Today v Complete Sports Report, 2 Pages (See Pases 10 and 11) Dimout ' Sun. sunset 6:56 Mon. sunrise 7:50 (Weather on Page 4) PCUNDSD ICZS v ijejety-cecond yeah Salem, Oregon. Sunday Morning, February -23.' 1843 Pric Sc. No. 253 If .777 7777) UlSThTf IWUll VD V TTH (TV Benefits Mayor Proclaims Aid for War Fund ritoiris Sliattei' WOMAN. B - Given Employes Not to Be Moved Until New Positions Found . Regional Directors Freer . By WILLIAM T. PEACOCK WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 - ber industry in all its phases and for metal mining other than iron throughout the nation was ordered Saturday night by the war manpower commission. ! At the same time, Chairman Paul V. McNutt issued regu lations granting board discretionary authority to area and re gional directors in putting the 48- hour week into effect in order industries in me -laoor snorx- age" areas designated last month. Ia general, these 'regulations - are designed to ease . the tran sition to the longer work week by providing . that no firm which mast release employes to go . on a 48-honr basis shall Install1 the longer week until the federal employment service finds, "suitable employment" for the workers. As explained by Fowler V. Har per, McNutt's chief deputy, this might mean a period of months r more before some firms in the labor shortage areas will insti tute the longer work week. He : outlined the procedure in this manner: By April, 1, the company must file with the regional manpower official a statement of how many employes it would release by go ing on the 48 - h o u r week. It should then continue working its current schedule until , manpower officials advise that jobs else where are ready for the workers who would be released. This would apply only to bus inesses which must release em- . Other firms, in Harper's expla nation, would fall roughly into two classes: 1. Those which can go on a 48 hour week without releasing em ployes which would make ar con tribution to the war effort by a longer work week. Such business es, Harper said, should simply change to the" 48-hour .week and need not notify anyone. 2. Those for w h o m a longer work week would be impractica ble, would not contribute to re duction of labor requirements or the war effort, or would conflict with the state or local laws. These should file a statement of their case with the local manpow er director by April 1 and await bis decision. The order to the lumber and non-ferrous mining industries to go on the 48-hour week was the first industry-wide applica tion of the longer work-week principle. The labor depart ment estimated it covered about 870,000 workers in lumber and 70,000 in mining. WMC officials said consider able segments of the two indus tries already are working at least 48 hours. Last September the war production board ordered that all workers in the two industries in 12 western states be placed on a 48-hour week with pay and one half for the work in excess of 40 hours. Subsequently the office of price administration raised t ceil ing levels to compensate for the extra costs. ' ' Asked about price and wage questions where additional work ers are affected by Saturday's or der. Harper said the WMC had no control over these matters that they were the concern of oth er agencies. . Price Administrator Prentiss Brown has expressed his opposition - to easing any price ceilings in order to take care of increased costs under 4 8 -hour op erations. -lU The general regulations as to instituting the longer work week in the ,; 32 labor shortage areas also apply to the lumber and mining industries. These regulations list various exemptions from the longer work week, f some of which had been previously announced. They in clude Z establishments employing fewer than eight persons, state and political sub-divisions, youths tinder the age of 16, and "persons who, ' because of other employ ment, household duties or physical disabilities, are not available for full-time work." .' Harper conceded the broad grant of authority to local and regional directors might lead to conflicting decisions by " officials in different areas but said that where any differences became, a national matter, Washington will step in. The purpose in giving great discretion to local officials, he (aid, is to have local problems , (Turn to Page 2 Story A) 48rMour JP) - A 4 8 -hour week for the lum Stimson Backs Over-All Draft .... .. j . Austin-Wadsworth - Bill Endorsed ; 'Control Inadequate9 WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 -JP Reporting "increasing evidence of the inadequacy of present con trols," Secy, of War Stimson wrote the senate military committee Saturday strongly endorsing a bill providing for the compulsory con trol of manpower. In a letter to Chairman Reyn olds (D-NC), Stimson said the war department "strongly en dorses" a bill introduced by Sen. Austin (R-NY) and Rep. Wads worth ; (R-NY) and "urges its prompt passage by congress." This was the first intimation from j administration sources of support for the Austin-Wads-worth measure, which would provide primarily for voluntary transfer of workers to essential war Jobs but "would provide for compulsion If voluntary controls fail to bring about the desired results. Stimson reports "present or im minent" shortages of labor in ag riculture, mining and industry. "There is increasing evidence of the inadequacy of present controls to achieve a full utilization of our manpower and to solve the labor shortage problem," Stimson wrote Reynolds. "As a result," Stimson contin ued, "in several instances where labor shortage emergencies existed it has been necessary to take men from the army to supply labor. This is a practice that is wasteful and disruptive to the army train- (Turn to Page 2 Story B) River Boat Comes, Here The Gay Marie, 165-70 foot steamboat minus engines, arrived at its mooring place south of Wal ter Hain's Salem Boathouse at 8:30 o'clock Saturday night to be come the first apartment . house on the river at Salem. Two decks and a pilot house comprise the white-painted super structure of the vessel, which is to be used as a storage place and boat shop below decks, with liv ing quarters topside. Believed to be about 40 years old, the Gay Marie was once the Gamecock, a towboat on the Co lumbia river. A number of years ago reconstruction into a night club was started, but never com pleted, and at that time the name was changed to the Gay Marie, Hain says. Recently the vessel has - lain near Ross Island bridge in Port land and has been spoken of as the "Ross Isle" although the name boards were never changed. Roosevelt 111; Talk Canceled WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 -1JP) President i Roosevelt, though im proved, canceled all engagements for the weekend Saturday to rest up from an intestinal disturbance which has kept him away from his office since Wednesday. - The slight fever which . accom panied the disorder had- disap peared Saturday and he was said to be "getting along very satis factorily." However, his physician advised continued rest and no ap pointments were made for him. :" A four-minute radio broadcast he was to have made between 1:15 and 1:30 p. m. PWT Sunday in starting the $125,000,00 Red Cross war fund drive was called off. Red Cross Chairman Norman H. Davis will read the message for him. - ' ease ErVored ; Committee Asks $40; Adjournment Awaits Some Big Issues : By RALPH C. CURTIS Good news for the recipients of old age assistance in Oregon was provided Saturday by the legislature's k joint ways j and means committee when it voted 8 to 4 to comply with Gov. Earl Snell's recommendation that .the item for this class of benefits in ; the public welfare budget be increased from the budget etsi mate of $16,880,000 to $20,000,000. But, though it's primarily the budget-balancers problem, to the tax planners the committee's ac- LEGISLATTVE CALENDAR Third reading Monday: In House: HB 163, 216, 369, 382, 383. SB 178,201,206. . i ... In Senate: SB 15, 151, 181, 258, 264, 265, 172, 208, 161. HB 81, 82, 131, 171, 364, 366, 367, 368, 370, 371, 372, 373, 195. tion afforded the reverse of ease and comfort. i- The increase, Gov. Snell had estimated, ould make it possible to raise the average monthly al lowance to $37 or $40. It puts addition strain of $900,000 on the already tightly-inflated budget for the biennium; and more than that if, as is being urgently suggested, the state takes over a portion of the counties' load. As things stand, half the total increase would be borne by the federal govern ment, 30 per cent by 'the state and 20 per cent by the counties. Guy Gordon, the governor's tax advisor, said the counties would not . be able to Increase their contribution by the $600, 000 this program would . entail, though they might transfer some of their other publie welfare , funds to old age assistance, sir ee there Is a falling-off in demand " for general assistance. Gordon recommended a definite state appropriation of $12,000,000 for old age assistance, and that all liquor revenue be frozen for this purpose. As to the future prospects of this source of revenue, C. C. Chapman predicted .income would equal or exceed that of the last biennium even if the . liquor sup ply is reduced 25 per cent, since more high-priced liquor is sold in prosperous times. In view of this decision by the ways and means committee, there were indications that Rep. John Steelhammer's bill to tax pinball machines and mechanical phono graphs and earmark the proceeds for old age assistance might be reconsidered in the senate. Figures obtained in the last 'few days in dicate it would raise about a mil lion dollars a year. Adjournment by the next week end was the big question mark as the members faced their last day of $8 compensation Monday. The idea of working for nothing being by no means novel to veteran leg islators, they were less worried about that than over the volume of work ahead. . Marked progress has been made recently however in cleaning up issues. These remain: Civil service, fortified winesT taxing munici pal utilities, occupational disease coverage under workmen' com pensation, : compulsory accident insurance, excise tax reduction, income tax reduction, communi ty property law, distribution of income tax surplus to schools. Not nearly so formidable a list as was faced a week earlier; and some of these are close to solu tion. Civil service, fortified wines and (Turn to Page 2 Story C) Willkie Seen As Candidate Indianapolis, Feb. 27 -v?) The Indianapolis Star, in a dis patch from its Washington-corre spondent, said i Saturday I night that Wendell L. Willkie's candi dacy for the 1944 republican pres idential nomination will be en tered in the 13 states having pri maries for selection of delegates to the party's national -convention. Willkie's candidacy for the nom ination "may be taken for grant ed without any formal announce ment from him" and he "will fight for. tiie popular vote in ev ery ; state t where delegates ; are named in primary elections," said the "dispatch. -,v-:-i - i u "Willkie, who was the republi can nominee against" President Roosevelt in 1940, was in Indian apolis Saturday, but he declined to comment on reports! that be would be a candidate again next year. ..,... i 7 Mayor I. M. Doughton here presents his Red Cross war fund proclamation to Charles H. Haggins, general chairman of the drive, in war; fund headquarters at 357 Court street.: Left' to right,' Justice George Ross man, chairman, Marion county chapter, American Red Cross; Mayor Doughton; Chair man Hugglns, and A. L. Shafer, manager, .western area division, American Red Cross, here from Saa Francisco to aid in preparation for the campaign. 125,000,000 Rationees Sign Today Deadline for B, C, Tire Check; Food Hints Given WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 Deputy. OPA Administrator Paul M. O'Lcary estimated Saturday night that about U25,000,000 food ration books were Issued during this week's registration. This was substantially above the approximately 123,000,000 is sued in the initial registration for ration book No. 1 last spring. Registration this week, OXeary said, went smoothly, as a result of the cooperation of jffewspapers; radio, schools and merchants. OPA Saturday amended the or der banning sale of canned meats and fish to allow canned chicken, turkey and other poultry meats to be sold immediately. Canned- chicken soups, however, may not be sold until Monday, when the present freeze on canned goods ends. In another field of rationing; OPA cautioned hotorists that Sunday is the last day for hold ers of B and C gasoline rations and operators of commercial vehicles to get - their tires in- ' spected. The deadline for hold ers ef A gasoline ration books Is March 31. The government suggested to housewives Saturday that they make up a table showing how many of the familiar kitchen cup measurements can be procured from various cans and packages of frozen or dried foods before they start shopping when the sale of those products begins Monday morning under the point ration ing system. The agriculture economists sug gested: Read the label to find out about quantity, quality, ingredients and (Turn to Page 2 Story F) Salem Not in; 48-Hour Area SEATTLE, Feb. 27-UP)- Brig. Gen. H. G. Wmsor, area director for the war manpower commission, Saturday announced boundaries of the western labor areas which will be affected by application of the president's 48-hour work week or der.. " 1 As forwarded by Regional Di rector William K. Hopkins, San Francisco, they are: ' Seattle area King, Pierce, Thurston, Kitsap and Snohomish counties. ; V- Portland area Clark county. Wash and Multnomah,' Clacka mas and Columbia counties, Ore. : All districts in which there are lumbering or non-ferrous mining operations also are effected (on a nationwide scale) but only in re spect to those industries. Silverton Pilot Killed in Action SILVERTON, Feb. 27 Fjed West, Silverton boy, was killed on an unidentified fighting front, ac cording to meager information re ceived here. He was a pilot of a fighting plane. The West family came to Sil verton ten years ago and lived on Mill street. A few months ago they moved to Portland, v-.- The message said he brought in his plane but was found dead at the controls. . ATiiY y . c? . iiini; 4-1 1 til's i. Ciano Arrival Said Delayed By Peace Aim BERN, Switserland, Fb. 27. P)-The German ambassador to Vatican city departed hur riedly and unexpectedly for Berlin Saturday night and Count Galeasso Ciano's pres entation of credentials as Ital ian ambassador to the Holy See was postponed until Monday. Well - informed Vatican ob servers were quick ' to see in these moves a further indica tion of the wide scope of nego tiations nnder way .since the ar rival of Archbishop Francis J. Spellman of New York-ty con sultation with Pop TluV XXL - (Turn to Page 2 Story D) Yank Bombers Blast Brest U-Boat Base LONDON, Feb. 27-JPh-Ameri can Fortress and Liberator bomb ers bashed the German naval base at Brest on the French coast Sat urday while RAF Venturas at tacked Dunkerque in continua tion of . the greatest sustained air assault f the war on enemy in stallations from the North sea to the Bay of Biscay. All the big US bombers return ed safely from the latest in the series of assaults in which allied planes have pounded the nazi war machine twice around the clock and more. The Paris and Calais radio stations "suddenly went off the air Saturday night, indicating the RAF was carrying the of fensive through another night. The daylight operations follow ed closely a Vvery heavy" attack by RAF bombers Friday night on the battered German industrial city of Cologne. Squadron after squadron of al lied planes shuttled across the channel Saturday as RAF and allied fighters supported the four motored American' bombers in their raid on Brest. . Their . target again was the U-boat - base at that west coast port, pointing to a sustained allied air offensive to weaken the Ger-r man submarine fleet and help clear the- way for the landings on the European mainland. - W i 1 h e 1 m s h even, which US bomber struck in - daylight Fri day, is another U-boat building center and. haven. Cologne, -left quaking; under Friday night's avalanche of RAF bombs, also builds submarine engines and parts. With the Lorient and St. Na zaire U-boat bases largely out of commission from day 1 and . night attacks by the allied' bomber fleets stationed in Britain, the Germans now probably are using Brest ' the - third big base in France to capacity, one British observer said. Institutional Food " . Signup Extended " Deadline, for .institutional users of foodstuffs to sign up at the Salem rationing board office was extended Saturday to March 10, because necessary supplies had not all arrived, Florence Bell, clerk in charge of food rationing for Salem, war .' price . and rationing board, announced. . - The board advised institutional registrants to plan to sign up be tween March 5 and March 10. r f -3 J Red Gross Fund Drive to Kickoff Monday for $42,000 Campaign; Jefferson Reports More than COO volunteers- will put aside their own work Monday morning to go into action in Mar ion county in behalf of the Ameri can Red Cross, war fund drive, which officially opens on a nation wide scale March 1. "This is no small army," states Charles H. Huggins, general chair man for the drive, "and I can us sure the public that it is as en thusiastic and- conscientious an ar my as -any American doughboy could ask to have out on the home front in his behalf. These workers know what they are working for $42,000 quota from the county at large, and . they know that this money is seriously needed to give the service that the armed forces must have from the local chapter of the Red Cross. In Salem, all preliminary work in connection with the drive was completed Sa'turday afternoon in the war fund office, 357 State street Official kick, off for the city comes at Monday noon's chamber of commerce luncheon meeting. oiiicial recognition, so far as . (Turn to Page 2 Story E) NW Firewood Authorized SEATTLE, Feb. 27.-(i?5)-Janes C. Scully, regional rationing rep resentative of the office of price administration, Saturday an nounced ration order No. 14, cov ering every form of firewood from kindling to sawdust, in Washington, Oregon and 10 coun ties of the Idaho panhandle. It is the first in the nation. : Some 4000 fuel' dealers will be required to register with the OPA and furnish monthly data on sup plies. Scully said consumers would not be affected immediate ly. Dealer registration dates have not been' set. V'-v . He said the order does not ra tion wood but does. give. Region al OPA - Administrator Harry Camp, San Francisco,, authority to do so, and to determine when it is needed. ,C-1 . v The order covered every per son buying or selling wood or ac cepting it as a gift, but exempts government agencies. It defines a dealer any anyone selling more than four cords a month. - Dealers will. report, wood sup plies April 5, covering March 1 inventories, and monthly there after. "- - . Scully said the enabling order was issued "because firewood is the principal domestic - heating fuel' in the area." : ' r ; "Rationing of fuel oil, labor shortages or transportation diffi culties which may affect the coal supply and the Influx - of - war workers Into the northwest, need-' ing more fuel," be , added, . may combine to necessitate heavier reliance on wood as fuel."- ' License Deadline Set Monday is absolutely the last day on which 1943 dog licenses may, be issued without a penalty, Lee j Ohmart, ; county clerk, said Saturday. ' His office was open until S o'clock Saturday fternoon to accommodate iaie comers am did a land office business. - v Begin Rationing 6,S Safe' Allies' ; Advance .: Six Armored Assaults Hit Northern Lines; Troops Take Town, Near Airport . . By DANIEL DE LUCE ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Feb. 17 (P)-Veteran British troops stoutly entrenched on the rugged heights near the Bizerte-Tunis bridgehead shattered repeated German armored thrusts along a muddy, 55-mile front Saturn day while in central Tunisia American and allied combat teams captured the town of Kasserine and drove near the Thelepte airport, 15 miles to the southwest I Throwing about 50 tanks into short, stabbing attacks, supported by probably as much as five bat talions of infantry. Col. Gen. Jur gen Von Arnim tried but failed to break into ' the strategic network of roads immediately behind the British line. From the area of Sidi Nsir, U miles northeast of Beja, to Jcbel Mansour, six miles southeast of Bou Arada, axis forces stormed forward into devastating fire from British artillery. Strengthened with new tanks, including the 40-ton Churchills, the British armor quickly coun terattacked and allied war planes provided close ground support. With the fighting still continu ing, the number of axis troops tak en prisoner, which Friday night exceeded 400, was mounting stead- X: Six attacks were launched by the enemy early Friday and although all were temporarily smashed the pressure was renewed at two points, field dispatches said late Saturday afternoon... Along the Mateur-Beja road, where 30 tanks and one Infantry battalion; began the assault, the enemy still va trying for a break through in the Sidi Nsir area. In the area of Bou Arada, which is held by the British, the enemy was attempting to dent the line after the British destroyed seven out of 20 German panzers for the loss of one Churchill. The northernmost limit of von Arnim's operations was, the Mateur-Tabarka road where a column of 700 men was repulsed. The southernmost limit was Je ben Mansour, whose bleak sum mit has been a long disputed vantage point. Other enemy thrusts were driv en back from the vicinity of Med- jez-el-Bab and southward from Goubellat, this latter attack hav ing been planned to link up with the attack northwest from Bou Arada and pinch off a ten-mile British salient. Aloft the allies used their grow ing air superiority to strike behind German lines, at the Bizerte docks. at Gabes and at the Sardinian town of Gagliari where the Italians said 73 were killed and 280 injured. - Cairo dispatches said reconnais sance patrols of the Eighth army had darted around the Mareth line to within 40 miles of Kasserine. 6 Oregon Men In Army Dead '; WASHINGTON, Feb. 27-(ff) The war department made public Saturday the names of 761 sol diers killed in action in the Afri can, Alaskan, " Asiatic, European, south Pacific and southwest Pa cific areas. Of the dead, 119 were officers, and 642 enlisted men. The list included: - In Africa: Oregon : " '-'''; Second Lt Robert C. Havens; father, Windom Leland Havens, Portland. Pvt. William Youngman; moth er, Mrs. Mary Youngman, Port land.' In Europe: Oregon Staff Sgt Jack M. Madison; mother, Mrs. Minnie L. Madison, Corvallis. v " ' Tom Howard Taylor; fa ther, Howard R. Taylor, Eugene. In southwest Pacific: Oregon ' Pfc. Eldon L. Allen; mother, Mrs. Mary J. Grim, Irrigon - Pff. Rex W. Thornton; mother. Mrs. Helen M. Thornton, Richland. Novelist Acquitted MIAML Fla., Feb. 27.-i!P)-Au-thor Ursula Parrott's trial, like her - books, had a happy ending with her acquittal Saturday of three charges growing out of smuggling a handsome young soldier from a military stockade where he was a prisoner for be ing absent without leave. o Axis; Into Towns ; . ' : - Airmen Destroy 18 German Bomber;' Nazis Stubborn LONDON, Sunday, Feb. 28-(X Red army troops battling forward, west of Kharkov captured a num- ' ber 9f large populated, places in violent fighting Saturday, while Russian airplanes roared ahead to destroy 18 German bombers on the airdrome at Zaporozhe on the Dnieper river bend, the Soviets announced early Sunday. ' Russian ground forces last were reported only 50 miles northeast of Zaporozhe. Soviet units swept into sev- serai populated places north of ' Knrsk also, said the mldnicM communique recorded by the Soviet Monitor, but the bulletin told of stubborn German resist- a nee on all fronts, with the naxls . steadily pouring tanks Into the -, battle, -especially In the, muddy -Donets greai;-. i'r4 ' Thawing weather is hampering the ' Russians, but Moscow dis patches said the Soviet generals expected more frosts to facilitate their drive before the advent of spring. ' -Strongly-reinforced German in fantry battalions were routed "in violent f jghting" southwest f Voroshilovgrad, and west of Ros tov along the, sea of Azov Ger man attempts to regain positions lost the day before were beaten back at a cost of 200 nazis killed, the communique said. 1 Red army aircraft were sweeping ahead Of ground troops in smashing at the airfield at Zaporoshe, and Ihe communique -also reported that air units ea Friday destroyed or damages 200 German trucks with troops and supplies and silenced five artillery batteries. Russian ships in the Barents sea sank an enemy destroyer Fri day, it added. Print Paper Ceiling Rises WASHINGTON, Feb. Ml.-iFl The Canadian and American gov ernments announced Saturday a $4 a ton increase in the ceiling for ' standard newsprint paper. The announcement was made jointly by the office of price administra tion and the Canadian wartime prices and trade board. - . The Increase becomes effective March' I. : . 1 ;. .: J ' OPA Administrator Prentiss M. Brown said the increase was nec essary "because the newsprint in dustry can no longer absorb the increased cost wnicn war condi tions have brought about." The war production board re cently postponed a proposed addi tional 10 per cent curtailment in newsprint, consumption when it developed that supplies would be larger than estimated originally. Saturday's OPA announcement said the price increase will be the first in five years and bring the so-called "port" ceiling price to $54 a ton, with zones adjusted ac cordingly. " ' ; . ; ,; Miners Tranned: ' a a. ' At Least 3 Dead BEARCREEK, MONT, Feb. 28 (Sunday)-(flP-The body of one of 72 miners trapped by an explosion was - found early Sunday in the Smith coal mine. The body was not immediately, identified. Two other miners were found dead shortly after the ex- ; plosion Saturday forenoon. ." A hope that the entombed men had ecraned ' deadlv - black damp fumes wes expressed by the mine manager, Bill Romek. -