PAGE EIGHT ! OSECON STATESMAN. Salem Onqoxu Wednesday Morning. November lSIStt USO to Aid Invitations To Soldiers ; Salem residents have an oppor tunity to add to the city's repu tation for pleasant hospitality throughout the nation at the same time that they are building ser viceman morale during the com ing holiday season, Capt. Alex F. Ruth, Camp Adair special service officer, told Salem USO Hicials : .Tuesday. ' . . j ; ."' 'At a called meeting to lay plans for Thanksgiving and Christmas soldier entertainment, the USO center with its already-organized and working hospitality hostess committee was declared official clearing house for residents of Sa lem and surrounding areas inter ested in having soldiers as guests in their homes. Availability of the service is to be made known at Adair througn the camp newspaper. Men whose arrival at the camp is so late that friends and relatives cannot reach them with gifts by Christmas day will be remem bered through the USO, It was said. At the meeting were Capt. Ruth, rant Willis Roth and CaDt George De Dakis, division special service officers; USO Director R. R. Boardman and the USO program chairman and assistant director, Roy Kunz; Mrs. O. K. DeWitt, Boardman's secretary; Mrs.. Low ell Kern of the hostess league; Mrs. W. L. Phillips, hospitality committee chairman; Tom Arm strong, city defense recreation committee chairman; K Scel lars, representing the USO coun cil, and Mrs. Walter Spaulding, . USO icanteen director. County Seeks Bridge Parts Critical materials needed by the county, particularly repair parts for machinery, lumber and other material for bridges, were to be discussed in Portland on Tuesday night by County Judge Grant Murphy and County Engineer N. C. Hubbs with A. B. Randall, re search adviser for the bureau of governmental requirements. Two bridge on the Fairview Buena Vista road, which provides access and egress to Camp Adair; one bridge On the Gervais-Par-kersville oiled road, and another on the Turnerr Marion road, con sidered a logical military bypass, are among those for which ma terial is wanted. Later this week in Portland Commissioners Jim E. Smith and Ralph Girod and Judge Murphy plan to attend the annual meet ing of the state association of county judges and commissioners. Raver Avers BPA Profits The Bonneville administration, due to war demands, is now oper ating at a substantial profit or average; income . of around $15, 000,000 a year, Louis Lachmund, Salem hop dealer, said he was in formed by Paul J. Raver, project administrator, while he was in Washington, DC, recently. . The thing Tthat is worrying Rar - ver and other officials of the Bon neville; setup is what Bonneville is going to do with energy gener ated by Coulee dam after the war is over and many of the current war industries curtail their opre ations, Lachmund declared. . Lachmund quoted Raver as say ing that 97 per cent of the Bon neville power is now consumed by " war industries. With the end of . . J" A - J ' ine war certain to comesome aay Bonneville officials already are seeking new permanent-industries for the northwest area, Lachmund onciuded. , i Crawford Named Stale Offices' Mile-Controller Appointment of W. H7 Craw ford, secretary of the Oregon Eco nomic council," as state - govern ment .- mileage ; director, was an , nounced by : Gov. -. Charles A. Sprague , here Tuesday. - The ' ap TVkinfmnt tun rnuct h Tnn Henderson, office of price admin istration, Washington, 'DC. .The purpose of the administra tor is in line with the nation-wide program to ; conserve 'gasoline,' tires' and motor vehicle equipment 7 Duties of the 'administrator are: ' -To - conduct -r study of the use f " mo t?r vehicles i in the service of- ;,the a t a t e , government .. and achieve a reduction of 40 Per cent ec more' of the mileage travel for C state in l4177t ' ' ' ' .Direct the. preparation of appli tations for gasoline and tire ra tions, , and enlist the . cooperation ef-aU officials who direct the use f motor vehicles and who author fee drsiipervisetrayeLiwK': Emphasize the need for the ob servance of the SS mil an hour cpeed limit by all those who eper atevehicles in the public service. Stimulate ? and V coordinate, the Cctivities of local fn2e8ge aJmir istrators in the state and direct information to :. them ' concerning the prcrarx - V :- 77v -7 Cfcedt continuously on progress ind'-1 reports to the state eafectcr.cf the office of price ad r.iinistratiCn. - , , .. n muteirpireitiiimg iTTfae War News By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Wid World War Analyst far Ttxm SUt i msn The full fruits of the great American naval victory In the far Pacific are yet to be revealed in Japanese military reaction to the blow, but navy opinion that the foe must strike .again at Guadalcanal, if only to save face, seems well justified. - Neither Japan, recoiling from a new defeat at American hands, nor Hitler, menaced by active second-front positions in North Africa, dare surrender the initia tive. To do so would be to ack nowledge failure of the axis dream of world conquest. The Achilles heel of a philos ophy of power politics, of rule by force of arms, is that its practi tioners cannot stop. Thus the next move is obvi ously vp te Germany and Jap an. Even so, there are certain unchallengeable new war fac tors resulting from the stagger ing rebaff dealt Japanese sea power in the Solomons. They have a bearing en the war in Africa as well as the war in the Pacific. Waiving the psychological by product, the factual and practical results achieved are highly en couraging. They lend a color of realism to allied hopes that the tide has definitely turned against the axis everywhere. Of supreme importance even before the full score of the Solo mons battle comes in is the cum ulative attrition of Japanese sea power. On navy books a ratio of better than 4-to-l has been es tablished against Japan in ship losses since and including Pearl Harbor. Sea power hangs no less on cargo than on combat tonnage. The unfavorable odds at sea for this country in the Pacific produ ced by two-front war are being whittled down relentlessly. That must influence sea odds in other oceans. The Solomons victory was decisive enough to make it virtually certain that no American warcraft need be re called from other seas to the Pa cific. It is the Japanese not the American fleet that must grope desperately for replacements. The absence of Japanese plane carriers from navy reports of en emy ships sunk . or damaged is highly significant and unexplain ed.. It seems obvious that Japan ese air power losses must be even greater in proportion and more telling in effect than ship losses to date. Lack of scouting and at tack planes may have been the key to the Japanese defeat. - The other aspect of the Sol omons sea victory that strong , ly impresses . : this observer is the evidence it fives of coor dinated (and effective army navy staff work. MacArthur's planes from Australia had . mnch to do with the victory Halsey's ships won off Guadal canal. American forces in the far Pa cific may have learned coopera tion in a hard school; . but the proof is clear in that shattered Japanese armada that it has been learned. History probably will trace the sea victory off Guadalcanal more to good scouting and combined staff work than to its individu al genius shown by any officer in the fight, daring as Halsey's plan of battle was. That daring must have been founded on assembled and digested advance information of enemy dispositions to warrant the risk. DAV to Convene Thursday Night - Disabled American Veterans are to . hold their social meeting Thursday night at the VFW hall, opening the session with a 6:30 no-host dinner. . Members and friends are invit ed and, following dinner, cards and other entertainment are planned. 1 Mrs. William Richards is" 1 chairman of - entertainment, Mrs. William Noyes, of refresh ments. . :" . " At 7:30 the Camp Adair com mittee is to hold a brief meeting. Chapter and auxiliary are furnish ing a day. room at Camp Adair. Tillamook Rainfall 5. 14 Inches in Day .TILLAMOOK, : Nov. 'n.-JPy-Thia : section-was . drenched.' by 5.14 . inches , of -; rainfall . between Friday noon' and Saturday morn ing in a coastal storm, Meterolo- gist H.. Newman said, Tuesday, Cargoes of several fishing boats caught , outside Rockaway . harbor had , to b -dumped overboard "to prevent 'capsizing. 7- -1 Piano Crashes TUCSON, Ariz Nov. 7.-ff-Charles Joseph Branham of Phoe nix, civilian instructor at the Pa-" cific flying school, and. . Theodore John Woods,' Redlahd,! Calif., an advanced student, crashed . to their deaths in a trtinini plane Monday, six miles couth of the municipal airport. , - - sMcCHORD -FIELD, Nor. VI.-(-An army fighter plane crashed approximately one ' half mile off shore in the vicinity of Port Angeles about 120 p. , m. Tuesday. The pilot, Second Lt Stewart L' Bennett,' of Arlington, Mass.,' parachuted ''safely and was rescued by the coast guard. Mrs. Chaffee Rites Friday Funeral services for Mrs. Carrie May Chaffee, resident of Oregon since 1913 who died Monday at a Portland hospital, are to be held Friday at 2 p. m. from the Clough Barrick chapel, Rev. Riddel Kel sey: officiating, with! concluding services In City View cemetery by Salem lodge of Rebekahs. Mrs. Chaffee was born October 10, 1868, in Portage; Wis., the daughter of Nelson and Bertha Van Skiver. In Cayley, Alta Can ada, where she resided, for-a num ber of years, she was charter member Of Pine Leaf Rebekah lodge No. 38. In Salem she was member of Salem Rebekah lodge No. 1 and of the Sweetbriar club of Wallace road. Survivors include the widower, Charles C. Chaffee, Salem; two sons, Clifford Chaffee, Salem, and Ralph Chaffee, Cayley; three grandchildren, Mrs. William Han sen, Mrs. Leta Arnold and Har vey Chaffee, all of Cayley; three great-grandchildren and several nephews and nieces, including Mrs. Vina R. Plane, Salem. First Aiders Treat Many First aid men were called Tues day to treat the following persons: Ray Moore, route seven, to take him to the Deaconess hospital af ter he was injured in an automo bile accident at Capitol and Cen ted streets; Mrs. Katherine Breck heimer, 67, treated for a severe burn sustained when the electric iron cord exploded at her home, 2205 Norm Fifth street; Marvin Rundhaug, 12, injured when he ran into a parked car as he was bicycling on South 13th street, and taken to him home,! 434 South 16th street; Gus Bogenheimer was taken to his home at 130 Lansing street. Monday night the crew" treated Jean Leabold, 1365 Trade street, for two cut fingers on the . right hand sustained while butchering "a hog.- Court Upholds Suit Verdict The state supreme court Tues day affirmed a decree of Circuit Judge Charles W. Redding, Mult nomah county, granting Mrs. Ce celia M. Carruthers $5244 damages against Dr. Ben I. Phillips, Port land physician anH surgeon.; The court held that Dr. Phillips was negligent in failing to remove sponges following an operation. The opinion was written by Jus tice James T. Brand, ; K ; Other court action Tuesday: E. C. Ahlstron vs. ' J. L. Lyon, defendant, and Pete Ebar, appel lant. Appeal from Lake m county. Opinion by Justice Belt. Circuit Judge Arthur D. Hay affirmed. Petitions for rehearing: denied in First National Bank vs. Marion county and in Skulason vs. Sheriff Martin Pratt of Multnomah coun ty. r c Bend, Marshfield Lead in Traffic ! Safety Contest; j Bend, Marshfield, Ontario and Enterprise were in first place in their respective divisions of the 1942 Oregon Cities Traffic Safety contest In October, Earl SnelL sec retary of stateand sponsor pt the contest, announced. , ( Cities: are graded according to their ratio of improvement over the accident experience far the previous three-year - period. Each city, competes' against ; its own three-year average. ,JV - r j j - Following are the cities in each division' listed in thei? order for October':- fJ-T? nfT' ' " t Division 1: Bend, Astoria, Eu gene, ': Medfd, Klamath ' Fans, Salem,'-Portland. ' " ; - ; ' Division ; S:; Marshfield,'; La Grande, Clrants Pass, Oregon City, Pendleton, Albany," Baker, The Danes; orvilUs.? -? ' Division S: . Ontario, Burnt, Springfield,. Prineville, Lakevlew, Lebanon, McMinnville, Silverton, NewpcCociuiIle, North Bend, Roaeburg." Tillamook,: Cottage Grove, Hood River, : St.? Helens, Ashland, Newberg, Forest Grove, Seaside, West linn, Toledo, Hills boro, Dallas. ; ' . Division" .4;;' Enterprise, ; Red mond, Union, Junction City Os wego, Rainier, ' Milton, : Bandon, West- Salemr Vale, I Woodburn, Heppneri Warrenton, Sheridan, Myrtle Point, Reedsport,' Xnde pendence. Milwaukie. Beaverton, Vtxwsidisf. StaytoiC; Mt.' ' Angel, Gladstone:' Gresham, Sweet Home, Nyssa. -'4 !' . I Prison Terms Meted Here To 4 Men Penitentiary sentences totaling 80 months were handd down in 18-month stretches -by f Judge L. " - - f M. McMahan on. Tueid ay to a quartet of men who ex tered pleas of guilty in Marion county circuit court. yV :. - 1 Charles E. Owens, convict from Gilliam county, who had only 21 days to serve on his term for lar ceny -when he and Roy Helms Randall escaped from sthe state penitentiary annex recently, was sentenced to serve additional 18 months in the p: here for larceny of a car. On the same . charge, Randall was given an additional 18 months in the penitentiary. The two ad mitted having stolen m pickup truck belonging to Lee Barber, Turner. r Ralph Guest, pleading guilty to larceny of a car, was sentenced to 18 months, while Lloyd B. Logan was given two sentences of 18 months each, to run concurrently. Logan entered pleas of guilty to two check forgery changes. Port land law enforcement! officials, meantime, had notified officers, here that they held Warrant for the same man on a Twnay charge. rison i Siissrite to Tk StatiSMi loll' iii vdJimuvu u imiiiruuuu v.vy u Lbuj u uu Unlu-U u yj ul a . I ; ' ' ' ' i 1 - ! . . - I J l : ... . WEES... ILJ . . ilY! I - :.-': - -. ' - I ..,.:... ..-.. -J j .; . , .5-. . ..., -. . ; - - Start The STATESMAN Today and eet this BIG EDITION w 78 PAGES filled with information that !s of vital interest to tlic people of the leyt . "5. ' - ft ' -Tcr Ver Year $5 linuW h'CltyPx Carter. Racial Cooperation Stressed Bv Forum of World iLeaders NEW YORK, Nov. 17-;P)-Queen Wilhelmlna of The Neth erlands said Tuesday night that the United Nations thrust for revenge after the war would be "great and understandable" but that revenge should hot "be our guidmfij motive." .' "Let justice be our aim justice and firmness tempered by wisdom," she said In an address for dellveryat the closing session of the New York Herald Tribune's two-day forum on current prob lems. ' . u . 1--V-f':.V?''' Her address was read hy Dr. H. J. Van Mock, Netherlands min ister of overseas territory. . Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek of - China said that , in order to achieve political, social and econ amic justice for all peoples the united nations must start at once to organize an international or der embracing all peoples to en force peace and Justice among them." i :; Chiang said that China had no desire to replace western imper ialism in Asia with an oriental imperialism or isolationism of its own or of any one else. - . ' - Adm. William H. Standley, United States ambassador to Rus sia, said : a firm beliefthat per manently profitable, normal peace ful relations between the. nations of the world can be the new or der, must prevail if our civiliza tion is to endure. ' The policy of national isolation Central Willamette t 1 1 ' 1 In "Advance Time Onlyl . . r- . it 14 must b4 j juried with other an tiquated! formulae, he declared in a prepared; speech Appealing for racial cooperation at home and abroad, Clare Booth Luce, congress woman-elect' Tfrom Connecticut, told the forum: "Ra cial cooperation is the keystone of our resistance,- as it must be the arch of bujr victory.1 - i - She declared that brown, black and yellow! men were the first to resist axis j aggression, and asked: - TWhat !are those colored mil lions of sotdiers, who fight by our side, fighting for? Well, it is very easy - tofsay what they are not fighting :for.They are not fighting for the j white man's supremacy anywhere,.. ; -:;:; ,-rV'v-:-' '!-''- Uclans Co Beserk j ,x :. . j,'. ! - . . . . - . r, LOS ANGELES, Nov. U-JP The UCLA Bruins went through such a bruising workout Tuesday that End Herb Wiener, Guard Mike Marienthal and Fullback Ken Snelling were injured. , to . -. ; - ' ; i - - A a. t. ; . i ... i i KOTEI 1 I- r j . V - l ; State Pension Body Ready For Election Distribution of ballots for elec tion of a statewide committee to outline the Oregon pension fed eration prpgram for the 1943 leg islative session will be completed not later than December 10, Theo dore Nelson, ' executive secretary, announced here Tuesday, The 35 members of the com mittee will meet in Salem January 12 and 13. , ' 'The job assigned to the commit tee is' two-fold. One task ; is to co ordinate " all major state pension proposals ' into one "definite, pro gram and to liberalize the old age assistance law so that Oregon will receive full benefits now available under the social security law. The other is' that of . exploring the possibility of promoting an old age insurance system that will prove a protection for aged per sons excluded from benefits un der, the social security act and from all other publicly adminis tered retirement income systems providing less than $40 per month retirement income '- i . Among those who' come within the latter category are the wives of most federal civil service em ployes together with many other public employes, domestics,, farm workers, ministers and self em Plan no7 ! to have The Statesmaii mail copies your men service! Each - i ' . . ' - a- ror- Uda mcdllng cervice, writo - names', and. addresses . on convenient krt;? found cni .Pac; 53 ;cl th Camp Adair "gecfioa ' (Sunday, KoTtaber t&J ener I2iitr mtfl "ot bring thtrn to Cii Ckxiesia'aa vrilh1 ployed business and professional men and women. Dr. Frank S. Shutz is supervis or of the'pension federation elec-' tion committee. Officials Praise La Grande Drill The " frrrfriomf Ar-m lntA . . " ' . .u 11E1U J-fK Grande on November 4 was the best initial effort nt f vir, Wi in Oregon up to this time, stato defense council off icials declared here Tuesday. - a neavv snow uut fan?i- a freezing conditions prevailed at ic tune, uinciais said the Various services responded, quickly and particular credit was due to a madical unit. The casualty clear ing station was the best Observed in any city of comparable size, the officials reported. Employer Asked to Guarantee Jobs PORTLAND, Nov. ll.-JP-Oregon employers , were asked Tuesday to guarantee that jobs would be available after the war to Workers who quit to go into war industries. ' v The request came from Emory R. Worth, Oregon directs pi the US employment service, who said the guarantees were neces sary to speed-the transfer !of men and women A4 rom non-essential to war work. ; r I in the J ': ' ir --I . - i