The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 02, 1942, Page 1, Image 1

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    Keep Posted
' Momentous events
'Sound Good?.
BERLIN (frera German :
Broadcast), July l-(JF) ,
Axis plan rt arc dropping lc r
liars attached to parachutes
over axis columns fighting
la the terrifle heat ef Egypt,
the German radio said Wed
nesday night , ' ,
la all parts of the world
while you sleep but also
while The Statesman news
services art reporting them.
Keep posted; read The
Statesman.
PCUND3D JCZi
ITCIETY-JECOHD YEAH
Salcxn. Oregon, Thursday Morning, July 2. 1942
Fide 5c
Ho. 74 '
M&BM
US Builds
Sea Base,
Uri Ireland
' r - -
Center Begun
1 In December '
UNITED STATES NAVAL
Ireland, " Tuesday, July
The US navy has completed a
. giant operating b a s e here
guarding t h e western a p
proaches of Britain in the criti
cal battle of the Atlantic. ,
Londonderry in this war has
become the counterpart of
Queenstown (Cobh), now in neu-
'tral Eire, which during the first
World war was base for as many
as 82 United States warships at
-one time.-.
The. Dondonderry base is de
signed to refit, repair and supply
destroyers and other light craft
; la Atlantic convoy doty. It was
commissioned February 5, bnl is
. just now receiving Its finishing
touches a Job virtaally com
pleted seven months jtfter US
' entry into the war. ;
"It already has lifted a great
burden of the convoy problem,"
- said Commodore Ross Stewart,
.commander of the adjoining Brit
ish naval establishment
Actual construction of the big
: base was started last year with
lend-lease funds and more than
8000 Irish and American laborers,
under direction of American civil
engineers headed by Commander
' Henry P. Nedham.
, Now hundreds of United States
laarines- and bluejackets : operate
machine shops, impiy.bases, dry
docks, control rooms, a hospital.
movies and barber shops. All this.
is spread over hundreds of acres
: Wartime security prevents re-
lating details of i the intricate
mechanism of the establishment,
but it Is ready to repair or re
, build anything from a typewriter
to the biggest American destroyer,
"Everything In the base down
to the last pork chop or not and
bolt has been brought from the
United States," vCapt William
larsea of Annapolis and Chl
: eage explained "It's a bit of the
United States transplanted.'
. The hundreds, of men required
to operate the base are housed in
deluxe Vnionset hiitsV prefabri
cated t- home and put together
, here.'VScores of warehouses are
t :'v (Turn to Page 2, Col. 7):
Polk County
Areas ClosedL
Virtually all of the forested
area of western Polk county was
rlmwl tn ntrv. excent bv nermit
in a proclamation issued by Gov
Charles A. Sprague . here Wed
nesday and filed with the secre-
tary of state. -.s -
The closed area includes the
properties of the Cobbs-Mitchell
Lumber company and thelWill-
- amette Valley Lumber company.
: The proclamation was request
ed by State Forester Nels Rogers
because of hazardous fire condi
I tions resulting .from the current
warm weather.
Federal forests; in Oregon were
rinsed Tuesday and other . closure
proclamatiortS-will be issued later
in the week, officials said;
30 Killed
WELCH, W. Va, July -l.r(P)
State police reported Wednesday
night the bodies of 21 men had
been recovered from the wreck
age of a south-bound army trans
port which crashed in flames af
ter -losing J wing at 500 feet.
State Trooper Tom Harrison
said that ten bodies were found
late Wednesday afternoon, and
that a search of the mountains in
the area was being conducted to
ascertain if any others had been
nhnard the Craft.
All of the bodies were brought!
here Wednesday night to await
identification by army officers.
Eight state troopers were
. guarding the plane, Identified
by markings as a former Amer-
lean Airline flagship, which
,' crashed earlier In the day la a
" victory garden plot ewned by
: miners In the village of Pre
mier, three miles from Welch.
I- -Lieut.-1. B. Crawford said the
troopers would remain on guard
,fn cririiera arrived from an
..army post in Ohio. v
US Carrier
Aids Malta
In 2 Runs -
WASHINGTON, July HP)
The United States aircraft car
rier Wasp has run the bristling .
gauntlet of the Mediterranean at
least twice, delivered plane re
inforcements at Malta and re
turned unharmed.
On one trip it arrived Just in
time for the British ' planes It
carried to surprise and Inflict
considerable losses upon an at
tacking enemy air force.
. The navy made this announce
ment Wednesday, and authori
ties disclosed that the ferrying
voyages occurred some weeks
ago, before the present grim
battle in Egypt began. Whether
the aerial reinforcements might
have any effeet en the current
struggle to save Egypt was not
stated. -
So far as events' conld .. be
pieced together from the navy's
laconic communique, the de
liveries occurred at about 'the
time the nails were pouring
troop and supplies Into north
Africa In preparation for Field
Marshal Era in Rommel's re
cent offensive. At that time the
air force based on Malta had '
been decimated ; by repeated
axis attacks.
The announcement left un
answered the question whether
American planes and American
pilots, as well as British, were
taken to Malta. It was con
sidered obviously ' possible that
the American fliers .were now
a part of the island's garrison.
The exact number of trips made
by the Wasp also was uncer
tain. ' . ;
Hilary Witt
Try.Saboteurs
24 Aliens Seized With
Radios, Guns Near
New York Gty
WASHINGTON, July HflVThe
eight men accused of landing on
the east coast .from German sub
marines for the purpose of com
mitting sabotage probably will be
tried by a military commission
next week, it was learned Wednes
day, and the death penalty will
be sought ' -
Government officials have been
reluctant to discuss the case be
cause of numerous1 legal techni
calities and its importance. How
ever, some information has come.
from the joint meetings of war
and justice department officials
which began Monday " and ran
through Wednesday. This much
was indicated:f
President fLoosevelt will ap-
' point a seve4-member military
commission. 'This Is very much
like a court martial, but Is used
to. try civilians rather than mili
tary prisoners.
Attorney General Biddle wil
personally present the govern
ment'fe case at a closed trial to be
held in Washington. f - C
The defendants will be repre
sented by a lawyer of extensive
experience and well known in the
capital. : ;:.
The .eight prisoners now are held
in New York, but would be
brought to Washington by the mid
die of next week for the trial. They
were listed as George John Dasch,
leader; Ernest Peter Burger, Hein
rich Harm Heinck and Robert
Quirin. alleged to have ' landed
' (Turn to Page 2. CoL 2)
in 2
Ten bodies were removed while
the cabin of - the 24-place plane
still burned. The 11th was located
in mid-afternoon. Officers waited
for the nun to cool to continue
their search for others.. -
State troopers sept out posses
ever the wooded mountains af
ter miners at Coalwood said
they thought they saw . men
leave the ship before It crashed..
The . plane was so low ; para
chutes could not have opened,
the" miners said. v
The big plane, headed south,
first was seen over Coalwood,
about five miles from Premier,
around -noon. Observers saw it
was in trouble and said smoke
was coming from the fuselage.
i ARCH FIELD, Califs July V
(Jfy-A four-motored army bomb
er crashed - and exploded ; on the
top of a low knoll near here
Wednesday, killing cine men.
The huge Consolidated B-24
exploded with a roar heard for
miles around, axd first reports
Plane
OKI Slash
A i '
a II a r c ay
On Fruit
Henderson Appeals to Public Against
Congress; Gdls First Price Break ,
On Fruit 'Isolation, Setback' .
' J. ; ' .'. "... , .' -. r .i
WASHINGTON, JulyM-Price Administrator Leon Hen
derson appealed to public opinion Wednesday night in his battle
with congress, declaring that the proposed slash, in his agency's
funds would lead to "utter disorganization and anarchy" in
the work of price control and rationing. .
Henderson issued a statement saying that the $75,000,000
Paulus Pacldhg
Company Hit
By Walkout
- '
'Unauthorized' Strike
Estimated to Have
148 Employes
A group of Paulus Bros. PackT
ing company employes estimated
by union members to number 148
went on strike Wednesday seek
ing, their chairman' said, higher
wages and changes in working
conditions.
The -plant, at Trade and Lib
erty streets, continued in opera
tion.' ' ' - i. . .
The strike is "unauthorised"
by either the American Federa
tion of Labor or Local 23,104 of
the APT cannery, worker
union, and can have no official
sanction front the Salem Trades
SJid Labor council, three AFL
representatives said. . ';'
Management of the cannery de
clined to comment on the walk
out, to estimate the number of
strikers or to disclose the number
of employes now engaged in pro
cessing cherries and other fruit
- "There is nothing I can say,"
George Paulus, manager, declared.
A group , of the strikers . an
nounced after attending a mee?;
ing of the cannery workers' local
Wednesday night that, they were
asking . for seniority rights, .plac
ing of shop stewards in each Sa
lem cannery i and for wages -exceeding
the state labor law min
imum of 52 cents an hour for
women and 2 cents for men.
a spokesman, WiUiam L. Carver,
reported.'
"We tried to organize the-employes
but haven't got any recog
nition," "said George Bernhardt,
who served as f chairman of the
strike committee when 38 work
men , from the cook room night
shift .walked out at 5:30 a. m.
Wednesday, and later - stood - a
watch on the picket line. "This
(Turn to Page 2, Col. 1)
Nazi Raiders
Shot Down
LONDON, Thursday, July 2.-(vP)-Three
German bombers were
destroyed over the continent Wed
nesday night, it was authorita
tively stated Thursday.
German raiders bombed scat
tered areas of the coast of South
Wales early Thursday.
The planes flew over one town
for some time at intervals of only
a few minutes. ; -
I
were that a load of bombs were
detonated by the impact. The
" army announced after a pre
liminary Investigation, however,
that the. ship was on a routine
training flight, was net carry
ing bombs m far as waa known,
and that the explosions were
caused by Its gasoline tanks.
There were two separate exslo-
sions. . -
The dead: :
first Lt Robert K. Murphy, 25,
Twin Falls, Ida the pilot. "
Second IX Jack, W. Green, 24,
Kansas City, Kan., co-pilot
SUtt Sgt Charles H. Davis, 27,
New Boston, Ohio. ;
Staff Sgt. Norman S. Ander
son, 25, Enderlin, ND.
Sgt John D. Rice, 25, Higbee,
Mo. .
Corp. Harry Scuff os, jr, 19,
Spartanburg, SC.
PTC James R. Stephens, 22,
Remington,Va. -
Pvt Jack Hearell, 29, Eldorado,
Kan. '
Pvt Bill Rosser, 27, Anson, Tex.
Crashes
Portends6 Axi
v - iO ; S
, e liiiig
Punctured
appropriation contemplated for
the OPA in a bill passed by the
house, or any amount below the
$161,000,000 -he j originally re
quested, would cripple his agency
and would mean "in short, that
price, rent and rationing controls
are all placed in jeopardy."
This followed an announce-
'ment by Henderson" that he "isl
being compelled to take meas
ures that will raise retail prices
of the-4942 pack of canned and
dried fruits by as much as. 15
per cent and possibly more,";
representing . the first puncture
of' the universal price ceiling.
: He indicated that congress wax
to blame for this, because, of spe
cial price concessions it granted'
to farm products and its failure .to
vote government subsidies to
maintain price ceilings.
!G rowers' prices for fruit have
risen sharply under .the I parity
formula, and because; of the
standards set in the price control
act, : can not be prevented from
climbing to levels at least 110
per cent of parity," he said. This
would be a price giving a unit of
farm production 10 per cent more
purchasing power .than It' had
from 1909- tovlil4.:,-!sU5I
The reduced appropriation ' for
operations. duruig" the fiscal year
which Started Wednesday, Hen
derson said, "would require a cut
below the presently authorized
staff of the f office of price ad
ministration a staff that Is "al
ready badly overworked.
The office of price adminis-
Turn to Page 2, CoL 5)
US in Wheat
Pool,ReUef
Five Countriet Sign
To Stop Famine in .
Post-War Era. ' -" '
WASHINGTON, July l-(ff)-The
United States and four other na
tions have decided to 'create ; a
wheat pool of not less than 100,
000,000 bushels : for .the relief of
famine in war-stricken areas, the
state department announced Wed
nesday.;,; ' ' r - ' ..;
The decision was embodied in an
agreement looking' toward control
of prices, production and exports
of the bread grain. Signers of the
pact were the United States, Great
Britain.' Canada ! Australia and
Argentina. " " "
Worked out by the five coun
tries participating in the Washing
ton wheat meeting last April, the
agreement became effective June
27, the date on which formal ap
proval of the respective govern
ments was transmitted..
Canada and the United King
dom are to furnish 25,001,000
bushels of wheat flour to the
relief pool, and the United States
b to provide 50,0?0,000 bushels.
These nations, with , Argentina,
would famish additional- sup
plies, as required en a basis, to
be worked out' by the govern
ments : Involved. Argentina's
exact quota apparently is to b e
determined later. : ". : -The
memorandum agreement,
approved by the five Countriesv.Js
designed aa a first step toward the
conclusion, after the war, of a
comprehensive wheat agreement
between all countries concerned in
the international wheat trade.
The agreement provides that as
soon as conditions warrant, - the
United States shall convene a gen
eral .international .wheat confer
ence. . At this meeting the draft
convention f of an international
agreement drawn up by the Wash
ington wheat meeting will be sub
mitted for consideration.
. This would call for an interna
tional wheat council to fix 'basic
nynimum and maximum jprices. It
also would provide for lowering
of barriers against imports and
control of exports. If the draft
convention were adopted the basic
export quotas for Argentina, Aus
tralia, Canada and the United
(Turn to Page 2, Cot )
Begin Fight
In Desert
- CAIRO, July l-P)-The main
British armored forces, bolstered
by reserves, finally locked arms
Wednesday with fixe onrushing
axis 'columns in Egypt in a last
ditch effort to pinch off the hos
tile advance in the desert bot
tleneck west of El Alamein, only
70 miles from the Nile delta.
The immediate stake was the
great British naval base of Alex
andria, and for the British all
their holdings in the middle east j
were imperiled. , - -
Just ; before midnight avail
able scanty dispatches indicated
the battle area still remained
Just west of El Alamein and ex-,
tended 30 or 40 miles inland
from the coast '
' There was no positive news
of the course of -the churning
(Turn to Page 2, CoL 3)
Parliament in
Churchill-Oust Move
To Have Final :
Talks Today
' By. The Associated Press '
LONDON, Thursday, July 2
Prime Minister Churchill's critics,
angered by . British military re
verses in Libya and Egypt, still
were demanding his removal as
defense ' minister in . the early
morning hours Thursday in a
house of commons session which
set a war-time record for length.
Government speakers already
had aesored the members Wed
nesday at the- opening " of the
debate thatJ. American dive-
"lombers, snore t:ivyinksVaneT'
British . anti-tank guaa- were
; reaching the hard-pressed lm-'
perlal defenders of Egypt
But the members continued to
debate far past midnight and
the session was enlivened par
ticularly at one point when John
"Jock" McGovern, the fiery in
dependent laborite, snapped:
"If I had to choose between Hitler-
and ; the prime . minister the
choice would be a very hard one."
. McGovern termed Churchill the
"most Intolerant and arrogant
member of the house. . ,
While the length of this session
could not be divulged, the previ
ous record in January of ten hours
and 20 m i n u t e s easily was
eclipsed.;.'
Winaton Churchfll's minister
of production, Oliver Lyttleton,
and . the prime minister's long
- time supporter, . lrd Beaver-;
brooky, likewise- confidently '
; bucked the tide of recrimination
from critics of all parties and
defended ' both quantity and
quality of the' weapons with '
which the British eighth army
failed to stop the German Afri
can corps in Libya and western
Egypt . '--'v ;1
LytUeton and other government
speakers in both houses frankly
conceded past miscalculations,
however, and left much criticism
unanswered.
Churchill will wind up the de
bate Thursday and he Is expected
to get a sizeable vote of confi
dence, despite the concentration of
criticism.
In the house of commons. Sir
John Wardlaw-Milne, sponsor of
the . non-confidende -motion on
which the ; debate is ipitched.
called angrily Wednesiay , for
separation of the prime minister
from; the ministry of defense,
charged that Churchill's optimistic
reports on British preparedness In
the Middle East had been "untrue
and inaccurate,", and said' that
lack of equipment was a "terrible
indictment of the -government
He asked for a full-time leader on
a chief of staffs' committee.
AtoiraX;? the- fleet Sir Roger
Keyes accused thev admiralty of
failing 'inexcusably" to give ade
quate air protection to the Medi
terranean fleet He pictured an
"intolerable situation in which
Britain's war machine is lumber
ing from one disaster to the next"
Salem Heat Hits
Nev: June High
June, regarded previously as a
wet, cold month, ended Tuesday
sizzling like water on .a hot stove,
for that day saw a new record in
June heat when the mercury rose
to 102 degrees. - -Records
kept at the Salem of
fice of the weather bureau extend
tack to 1223, sxd the nesmt to
Tuesday's mark was found to have
been In 1&25 and 1S2S when old
Lon
Debate
Sol raised it to ICO degrees.
RniaM.Adkiniit
Up in Fierce FigBtin
For Key to Camcasiiis
Berlin Claims
FallatNooii
Mass of Ruins Greets
Victors, Report; '
Air Troops Plan .
By The Associated Press .
BERLIN1 (f r o m German
Broadcasts); Jul yl -The
capture of Sevastopol, great
soviet stronghold bailed - by
the German besiegers as "the
most powerful land and sea
fortress In the .world," . was
announced Wednesday night
by the .German high command
a f t e r a siege of nearly a
month. .
The entire waterfront at Sevas
topol is in . flames from a fire
started by nazi bombers, the Ger
man radio said. 'Docks were re
ported blazing fiercely and the
harbor region . was obscured by
smoke. - .
A special communique broad
cast from the eastern front head
quarters Of Adolf Hitler with the
customary fanfare of trumpets de
clared that the soviet port, which
in effect has been - under- siege
since jast November 7, fen to Ger
man and Rumanian troops at noon
Wednesday. :
."The number of prisoners tak
en and the amount of war ma
terial seized can not yet be esti
mated," the special communique
added. ; .. : . .-;
"The remnants of the beaten
soviet ; Sevastopol army ' have
fled to the Kbersones peninsula.
Pressed closely together within
. the narrowest space, they are
facing destruction."
(The Khersones peninsula is a
spit of land just outside Sevasto
pol and is the southwestern ex
tremity of the Crimean peninsula.)
"The conqueror of Sevastopol,
the Germans said, was Col.-Gen.
: - (Turn to Page 2. CoL I)
Allies Bomb
Jap Aircraft
Celebes Raided;! Both
Buildings, Graft;
Hit in Wide Area '
' A LLIED HEADQUARTERS,
Australia, Thursday, July 2-(JP)
Allied bombers in a long over-water
hop poured explosives on
packed Japanese aircraft at the
Kendari airdrome fin Dutch Ce
lebes Wednesday,' General Mac
Arthur's headquarters announced
Wednesday.
An air officer commanding a
large allied area who personally
directed .the operation said: .
"It was a most successful raid.
' Airplanes were parked on the
airdrome everywhere. 1 saw
' bombs hit one group of air
craft while incendiaries started
fires."
One gunner complained r e was
so busy over Celebes getting ready
for -'Japanese fighters which
never came that he didn't have
time to see our own fun."
The pilots said they made sev
eraL low runs over their objee
tiveo and that direct hits were
scored - on buildings as well as
grounded planes. ,
Other, allied units dropped ex
plosives on grounded Japanese
aircraft in Portuguese Timor, at
tacked barrack and Jetties at Lae
and Sabmaua in New Guinea, and
targeta at - Tulagt and Bougain
ville in the Solomon island group
far to the northeast of Australia.
The allied attack on Salamaua
where large fires were left in the
dock' area followed up Sunday
night's commando land swoop on
a surprised 'Japanese garrison
which, suffered heavy casualties.
Tuesday's 7eather
Tuesday's max. temp. ' 1ZZ,
cLa. C2. 7tiztziij river, I.
By army request weather fore
easts witLhcid and temperature
data delayed, - .
Wednesday
Chocolate Bar
Destined to
Disappear
NEW YORK, Jnly l-(jP-The
Chocolate bar an American In
stitution comparable' to the hot
- dog may be as difficult to eb
, tain as a rubber tire after this
' year. : " v""y. ?
rrhere probably will be pien-'
ty of chocolate bars available
until the end of 1S42." an offl-eial-of
the Association of Manu
facturers of Confectionery and
' Chocolate said Wednesday. :
f Early In 1943 however, sup
plies will begin to get tight" he i
added, "and by Easter of next '
1 year production virtually j may
halt unless imports of cocoa
are Increased.";
Orcliardists
Renew Appeal
Hundreds' of Cherry
; Pickers Needed .
; Immediately - . . -
Hundreds of additional cherry
pickers are needed to save the
Willamette valley cherry croD, the
United States employment service
office, here, was notified by grow
ers Wednesday. The, rapidly rip
ening fruit must be taken from
the trees at once and the need
for pickers. Is very great
An appeal to the women of
Marion and Polk counties to help
with the cherry harvest-was
made Wednesday by Mrs. David
Wright chairman of the mobiliza
tion of women1 committee. v
.The 30ov acres of cherries
adjacent to Salem are ripening
rapidly and have gotten beyond
the control of the regular pick
ers and the boys and girls who
have been assisting,"; 'Mrs.
Wright said.
; I wish to take this- means of
calling to the - attention . of our
women the need for their help and
to urge them to get into the or
chards during the next few days
if possible.-
Mrs. Wright asked the women
to call the employment office for
information as to where they
were needed so they may go di
rectly to the orchards. . Where
transportation is needed, ' many
growers are picking up their
crews in .Salem and returning
them at night -
Mrs. Wright will. remain at her
desk in the employment service
office during this emergency to
assist in directing women who
wish to volunteer to go into the
orchards. , ev ,
Pickers are being rounded up
in smrromnding districts. ManrV
nearby towns are also . patting
on local campaigns to get large
numbers of pickers out Silver
(Turn to Page 2. CoL 1) '
111 Americans
Held by Japs
WASHINGTON. J u l v
The capture and imprisonment of
ill American sailors and marines
by the Japanese in China was an
nounced1 Wednesday b the war
department -.
' The men are held as, prisoners
of war-at Shanghai,, the depart
ment said," and next of kin of all
have been notified by the navy
department and marine coma.
Of the prisoners, the war de
partment said, 72 had been serv
ing at Peining and the other 29
at Tientsin. They included three
omcera and 1 1 enliated. men ox
the navy and 11 officers and 80
enlisted men of the marine corps.
Our Senators
Lcrl 5-2
r-v an.
Baclen
Inflict Huge
Losses Upon
Axis Troops
Germans Bring Fresh
Reserves to Cow
Crimean City-
By HENRY C. CASSIDY
MOSCOW, Thursday, July
2 (AP) The Russians offl.
dally acknowledged Thursday
that axis troops had succeed
e d in advancing In ' fierce,
hand - to - hand fighting for
Sevastopol bat German claims
that the Crimean port had
fallen were not confirmed
here. ;-' i . 1 ,v--:7?;!
The defenders of the huge fort
ress-port met as many as 20 Ger
man assaults on a single, position
in their last-ditch fight and the
bodies of hundreds of enemy men
were left on the field, the Soviets
declared. "V-:'"' - ":
The nazis "at the cost of enor
mous losses succeeded in advanc
ing a little, the soviet announced
in their rnidnirht-Mmmunifme '
The - titanic struggle for thfj
Crimean -feeport -'fortress t liy
(which the Germans ..announced
they had captured at noon Wed
nesday) flamed through the 27th
day1 of heavy ' siege Wednesday
while , far to thenoruV the red
rmy Twaa; reported beating off
constant waves of German tank
supported infantrymen in the
Kursk area ;30a miles south of
Moscow.
A supplement to the regular
communique said of the grim
Sevastopol struggle: ; .
"Regardless of e a or moas
losses, the enemy continues his
fierce storming ef SevastopoL
The gall ant def enJerrnf tho
c4ty are flgaUms-with aU -sacrifice
against superior forces of
Hitlerites.. '
- Sevastopol is a ; key to naval
control of the Black sea lanes
leading to the oil of the Cauca
sian mainland to the east and is
the only part of the Crimean pen
insula not yet fully conquered by
the nazi&. 4 i- :.
Rising time and again from the
stone rubble of the battered city
the red army and navy garrison
there has beaten off the nazi tide,
but soviet newspapers' have ac
knowledged their outnumbered
troops1 were in . an increasingly
crave tvoeition. The fofendera
have been handicapped by lack of
aircraft b e c a u s e of the narrow
corner they held on the peninsula. -
Of tfie fighting In the Kursk
area the regular communique said
"pur troops repelled attacks of
the German fascist troops.' .
"On some sectors large tank op
erations took place. The enemy
suffered heavy losses in men and
equipment" . j 1
A supplementary bulletin also
said that the Germans were
bringing In fresh reserves but
- "our artillery airmen, tonkmera
and Infantrrmen are sueeessful-
y smashing the enemy's tank
.and Infantry units." -
r--' ,---r,
. Press dispatches had reported
earlier - a resumption flighting
100 mile west of Moscow, but the
communique said there were no
significant changes on 'that front
or elsewhere. - ? -
Two Treated fo
Heat Prostration
Two cases of heat - prostration
are being . treated at - the- Salem
Deaconess hospital as a result' of
the high Tuesday and Wednes
day temperatures1 "tlrs. ? Qeorge
Lomax, 1135 " South :J2th street
was admitted Tuesday' and was
reported early this morning to be
in. "just fair" ' condition: Getting
along well this morning was Gail
Matthews, 18, SakafUCA, iA
employe at a local .cannery. l !at
thews was taken td the Descone;i
for treatment Wednesday.