V XT.) I r m fli Allied Airmen Strike Rabaul Three Enemy Ships " Set Afire; Troops .Split Japs at Buna . G (Continued from Page I) O tombs. One Zero fightet on the ir! ground was destroyed. .. tThe- Japs also lost t two out of five . fighters which . attempted to intercept the Rabaul raiders. All f,J Allied planes returned. ' v . " Ah ; Allied medium unit also combed Buin in the Solomons. On . ; their part, the Japs sent 'a forma Z, "iJtioh of medium bombers "over ' Merauke In Dutcn Uew ' Guinea. The enemy has been devoting con fr siderable bombing attention to this - sit ! milage ;;0n the south coast.- -1 "... - . - - .i-i : ai nana, tToana troops sup , ported by tanks and artillery drove through the Japs near the xnoath mt Glrepa creek to reach the 1 coast, splitting the enemy lines anew. This part of s systematic Job of splitting the " i ' en mopping -them up. f. Artillery fire reduced at least . ,vfbe Jap Bunkers. Jap troops were machinegunned while running 'from them. U . Heavy fighting continues on the Allied left but on the right all the job that remains Is to dispose uof small enemy pockets in the air - i,t atrip dispersal area and at other vv scattered: points. . Nimitz Calls B (Continued from Page 1) B of a submarine and two destroy- ers for action elsewhere; and a , . silver star to a submarine gun-'- ners mate. "' ' ' - Among the ' navy crosses (was one to: Lt. Comdr. John C. Alder : man, of Portland, Ore comman der of the USS McFarland, a con verted destroyer which acted as cargo and troop carrier, escort - vessel, and seaplane tender in the Solomons - campaign. Commander Alderman brought vitally needed , supplies r into Guadalcanal Octo ber 18. The stern of his ahip was blown off in an attack by enemy dive-bombers buVbecause pf the .commander's excellent seaman ship the -McFarland will be able to return to action. SHEPPTON, Pa.P)-The East Union township high school bas ketball team should, have a good 'season. The students elected Rev. Jo seph Baran, a Catholic priest, as coach, and the Rev. L. P. Kllnger, a protestant minister, aa manager. Funniest Thing aa Flint 1 1 Vim J JACK ANN rttrvcifrnii -Plus Co-Feature Borrors and Howls! 'The Hidden Hand Plus Bugs Bunny Cartoon i 1 j d n j I Last Times Today 1ST XT IS ESS OF aBTflmw luiar csmsfacnaiETt -CO.UVANIO.V FEATURE The strange drama of a man with; two loves . . . two pasts. To which does he belong? 'onnrt Cft Burgess MEREDITH - Claire -TREVOR Starts Sunday 4 r ' i in. i ii .1 ' " ' ' " " l PlUa SOS Coast Gaard" 1,0 i i fVVfiJ y m mm ? id Gen Giraud Inspects American Troops l-t T . fx --.vv-..'...--..-.-i..-.-.-L-:---: :-i: J. : - j ' ' 'n irtl rillllY 'l III" ' iTl tflMR ' --' ' jfctUMM Gen. Heart Heaore GIraad. saeeessor te A dm. Jean Darlaa as high ' eommisslener f French North and West Africa, Is shown as he in spected American troops In Casablanca, Morocco. This picture was sent by radio iron London to the United State Associated Press Telemai. Roosevelt Calls for Full US Cooperation Following War O (Continued from Page 1) C gestions as to the form that the post-war international ofganiza-? tion should take. The details were unimportant, he said, and the; main tmng was the objecuve. Some thought that his ideas on methods might be presented in his annual -address to congJtess, next Thursday. It was thought possible that he would follow up with perhaps a Bombers Hit African Axis D (Continued from Page 1) D about the Sousse railway yards and a spokesman said match smoke arose from the yards, the neighboring dock area to the north' and storage sheds to the east. ; - Fires blazing among buildings on both sides of the Sousse har bor after; the second attack. Two medium-sized merchant vessels in the harbor of Sfax re ceived direct bits when Flying Fortresses , raided the key point again Thursday, it was announced. The Fortress crews also reported hits on the docks and other har bor installations. They were es corted by P-40 fighters. The long-range, twin -motored Lightning fighters shot up and destroyed a number of axis cars and trucks near the Tunisian Libyan frontier (which Marshal Rommel must cross if he is to aid Gen. Walter Nehring in the de fense of Tunisia). Hurricane bombers of the RAF Joined in the attack. With a spit fire escort they struck at an axis repair depot southeast of Pont du-Fahs and the$ destroyed two trucks on their way home. The only ground activity Thurs day, a snokesman sakL was an ar tillery exchange in frte northern sector. i The allied headquarters an nounced that enemy planes at tacked Casablanca early Thurs day morning but that material damage was "negligible" and there were few casualties, "largely ci vflians." Blind Editor Killed NEWARK, N J, Jan. 1 Dr. Anton Kaufman, blind pub lisher of the Newark Jewish Chronicle, was found dead in a yard outside ' the Robert Treat hotel Friday after he fell through a window of his eighth floor room. His age was 60. ! rTTWV,rrTrrTTr Tune I lJ"'tail'JJ', Today Continuous 1-llt p. m. cvnizs 2nd 'K- news, cartoon, serial Sunday - Moiu - Tues. I It's a merry scream set to music! KAY KYSER "llj Favorile Spy" i With Ellen Drew, Jane Wyman : and Kay Kyser's Band t , ; f eaturing rLfJS ACTION FEATURE The 3 Mcsqoiteers "T7EST OF cniannoii" V" j J partial endorsement of the "world council" proposal recently set forth by Vice President Wallace. Under the Wallace plan the "coun cil" would have responsibility 'for general worldwide conditions, with regional matters to be ad justed by the nations of the re gions affected. ' i One thing seemed certain: That any specific proposals or administration Insistence upon the coarse of action suggested Friday would draw Into the open the opposition of those who opposed his foreign collab oration policies before Pearl Harbor. They have been aaletly preparing to meet this rising Issae, Mr. - Roosevelt's statement was made in observance of the first anniversary of the signing, on January 1 and January 2, 1942, of the declaration of the United Na tions, a document to which 29 countries have now adhered and in; which they endorsed the prin ciples of the Atlantic charter, pledged themselves to fight the war through to the end with all their resources and promised to make no separate peace. Military Writer Weds NEW YORK, Jan. -l George Fielding Eliot, military analyst for the Columbia broad casting system and special writer on military subjects fori the New York Herald Tribune, and Mrs. June Cawley Hynd, were mar ried Friday. &os "Life Begins Andy Hardy" and Red Skelton Lionel Barrymore Lew Ayres "People vs. Dr. Kildare lomorrow I Tondelayol Woman of Fire .... After her sensational Dortravotl in 1 "White Cargo" jP we'sain present Hedyiximarr in one' ;of her most autstemd- ? ling roles. Iledy Lanarr Janes Siewari "Como Live with IAN HUNTER TEKA TEASDALE DONALD MEEK Continoons Show Today Matinee 1:00 OZT CTATEd-IATT, Mem. New Yer High K:n A Water Kills 6 .-V " ' " - .' ,. ! . Many Evacuated as . Road and Rail 4 Travel Halted . '. ' l: i' ' i. - 4 .... J 1 A (Continued from Page 1) A to get some trains through Fri day night. Aray, f state poUce, Red Cross and volunteer workers, continued throughout the. .:day - to bring stranded families from. Rowland homef ibT. safety r?toduded were several" ill; persons who had tor be carried on'tretehenu ; Receiving stations 'were -et aup , in Jocalities around "Eugene NandT In Corvallis. The crest of tho flood had not reached Corvallis but some of the river-bottom country wa4 ' under water. - , - , .11 -The weather' bureau - at Port land predicted the flood crest had passed Eugene for the time being but would reach the- downriver the flood waters, and the city ?m' Albanyand left a fuR teser Salem Saturday creating serious However, that I supply was flooding throughout the valley. lltiieved sufficient it the emer- ..:-"-" j - evacuate speedily. . Several mid-valley towns were under three or more feet of water and the weather bureau, said the Thursday from Earl Burk's auto same fate was in store for others, there. Burk was owner also Rescue workers said many houses ef the Mellow Moon rink. Among and barns had collapsed and those moved out of their homes washed away. was Mary Janzen, 16-year-old ta in the lower Umpqua near the valid, who was taken on her bed coast five nouses were swept away to the home of neighbors, when the Umpqua went out of its From dawn, state police and banks. Several dairy herds were Red Cross disaster committee per- reported trapped in barns and farmyards. The victims of the Albany tragedy were Mrs. Marvin H, Smith ,25, and her Are-months old son, Howard. Her husband was saved by Sgt. din ton Lb Franklin of the Camp Adair military police, who palled Smith, unconscious, from the ear by his hair. The soldier towed Smith to a tree, where he regained consciousness. Af ter making ansvoosasfal : efforts to save the mother and baby, they took refuge h the tree. A farmer, William Peacock. cued them In a boat a half hoar later. The Springfield victim was Mrs. Josephine Lee, paralytic, who had been evacuated from her home near Glen wood. The Grove death was that mttiM o VTr Helen Skrebenskr of Portland, Her husband was thrown from the car and reached safety. Her body was not recovered. There was no danger of flood- ing at Portland where the chan- nel is wide and deep. I Two busses full of holidav nas- s enters were forced - to soend Thursday night in a schoomouse and the occupants clung to teie when the vehicles were marooned phone poles and ropes until help between Corvallis and Albany. West Springfield, near Ea- gene, was the community hard est hit. All but 5 or 6f of the approximate 900 persons there had been evacuated by late Frl day. Most of the evacuation : work LAST TIMES TODAY Uilh He" Oregon, Sciturday Mornfao. January 2. IS 3 Flood's High ExpectedJIere today; Building Jams Bridge F (Continued from Page 1) F ji.sr. fMwi ooerations Friday. All day, "lumber carriers speeoea from the west end oi me com pany's docks and properties mov Ing approximately JJOOO.000 feet of lumber out of the path of the oncoming i river, stayit -alwars "just a UrUe-ahead," and work men continued through the night in an effort t beat, the .'rtting wa ter. : -?r?. r " In West -Salem,-' Edgewater - street was turned fnto;a canal down which a metorboat could operate for, approximately three bUcks. By midnight water was washing across the Tattersoa sttwtrVmtersecUoa. r stood' ate feet the basemen of the elty hall and threatened possible : shortage of drinking water. Pump in basement of the city hall there used to keep the reservoir filled from wells were disconnected and raised up out aencT passed this weexeno. ulrJLtJln that city Included regidents in the" river area, who added to those moved were I onnel checked to determine wno among the lowland dwellers would need aid in moving xrom the path of the river. By night four motorboats nfere working from Talbot to Buena Vista and two were operating at Oroville. No estimate of the number of per sons moved was available Friday night, , although boats were not operated after dark. Kay Howard, chief of police at Independence sent oat boats to evacuate persons soatheast of that town Friday. Sheep were being moved oat of. the Oregon was done oy civilian aexense workers under direction of the Red Cross. Police and soldiers al so took part Evacuation continued through out the night although tho river wh falling in the Eugene area. The Red cross saia we uooaeo homes were without arinxing wa ter, lights or heat and that the danger of contamination was I great. Food also was getting acarce in some communities. The swirling waters swept trees and small buildings downstream and made rescue work hazardous. I severai ooais were overturned. arrived. ; None was reported drowned tin rescue work. Tdnonnou n E3S I hf CXAHAM tACXt CtrMtarf if CEOXCf MAXSHVUt hop ranch by Chris Johnson, ; manager, and the machinery of ; ' the mil Gravel company ai In dependence ! was : reported n der water. Indndedwas a bull dozer, while 7 truck .was par tially covered there. It was said. Mnvin north Friday night, Wgh wai washing around the Spongs landing area, Red Cross Disaster Iri S. McSherry , was In formed, i '"J? , , - H'- . . f Aid was offered by Capt. Fletcher, US coastguard port cap-, tain, Portland, but, Gov-, Sprague informed him that state police had the situation' in hand.1? . Expected here today Is Dr. Paul Raver, Bonneville j administrator, Harry Readv numfger 'of alem Electric, said late t. Friday ) night, expressing the ' hope" 'that service in Salem cut off when the high pole fell might be resumed early this morning. ' J Only bus transportation out of Salem was to Portland, although railroad schedules were all in op eration, made late by mountain slides and flood conditions. Soldiers, Travelers Hah Here Soldiers and traveling civilians marooned in, Salem by flood waters- took every hotel bed in the city and slept in the lobbies Fri day night , Although Camp Adair man, alerted Thursday because of the flood situation, were Friday or dered to remain at the post, some were already here on New Years leaves and were unable to return to camp. More than 500 had registered at city police offices, under instruc tions from officers at the camp. Cf. Gordon McCoy, camp com mander, declared Friday that the military would cooperate in every way possible to allay the 'discom forts and losses from flood. De tails of men from the camp, un der supervision of army engi neers, 'were sent to strategic points on the river between, Sa lem and Eugene. ' - i Meanwhile, to the soldiers .In Salem, of whom 123 were bedded at St Joseph's hall, another 100 offered cots at the YMCA, and still others taken into private homes, were added hundreds of motoriss and stage passengers. Zionist Leader Dies JERUSALEM, Jan. 1 6P) Arthur Ruppln, 67, Zionist econ omist and author died here Frl day - Born in Germany, Ruppin came to Palestine in 1908 to di rect the first Palestine office of the Zionist organization in Jaffa. He was among the founders of Tel Aviv. , 1 r . Ufcau Hitler Evades . Nazi Flight, Sees Victory II (Continued from Page 1) IT "If God Almighty has given ta strength to overcome the winter nf 1041-42. then we snau over come this wintery Friday he said: "Only " if we exert all or our strength can we beg oi our iora to afford us his aid,' as he has done hitherto.- . : . ttm reneated.' too. his assertions that the war was forced oh Ger- 3 He terr4e4 i Germany Vunsult kble?, for. experiment.with various plans that have been outlined by the . Amed-Nations-! In this ; vein he recalled the aftermath or World War t termed Wopdrow Wilson a hypocrite and said, that Germany w a s J immune against "repetition ol.anysuch attempis." Thii winter mar be hard, but it cannot possibly' be harder than last winter . . .! one power wui be the first to collapse in this struggle. 'This power wiu not oe Germany. This tune tne uerxnan people wm remain victorious on th battlefield. Then, at last we shall have that long peace which we need for the great reconstruc tion of our ' national community. This will be the only right way in w h i c b to thanx our aeaa heroes.'' CurchfflFilla Office Shakeup LONDON, JanJ 1 -Pr- Prime Minister Churchill completed his shakeup of government posts Fri-1 day with new offices for two I peers. . . " The Duke of Devonshire was made parliamentary undersecre tary for colonies, which post Har old MacMillan, who is married to Devonshire's sister, left on Wed nesday to become minister resi dent in north Africa. The Earl, of Miinster was mov ed into the Duke of Devonshire's place as parliamentary undersec retary for India and Burma. . Hospital Ships More . LA LJNEA, . Spain, Jan. 1-UP) The Italian liners Vulcania and Saturnia entered i Gibraltar bay. from the Atlantic Friday under safe conduct passes with Italian wounded and non-combatants from Indian ocean points and de parted later for Italy. : v , . (BCSdiCiQlX' I in utr Hi (I J irf -Vcrcslija tcpi Stx lizd i w m f w esr ssw w - H , ' ''''-.-.Kii'. f :r TWQ BIG HITSContfnZr !Bn;" Tt;M ! : Last Day ' ' f Dilz Brcs.; 'Xj i Grace McDonald Caral Bra-. T t l::..-i:cibd.llaoaapDr, i I " ! : and 1 ' ; . , Bock J.,? fa aw,ycr,..1r filcn!niiaoi.om.;ca By US Planes WITH THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE IN CHINA, Dec. 53 (DelayedMV-The Japaneso troop and strpply center of Meng- tnao, 30 miles west of the Salween river in western Yunnan prov ince, was virtually blasted off the map Wednesday as . US bombers and fighters continued their sweeps of the Burma-Yunnan border area. . Menemao. a valley town near ' Tnrnieh. was bit in ' two raids which followed two other Jterriflc attacks Sunday.' :- . ..Tons of bombs flattened, build-, hies and set off shattering explo- sions In gasoline and ammunition dumps. . - , ;', .: . One of Seven Fliers Founds Oregon Coast E (Continued from Page J) E "How he got on that ledge' ITl never know," said - Roger. ' "But he probably would have drowned at high tide if he hadn't, because the beach is covered at that point "We .were searching' the- shore line for survivors when we heard. a moan and followed it in; the darkness.- We found the' trail leading to the ledge j and found Brush." :nv!;v.,--v: -: - The coast guardsmen said the other raft and a . life preserver also had been found near here' but there was no way of telling whether 'any of its personnel had reached , shore. NEWARK, NJ VPh-A New ark man sat fidgeting through two hours of traffic court waiting for his name to be called. .Finally, when he was the only one left in the court room the court officers asked: him what he was waiting for. v'j ; ; i' He said he had a ticket for care less driving. , i Examination showed the sum- - mons was for Closter, mora than 20 miles away. t ' Vtieran's Hall 640 Hood St. ouc Knows sux Lac lticks, natural and supernatural, on how to charm a man .and brother, she makes 'em stay charmed! FraTbna&sIii'i caciest Hovel! FREDRIC MARCH : VEROfJICA 1AKE SHE OARED DEATH FC3 KERCC'JTITRY ... vkitt trackfii