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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1942)
PAGE TWELVE V wssmmswsmbbiW itviw;. I ali--- -4 By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Wide World War Analyst For The Statesman Regardless pf where - and when Generalissimo Hitler now hopes to establish his winter line across Russia, loss of the Moz haisk bulge is a grave strategic setback for the nazis. '"' Coupled with earlier loss of the ' Rostov and Kerch peninsula keys to attack on the Caucasus, and mounting Russian threats to the whole German northern flank above Moscow, it means the nazis will lack the best springboards for the new offensive they talk about launching "in the spring." They might have to start again virtually at the Dneiper river line In the center and south, and al most back at the Russian fron tier north of the Dneiper. There is little as yet to war rant the conclusion that Russian recapture of war-ravaged Moz haisk marks the beginning of a German retreat to the Dneiper. It seems obvious, however that a retreat in the center beyond Vyazma junction is in progress on a front of unindicated width. ' "JJhe north-south rail and road line from Rjhev, through Vyazma to Bryansk, which supported the Mozhaisk bulge, is already crack ed by the Russians to the south and rendered useless in the north. Bryansk itself is menaced by the Russian break-through to the north at Lyudinovo. The Rjhez junction pivot on the upper Vol ga also is threatened from three sides. Only the center section of the Kiev-Bryansk line, between Vyazma and the vicinity of Ly udinovo, is still In German hands. There appear to be more or less isolated pockets of German resistance north and LJ LJ Di mm mw tsr She EJore Bonds You The More Planes Will Fly Tliis Axis war upon us is a matter of life or death for America, your free America ! Now, as never before in all our glorious history, our Army, Navy and Marine Corps urgently need planes, tanks, ships and guns! Literally billions of dollars are needed im mediately to produce these and other weapons of defense ... of offense . . . and of Victory! They must be produced now! The money, must be secured now! Let's do it the voluntary way, the American Way, the Defense Bond way ! If we are to smash the enemy out of our seas and blast him from the air over our heads, every dollar you can spare, every dime that is FACTS ABOUT DEFENSE BONDS (SERIES E) sor uvea do thet cosn YOU LEND UNCLE SAM $11.75 .... S37.50 .... S75.0O . . S375.00 .... $750.00 . . . . Wlm it maturity? Tea years from the time you bay iHs Bood. If yoa need the money before then, yom can cash Um bonds at any time after 60 dart from their imoc date. A table of eaah-ia value is printed oa each Bond. Naturally, the longer you hold the Bead, up to 10 years, the more money youTI get back. Bat youU never get leas than jewpvtin. , ' BJkat's (U iitfw mi roSeT JTbea beld t maturity, the Bonda yield 2.9 per year oa your investment, com pounded semiannuaUy-'-you get 94 far every ti. WhendttgHobmraBaUf To your local Bank. Poet Office, Saving wad Lou Asso ciation, or tber Defenss Bond Agency. JFis bonf Mmu Stampt? Baring Defena Stamp i a convenient way of taring noney with which to bay a real Defence Bond. Stamps are sold for as Ettle as 10. Wktm JumU I btym Bona? Start now; bay regularly. Ifyowr company has a Defense Sarin. Pay -Roll Allotment Plan, take advantage of it NOW. INVEST IN SAFETY wTOi PERFECT SAFETY I tEBIE west of retaken Kaluga but the Russian southern pincer jaw already west of Lyudinovo and gtretchinr northeastward to Mosalk renders their position precarious. Whether the Germans back tracking from Mozhaisk can es cape to' Vyazma down the main Smolensk-Moscow route appears doubtful. Rearguard action west of Mozhaisk, in the vicinity of historic Jorodino, is reported. It was thee Napoleon scored the victory that allowed him to reach Moscow, only to meet utter disas ter in a winter retreat. There have been persistent reports of Russian straddling of the Vyazma-Mozhaisk route near Gjatsk, midway between Borodino and Vyazma and 35 miles in the rear of the retreat ing Germans. From the Kos tino area on the Kaluga-Vyazma railroad, another Russian spearhead is pointed north westward at Vyazma 50 miles away. Some military observers ex pect a new German stand at Vyazma, integrated with an ef fort to hold also the Ugra river bulge southeast of that point in lieu of the lost Mozhaisk position. The strongest natural defense position on the Napoleonic road is west of Vyazma, however, along the rise of the Dneiper 60 miles east of Smolensk. If this is an accurate appraisal, iss nrx UPON MATVMTY TOO GET BACK . . . $25.00 . . . $50.00 . . . . $100.00 . . . . $500.00 . . . $1,000.00 . . Get Your Share of r. fo)ffi)n The Woman Leader Resigns Post Acceptance of a new position which makes it impossible for her to devote sufficent time to the survey has forced Mrs. R. L. Wright to resign as co-chairman of the Marion county committee for mobilization of women, W. H. Baillie, manager of the Salem of t fice of the US employment serv ice, announced Wednesday. Mrs. Wright and Mrs. David Wright were j appointed to take charge of the work in this coun ty by Mrs. Sadie Orr Dunbar, state chairman for the drive. In a letter to Mrs. Dunbar, Mrs. Wright expressed her regret at having to give up the survey and offered her ass&tance during any spare time she might have. Former Salem Pastor Dies Friends in Salem of the Rev. Charles Powell have received word of his death at Bishop, Calif., on January 15. Rev. Powell was rector of St Paul's Episcopal church here for about five years. He left Salem in 1920. He is survived by his widow, three sons and two daughters, one of whom is married to Ralph Wil son, son of Mrs. W. E. Wilson of Salem. They are now residing in Washington, DC. Family Move Into New Home and Rent Farm GATES The Tillman Rains family have moved into their home at Gates, and have rented their farm, where they have been residing for the past two yars. Mrs. Herman Rue spent last weekend at Fort Stevens visiting with her nephew, Dan Sellard. Mrs. Rue was accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Claud Sellard. it is doubtful that more than rear-guard actions will mark the further retreat of the nazis until the front is west of Vyazma. Buy miuf not absoluetly required for the necessities of food, clothing, and shelter should be, yes, must be, loaned to your Government! We must act fast. Start getting your share of United States Defense Bonds and Stamps to day. Get them regularly, day after day, week after week. If you have already bought a Bond, now is the time to get more! Remember, every Bond you buy is a blow at the military maniacs attacking us that every dollar you invest will come back to you tvith interest on that brighter, happier day when Victory is ours, and there is peace again throughout the world. T 7 iiczMjrtue lou can start buying Defense Bonds f f by baying Defense Stamps"! 1 11 for as little uuiiit,. IUu 19 cents in Defense Stamp boy S cartridges. OBEGON STATESMAN. Salem. Defense Training Expansion Planned at Chemawa School Next expansion for Salem's defense training center, which is operating largely on a six-days basis, will be to Chemawa, Coordinator C. A. Guderian stated Wednesday. He said all weld ing and aviation sheet metal classes have been filled. When enough demand is made and equipment secured, addi tional classes in the two-courses wiU be installed at Chemawa. Twenty five Indian youths from the CCC service are in forest com munications training under the defense program at Chemawa, Guderian announced. They have taken one week of the three months course, similar to one given a year ago. Selected from over the northwest, they, will all go into forestry work. Instruction is given in telephone, radio repair and code. Welding tests for trainees and others who wish to see if they are eligible for shipyards employment will be given Sunday morning be ginning at 8 o'clock at the down town shop. These are usually run Saturday but were changed be cause of classes hfld then. Ap plication is made at the Salem office of the US employment ser vice. Pacific U, President Speaks at Civic dub Need for straight thinking and decisive acting in preserving four great institutions, the home, school and state, were stressed by W. C. Giersbach, president of Pacific university, Forest Grove, in an address before Rotary club members Wednesday. Institutions that look ahead cannot be written off the books, and although nations may be de stroyed, ideas born of God and man will live on, the speaker de clared. Several Hawaiian selections were sung by Kenny Allen, son of W. G. Allen, Salem. Dies at Mt. Pleasant SCIO Funeral services for Mrs. B. Darby, who lived on a farm in the Mt. Pleasant com munity, northeast of Scio, have not been completed. Her husband and several children survive. IS cants ia Defense Stamps bora a sol dier's aness kit. $1J9 in. Defease Stamps bars' int. aid kit. U0 in Defense Stamps bays a good warm blanket. . $10M in Defens Stamps bay 2 steel helmets, Tht More Defense Bonds Yoa Buy Tht Mart Plants Will Fly SWvfl Ortcon. Thursday Morning; January 22. 1942 Service Men Where They Are What They're Doing Marvin O. Bacon, Salem; Mer vin A. Howe, Albany and Robert W. Lane, Corvallis. have recently enlisted in the navy according to Lieut Glen F. DeGrave, of Port land, recruiting officer of the Oregon district. WHEATLAND Harlan Coop er, . son of Roy Cooper, and Chandler Fowler, son of Clyde Fowler, both of Wheatland, who joined the navy about a month ago, left Tuesday for Portland for training at San Diego, Calif. PORTLAND, Jan. 21-(jP)-Re-serve officers called to active duty from the Oregon military district Wednesday included First Lieut T. A. Swanson, Albany; Second Lieuts. Henry B. Milne, Corvallis, and Herbert U. Sieben, Albany, all infantry. PORTLAND, Jan. 21-P)-Sam Henry might have gone on think ing he was an American citizen if he hadn't tried to join the navy this week. The 29-y e a r-old Milwaukie bartender said he was born in Scotland. His father died and his mother remarried. The family later came to this country and in 1927 Sam's step-father became an American citizen. Sam thought that made him one, too. Today, as he was turned over to the immigration department, where inspectors tried to decide what to do about him, Sam said he was in an awful fix. SPOKANE, Jan. 21-(jP)-Staff Sgt. T. J. Barnighan thinks he's found a boy who'll make a great marine. The youth, 17-year-old Frank Slocum of Spokane, attempted to enlist last November, Branighan explained, but his chest measure ment was an inch and a half too small. When the war broke out, Slo cum tried again without success. So, he gathered up a series of physical exercises and went to the YMCA gymnasium. There, the sergeant asserts, he worked six weeks' nearly all dav. day. "He came back this week," the sergeant continued. "He was still just a little bit under but I didnt have the heart to turn him down. I sent him to the coast and he didn't come back so I guess he's in. "That's the kind of stuff that kept 'era fighting on Wake island." Rail Hearing Slated UKANTS PASS, Jan. 21-6W-A preliminary public utilities com mission hearing on the Southern Pacific's abandonment of passen ger service in parts of southern Oregon will be held at Salem January 26, Commissioner Ormond Bean announced Wednesday. Brush Creek News BRUSH CREEK Mrs. Vivian Reed is at the home of her grand mother, Mrs. Anna K. Jensen here for a visit She has spent the past several months In Kentucky and Norfolk, Va., to be near her hus band who la In the navy and was recently transferred. Alfred Jensen has returned from Corvallis where he attended a two-day seed meeting. Jensen grows grass seeds as well as crim son clover seed. Oriet Moen, who is employed at the statehouse at Salem, Is now spending the nights with her s& ter, Mrs. Elmer Grace at Silver ton, since Mr. Grace is employed at Valsetz. Mr. and Mrs. George Elton have returned from a visit with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Lyal Everett Kal lis pel, Mont Community Clubs PRATUM Sylvus, the magi cian, and his assistants brought thrills and laughs with his magical show at "the Pratum community club Friday night Rev. James Wilson was in charge of the pro gram. Serving on the refreshment committee were Mrs. W. E. Branch, Mrs. W. M. de Vries, and Lydia Powell. Putting on a play in the near future was discussed and a com mittee was appointed with Delia Kleen chairman, Mrs. James Wil son and Willis Goebel. For the next meeting, Frank Schaap, president, appointed' the following on the program commit tee: Adolph Krehbiel, Carl Vogt Willis Goebel, and Russel McCal lister; refreshment committee: Mrs. Herman Kleen, Mrs. Arch Bo wen, and Mrs. Arthur Johnson MIDDLE GROVE The com munity club program Friday, in charge of th men of the com munity, consisted of musical en tertainment by representatives from the Priscilla Meisinger stu dios in Salem. Louis Brown, Covil Case, Carl Snyder and Walter Davis were in charge of refresh- Death of Former Pioneer Woman Noted at Dallas ' PIONEER Mrs. C. Domaschof- sky, 77, who died at ;the home of her daughter, Mrs. John Nachti- gal, Dallas, was well known in Pioneer.. The Domaschofskys bought their home in the Pioneer i district soon after coming to Oregon. The chil dren received their Searly educa tion in the Pioneer school. Mr. and Mrs. Domaschofsky celebrated their golden wedding here in 1932. Seventy ears ago Domaschofsky died and Mrs. Do maschofsky later moved to Dallas, where she made her home with her daughter. Mrs. Domaschofsky was the mother of 12 children. Surviving her are Chris, Junction City; Os car, Portland; Robert, Tillamook; Clara, Albany; Frank, Alfred, Lewis and William, Dallas and vicinity, and Mrs. Nachtigal, Dal las. Publisher Rites Held PORTLAND, Jaai 21-iiP-Fu- neral services were held Wednes day for Alvin Y. Beach, 76, county assessor's deputy for; 35 years and former publisher of the Lake County Examiner at Lakeview. He died Tuesday. Today's Menu Hot tomato juice will begin today's dinner that will end with just plain apple pie, with no trimmings. Hot tomato juice Cheese sticks Savory meat loaf Escalloped potatoes Buttered cauliflower Apple pie SAVORYT MEAT LOAF 1 pounds veal, ground Vs cup chopped salt pork cup chopped celery Yt cup chopped onions 2 tablespoons chopped parsley Vi teaspoon salt y teaspoon pepper 2 cups toasted ready-to-serve cereal flakes V cup milk or Cream 2 eggs, beaten (or 4 yolks) 2 tablespoons butter, melted Mix ingredients and press lightly into buttered loaf pan and bake 10 minutes In hot oven (425 degrees). Reduce heat to 350 and bake an hour. Serve cut in dishes. Boy QUALITY and SAVE Longer wearing, your purchase of (P. L & AT 100 virgin wool, pur worsted suits,; in dark patterns, single and double breasted models. Up-to-the-minute in styling, these suits are available in all sizes. Buy now and save. T Men there are some great buys in Topcoats, if your size is here. A few Kuppenheimer coats are in cluded in these prices. Manhattan Shirts and These are selected assortments in regular ; Manhattan quality. Some sizes are limited, some are slightly soiled. m Nunn-Buoh Edgcrton Shoe It will pay to see if your size is in this lot They go at a mere frac tion of their real value. ' : $595 A $ : IU MOXLEY & HUNTINGTON TTie Store if. Style, Quality & Valui Laura Wheeler Kitten in Appealing Decoration for This cuddly-looking kitten is enjoying himself among the lazy-daisy flowers' on this pretty carriage cover and does equally well for a crib, cover, too. A gift solution for that new baby. Pat tern 200 contains a transfer pat tern of one 14 X 15 Inch, one 7 Club Meets at Bradford's l r Mrs. Laurence Bradford en tertained at her home in Albany for members of her club Friday. A short business meeting was held and a buffet lunch served . later. ' Members present were Mrs. JJorris Walen.1 Mrs. 3. F. Van Osdol, Jr., Mrs. Edwin Johnson, Mrs. Harry Moore, Mrs. Paul Brandon, Mrs. Ronald Crossland, Mrs. Robert B J &aw, Mrs. Bruce Gambill and; Mrs. Laurence Bradford. Nurses -Vote to Buy The Oregon State Nurses' as sociation will meet on Monday at the Deaconess hospital at 8 o'clock to discuss further ways to cooperate in the civil defense and the Red Cross . programs. The association is acting In every possible way, both in service and The Euan's Shop shape retaining clojhing can be had only by known, proven quality. Men here it is. PIT Other Suits In broken lota, from $19.50 up P AT $9 SJ.65 $2.00 Quality and s 9S est aw 9 Baby s Lover x 7 Inch and six 2 x 4 inch motifs; illustrations of stitches; materials required. ... Send ten cents in coin for this pattern to Statesman, Needle craft Dept, Salem. Write plain ly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. In financial aid to the govern ment in the crisis. At the last meeting, the group authorized the purchase of a $500 defense bond. Talk Planned For. Today Mrs. George Lewis will talk about her experiences in Hono lulu at the time of its bombing, to members of the 7S Sisterhood Bible class of the First Christian church meeting at 2 in the church parlor this afternoon. Members are invited to attend. Mrs. Iha Adsitt, chairman of the hostess committee, will be as sisted by Mrs. E. O. Allen, Mrs. D. Arnold, Mrs. Frank Barnett, Mrs. Clara Brunk, Mrs. Effie Barber and Mrs. Sarah Blue. Mrs. D. B. Simpson will give the devotional. Mr. and Mrs. Loring Schmidt were among those attending the Washington-Oregon State bas ketball game Tuesday night io $31.85 Pajamas $.95 $2.50 Quality ' Sweaters Odd lots of wool slipons and coats. At these low prices, If these sweaters are not just what you had In mind, you could well afford one for work or second best 03 416 State St. Iments.