IV .c; TVL :Cocst Guard' -: Aids Rescue - Volunteers "and Army Engineers Used to Move Residents D (Continued from Page 1) D ; reported from Grand Island to Keizer, where families appar ently In the meat critical state were removed and ethers who had fowid second floor rooms - of their homes habitable . were to be contacted today. Evaeua tlon or aid ia form of food and I water was promised these per sons today. Bed Cross elothlmr and blankets were to be avail able. ;f::,::r ; No estimate of 1 the number of families moved from their homes was aba liable either at Red Cross or air base of fices, as men worked through the second night prepar ing for morning rescue parties. . Considerable cattle loss . was predicted by rescue parties. The Oregon Hop company alone lost 50 j sheep, caught in the flood across the river from Independ-,- ence. - - "Another, inch would have put out the brooder heater," said George Rhoten as he discussed the situationat' the Rhoten farm : south of Roberts, where thousands of chicks were saved because the : water. rose no higher. : - At the Minto hop ranch it was - understood no severe building loss had been sustained and the horses and other farm stoek xhad been moved to , the second floors of - bams. - y".;' '"jr. -' - Question all along, the lowlands' was the amount of erosion which might be expected in the fertile flat country. " - - Use ef Wheatland Inter-county ferry to salvage SO cattle In the Dayton area was author : bed ' early .;: Saturday morning by County Jadgee Grant' Mor phy and William O. PowelL A . tog was to move the ferry with Its cargo valued at $25,000, property of ' U. S. Alderman, . large fann operator. . ; ; Roads in' the Jefferson area were largely- impassable Saturday, but damage was reported light, although power poles- had gone "down .Fridays - !'- ,-,-"t South and North: River roads were closed and a barricade was placed near the North Santiam schoolhouse, where an old fill had washed out : , , County shops were to remain open today to receive cala f or aid over telephone 8813. OHtheHOME FRONT By-cash, cnnjxi Adventure stalks the heels of ; Salem's Don Madison. - ' A river boatmao, whose boat -Saturday- lacked- powerful enough motor to be useful' in the heavy current of the Willamette, ' Don told County Engineer Nate a -;V . I rr i Hubbs ne'd , find transportation. ' How hwgot together a boat owned ' by Dick Severin and motor be- . longing to Dr. Hugn Dowa is gtory which, someday may be told I V including always how he took ' Udie little craft back to Salem Dea eoneas hospital thinking could operate it in the flooded base- r.lv. But the real story Is of "the -thrilling tilp taken with Ma boy r who knew the country . . . be was swell , i . wish I could tell you " bis name. He told me, but tod " many things - were trying to go .: through my head.' ItMi be worth a month's salary to take that trip, kut I wouldn't go again in that ; UtUe boat for anything!" Over the tops of telephone - lines, walnat and peach or ' . eharda- now and then avoiding a fence Unit apparently was at ' the top of a rise la the ground, the Uttlo boat traveled aoame IS - . r IS wiles. ' , ' Once it mixed: with, some hop , wires and was stopped in the nick of time. Don gives you to under s stand that in partner- might th- ' erwioe- have- been -rut in two by ; the wire which was tightly drawn - across his middle. - They, or at least Mr. Madison, ' didn't know exactly where they ;: were KOMwhert back of Sen. - Charles I McNaryV farm. ; Once they eat thrsetgb the top 1 of some woods, wnaoked what had. been) :a- bee r tree, Jearned " : tieT -...-;JI"1 Further meat -shortage was pre , r dieted by Madison; - whose big r game hunting instincts wero - roused by Jight-of a cow precari v . ously perched on a hillock; -a few . sheep floating past. I s may -add V- that this was. afternoon, when the crest cf . the -flood : should ' nave . reacheCr. that portion of the river, so the cow, no doubt, continues to lead a useful life, the sheep, i still living when seen by Don, v may well have reached dry ; ground. . S.-ife- ' . . v t-V ' rm-: V-' One elderly couple in a house lapped by the edge of the river ;. preferred to remain at home. An -.other couple traveled In the Madi . ,son party to a -point where they ; could be put on . dry. ground V .j-aved highway,-actually. " i'Dimcut- . C r- :y sunset 5:SS pun. Mon ' C-y i.zriss a. m. Weather: r. L rr-zx. temp. 59. mia. 4L FrL; . j. i .17 ts. Sat. river Zi.9 ft r Ciia . resinctea ox Panorama of Flooded West Salem S ' -v. - "-'It king eastward on Edgewater . pper photo) of the west end of yfcttny rink (lower, photo) was dynamite charges to break ap the ran way. Statesman photos. BuHdiiig Floor Highway Crew; CT (Continued from Cage 1) C eenrred partlea In boats small and large braved the tarbnlent flood waters which veteran riv ermen ; described" as "a good plaee to stay: eat of." - Capt. Wallis and other tug op era tors had gone many hours and miles without sleep helping rescue stranded persons and snar ing runaway log rafts. His o boat narrowly escaped disasflsr at one point when It fan out of faeL . Keith Brown, Salem industrial ist, swam to safety when his pow erful . eight-cylinder speedboat capsized, after it had eaugfat on a cable and later been taken- in tow by fee Vanda. Seperts freta Isolated farm famine ponred In froaa np and down the river, aaaary ef them. retaetaai to . leave then dwellings, and Its' own ; water-sail oimded In the Senth MIU creek Winter street in the Larmer warehen at IXigh -and Liberty streets, en fewer ClmaoMa street and 'rUi'On the river read, and ht the tower Cherry avenae dte- ;triet. ; ' . Many industrial plant propri etors were attempting to cheek up on their loas os from water dam age to stores of paper, lumber and canned foods, primarily, while many? downtown buildings nsrvmg -deep- had' a foot r snore of backup water, mat damaged ' mei ttrandise and supplies. Even the two city rest stations at State and High streets were : flooded - out of use fulness. i': It was too -early Saturday night to obtain -even specific guesses s to individual tosses in most cas es. Employes end employers alike had been too busy moving goods and snachinery to abov Ipeiwnifnt levels. , t Damage to the highway bridge. whose deck ' had sagged six feet Saturday, night, win cost' the state highway department from $10,000 to $15,000,- R. H. Baldock. chief engineer-estimated. He was con sidering; the possible necessity of erecting a .temporary trestle to reopen travel, to West Salem if early efforts to shore up the reg ular approach failed. : The city lest another bridge to the ? ravaging of Skelton drainage ditch Friday, this time the 14th street crossing between Leslie and Oak streets, a $1S00 less. City Eagineer J. H. Davis said. It took with It a six -inch city water mala bat water ser vice in the; vicinity, was ) only briefly Interrupted, aceerdlag to Carl , Gaenther, water depart ment maaager. Ne other water " Tho - ! 9 ( J - KJf. . j, - m. x' -.4 t street In West Salem, The Statesman y V the 1b undated Marion-Folk eouty bridge approach. Mellow Moon Jammed firmly against the west approach to the bridge. Workers used huge mass of wreckage m an effort to take pressure off the sagging Breaks, Drops Two Missing ks damage was reported. The same ditch eroded ten feet of bank near -the Rosebraugh foundry nt the fodt of South 17th street. Its waters pouring into Pringie park against: slack waters from the river abetted the inunda tion of many houses, the Deacon ess hospital basement and the room of the state school for the blind. Supt, Walter R. Dry postponed Monday's scheduled reopening of the blind school. Salem's isolation lessened Sat urday night as the Pacific high way to the south wna reopened to travel as far south as Eugene. Pi lot cars were in operation south of Harrisburg. The west side Pa cific highway also was open to the Lane county seat. One-way traffic continued over the North Santiam highway; the South Santiam was closed again by slides at Upper Soda. No major power ' interruptions occurred despite the flood, W; WJ Hamilton, division manager of the Portland General Electric com pany, j said Saturday afternoon. The company's feeder south of Salem connecting with the Bonne ville high line went out of set ice early Saturday morning wfc debris felled fire poles, but the main supply circuits north to the firm'a own .generating stations re mained in-service. An emerges connection was being set up with the Mountain States lines at West Salem. Although the Portland Gas it Coke company's gas main , to West Salem and 'Monmouth is carried by the Salem-West Salem bridge,; it was holding- and service was being i given aa usual. Manager Leif Bergsvik reported. Salem Electric Cooperative as sociation, -serving many downtown business houses in the capital, ex pected tit have , its services re stored today. Manager Harry Read indicated. Radio station KSUL deriving-. 3ts power from this source,., was. ft; the air Friday night and much of Saturday. The station's1- antenna tower . on ; the west aide of .the river was' not reached' by the' flood waters.' 5; Pipeline Installed' " I A new section of pipeline was installed Saturday to replace that broken. ; Thursday ' when the ' last portion ; of the Abiqua dam went out at Silverton. Portable pump ing equipment was put to work there again after the installation lifting river water to the settling tank and on up to the reservoir from which the city obtains its water' supply. ;-.-." OZEGON STATECMAIT. Ccdara.Ore.jon, Sunday ' Morning, Icmun-7XSi3 . -y "V f "' -..,.:'.,''.,'..:'.: - v. r h -r photographer snapped this view Reds Deeply Into South, West F (Continued -from Page I) F ward through the shell-pocked ancient fortress of Velikie Luki and thwarting every German ef fort to break out of entrapmeniBurk, owner of Mellow Moon at Rzhev, The Germans insisted that Veli kie Luki still was theirs despite Russian claims to have slaughter ed the Nazi garrison to a man in puncturing the: main enemy de fense line stretched from the Bal tic to the Black sea. Berlin acknowledged the fall of Elisia 170 miles outh. ml StaUncrad say ing it was destroyed before the 'Russians entered. fat the Paetfle ekant shins In a mi attrition against the Oriental lack of shipping wUar whloh to exploit the tieas lands, canqnered to, the Tbevtctories brenght to lit the total ef Ji by. two large, sv a. small cargo ship; TK ntH.h Ttr nnv tH1 m I bogged down m the mud of .Tuni sia, but the Eighth army started moving again toward Tripoli, chasing, the Germans from . dry water guSy 185 miles abort of the Tripolitanian pert. The Berlin radio predicted . imminent large scale attacks in both Libya and Tunisia. ; It was give, and take In the Tunisian air. Allied planes act large' fires at Tunis but lost eix planes. X The Germans lost four in three thrusts at Bone. , The east coast ports .of ' Sfax- and Sousse were declared heavily damaged and the- enemy appar ently was making no repairs. t The army's Aleution Islands air force,' grimly determined to .elim inate the newest Japanese menace at Kiska,'returned in force to mat enemy base on New Tear's day, shot down one of six 2erolflghiers which attempted to intercept and scored at least a near hit on one small ship in the harbor. JThis action was paralleled by heavy American air raids the first day of 1943 M the Solomons area of the south .Pacific where bomb ings were concentrated on break ing I. up Japanese resistance on Guadalcanal island and prevent ing use of the Munda air base oh New Georgia island. ' AB US planes were reported turned from both raids. TJS-amkmsriSiis Papuan Fight Not Finished Isolated Snipers Busy; Sanananda Area Left Short of Lae A (Continued from Page 1) A by advanced allied infantrymen. Douglas attack., planes also swept low over the water, machine gun- ninjr the swimming Japanese While these ' ground troops made-.Jthei allied:., airmen pounded . me airdrome at Lae, above Buna to the northwest, in a series"of heavy 'attacks." B-36s led Ihe -assault, dropping 1000 pounders on the runways, dis nral havs and hangars. With American - P-38s and Australian Beaufighters supplying a cover- Inar air screen.-A-20s followed m a low level sweep over the enemy's field. When the attack was over, fires wfre burning all around the airdrome. Giving details of the air raid on RabauL New Britain, Januaury a spokesman said Flying Fort resses dropped 500 pounders and clusters of fragmentation and in cendiary bombs on Laknnal air drome, star'Jng fires which were believed , to ' have destroyed: a number of places caught on the ground. West Salem Wet-But Undefeated By' STEPHEN C MERGLER They waved, men, . women and children alike, as they congregat ed along the : Southern Pacific tracks to welcome one of the sev erafspeciaV abbreviated combina tion trains a locomotive, a cou ple of. boxcars,: and a couple of cabooses for the first-class pas sengers chugged along the tracks into West Salem Saturday after noon. ' : The scene reminded of earlier days in those cozy small commu-1 nities: where the coming of the! daily train was an event not to be missed, j - . , . v Salem's neighboring coramuni- ty across river was making out right well, thank you, even though half of its main street, Edgewater, under ;. water to depths as great as six feet, homes and stores flooded out; lakes and millraces rippling and raging over what had been high ground, the, day before. The train brought . groceries milk, workmen who had been marooned fat Salem -and even a general's daughter, Mrs. CeCe Ceek, who made the novel trip from Salem to Join her fa ther, Mai. Gen, Gilbert K. Cook, commander of the Timber Welf division at Camp Adair. Hardest hit property holders and business proprietors in West Salem apparently were Earl C. iuu, wwen Droxetup Saturday- against the highway bridge, and of the; Riverside auto park, which lost a wash house and smaller stnictures to the swift Willamette; John S. Friesen, who lost between . $2500 and $3000 worth oT box- shook held tor war orders -at the Salem Box factory, and the owner of the Puritan ri der workswho got but little of his goods from ' his establishment before Uie river poured In. uvuian aefe&se officials of West Salem; supervised the caring for at least 18 families, driven out of their quarters In Burk's auto court and .given the Kin wood post, American Legion, hall as temporary dwelling, place. Walter Gerth, pioneer of West Salem, said the town's new city nau apparently was undamaged by the flood, though muddied up on 'the lower levels. The town's water pumping system, which had to.be removed from the hall the river rose, probably will be backin service by Sunday, Gerth said. Meanwhile, an ample auppiy of water was believed held in two '' the top off the right-of-way i -street of the a Mg lake over Wal- for nab? ' The city park, where the town has lone wanted to install su swimming pool, didn't need such fancy trimmings Saturday. It also was a lake. ' . The West Salem townsfolk were taking their ' cares in stride, smil ing and making the best of It. thankful the water .bad come no higher. A-1923 high water mark in the basement of Gerth stare kt 1211 fkigewater street iiipated the of ficial Tiver gauje records' showing thatthe .flood- of If was ..greater that) that of '43, he said.". - . . - . . . -- . - . TThere Isn,t more than an inch difference: ; either way," : , Gerth said, referring to level of .seepage water.T- . -, . 1 - Pedestrians travel ". over - the Southern Pacific trestle was lim ited by railway officials to sol diers Adair-bound and civilians who could, obtain passes 1 based upon necessity of the trip. ' To the west, the Salem-Dallas highway was passable. .' ' Grew Reported O f Surprise, Boob Dicclosea B (Ctotinued -from Page -1) B ies, "like strong wine," had Intox icated Japan with dreams . - "golden opportunity. Then on January 27, Grew informed the state department ef "reports fromjmany soores, : that Japanese ; military - forces planned a 'surprise mass ai T earl H a r b e r In case of t r b 1 e w 1 t'hr the United StatesJ :; ? - i Soon Ihere alter the new Japan ese ambassadorr Admiral Kicbisa- buro Nomura, presentediius. cre dentials to president Roosevelt, and were begun to persuade f the Jananese that their real, opport unity; lay In collaborating, with Britain and the v United states aeainst the German menace. In a conversation with; Nomura, Huu said that "unless the civilization of the world was to run the great risk of being destroyed by Hitler the united efforts of nations like Japan. the United States and Great Britain would be required to shape the course of the world In . a different direction. Germany invaded , Russia In June. 194L . and in July the Jap anese moved troops into southern Indo-China. A though on July 24 President Roosevelt received No mura and told him the new move by Japan in Indo-China created an exceedingly serious problem for the United States, he proposed neutralization of Indo-China by international agreement" When, in the following month. the president met Prime Minister Winston Churchill at . sea in the historic Atlantic Charter confer ence it was agreed that the United States should continue conversa tions with the Japanese. But Japanese-American relations did not improve. Nomura suggested they would improve If a meeting . could be arranged , between President Roosevelt and Premier Prince ftonoye, possibly aboard a Jap anese warship. Secretary Hall insisted an agreement In prin ciple on at least the major far: eastern questions should be. reached before such a meeting. The' Japanese repeated the In-' vitation and finally warned that the Koneye government might fall If the meeting failed; to take plaee; In which case "a less moderate government might take the helm. Koneye did fall and Gen. Hidekl Teje took over. Ambassador Grew cabled from Tokyo, warning of the possibility of Japan's acting "with dramatic and dangerous suddenness. .On November 7 the situation' looked so bad that Secretary Hull ad vised the cabinet that the public should be informed in public speeches of the gravity of the crisis, the report said. But soon thereafter there ar rived in Washington Japan's fly; ing emissary Saburo Kurusu and on November 17 Kurusu and Nomura began their conferences with H&l for negotiation of a far eastern settlement. The same day, November 17, Grew again cabled urging "vig ilance against sudden Japanese naval or military attack.' - , The negotiations pursued their futile course. Rescue Craft Lost in Flood Somewhere .beneath me flood In the Spongs landing area lies Keith Brown's speedboat, -formerly owned by Lee U. Eyerly. Used as a rescue vessel.; Satur day morning, the boat, with its rescue party consisting of Brown and his son, L W. DoefLewis and Chandler Brown had picked up Mr.- and Mrs. R. H. Myers, their infant daughter and "Mrs; Myers mother, when it tangled with a cable strum? between two trees. : Services of another craft were secured to remove the Myers fam fly, the boafs earner, due to leave shortly on er busineas . ,trip, and his son. jFinally ieinoed from the cable on which it had been "hung up," the boat took on water and sank. W hop it's wedged in some trees and can be recov- ered wl the flood. taewn," said Chandler Adair Men Returned Men from Camp Adair, instruct ed Saturday afternoon to walk across th railroad bridge and take Imsses in West Salem to Camp Adair, found motor service insufficient and returned to the capital city, where Saturday night they were, told to travel by bus to Albany, entrain there. Prayer' Teek Open .1 WASHINGTON, Jan. 1 President Roosevelt today endors ed the "universal week of prayer which Is being sponsored by the Federal oCuncil of the Churches of Christ in, America, atarting Sunday. The general theme will be Taith Giveth the yictory ':-fV Ila-Shili Appointed WASHINGTON, 'Jan. 2-JP-Dr-Hu-Shh, former Chinese ambass ador to the United States, has accepted appointment as -research associate and consulate of the American council of learned soc ieties it was announced tonight-; Jap Intention Industry Loss Hospital Hit fi Still uncalculated .. at an early hour this morning were Salem's industrial losses from the wuiam ette river flood. .. J. i vn, ih. nram Puln andlvaee ooeratlons began mere w , Paper; company's paper, milLA laiS portion-of 1600 tons of fin- isbed paper stored j at the 'Lax- mer warehouse and at the com panys plant on Soum Commer- cial street, was believed damaged and uncovered by Insurance, 1 i -nt, intf ta 'wi:mtmI nrab ably small, nor damage to equip - ment could be estimated Satur- day, X Not -until the water r: has dropped considerably could con- cuuon oi tne macnmery-ien onienneerg took over evacuauon. the lower level be determined, j Hmdreds f Camp Adair sol The outdoor sulphur - pile stood f .tMI ,arormd in Albany, were in slack water and -was probably noi greauy , ownagro.; . ai uie vuuiuanj a mwtum, motors were pulled Friday night; SLBLSr morenVfooT approximately a toird of the yard j 'v. woodea platform from the river Side. y r.- ---r.i ; -OH;-ry - ;-;;aj t r nn i. hiUvMl l' to be the r Deaconess hospital, J said late -Saturday that the Ever where the: heating plant waa; green highway on the north side oat ef eommlsslon, the big kitchen too flooded far service, cooling equipment, power cut off and stored -food supplies thoroughly wet. In : the water which stood' more . than four No estimate of. losses can be figured until salvage can be checked and cost of repairs de- To residents of flooded com termined, Ff F. Wedel, manager, munities and evacuees therefrom, said. ' From the kitchen of the these instructions were -issued nurses home and diet kitchens went, food to the patients who! practically filled the recently-en-J urged hospitaL ! . "Everyone has been most co- operative and kind,L declared Mr. Wedel. Willamette university's president. Dr. G. Herbert Smith, offered use of Lausanne hall kitchen equipment, which the hos pital management said would not be .seeded. !r Commercial estab - liahments offered, gratia. Jood to aid the biir ! estahliahment. TJr. ..ao. - t 1 Cross, civilian defense and -doc- tors of the city, sought to dis- cover what were toe hospitaTs heeds and renorted that the jtaff believed It could care . for the emergency. t T' i ' ' ; t Other Industrial losses Includ - edj ; i . .:;;l:.1-;.';F.i-,lnfor those' in 'the Terminal Ice & Cold Storage company, 990 North Front - street. five feet of water on lower tr that may have damaged wall In- sulationr all ' of - customers' mer- J"""" ao.cjucnrisi Duua chandise removed ahead of the ,bove Woolworth store, rising water. 1 (in Salem, will receive such re- Reid Murdoch lr. mnan vr vr..v. -...T salvage work! to ri. . k.., atocki of canned eood. atored k lower floor. : primarily : a loss through labor entailed. Hunt Bros. Packing company. no damage to plant or -stock, but section of river bank washed away, threatening small parage at I rear of cannery bufldings. Faulus Bros. Packing company. unlabeled, canned .good -In base meat levels flooded butrto be aal- vsged with Uttle or no Iocs. eCnllaSM T AniJtpw xeaa a. i '-itSSTl S-SS: Douera shut down during day Sat urday but expected to be In oper ation today.' . - , 19-Year:01d; Takes life Jack LockharV If, recently' en listed in' the jmy Signal' cerpa for training here, hanged wiralf at rthe home of lus nareats 140 Silverton road, late feturdey al ternoon, afaerifTa and corenera office 'announced jherew . Apparently f happy m bis radio school work at the old high school, young Lockhart on Saturday car ried to : a conclusion ' experiments attomptod twice prevtoualy, his mother told iavveatigatang officers. City Cast aid men wrked vex the body two feours. , - Bobson PredicU -New Trench line NEW YOPJ Jan. tHVCover nor. General .Pierre Doissen oi French West Africa said Saturday In a new year's message broad cast oyer the Dakar-radio that the allied - landings in North Africa had put .France on . the,, path to Victory oral that tomorrow we will be on the firing line. with an our Forces." , .:."' Malloni Returns;: ! Pal ' MaXlon Is baik 'en' Ids beat; the nation and the world, as seen from Washington, ' DC - Theabaenee en much-needed vacation oT. this' top 'celamnlst.' whose lines rare packed with accurate rpeerting and at times astounding foresight, 'brenght many iaaniriea to The States man as to whether or not his daily" colnmns had been Clscon tlnaed. They have "net, and The Statesman hopes It will be able to eenUnae ' tegularly present- ' lag Mr. IXaHonS eemmeats. iLovcr Hive:1 Floods Bants Lower Sections Hit, But Level Drops' . Toward North g (Continued from Page 1) B structure on a dam at Oregon city was carried away. At r.mrna the river dropped five feet. It Is expected to be back i - ---- . . c,, army engineers ryeyed dange expected to run Into f mUlions of dollars. It was tne worst - 1 there In 15 years. seventh flood fatality was i reported la the miaaie viuej I n,t,AM- jnhn Heffner. a fanner, I M-nMi after a rowboat cap 1 sized. Emergency food shipments were fxa the thousands of homeless, A ue ; Albany area army I jetuurned to camp by a special I frafn maiins! room in tne puduc , .m r nrivate . names. where been housed, for the incoming evacuees "itween ed la Oregon ce. bwe Marshfield and Coquille on the coast where water stood over the bkhw-" - I The l Washington state of the river had been reopen eo. Flooded Areas Instructed by I Hrrrltn OltlCGrfl - - - , - Saturday night: AU drinking water should be boiled until the source Is known jto be clean. Wells should, be I cleaned by use of some purifying solution. Chloride -of lime Is ap' I proved and used widely for this I purpose In the east; simple Qorox 1 of Purex is satisfactory, if approx- I imately one-half cup is poured I into well and water pumped out luntn chlorine taste Is gone. Don't I drink the water, but it may be I nut on the toncue. . ' . ' . . ! 1 1V' W T CfMia L ' County Health Officer. Register as soon as possible I your current needs, your losses. condition of property, etc- with I your nearest Red Cross represen- j tahve. MrsT Hal. Wiley at the Jef-; 1 ferson drugstore wlU take such Talbot - Jefferson district r Mrs. I "ton Hoyfser, route three, Is to receive It from the Oroville-Riv- rid area. The county chapter I rom nearer areas and those north of the city. 1 Sucn registration will aid the .Crc workers to determining , JLV?11 .? ffer nd will be of - considerable value in tne task of rehabilitation. . Ceocge Roeaman, Marion County Red Cross Chapter Chairman. Irl S. McSherry, Disaster CThairman ler County Bed Cross. Holiday Toll -Io Jrersoii3 By The AssocUtad Press Wartime restrictioo. . JTii the-buaineas of ataying on the Job helped th w Jr 7 o the-safest in years. - - tf5?.WWe 184 Wn'r deaths unfcd la an Associated Press unrey Satarday nlghV of which 5?iTEJ? -ts and dr!E!i'00tiI,1 tbbinga, cwShgs, falls and by auffoca on. Jeauary z, 1942 the New. Year's total wag ICS, , of TO m were traffic deaths. ment Closecl On Rood Control ;The Willamette vaUeys Nw " anot -fgurn d SaSrday! ?pn ddar- ProJeclJ1 w vcn SSTSw the le?onaS? ' tmr. sold he ha5 -been'' r Rep. Jae.V!ot;d- Ptt'"a2?fnd- f 443 vcuated from PiuSi nounced today bt L1 Wa. n er, of toeWesSLlf roup already bTmW JT' The m C3ucot mr,A cenier nd Drew Arkansas. counties, c Herd Smith.- hxutliM v e ' h y eaa filer, a elS Br -Arl- wrial adventure! lllT Ia t ... - ccorchy-