The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 05, 1942, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TT.CZ TWO
2JPartyPlaff '.
Revived by
Elections-
Appeasement Policy
Lacking; all Fit '
- Endorsees Lose
By RAYMOND J. CROWLEY
WASHINGTON, . Nov.
The two-party system, dealt a
near ! knockout blow in the na-
tion's great depression, ; revived
with a vengeance Wednesday in
-the midst of global war.
The republican : party, after
suffering -such shattering reverses
" In the past decade that many ask
ed whether it was on its way out,
- has surged back to take a promin
ent place at the nation's council
tables." Indeed, its voice may be
the determining factor on many
Issues, " for it is foreseeable that
sometimes the greatly ; increased
- GOP "strength in congress may be
combined with enough demo
cratic votes to put new dealers in
; a minority.
Whatever the causes of this
. GOP renascence, however, one
may feel about it, there are three
men who would be well-advised
not to take any comfort from it.
They are Hitler, Mussolini and
Tojo. . .
Nowhere on the nation-wide
campaign map did any candi
date arise to advocate appease
ment of the united nations fees,
- or to suggest that we poll our
punches. Everywhere the de
mand was for total war, for
hammer blows against the axis;
until the war 1 won.
-That theme was emphasized In,
post-election statements by the
republican party's last president
and also by the man who, at the
moment, is most discussed as its
probable Nominee in . 1944.
Said Herbert Hoover:
"Our enemies can get no com
fort from this election. The plat
form of every single candidate
republican, democratic and labor
was vigorous, efficient prosecu
tion of the war." There "was a
strong element of protest in the
vote. But it: was the protest of
insistence upon more effective or
ganization of the war. And that
can be no comfort for the enemy."
Thomas E. Dewey, governor
elect of New York, called on
Americans to redouble the na
tion's efforts for a "total", uncom
promising, crushing victory over
our country's enemies.
Of course, it is easy te see
! how new dealers are saddened
1 by the result, Jnst as republi
cans were I 'emotionally over
whelmed by ' the repeated new
deal victories that begin In 193S.T
, It is natural that a political fig- j
ure, tasting the bitter brew of
defeat instead : of the heady
draught of 'victory to which he
has become accustomed, should
feet that the world b coming to
an end.
Thus elderly George W. Norris,
Nebraska senator who., has woven
his name inextricably into the
twees of American history, cries
in something akin to agony that
his defeat .means "repudiation of
40 years of service"; that "right-
. eousness -has been crucified.'
But no one here, not even the
most fervent for all that Norris
stands for, expects sweeping re
, peal of new deal enactments, any
abrupt reversal of national poi
icy. For one thing, the'.Presi
dent has veto power over any
measure passed by congress.
'Norris was one of three can-
dldates bearing public endorse
ment from President , Roosevelt
in Tuesday's bauoting. All were
defeated, the others .being John
J. Bennett, Jr, democratic can-;
didate for New York governor.
and Ferdinand Heyt, democrat
ic ..opponent of Representative.
Hamilton Fish of New York.'
Incidentally, the election 1 dem-
onstrated anew how the constitu-
tional mechihery set up by the
founding fathers often puts a
Drake on suaaen swings irom one
PO"cai poie lo anoxner. unaer
ine consmuuon, u was a mame-
M A A A . " Al. .
matical impossibility for the re-
publicans to gain control of the
senate Tuesday, and of course the
presidency was not at stake at all.
Only in the ; elecWons lor ine I
house could the groudswell of re-1
puDiican resurgence regmer luuy,
u : mowu Wm ,
voiers is oemonsxraiea, so uui me
naUon's leaders may take note and
govern ineir course uccoruinaiy i
out xne leaaersmp is noi acruauy
vci iui ijctj. I
Reasons advanced for the re-1
publican victories are many, and
vary according to tne iignts : 01 j
' the reasoner.
that it is the rule, rather than
the exception. fori the party In
power to lose strength in the off-
year elections.- Some of them say,
too, that the voters were restive
under such necessary war meas
ures as rationing and other re
strictions. -
The ether side stresses that
, the result primarily was m pre-
test vote against what ft calls
Inefficiency, fat the war effort ,
.and bungling of some domestic
Issues. There are seme , tee ea '
- both sides who say that the lack
ef any immediate great suc
cesses on the ' battle fronts had
much to de with the result. :
Some thought the election
rrJ;ht be followed by swift ac- J
tlon on manpower mobilization--1
there have been frequent demands j
f.r such measures as compulsory I
a.-;:mments of workers to jobs
in war factories and steps to keepl
Victors
5 TARMER" JONES
ls. HL RAMAGE
- yJ
JOHN STEELHAMMER
r4
V:'
V
W. W. CHAD WICK
All republican candidates, the
I above men, pictured from the
' : top in order of votes polled,
will comprise Marion county's
; delegation in the state house of
j representatives for the 1943
session. H. R. "Farmer Jones
and John Steelhammer were in
cumbent. New members are L.
M. Ramage and W. W. Chad
wick. vitally needed agricultural work
ers on the farm.
The administration's approach
to the J farm .problem appeared
due for some searching reexami
nation. : In general the farm bloc,
which engaged in a notable fizht
with the I administration on the
issue of how high agricultural
ceilings should be, gained strength
in the "balloting. V
Senator Brown fD-Mich. sen
... soonsor of the bitterlv fought
I "
interaretation ' that envommMt
subsidy payments to farmers
should be considered in figuring
ceilings on farm products, lost out
m reelection contest. The
arrioirttnr Hpnarbnont'i rtmierta
to UIU. ntait to romedv farm
labor shortages and to prevent
in price ceilings appeared
due for more buffeting at the
handa of farm legislators who say
is proper approach
the problem.
ul r course, the new canirresa
does not take office until Janu-
ary the election's full ef-
f ects j will 1 not become apparent
As for the long run, old -timers
believe that the way things
work eat ; will depend upon the
intangible h u m a a element.'
Much depends ea whether dem
ocrats and republicans tradi
tionally at loggerheads, eaa put
themselves into a unity harness ;
and pull together. - -
No longer can the president sug
gest legislation in the expecta
tion that it wiH be approved im
mediately ; without change. No
longer , can . republicans confine
themselves exclusively to whack
ing new deal heads right and left
for they now are in a position -of
new-found responsibility. ",
Most observers on both sides of
the ; fence agree that cooperation,
salted richly with ; constructive
criticism, is the people's mandate
as the nation bends all efforts to
meet the cry:
"Beat the axisl
! . - ' :
Late Returns
Oust Pierce i ;
Stockman Added to
All-Republican
Congress Body
(Continued from Page 1)
for secretary of state, and W. E.
Kimsey led Democrat Clarence
F. Hyde, 129,573 to UL6CC. -
. Snell's majority was the great
est ever accorded an. Oregon gov
ernor. , t . i
HOW OREGON TOTED
ON MEN. MEASURES
. By Th Associated Press
US- Senator '..;
(Complete returns from 11691 .of
1770 precints) '
Charles L. McNary 203,884
Walter W. Whitbeck 61,383
Congressman, first district i
(Complete' returns from! 497 of
500 precincts) ; U :
James W. Mott 48,827
Earl A. Nott 27,021
Congressman second district
(Complete returns from; 383 of
433 precincts) " -
Walter M. Pierce 15,994
Lowell Stockman 25,764
Congressman. : third district
(Complete returns from 441 of
443 precincts) : J
Homer Angell 54,073 !
Thomas Mahoney 50,308 ! :
Congressman, fourth district
(Complete returns from' 332 of
394 precincts
Harris Ellsworth 26,992
Edward C. Kelly 16,969
Governor '.; j '
- (Conplete returns from 1691 of
1770 precincts) . i
Earl Snell 211,039 !
Lew Wallace 61 j 812
Secretary at State-j
Robert S. FarrelL jr. 164,127 .;
Francis Lambert 92,149 '
State Labor Commissioner 4
Clarence F. Hyde 111,666! .1
W. E. Kimsey 129,573 1
t State Measures i'.j . -
i (Complete returns from 1558 of
j 1770 precincts) j i i
j Increased pay for legislators1
Yes 118,378 I , i
No 104,084 I ! -
Rural Credits Loan Repeat
Yes 92,326 . j
No 83,238
Gas Taxes Uso
Yes 115,257 v :
I No 80,288
Voting Privilege amendment
Yes 93,435
No 94,701
Cigarette Tax
Yes 10L268
No 117,038
Net Fishing restriction
Yes 89,124
No 126,463 j
Surplus Tax to Schools
Yes 123,117
No 86,139 j .
Few Judicial
Races Need
Decision I
(Continued from Page 1)
O. C. Gibbs, democrat, with a
few outlying precincts still to re
port, r i
Republican Incumbent Max S,
Taggart and Democrat M. A. Biggs
were engaged in a close battle for
the Malheur county district at
torney office with the issue still
in doubt Wednesday night; :
Up-state district attorney j can
didates who were without: op
position: '';! T .
D. N. MacKay, Gilliam county;
Boyd R. Overhulse, Jefferson
Harlow J. Weinrick, Linn; Bruce
Spaulding, PolkJ Robert V.I Chris-
man, Wallowa. :c
Circuit judge candidates in up
state districts who had no op
position: - J - U . ;i
Dal M. King, second judicial
district,- Coos, Curry, Douglas,
Lane, and Lincoln counties, posi
tion No. 2; E. Max Page, Marion
county, position No. 2. Fted W.
Wilson, Hood River-Wascoj Ralph
S. Hamilton, Crook-Deschutes-
Jefferson, 1
In Portland, district No.) 4, In
cumbents Martin W. Hawkins and
Donald E. Long were unopposed
as circuit judges. Charles Red
ding, incumbent, defeated Frank
Lonergan for the bench in de
partment 6 of the district and
Ashby C Dickson defeated in
cumbent George Tazwell ; in de
partment 7. Walter Tooze -held a
1094 lead over Frank Hilton in
department 8 and was believed
a sure winner. .
Silverton Man
Hurt hy Auto
SILVERTON. Nov. 4 Charles
Hanson, 305 Mill street. Silver
ton, was still unconscious at Sil
verton hospital Wednesday: night
mora than an hour after he had
been struck by a Portland motor
ist near the old Hartman garage
on South Water street.;? i i y
Hanson, a pedestrian, was not
seen until the driver was nearly
upon him, the motorist, named
Ferguson, told the police t officer
who : investigated. ' Condition of
the Injured man was believed to
be . serious, although full extent
of it was not known. One - of
Hanson's sons, Robert, is a stu
dent at Willamette university.
mImmm
Rlanager Rejected j
BAKER, Ore, Nov. 4-(-Baker
residents defeated a proposal
to Install a city manager form of
government here, election returns
showed Wednesday night. The
vote was 1333 to 84. 1
Desert .Retreat by Rommell
Blasied'by Allies Planes r
(Con't from page 1)
was said the British had suffered
heavy losses, losing 52 heavy
tanks and 25 airplanes alone, dur
ing Wednesday. No authority
was cited for the figures either in
that broadcast' or in a 'previous
one which, claimed that the .total
British tank losses were: between
450 and 500.) . :
i The British drive westward
climaxed 'days ef artillery and
aerial preparation which soft
ened the axis line, touched off
an elaborate " f our-mfle-deep
mine field, and knocked out
" other fixed naxi positions. .
Imperial infantry did ia heavy
preliminary job before General
Montgomery hurled his buge tank
forces through a gap torn in the
axis coastal flank west of El Aid'
Bare Congress
Majority Kept
(Cont from page I) :
Administration looses
Many Strong Men;
GOP Seats 205 j
ate. Detroit's Judge j Homer
Ferguson defeated SenJ Pren
tiss M. Brown, who ramred
ded this year's price )eentrel
legislation through that; cham
ber. A republican Industrial
ist, Albert W. - Hawkes. ac
counted for William H. Smath
ers ef New Jersey. Republican
George A. Wilson . downed
Democrat Clyde L. Herring In
Iowa. s j
White House influence could
not save Sen. George Wj Norris,
who bowed to Republican Ken
neth S. Wherry. E. V.I Robert
son, Wyoming republican elimiri
a ted Sen. Harry H. Schwartz.
Other republican victories were
hung up by C. Douglass Buck in
Delaware, Harlan J. Bushfield in
South Dakota and Chapman Re
vercomb in West Virginia! Rever
comb vanquished Gov. ! M. M.
Neely, a former senator. In West
Virginia's other senatorial race.
for a short term ending next Jan
uary 3, Neely's appointee; Joseph
Rosier, lost to Hugh Ike Shott, sr.
The list of incumbenti demo
cratic senators re-elected included
Bankhead of Alabama, Blender
of Louisiana. Maybank of South
Carolina,' Russell of ; Georgia,
Glass of Virginia, Stewart of
Tennessee, Bailey of North Caro
lina, O'Daniel of Texas, Green of
Rhode Island, Hatchol New Mex
ico. Johnson of ;C1nrdoi nd
Chandler of kenjtuky '
Party leaders in both -houses
won hands' down. ; Speaker
Rayburn had no opposition In
his Texas district. Bouse Ma
jority Leader McCormack and
Minority Leader Martin came
through In Massachusetts, as
did Senate Minority Leader
McNary in Oregon. The seat j
ef Senate Majority Leader j
Barkley was not at stake.
Mrs. Clare Booth Luce,; blonde
playwright, author and world
traveler, took a Connecticut house
seat, while Hamilton Fish,: day-in-day-out
opponent of administra
tion foreign policies before Pearl
Harbor, won again in the 26th
New York district 1
Andrew J. May, chairman of
the house military affairs com
mittee, was leadiding for his Ken
tucky 7th district seat after a hard
fight Buy Clyde Williams, of
the 8th Missouri, ranking demo
cratic member of the house bank
ing committee, lost to William P.
Elmer, republican. j
Girl Depicts!
Flynn
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 4
The gallant and adventurous Er
rol Flynn of the screen was pic
tured in court Wednesday by
17-year-old girl as a man who
knocked on her bedroom door and
entered at the same time.
. Peggy La Rue Satterlee, who
accuses the actor of twice; raping
her on a Catalina island j fishing
cruise last year, told Judge Byron
Walters she was in bed aboard
Flynn's yacht, the Sirocco, when
he suddenly ; appeared in the
stateroom assigned her, clad in
pajamas.
"He knocked and came in all at
the same time, : she said at the
preliminary hearing ,of her
charges. She said she chided him
about coming into her : room but
that he reassured her, saying, I
just want to get in bed with you
and talk."
"Somehow or other, she tesit-
fied, Flynn dsirobed her, forcibly
violated her, after which he left
the stateroom, returning a short
tune later to bring her a robe
and a glass of milk.
Governor Results
asocuiiea rress returns on
election of governors in 33 states.
f now held by democrats 13 and
republicans IS) compiled to 90
fc m. eastern war time, .showed:
Demecrata elected. 13; dem
ecratie gabs.-e.
Republicans elected. 17 j
publican gain, 4. J
Progressive elected 1;
re-
greasive gala. L
- ' Cea tests undecided, t. ;!
(Governors unaffected by this
election: democrats 10; - republi
cans 9.) -
Stdry
mein. . The- same procedure was
followed 40 xnOes to the south at
the edge of the Quattara salt sinks
in an effort to roll - up the nazi
nositions from both flanks..
Hundreds of' allied planes
pounded the axis supply -lines as
far -back as the Libyan port o
Tobruk which was X one of the
main intake points for much-
needed axis supplies hazardously
ferried across the Mediterranean
from Italyahd GreeceT
So superior wa the advantage
enjoyed by the allies this time in
the air, the communique said, that
300 axis planes were shot down in
combat and a like number de
stroyed or put out of . action ' on
the ground.
US airmen played a major
part In this sky artillery war.
' and their big bombers account
ed for some of the 50.000 tons
of shipping stink along V the
Mediterranean coast behind the
axis forward lines.
Wednesday night these Ameri
can and RAF fliers still were
hacking at the tattered axis infan
try and i the remnants 4 of their
armored 4 forces streaking west
ward along the coast toward El
Daba, 35 miles behind the punc
tured Alamein line.
Unde the protection of this
allied sky artillery the British
Eighth' army, was continuing its
advance. Although the extent of
imperial ground gains was not
stated in i the communique, front
dispatches said the imperials were
beyond Side Abd El Rahman, a
coastal railway point 18 miles
west of Alamein.
Thus the nazi threat to the big
British naval base at Alexandria
had been removed by a distance
of about 100 miles. British tanks
henceforth will enjoy greater
maneuverability in the dessert
now that the Alamein line has
been shattered, but full advantage
in this respect will not come un
til the Germans have been pushed
as far west at Matruh, which is
75 miles beyond El Daba. The
Qattara depression in the desert
to the south ends on a line drawn
south from Matruh.
The British announcement was
read out at headquarters in an
enthusiastic atmosphere. It laid
special emphasis on the full
flight of the enemy, under the
relentless air attack and ground
onslaught but there still was no
hint from any quarter how many
miles westward the British had
moved. ' " - - ;..
The allied airmen gave the
retreating soldiers no rest, or
respite. Almost all traffic was
on the coastal road, where the
RAF reported the "carnage was
heavy. ;
One pilot who strafed the re
treating enemy, said they had lit
tle or no chance to escape.
One observer , said the aerial
action was a real act of : punish
ment to the people who 2 years
ago taught the world the art of
annihilating troops on overcrowd
ed roads in France and the low
countries, j
Up to a late hour Wednesday
night it was reported 12 axis
planes had been shot down while
only one allied plane was lost
One British squadron leader
gave this description off the air
action, in which flocks of planes
came down to win thin a few hun
dred feet of the ground and swept
tents and trucks with machinegun
fire: 1 " ,. ,
"Our objective was a retreating
enemy transport on a road near
Fuka. As we came in to drop' the
first stick,; trucks careened madly
off the road. It looked, absolutely
crazy. I saw one overturn and
troops running away like cock'
roaches colliding jumping head
first into patches of scrub or any
hole they could find. We saw our
bombs do plenty of good work,'
The area through which the im
perial army now is pouring was
reported strewn wMh the bodies
of axis dead and the burned out
hulks of hundreds of enemy tanks
knocked out in the big armored
battle o Sunday night and Mon
day ' :
But far) to the rear there also
were similar scenes where the
allied airmen ' had : , done i their
punching. ; '
"I never saw such destruction,-
said Brig. : Gen. A. C.
Strickland, chief ef the bomber
command of the USAAF middle1
. east unit, fas telling of Tuesday
attacks en fleeing axis columns!
te the rear. General Strickland
personally led the attacking US
bomber forces. .
. "We swept over . the road and
saw it packed with transports but
every vehicle . was stopped and
everywhere there were tiny trails
of dust where the crews were
running into the desert Every
bomber : in ; our fomation . turned
and sailed down the road, spilling
their bombs on vehicles and men.
The joint; communique which
disclosed the first detailed results
of this third big British offensive
in the desert said that the slain
General Von Stumme had been
Field Marshal Rommel's standin
whenever J the latter . made his
periodic trips 'to Germany. ;
His death : was an obvious hard
blow to axis leadership, along with
the capture of Gen. . Ritter Von
Thoma and other senior axis of
ficers. . j " , -
7omen Rejoice
WASHINGTON, NoY..4-WVRe-
publican women were Jubilant
Wednesday at their 6 to 1 victory
over the democrats in electing pet
ticoat law-maker to congress. The
national democratic women's
headquarters had no comment '
OilMOMEMri
By DAETL OZLD3
Oh, the battle of thejballots -It
was fought from poll to poll.
Now, an armistice - has been de
clared
And speeches cease , to roll
Like thunder from the camion's
ith' J ' "
f6f sneakers there will be
s-C. drouth)- - r -;; "
And who the luncheon clubs Willi endorsement until later. .
. hear'
Kit
Hat Program Chairman - on - his
art T,
(1 V 1
Our pre-election ballistics
Broke no records in statistics;
But each spokesman had a drum
to beat,
A bill to back or. to defeat 1;
And gladly l talked while . we did 1
eat! I fl --TT-fe'f k
Now, lacking such incentive,
These speakers turn inventive,
And cleverly they reason if
That .tO another season
Of war upon the home front
They need simply smile and grunt
Tve already a speaking date-
Why do you always ask so late?"
Though fireworks may be denied.
No candidate can be tongue-tied.
And so for the duration
Our entertainment ration
Would be enriched and vitamined
Should the powers-that-be so in-
dined - ' ' i :
As to hold elections oi some kind
Each month throughout the' na
tion! I- !: j .- r
Aussies Push
Enemy Back I
Toward Buna
GENERAL MacARTHUR'S
HEADQUARTERS, Australia,
Thursday, Nov. 5.-(53)-Overcom-
ing strong resistance, allied ground
forces advanced further Thursday
beyond Kokoda in the Owen Stan
ley mountains toward the Jap
held north" New Guinea coastal
base at Buna, the high command
reported Thursday.
Allied medium bombers' re
turned again; to Dilli, h arbor
tram and the Jan-occunied vil
lages ofi Maobisse and Alley In
Portuguese Timor, causing heavy
damage.' f i - ' ";.
Wednesday night under cover
of darkness, an allied heavy unit
bombed the airdrome and wharf
areas at Lae which is a Jap-held
base on h the 'northeast coasi-'of
New Cfulnea ' 175 .mueiT abova
Buna. wl
In the ground fighting, in which
allied troops ihaVe rolled back a
Japanese offensive thrust over; the
Owen Stanley mountains directed
Lat Port Moresby, General MacAr-
thur said the strone enemy i re-
sistance was i met and overcome
three miles west of Oivi while
planes, supported, the -attack; by
efmiftmtf Tnn rtU'irinne - - - -!
A strong force of medium bomb-
ers attacked Salamaua, another
North New Guinea port, one bomb
touching off an explosion, prob-
ably a munitions dump, which
hurled debris 700 in the air. All
the bombers got back despite anti
aircraft opposition. -
Peonage Charged
Sugar Company
TAMPA, Fla, Nov. 4 GP The
vast US Sugar corporation, oper
ator of plantations and refineries
in the Florida Everglades, was ac
cused Wednesday of holdidng nei
gro cane workers in peonage.
US District Attorney Herbert
S. Phillips ; announced federal
grand jury; indictments - against
the corporation, its - Personnel
manager and:! three of its planta
tion superintendents. : ?
Vice President Jay: W. Moran
at Clewiston : expressed amaze
ment at the indictments and de
clared the I corporation "always
has maintained the highest work
ing and living conditions" for the
laborers.! H f 7' M----.
fTonight
7 Friday
Saturday
Cold Lead vs. Hot Rhythm..
. 1 ' I: aa I
FREDDY MARTIN
and his ORCHESTRA
: : 'Meet - ;
-?ho Llayor ;
of Aim st
- : -i Starring- -' , '
" " GEORGE MURPHY
ANNE SHIRLEY
'1 1 " ,with
William Gargan - Richard
Barthelmess .- Joan Merrill
Plus Second Big Feature
. '-. , Newest Romantic
Adventures with the Star'
Who: Played The Saint"
. ' , 1, -- ,
With George Sanders - Lynn
Bail - James Gleason - Al
len Jenkins Helen Gilbert
Also News, Color Cartaea
and "Jungle Girt"
Buncan Vote
359
Incumbent Loses as
Judge; 46 per Cent
Vote Cast, County
.(Continued from Page 1)
JC2undgren, Clackamas county, and
iJohn Steelhammer.-Marion
al county, i j
- Wells sad he did not expect &
-"OFFICIAL UNOFFICIAI
BIAEION COUNTY VOTE
to (All precincts complete)
US Senator : .-'
McNary 14,380 ,' r-;
Whitbeck 3428 r ;
j Congressman
1 1
Mott '12,174
Nott 5487
Geverner 1
Snell 14,747 l
Wallace 3235
Secretary of State :.
- Farrell 11,399
Lambert 5774 f
Labor Commissioner
Kimsey 9035
Hyde 6665
State Senator '.
(2 positions)
McKay 12,917
, Carson 12,006 J ;
State Representative ';
(4 positions) ,
Jones 11,655 . 1 :
Ramage 1L220 I !
Steelhammer 11,184
Chadwick 10,612 i
Randall 5500 1 '
Hay 5180 j ,
Brabec 5090
McPike3819 1 ;
County Judge : ; !
Murphy 10,918 '
Bayne 3428 !
County Commissioner
1 Smith 9839 ' .
Prange, 6314
County Recorder r
Lanke 11,351 j
Jory 4651 J
Justice of the Peace j
(Salem district) $
Felton 8901
Constable
1 (Salem district)
Mogan (deceased) 5206
Adams 5126 . :
Circuit Court ,
Position 1
Duncan 8117
McMahan 7758
Position 2
Page 12,432
I Supreme Court
I (3 positions, all uncontested ) ,
J KeUy 12,48J - . l t .
I Brana ii,S7X - ,
BeI 11,121
State Schec Superintendent
Putnam 1363 j -
-Meawirea ! I. f,
t .Xtim.te&Mat, pay, -.yes
17996, no- 7358; rural credits
amendment repeal f yes 6617, no
P"; gasoune tax limitation yes
690 1 no 6274 ; vote privilege
amendment yes 5990, no 6850;
cigarette tax yes 7146, no 7686;
coastal fishing restriction yes
I C938. no 7709; surplus funds to
chools yes .7987, no 6104.
j Inmate Escapes
Guy M. Barhan, patient of the
ported.
BumussmsuuSBUBaut:
HBauaHuakuaaaauauBi
NOW - TRIPLE HIT SHOW!
EILEEN'S CREED -
. . . Love thy Neighbor . . .
especially if he is Tall, Dark
and Handsome! - I
The Men she could! not get
. were the Men she had
not met!
She believed that a girl with
Good Lines . . . can get fur
ther than a girl with a Good
Line . . . ! ;- -' ' --s . .;
Nun P"V1 1 ! :!
;i
Si.
a. t-
Mm
if - Mvl
I PLUS---
ij CRAJO STEVENsTrens MANNING j
1 ZULU O ) 7
1 ciiycfnczD f
III - ,.mr::-:
TODAT AXO m -1 BITS j
' -SS'
! rxu3 i
' I ljlIDU Ljj If
' 2 n r rs 7 '
j -jL..-. w-
-ill z sr. t
Tthmy Llcssageo
Congratulate ;
- More than 500 telegrams, con
gratulating Secretary of State Earl
Snell on his election as governor
in Tuesday's gubernatorial con
test, were received at the state
department here Wednesday.
While most of the telegrams
came from Oregon points others
arrived from eastern and middle
western cities.
Winter Joins
Aleutians
Battle
(Continued from Page 1)
the Tundra, set up their guns en -ground
so 1 spongy that a man
mess haILt;-'; j.'-'.'-Before
the Japanese were suf-
"J wiaucu ii xvisna, AIXU
and Agattu to make shipping rea
sonably safe, the Alaskan north
was braced for an attack, ,v
. The attack never came, but the
ships did. j Not the few which had I
been in the plans, but dozens, deep .4 j
at the water line, carrying sup-
plies -for ( full-fledged army
1 a met Hiaa a sew ouiposiS.
Civilian I lonsshore -, erewi w.r.
hurriedly j recruited. Soldi ers
pitched in. Even Eskimos aided.
So the cargo came to the north
food for the winter, shells-
tents, huts to ; replace the tents.
tractors, . trucks, radio Installa
tions, fuel,! Plane engines, every
thing an army would need to sus
tain, itself I"- :
Today, this army,' scattered
throughout! posts where snow al
ready is deep and the ground froz
en, is ready for the winter.
Some of! the troops are still In
tents; but these tents are winter
ized." - ' ,-;
From now. en, no ships will
enter the! mnnt nnrthni
until spring but neither will
an Invader's fleet appear off the
coast. For better or worse,
both United States troops and
any enemies r most. In these
northern latitudes, depend upon , )
the airplane for supplies, for1
mail, for ! reinforcement.
It could be worse. The United
States has lots of airplanes. No
one who stood on the aprons of
tnese northern airports durring
those critical days of early Sum- 1
mer can doubt that
70 Hunters Marooned
WENATCHEE. Nov. 4- iVPi
State highway department crews ,
and equipment ) . fought heavy
snowdrifts for the third day K to ,
reacn some 70 hunters . marooned '
in the nearby Cascade mountains,'
oui at a late , hour Wednesdav -
hight no word had been received )
nere that roads had been
opened. ! '
re-
MARGIE
, nADT
ih Y Joe E J Brown
V Daring
II S . Young Man"
Ul5
TODAY
ft
ANN ff i
SHERIDAN
RONALD f
RE AG A
Lupe Teles
Honolulu
LtjT
Bexefflce Opea (:45
LAST DAY - "YOKEL
BOY," "MYSTERY SKIT"
MA :
L J
: ' J' ... " 1 -
mmm - jsuuBuiarniy t ' '" r '"t
Tomorrow V
Defers
"Red River) "i
i
w 1 til -!'