PAGE FOUa lli OHEGOIT 8TATESMAXT flfflorn. Oregon. Tuesday Morning February 2, IS43 Civil Defense Group to Aid Fire Fighting : First civilian defense organiza tion within Marion county not of ' strictly "volunteer nature Is In " process of formation here this week, County Coordinator Byron H. Cooler revealed Monday night as he outlined plans for the for est fire fighters' service. ' - Men who -volunteer for th service may have special train ing in fire fighting methods if they are willing to utilize some spring evenings for class work, Conley said, and they may be called upon to work In event of fire in rural, areu or in forest sections of the county.' When called upon to fight for est fires, the members of the or ganization will be paid, Dan D. Robinson . of the state forester's office, who is now contacting leaders of Salem civic organiza tions for help in starting the serv ice, has told Conley. Classes are to commence soon as sufficient interest la the organization has been shown to snake possible establishment of a - training schedule, t- Conley said .Monday, explaining that probably one night a week would be asked oi volunteers. : 'Axis Supply Dumps Go Up in Smoke Upshaw Named US Marshal PORTLAND, Feb. Lt. Comdr. Frank B. Upshaw, US tia vy retired, was appointed acting United States marshal Monday by Federal Judge Claude McColloch and James A. Fee He will hold office until Presi dent Roosevelt appoints a succes sor to the late Frank Hamm. Up shaw said he was not a candidate for the job. A former state manager of the Home Owners Loan corporation, Upshaw entered active duty in 1940 and returned here under phy sical retirement September 1. Khaki Dominates License Records Marriage license applications for January, up approximately 25 per cent from the record of January, 1943, reflect the pre sence of Camp Adair In this area. County Clerk Lee Ohmart susses ted Monday as he pointed ut that 31 of the male appli cants were service men. In January of last year four f the 47 prospective bride grooms were in - some branch of the service, although many were shipyard workers and otherwise enraged in war acti vities, while in January, 1941, only one of the 19 male appli cants wore a uniform. Axley Services Today, Portland Funeral services for James Earl Axley, auditor in the commissary department at Fort Stevens, will be held at 4 p.m. today in the drawing room chapel of Holman and Lute, Northeast 14th and Sandy, Portland. Commitment will be at the Portland Crema torium. Axley was the son of the late James Axley, formerly a teacher In the Salem schools. He is sur vived by his widow, Mrs. Augusta Axley; three brothers, Rollo, Port land, Seth, San Francisco, and Bay, Portland; and an aunt, Mrs. J. R. Anderson of Salem. A. " A heavy black cloud of smoke rises from axis supply daaaps in Tripoli. They were set afire, by mel's forces fleeing before the British Eighth Army. (This is an official British photo received m the United States via radio from Cairo.) Associated Press Telemai. imtteirpireitSimff The War News By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Wide World War Analyst for His Statesman progress to escape a closing red trap. Though the terrain and weather conditioning the battles in the northwestern Caucasus and in southern Tunisia are utterly dif ferent, there is a distinct parallel in Russian and Anglo-American French strategy. In both cases the old military axiom of divide and conquer is coming into play. The allies are obviousdly trying to trap the retreating MarsHal Rommel before he can join forces with the axis defenders of the Bizerte-Tu-nis triangle. Pastor Selected MOSCOW, Idaho, Feb. l.-iJP)- The Rev. Owen J. Beadles, Me fhodist pastor who came here five years ago from Chehalis, said Monday he had been transferred to the pastorate of the Centenary Wilbur church at Portland. Fall Injuries Fatal PORTLAND, Feb. 1 -(TV-George W. Hall, 40, shipyard worker, died Sunday of injuries from a fall off four-foot scaffold last Thursday. Host to FDR En route home from the historic Casablanca conference. Presi dent Ceosevelt paused In Li beria on the African west coast to pay his respects to that coun try's president. Edwin. Barclay (above), and to review Ameri- can Negro troops stationed there Associated Press Tele mat. - . By every available portent the month of February, 1943, seems destined to bring twin crises to a head for Hitler on his soviet Russian and Tunisian fronts. They could spell the be ginning of his doom. On the two far-separated sectors something like a million axis troops are already dead, cap tured, or in imminent peril of sharing the fate of the "suicide" garrison of the Stalingrad pock et Moscow reports, documented by statements obtained from captured German staff officers, now set nazi losses in the Stalingrad clean up at a third instead of a quarter of a million men. Another 250,000 or so are reported all but trapped below Rostov in the northwestern Caucasus between the Kuban and the Don, with their backs to Kerch strait and the Crimean escape route. Still another 25,000 to 50, 000 appear cut off to the north by the Russian sweep toward Kursk. The excuse offered by Hit ler's spokesmen for the sacri fice of the army before Stalin grad Is that it made possible preparation of a new defense In Russia. Just where that front in the south runs is not yet clear, bat It Is hourly becoming more doubtful that it can Include the Rostov anchor on the Don estu ary or embrace any part of the Caucasus. Just where the main Russian thrust at Rostov is to fall cannot be discerned. It seems obvious, however, that an element of Sov iet strategy for that crucial drive to fling the foe back of the Dnie per and out of the Donets basing is the attempt to cut off and trap the remnants of Hitler's army of the Caucasus below the Don. The speed of the Russian advance be yond recaptured Maikop to close in on Krasnodar suggests nazi re cognition of that danger A Ger man flight to. the Crimea via Kerch strait may already be in McKenzie Named Juilge for Union Appointment of Alex McKenzie as Union county judge was an nounced by Gov. Earl Snell Mon day. He succeeds Judge U. G. Couch, La Grande, who died re cently, and will serve the unex pired term ending in January, 1945. McKenzie is now serving as tounty commissioner of Union county and is a member of the executive committee of the Coun ty Judges and Commissioners as sociation. He was born in Union county, is 52 years old. and is a successful farmer. McKenzie is a republican. Gabriel Found Insane I PORTLAND, Feb. l.-tfVAn alienist pronounced Ennii . Ga briel, 50, i accused slayer. Insane Monday, and Circuit Judge Lou is P. Hewitt committed him to the state asylum at Salem. Gabriel is accused of shooting Rollo W. El lis in Gabriel's confectionery last August. Judge Hewitt continued the first-degree murder charge indefinitely. ' ,.- Thousands Praise Simple PES SEMP This Quick, Easy Vftyl Sins pOm mm mot nti mm totta fern with wmtdmUm tteb. torn m4 IrrtU-. fek. 'ilni rmtirt. TMr l-vrm kltm Uartetm tI mwfcuim mllj kibrioata m4 Mftm. FretaeUv m4 mU rtaftajr, mm mr to mmm. If wo4crfml to to tram et miim tortara anbt. Ct imto ir' Valentine Mail Heavy The girls they left behind them ha vent forgotten. Judging by the Valentines mailed to ser vice men overseas during Jan uary, reports Postmaster Henry R. Crawford. It's enough to make the mail, carrier feel like Cupid, and with the "hearts and flowers' month Just arrived, a local boom in Valentine mail is expected. January receipts at the post office showed an increase of Sl.397.68 worth of business In January, 194S, over January, 1942. Last year's total was $4L 769.52 while In the month lust gone by, postal clerks transacted 143,167.20 worth of business. Two at a Time PORTLAND, Feb. 1 -(JF)- Ob taining only $1.99 in ST hardware store burglary here Sunday night, a burglar hammered out a wall section and found himself in a drug store where he helped him self to $22. Netz Services Held Monday i - - - - A military funeral was held Monday afternoon In Christ Lu theran church here for Lt. Stan ley) G. Netz Of the US army air corps, who died in a bomber crash near Alamogordo, NM, on Janu ary? 24. -: Rev. F. H. Theuer cox ducted the service for Lt. Netz, who was. employed by a local newspaper for 17 years. The pallbearers, soldiers from the! state fairgrounds encamp ment, were: Tech. Sgt. Howard D. Mete, Staff Sgt. Herman W. McLaughlin, Staff Sgt. Jay E. Ob- erxnan, Sgt Harry E Bender, Sgt. Marlin K. Kelly, and Sgt Charles K. Askins. LL B.A, Kallonzes ac companied the body to Salem Staff Sgt John B. Hoffman di rected the firing squad which honored Lt Netz at the Belcrest Memorial park. Pvt. George Bart ley; was the bugler. Army Repairs Books Here Salem Is one of six western cities at which branches of the army's Ninth service , command library arc being set up to process, repair and distribute books do nated for the use of soldiers, ac cording to an announcement from command headquarters received by The Statesman Monday. Mrs. Ruth K. Stratton, formerly of I the city library staff. Is in charge of the local branch. It Is operated at the state library, whose head librarian. Miss Elea nor Stephens, directed the Vic tory book campaign in Oregon. The army library branch takes the place of a WPA project that had been set up, also with Mrs. Stratton in charge, for the same purpose. The service was stopped recently when WPA was liquidat ed. British Flax Mills Sought WASHINGTON, Feb. lHJPh Possibility that Oregon may get some unused British flax fabrica tion machinery Is being investi gated by Senator' McNary (R Ore). " " . s- - -, Q. JL Hyslop, head of the divi sion of - plant industries at Ore gon State college, wrote the sen ator, asking the procedure under which British machinery might be obtained under the lend-lease act He said production of flax has ' expanded beyond the capa city of local mills and he believes a spinning ' and weaving ' plant might be started If the machine "ry were available. ; - Believing that many fiber Car machines must be idle in Great Britain, he . thought they might be made available to the Oregon Industry. -,:.lyy ; .y -.v: . v The senator asked Hyslop for additional data on the tjpe of equipment needed.' MONTGOMERY WARD1 oun TO'r.inY bnncT AS wool felt end dyed h the exoct shades of your coat and suit pecan brown, reaV beige, Cght blue and gold. A casuaL pert Ctlfe beret yoa can slip on your head, mon !2t any number of waysl V1 1 Brothers to Qose Food Store Here Western Food market 137 South Commercial street, is go ing out of business, a war causal tyj the proprietors, Isaak Broth ers, announced Monday. - Lack of merchandise was given as the im mediate reason for impending closure of the store which they opened six years ago. The two proprietors, owners or homes here, expect to continue to live in Salem, and plan after the war to reenter the grocery bus! neks. Thev oDerated a store in McMinnville for 11 years before coining to Salem. For ihe Deration o! All Merchandise j in Slock All Advertised Prices Effective While Merchandise Lasts. PEANUT UTTI EES Bulk Jars. Garden Brand, 2 lbs. 49c wmw Campbell's Tomato or Lynden Chicken Noodle i - SAVES No. 1 Tall Cans, Packed In Tomato Sauce &4 Clara Chowder 190 l omaloes Each Lg. No. 2Yi cans Per case $3.05 Siring Deans Eh 90 No. 2 Cans Per Case M.49 Raisins 2 Li. 250 Bulk Sampson Seedless Raisin Bran 2 for m9 10 oz. Pkg. ; D2Sn 2r.390. Washing Powder Dng Gofa Pail wz. 190 Zcchanic Soap 250. ML Hood Brand, 6 Bars MIS Flagstaff Brand Hard Wheat, 49 lb. Red, White and Blue Or Kitchen Queen 49 lb. I; $.98 Fisher Blend or Drifted Snow, 49 lb. $05 indicl Tip Uoa 190 Lge. Ctn.290 PET JEE5. s pus. 270 Tuckinj Hi Prices' lrroxojD b Vi k )ji iJs n; 'ij' 137 Sa. Ccnl ! 1 KJ , a; in- ii ?0 V f, tSs. i . i SOFT CASUAL COAT Yea, of 1 00 pure Shetland type wool and dyed to the fovcHest pastels hnagf-, nabUI Lusciousred, beige, light bU, pecan browii and gold, just He its com ; ponion suit In seven : styles, boxy or flfr fed. Sizes 10 to 20. lhatc:::::o cacuai curr Wllh the coat It's an Ideal Spring en semble . i , separately yogH wear O un t3 warm weather. And It's dyed to the same lovely colors as the coat h o Choice Of popular styles. 10 to 2a Use Wards Monthly Payment flan to bvy o3 you need. If a the convenient way to shop;' BUY WAR DOUDS i i . Oil S ALB AT Aon. 3194