Complete Dimout ; " Saturday's sunset, 5:34 p. nu ' Sunday's sunrise, 8:21 ';a m. Weather: Tburs. mas. temp. 59, min. 32. Elver Fri. 7Jt ft. Weather data restricted by army requett. Teal! fladae newspaper tan give mors real tatisfae ? tion than your local morn lex paper, with I to WORLD NEWS plus nOUX COM MUNITY, NEWS. - NINETY-SECOND YEAB Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning. November 21. 1942 Price Sc. No. 13 Poison's " StDiirce Big Job No Delay WmMting Gains . Territory- Heaw Allowed For Mm I V II II 11.11 U .11 Gas Cut -t "A Coloring Considerable Use Reported For Fluoride in Insect , . - : . .... . . . . . J : . ... ControlMaiiy Queried While state police still sought to ascertain the manner in which a lethal dosage of sodium fluoride cot into a batch of scrambled eggs at the Oregon state hospital Wednesday, the state board of pharmacy Friday asked the federal food and drug, administration to require that the poisonous min eral compound be colored so that it could not be mistaken for salt, sugar or powdered milk. - The board said restaurants and hotels usually had the poison on hand for the control of insects and declared that a tragedy such as that at the state hospital might have occurred anywhere. Two Prisoners Escape Here , Mouthful Brothers Leave Penitentiary, -Said Dangerous Still at large at an early hour iis morning were two young convicts who escaped from the Oregon state penitentiary before dawn Friday. Truman Wilson, 16, and Glenn Wilson, 17, prison cook and wait er respectively, If ft, the rope they had contrived from towels hang ing from the top of the main, prison, building but no other trace was discovered of the youths who had left quietly in the murky morning hours, officials at the prison saicL first to escape from the pris-, ' en proper In, more than 11 years,; the boys, sent, up last Jane It from Multnomah county with an' older brother, all charged with rape, are dangerous characters. Warden George Alexander . warned! They hare caused con siderable trouble at the prison, he said, as ' descriptions of the pair .were broadcast over the state' and law enforcement of fl eers Joined prison guards In the search. y.. Released from their cells at 5:30 to go to work in the peni tentiary kitchen and cafeteria, the Wilsons apparently took, their cell made rope to the top of the main building, crawled over the struc ture and lowered themselves to the ground, scaling a 10-foot walL They were believed to have started on foot in an easterly di rection. Last previous break from the prison proper had been in Janu ary," 193 1, when Lee Duncan and Luke v Flynn escaped,- to be ap prehended later in a Jefferson school building. PORTLAND, , Not. 20 . ' Portland Detective Herman He rack described t h e . Wilson brothers who escaped' from the state penitentiary Friday as "young, but dangerous." - "They would shoot if they get a gun," he warned. i He said the brothers, Truman, 16, and Glenn Wilson, 17, Were convicted in Multnomah county of rape and sentenced to seven and 10 .years ? respectively ; A third brother, not involved in the break, Rassie Wilson, 21, got 20 years. rape, r robbery, holdup and car theft crimes, Horack said. Police ordered a guard around the homes of -the two Portland girls the brothers were convicted of raping." The. police said .the Wilsons had threatened to kill the girls for. testifying against them. Auto Theft : ALBANY, Ore., Nov. 20-il3)-City and state police blocked the Pacific : highway here Friday af ter they --sighted an automobile they thought contained .Truman and Glenn Wilson, brothers , who escaped from the Oregon peni tentiary. - A-'V - -' . 'Vy J ' They stopped the" car but "the "Wilson brothers -were not inside. Police avrested thp occupants anyway, " listing, them as Jerome L. Olaf, 1C; Joseph (A Zinna.J.7; Neldon F. McCombsv 15, all -of Seattle. -- - : , 'Vi, Sgt Earl Houston of the state police said they . were wanted : in Seattle on a car theft charge. Houston said they had switched license plates with an Oregon car on reaching Portland. A The violently poisonous egg dish, served to some 467 inmates of the hospital, had taken 47 lives, the figure remained un changed Friday night from Thurs day's count. All of the victims were patients, seven of them wo men. . State police before recessing their investigation after more than 36 hours of continuous prob ing revealed Friday night that approximately 40 persons, both employes and patients, had been minutely questioned. A majority of -them worked in the hospital kitchen. "There is no telling how long we will be at this," Capt Walter Lansing said of the investigation. Dist. Atty. Miller B. Hayden and Coroner L. E. Barrick indi cated they were awaiting outcome of the state police studies of the poisoning. Details of the labora tory analysis that determined the nature of the poison Thursday may be disclosed today, it was in dicated at the capitol Friday. Dr. J. C. Evans, hospital . i perlntendent, said that of the ! kitchen workers on 'duty Wei-; nesday afternoon only four were paid staff members. The . remainder were trusties. The latter ' were not permitted to carry keys to the fruit storage in the basement where (Turn to Page 2) Half of Jap Force Slain; Sea Toll 28 WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 JP) Half of a force of 1500 Japanese landed on Guadalcanal has been slaughtered and the rest routed, the navy announced Friday, and Secretary Knox declared jubi lantly that the American hold on the island prize is "now very se cure" ' Knox based his statement part ly on the land action, in which embattled marines and army troops apparently crumpled the eastern jaw of a Japanese pincers aimed at the vital airfield, and partly on the great sea victory of last week. He J announced definitely that the toll taken in" the sea fight was 28 .enemy ships sunk, and ten damaged. There had previously been some thought that the total might be slightly lower due to the possibility of duplication In re ports from the scene. : "All told," Knox i said, "the Japanese fleet has been pretty badly punished." "Of course," he added, "they can bring in more reinforcements and' fight their way but so far they have been unable to do it." He revealed that two American I (Turn to Page 2) Expansion of WA AGs To 150,000 Approved WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 -(fl5) President Roosevelt authorized the WAACs Friday, to recruit the full strength of 150,000 authorized by congress;! enabling Director Oveta Culp Hobby to institute eventually the expanded program she envisioned - after her recent trip to England with Mrs. Roose velt , i ? ; a , -l.; a;: i-r'j . . : : : Mr.V Roosevelt originally ; had ordered that the Women's Auxil iary Army corps be held to 25,000. In announcing his authorization t or , the expansion .at "his press conference, he said it was look ing , pretty - far to the future in view of the training which would be required. Mrs. Hobby said at Houston earlier that the full 150, 000 could be trained by April, 1944. ' The director reported on her return from England that she had BRIG. GEN. W. H. HOGE Mastermind behind the building of the Alaskan-Canadian high way, a vital defense link be tween the US and Alaska, Is Brig. Gen. W. H. Hoge, officer commandnur the US forces buUdlnc the road. ; Alcan Highway Officially Open DeWitt Calls Road Great Help in Pacific Fight WHITEHORSE YT, Nov. 20 (if) Word of the formal cere mony, officially opening the 1600 mile Alaska-Canada highway at Soldiers Summit, overlooking iso lated Kluane lake in the St Elias mountain country, was awaited here Friday.' The ceremonial clipping of a red- white and blue ribbon to signalize the opening of "Ameri ca's Burma j Road," was set fof 10 a. m.1 but! there was no regular communications between here and the dedication scene to ; indicate the actual opening. - ' Brig. Gen. James A. O'Connor, commanding! the US army's jaorth west service command, in his speech prepared for the ceremony, thanked the people and govern ment of Canada for their cooper ation, and described the highway as "a real and unique tie" and said he hoped it would become "an unbreakable bond of under standing between our lands." Lt Gen. !J. L. DeWitt, com manding the United States west ern defense command, sent a. letter to be read at the cere mony in which he stated the . Alcan highway gives the Unit ed Nations! "a tremendous ad vantage In ; the prosecution of our operations against Japan and In assisting Russia." "We now have established and in operation! airways and a high way from the United States through Canada to Fairbanks; a waterway, via the inland pas (Turn to Page 2) . British Raid Italy Again , LONDON, ! Nov. ' il-HifV-British sources reported that RAF bomb ers were over Italy again Friday night. It was the sixth round-trip sweep across the .Alps by British squadrons iri November. 1 The port of Genoa and the ar senal city oi Turin received at tention in the previous raids . of the month, j The Fiat Airplane Motor works and other objec tives of Turin, on the river Po, were bombed Wednesday night learned from; the British example innumerable j way s in which WAACs in this country could re lease men for combat ' duty. , At that - time she forecast; immediate expansion in the size of the corps and the variety of its duties. -. - The corps has 10,000 women en rolled now. Of this number. 7000 have completed their training, in cluding those graduating , Satur day from the school at Fort Des Moines. The! rest are in training or have been sworn in and are awaiting orders to ? report for training. " . ' At the -second training center, which will open December 1 at Daytona Beach, Fla several new specialist courses will be offered. The WAACs ; started training last July with four" specialist courses cooks and bakers, clerical; com munications and motor corps. House Members Urge; Salem Meil To Check Papers Washington; Nov, 20 (P) Rubber administr a t o William M. Jeff ers served blunt notice Friday that na tional rationing of gasoline Will became effective on December 1 despite an opposition cam paign which, he asserted,- is fi nanced "by people who should know better." j "The gasoline rationing in the east saved rubber," he said in an address at New York. "Nation wide gasoline rationing which goes Into effect December" 1 is only a means to an end. It will go into effect regard less of the organized opposition m the west. That opposition is based on the theory that there is no shortage of gasoline. As he spoke a bloc of 175 house members was making a determined effort to postpone the rationing date. The group met' Thursday nicht and unan imously voted to seek a 90 -day ' postponement Speaker Rayburn ; disclosed that he was seeking a ! . delay until January 1 at least . Rep. Jed Johnson (D-Okla), I chairman of the congressional j group, said he hoped to confer with Jeffers soon.' Jeff ers departed from his pre pared speech, delivered before the Grocery Manufacturers of Amer ica, to state his determination that rationing shall become effective December 1, as scheduled, and to . (Turn to Page 2) War Industry Essentials To Get Help WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 -JPy- Pre&tdent Roosevelt revealed Fri day that the manpower control system now in formulating will include tighter regulations for ex empting "necessary war industry workers from the draft. In addi tion, he told a press conference that he had ordered the army and navy to refuse enlistments and commissions to government em ployes. This action he said was induced by a rush to enlist and obtain commissions following his order that the draft deferments of government workers be can celled except in unusual cases. The president said there were two schools of thought on wheth er a proposed registration of wo men for war work would be worth while. Some, . he said, thought . a great many would register,, while others believed the number would be very small. On the general manpower que tion, the president said he was still uncertain whether .'the "new system would be established by administrative action but thought in any event that little new legis lation would be needed. In connection with keeping ir replaceable skilled workers out of the army and in the factory, Mr. Roosevelt said a principal problem was that of obtaining uniform action by the many draft boards. ' Mr. Roosevelt thought the prob lem of uniformity could be par tially corrected by closer cooper ation between employers and the draft boards. Factory manage-" ment he said, should certify more frequently to the boards wheth er prospective draftees are or are not essential and Irreplaceable. Keezer Named, Post-War Help WASHINGTON,;Nov. 20 fJPi -President Roosevelt: named a: committee of four Friday to work with the war and navy depart men ts on steps to enable young men in military service to resume their$chooling after the war. f ' He appointed Brig. Gen. Fred erick H. Osborn chief of the war department's special services, as chairman. - - v . . ..' : . Other committeemen are: " Y. B. Smith; "dean of Columbia university's law schooIJ TJr Dex ter M.' Keezer, former 1 president of ,Heed r college, Portland,: Ore., now assigned to the office of price administration; - and,; Dr, "-R. " C Harris," president of Tulane uni versity at New Orleans. ; The president told Osborn in a letter the committee should co- relate its studies with those of the national resources planning board, and make use of - the board's facilities. Aed. Zeros Enter Combat in " -" - . ! i - , , : I- f - m n New Guinea Japs Hold Only Small Buna-Gona Sector, 8 Miles Inland By C. YATES McDANIEL A L LI E D HEADQUAR TERS JN AUSTRALIA, Sat urday, Nov. 21 (AP) The heaviest fighting of the New Guinea campaign raged Sat urday in the Buna-Gona areas where r the Japanese, pinned against the coast, lashed back at the advancing allies with light artillery mortars and machineguns. A -communique announcing the allied attempt to shove the trapped Japanese into the sea gave no details of the battle which began Friday except to say that "enemy air forces have entered the engagement," ' Bad weather on the lower side of . the Owen Stanley mountains was said to have prevented Gen eral , MacArthur's. airmen from giving the formidable aerial sup port which has been such a fac tor in the allied counter-drive across the huge island. US and Australian ground troops thus bore the! entire brunt of the attack of low-flying Jap anese Zeros that thus far had not snown mucn activity : ; , The fighting is in a triangle, the ' basTformed by six-mile coastal stretch -between Buna and Gona, and the apex extending eight miles inland to Soputa. While the - Australians at Gona and the Americans at Bona were encaged in close quarter fig-BUnr with the, enemy on the outskirts of (those ham lets, combined units were at tempting to smash the only In land point still held by the en emy at 8opata. i A headquarters spokes man meanhwile said the aerial recon (Turn to Page 2). Bengasi Goes To British; Planes Lead CAIRO, Nov. 20 -VP)- Bengasi was sealed tight , in a British trap Friday as the Eighth army drove down along the Libyan coast to the port while its . southern wing cut the coastal highway 50 miles to the south and advanced on the Agheila defile where j narrow axis defense positions already were be ing pulverized by allied bombers. (The ! German high command said Bengasi was evacuated. The Berlin radio said Marshal Rommel has retreated to positions "fairly far to. the' rear.") ;7, The eastward drive of the Brit ish First army in Tunisia ;was supported again from the east by Malta bombers attacking hangars and starting fires at the Tunis airport, . ; The northern wing: of Gen. Sir Bernard Montgomery's steam-roller mopped up as it advanced on Bengasi,'" destroying or capturing 28 tanks, 24 guns and: 250 vehicles between. Martuba and Slonta,- 95 miles from Bengasi. Some of the tanks had just come from axis repair shops nd- others had been picked up by Rommel , on his flight from Egypt 'where he lost all . but 15 T his 500 front line machines.: ' - . j ;; . US planes were in the vanguard of advance, pounding the Macrun air field in the salt marshes 100 miles south of El Agheila and de stroying six planes. , "T v Crbwd rAttackspi Pro-NaziDoriot .. '. ' ' . r u .:,--.i k . " k-3-"T":; i LONDON, Sanjrdaytjv2lMP? The London Daily. Express in a dispatch; dated H on the French irontier quoted Paris reports Sat- ttraay, mat a crowd armed with bludgeons attacked Jacques Doriot and his bodyguard as they left a meeting of Doriot's popular party. These reports said Doriot, pro- nazi editor, was taken to a hos pital with four broken ribs and that he 'might lose the sight of his left eye. 1 f Battle Intensity Grows FRANCE go MARSCILLt LtOULONV ! CORSICA II ALGIERS )RAN iVNlSIAlHIII!! f ALGERIA V' O 400 I I STATUTE MILES American and British legions have clashed with axis forces in a growing battle for possession of Tunisia, hinging greatly en stra tegic Bizerte and Tunis (1), which are the last axis holdings in the French colony. Attacks by planes based In Algeria and on Malta supplemented the land drive. To . the eastward, the British Eighth army entered Bengasi (2) without a fight, and was racing closely behind Rommel's scattered forces for El Agheila, where the Ger mans are expected to make a stand. The RAF smashed again at industrial Italy; especially Genoa (3). Associated Press Telemat. Perhaps 10000 of Enemy Killed on Guadalcanal; Services Cooperate Well ' By. WALTER B." CLAUSEN T" - ! PEARL HARBOR, TH, Nov. 20 Perhaps 1 0,000 Japanese have been killed on Gaudalcanal and the marines are optimistic ally talking about their ' next j island "objective, said the first American naval officer to return here since the major United States naval victory in that area November 14 and 15. He was Lt. Dweitt Peterkin, 29, of New York, a former banker assistant to the J. P. Mor gan partners. Lieutenant Peterkin left Gua dalcanal November 16. He was a ground officer for the famous carrier torpedo Squadron Eight, which participated in the Midway battle, Ensign George Gay, being the sole surviving member of the section that -struck the Japanese carries off Midway in June. Peterkin said he got to Guadal canal late in August and reported that his squadron sank 13 Japa nese ships and probably got a 14th. : In the great naval victory last : weekend, Peterkin's squadron Joined with other navy, marine and army fliers In striking one element of Japan's show-down .Invasion force heading- toward ' Guadalcanal on the afternoon of ' November 14. ' It sank four transports, set four more afire, and of five others fleeing westward three were seen smoking. ' ' It was during this' period that Adm. William F. Halsey's naval forces fought one of the world's great naval, battles, and crump led the. Japanese combat force. Peterkin's squadron' participat ed in supporting the landing of the, marines August 7, and began Operating f rem Guadalcanal itself late in August Peterkin was on the Island from that time until November, 18. ' The marines and other forces ?. (Turn to Page 2) Prisoner Dies From Poison : One investigation Into a death by 'poison was underway at the penitenliary here 'Wednesday when state ' doctors ; were called away by the 'mass poisoning at the state hospital, officials of the prison revealed Friday nighC - Neither suicide nor, ter twas : suspected' ia the death Tuesday night of Thomas O'Con nor,' about 35ijsent,up from Des chutes county for larceny, j u. llalley, deputy warden at the penitentiary, declared Friday. : O'Connor was believed to nave drunk some liquid he had found at the prison farm, where he was a workman. vFond , . of - alcohol in its less- poisonous forms, the trus ty must, have taken anu-lreeze. cleanmg fluid or something simi lar, prison officials think. Early part of the cusrupiea examina tion i had borne out this theory. they were told by the doctor In charge. s WGOSLAVTL. ITALY ::: ::::::::uJT.KUME l""-;::::: -f , I 1 IUi. - SJ cn::n:::::::..tX SICILY; TRIPOLI S BENGASI ; SIRTE AGHEILA LIBYA Half Supply Of Butter ; Frozen . WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 -P) The government Friday night, or dered that half of the butter . in cold storage in the 35 principal marketing centers be held for government purchase, an order which had the effect ' of freezing 40 per cent of the total m butter supply in storage in the 'nation. The war production board, in issuing the order, said, the! action was "temporary" and -designed to insure adequate 'supplies to meet the needs of the armed forces and the lease-lend program. Agricul ture department officials said the freeze order would result ' in a sharp curtailment of civilian sup plies inasmuch as current produc tion of butter is insufficient o meet civilian war-needs. The 35 marketing centers hold about 80 per cent of the butter supply.- The balance is scattered among small warehouses in the less important producing and dis tributing " areas. The : order does not affect stocks on hand in re tail establishments. Because of the butter, shortage. WPB explained the army and navy have been meeting diffi culty in getting sufficient- sup plies, and ships having space for butter have-been , departing with other carga, ''-v----::-- y fThis situation requires prompt and J drastic, .action, WPB . said. It was estimated that 30,000,000 to. 35,000,000 pounds were frozen by the action, which is effective to night and will , remain in. force until March. 1943 - . isaaj ClnTrfnfr. nf SIlin nianslaugh-jfgV?: " lVh 11 Afterlight JL old AN EAST COAST PQRT, Nov. 20-(i93)-The sinking of their vessel by an enemy torpedo after driving off and . possibly sunk one' subma marine and won -a hard fought battle with a North Atlantic gale was described Friday by 37 sur vivors of a "medium- sized US merchantman. ' - ' " - y .y- - -, Three shipmates died ; ,. one was washed overboard during the storm and the others were miss ing after the torpedoing m the mid-Atlantic : during the latter part . d September. Allies 30 IWiles From Bizerte And Tunis Furious Air Struggle ; French Drive Wedge In Eastern Sector By WES GALLAGHER A L LIED HEADQUAR TERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Nov. 21 (AP) -The battle for Tunisia mounted in in tensity Friday night ; aa. the main forces of the American, British and French troops ap proached the German defense lines about 30 miles from Bizerte and Tunis while the RAF and the American air men slashed at the nazi air force for control of the skies. All Tunisia except a-r swiftly contracting coastal- stretch includ ing Bizerte and Tunis were re ported in allied hands ' i Friday night. i 1 The " destruction of nine axis warplanes by the RAF in one day testified ' to the furious air strug gle in TwhichJ American Flying Fortresses took an. active part by bombing Bizerte while, the RAF blasted Tunis. f While details of the clashes between the advancing British and i American forces .were lacking immediately, , an- authoritative spokesman said A certain that the strugrlff for eohtrol b .Tunisia ; is Increasing in intensi ty." ..... ; French resistance i around the Galf ef Gabes, In southeast ern Tunisia, "is driving off Gf r man attempts t take the coast-' . al road by . land or air. . It Is considered especially encourag- i ing as it drives a wedge be tween the axis . Tunisian for CCS and i Marshal Erwin Rom ' mel's troops In Tripoli, leaving . the- vast majority of Tunisia in t allied hands or at least out of German control. .At the present moment the only area in Tunisia that the Germans are known to command is a 30 mile belt around Tunis and Bi zerte and communication between the two points. Unless the Germans are able' to extend their ; ridgehead and take positions all along the coast from Tunis to Tripoli, Rommel is" in a critical military position. He faces-the danger of having Brit ish and American forces burst in upon -his back while the British' Eighth army is knocking at his front. door. - " A decree, by French Adm. Jean Darian granting amnesty to those favoring the allied operation 1 In north, Africa was looked upon with, some interest from the po litical angle as many of these im prisoned by - the Vichy regime -. (Turn to Page 2) Germans Flee Before Reds . . By The AsaocUted Press Some 10,000 Germans were"" killed in the central Caucasus and on the Volkhov . front, and the clearcut rout of the Germans from Ordzhonikidze . grew more disor derly by the hour Friday. One German line after , another, j was taken and the enemy fled to 'the! Caucasus ' hills and forests. . The vast amount of booty including 140 'tanks posed a critical logistics problem for the Germans who must cart supplies through 1000 miler of hostile, frozen territory. The: Germans, for the . second straight day, filled their commu nique with accounts of determined Russian attacks and German de fensive battles. This suggested that Hitler was losing the initia tive. , . a ; The Russians improved ; their positions inside . I Stalingrad - and captured a height south of the city". : , --. Ecuador Gives Bases j MEXICO CITY, Nov. 23 CSV President .rroyo Del Rio of Ecu ador .revealed Friday night that his country has given the United States territory for tase3 on the South - American continent and sajd she was not only the first to give land for bases but also the first to permit continental ones.