The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 28, 1942, Page 2, Image 2

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    li. OREGON STATESMAN. Saltm. Orwjon. Tuesday Morning. My EI. IStt
PAGE TWO
m
i hwihimh r -
By KIRKE L.
Wtda World War Analyst
The Russians have announced
tov. at the uortal of the Caucasus,
defense line is tottering all along the lower Don rrom tne Rostov
area eastward to the great bend of the river 50 miles or less
from Stalingrad and the Volga.
The same communique telling
of the withdrawal from Rostov,
which the red army wrested back
from the Germans last winter re
ported abandonment of Novocher
kassk, 20 miles to the northeast
of Rostov. Earlier, Moscow ad
mitted at least two bridgeheads
on the south bank of the Don
were in enemy hands east of the
Donets inflow.
Novocherkassk is several miles
upstream on a small river flowing
Into the Don from the north.
.... . ! 4
wnemer ine nazis vmim w r
captured - Bataisk Junction, . 20
miles-south of Rostov on the main
rail and pipeline routes in the
Caucasus, represents still another
crossing of the Don or a flanking
J .iki. Miik - iM
VClOklVM - "
the river is not clear.
It makes little differed. In
either case the plight of the
whole Russian left flank is cri
tical if Bataisk has been taken.
That eonld represent entrap
ment of all Russian forces sooth
of the Don below the Donets
conflnence to the Sea of Azov,
and collapse of the lower Don
defense line at Its strongest
point
Bataisk is a point on the Ros-
tov-Baku railroad where a high
way takes off westward to the
4 . A .n.r . nna (Ka YY" li 1 1
VUn 11 Vi. xvv v" w.j - v. ...
pie mouths of the Don. In Ger
man hands that Junction not only
represents an immediate threat to
the Maikop oil fields, less than
tOO miles farther south; but a pos
sible new sea-borne flanking in
vasion route to the Caucasus from
Tagonrog. It is less than 30 miles
airline from Tagonrog to Azov
a i- - iu ...
cross uic narruwiiig nuiuicaaicm
arm of the Sea of Azov across
the narrowing northeastern arm
of the Sea of Azov below Rostov.
The whole northwestern bulge
of -the Caucasus to the Maikop
oilfields could be quickly cut off
' by a further German surge south
ward from Bataisk. While that
filfi itself fa nf minor Imnnrtanee
compared ' to the great Caspian
shore pools, the Germans, if they
1 1 t X 1 J I A r J 1
reacneu it, wuuiu uc asixiue uuui
routes to Baku. They would be
In a position to strike down both
the north and south flanks of the
forbidding Caucasus range even if
ai l j n i x ir.i
beyond the Don bend.
; Berlin asserted the Don had been
crossed east of the Donets con
fluence several days before Mos
cow aon lieu onogeneaus nau
keen established on the south
bank in that region. There was
no mention of the Bataisk opera
tion from Moscow as this was
written, out, specinc uerman
claims of that nature rarely have
proved incorrect. The probabili
ties are, therefore; Bataisk has
been at least invested although it
seems unlikely the Don line was
J ' ! 4V. ir . - 4 n 4
reach it
However this new and most
menacing- German tn Into
' the Csaeasns was achieved. It
has tnly one encouraging aspect
- from aa allied nation viewpoint
It tends to confirm the lmpres-.
sion the whole nasi offenslTe re
volves aroand Hitler's argent
necessity of obtaining new and
considerable oil sources before
winter closes la again. The tre
mendous scope of his offensive
operations in Russia Is drawing
heavily on his reserve stocks
of natural or synthetic fnels, as
Is his long-distance sea blockade
campaign in American waters.
It goes without saying the Mai
kop region wells, refineries and
T!ntin will rloatnwl ntuUr
the soviet scorched-earth policy
If the threat becomes more im
minent Destruction crews are
probably already , assigned o do
.the Job and do it thoroughly.
Even with pipeline or rail eon
nections with the Caspian fields
broken, Russian needs could be
served by sea and Volga barges so
long as red armies retained con
trol of that transportation means.
There can be small doubt, how
ever, that very considerable Rus
sian forces along, the lower Don
below the Donets inflow and In
the' northwestern triangle of the
Caucasus which fronts on the sea
of Ar.ov are in deadly peril if the
Germans are already behind them
. 4 t- -.-' ... .
v oauuu,
A desperate retreat southward
before the trap closes completely
may confront the whole southern
flank of Marshal ' Timoshenko's
line if the claimed nazi spear
head at Bataisk cannot bo pinched
off without relay.
Nutrition Meet Set '
CORVALLIS. July 27-V-Dean
Ava B. Milam, state chairman of
nutrition committees for defense,
announced Monday that the state
and Portland committees will
meet at Portland Wednesday with
national and regional directors.
SIMPSON
lor Ths State nan
their withdrawal from Ros
and Berlin says the Soviet's
Bean Pickers
Appear Fewer
Season to Begin Next
Week, Spread Over
Longer Period
(Continued from Page 1)
15, and the three harvests will
be finished Jby October 1. accord-1
ing to advance estimates. I
Bean pickers will receive one
and three-quarters cents a pound
and a quarter cent bonus. Prune j
and hop picking prices have not
been set
"The harvest problem has to be
handled by the people of the dis
trict; there are no migratory
workers this year," W. H. Baillie,
manager of the local employment
service, said Monday.
"It behooves the people of Sa
lem and the other towns of the
area to see to it that these crops
are harvested."
Businessmen in many towns of
the Willamette valley have made
plans to delay opening of their
places of business at least until
10 o'clock in the morning to per
mit employes to work in the har
vest field.
Towns where this has been ar
ranged include Stayton, Mt. An
gel, Gervais, McMinnville, New-
berg and Woodburn.
J. N. Bellinger
Said Tortured
By Japanese
PORTLAND, Ore., July 27-iS5)
Friends said here Monday that the
Jasper N. Bellinger mentioned as
among American newspaper men
arrested by Japanese in Tokyo is a
former Lebanon, Ore., resident
Bellinger's name was included
an a dispatch by Utto JJ. Tons-
chus, New York Times correspond- stead of 1944 income. For pur
en t from Lourenco Marques, poses of these payments,' the in-
Portuguese East Africa, where
Americans from Japan are wait-
ing a Tisbound ship.
iolischus said ' Blliger7who
hn Arkin fnp th. Jnn
Time. Advprtw. was -mon(f
four newspaper men and women
sujected to physical torture. I
Tolischus added that other
corresponaem were seniencea io
at least 18 months in prison, but
that Beilmger escaped sentence.
He did not say whether Bellinger
was en route home.
Bellinger is a University of Ore
gon graduate, and a post-graduate
student of Wlamette university.
From 1937 to 1939 he taught Eng
lish in A orama Gakuin college in
Japan. He made a trip to this
country in 1939 before returning
tn Tnkvn to newsnaner work.
Bellinger was a member of The
Statesman news staff for a num-1
ber of months in 1934 and 1937,;
shortly before he accepted the
.teaching assignment in Japan.
Regional States'
Office Is Moved
c a nT9 a mrvrrc riw 9t m
The site of a r-nnsed regional
ff,v f 4K. mri .t.t. ---
v-4vv ssvaw vvumvu av mv
rnmnt- to Mit seven
-, in -.,,-
,-T-a nA itn ttsM f-i
... rh.no f-m
Sacramento to San Francisco
Monday by the California com-
mission on interstate cooperation.
Conimissioners voted to spend
$8000 in state fundsto heipfi-
nance the office. Other states in
the region include uregon, Wash
ington, Idaho,
Nevada, Arizona
and Utah-
Hamilton Hit hj
Heart Ailment
VALLEJO, Calif, July 21-m
mer Stanford university blocking
quarterback, is in the Mare island
navy , hospital under treatment for
a heart ailment.
He ha. been in the hom
Krnit ivht Ha Attri(tanta aaM
his sUy-would be "indefinite."
Congressmen Relax
WASHINGTON, July 27.-
Speaker Rayburn said after a talk
with President Roosevelt -Monday
he expected congress at least the
house end of it to be in informal
recess five or six weeks.
vuie ua women
KANSAS CITY, Kas- July 2T.
-(aVrhe International Brother-
hoed of Boilermakers will vote on
whether to admit women banned
from the AFL union for 62 years.
I Joint Return
Plan Rejected
Three Other Treasury
Plans Kept in Mind
Include Bond Tax
(Continued From Pag 1)
poses. Sometimes their total
taxes are lower than if each had
to file returns on income actually
received. 1
The rote acalns t federal tax
ation of the income from out
standing Issaes of state and
mnnleipal bonds also was said
to have been 14 to Z. What was
described as a large majority.
however, favored ratim
future issues.
The treasury had estimated
that taxation of outstanding issues
would raise about $200,000,000
but taxes on future issues were
calculated to yield only about
13,000,000 in the first year.
The group was said to have
voted 9 to 6 to hold open for
future study the; question of
changing oil and mining deple
tion calculation methods.
A huge increase in taxation, so
that half the government's ex
penditures would be met out of
current revenue instead of bor
rowing, was advocated by Sena
tor Wiley (R-wis)
"We should not consider for
one moment passing on to the
following generation more than
50 per cent of the cost of this
war," he said in a senate speech.
"If we do we are lickers.
The pending $6.271,O,00e
would bring total federal reve
nues to a total of only $21,-
000,000,000, he said, as against
prospective war expenditures of
72,000,000,000 daring the next
12 months.
Wiley suggested "timid, minc
ing steps" be abandoned; that
congress raise $36,000,000,000 by
taxation and insist Americans buy
$36,000,000,000 in war bonds
All senators voting for this
plan, he said, could demonstrate
leadership by pledging one-third
of their net incorne to the pur
chase of government bonds
The senate finance committee
heard a proposal for "advancing
the clock" on income tax collec
tions by collecting a treasury
bookkeeping operation which
would credit this year's payments
on 1942 instead of 1941- taxes,
making collections current there
after,
Beardsley Rami, of R, K.
Maey & Co- New York, ad
vanced this suggestion. The
plan, he said, would cancel
every individual's 1941 income
tax liability bat would cost the
treasury little if anything In
revenues new. J , . ,
He said this "'could be .accom
plished by considering the pay
ments
made this year by Indi
victuals as collections on 1942, in
dividual would calculate his 1942
revenue at the exact amount of
his actual revenue in 1941. By
en witness
,a. " individuals men would
have paid their current tax bilL
s j rr
VI CilUUllU n flgC
t , f1
I-J18pilte VrlVQ8
Strike Threat
SAN FRANCISCO, July
A month-old wage arbitration
dispute between the Pacific Grey
hound lines and some 1300 AFL
bus drivers and other employes
I threatened Monday to develop in-
w ueuP ot Greyhound lines in
j seven stales.
j F. W. Ackerman, company vice
f1,dent' said e had discovered
the union membership was bal
Ioting secretly on a proposal to
'suspend work" in California,
Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Arizona,
New Mexico and Texas.
The dispute was disclosed when
the company asked the San Fran
dsco superior court Monday to
determine what rights both part
ies have under a work contract
wbich xPire August 31
The company asserted it had
lt
been vainly since July
to enter into negotiations with
the AFL amalgamated assocla
tton of electric railway and
motor CMch employes of Amer-
1CU Ior new worxmg agreement.
w i i
Mussobni's Barber
And Chef Victims
NEW YORK, July 27-flVOne
of the Italian convoying planes
which flew on Premier Mussolini's
trip to north Africa, which was "to
end In triumph and, of course, in
Cairo," was shot down by the
RAF and his personal chef and
barber were drowned, the BBC
said Monday night in a broadcast
oy CBS
Rome broadcasts Saturday said
Mussolini flew to north ' Africa
after the fall of Tobruk and that
h ntamtd Vm Ju 20
I " ' mmmmmm. mmmm "mmmm
LatO SpOt3
LOS ANGELES, July 17-ff)
Coast: . . . i.;
I Seals
001-000;100-r3 9 2
I Los Angeles.02 100 01 4 19
T Seats-. Epperly (7) and Sprinz;
I Mallory and Todd.
. Tr- v f T v ..1 mf fm
Chamnion Chalkv Writrht and
Lulu Costantino of New York to-
J day were signed by Promoter
I Mike Jacobs for alS-round
1 featherweight title bout at Madl
I aon Square Garden September 23.
FBI Hunts Nazi Saboteur Throughout
5S -
'i)
f
1 - ft
i
Soundphotos show (left to right) Walter Kappe, alias Walter Kappel, 37-year-old lieutenant la the intelli
gence section of the German army; Rheinhold Rodolf Barth, railroad draftsman and saboteor, and Jo
seph Schmidt alias Paul Schmidt, who fled from Canada to Mexico, then to Germany, at the oat
break of war. The department of Jastice issued wanted circulars Identifying the men aa nasi saboteurs
ordered to the United States by the German high command to destroy vital war industries. Information
concerning the men was believed to have been obtained from the eight nasi saboteurs landed on the
Atlantic coast by a German U-boat r - : - - -
Germans Across
In Giant Battle
(Continued From Page 1) i
terminus for Caucasian oil and !
foods, and a shipbuilding center
near the corner of the sea of
A SOT. 1
Tuesday's war bulletin said ot
the Tsimlyansk area:
"The enemy repeatedly at
tempted to cross the river. Fight
ing is. going on with fluctuating
successes.
"In one sector the Germans suc
ceeded in pushing, forward but
were stemmed by a counter-attack
of soviet troops and lost during
this engagement 350 officers and
men killed."
The phrase "fluctuating suc
cesses" bore out press dispatches
which acknowledged the Germans
were flowing across the Don de
spite the wrecking of numerous
nazi pontoons by soviet airmen
and artillery.
The "retreat south of Rostov
further endangered the Soviets
because it increased the possibili
ties of a nazi attack on the red
flank from the German-held
Crimea.
The outlook for the Russians
was admittedly darker than
ever now because the soviet
people had hoped the Don bar
rier would be held at any cost.
Bat all Russian dispatches re
peatedly emphasised the nu
merical superiority of the at
tacking nasi army.
Not only is the Caucasus rich
in oil and grain, but it is the gate
way for allied supplies from the
middle' east Its severance from
the Russian hinterland would be
an eitremely heavy-jolt to the red
military machine.
The Germans also have the ad
vantage of several months of good
fighting weather ahead.
Only in the Voronezh area 300
miles north of Rostov were the
Russians claiming any distinct sue
cess. There the red army was re-
oorted to have made another
crossing of the Don to the western
bank after wiping out thousands
of nazi troops.
But the Russian successes in the
Voronezh area thus far have not
endangered the left nazi flank
enough to stem the southeastward
German tide which threatens the
Caucasus and Stalingrad on the
Volga communications route.
Russian dispatches said the
lawer Don river between Ros
ter and Tsimlyansk was
breached only at terrific cost to"
the Germans hot the Germans
dM cross.
Thousands of dead Germans lit'
tered the banks of the river or
slipped downstream in the swift
current along the smashed pon
toons, these dispatches said. But
long coils of German reserves al
ways were there to take the place
of the fallen, the Russians ad
mitted. -
This new, surging enemy tide
and bracing central resistance by
the red armies, coupled with aerial
warfare of a scope and intensity
hitherto unexceeded turned this
encounter of tangling masses into
one of the greatest battles of his
tory.
It was obviously the most im
portant battle fought on Russian
soil since the Germans first
crunched into Russia's western
buffer front on June 22 last year.
The oil, mineral and agricultural
riches of the Caucasus are at stake
and with them Russia's-southern
lifeline from her allies in the mid
dle east. 1
Both the Germans and the Rus
sians put on a terrific show in
the skies, accordin gto advices
reaching Moscow.
Day and night the . heavens
were filled with ' fighters and
bombers, the Russians drawtng
heavily en planes from the
United States. The rear and
whine of planes in twisting em
bat, the blasting of aerial eaa-
. Bon and thnnderoas baurst of
bombs at times blanketed the
tamali of battle aground.
' The whole Steppe land inside
the Don bend and the river slopes
in places were splotched by the
wildfire of battle. Fires spread
through the - ripening grain field
which provided ideal terrain for
tanks maneuvering by the hun
dreds. -J. r;;v- ";-,
v With typical restrain'tte early
morning Russian communique said
fighting continued through Sunday
night at Voronezh, 300 miles north
of Rostov, on the harassed north
ern flank - of Germany's broad
southern drive, and in addition in
the areas of Rostov, Novocherk
assk and Tsimiryansk. ' -(The
Germans said their east
'v . '"- I ;
? , '- - '-tf ' 1
s -" - TT . r - ! I . 1
; - I - ' - J '
I " - v - yi .. , I
Y- - - r- y - 2
: 1 I K )
I . .i in 1 S 1 in- i"T f'nriii. l-tvi. I J
Don River
for Oil
bound forces had reached the Don
bend on a broad front facing Stal
ingrad. Although the geography of
this claim was not clear, Berlin
indicated the attackers were with
in SO miles of Stalingrad and
added that violent air attacks had
been launched against Stalingrad's
river and railway communica
tions.) Scrapping of
Oregon Only
Last Resort
The battleship Oregon should
not be scrapped until all other
sources of material have been ex
hausted. This is the opinion of
Acting Secretary of the Navy
James Forrestal as stated in a let
ter received Monday by Gov.
Charles A. Sprague.
According to Forrestal, the re
quest to the governor that the
ship be scrapped was made by
the Seattle office of the war pro
duction board without the knowl
edge of the navy department and
the governor's answer to the
board was correct. He added that
the WPB had no authority to have
the vessel scrapped, since it be
longed to the navy and could be
disposed of only by the navy.
Although the need for metals Is
great, Forrestal said, "memorials,
such as the battleship Oregon,
representing in their being the
spirit and traditions of the navy
and of the country It represents,
Constitute a distinct morale fac
tor, and should be preserved until
all other sources of materials have
been exhausted."
(Mid Killed
As Autos Hit
WDJLAMINA, Ore., July 27UP)
Collision of three automobiles
killed one person and injured four
others at New Grand Ronde near
here Sunday.
Fatally injured was Kathleen
McGee, four-year-old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Collie McGee, Wil
lamina, who were hospitalized,
the father with serious spinal in
juries and the mother with mul
tiple head Injuries.
The occupants of the second
car, Frank High, Tart, sunerea
broken ribs and bruises, and his
wife chest injuries. Both were
hospitalized.
The driver of the third car,
Don D. . Mann, Delake, escaped
injury.
Albany Woman Is
Wounded by Gun
ALBANY, July 27-ff)-tate
Policeman Curtis Chambers said
Monday an investigation had been
started of the wounding of Mrs.
R. R. Ermer, 18, by the dicharge
of a .22 calibre pistol found in a
glove compartment of an automo
bile in which she was sitting.
The woman, shot in the jaw,
was taken to a hospital where her
condition was described as not
serious.
Sunk Flailing Boat
May Be Salvaged
DEPOE BAY, July 7-t)Sal-vage
operations on a fishing boat
which foundered Sunday off the
north Lincoln county coast await
ed Monday on allocation of the
craft.;. ;-v'
Chuck Youngblood, the skipper,
and his crewmen, taken aboard
another fishing boat before the
sinking, said salvaging 'would be
attempted if the boat was found
to have drifted into shallow water.
Today and Wednesday -
Companlon Feature
"Ilr. Erj
Gees lo-Town
ii
IN TECHNICOLOR
Nation's Borders
600: Bombers
Hit Hamburg
Great Explosions and
Eire Blade by RAF
In Renewed Attack
(Continued from Page 1)
istry said, relatively little damage
was caused.
The big Blohm and Voss ship
yards, said to be capable of build
ing 23 submarines at a time, were
believed to have been one of the
RAFs principal targets at Ham
burg. Other objectives were the sea
plane factory, oil refineries, ex
plosive works and miles of docks
which have been battered six
times this year and 91 since the
start of the war. The last attack
on the port was the night of May
3.
The air ministry news service
said the wave of bombers dropped
all the explosives they could carry
in one concentrated blast at the
city.
The second wave swept over
within 33 minutes, showering
down high explosives and incen
diaries.
"Much of the old town was on
fire," the news service reported.
"There were fires all around Aus-sen-Alster
lake, and there were
many in the dock area."
Pillars of black smoke were
rising but as yet they were not
drifting over the town. The tar
get was clearly exposed for the
attack of the last wave of
bombers, and these were fully
loaded with high explosives, in
cluding many 400-pound
bombs."
Appearance of US army fighter
pilots in weekend RAF forays over
the continent further tipped the
scales in favor of the allies in the
long struggle for mastery of the
air.
The pilots are flying British
Spitfires, buf later they are ex
pected to have their own latest
US models.
Jap Raiders
Hit Darwin
GENERAL MacARTHUR
HEADQUARTERS, Australia,
Tuesday, July 28jP)-J&panese
raiders attacked Darwin in north
ern Australia twice Monday night
and attempted to attack Towns
ville on the northeastern coast, a
communique said Tuesday.
No damage or casualties occur
red at Darwin, where from three
to five planes flew over the city,
the communique said.
Meanwhile, allied bombers and
fighters continued their attacks on
the new Japanese bases in New
Guinea, a group of dive bombers
blowing up an ammunition dump,
the communique said.
Other allied airmen ranged far
to the northwest to score direct
hits on an airdrome and barracks
att Japanese-held Joepang in
Dutch Timor. Fires were left in
their wake.
Cheese Is Victory
Special for Week
WASHINGTON, July 27.-(P)
The agriculture department Mon
day designated cheese aa the vic
tory food special from August 17
to 29.
As a part of a program for
widening distribution of abundant
commodities, the nation's retail
stores will be expected to focus
consumer attention on cheese dur
ing the two-week period. ,
ConUnaons From 1 P. M.
LAST TIMES TODAL
Margaret Sullivan and
Ch-rlea Boyer in
"App:inlncJ f:r
Lbve"
PLUS--
"STEEL AGAINST
' THE SKY
Wlth Alexis Smith and
Lioyd Nolan
COMEDY
Times:
Lore. Z:45-5:45-S:5
EteeU 1:15-15-72O-102I
A.M.Eby ,
Dies in Fire
Origin Unknown of
Blaze in Upstair
Studio Business
(Continued From Page 1)
Carrie May Eby, who was not at
the apartment when the fire oc
curred; daughters, Mrs. Ernest
Garrett of 981 North 15th street,
Salem, and Mrs. Chester B. Doerr
of Portland; sons, A. Edwin Eby
of Bremerton, Wash-, Willis 'E.
Eby of Hood River, and Donald
M. Eby of Portland, and one
brother, D. : M. Eby of Salem.
Members of the family said no
funeral arrangements would be
made before today.
Damage to the building and
the business firms it housed
eonld not be ascertained Mon
day night, although Otto Klett,
ewnef of the , more-than-60-
yeaxHold structure, said It was
, ins-red for S15,00; "more than
. enongh to oarer my. loss."
Water damage to the Quelle
restaurant below would run be
tween $4000 and $5000, Frank
Chats s, owner, believed. The fix
tures had been insured for. $2000,
It was understood. Today the res
taurant would normally be closed
under Salem restaurant men's
agreement
Smoke and water damage to
Joe's Upstairs Clothiers was un
estimated. There, too, insurance
was said to be for $2000.
Loss to the Morris Optical com
pany, downstairs and just east of
the Quelle, was believed to be
limited to minor water and smoke
damage. '
In the studio apartment of the
Ebys, the kitchen and bathroom
at the rear were blackened by
smoke; the bedroom was gutted,
part of the partition leading into
the living room blown away by
what firemen termed a "back
draught" explosion caused by fire
made gases; the living room was
somewhat burned, smoke dark
ened and thoroughly wet, and
damage to the studio reception
room was believed limited to
smoke, water and broken win
dows. .
7 Saboteurs
Seek Writs
(Continued from -Page 1)
as if they had never gone before
the commission.
Announcement of the special
supreme' court term,' rare1 In re
bent history, was issued by
Charles Elmore Cropley, clerk of
the court It did not say how many
of the prisoners were petitioning,
but other sources said seven.
There was unofficial speculation
the man who did. not petition is
George John Dasch. He is report
ed to have given-the FBI valuable
information and is represented by
separate defense counsel.
If the eonrt refuses to enter
tain the petitions, the military
commission will hear final ar
guments from both sides start
ing Thursday, and proceed to
consider a verdict. .
To convene the special term, the
nine supreme court justices had
to be summoned from their homes
and vacation retreats throughout
the country. Farthest away was
Justice Douglas in Oregon and
he already is on the train.
Atlantic Ship
Loss Is 401
(Continued from Page 1)
the war began and allied losses
"have greatly exceeded new con
struction" despite its tremendous
volume.
On the other side of the ledger
the government has extended Its
convoy system, opened anti-submarine
schools, added escort ves
sels and increased air patrols in an
all-out effort to smash the under
water menace. Into production It
has thrown the facilities of the
world's greatest shipyards. ,
Henry . Don v
Fonda - Amacht
Lynn Bari-
THE MAGNIFICENT
DOPE?
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Box Office
Tax
Open ,
6:45
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Jernstadt Said.
Better Monday
McMINNVTLLE, July 27-7
Condition of AVG Flight Leader
Kenneth Jemstedt was declared
improved Monday byDr. E. H.
Barendrick, who said the Flying
Tiger's illness had been diagnosed
as Dengue fever contracted while
he was on duty in Burma and
China. M ' i
Barendrick said that the ace's
temperature, which was 104 de
grees when he was rushed to a
hospital here last Thursday, was
back to normal Monday.
Flier Urges
More Planes
DeSeversky and hem
Propose Diversion
Of Shipbuilding
V; (Continued from Page 1)
a second front In Euro no Is
feasible as the United Nations
haven't enoagh planes to prevent
disastrous attacks en transports
crossing the channel.'
The major said ; ho didn't see
"the ghost of a chance of a JaDa-
nese invasion of the west 00851"
"An attack from a carrier Is
unthinkable,' he said, "unless wo
are completely asleep.
WASHINGTON. Julr 27W
A fleet of giant cargo and troop
carrying planes was proposed in
the senate Monday as the onlv
w ,
answer to the submarine menace.
Youthful Senator Leo (D
Okla) solemnly told his colleagues
air-born transportation offered
tne "only possible chance we have
of winning this war." It is folly,
he said, to continue trvins tn
"biuld ships faster than Hitler can
sink them." r
His resolution, calling for a sn.
cial board to start immediate con.
struction, was referred to the mili
tary aiiairs committee.
Lee said It had been estimator
10 per cent of Hitler's airplane pro-
auction was devoted to giant fly-
ins: DOatS- but that Trrn am ns.
too small for United States needs.
Our communication lines are
many times longer than Hitler's
and therefore the percentage of
production devoted to transpor
tation must be greater than that
required for Hitler's needs."
Under Lee's resolution, th
centage of shipbuilding caoacitv
mai wouia be diverted to building
flying boats would be left to th.
supply board composed of the sec
retaries of war and navv. the ad
ministrator of war shipping ad
ministration . and the chairman of
tne war production board.
Kaiser Offers
Paid Training
PORTLAND. Ore- Julv rrwm
Learn to Weld end get 85 cents
an hour while you're training.
.inais the opportunity offered
to, 14,000 persons In Oregon and
Washington by . the Kaiamr Mt
lyards in the Portland-Vancouver.
wasn area to meet a "very ser
ious shortage of workers." - -
Wans to pay-learning welders
at the same rate as men now on
the job have been approved, the
company said, ! and the program
will start Monday. . ,
Trainees will be taken from
state and federal vocational train
ing schools in the two tt a
assigned to classes In the com
pany's yards. After 60 hour, th.-
will go on production work;
pay War Stamps and Bonds
LLlj
OW SHOWING - TWO HTTS
Lie Davis C
deHavilland
p : COMPANION FEATUU -J
CAROLE LOMBARD
JACK BENNY
"To Be or Not to Be"
Time: 1:14-I:S1 . fS
OMSMNMOMS
Pins Dead fend Kids la
-G-MEN OF TOT Ant"
COMPANION FEATURE
They need no excuse for
af Ight but look out
when htey have a reason!
Dcd Ed mds
Geo. Brent 1 Tl. r
ST
I Fls Super Kan ' . . i
j Tine7e - lt:ll
jrttJS.ii -YOKEL BOY" Wl
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Starts Wednesday - Two Hits;
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