TTJSZ TWELVE TIi OnCGOIT STATESMAN. Sclera Orwjon Saturday Morning. KareinBer T 1212 Allies to Open Second Front. Stalin Says Soviets Made 8 Million of . Enemy Inactive : ' (Continued from Page 1) - a friendly tone in the speech that highlighted celebrations through out the land on the even ox the 25 th anniversary of the commun fart revolution. - ; .The German dream of conquest envisioning the fall of Stalingrad by September 25, Saratov by Aug list 9, Baku by September 29 and Moscow this fall has failed, the Russian commander in chief as serted. : ,MIn their hunt for oil and for Moscow, the German strategists have got into difficulties,? he said amidst cheers. "Their summer plans appear to have failed." i The premier offered "facts to . - prove the strengthening" of the coalition between Russia, the United States and Great Britain, and added: "The , Anglo-Soviet-American coalition . has all the possibilities tor -victory and they will win." He said "no sane man" would ! attempt to ' destroy Germany, j bat "we will destroy the Hitler ite' military power." Germany, he said, was already weakening as attested by its Inability to launch general attacks along the entire Russian front. "The Germans were not strong enough to attack southwest 'and north Russia at the same time like last summer," he declared, "but they are still strong enough to launch a serious , attack in one f - direction." He said the Russian home front was stronger and better organized than ever before, and ' that the people of Europe under Hitler 1 domination were seething in re- volt. The transport problem was Russia's' major hurdle, he said, ; but he added that Russia had been able to build new factories and supply, the Red army with tanks, planes and guns, and furnish it with food. He said the main German ob '. jective had been to divert the Russian reserve strength to the southwest in order to attack Mos cow, and by taking the capital, finish the war this year. The Ger ! mans, he said, had more than 3,000,000 troops in Russia. Time after time, the Russian leader spoke of the second front. "Because of the absence of a .second front in Europe, the Ger mans were able to take the ini tiative without risk to them selves," he said. ' "Thus the main reason of . German . saceess this year is .j. the absence of a second front. IT there had been a second front in Europe drawing away tv divisions as during the first werld war, the position of the German armies today would be bad Indeed. We would-be witnessing the end of the German Fascist armies because our troops would be in Pskov, Minsk and Zhitomir. This I would, mean the German Fascist army would be faced with catas trophe." : Stalin said that in the first world . war only 85 of the 220 German divisions were on the Russian front' Now, however, this year, out of 258 divisions 1-79 -are on our front, he said,, "to this can be be added 23 Rumanian, 14 Fin nish,' ten Italian," 13 Hungarian, and one Spanish division, making 240 divisions altogether on our front against the Red -army. , "The enemy's other troops are In Occupied France, Norway and other places," he said. " ; "Part of then are in Libya I fighting 1 against j the British but there are only four German divis ions and 11 Italian ' divisions in all. We have over 3,000,000 men arrayed against us. . "I think no other enemy or country could stand up to such an onslaught." ; ' i, In answer to the question, "will Name of Owner and Description of Property as Shown by the Latest Tax -Roll. ffon, Vol.217 Pages 277, 326 Odom, F. L. Fr. Winona A d d i t ion, Salem, Oregon, VoL 210 Pages 350-351, Vol. 224 Page 365, ex. Vol. 226 Page 458, ex. Vol. 227 Page 480-538 Daily, George F. & - Thelma S.: Yew Park Annex, Sub Division of Blocks . 28 & 35, Salem, . Oregon, Vol 237, Page 64 Gilliam, D e n z e 1, 3c Pritchett Don: Merrifield's Addi- . tion, Aumsville, Oregon, Vol. 247 Page 75 Gilliam, D e n z e I, & Pritchett' Don: Merrifield's Addi tion, A u m s v 1 1 le, . Oregon, Vol, 247, Page 75 , Schwartz, Lawrence -St Alexis Addition, Dutteville, Oregon, Vol. 121 Page 389 3&4 110 5&6 10 2 to 7 12 JDixel, Jlarsaret 'Fr. Feller's Addition, Donald, Oregon, V,1. 143, P&S2S 361- toere be a second front," Stalin replied: "Yes, there will be' one sooner r later, because . It Is . no less . essential for our allies than. us. Oar allies mast understand that after the fall of France, the ab sence of a second front can mean catastrophe for them. ' The Soviet war aims, he said. are: ' 1. Destruction of Hitlerism, which is "both possible and es sential." 2. Elimination Of the "slave system which Germany calls the new order." ". . 3. Destruction of the builders of this new order, i -Tne moral and political re serves of the Germans in Europe is .being exhausted," Stalin de clared, "the peoples are rising. The"enslaved nations are awaiting their turn to take revenge on the oppressors. They know the German-Italian coalition is falling to pieces. "There are people who doubt coalition can., mobilise all its resources. They say that as a result of oar. different social systems we cannot do this, bat I think that this is not so." He said the Allies "must act in colloboration," and, that it would be ridiculous to stress ideological differences in face of the common foe. City Advised To Ration Meat Supply PORTLAND, ORE., Nov. 6 UP) High government officials en tered the Portland meat contro versy Friday, asking the city to ration the meat voluntarily and drop the controversy. Some packers claim the city has only enough meat for another week, and OPA quotas prevent them from putting additional meat on the market until January 1. They ask increased Quotas. One packer said, however, that while some meats may become scarce, there will be neough to get the city through the rest of the year. He requested anony mity. The government officials, in cluding Agriculture Secretary Claude R. Wickard; Elmer Davis, director of the office of war in formation; Paul McNutt, man power director, and James M. Landis, director of civilian de fense, in a message to Gov. Charles A. Sprague, requested packers to accept the quotas and asked Sprague's cooperation. Earlier Sprague had urged in creased quotas OPA officials said Portland could not expect special allot ments while, other cities are limit- to original , quotas. Jernstedt Signs As Test Pilot YAMHILL, Nov. 6 -(if)- Ken Jernstedt of Yamhill, whose sput tering machine guns downed no less than 10 Japs over China and Burma, has turned test pilot The only Oregon AVGer said Friday he would join the staff of Republic Aircraft corporation, Farmingdale, NY He has been resting for several weeks recovering from recurring dengue fever contracted in the orient. British Bombers Again Hit Italy -LONDON, Nov. 7-()-British bombers were over Italy again Friday, night, it was announced Saturday. It was the first RAF assault on Italy since the night of October 24, when home-based British planes ; struck heavily at Milan, site of the big Caproni bomber works.. I That raid was the fourth direc ted at targets in northern Italy in a space of three days, other ob- jectives being Genoa and Turin. o lriH TaxRon o g; VoL Page Line 23 E 5 Total 749 7 1938 12.84 3.98 47J7 6 ! 2B 756 3 1942 1.18 .01 763 . 20 1941 1.85 .13 756 35 1940 1.87 .28 ' I 757 1 1939 . 1.83 .42 , 752 2 1938 1.67 .52 . 867 9 1937 1.73 .67 12.16 ' f.-i" ; ' 74 i . . ; i . .: - ,' : .' i ! ' 48 i - 2B 764 ' 27 1942 1.98 i .02 . 773 I 10 1941 3.10 ' J22 i ! 766 . H. 1940 3.11 ! .47 - 761 8 . 1938 2.79 6 12.65 2B 766 ; I' 31 1942 ! 774 31 1941- 767 - 30 1940 . 767 "30 1939 j 762 1 31 1938 2B 766 . 32 "1942 . '774 , 32 1941 767 31 . 1940 767 31 . 1939 762 32 1938 2B 772 ' 12 . 1942 781, .5 .1941 774 .2 1940 774 , 1 1939 (768 32 . 1938 762 . 35 1937 2B 775 15 1942 784. . 19 1941 777. 15 1940 - 777 , 14 - 1939 ' -659 "19 1935 .'663 3 1933 f 658. . 11 1932 .657 1 1931 Polities Truce Gains Strength Winning of War Now Said Job; Greater Efficiency Asked 1 (Continued from Page 1) Iday on politics to order to con centrate en the, common' objec tive of victory ? over the axis. Senator McNary of Oregon, re- ' publican leader, who baa attrib uted democratic election re verses to "shocking wastes" in expenditures and ether factors, said: .;U.,-v N-. 1 "We are willing to f orget the election if the administration will remember the implications It contained. w Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich) who has suggested a , "unified committee on war .cooperation,' added Friday in further comment on the elections: "This is no time for a Jubilee, it's time- for a prayer .meeting. The loyal opposition asked the country for a mandate and got it We must now deliver the goods and that means from here on out there must be maximum; efficien cy and a minimum of mistakes both at home and abroad in the winning of the war." Senator Nye (R-ND) said the president's remark about assum ing congress, wanted to win the war was "insulting" in Its under statement "The president ought to konw, if be doesn't, that there Is just as complete determination on the part of republicans to win the war a there Is on his part," Nye declared. The North Dakota senator ex pressed the belief that increased republican strength in both houses would be reflected immediately in greater insistence on knowing what is being done with the money that has been appropriated for war purposes. Canadians Join Fight A BRITISH PORT, Nov. 6-0P1 A great mass of Canadian fight ing forces, including the first de tachment of the Canadian Wom en's Army corps, called CWACS, and the largest air force con tin gent yet to arrive, has reached this port after a safe crossing of the Atlantic. Thousands of reinforcements for the field army, including ar mored infantry, artillery regi ments and lumbermen - soldiers for the forestry corps, were in the convoy. t me crossing was swtrt on a calm sea, unmarred by any ene my opposition. CDA Initiation To Be Monday MT. ANGEL A joint reception of new members of the Mt Angel and Stay ton courts of the Catho lic Daughters of America, will be held here in the clubroom of St. Mary's school, Monday night, November 9. Local candidates include Anna Fisher, Catherine Fjennette, An tonia Baker, Cecelia Bochsler, Geraldine Ackerman, : and Ella Schaefer. ! Assisting' and preparing the banquet which will be held in the school dining room following the reception are: Mrs." Cecelia Skonetzni, Mrs. Al Lulay, chair men, Mrs. Leo Schwab, Mrs. J. Deneke, Mrs. L. A. LeDoux, Mrs. John Ebner, Mrs. .Fred J. Schwab, Mrs. A. J. Butsch, Mrs. Joseph Wagner, Mrs. Alois Keber, Mrs. Al Wilde, Mrs. J. L. Wachter, ' Mrs. Henry Zollner, and Mr,. 17 Hoffer. Name of Owner and Description of Property as Shown by the Latest Tax Roll. Parrish, J. E. & J. N.: Fr. 4-5 ; Jefferson, Oregon, Vol. 173 Page 390, VoL 188 Page 74 s Ball, Wm. L.. $ Loganville, Oregon, VoL 144 Page 567 Stewart, Isa belle Est.: 1 Minto, Oregon, Vol. 11 102 Page 543 - Butte Falls Fruit Fr. Growers Ass'n.: Scotts Mills, Ore gon. Vol. 105 Page' 85 - : 3.78 JDA .38 59 f .79 . 5.91- 1.36 ' 5J4 1.66 15.61: .16 - 22JJ4 1.54 2181 3.27 24.35 5.60 42.01 ' 6.82 16'" JDl I ( 1.72 .12 l.68 .25 t 1.74 . .40 ; 1.87 8 1.89 . .74 2.69 ,03 , , 4.23 - JO , 4.97 .75 ,3.40-. x .78 5.68 3.11 12.06 , 7X0 11.04 7.88 &2S 29 29.91 Fischer, Paul 12321 Scotts Mills, Ore- 13 to 16 gon, VoL 195 Page 348 - 1226 Williams. O. Ames' Addition, Silverton, Oregon, Vol. 180 Page 569 . 705 1 Haskins, Pansy - t Cowings Addition, ON the HOME FRONT By ISABEL CHELDS ' When the rain falls : so should the lamplight 1 i Puddles in ' the uneven paving then are not merely sources, of mud blotches on windshields and stockings, but they become golden pools reflecting to the outsider the cheer that surely lies behind the windowpanes. " " Such pools take. on odors, too, or should I say scents? Biscuits bake there, and tomatoes bubble, while freshly-sliced . potatoes fry and the whole blends tantalizing- ly with a meat loaf, just out of the oven, the shaggy chrysanthemums just in from the garden and the faraway breath of umbrellas dry ing in the hall. fc There's strawberry jam on the table, and a few pieces of late music on the piano. No amount of urging can remove the jschoolbooks strewn where they do not belong, but then, if the books were .to go too, so should their owners. And the sound that arises from a shining brown street,; when the lamplight falls where the rains have been, is not merely that of the day's most sophisticated radio program;' nor is it the tinkle of ice in glasses. But somewhere behind the windowpanes, whose light reflected in the puddles at his feet there is laughter and argument there is breathless competition to repeat what the best friends said at school. Somehow, the outsider thinks less of the morale-building quali ties of the latest fingernail enam eL sheer hosiery and even a suf ficiency of gasoline and tires when there is lamplight in the puddles at her feet Now that, like sugar, such lux uries are rationed to us, they per haps, seem the more valuable. But the things to which we look forward are the things for which we willingly sacrifice.!' V j And the time will I come when the lamplight falls as: liberally as the rain. Nazi Assaults Hurled Back (Continued from Page 1) were fighting "tense defensive en gagements with enemy tanks and infantry" southeast !of Nalchik, deep in the Caucasus. One red unit was said to have repelled three enemy attacks in which the Germans lost about 400 men and five tanks while Russian artillery dispersed and partly annihilated about one battalion of enemy hi' fantry. Only fighting of local import ance took place on the area north' east of Tuapse, the communique said. The Russian communique Fri day noon, had contained equally good news of soviet resistance The reports added to the festive atmosphere as the soviet union went into the celebration of the 25th anniversary of the bolshevik revolution. Oregon Second, Bonds PORTLAND, Nov. 6 (JF) Oregon is second in the nation in percentage of income invested' in war bonds, bond sales administra tor Ray Conway disclosed Fri day. The state's percentage is 9, compared to Iowa's 10.1 which leads the nation. Alcoa Prefers AFL VANCOUVER, WASH., Nov. I -(P) Alcoa workers in the Van couver plant Friday voted 305 to 913 in tva A.f.cnn4 I. 41,. A TTT I of the CIO Aluminum union. "3 O Jd sft3 u o o OT c r 31 C 1 to 4 & Clara: Els 15 MS . Longer .Week Said No Good FR Declares Output Would Drop ; Kaiser Advocates Control (Continued from Page 1) committee be established to al locate men and women where needed in the ; armed forces. ' war plants and essential civili an Industries. The committee, he said, should include representatives of. the army, navy, maritime commission. agriculture, war industries and essential civilian industry, with two. spokesmen for labor' and neutral representative. The com mittee, operating through regional directors, . would "have authority over manpower needed for farms and factories. Kaiser called the government's present manpower policy confus ing and counseled immediate action to halt the flow of skilled industrial workers into the armed services. British Slash African Corps (Continued from Page 1) in the desert. Thousands of these prisoners were pouring back into rear-line cages. Three entire Italian divisions, the Trente, Bresoia, and Felgare, have been trapped by the Brit ish far south of the Mediteranean coastal road at the axis anchor positions near the Qattara de pression. These troops were abandoned as the German African corps scurried westward. But another reason for their encirclement was effective allied aerial blows that wrecked most of the fascist trans port. One dispatch late Friday night said a large New Zea land detachment had passed between these Italian divisions and the Qattara depression in a race toward the Egyptian frontier as part f of the effort te pin Rommel's troops against the sea before they can reach Libya. US, British, and South Afri- can airmen still were hacking constantly , at the fleeing axis columns - packed tight in four lanes west- and south of Matruh The enttrej Mediterranean coastal road hy5 which Rommel's troops hope to . escape into Libya has become "a ribbon of fire and death," AP Correspondent Frank L. Martin said in a dispatch from the front in the western desert 208 Republicans, 221 Democrats' Sent to House Unofficial tallies up to Friday night showed the election of 221 democrats and 208 republicans to the house as a result of Tuesday's balloting, with two contests still undecided. The new lineup, in the senate stood at 57 democrats and 38 re publicans. The latest house contest to be heard from was in the first dis trict of Utah where a final un official count gave Rep. Walter K. Granger, democrat 36,430 votes for reelection to 35,947 for Bracken Lee, republican. There was a pos sibility that an unofficial canvass November 30 might change the result The last senate contest was de cided Friday when a final couh gave James E. Murray, democrat, seeking, reelection to his Montana seat a narrow margin of victory over Wellington D. Rankin, re publican. -,. Tax Roll Vol. Page Line c 2B 787 40 1942 ; 20.34 797 25 1941 29.58 790- 10 1940 26.10 784 32 1938 38.99 938 12 1937 120.88 675 17 1933 28.91 2B 791 18 1942 .17 801 17 1941 .25 794 I 3 1940 5 793 35 . 1939 .24 788 20 1938 .23 2B 796 16 1942 I j 4.40 807 12 1941 6.06 799 30 : 1940 5.84 . 799 J20 ! 1939 50 794 : 2 1938 , 5.56 2B 803 ' 5 1942 26.18 814 T31 . ' 1941 38.16 807 : 11 1940 ' . 31.13 806 ' 33 1939 : - 29JZ6 - 801 ... 11 1938" - 38.07 795 19- 1937 - 41.74 688 - 7 ; 1335 50.61 691 v , 7 ; 1933 .47.45 686 15 , 1932 - - 40.33 685 6 :. 1931 12.83 2B 805 ,14 1942 28.56 817 : 13 . 1941 - 41.64 809 28 - 1940 -r- 33.96 , 798 i' 1 ' 1937' .-v 7.38 690 -.'24 ,1935 33.74 693 24 i 1933 36.16 688 32 ,,"1932. 300 687 23 1931 19.64 2B 812 ' 5 1942 10.52 824 , 17- 1941 46 816, 30 f 1940 J- 13.83 811 . . 5 1938 10.50 805 ; 15 1937 10.92 700 31 1933 10.44 " 696 4 1932 - 10.06 2B 815 1 38 1942 10.52 823 27 1941 14-33 0 2.07 3.92 12.09 '47.14 18J21 None .02 .04 ..06 .07 .04 .42 .88 10 1.72 8 2.67 4.67 6.44 11.80 16.23 27.84 30.09 23.77 9.96 ' .29 2.91 5.09' j 2.66 18.56 19.89 21.97 15.19 - .11 1.00 2.03 2.4Z 329 6.58 7.14 .11 1.01 Lato I Sports ' PORTLAND, ' Ore., Nor. 6-JP) Lou Nqva, the heavyweight yogi manT' launched ' a comeback ' aW tempt . here Friday night V by knocking out Ernie Nordman, Goodlahd, Kan in " the fourth round bout of a scheduled 10-round Nova; f 208, whose self-styled yogi punch j failed against cham pion Joe Louis, opened cautious ly. He caught Nordman, 195, with a few hard rights in the second, taggedl him frequently in the third : and floored him - twice in the ' fourth before putting the Kansan but for keeps, in 2:02 of the round. In thiei feature bout of the warm-ups Keller , Wagner, 190, Salem,' knocked out Bobby Ross, 185, Amarnio, Tex, in 2:25 of the first round. Oregon High School -7 Cottagef Grove 6,. University 0. Heppnejr 13,' Grant Union 0. MairinesHold Offi Attackers Axis (Reports Allied 1 t i . Convoy Steaming; , British Bomb (Continued from Page 1) becoming concerned over military possibilities west and south of Libya, and in the Mediterranean itself. A j The newest chapter in the Ger man radio s continued story 01 troop, j plane and ship dispositions at Gibraltar was that a big allied convoy,; Including aircraft car riers, :had " gone from . the rock's harbor jinto the Mediterranean. The . Germans hazarded a guess that this jwas a new supply expe dition! for Malta, but they, may actually expect something else. A German radio broadcast early Saturday reported the British battleship Rodney, one of a large numbert of British warships said to Dei maneuvering mysteriously around Gibraltar, and a large con voy of freighters, steamed away from the; British base Friday. - The! convoy, the radio said. headed Into the Mediterranean, but there' was no indication of the direction i the battleship took. The Rodney, the German report add ed was protected by an "air um brella" of fighting planes. Flying ! through rain and heavy 'clouds, British fear-motored Lkneasters . and mediant Wellington bombers attacked Germany , in . daylight - Friday while 200 Spitfire fighters, some i-jr with American pilots, made diverslonery sweeps ever occupied France. , A small force of Lancaster heavy- bombers dropped explosives on industrial communication tar gets at; the rail junction of Osna brueckj jit was reported. They slipped' in and out of clouds for protection.: Swooping suddenly out of . the clouds, the Wellingtons, mean while attacked an unidentified fort in northwest Germany. Squadrons of US fighter Dlanes made sweeps. with the RAF over enemy targets in occupied France while! British bombers pounded German ! airfields at Caen. - if: ' ' Navy Enlistee s 44 Others LOS ANGELES, Nov. 6WV-N. L. Judelson. 44. who wa . tM upon his; recent enlistment in the na vy to j go out and get another enrolee, paraded back to the re cruiting joffice Friday at the head of 44 cheering and flaewavin men he : encouraged to enlist ThiS jis the largest and i mot colorful f group of men cvr n have been assembled by a newly enlisted man,? said Lt R. B Trick; recruiting- official. ! t Judelson was an advortfeln wxuiii oezore ouiing the colors. Name of Owner and. Description of Property as Shown by the Latest Tax Roll. 85 Total Silverton, O r eg on. Vol. 159 Page 100 " v:: ' I-'-'-:'y; Haskins,: Pansy Cowings Addition, Silverton, Oregon, Vol. 175 Page 608 348.43 m i : 13 Gay, S. A. & M. Upsund's Addition, ' . Silyerton, Oregon, Vol. 174JPage 89 Maertz, Rosa : Hollister's Annex No. 1, Stayton, Ore- . gon. Vol. 116 Page' 95 - Harris, Joe. E. & Car I E.: Hollister's An- nex No. 1, Stayton, Oregon, Vol. 212 : - Page - - 3L32 504,59 of th fnrMnind -V IlTi Yt .r"11 Kven exclusively oy. jour weeiciy puoucauons erJ L cirSualionfa? Miri6 Oregon Statesman, i daily newspaper! of gen Ssteto?t5rJ5ft o? Jhe County Court of 1942 318.44 publlSu'on0 NoembJr V i ' ,;" l ::!i 10330 ' 1 Hochstetler Rites Sunday . Former Salem Man Dies at Veterans ,J ; i Hospital Thursday WOODBURN-ilrwin M. Hoch stetler, 52, died ( at the Veterans hospital In Portland ' Thursday. Mrs. Hochstetler j and son now live at "Hubbard but: the family for merly,! lived ,mj Salem. Irwin Hochstetler-was born In Nappnee, Ind, May 18, 1890. 1 He was a vet eran of World war: L F He Is survived1 by his wife, Ida, of Hubbard; sons, Glenn, - with, the navy j far, the I Pacific, George of Hubbard;' brother j Simon. Hoch stetler - of Hubbard, two iialf brothers, George Strawn of Day ton, Ohio, and jJohn- Strawn ; of Hubbard. j , Funeral services, will be held on Sunday at 230 pjn. at Bingo cnapei in woodburn. Burial win be in -Hubbard cemetery, Mrs. Bertha Kitchen . - ALBANY Mrs. Bertha Kitchen, 76, a resident of 'Albany for over 40 years, until three - years ago, died at the home; of her daughter, Mrs. .Esther Kean in Corvallis, Wednesday, following a stroke of paralysis - she ' suffered last - Mon day.;.!; -X :Z Funeral -seryices- will .. be held from the Fortnuuler Funeral home, Albany, at 2 o clock Saturday, new. u. v. isaxer, pastor. 01 ine Pentecostal Assembly, Corvallis, of which Mrs Kitchen was a mem ber, will conduct!' the Services, Burial will be in Riverside. Born in Breslau, Germany, on August, 23, 1866, Bertha Barffus came to the United States when she was 21 years old, leaving her family in Germany. She went to Portland, where she. was married to::' Frank Kitchen. 'Later i they lived- at Fort' Stevens where Mr. Kitchen was "employed on the construction of the south Jetty of the Columbia river. V From there , they ' came to Al bany where Mr. Kitchen operated a brick yard for many years. He died in 1935. Mrs. Kitchen went to Corvallis three years ago. Surviving beside, the daughter are two sons, W.; F.' Kitchen of Corvallis. and J. E. Kitchen . of Waldporu. . There are also eight grandchildren, one of whom, Wil liam Kean, is with the US army orps at Fort Bliss, Texas. vass I Made Mariin county; voters cast 14,789 votes for Earl Shell for governor, 3175 for Lew Wallace, the "official canvass figures1 released - Friday from County Clerk Lee Ohmart's office Reveal, f Sen. ' Charles Li McNary drew 14,379 votes to Walter W. Whit beck's 3428; .Rep. James W. Mott received 12,175 votes, while Earl Nott got 5488' f the same officer. Robert E. Farrel, Jrv for secretary of state was the choice of 11,395 Marion county j residents, Francis Lambert: of 5770.1 -- Closest race tallied, in the can vass Friday was that between W. E. Kimsey and Clarence F. Hyde, the former receiving 9237 for la bor commissioner while the latter nurse liernatitus First for Award " ; : WASHrNGTON ; Nov. 6ffV- The navy announced Friday that Miss Anna Bematitus, a native of Exeter, Pa af navy nurse who served on Bataan andCorregidor, will be the first person In the na val service to receive the newly created legion jofji merit award. Miss Bernatitus, now : a chief nurse on the staff of thei naval medical center, at Bethesda, ' ML, will receive the award for "cour ageous and outstanding" perform ance of duty. Coun Can Tax Roll. 1 ;s J - VoL Page Line S -6 2 I " -. 820 - 26 1 1940, 13.88 2.08 ? H , 820 , 17 1939 11.64 2.68 I 1 704 25 1933 - 10.44 6.58 i 699 31 - 1932 2.51 1.74 ; j 2B 815 39 , 1942 - 526 .05 I I; 828 28 ,1941 , 7.18 .50 ! 820 27 1940 - 6.94 1.04 1 f, 820 18 1939 5.82 1.34 '" "j ,!" '04 26 1933 5.22- 3.29 - I 699 " 32 1932 . 1.25 .87 ! 2B 825 17 1942 - 36.82 .37 i 839 . 21 1941 50.26 3.51 ' ; , 831 15 1940 48.58 7.29 ; I 831 1 . 1939 , 40.74 9.37 j . ! 825 13 1938 . 36.75 11.39 2B 831 19 1942 6.02 .06 ! . 846 3 ' 1941 8.40 .59 ' ' i x ' 837 32 . 1940 . 8.53 1J2 ; 837 14 ' 1939 8.58 1.97 I 831 28 v 1933 . 8.62 2.67 2B 832 . , 2 1942 10.15 .10 f ' . .! 46 28 1941 14.18 .93 ; t '833 20 1940 ' 14.39 2.11 t, I 838 , a ; 1939 11.80 2.71 4i I I 832 15 1938 11.86 3.68 M 721 , 28 i 1933 6.94 4.37 , ! f 716 .32 ' 1932 5.81 4.14 V CO 5 & 6 2 T&8 ' v-yuav, roaas ana entered YtiM f ntlce 13 Ctober A. C. 1 1 Bend Training Center To Cost Four Blillion WASHINGTON, Nov. 6 The war department formally an nounced Friday night authorizai.! tion for construction of a training center at Bend,' Ore', to cost jin excess of $4,000,000, under super" vision of the Portland, Orej offica ox tne army engineers. i Price To Be Frozen WASHINGTON. Nov. ft! wta- The office of price administratioa : will act soon to Insure reasonably' prices on turkeys for the Thanks- L giving and Christmas holiday ta.' Dies, a spoaesman asid Friday. j The new ceiling price, expected within a day -or so, will replica the present. 60-day freeze', order which pegged ceilings at each sel ler's highest price in the I period September 28-October 2. The freeze expires December 2. j - h ' The , new ceiling will hot ba' of the individual "freeze? type, the spokesman said, but he would not cuvuige what form of price aer could be expected. ; Driver Ordered Held PORTLAND, j Nov. 6 (M George : W. Holmes, 54, of Port land, driver of the car which fa tally injured W, P. Campbell, 84,: October' 28r was ordered held for the grand jury Friday by Munl dpal Judge J. f. Quillin. Camp bell was father of i the late Her bert Campbell, once publisher! ot the Vancouver, Wash., Columbian. Watch for (EdPIUDEBI TT A TTrVTAT iijiuiiyiit By Corenee Budingfon Kelland was becmuful. But :sh lived in i a small town where beauty was n d t appreciated, j ; Bealn this retrashlna story j of, a girl who wanted to live exdt- ; Inaly, starang soon in esaaa 833 . m a A t . on tne u day ox September, 24- Vand the date of last BURK. Turkfey &&m:t- -v mm. .i. ... in J 1 1 DABNLEY CARFAX ? p . Sheriff and Tax Collector of i 1 , v r Marion County, Oregon. M. B. HA YD EN, K District Attorney for Marion County, Oregon. 0.24-3L-N.7-14. . ; . H - U I ! I' k j I Total '. ; . L '' , U" ::V V' - ' ' : ! - M ;r :. - 1 38.76 , : : . ' ". 245.08 - - 46.72 :.T I . ' J3