Nm i WarM v . tit in I ft Bitter Awako Yet? . The Japanese drive en' Singapore has narrowed all' Questions down to one: "Can we survtve or thyt ' So ' H71 Paul Mallon la Lit col umn en the Statesman edl torial pace today vc POUNDBR 16131 ' (V NINETY -FIRST YEAB Salem, .jn. Friday Morning, February 13. 1942 Price 8cj Newsstand te No. 277 - : T7T7 3 .Em M(DM(i& VJj Uiy 1L 1 -: ! , , . - .1 " : Z . i , . - I ii IMS Eig:Mt; Waged v - - - - 1 avj Aircraft etails Of January31 US Loses Only Five Bombers; One Ship Hit WASHINGTON, Feb. 12 (AP) -The navy depart ment announced Thursday night that important Jap anese naval and air bases flanking US supply routes into New Zealand and Aus tralia were wiped out in the recent bold attacks by units of the Pacific fleet on the Gilbert and Mar shall islands. ;t The mighty, Offensive actions first since the " Japanese smashed at Pearl Harbor December 7 also yielded a rich harvest of destruc tion n ships and planes. Sixteen ships, including a con verted aircraft carrier; a light cruiser, a destroyer and two sub marines, were blasted into useless wreckage. Forty one enemy planes either were sent flaming from the skies or battered to bits on the ground. V The raid on the mid-Pacific isles, a surprise attack brilliantly executed, was carried out Janu ary 31 under command of Vice Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr., of Washington, DC, the bases at tacked were in the Marshall and Gilbert islands lying more than 2000 miles southwest of Pearl Harbor. Five Roi, Kwajalein, Wotje, Taroa and Jaluit are in tbs- Marshall group, and one Makin is in the Gilbert group. It is from the bases of these Islands that the Japanese have sent their marauding submarines to raid shipping on the,. Pacific coast It was from these bases, according to naval authorities here, that they intended to strike devastatingly at the US convoys carrying reinforcements and sup (Turn to Page 12, CoL 1) Salem Chest Officers Are Re-Elected ' All officers of the Salem Com munity Chest were reelected Thursday night by the directors, who also accepted the 1942 bud get as recommended by the bud get committee and discussed rela tionship of the personnel to war chest activities. Officers are T. M. Hicks, president; Guy Hickok and Irl 8. , McSberry, vice presidents; Mrs. Kay Keene secretary, and Linn C Smith, treasurer. - Directors recently ' elected to succeed themselves for . a Ihree yea term were W. W. Chadwick, Leo N. Childs, A. C Haag, Dr. D. B. Hill, Floyd E. Miller, Irl McSherry and Linn C. Smith, and William Braun to succeed Ben J. Ramseyer. Smashed FprayTold Nation Celebrates , : By The Associated Press The United States, In its dark est days, since the1860's made Abraham . Lincoln's birthday an niversary an occasion Thursday lor renewed pledges that govern tnent of the people, by the people and for the people shall not perish from the earth. These words from the Civil war president's -Gettysburg address srere read at a ceremony in the Carrier, Cruisers, Subf - . . I : On South Pacific Islds This Destroyer Probably in Mil IMM r -r"r v:- lSh m Vim nil i mil ii mi i mil -i 11 n 1 1 m mifii A) vrff I 8 This is the starboard side eta destroyer which is protecting a eonvoy enronte to the war zone. One officer Is taking bearings of sn object while a signalman (right) is blinking a messags to another ship. (Official US navy photo from 1 Blaze Fatal To Girl, 8 Body Sought in Home .Near Silverton; Car Wreck Hurts Family SILVERTON, Feb. 13-The body of eight-year-old Nettie Al ger, believed to have perished in the flames which .Thursday night destroyed her family's home, was sought throughout early hours of this morning. State police and Coroner L. E. Barrick joined neighbors and city firemen in the search at the charred ruins of the old residence on Powerhouse hill. In a Silverton hospital her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Al rer, and her ZH months old sister, Deett Nora, . received care for Injuries sustained In the fire and in a later automo bile wreck. Details of the highway accident were not generally known, but Mr. Alger was reported severely cut and some bruises and cuts were received by the other two fire victims In the mishap, which involved a neighbor's car as they were en route to medical aid. The story of the fire was re lated by 12-year-old Virginia Al ger, who with, Mary, 11, and Leon, jr., 7, escaped practically unscathed. While the fire crackled through the frame house on the Silver Creek Falls highway three miles east of Silverton, Mary, sharing a bed with Net (Turn to Page 2, Col. 4) Shingle Weavers' Union Demands Pay Increases PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 12-tfV The AFL Oregon, Washington and Idaho shingle weavers' union an nounced Thursday it would de mand increased wages and two- weeks vacations with pay. The union said its 4000 mem bers would ask increases from 78 cents to $1 per hour and time and one half for all work over 30 hours per week. house of representatives and were repeated at scores of other ob servances. Democratic leader McCormack of Massachusetts eulogized the martyred Lincoln in the house as "a great president a great Ameri can and one of the outstanding men in the long history of man." "Lincoln preserved the nation from internal danger," he said "It is our duty to preserve the nation from external danger.",. In a low, firm voice, Mrs. Fran Sea y 1 r 1 2000 Salem Men Expected To Register Probably too ' men will be registered in Salem this week end for selective service, CoL Elmer V. Wooton, state director, said Thursday. , He ' estimated 1300 to 1460 would be signed In each of the other Marion coun ty boards, at Stay ton and Woodburn. CoL Wooton stated the figure was only a guess because an extremely large number of men within the age groups, 20-21 and 36-44, had enlisted in serv ices from this area. Registration f r Salem will be in the armory beginning at 1 pjn. Saturday. Ontario Chief Says US -Navy Fears Nippon TORONTO, Feb. 12-()-Mit-chell Hepburn, Ontario's provin cial premier, sounded the possi bility Thursday night of a Japa nese invasion of Canada in three months and charged that the Amerjcan navy "is afraid to make contact" with the Japanese fleet Hepburn's ire was fanned by criticism of his previous state ments in which he declared "the American navy is in hiding." "Wednesday Canadian Navy Minister Angus L. Mac Donald said Hepburn's statement, com ing from one who" had long been opposed to the Canadian national government, in no way reflected the official view In Ottawa. About the prospects of Japa nese invasion, Hepburn said "they will come down the prairie side . and not the Pacific." Al though he failed to elaborate his statement, he apparently had the (Turn to Page 2, CoL 4) Lincoln's ces P. Bolton, republican repre sentative from Ohio, read ' Lin coln's Gettysburg remarks. ' , .: In accordance with long cus tom, the republican party hold dinners in many, communities. Through all their speeches ran a keynote of unity in prosecution of the war against the axis, although party spokesmen have emphasized that there will be no moratorium on criticism where they consider criticism due. - j President Roosevelt, follow Isle Fight m V X;- somewhere on the Pacific ocean Associated Press). gue Sees Over-Faith Tells GOP at Boise US Too Confident; Red Tape Slapped BOISE, Feb. 12-(ff)-Warning against overconfidence in Ameri can strength in the present con' flict was given Thursday night by Gov. Charles A. Sprague of Ore gon in an address at the annual republican Lincoln day banquet "The pages of history are full of the failures of great nations of great armies because their greater powers were inexpertly handled," he asserted. He admonished members of the republican party "to refrain from criticism which seeks only party advantage" and declared "in many respects we have failed on our industrial front Business was slow to pitch in on war work . strikes slowed down production or delayed shipping. The governor also remarked there had been "woeful lack of coordination" In. Washington and that "bureaucratic obduracy and red tape have crippled en terprise." . "All of these initial failures can be overcome," he said. "It is un thinkable that this nation, the (Turn to Page 2, CoL 2) State Farmers Donate Iron PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 12P) Three thousand tons of scrap iron and steel enough to make ,; 250 light tanks have been turned in by farmers . of 10 Oregon coun ties, the state department of agri culture war board was told Thursday. . Robert B. Taylor, Adams, state chairman, urged farmers to re double their efforts to clean up scrap piles. Collections of the metal have been made by granges, the Future Farmers of America and AAA committeemen. Birthday ing s ess tent of past years. drove to the Lincoln Memorial beside the Potomae river with a wreath. - 4 Bareheaded in a chill wind, 'the president stood ' within- a : cordon of soldiers while his military side, Colonel Horace B. Smith, laid the floral tribute at the base of the Lincoln Statue and the band play ed the "Star Spangled Banner." Lord Halifax, , the British am bassador, placed a wreath on Lin coln's tomb In Springfield,. BL 7 w' ; bpra WarMbrt Of US Hit ByWillkie Wants MacArthur Army Head; Flays Perkins, Knox BOSTON, Feb. 12--Wen- dell Willkie asserted Thursday night that there was "lack of mutual confidence and central direction' among our various fighting forces" and demanded that Gen. Douglas MacArthur be brought home from the Philippines and placed in su preme command under the president. "Then," Willkie told the Mid dlesex Republican club, "the peo ple of the United States will have reason to hope that skill, not bungling and confusion directs their efforts." The republican leader's asser tion came in a prepared Lincoln dinner address in which he assail ed what he termed "nibbling"' by the administration at the authori ty of Secretary of State Hull, and he criticized the administration's labor policy, declaring "we need a Bevin, not a Perkins." As for the part , the republican party should play, Willkie said "let us do more proposing than opposing. Let us exercise our freedom by developing our own policies." "The day of phrase-making and showmanship for those in government Is past," he added. "The time for petty political opposition and negation is over. This is the day for touch and resolute men; this is the hour for patriotic men." Calling on the republicans to force "necessary reforms in or ganization" of the nation's war effort Willkie said: "In the case of production and labor, the confusion has arisen from failure to appoint adminis trators. In the case of the state department, we see our most re spected department of govern ment gradually being destroyed by a process of nibbling at the authority of the administrator... all because this administration did not know and has not learned (Turn to Page 2, CoL 7) Hoodoo Day? Watch Step! Friday 13th This is a .season of marriages in Salem and s time for regis tration of candidates seeking of fice, but the man on the street is saTe in predicting that few will apply for marriage licenses today or file for places en the ballot Throughout this "unsu perstltious" world this k Fri day, the 13th, doubly unlucky. What Is more this is only the beginning, for the 1942 calendar contains three such days, March and November completing the trio. To the capital city's curbstone philosophers, who Thursday night took time off from telling the president how to ran the country, the editor how to pub lish his paper and passing driv ers Just what was wrong with their technique, there Is a simple answer for persons who worry about Implication of this date. "It's Friday, the 13th fat Ger many, Japan and Italy, too, Isnt Itr they asked and then turned their eyes and conversations to the sUk stocking problem. Famed Artist Dies on . Eve of 50th BiiihcLiy IOWA CITY, la, Feb. 12-(ff) Grant. Wood, famed mid-western artist : whose : paintings caused periodic nation-wide 'Controver sies, died here Thursday.. Recognized as - one of the greatest- portray era on canvass of the mid-western scene and the leader In what .has- been' termed a new "regional" school of art, the Iowan would - have been , 50 years old Friday. ', ; Over 2861 Receipt Returned to Statesman An 80-year old reminder that The Oregon Statesman Is one of Oregon's earliest newspapers, a subscription receipt Issued in 186L was brought to the States man office Wednesday by Mrs. L Knox, 1I1S Sooth High street Signed on the back, "Receipt from' Bosh," evidently by Asahel Bush, founder of The Statesman, the receipt read: "Received of John Wilson SIS for The Oregon Statesman Vols. 8, f, 10, and 11. Salem, Oct IS, 1861. (signed) H. Gor don." Wilson, Mrs. Knox said, was the grandfather of her brother-in-law, E. J. Sears, of Cot tage tirove. Japs Close in On Singapore British Admit Enemy Within Two Miles of Gty's Outskirts BOMBAY, Feb. 12-(JPy-Tht British Thursday night reported an intensification of Japanese pressure on the northern part of Singapore Island and Officially announced that the invaders-were within two miles of the city of Singapore itself. (This dispatch, delayed in trans mission from Bombay, although confirming earlier indications of the British position on Singapore island brought the first official announcement of this position.) Thursday nig ht's regular Singapore communique, relayed here : by radio, stated that "heavy fifhting continues in the western and northern sectors" of the island, and Indicated that the British still held the naval base in the north. The British line, said the com munique, runs from this base to Tanglin in the south. Tanglin is a point just two miles northwest of Singapore city. The British also reported suc cessful counter-attacks on the Japanese left flank, presumably at the north of the island. The communique relayed here by wireless. "At 7:SS sjil, today, Japanese military bombers with a fighter escort fought an unsuccessful engagement against our air force over Malaya. "Heavy fighting continues in the western and northern see tors. In the north of ihe Island enemy activity has been intensi fied. "Enemy sir activity ceased dur ing the night, but was resumed early this morning. The enemy attack was supported by d 1 v e- bombing and machine-gunning as well ss by medium tanks. "The British line extends from the naval base in the north to the center of the island to Tanglin in the south. "From Sungei Sunya the line runs north. Counter attacks by our (Turn to Page 2, CoL S) Boys Locate Odom s Body AtTroutdale PORTLAND, Ore., Feb, -() The body of Foster L. O d o m, Oregon City contractor missing since ; January 6 when a car in which he was riding plunged Into the Sandy river near Troutdale, was found Thursday by two 12-year-old boys, r Odom's family h&d offered a re ward of $1000 for recovery of the body.. The boys we re Richard Schultze and Martin Chase, both Troutdale. . ' .-., - Odom w a s - a ' Salem resident until a few years, ago, - . TTednesflays Weather : Weather forecasts . withheld and temperature delayed by army request Elver Thursday, . f feet Max. temperature, Wed nesday, 52, mbx, 28. . ano 0 Japs Set For Final Bataan Awaits Mass Attempt; Isle Occupied WASHINGTON, Feb. 12-() A Japanese drive southward to occupy the remaining islands of the Philippines was disclosed Thursday as more enemy troops massed for a renewed attempt to smash the defenses of the Bataan peninsula. Nipponese troops who pre sumably moved southward from Luzon occupied the island of Masbate, the war department announced. Thus they extended their control to the central part of the archipelago which had es caped invasion. In Masbate, seventh largest is land in the Philippines, the invad ers are within 200 miles of clos ing the gap between the island of Luzon and Mindanao, the south ernmost extremity. Within a les ser radius are Cebu and Hoilo, the second and third cities of the Philippines. ? Masbate, the captured island, was one of the best airports in the Philippines .end Is the site of a large gold inlnej ' " ; ' '" -. A eompartive lull in the Ba taan fighting In last 24 hours was said to Indicate that the enemy- was awaiting additional new supplies and reinforce ments before resuming the of sense against Gen. Douglas MaeArthur's little defending UV7i In Manila and other occupied areas of the islands, the Japanese had clamped tight control over an printed matter. A late day com munique from the war department told of a Japanese proclamation (Turn to Page 2, CoL. 3) Third Crash at McChord McCHORD FIELD, Wash. Feb. 12 HJPh An army bomber crash. after the pilot apparently kept the plane aloft to avoid plunging into a small community 20 miles east of Seattle, carried four men to death late Wednesday night The; twin-motored light bomb er landed in a swampy pasture near 4be town of Tolt Police Chief William Munson said the plane was flying low and the pilot seemed to be trying to keep It aloft The dead: Second Lieut Harry L. Klein, 24, 5308 Montrose, Ave., Chicago, pilot lis widow lives In Tacoma. Corp. W. W. Bentley, 23, Post Falls, . Ida. Mother, Mrs. Jennie B. ' Bentley, Post Falls. Pvt Walter M. Dings, 24, Seat tle. His mother lives In Seattle. First Lieut Harry C. Hosfelt Detroit Mich., an observer. His widow lives at 290-S. Morrell St, Detroit CoL Annin F. Herald, Mc (Turn to Page 2, CoL 4) . PRESS TIME! By lis latest press fime la thsj tfexta, your Oregon Stcrtesman dally gives t ;yw -v .. -. 'IMxi Latest sports- . . Latest world news. ; f : . '; t . No " increase ; in price, t - ; ';- - y ; " r 'pr mo.'!- 1. By carrier . Assaults Reported British Lose ; 42 Planes in Channel Row LONDON. Friday, Feb. 1 3- ( AP) The long-refuged German battleshipt Gneisenau and S e h a r n -horst and the criuser Prina Eugen slipped away from their French coast anchor ages Thursday with a strong air and surface es cort and engaged the royal airf orce and the British navy in the greatest land-sea-air battle off the Dover coast since the fall of France. After the furious battle, to which even the shore guns on the Dover cliff added their thun der, the German ships were last reported escaping to new bases In the Helgoland bight The cost was great to both sides, in this tremendous gamblo to free the 28,000-ton battleships and the Prinz Eugen, a survivor of the Bismark-Hood sinkings, for new nazi implements in the battle of the Atlantic The British acknowledged they lost 42 planes including 20 bomb ers and said "casualties in our destroyers were not heavy." The Joint admiralty-air minis try communique early Friday placed the German losses at It fighter planes and said that de spite poor visibility, the crews of British planes and surface ships claimed five or six hits with torpedoes on the big - ships. RAF pilots also . were : convinced they scored -direct bomb hits on the threfesseifc.;U B ..i The liavy : German "ships, bombed and reported hit fre 1 (Turn to Page X CoL 1) Posters Warn Enemy Aliens Prohibited Areas in Oregon to Be Vacated Sunday Says Order C. S. Burdell, special assistant to the attorney general, has an nounced that enemy aliens must vacate prohibited areas in Oregon by midnight February 15. CoL Joseph L. Stromme, com manding officer at the Portland air base, said that the same held true of the area around the base although it was not one of the regular prohibited districts. Posters in English, German, Italian and Japanese are to be distributed notifying aliens to con sult their federal social security boards for additional information. PORTLAND, Feb. 12-PV-Ene- tny aliens may be barred from additional areas in Oregon, US Attorney Carl C Donaugh said Thursday as federal agents began posting the 23 prohibited districts already designated. Future orders may include the Portland metropolitan region, Donaugh said. If this Is done, he' estimated the total number of aliens affected in the state will be about 5000. Under present re strictions only about 1500 mostly Japanese merchants and truck gardeners are affected,' he said. PORTLAND, Ore, Feb. 12-UPi Two Japanese, one German and one Italian aliens were arrested as federal bureau of investigation ' agents searched alien homes in the Astoria district, J. Douglas Swen- son, FBI chief here, said Thurs day :- '; . ,. v - Swenson said those arrested had contraband articles In then . possession. Eight guns, anuavunl- tion, two sticks of dynamite and -five short wave radios were confiscated la the raid. : -iThe search centered in the vi cinity of Tongue; Point naval sir station, - Fort Stevens, r Astoria, Hammond and warren ton Oreson Get Contract : PORTLAND, Feb. 12 - (ff) - A $3,001,000 contract fpr $redproctt ing " marine . engines f, has; been awarded by , the maritime, com-' mission to a Portland pooi of IS metal working plants X. CVSam mons, president of the group, an nounced Thursday. . . ' . :. ' ' 1