The Insido Dimout 'Friday ' sunset H1 p. m, Saturday sunrise 8:17 a. m. Weather; - Wed. max. temp. 49, sain. 49. Wed. rain .57 Ln. Thv. river le.5 ft. Weather date restricted by army re uest Jnr complete morning : newspaper, . The Statesman, offers you pertinent com T" HtnU war news "of the ; day by Kirks Slmpna. Washington analyst . -) . :? FCUND3D ICl tmimszcom yeab Salem, Oregon, Friday Morciag Tmbrumj 12, 1943 Prfc Sc. : " No. 2C3 . . a acis. aLim i n n rrm n n crh mm lUUiiLU-jyiicOl 9 TTT) "RT - ..71 lLDFl N FUML : 4'-Puzzles Faced On ion How Soon, How Much, : Formula, Oiling; Deficit Possible - By RALPH C. CURTIS -: Whether reductions in the state' income tax, contemplated In the program upon - whose broad outlines ,-the legislative tax- committees and Gov. Earl W. 6nell are in agreement, can be applied to taxes upon 1942 income payable this year," was one of the four intricate . puzzles which : faced the house taxation and revenue committee Thursday as- it tackled the job of drafting detailed specifications. t Offhand, the answer, is '.'no." Apparently the emergency clause cannot be attached to a tax bill, even if it is one -educing taxes. Lacking that, the bill will not be come law until late May or early LEGISLATIVE CALENDAR Third readings Friday: In House: HB 107, 120, 140, 148, 166,215, 318, 327. SB 4, 44, 57, 97. Id Senate: SB 74, 104, 122, 134, 154, 462. HB 15, 48, 49, 50, 95, 181, 231, 246, 277, 285, 297, 311. June, some weeks after the dead line for3 filing returns. Already income tax returns with checks and money orders attached are coming into the r tax department offices. However ; if the formula for reduction if not too '.compli cated, a means of putting it into ' effect this year with a minimum of refunds is considered possible by some committee members, s J . The "committee's other puzzles are .these: -" L Hew anach Income tax re ; ductlen? 2. By what formula? S. What celling shall be pla : ced apon diversion in any one year of income tax surplus to school districts? Though there were approxi mately eight divergent view points in evidence at the commit tee meeting and there might . have been nine had one member not been absent in actuality the problems : were in process of be ing ' boiled . down to . agreement, and were this near to it: Assuming that compromise will eliminate extremes, the reduction will be not less than 11.6 per cent nor more than 20.8 .per cent. Whatever it is, the reduction in '- state revenues to offset property ; taxes. will be not much more than half that for no 5 reduction 'in corporate excise taxes has , been considered, and they comprise al most half of the total. The ceiling on diversion will i be $4,000,000 .or $5,000,000 or some figure In between. The ,: formula well, that's less briefly disposed of, but only three ' alternatives have been discussed: 1. A simple percentage reduc tion of payments without change ; In rates. (Turn to Page 2 Story A) Wood Ration Not Planned fat j JL MMJkij f T Aggg-VJL ; WASHINGTON, Feb. ll.-P)- i Rationing of firewood in north western states will not be made effective before next winter Sen ator Wallgren . was i normtd I Thursday , by the office .' of price administration. - : ' ,The season has advanced so far it is not advisable to attempt formal wood rationing this win ter,"; Joel Denv director, of OPA's fuel rationing division, said in, a letter to Wallgren, who had asked for' postponement r. 5 t , Wednesday the war production board announced it had author ized the rationing of firewood in Washington, Oregon, and J Idah-x . at OPA headquarters. OPA said then, however, that before ra-"tioning- actually was instituted there would be a registratioitlof wood - dealers to, .get information en which "a" rationing - program might be based. Dean's letter to Wallgren said that although the actual i ration ing has been put off until : the 2943-44 season, - plans must be completed by May 1, as most wood is secured in the spring and f alL and ' dried for winter burn-3. Taxat Ships to Be Named For Dionne Quints ' TORONTO, Feb. ll-(ff)-The Dionne quintuplets will launch five cargo ships for Britain at Superior, Wis next May 9 and each vessel of the -qutat fleet" will bear the name of one of Oliva Dlonne's famous daugh ters from Callander, Ont . .J , The ' announcement Jof their first visit to the United States 'was made to the Ontario legts-; latare Thursday . by Premier Gordon Conant, who said -"the government concurred In "the :r decision of Mr. and Mrs. Dionne to participate ln this T interna tional restore of good wilL" 9 Men Apply, Postmaster Exams Here - .. t -- AP lists Three From First Examination For Salem Post Nine men have applied for the second series of civil service ex aminations for the Salem post mastership. The Statesman was advised Thursday night by the regional service of The Associat ed Press in Washington, DC Only three ' of the applicants listed were among the nine who applied for the1 $4200-a-year posi tion last fall. After local demo cratic organizations had protested to the postmaster general over the commission s certification of only one man from the first list, and he an independent, new examina tions were ordered. . Applicants as listed now by the AP, arer - ,- -. Harry Stilwell, auditor, for the Oregon secretary of state; Donald LT McBain. personnel office direc tor t or- the unemployment' com pensation commission; Paul ' M. GenunelL auditor for the Becre tary of state; Anson L. Lindbeek, head of the Salem bureau of the Oregon . Journal; Chet L Nelson, former state NYA director' and now, connected with the person nel department of the Kaiser shipyards, who maintains his home on Croisan road; Albert C. Gragg,' salesman for Valley Pack ing company; Chester Thompson, believed to be Gordon D. Thomp son, Salem postal clerk; Kenneth W. Bayne, local democratic lead er, and Joseph J. Gallagher, bene fits supervisor for the unemploy ment : compensation . commission, who was the only man certified from the first list of applicants. Absence of the name of Paul Lynch, deputy collector of inter nal revenue, was not understood, since he also had applied a sec ond time, as had Gordon Thomp son. No Chester Thompson is list ed in the city directory, r ; The examinations f or : a 5 first class postmastership for an office the size of Salem's are not formal, written tests, but investigations of the applicants'" experience and personal suitability for the ' posi tion, i Swedes Down German Plane STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Feb. 11 VP-A Swedish warship's anti aircraft gunners shot down a Ger man seaplane Thursday' off Karl shamn on the southern coast, an official announcement said Thurs day night. I i r The; plane flew into Swedish territorial waters northwest of Skaane. After it failed to heed the warning ; shot, the communiaue said, the warship opened fire. The plane landed in the water and the crewmen, unhurt, were taken into custody by the military. A second German plane flying o v e r Karlskroma naval harbor turned away after a Warning shot . This was the first German plane announced shot ' down - since the autumn of 1940. - Reds 'Gut MOSCOW, Feb. 11 The red army in a methodical isola tion of the big German bastion of Kharkov has cut the Ukraine capital's main -railway to the Cri mea and the Donets, basin by cap tarihg .Lczovaya, a junction J$ miles to the south', a: special so viet "communique " anno ua cad Thursday night. V-k--''1 H'i-vt Other Russian units were closi ing -ia on Kharkov itself : along a 50-mile sickle-shaped front, some of, them 22 miles to the southeast at i Chuguyev and 36 miles to the northeast . at Vol chansk. -, s - - - The capture of Leaevaya rep- mm Force n MacArthur MoVes . ;.Toward Salamaua ; j; Airmen Harass ; By MURLIN SPENCER. ' r-s ALLIED I HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, Friday, Feb, 12-P)-A la rg e J apanes e ground force which on January 30 had attempted to capture Wau," New Guinea,5 35 miles southwest of the important Jap base of Salamaua, has been "de cisively defeated" in a series of engagements . and is 'in ' full re-. treat, leaving behind an estimated 1000 dead. r 'j .. t ;n . ; Gen. Douglas MaeArthnrs noon communique . announced Friday that the Japanese force, estimated originally 'to have constituted a reriment, or 280 men, is ! fleeing toward Mubo, some 12 miles below Salamaua, after being battered by jungle trained Australians, harassed by American fliers and badly hurt by artillery. ' , Australians mopping up in . the rugged country southeast of 'Wau in the vicinity of the Wandumi trade found 200 " more' Japanese dead which previously had not been reported. - "This brings the total of . his abandoned dead to "nearly 1000 since the initiation of his unsuc cessful attack of January 30 " the communique said. In addition, - it was estimated that, other Japanese casualties- wounded and sick "probably are many; times, as great" whereas our . own - losses have been rela tively light." , , i Air activity was comparative ly light in the southwest Pa cific One Flying Fortress har assed the big Jap base of Ra banl. New Britain, for more than two hours, finally dropping bombs that started fires near the Lakunai airdrome. ' The communique also reported the sinking of an allied merchant man off the east coast of Austra lia by a submarine. All person nel have been rescued. It was the second announced submarine ac tion in this area approximately within a weekVtime. Food for Occupied Europe Sought ) NEW YORK, Feb. U The Greek aid plan has demonstrated that without interfering with the war effort food can and : should be ! sent .. immediately to other starving occupied European coun tries, Herbert Hoover and Hugh Gibson, former ambassador to Belgium, maintain in an article published In Collier's.' Assistance can be given to the 50,000,000 starving men, women and children in Norway, Belgium, and Holland by lifting the block ade of Germany to permit limit ed quantities of supplies through, the authors asserted. 2nd Dutch Nazi Leader Slain LONDON; Feb. 11 Dr. H. Reydon, Dutch propaganda chief, and his wife have been fatally wounded in the second slaying of a Dutch nazi leader within a week, the Dutch news agency, Aneta, reported Thursday night. The re port came from Amsterdam via Stockholm. ; : : ". ' ' : Aneta said the Scandinavian telegraphic" bureau reported that "unknown terrorists" shot Dr. and Mrs. Reydon and predicted 'strong reprisals" by the German author ities. . . - resented . a . 35-mile westward sweep from the Barvenkova-Iz-yum sector., This flying Russian column -now may turn south ' to ward the sea of Azov ; in an at tempt to trap hundreds of thous ands of German troops in the Ros tov and Donets basin sectors far to the east .. -,"-. .The rail junction's seizure also gave' the Russians an additional base for the - approaching battle for Kharkov, and for a sweep on westward - to :-, the ; Dnieper river, 65 miles away. The Dnieper' gen erally is considered the Germans' best defense line" should Kharkov fall. Routed pailway -; e '5 r.Cirtifitij.ii.i A tugboat serving as a ferryboat capsized in the Columbia river yen route to Kaiser's Vancouver ship yard early Thursday morning. Nb yard worker-passengers and .'crew members were, reacued.. six i bodies reeoverfd aitf( four persons were still miss uig. The ' photo' tut'or Tnriuiajn ii. nnett Eisenhower North A frican Fighting; Top Britons ALLIED HEADQUARTERS (iT-Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, in North Africa, conferred Thursday with British staff officers from the Middle East on completion of his. unified command of powerful allied forces for a final, crushing offensive to drive the axis from Tunisia - . The array of military leaders serving with Eisenhower, who commanded the allied occupation of North Africa, includes Britain's foremost commanders of land, sea, and air successes 'in the Mediter ranean area, battle-tested Ameri can generals " and French army generals. K'";, ,l'f '":'?,.,a;"J To bead this centralized com mand of generals and a .British admiral, the popular Eisenhow er was nominated by President Roosevelt to become a full gen ' eraL a rank otherwise held only by -John J. Pershing, George C Marshall. Douglas MacArthur -and Malia -Craig.' 'j As his deputy commander-in-chief, Eisenhower has": Gen.. Sir Harold Alexander, former British (Secretary - of - War"; Stimson and rrinae Minister Churchill on Thursday disclosed other plans and developments In the war against the axis. Reports by them are on pace . two.) P middle east commander, who will direct all . hmd operations.; Like Eisenhower,' he is young: an en ergetic, and ; favors direci action. Air Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder, air commander-in-chief 'for the Mediterranean area, . will . be re sponsible for all air operations in this vital theatre. - Directing the allied . navies is Admiral of the Fleet Sir ! Andrew Browne Cunningham. 1; ' ' . Land operations in north Afri ca have this powerful lineup: - ... Under ? Alexander are the crack British Eixhth amay of Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgom ery," , which ': : chased -. Rommel - 09i miles from : Egypt ; clear .aerosa Libya; the BriU&h First army nader. Lt. Gen. Kenneth A. N. Anderson, Gen. Henri Gl- -rand's French forces and , two America corps commanded by MaJ. Gem. Lloyd B. Fredendall . and UaJ. Gen. Charles W. Ry ; ierV'v.,:'i;.: - ;: .. ' ' ; '-; :;: - ' Still directly under Xisenhower for the time being is the Ameri can Fifth army of Lt Gen.. Mark W.' Clark ; In northwest Africa. In the air: . - u ' Tedder -become "stratecic (Turn-to Part 2 Etory B) Shipyard Workers. Die ' - - - ' - . t Associated resa.rn - ' to Command Under Him IN NORTH AFRICA, Feb. 11 hew allied commander-in-chief fY'Gardei (mmitfees Appointed A committee of seven members to formulate rules and arrange for judging of victory 'garden contest,;- sponsored by The Oregon Statesman - and the Salem Men's Garden club, was named ' at Thursday night's largely-attended meeting of the club. ; C. A. Cole," James ' -McGilchrist Ernest Iufer, G. W.- Ailing, Robert Shlnn,' E. T." ' Saling and G. O. HolloweR,"? , who V cbmpriseV that committee, are to hold a prelimi-' nary meeting Tuesday night at 8 o'clock at the YMCA. ; Until another committee' can be organized to care for that phase of the -club's newest project per sons having plots of ground they would like to lend landless gar deners " and 1 others interested in securing the use of garden spots should call the YMCA to register, dub officers declared at the close of the meeting Thursday night Approximately 50 men, includ ing 10 new members attended the meeting, held at the YMCA Cr; ; .More . than 100 colored slides of camellias, shown by John Henny, aroused considerable dis cussion, among camellia fanciers. 'Preparation of a plot of ground on Highland avenue recently given to the club for use as a demon stration garden was . assigned to a committee composed of Knight Pearcy, Glen Slentz and K.' S. WUbur. - . v - ' ' ' C A. Colo won first prize In the garden quiz, while second was awarded to Rex Peffer. The prizes were given by Russell Pratt club president " . , , - - Crish Kills la v; - MONTREAL, Feb." H-(flP-Fiv crewmen and' 15 passengers of a royal air force commander Liber ator bomber were killed in a crash Tuesday in Newfoundland, it was announced here Thursday niht in. River ;,.:. .. " :. ' hows reeovery of t3ie .third -hdf. 6 Known Dead In Boat Four Still Missing : l In Columbia ; Man ; ? Lauded for Saving " PORTLAND,! Orfc, Feb. 11.- (ff)-A diver recovered two bodies from the sunken Tugboat ' May Thursday night bringing the toll of known dead in the. worst Co lumbia ' river disaster of modern times to six and leaving four still missing. r'v!4 . ; '' ; Diver Fred ; Devine - brought up the bodies of Ben Xt w J s, 47, deckhand, one of" the tug's crew of three, , and Benjamin A. Ben son, 58, one of 18 workers being transported from, the Oregon shore to the ; 1? e p y y .J. Kaiser shipyard at Vancouver, Wash. - Bodies of ' Phillip Gerstenkorn, 48; James H. Westmoreland, 29; William H.; Bennett- 54, and Nels E. Nelson, 82, all shipyard work ers were recovered earlier Thurs day. - - ,v j '- ' Still mUsinr were Ray Lewis, 45, deckhand Ben, and two and '-, brother of shipyard work ers W a 1 1 e r rearsonj Jr 17, and Mrs. Esther. Chamberlain, Siv The Multnomah county sheriffs office; said another was missing but the name was not known. "'j - - -Clarence Harvey, 38, captain of the tug, and eight shipyard work ers were rescued- by Harold Gran (Turu . to Page 2 Story C) FDR to Speak, V 6-0 Tonight : By The Associated Press . President Roosevelt - will make a 20-minute radio address at 630 pjru, PWT, Friday night over all networks.. ! The White House said he would discuss many subjects concerned with the foreign; and home fronts. It also was announced he will speak February - 22,. addressing George Washington dinners held under auspices lot the democratic national committee. The hour is not yet determined.' Gap tain, Carl Named Tilajor 1 rOlTLAN D,. Feb. Capt Marion Cart Hubbard pi-, lot ace widely feted on his re turn to tls area recently, has been promoted to therank of major In command of a marine fighter squadron, according to word received here Thursday, lit Is at Santa Ana, Calif. ' ' 8-Mile, Advance MtiiiM; .; M&immel :: Anieriiisan Over Genter, WhUe Fre : Fall Back for Re-Eqnipment LONDON,' Feb.", 1 l-ffTBritish and French troops were re ported Thursday,, night by a field correspondent in the Mat cur area to have set the long-dormant northern front inJTunisia into action with a continuing attack that has advanced them about eight miles. ' : ' . . . The report came from a Reuters correspondent in the Mateur Salem Included In Portland's 48-Hour Area US Chamber Advises Wait for Official " Rules on Change , . PORTLAND, Feb. ll-()-Sa-lem, . St Helens, Hillsboro and Oregon City are included. In the Portland : Metropolitan area ' af fected by the 48-hour work week directive, L. C. Stoll, regional. war manpower commission director, said .Thursday. j . " v 7 T f He explained the area embracef Multnomah,- Clackamas and - Co lumbia , counties . and parts , of Washington . and Marion . counties in Oregon, as well as Clark coun ty in Washington. William H. Baillie, Salem of fice manager of the US employ ment service, stated Salem's in elusion was a surprise to his of fice, and that he would be better able to advise when official in structions from. Washington have been received. Baillie stated that most essential industries . in ' the Salem area are already operating on a 48-hour week. V WASHINGTON, Feb. The United States chamber of commerce ' disclosed Thursday that It has advised Its members to "sit tight" and await official regulations' before rushing7 Into a ; change-over to the 48-hour work week ordered by President -Roosevelt Eric A. - Johnston, president of the chamber, made this disclosure Thursday'-: after a White' House conference. . '. j.---..- He said he told the president that the nation was already in a (Turn to Page 2 Story E) u Draft to Call Fathers Now, SaysHershey WASHINGTON,. Feb. ll-(ff) Most draftees within the next two or three months will be fathers, Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey re ported Thursday "because therell be no one else left to induct" " The selective, service director declared it necessary to draft men with children in testifying against a bill by Rep. Kilday (D-Tex.) to put the draft on a state-wide in stead of a' local board -.basis and Mb require draft boards to consid er dependency - as a . ground for deferment - Further hearings are set for Monday after which; Kil day said, he would demand that the house military committee ap prove the bilL - '' ; The measure would provide for this v order of induction within state limits: Single men without dependents; single .men with col lateral ' dependents ' such as par ents; married men - without chil dren; married men with children. In eff ect it would. - prevent the induction of a married man . in any state so long as eligible sin gle" men are available. Hershey said he had no decJre to put heads of families into uni form but presented figues which proved, he said, that it was nec essary. These figures showed an available pool of 22,000,000 men of draft age of which . Hershey said only about 14.CC0.00O could meet , physical requirement and of those . 14,000,000, approximate- Iy' 1,500,000 must be deferred foi essential work, leaving 12,500,000 to meet tia requirements of the armed. forces - sector about 15 miles south of Bizerte who declared that allied troops , including B r 1 1 1 s h and French commandos attacked the Italian-held line in the northern area at Dawn Wednesday. The, smash carried, eight miles deep over an area of about 100 square miles, he said, adding: "By evening the men reached their primary objectives. ' "According to information so far available . the operation has ,1 i a - .11 : 1 a . fi, Kuuc wen, uut iuu resuiis win not be known until the . second sweep, now in progress has been completed." .. . There was no word of the at tack immediately from any other sources. :.' : Meanwhile, far to the south on the vital Tunisian; battle front the British Eisbth army was reported fighting 20 miles ' Inside the southern border from gjsya, : pountwg ae i rtir.z forces ot Field Marsbai Erwla .Rommel with artillery fire east: .of Ben Gardano. KHitf Dispatches from .the nonh Af rican front said Rommel appear ed to have called at least a tem porary halt to his retreat, and in the biggest action since El Agheila had thrown tanks, infantry and artillery against the British for ward forces of Gen. B. L. Mont gomery, mis apparenuy was an effort to save Ben Gardane, which commands the roads important to the British advance. . Farther south British tanks under General Montgomery were probing the more vulnerable end of the Mareth line. .-..;: The other arms under Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower were de ployed along a 200-mile Tunisian spine 50 to 60 miles inland from the Tunisian east coast hemming in the German and Italian forces. Incessant rains kept the stickier black soil of the center and north active. American troops and Lt Gen. K. A. N. Anderson's British First army, veterans of Dunkerque, took over large sections in the center from the severely buffeted French troops of Gen. - Alphonse Juin, whose obsolete weapons, had been no match - for the enemy. . The French moved to the rear for re-equipment and reorgani sation and Gen. Juin declared la an order of the day that they would reappear "at the front In the.' near future with modern armaments." New materiel ' was arriving swiftly from the Unit ed SUtes. US planes hammered ceaselessly at the enemy supply line across the Mediterranean narrows and at bases in Sicily, sinking one and . probably two small troop ships 30 miles north of Cape Bon. Each carried 250 enemy troops. . LONDON, Feb; It (JP) - A Reuters dispatch from the Ta-nlsian-TripoIitanian border said I Friday that Field Marshal Rom mel's troops had fallen back In good order on the southern sec tor of 'the front . It said this maneuver accom plished a shortening of the whole battleline. - 4 ' - " - - Georgia Senate Okehs l&Vote ATLANTA,-. Feb. 11 vf)- The Georgia senate Thursday voted for a. -constitutional amendment to lower ho--voting age from 21 to 18 and Gov. Ellis Arnall averted it was the first such legislative action in the country. Arnall said ' he , believe'd the house would approve tubmisMcn of the change to popular vet too, and he promLd to cErni;, i for it The governor is, 35. The governor contends that a oerson- "old -enough to fight i old enough to vote."