Marion) and
! Dorothy Lee (R-Multnomah), a
j person arrested for speeding would
; have to proverb, was driving pru
:dently. The existing law provides
! that the officer must prove the
j driver was driving imprudently.
t1 : The bill was passed after the
' senate overwhelmingly defeated
two attempts to amend the bill to
. provide for fixed speed limits of
' 60 and 50 miles an hour.
; Brawling Nazi
Said Dying
SOFIA, Bulgaria, Feb. 24.-(;P)--
Officials of the United States le
. gation said tonight they were try-
ing to track down repeated reports
I that a German injured by Minis
; ter George H. Earle is dying of a
fractured skull. A check of hotels
j and hospitals failed to disclose
; any trace of the man.
He and Earle engaged in an al
tercation at a restaurant near the
legation early Sunday.
A spokesman for the German
legation said it had been estab
lished that the man was not "a
member of the legation staff or a
German officer and therefore he
must have "been a private citizen."
He added that the German lega
tion was conducting its own in
vestigation. Earle himself said he had re
ceived one report that the man
was dying of a skull fracture. He
said the best information he had
been able to obtain was that the
man was a member of the Ger
man general staff.
Final Rites Set .
For Salem Woman
Final rites for Mrs. Helena A.
Hilmer, 73, late resident of 1076
South Liberty street, wiij be held
today at 1:30 p. m. from, the WiT.
Rigdon company chapel,"' -Dr. "Ray
Dunn and Rev. C. A. Wetitsch,
both of Portland, ' in charge. Mrs.
Hilmer died early Sunday morn
ing at a local hospital.
The remains will be shipped to
Spokane for a short service and
. interment at Riverside Park cem
etery. . ; -. -
Survivors include Esther end
Selma Hilmer of Salem, daugh
ters with whom she had?resided;
Wesley F. Hilmer of Spokane;
win W. Hilmer, Vancouver,
Wash.; Milton A. H timer of
Ridgefield, Wash., and five grand
children, a sister and several bro
thers.' , ' - v. - : -
II E E D II A II S
E
E
D
n
l.
:i
CARBON PAPER
and RIBBON
Columbia ribbons 'and
carbons are .tops, in
quality. Try Pinnacle
carbon and silk' gauze
ribbons. - " t. . t -
TV
Book
I AKH a.
wMuiJ Star
45 State Phone 3302
Bomber to Fly Ocean for W ar Duty in England
One of 26 huge bombers built In California for the
British, the new "B-24" is shown at LaGuardia
airfield, New York, prior to being flown across the.
US and British
Warn Japan
Report Nippon Told
to Keep Hands off
Singapore, Isles
(Continued from page 1)
retary Anthony Eden, who is In
the near east, Churchill also saw
the Turkish ambassador and the
Greek minister Monday.
The Evening News said that
both Britain and the United States
have "given Japan a straight
warning about the consequences
if she continues her drive south
ward toward Singapore and the
Dutch East Indies."
"If the movement is not
stopped or radically moderat
ed," the newspaper declared.
Britain has warned that "it
must eventually bring Japan in
to collision with vital British
interests in the Pacific." And, it
added, "America has said much
the same thing."
Authoritative diplomatic sources
also said Britain had made known
to Japan her view that Japanese
southward expansion "enhanced
dangers" in the orient, but they
denied that Matsudka had refused
proposals by Eden and said no
concrete proposals had been made
to Japan.
Federal Chief
Gives Okeh
(Continued from page 1)
ence rating and make the employ
er's base period conform to the
federal law, probably would be
certifiable "subject to two re
servations." The bill provides that 2.7 per
cent shall be the maximum. pay
roll tax when the fund amounts
to lVz times the amount paid in
benefits in the preceding year.
With respect to this provision Mc
Caw stated, without indicating
whether or not his suggestion
might be considered mandatory:
"However, the bill seems to en
danger the solvency of the fund
because it provides maximum
rates above 2.7 only if fund be
comes low and does not provide
that minimum rate shall be rais
ed if fund is low.
"Information in the Oregon
agency should establish more
clearly the effect of such rates on
solvency. From information avail
able here, bureau urges that min
imum rates become 2.7 and high
er rates go into effect whenever
the reserve fund is less than 4
per cent of total annual payrolls
averaged over last five years."
From statements following, it
appears that McCaw intended to
suggest that it would be proper
to make 2.7 the maximum rate
when the fund is adequate and
the minimum rate when it be
comes low. His statement is sub
ject to another interpretation
which, however, is in conflict
with, the general understanding
here of the federal law's provi
sions. Labor representatives who have
appeared before the house Judi
ciary committee, which has the
unemployment compensation bills
before it, have objected to HB
414, contending that it would de
plete the fund.
The communication from Mc
Caw received by Gurske was
turned over to the committee.
Late Sports
MONMOUTH, Ore.. Feb. 24-(P)
-Oregon College of Education,
paced by Hartman who scored 11
points, defeated Pacific university,
37 to 24, in a basketball game
Monday night.
WACO. Tex, Feb. 24-(P)-Frank
Kimbrough, Hardin-Simrrions uni
versity coach, Monday was named
head football coach at Baylor uni
versity. Ralph Wolf, Baylor bus
iness . manager of - athletics, was
promoted to athletic director.
Kimbrough is a brother of all
American back "Big John" Kim
brough "of the Texas Aggies.
BALTIMORE. Feb: 24.-UPW
Chalky Wright, dusky California
featherweight, : stopped Maurice
Arnault. French lightweights In
the second round ox their" sched
uled ten-round fight here Monday
night :
Kew bomber at LaGuardla field
L
Lobby
Hobbnobber
(Continued from page 1)
chambers after taking an enforced
holiday in the hospital to recover
from automobile accident injuries.
Only mark she bore of her being
caught in one of those three-way
collisions, was a metal splint on
one finger. When the afternoon
papers were placed on her hus
bands desk, she learned that a
cousin, Dr. Paul B. Cooper of Port
land, and his wife, had been killed
in an automobile accident near
Kelso Sunday.
Oregon national guardsmen
prefer tents to cantonments.
Rep. Wallace Larkin. Yamhill
county, said Monday when the
fact that selectees rather than
guardsmen were moving into the
latter at Tort Lewis was com
plained of by Sep. Rodman.
"They are getting a big kick out
of helping the new boys until
they learn the ropes," said Lar
kin. Those smiling, interested women
seated inside the south rail of the
house chamber Monday afternoon
were guests of Rep. and Mrs.
George R. Duncan, all from Stay
ton. They were Mrs. V. R. Tuel,
Gilbert Schachtsick, Mrs. Law
rence Smith and Mrs. J. L. Sieg
mund. George Brodie, publisher, and
Robert H. Holmes, promotion
manager, of the Oregon City En
terprise were recent guests of Rep.
J. S. Greenwood.
Healing echo: On bill allow
ing 320 -acre landowners to pro
pagate China pheasants and then
shoot 80 per cent of them. Rus
sell Sewall. witness "They'll
not get 80 per cent of them;
some will get away."
Sen. Lew Wallace "You and
I know some would get away."
Sewall "If know you weU
enough, all of them would get
away."
The five-minute rule, stiffler of
oratory, went into effect in the
senate Monday. But one senator
may borrow time from another
who does not choose to talk on a
particular bill.
Howard Turner of Madras, who
represented Jefferson and Crook
counties in the house for several
sessions, was around the legisla
tive halls on Monday.
Sen. J. A. Best of Umatilla coun
ty was back at his desk on Mon
day after being ill for two Weeks
in a Salem hospital.
Mill Official
And Union Local
Sign Agreement
SILVERTON M. C. WoddardL
manager of the Silver Falls Tim
ber company mill, said Monday
that the firm had reached a work
agreement with the Industrial
Employes union, local 50.
War News Briefs
TOKYO. Feb. 25-(Tuesday)-(AVKoh
I&hiL spokesman of ; the
cabinet' information bureau, an
nounced today that an agree
ment was "near at hand in the
Japanese mediation of the con
flict between Thailand and
French Indo-China.
WASHINGTON, Feb. U-ifP)
Soviet Russia was reported
Monday sdebt to hare failed la
renewed efforts to gala posses
sion of more than a dosea Baltic
merchant ships held in Ameri
can ports major point of
friction between Washington
and Moscow. ; j
SOFIA, Bulgaria, Feb. Zi-(&)
-British citizens : were leaving
Bulgaria Monday la anticipation
of German occupation of this
country, leading an officially
inspired Turkish newspaper to
comment ' that . the axis powers .
are "going to try to occupy the
whole Mediterranean." ;
LONDON, Feb. t-(P)er-t
man raiders Swept through star
lit skies ever the becalmed Eng
lish channel tonight shortly aft
t ihwuii ume, d oonri uu i
er the "all clear 'i sounded la
London without .any Invading
planes having be a sees or
heard. .
Atlantic to England for war duty there. The ship
was flown non-stop from California to New -York.
Sana weigh 20' Luna, carries four tons of bombs.
Sprague Given
Citizen Medal
Marion Post of VFW
Presents Highest
Civilian Award
(Continued from page 1)
their democracy as exemplified,
among other things, by the club
house built through the sharing
of effort, and thanked the mem
bers for their support of his pol
icy with respect to the state
guard.
The citizenship medal, highest
award which tha VFW accords to
civilians, was presented by Na
tional Deputy Inspector General
John Schum. Sen. Douglas McKay
served as master of ceremonies,
taking over the gavel from Henry
Sim, senior" vice-commander who
presided in the commander's ab
sence. Other features on the pro
gram were numbers by the Sa
cred Heart academy orchestra and
the glee club of Capital Post No.
9, American Legion.
Present on the platform in
addition to Gov. Sprague and
his daughter, Miss Martha
Sprague, post officers and the
national deputy, were State
Treasurer Leslie M. Scott and
Mrs. Scott: Mrs. Arella Atkin
son of Eugene, department aux
iliary president; Louis Starr, de
partment senior vice-commander
of the VFW and H. Moore,
national chief of staff of the
Disabled American Veterans.
Refreshments and dancing fol
lowed the program.
Man Is Found
Dead in Home
DALLAS Thomas Lee, 74, of
near Falls City was found dead at
his home Sunday. Lee, who re
sided just west of Mac's park near
Falls City, was last seen by
friends Saturday night. When
found he was sitting in a chair.
Death was due to natural causes
and there will be no inquest.
Lee was born October 30, 1866.
He was the last son of Wilson and
Abigail Lee. He was unmarried.
Funeral services will be held at
the Henkle and Bollman chapel
in Dallas Tuesday afternoon at '2
o'clock with interment in the old
Dallas cemetery. Rev. H. E. Kelly
win oiiiciate.
Amateur Flier
Falls in Canal
HOODSPORT Wash., Feb. 24.-
W-A yellow cub airplane plun
ged into Hood Canal opposite this
Olympic peninsula town late Mon
day, apparently carrying an am
ateur pilot to death.
The victim was Identified ten
tatively as Charles Stevens, about
35, a US navr yard mnlnv
Bremerton with three hours of
solo flying experience. He wai
flying a small trainer plane rent-
ea rrom a flying service at the
KJtsap county airport.
Salary "Floor" Ashed
For Public Teachers
The house education commit
tee will offer the state legislature
a bill today to put a $1020 a year
floor under public school teach
er's salaries, according to Rep. Al
lan G.- Carson rR.Marinnt
. . v... , I ivt
chairman. Monthly salary pay-
wwmu oe required to be at
least nine-twelfths of this sum in
nine out of the 12 months of the
calendar year, leaving it to lo
cal boards as to whether, the re
mainder would be paid by the
month or in lump sum.
As amended by the 1939 legis
lature, the law governing teach
ers' salaries sets a minimum of
$85 -a month, resulting In an an
nual salary of $701 in some school
districts. . ; ,
Today Wed.
1
Baby Sandy
- la ' - :
"Sandy GetsV
ner Man" -t
;.. wlth ..T
Stuart Erwin
Una Merkel
tfi'iJQHJ'
f
Wheeler Plans
Stumping US
"Turbulent Untruths"
. J Charged in Debates
s by Senators
(Continued from page 1)
Meantime, K warnings that the
bill means war . were shouted to
the senate by SenatorLa Follette
(ProgWis.), Clark (D-Idaho)
ahd-Danaher (R-Conru), as the
spidery steel . girders above the
chamber echoed to a seventh day
of, tense debate on the. measure.
fPeople -of America, you are on
your ' way to" war," exclaimed
Clark, a tall slim figure in a
brown suit, pacing up and down
in the year of the republican seats
and pausing now and then to hang
his fist on any desk that was
handy.
"You are moving to war on a
turbulent cataract of untruths
and propaganda. Ten are being
driven there by international
financiers who will coin money
out of the blood of your sons."
La Follette, quoting a speech by
his father before him on the same
floor to show that the Versailles
treaty-makers were not "peace
makers" but "war-makers,' as
serted that "modern war has be
come such a destructive process
that it cannot achieve its an
nounced objectives no matter
how lofty or how venal they may
be."
In contrast to Clark's restless
pacing and sweeping gestures, the
stocky La Follette stood at his
desk, also on the republican side,
his hands in the pocket of his blue
suit, and read his address from a
manuscript of 37 legal-size pages.
His body vibrated with the ve
hemence of his words as he de
clared that the British aid mea
sure "gives the president power
to create a state of war."
"I urge that we stop misleading
the valiant defenders of Britain,
Greece and China into thinking
we are going to war," he con
cluded, "or stop misleading the
American people into thinking
that we are not going to war."
The galleries were crowded, as
they have been daily, with many
spectators standing in the rear.
A dozen or more members of the
house lounged on the red leather
settees at the rear to hear the
debate.
Call Board
ELSINORE
Today "Gone With the Wind
with Clark Gable and Vivien
Leigh.
Friday James Cagney and Olivia
DeHavilland in "Strawberry
Blonde" plus "The Wild Man of
Borneo" with Frank Morgan and
Billie Burke.
GRAND
Today "Western Union" with
Robert Young, Randolph Scott;
' added Kenny Allen in "Hawaii
an Rhythm."
Wednesda y "Murder Among
Friends" with Marjorie Weaver,
Cobina Wright, and "Ride, Kel
ly. Ride" with Eugene Pallette,
Mary Healy.
Saturday "Night Train" with
Margaret Lockwood and 'Tail,
Dark and Handsome" with Cesar
Romero, Virginia Gilmore and
Charlotte Greenwood.
CAPITOL
Today "Son of Monte Cristo"
with Louis Hayward and Joan
Bennett, plus Weaver Bros, and
Elviry in "Arkansas Judge."
Wednesday Err oil Flynn and
Olivia DeHavilland in "Santa
Fe Trail," plus "Knute Rockne,
All American" with Pat O'Brien
and Gale Page.
STATE
Today B e a u Geste" starring
Gary Cooper and Ray Milland,
plus "Elsa Maxwells Public
Deb. No. 1" with Brenda Joyce
and George Murphy.
Wednesday "Third Finger, Left
Hand" starring Myrna Loy and
Melvyn Douglas, plus "Hullaba
loo" with Frank Morgan and
Billie Burke.
Saturday midnight "The Mark
of Zorro" starring Tyrone Pow
er and Linda Darnell.
LIBERTY .
Today "When the Daltons Rode"
with Randolph and Kay Francis,
plus "Curtain Call" with Bar
bara Read and Alan Mowbray.
Wednesday "Heroes in Blue"
with Dick PurceU, plus Edgar
Wallaces "Mysterious Mr. Reed
er" with Will Fyffe.
Friday Gene Autry in "Tumbling
Tumbleweed" with Smiley Bur
nette, plus "Tom Brown's School
Days" with Freddie Bartholo
mew, plus serial.
HOLLYWOOD
Today Loretta Young. Melvyn
Douglas in "He Stayed for
Breakfast"; Baby Sandy in
"Sandy Gets Her Man."
Thursday Gene Autry in "Ride,
Tenderfoot,vRide";, Richard DIx,
Wendy Barrie in "Man Against
the Sky."
GARY RAY .
COOPER MILLAND
: "Beau Gesie""
2ND HIT
PUBLIC DEB NO. 1"
i i
i
i
BRENDA
JOYCE
GEORGE
MURPHY.
GOP Leader
- .-
Lamport New
County Chief
, Frederick S. Lamport of Salem
was elected president Monday
night of the Marion County Re
publican club, succeeding Del K.
Neiderhiser.
Other new officers are Frank
Mogan of Salem, first vice-president;
E. H. Banks of Silverton,
second vice-president; J. T. Jones
of Jefferson, third vice-president;
Helena Schneider of Salem, secretary-treasurer;
Mrs. Harrison El
gin of Salem, corresponding secre
tary. The next meeting is March 17.
Proposed Milk
Law Postponed
Revision, Discussion
Decided Before City
Gets New Draft
(Continued from page 1)
substance be used exclusively for
the floors of dairy barns produc
ing Grade A milk was expressed
hv TTarnM XToKTillan wn4AtA
of McMillan's Dairy.
Denial Made Ordinance
Would Cause Higher Prices
In general discussion, local pro
ducers and distributors denied the
suggestion of J. D. Mickle, direct
or of the state department of ag
riculture, that the new ordinance.
if passed, would serve as a pretext
for retail price increases in the
Salem area.
A direct Question to producers.
whether the new ordinance with
more stringent sanitary and mar
keting provisions would increase
costs of production and distribu
tion brought no clear answer,
nowever, from dairymen present.
E. A. -Rhoten, a local produ
cer, declared that virtually all
milk now produced in Salem
and sold as a high-grade prod
uct meets the full requirements
of the new ordinance.
His opinion' was seconded by'
John Geren, city milk inspec
tor, who said that "seventy-five
per eent of the milk operators
won't know that chanses have
been made If the new ordinance
is passed."
Hans Hofstetter. DroDrietor of
Ciu-ley's dairy, indicated that the
requirements of the new measure
would require expenditures of
over si 000 immediately on his
pan, ana suggested that other dis
iriDuiors would meet similar ex
penses.
Another leading Question from
d. rrine, member of the com
mittee, whether or not the new
ordinance, if passed,. would imme
diately afford the city safer milk.
brought a negative opinion from
12 or the score or more dairv dm.
pie present, one affirmative vote,
ana no response from the remain
der.
Bacteria Count Below
Maximum. Dairy Man Sava
Lewis J U d S O n. Proprietor nt
Judsons dairy, commented that
ine average bacteria count of
Grade A milk in Salem is only
10,000 per cubic centimeter, whm
the maximum allowed is twice as
great.
Judson added that the Sal Am
milkshed at present lacks an ade
quate supply of milk, and that
further restrictions on nmiiiMM
would Increase their costs, reduce
meir production and leave the
market open to "booties? tred" mnv
His statement was challenged by
Fred Klaus, manager of the Dairy
Cooperative association, who de
clared that a 5000 Pound mrnl.t.
has obtained daily here for several
wees.
Klaus also referred La
Me purchase of local milk by
United States army procure
ment officers, who would, he
asserted, require milk of the
highest standard.
Further reference was im..
U the same subject by Roy
Dodson. assistant sanitary engi
eer of the state department of
health, who declare th.t -
tons milk surveys taken In Sa-
em nave not shown the
milk supply to be of o
nlghest grade.
He indicated that arm ann.i.
officers would relv m th
department's survey to determine
(SALEM'S NEWESTTHEATR?
Last Times Today
'T7IIEII THE
DALTOIIS BODE""
Randolph Scott - Kay Fraacts
Always I "-US
15 C "CURTAIN
JJ CALL-
Senate Grouj
" Cornmittee Would Add
0700,000 to Aid
Disabled Men "
(Continued from page X)
I1IAI); thumb StOt (tM); first
fe fourth fingers feet to $15
(MM to 9151).
Principal pension rates of the
present law would be increased
from $30 to $40 a -month for to
tal permanent disability and the
additional pension for minor de
pendents from $8 to $12. Burial
benefits would be raised to $150
rrom $100.
Three thousand dollars would
be' made the base for computing
partial functional losses.
Clearance of the senate com
znittee's desk left one other leg
islative committee grinding away
at similarly complicated and even
more controversial legislation . ,
the house judiciary committee,
which Is attempting to work out
a compromise of labor and indus
try demands for changes In the
unemployment compensation act.
Uses Strong Language When
Reviewing Alleged Reports
Meeting Monday afternoon and
night, .the committee hoped to
work out its substitute bills by
tonight. Chairman Frank J. Lon
ergan said. Distressed at newspa
per suggestions that these meas
ures were being Held back as a
club to force passage of pet bills.
Lonergan declared the reports
were "damn lies."
"This is the only committee in
the house that has had a Job guch
as this thrown at it," Lonergan
added. "We've been here night
after night trying to work up
some satisfactory program on one
of the most important subjects a
legislature has been called on to
consider."
Lonergan said his committee
members' votes '.tonight on the
compromise proposals would de
termine whether or not the un
employment compensation ques
tion could be put before the house
in the next day or two. Senate
committeemen who will receive
the 'bills if they are adopted in
the house indicated not much up
per house committee time would
be required before they could be
reported out.
Navy Bombers
In Crashes
SAN DIEGO. Calif., Feb. 25-(")-Two
San Diego navy base
planes were reported to have
crashed Monday sight, one on
the' nearby Camp Kearny mesa
and the other In the sea off
Carlsbad.
Navy officers confirmed re
ports that "two bombing planes,
each carrying two men, encased
In routine maneuvers, are unac
counted for," but said they had
received no word of the crashes.
Saa Diere police, deputy sher
iffs, sailors and marines were
sent to search the rugged mesa
area and a destroyer and a coast
guard vessel were operating- off
the coast between Carlsbad and
Enclaltas.
Independent reports of the
two crashes came to the sher
iffs office here.
Mystery Prevails
In Death Probe
NEW YORK,. Feb 24.-)-A
new aerial torpedo, a mysterious
warning written in Russian, and
a family connection in the nazi
army complicated the investiga
tion Monday into the mysterious
slaying last night of CoL Michael
Borislavsky, 55, military scientist
and one-time officer in the Rus
sian imperial army.
Salt Company Seeks
Willamette Water
The Pennsylvania Salt Manu
facturing com Dan v. Timmi
Wash-, has filed application with
tne state engineer here to appro
priate 25 second feet of water
from the Willamette river for
manufacturing purposes in Mult
nomah county.
the best milk supplies, and that
weir decisions would be influen
ced by more stringent require
ments - ior mux produced in the
locai.area.
Further disni ion nf tK. w
ter was adjourned tensiin tha
results of private conferences be
tween miiJc producers and distrib
utors and health department offi
cers over points still at issue.
tixDouH scon ((
DEAS JAGGU i J N
TIIGIM 6iuonr-f HrL
ika Cart litn LJ IkC? T
m tun um " - tftB m I
ADA
-Paxil U outer's Column
' 1 (Continued from page 1) -
to jgo to school anyway. There
appears to be little, sign of. im
provement In the calendar - for
next year because it comes on a
Sunday. Look for better things
in 1043. ' . -
Mesa while fear are being
east about that if the legislature
doesn't hurry up it will be sitting
La the Up of the basketball tour
nament, which wouldn't be
pretty. ' ' f
jX. FITTERS EN SPEAKS
' j (On Trailers and Things) -
snooeaomi? SiS 2 years too
um. sutler soJa atevcr kave
- Bees. Nra.
, f Have several trailer kaosos
lor sate. - . , -:
Wallace Larkia. w reoro-
' aurtattvo at Salem Is wtktmg I ?
bars (or olS as aoS Bark la
tor straightening Tillamook
. highway. i
Heavy 'frosts nights lately.
M. Petersen has trailer honses
tf sale. Some as. tow as 2
;Uars. - -
j i. Petersen in Sheridan Sua.
MARITIME NOTE
The Wheatland Ferry gnashed
its teeth at a stray Japanese fish
float yesterday, but retained Its
neutrality and continued on pa
trol, i'
. a . . -
British Dei
Ml ' ..i-
nv
;io -5
! t
Refute Loss of Huge
Tonnage at Sea, but
Await Land Fight
; (Continued from page 1)
i . - i - -
captured two additional Italian
popts on the Juba rirer front in
Somaliland. ' f
1 Other units Invading Italian
Eritrea were reported to have
driven St miles to Cubcub in a
pincers movement aimed at re
ducing Cheren. 40 miles to the
southwest where Italian de
fenders long have1 held off a
firitish column attacking from
the west.
British bombers reported "ex
tensive damage" on Italian sir-, '
dromes in Addis Ababa, Ethiopian-
capital.
The Italian high command said
the garrison in the Giarabub oasis
in Libya still was holding off vio-
ent British attacks. The garrison
was cut off from the main Italian
armies early in the desert cam
paign and had been isupplied by
fascist airplanes, the Italians said.
i Raids by German bombers on-
efating from Italian I bases wpr
said to have set fire to heavy mo
tor trucks in Libyan Dosts Ma
tured by the British and "prob-
fjL7' 113 ve sun large Brit
ish warshic i
m - i
Governor Grants
Extradition jr
I Gov. Charles A. Sprague Mon
day authorized the extradition of
Clarence Cain, who is wanted at
St. Charles, Mo, onf a charge of
first degree robbery, f He is under
arrest in Portland. J
I Another extradition warrant
was issued for William Mingus
Aitken, wanted in f Sacramento,
Calif., for failure to support a
minor child. He is being held in
Medford. -
! Gov. Sprague has requested the
return to Oregon of Samuel Davi
aon. jr., wanted In Portland for
forgery. He is under "arrest In Los
vngeies.
Continuous Irons W Noon
spoors upen HU0 A.M.
few - Shows 12. 8:2
p.m.
Matinees
Gen. Ada.
iOe
Children tie
(Matinee
Only)
Evenings 55e
a?5SSSS5BSBSSS5m-
TP'
Last Times Tonite - 2 Hits!
Action Thriller!
THE SON Or
MONTE CRISTO
with Louis Harward
Joan Bennett
Companion Feature
Key Rogers
US tarts Wed. Z Big HiU
IHIDI-DiMVIIifllffi
I
JoVh h ' -
p Companion Feature j
NEW LOW PRICES!
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Hitler
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