The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 31, 1942, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
Tha CIIEGON STATECI IAIL Salea Oregon. Ccrtarday Morclng, October 31. IS i2
Governor Sees
Action
Regimental Training
Demonstration
Is Shown "
v (Continued from Page 1)
? looking and. listening, while regi-
1 mental officers explained what
was being done, witn. " a nuge
chart and maps to illustrate and
then he walked througn a Darn
ers resting on grain bins and a
manger. The light was dim and
. . J s
the spectacle picturesque in uw
extreme. Grain was still strewn
over the floor and bay was hang
ing from chinks and the odor of
livestock was still noticeable.
This Place Protected by Ore
gon Farmer, ' read a sign on a
tree. It seemed oddly ironic, on the
old, moss-covered oak by an empty
farm house, with officers striding
about and scores of military cars
and trucks rumbling over the
road. The governor lunched with
General Cook and staff, then rode
out inV scout car.
, The officers who talked, in front
nt the barn, with their associates
paying closest attention, included
Maj. Edwin G. Swafford, CapL
H. W. Ryan, and Lts. A. H. Dise-
- v sr a j
rens, iv. k. Aiason, i. u autuui
III, and John Cunningham.
These, officers told how a regi
. mental personal functioned in de
lending such an area, with proper
distribution of ammunition,' kit
chen and baggage train and main
tenance section. All vehicles were
camouflaged and the area was
ringed with outposts, including a
"disciplinary outpost" on a road
to, see that all vehicles coming
up were camouflaged as they
Should De ana inai au. necessary
precautions were taken.
Arrangements were made for
sending back five-gallon contain
ers to be filled with gasoline and
' returned to the-front,, as well as
for bringing in extra bed rolls
and keeping records. The import
ance of cover and concealment
were emphasized, and of a sur
face hard enough for heavy ve
hicles and of spacing trucks so
that they would be free to move.
Although court martials and is
suance of orders would be held
to -a minimum in the field, there
must be strength reports and ser
vice record and payrolls and the
mail must be brought up, for the
sake of morale.
If Con tin nous Today
Plus
Ml to 5 P. M.
Tax
if
'Mexican ve7jz
Pins Second Feature
Also Stooges Comedy
News and "Jungle Girl"
Ccning Sunday
It's Real and America Is
in It You See "The World
at War.- Feature Length.
Produced by U. S. Govern
ment. Plus Second Feature
RUMMIOS
Bad-Abbott - Lou CeeetUe
VBJO IUTA"
Adair
LAST DAY
GARY COOPER in "Lives of a Bengal Lancer
' And ' -
Jack Benny - Rochester -
"BUCK BENNY RIDES AGAIN"
V" t,' - y-' '-',' S . - :. f ' :
C MfrlimiMI 1 II .:...-r . lA-..., r r r.;...t,. fJJ,tf if
Lfl;'i Slarls lOIIOimOU J
I I I .M H C . Ill J I I
I
! 1 -
i .Til m ti
- S:sca Petsrs"
Fred BlacJIURRAY
,, .1 II II ll
ON THE HOME FRONT
B7 ISABEL
One was a little girl of nine
years and the other a very young
school teacher in that beautiful
country high above Manila. And
they, in common' with other little
girls in Bishop Brent's Cathedral
school for girls, and other young
teachers at the same institution,
rode Spanish .ponies down the
mountainside where tree ferns
grew. They 'saw caribou (and at
least one of them was chased by
one of the creatures once), and
shared the charm of Baguio.
The youthful teacher, Frances
Virginie. Melton, and her young
Added Power
Set in West
WASHINGTON, Oct. 30-(P)
Interior Secretary Ickes said Fri
day 778,600 kilowatts would be
added to power supplies by Jan
uary 1, 1944, by five interior de
partment projects in the west on
which power installations were
proceeding.
These projects were exempted
specifically by the war produc
tion board from its order direct
ing Ickes department to stop work
on its construction projects gen
erally pending review to deter
mine their necessity- in the war
program. vv
Ickes said additional power was
being added by installations at
Grand Coulee dam, Washington,
and .Boulder dam,' Arizona-Nevada,
and that new plants would
into operation during 1943 or
early 1944 at Parker dam, Arizona-California;
Green Mountain
dam, Colorado, and Shasta dam,
California.
Marines Yield
Embassy Guard ;
LONDON, Oct. 30 -)- , The
US marines turned over to their
army comrades Friday the job of
guarding the American embassy
and naval and military headquar
ters. They left for "elsewhere in
the British isles," an announce
ment said.
The marine detachment, the
first organized unit of American
armed forces to reach Britain in
this war, yielded its sentry posts
here after 16 month of duty.
11 in Hungary
To Be Executed u
BERN, Switzerland, Oct 3H)
Dispatches from Budapest report
ed Friday night 11 persons were
sentenced to death in the Batsch
ka area of Hungary for sabo
tage and possessing and using fire
arms. :- '.---;
A Sofia dispatch said two per
sons were sentenced to death and
58 to long prison terms for sabo
tage shootings and endeavoring
from March until August to pre
part a revolution.
Lindbergh 3-B
ENGLEWOOD, NJ, Oct. 30-P)
Charles A. Lindbergh, the trans
atlantic flier, has been classified
3B by Bergen county selective
service board No. 7.
Goal Half Reached
GRANTS PASS, Oct 30 -(ff)
Josephine county's scrap goal was
half completed Friday as scrap
gatherers reported 800 tons.
-
Great
Hits
) J
Jack OAKIE
frr-1
CHTI.DS
charge, Ada Waddington, daugh
ter of a Manila businessman, were
together only one year in the fin
ishing school where the child, de
scribed as "charming and mis
chievous,' had been sent along
with daughters of American army
officers. But there was some mag
netism which made the year live
in the memory of each.
For when the little girl, new
a Vpoised and charming young
matron, wife at Lt J. E. Bowea
of Camp Adair, heard mentlon
: ed by a casual acquaintance
the name of "Miss Melton" as
, they discussed music in Salem,
she was Immediately Interest
ed. Could this Miss Melton be
the young woman who had
come to her school from Paris
to teach music and French?
So it was that Mrs. Bowen and
12-year-old son, Jimmie, appear
ed recently at the studio of
Frances Virginie Melton in Sa
lam. And there was recognition
in the eyes of the musician as
she welcomed them, although It
is admitted that the name of the
little girl now grown up did not
come readily to her lips.
Now, the two , who share the
memory of that year fat Bagato,
knew a new pleasure, that of
a frleaWbhl eeatlaainf from
the teacher-papn relationship.
And Miss Melton, known to
moat of Salem. Is more dellghU
ed ta the experience of know
ing as a friend the woman who
was her small pupil than In
the obvious conclusion I should
draw that the world k after
all a small place!
Nerves Place
Manyin4-F
NEW YORK, Oct SO-CPh-CoL
Leonard G. Rowntree, chief of the
medical division of national selec
tive service, said Friday 200,000
men, or 13 jper cent of the 1,500,
000 classified as 4-F throughout
the nation, had been placed in this
classification because of ' mental
or nervous disorders. .
Col. Rowntree made the state
ment at a press-conference pre
ceding a meeting between selec
tive physicians and civilian doc
tors to find ways of weeding , out
men with mental disorders before
they got through local draft
boards. : vv ;
Nationally, CoL Rowntree said,
4-F rejections . for nervous and
mental diseases amounted to 6.3
per cent of the total draft regis
trants called.
In comparison with national re
jections, the officer said. New
York had fewer rejections for mis
cause than any other section.
WAAC Training
Head Changed
"FORT DES MOINES, la, Oct
30-;p)-Col. J. A. Hoag, M, a na
tive of New York City and an
army man for 30 years, became
commandant of the Women's
Army Auxiliary training school
here Friday, v
He succeeds CoL Don C- Faith,
who transferred to a s e e on d
WAAC school at Daytona Beach,
Fla. -:- -.: v.-;-'-
CoL Hoag, a field artillery of
ficer, came here from Fort SOL
Okla.
.1
Blow at Japs
From North
Seen Answer
(Continued from Page 1)
Japanese moved south through the
Philippines and into the Dutch
East Indies.
This particular military
authority scouts such an opera
tion as too costly la time, men
and equipment. He does so pri
marily because throughout that
area the Japanese,, have built
up Island air bases from which
land-based bombers could keep
up constant raids oa the con
centrations of " surface ships
. which would have to be involv
ed. , -c : . . 'A...'"-U 1 s r -'
With the northern and southern
lines, once secured, he would
launch the attack d own from
Alaska and the Aleutians, severing
Japan's supply lines to the south
Pacific, establishing and holding a
base in the Philippines,; and then
turning to the attack on Japan's
home islands. The final assault
would be coordinated with air at
tacks from bases in China and,
possibly, in Siberia, while allied
forces in. the ' Australian : zohe
would drive north to wipe out the
enemy holdings in the south
Pacific islands. , .
Such a ""pip could not be
waged without cost It might take
one year, two, or even more. But
it would take the war to the
enemy's shores "and well have
to wipe them out on their own
territory before we : have them
licked," concludes this source.
Tooth Paste
Firm Charged
WASHINGTON, Oct . 30-P)
M -M - a a.
.ine ieaerai iraae commission re
ported Friday it had Issued a com
plaint accusing Bristol-Myers Co.,
New York, distributor of Ipana
tooth paste, of misrepresentation.
The complaint said, among oth
er things, that the value of the
product in producing a. beautiful
smile and increasing the popular
ity of the user has been misrep
resented. "A beautiful smile or increased
popularity are dependent upon
many factors which would not be
influenced by using the product,"
said a commission summary of
the complaint
San Francisco
Area Alerted
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 30 -(ff)
For an hour and five minutes
Friday the San Francisco bay area
was at a state of alert while army
and navy air forces probed the
sky to identify a flight of planes
detected in the distance. The si
rens did not sound. 5 .
finally the army stated "the
unidentified planes were elimi
nated as potential targets." Sub
sequently the army advised: "It
has been determined definitely
that the alert . . . was caused by
friendly planes which have been
identified."
It was San Francisco's 24th
alert of the war. The last prev
ious alarm was a 53-minute warn
ing on July 23.
Army Airmen Ready
To Move Anywhere
NEW DELHI, India, Oct 29
(Delayed)-p-Brig. Gen. Clay
ton L. BisselL commander of the
US army air force) in the India-China-Burma
theatre, said Thurs
day his airmen were mobilizing
for the day when "we can move
rapidly in any direction.";
LAST DAY
Gene Autry
"Heart of the
Rio Grande"
-and-
"Mad i Doctor of
Market Street"
-Added
"Adveaiurea of
Red Ryder
J . aafiM t y
r
Lato Sports
Beaverton 27,' McMlnnvUle 12.
. Roseburg 26, Cottage Grove 0.
Independence 29, Amity 0.
University, Eugene, 0, ' Spring
field 0 (tie).
Oreroa Hlrh School Football
Klamath Falls 31, Grants Pass
0. " "
- Medford 21, Eureka, Calit, 7.
German Subs
Claim Toll
", BERLIN KFrom German broad
casts), Oct SO-Cfl3) The Trans
ocean News Service Friday night
published a report from "Informed
quarters-. that German submar
ines have sunk allied vessels to
talling 514,925" tons in the AU
lantic thus far in October. . Re
turns for the month, it was said,
are toot complete and the figures
will be higher. - - vi
The figure, it '. was added. In
cluded nine ships of 68,500, tons
which the high command in a
special communique Friday said
has been shot out of a "fully
laden convoy on its way to Brit
ain."
(No allied source confirmed
this reoort or even mentioned
effective attacks on Atlantic con
voys.) !
Candidates
File CosfcT
WASHINGTON, 5 Q t VHft
Candidates for the senate have
spent approximately $90,000 so
far in their general election cam
paigns, preliminary expenditure
reports on file Friday with the
senate secretary show.
Final reports must be in with
in 30 days after the general elec
tion. Among expenditures by candi
dates who have filed to date: .
Idaho: Glen H. Taylor, demo
crat $1148; Sen. John Thomas,
$2448.
Montana: Sen. James E. Mur
ray, democrat, $8454; Wellington
D. Rankin, republican, nothing.
Oregon: Waiter W. Whitbeck,
democrat, $484; Sen. Charles L.
McNary, $115.
British Paper
Praises Stand
LONDON, Saturday, Oct 31-Py
The Daily Express, in editorially
praising the fighting quality of
the US troops in the Solomons,
said Saturday they were heavily
outnumbered "perhaps by odds
as great as five-to-one." -
The newspaper said Britain's
debt to the Americans for aid
given in an hour of dire need
"cannot be paid in money orcrati
tude," and added: "Most of all
we admire them for their fighting
quality which they- disclose , In
hard battles fought on land, on
sea and in the air."
IT TAKES. A
MURDER TO
PULL THEM
TOSETIIIRI-
V.WMMPWMBWaSNP
fh . Jry
tonor. p
' y a '... . .. . . . .
. . , i i ' " -"1 1.J !,-:' f f v . .. .
.. and i j j
' "Gel n:? b I
I ' ' .L5V3"-, jj
Americans
Holding to
Same Lines
(Continued from Page 1)
To back up that statement
he ouoted a remark by Under
secretary of the Navy James
Y. Forrestal The closer to
the front you get. the closer the
cooperation becomes."
"The armx air arm," he said,
fts 'carrying on a vigorous . of
fensive against the enemy."
Knox declared tanks mentioned
In -the earlier communique Friday
as being used by : the Japanese
were" light, probably about 18 or
17 1 tons. X-'i,: .":..
2 The ; number of tanks blasted
plainly Indicated that the' Japan
ese have landad a considerable
amount of powerful equipment on
the island. .Twelve light tanks
were , destroyed ; during the past
week as army and marine troops
repulsed repeated Japanese on
slaughts.
Earlier , the Japanese had lost
five tanks in their unsuccessful
attempts to . drive through the
American lines the night of Oc
tober 23, when four successive
attacks, spearheadad by . tanks,
were- launched, under cover of a
heavy artillery barrage. :
The repulse ' af the various
Japanese attacks has been fol
- lowed by a tan tm the Mchtliur
en Guadalcanal. The commnal-
tue said that recent activity
ashore has been confined to
small skirmishes between pe
trola,
However, American aircraft
were busy destroying, two -enemy
seaplanes at Rekata bay on Santa
Isabel island 115 miles northwest
Lof Guadalcanal and bombing and
strafing enemy ground' forces.
OBT Exempts
Farm Tracks
M
WASHINGTON, Oct. 30-P)
The office of defense transporta
tion : Friday j exempted another
month trucks engaged exclusive
ly in the transportation of farm
products and supplies from cer :
tain provisions of ODTs, conserva-1
tion orders.
Trucks so operated were ex
empted from the 25 per cent mile
age reduction requirement and
permitted to continue to make
make wan one delivery a day.
The new exemption will expire
November 30.
473 Vould Enlist
EUGENE, Oct 30-P-Follow-
ing conferences with army, navy,
and marine ' corps recruiters on
the campus this week, lt was an
nounced Friday that 473 Univer
sity of Oregon students have asked
for - enlistment applications.
mm
Piano Crashes
GILA BEND, Arit, Oct 30-tiP)
Staff Sgt Ivan M. Copess of
Dekalb, HL, was kiUed Friday in
the mid-air collision of two army
planes and two civilian instruct
ors parachuted to safety, the
army reported, .
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla
Oct 30 fiJP Ensign Gerald Wil
son Wilmot of Spokane, Wash.,
was. lulled in the crash of his
training plane Friday near the
Dying field at South Boca Raton,
officials at the Fort Lauderdale
naval air station announced..
FORT MYERS, Fla, Oct 20-UP)
An army medium bomber miss
ing from . Page field near : here
since Wednesday night was lo
cated Friday four miles' west of
Venus, Fla, where it had crashed,
killing the seven members of the
crew. -
The department listed the dead
as: Second Lt Thomas H. Dun
bury, -West Medford, Mass.; Sec
ond Lt David Furman, New York
City; Sgt Lloyd Wyatt, Berlin.
Md.; Sgt Emory D. Barton Wax-
ahachie. Texas: Set 1 Douelas G.
Johns, Horseheads, NY; Sgt Ver
nal M. Skarison, Mayville, ND;
Sgt Charles Schwamberg, Rices
Landing, Pa. .
Defense Phase
Of War Qosing
. (Continued from Page 1)
you this assurance the dose will
be repeated throughout the win
ter. and it will bo intensified.'
"We have command over the
western shores of France and be
yond. Even by day our RAF can
fly to Italy and bomb Milan and
Mussolini. 'This is a suoerb
achievement, even for the RAF."
Eden's remarks were made
against a background of many
evidences - that the British are
shifting to offensive tactics, while
the ; axis is ' devoting increasing
thought and energy to defense.
Hull Seeks World
Of Peace for Jew
WASHINGTON. Oct 30 -&)-
Secretary of State Hull said Fri
day "We must have a world In
which Jews, like every other
race, are free to abide in peace
and in honor." -
Hull's statement was made to
a group of rabbis who presented
to him a memorandum commem
orating the 25th anniversary of
the - Balfour, declaration pledging
Britain's best endeavors to fa
cilitate establishment in Pales
tine of a national home for the
Jews. . - -' - . . v i
SCIE'G
PUTTIMCv-
THRILLS )
mino I r
I3CAQ7!
hm's putting
wings on
Amwica't
Cosfwsf.
COMPANION
Mil -fer:
crtxy
EsstsdatirZifor
cosie wkS
fviti!
U. ' I J.Ir AIIBSSCFTOTVG
- -
d JX! Klatinee Today 1 W
Madagascar
Uty Taken; ;
Vichy Worries
On Madagascar, the British for
ces of occupation took Fianar
antsoa, 'most important town in
the south part of "the big Island,
and it was stated that no further
resistancev was epected from the
Vichy elements remaining at
large, -'rt:-;;;;.;-- f" y.- y;it
uc ot iioena, iteuters, - British
news agency, reported an official
uuuuunuKui u we eiiect that
US troops, in residence since July,
had completed two military air
uom. v asmngron was : -suent
however.
The question of West Africa
monopolized the attention of the
cabinet of Vichy Trance.
Back from Morocco and Dakar,
Adm. Jean .Darlan reported to
his colleagues on "measures tak
en to assure the defense of French
West Africa1 A mmuniaue said
this was especially important be
cause of "circumstances."
i 6oastwaiifcWWwwoiowootw
Continuous Today from 1
170T7 Features!
His Yankee pranks rock
Eton . . . with laughter!
And how those English
girls fall for hia Yankee
brand of romancing! It
lops nu nest!
&mmm
mm
ptsoea
twMtii.wU,lr.if
etoU.isse:tarmT
-COBEPANION FEATURE.-,
tICHARD TXAVIS 5uUE IISHOr
MCX C CtCASOM FIAMK WttCOX
Mkkey Mouse Mathtee r
. at IP. M, ... J
STMTS
TODAY
Continuous
from "
1:00 P. M.
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