i PAGE TWO Tbm OSEGON STATES MAtT. Salem Oregon, Wednesday Morning November 18. 1912 3 Greater Enemy Loss Foreseen Cleanup Operations Not Yet Told; Two More Deaths Known (Continued from Page 1) guns as compared, with 14-inch weapons carried by the -type of Japanese battleship involved in the fight, and the president said Admiral CaUaghan had done a very courageous thing. He re marked, that he was very much . upset at the news of Callaghan's .. death. A A strong indication, that the list of Japanese losses is as yet incom ' plete came from, Maj. Gen. A. A. - yandergrift, commander of the . marine force on Guadalcanal is land, in the course of a message of mnprntiilatinrm nn the naval . triumph. , ,The enemy has apparently suffered a devastating defeat," ' A1 .1 J 1 , DC ma uic imt ncpMuucuh The battered 1 helmets of the ngnung iorees on uaaoaicanai ; are lifted in deepest tribute to Rear Admirals Callaghan. Scott. Lee ind Klnkaid, and to their forces, who against seem ingly hopeless odds did. with magnificent courage attack and drive back the first hostile stroke and make, later success possible.'' What "later successes" he re ferred to, whether they have al- ready been won or are even now in the making, was not disclosed here. The Vandergrift message, cou- pled with previous reports,1 , showed that at least five admirals . were in the battle area, and pro bably in the action itself. Rear . Adm. Norman Scott, like Callag han, was killed in. action. The other two mentioned by Vander grift were identified by the navy as Willis August Lee of Owen ton. Ky- and Thomas C. Kincaid, of Philadelphia. The fifth rear admiral was" Kelly Turner, who commanded a task force which took part in the battle. -The ipresence of these high ranking officers and "possibly of others gave a clue to the size of the American forces in the main encounter of the Solomons which was fought out in the early dark ness of last Friday , (Guadalcanal timp with' the TTnitid Statps hat 'tleships in full action for the first time since the Spanish American war. The fact that Rear Admiral Scott had been killed was dis closed by the nary Tuesday along- with the death In action of CapL .Cassia Young, captain of the flanhio of Rear Admiral been reported . Monday. " Scott, 53, was from Kirk wood, Mo., and Young, 48, had recently made his home in Coronado, Calif. Young held the medal of honor for exceptional bravery at Pearl Harbor, during the Japan ese attack on December T. He was blown off his ship by a ter rific explosion in the burning Battleship Arizona, tied up along side, but swam back, climbed aboard and moved his vessel out of a sea of flaming oil to safety. Germans Ousted From Airlines KJO DE JANEIRO, Nov. ll-V?) Reorganization of the Condor Air Lines and the exclusion of Ger man interests formerly controlling -the firm have been completed,, it was learned Tuesday. It was expected, consequently, that the company will be removed from the North American black list of business organizations hav ing connections with the enemy. Dance Tonight Veterans' Hall BO Heed Street Tonight : Thursday RECKLESS. DUMPING COUnflfiFI rVv'.-tha q isasi - - The Stars cf . Combine in One of the Greatest of Outdoor 'Action Romances STAIJIVYCE ; Icci rJcCREA im 2ZtO H0i - OMeHOMEFRONT B y BASEL QHTLD3 . The news editor sits in his uneasy chair But the linotype operator's always there ' r- V To- edit 'my copy as he thinks best Sorta help me to pass the moron's test! . V Leave out one word and change the tense; Skip another and change the sense! When I write Ford up I refer to a. flivver, Down, as in f-o-r-d, to a road through a river. But my printer 'friend cares not la jot When it's down it's up when it'; up it's not. V Oh, such is the fleeting reward of fame If it weren't "standing head," he'd misspell my name! V Up in printer's parlance refers to capitalization; down mean lower case or small letter this is for the benefit of the lay reader and not the linotype operator, who really does know. Grange Calls Farm Parity Plan Obsolete (Continued from Page 1) is prices for farm products that are in line with the cost of pro ducing them. The parity formula to which the grange objected uses prices farm ers received and paid in the 1909 14 base period. Farm wages, the grangers said, were not included in computing farm costs, although delegates said the cost of farm labor had increased at least SO per cent Grangers said that since 1933 parity had been the goal of na tional farm programs voted by congress but that farm prices did not reach an approximate, parity until the middle of 1942. As an illustration, of how price levels of 30 years ago were obso-4 lete, Goss used grapefruit In the 1909-14 period, he said, grape fruit sold for $10 a box. Under the 'parity formula today the price would be $17, but because thou sands of orchards have been planted and production stepped up, prices have been lowered to between $3 and $4 a box. Tuesday night the grangers adopted a taxation resolution stat ing that the ability to pay, and the value of benefits derived, should be the basis for levying taxes. Kaiser Asks Inventions Open to All (Continued from Page 1) labor-management committee. "I believe that industry will eventually.be more productive if patents are distributed among those in industry," he declared, advocating that post-war compen sational.go to individual inventors "rather than groups and trusts. Kaiser reiterated previous tes timony that "indiscriminate draft ing of men with technical skills has created a grave situation in war industries," and suggested that local selective service boards allow more time for training re placements for welders.' electri cians and others inducted into the armed forces. I Two Bis Features sirens scream sky;.. unaware they m m m recacn nun the 'TJnick Pacific" Germans Cain At High Cost Fighting Fierce in Leningrad Area; Soviets Cain I (Continued from Page 1) brought tip reinforcements and "succeeded In breaking j into the outskirts of a populated place," the communique said. "Our units are engaged in violent J s t r e e t fighting." f In the Caucasus the Russians said their troops rained on the Nalchik front, driving the Ger mans oat of fortified positions near one village, disabling five nasi tanks, and wiping oat about a company of German Infantry. . Northeast of Tuapse where the -Germans have been t r y 1 n g to skirt the Caucasus mountains along the Black sea coast the communique said 400 more Ger mans were killed. j In the Stalingrad sector the Russians said, their troops repul sed numerous nazi attacks, but acknowledged that "in a factory part of the city the Germans pressed back our troops 'after two days' fighting." These slight nazi penetrations and successful soviet counterattacks have been occur ring for weeks on that stalemated part of the front however. Aside from 1000 casualties' suf fered Tuesday, the Russians said the Germans lost 60 trucks, five guns, 15 mortars, 28 machineguns and ten blockhouses. Northwest of the Volga city the Russians told only ofj artillery duels, but said one Russian omit caught and killed 73 Germans erecting barbed-wire entangle ments. Troops Nearer Pqrt of Buna; Planes Strike (Continued from Page 1) harass the advancing troops. Al lied bombers with a fighter escort surprised the Japs at Lae, above Buna on the New Guinea north coast, destroying seven .enemy bombers and seven fighters in low altitude attacks. A Zero which at tempted to intercept was shot down. Other bombers returned to Por tuguese Timor and attacked the enemy occupied towns of Mao bisse and Bobonaro which have been targets of other bombings within recent months. I 10 Million on Fartn WASHINGTON, Nov, 17 -(Jt) The agriculture department re ported Tuesday employment on farms totalled 10,879,000 on No vember 1, representing a seasonal decline during October, but prac tically unchanged from; the same figure of November last 'year. Obituary Phlessen Henry Phiessen. Salem. 'late of Astoria, November 17. 1 Survived by wife. Martha. Astoria: son. George, Astoria. Announcement of services will be made later by the Rose Lawn Funeral; home. Scharf- ! Frank Scharf. died at his resi dence on route six, November 17, at the age of 81. Survived by his widow, Katherine; four sons, Will, Fred and Dan of Salem. Ed of Perrydale; daughters, Mrs. Rose Crane of Denair, Calif., Mrs. Esther Van Laanen, Salem; one brother, August of -Santa Moni ca, Calif, and two sisters, Mrs. Emma Goss, Cape Girardeau, Mo, and Mrs. Marr Barnharri. nf Jonesborough, m.; Id grandchild ren and ll great grandchildren. Funeral services will be announ ced later by the Clough-Barrick company, Last Don't Hid Your EyosI ioolr! SHefcla! f j ; . WmiTUrr j i -. I . S 1 . . 1 . . ' SI ) s tnd Big Hit! . laSL Eioti tUFS VELEZ j . ; -in- : "Mexican ' Spitfire's . They gave their lives for the Liberty we love! Patton Says Luch All His In Morocco (Continued from Page 1) Simms of Washington,! DC, who gave up a profitable business to get into this war, "with four tanks drove back 18 French tanks and a column of infantry in 'five miles. 1 He personnally. knocked out four French tanks, although his own was hit three times." I , Patton also praised CoL W. H. Wilbur who conceived the idea of taking a letter to the general at Casablanca. "Wulbur penetrated a hostile line at night traveled; 14 miles through hostile territory unassis ted, and delivered the letter in Casablanca before dawn, Patton related. ; ; Asked how Americans and French were getting - along now, the general said: "It's damn friendly." ? Holiday War v WdrkAskeU WASHINGTON, Nov. 17-UP) Donald M. Nelson, - chairman of the war production board, Tues day called for a full day's produc tion on Thanksgiving day in all factories producing war goods or goods essential to the war econo my, and in all mines and plants producing essential raw! materials. "Our enemies are not going to stop their production on November-26; we dare not do so either," Nelson said In a formal statement Men and women of management and labor alike can easily rear range their personal schedules so that the traditional Thanksgiving dinner can be enjoyed after work has been finished. And the deep est religious devotion we have will find its truest expression In, an unflagging attention to duty by all of us." I Blast Wrecks Eastern Town CANTON, Pa, Nov. il8-4P-An explosion and fire wrecked , the business section of this northern Pennsylvania town of 1 2500 pop ulation late Tuesday night and a reported at the scene said at least one person was killed. The fire remained out of con trol early Wednesday. Several buildings, including the post office and the first national: bank had been destroyed. ; Beatrice Farmer, 27,! of Canton, was crush edto death when a blast, wrecked a store and showered her with debris, a reporter for the Towanda Review said. ! The cause of the explosion was not known. Firemen had been called from El- mira, NY, and four nearby Penn sylvania communities. ! .3000 Mussolini Enemies Held MOSCOW, Nov. 17-P)-At least 3000 persons charged with "being in opposition to Mussolini have been arrested the past few days in Genoa, Turin. Milan and other Italian cities, the Moscow radio said Tuesday night 'quoting a Tass dispatch from Geneva. Among those arrested, it was stated, were many army officers and industrialists. Several fascist party leaders, accused;; of having relations with opposition elements, also have been detained, the re port added. I; Monmouth Postal Head Confirmed WASHINGTON, Nov. n.-(JF-The senate has confirmed these Oregon postmasters: J. Dayton McLucas. Hood Riv er; Oscar L. Groves, Monmouth; Elton A. Schroeder, Myrtle'Point; Phyllis H. Ryman, Westfir. ' Day No One Under IS Years Of Are Admitted! This is not a fic tion war film but pictures made with th fiesh and blood of dead and dying. i -;r; Seeae tkat Test tt Natures mt Vlitrrai Mcb Colds i facts that must be told ev ery man and wo man - who prays for safety and a better ;. world Gas Rationing Signup Today Eastern Allowance of Fuel Cat; Congress j. .Would Postpone i ' (Continued from Page 1) same days, has set its registration hours from 3:30 to 9:30 p. m. . In Salem, proper, the eight ele mentary schools are rationing reg istration points: Bush, University and Mission streets; Englewood, 19th and Nebraska; Garfield, Cot tage and Marion; Grant, Cottage and Market; Highland, Fifth street and Highland avenue; McKinley, South High and McGIlchrist; Rich mond, Richmond avenue and Mill street, and Washington at Center and 12th streets. ? i - B rooks, Hayesville, Keizer Au burn and Salem Heights schools, also in the Salem rationing j dis trict, have, been designated for registration of motorists. In the Woodbum area, Aurora, Hubbard, Woodbum Gervais and St Paul grade schools are regis tration headquarters. 1 Stayton area's registration1 is to be handled at Jefferson, Turner, Aumsville, Mehama, Mill City and Detroit elementary schools. In the Silverton area, ML Angel and Silverton grade schools have been designated as rationing regis tration headquarters. r By the Associated Press Eastern motorists T a e s d ay night had their gasoline : allow ance reduced effective Novem4 ber XX while In congress si drive, developed .to postpone nationwide rationing of gas oline scheduled to start on De cember 1. s The office of price administra tion announced that beginning November 22 the value of gaso line ration coupons In A books now used in 18 eastern states will be reduced from four tocthree gallons. Rationing is now effect ive m 17 eastern states, but one of those West "Virginia was ex cepted from Tuesday's order, for the time being. , . An official announcement said that other measures to curtail fuel oil consumption In non-war industries and for heating of cer tain types of buildings are now being drafted. On Capitol Hill, Rep. Johnson (D-Okla) said a score of con gressmen had assured him they would support his resolution to set up a three-man board to stu dy the entire petroleum situation. Johnson's resolution would fore stall nationwide application of gasoline rationing for t h r e e months. Ever since the plan for nation wide rationing of gasoline, was announced, representatives rrom the west midwest and some from (he south have protested it would unnecessarily inconvenience res idents In areas where nil supplies are plentiful. Survey Set, Recreation Groups9 Need (Continued from Page 1) SSSSSSHBSSSSaMSSSSSMMKttSSWMMSSSSSBSBSMaaBSaSSSSS by Armstrong to.meet with Dev- ereaux. , uoing on recora v xnai effect, defense recreation com mittee members and representa tives of organizations were told that actual outlined programs and budgets from a responsible ' or ganization would be required be fore funds could be obtained through tha federal agency. "If the reports we hare asked from all organizations providing soldier recreation Indicate that funds are needed and would ; be well s p e n t according to their plans, our defense recreation com mittee will incorporate tor the purpose of securing such moneys,' Armstrong declared. In a man ner similar to that used by Com munity chest budgeteers, be said. EE Ding Crcsby BURNS MARTHA BATE la '-v ' Walklkl w v nmij with 8hiriey Preston Foster Frank-; Andy , Maxyaa . Devine . "Gmoimio" . Office Open 1:45 50 V y i t0 Today each agency's budget would . be j scrutinized, possibly remade and. as deemed wise,' included In the I city's one! recreation: budget. With Devereaux at the meet ing Tuesday night to discuss with organization representatives 1 pro grams for i entertainment of ser vice men lor defense workers, if the latter group becomes large in Salem, were Miss Gladys Everett, Portland, j and Miss Manche L Langley, Worn ens workers in the same agency. British Slice Libyan Gap (Continued from Page 1) south of Tripoli across theMes ert. The force might already bo on the ; move f from , Fighting French territory. Marshal; Erwin , Rommel's ex hausted remnants were scattered all along; the coastal route from Derna to El Aghella and along an inland shortcut from El Mechili to Msus and El Agheila. The weather kept most of the RAF grounded, giving the retreat ing foe surcease from the terrible bombings which has beset him along his 400-mile flight from El Alamein ;ln Egypt US fighters ranged the forward areas Monday without encountering single e my pian&i The fall of Derna placed the British within 150 miles of Ben gasi . along: the coastal road. At El Mechili, on the- desert trail flanking Rommel's first-line, fight ers are believed to have dwindled to fewer than 20,000 tired and tat tered men, but the men he has picked up on his retreat probably have swollen his surviving force to between 70,000 and 100,000 men. Their: remaining equipment is so sparse, however, and their mor ale is believed so low that they are no longer considered a formid able fighting force. It is a matter of overtaking, them for the final K1H. Berlin Impatient At Vichy Moves NEW YORlL Nov- 17-UPV-Tm- creasing German krmatience with the vacillating government of trance was reflected in German broadcasts! heard here Tuesdav nignt ;i ! . -J i ' - Berlin dropped vague hints that fundamental .chances may he in order. .1!. " A Paris! correspondent of the German trans-ocean service wrote that after! the United States estab lished a military front in the Af rican colonies "France's reaotinn should have been not only polit ical, mu aiso miutary." He said that the iFrench fleet at Toulon remains a, potent military factor; Escapee Caught 1 Glen Le: Roy Ericks, state trainr mg school escapee, was appre- nenaea a ruamath Falls Tuesday ana admits the theft of a car there, state police disclosed Tues day nighty ' : , , Inmate; (Escapes Emmett ; Morgridge. 41. escaned xrom the i state hosoital Tuesday state police said Tuesday night. T O D A Y r 5) 'ii G CD 3 m re sa 9sV TT M i'( lM J r i Filibuster Continues; Berkley Hit WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 Southern senators ! filibustered Tuesday against the; anti-poll, tax bill in a bitter senate session which saw Senator McKellar (D-Tenn.) withdraw his, recommendation that Majority Leader Barkley be appointed to the supreme court. By a series of roll calls and otiv er delaying tactics, including read ing .and correcting the complete journal of Monday's proceedings. the southerners : for the fourth consecutive legislative day pre vented Barkley from brfngingjorr mally before the senate the con troversial bill which would elim inate payment of a poll tax as a voting prerequisite In eight south ern states. - ;. As the " filibuster continued, President Philip Murray, '.of the Congress of Industrial Organiza tions,' sent a letter to members of the senate that the nation "stands aghast and enraged at the tactics of a small bloc which is seeking to frustrate majority rule in this nation.' ' .-'-Mfc :-,y. : He called for speedy enactment of the anti-poll tax legislation, as serting: ; - . : i ' "In this period of national cri sis, the ; opening of our ' polling places to every qualified : citizen in the nation by the elimination of poll tax restrictions which dis enfranchise' large r numbers of American citizens Is a measure essential to our war; effort McKellar bitterly assailed Bark ley for moving Saturday that Mc Kellar and seven other senators be arrested and brought to the chamber in order to obtain a quor um "Which he could not do any thing with when he got it" McKellar told, too, that last month he prepared a petition' to President- Roosevelt, signed v by several other senators, ; recom mending Barkley'a appointment to the supreme court to fill the va cancy created by the resignation of Associate Justice Byrnes. He said he never dreamed that "the man I had recommended so highly would single me out as one of eight senators to be arrest ed.' The whole episode, he said, was "a shocking performance.' The poll tax states are Arkan sas, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennes see, Georgia, South Carolina, Vir ginia and Texas. : It : Salem Men onj Road PO RTLAND. i Nov. 17-iJPi Among the 68 Oregon civilians employed on the construction of the Alcan hiirhway . announced Tuesday by the public roads ad ministration - were Myron Good- man and Hazel Goodman, Detroit; Ronald Paune and Thomas Rilea. Jr Salem. - (-- '---'- - mot h.yt::j s:.:ith Last Times Today Starts Thursday 2 Ilsin' Features1 TKinSoooDO DTS ' '.UN:!.,- ail iMi.'ir ? PLUS COMPANION FEATUHE . " "" ' - in Straightening Method Speeds Armor Plating ' - - " . . . .. , : - DETROIT, Nov. 17-(i?VA new method of straightening armor plate, , designed to speed up the final stages of its production and to eliminate the' use of much cum bersome and costly straightening equipment, was announced Tues--day by the Ford Motor company. The formula, already in use in the new Ford armor plate plant, substitutes water-cooled dies for water tanks, sprays and straight ening .machines. It steps up de liveries ,of armor plate to tank builders and reduces the straight ening of armor plate Jo one short operation. It is applied to the met al Immediately after it has been put . through a heat-treat furnac-ing-ln which the armor Is tfrtxl to shell-resisting hardness. The conventional , method of processing armor plate consists ofc cooling furnace-hot plate by sprays, and immersions after which it must be flattened in huee presses. This operation, according1 J to i ord engineers, requires at least a. a - a. - - - - lwh nrnini tr at irnrt era The new process completes the s job In three to eight minutes. Dairy Consumption Slice Studied NEW YORK, Wednesday, Nov.! lS-JPi-Tht Herald Tribune savs that the food requirements com mittee of the war production board will meet Wednesday in Washing- ion to study means of reducing 11! J I m . . civilian aairy proauci consumption by at least 12 per cent under current consumption. M Starts Todar - X mts f ' , Popolar Retorn of v The Screwiest -Comedy Ever Made JAMES. STEWART ROSALIND RUSSELL "NO TIME "FOR COMEDY" -PLUS- A Killer of the Plains Aflame with Savaro Fary . . "KING OF TIIE , STALLIONS v with Chief Tonto v i Thanderelond and l ' "THUNDER" The Wonder Horse . . . Palsif -The KUler Staliloa : Plus Tax Till ft P. M. SALEM'S LEADING THEATRE AXEXIS PLUS HIGHWAY BY NIGHT aad March of Time "Fighting - : French" tm:nn if i(t)i i 7 f itu v y, r r -j f Kev LtMki j Elephant l .... Umt4 Norrl Srfc -