The OnrCOIT STATESMAII Salem. Oregon, Friday Morning. March 5, 194 J PAGS-THSTIZII 154Interiiees' In Chink of ' le d r Jati&XJs TV.' -i"-JL J" -v - A WASHINGTON, March yilie war-' department announced Thursday the,' names of 154 Am jirlcaa. civilians, interned by-Jap-en in occupied .China. ' L. .,. The list was announced by the itate department but' the. Ameri can addresses werernot reported. V BwwTer ' the-; snwe of one' sreaoedaevi Cl I v I 8.' Hu-sh, ; ' Was taeladed aJMBC lniernees at Shanghai, lie" worked for ; many years an an English--' w b e d - Shaitf hai - newspapers Ills sister, Mrs. Kath mnehes ter resides at IKS - Southeast Pine SW Portlaad. His mother and ether relatives also live in Portland. Interned at Shanghai: Charles C Anderson, Leon An derson, Edwin C. Allen, Hoiks H. Arnold, J.ames R. Beasley, Her bert C BallettL James H. H. Berckman, Gustaf R. Berg, John jBrezowar, Zephra G. Briggs, Ed ward B. Brodd, Thomas J. Bro derick, Emile J. Bares, Russell D. Brines, who had been on the As sociated Press-itaff in Manila; Robert - D. Chisholm, Louis Chl tireo, James S. Clark. Chester Al Craddocfc, Harry H. Cameron, Frederick W. Daly, Thomas Daly, Walter L. Desmond, HOaire Da Berrier, Thomas B. Dunn, Paul P. Faison, Adolph H. Ferguson, Cornell S. Franklin. Clyde A. Geist. Gaetano Gilbertb. Philip W. Giovanninl, Jacob M. Gussa- toft, Francis P. Ganlejr, Constan- tin Goldkette, William Hallett, Howard. H. Hanver. Arthur E. Hebert; Calvin S. Hirsh, Paul S Hopkins, John M Hykes, Lewis C. Hylbert, Arthur B. Henning- aenu Theodore Herman.. James F. trby, Bruce--S. Jenkins, Arnold M. Kiehn, JosepTi W. Iabby, James Sterling Love, William B. m eeks, Xeon Mitchem. John R. Myers, Edwin Marx, Joseph Or- ' epello, Eric A. G.- Petersen, George E. , Provost, Robert J ohn Feed, Pete M. Seibie. Robert K 6heen,' George W. Stock, P. M. Streit, Keith C SVartzell, Oliver Pitkin Turner, Harry C. Varnum, Ralph A. Ward. Paul R. Winn, Frank Yenalevicz. Interned at Canton: Donald Carlson. ' Judson Linzley Gressitt, Chester William Lawson, Garnet Galard Phillippe. Interned at Tsingtao: Mrs. Ruby Adam. Cecil A.' Broome, Gertrude J. Bush, Pearl Caldwell, L. J. Da vies, Agnes T. Deegan, William H. Gaulkner; Rudolph h. Gerber, Robert A. Jacob, Helen M. Johns. Maria K. Kappes, Gertrude Av Lorenz, Hel en V,'McCarron, . Erva Jloddy, Kugh Overtop LydUtvlt. Jfch, Charles RelnbrechV Mrs. Charles Rembrecht, Janet Reinbrecht, Georgeanna; Reinbrecht, Mae L. fcohlfs, Robert Davis Smith, Cath erine Stirwalt, Mary C. Sullivan, Jtuth Vasen, Edward G. Whittak jrt Mrs. Edward G. Whittaker, Master Donald Lee Whittaker, Nathan Edmond Walton, Mrs. frathan Edmond" Walton, Barbara Simple Frocks Answer Wartime Wardrobe Needs New Combination Give "flower shower towels to that engaged friend or brighten Up your own linens with these vivid designs. Pari ef each flower is embroidered; the center is appliqued in a color that's repeated in an applique on the edge. Pattern 651 con tains a transfer pattern of 9 mo tifs averaging 54x8 inches; applique pattern pieces; stitches. Send ELEVEN CENTS in coins for this pattern to The Oregon Statesman, Needlecraft Dept Salem, OreJ Writa plainly PAT TERN NUMBER, your NAMS and ADDRESS. - . r.:iscn:iS3 ITith A IT JL Just try a pwstisVa-tro-txJcpeaca nostril. It 1) shrinlaswplkamem tsanes, (2) soothes irritation, and P) helps clear cold-clogged yiX nasal passages. FOI- r5Jbi I low empte O ."mL. 'V" f ? Biilb Growers Buy Acreage GERVAIS Heirs have sold 24 acres of the Thornberry place south of Gervais to Mr. Worrell and Mrs. Smith, who will grow bulbs. They are partners and were brmerly connected with the Can- by Tulip 'farms. Hlh social ' event of this weekend, will be a dance1 to be givea at the high school audi- torium Saturday nifht, March C by the Farmers Union. This Is their annual event and is a ben efit for, the edncational depart- meat. .The Willamette ; Valley Logrers will furnish music The publle U Invited. Mr. and Mrs. L. C Robinette of Tillamook, who , came to Oregon last year from Minnesota,, were here Wednesday looking for a small acreage for a chicken ranch and garden. , Mrs; A. D. Folker is in the Dea coness hospital in Salem where she underwent a major operation on Monday. She is reported to be doing well. Her mother, Mrs. Ida B. Elder, and brother, Wayne El der, and wife of Vale, are here to be with her for a few days and are staying at the Folker home. V torso Aresst right. Victory j Left; Jraper swd Moose effect; Simple clothes; are the smartest answer to dawn-to-dusk work and leisure clothes for the spring and summer wartitne wardrobe. fc ten can achieve individual distinction to your clothes if you make them yourself. The three dresses In the above pictures are good examples; of what you can achieve in thl way. The first frock simulates a Jumper and blouse with Its-print yoke and sleeve arrangement. It Is easy to put on as it buttons at the back from neckline to hem The simple, two-piece torso frock center, has a Sleek fitting sweater-type top and knife pleated skirt. Victory dross, right, in rayon crepe, bat an elongated basque bodice And concentrated fullness in Uje narrowed-dowa skirt. (jDterntioaaJ Walton, Tommy Walton, ' Eldcri C. Whipple, Mrs.' EldenC Whipple, Elden C. Whipple! jr., Lorna L. hippie, Dwight W. Whipple, Julian N. Whipple. Alfred W. Yocum. Interned at Chefoo: II. Edwin "V. j Andrews, Grace Funk Andrews, William L. Beret, Lea da Newman perst, Fronsie A. Beckon, -Marie eL Bosse, Joseph R. Cooke, Alvin Frederick Dester- haft, Wallace Edwin Desterhaft, Frances " A. D. Emery, Winifred Eaglund, Jennie K. FitzwiHiam, Francis John Fitiwilliam, Wiley B. Glass, Jessie Pettigrew Glass, Ixis Glass,, Frederick Harris,! Bet ty Hatton, John Hatton', Howard Alexander Hatton, Esther M. Nowareck HessL Barbara Ethel- wyh Hulse, Joseph Hugh Hulse, Bernice Elizabeth Kohfield, Byron Douglas KobfieldJ Bruce Bernard Kohfield, Kathryn Kuhn, Doris Knight, Roy Lanning, Wilhelmina MUtray Tanning, Deever M. Law- ton, Florence Ci Lide, Mary Pearl Nowack, Martha H. Philips, Kath ryn June Phillips, Richard Lee Phillips, Mrs. T. S. Small, Kath leen Small, Ian Small, Ruth D. Thomas, David Dunton Thomas, Rhode Jeane Thomas, Anita Eliz abeth Vyle, Ida! J. E. Wight, James LeRoy.-Young, Luce Young. Mrs. Marguerite Nazi General Killed LONDON, March 4-(P-Gor- man Gen. Theodore Eicke of the Waff en SS, a hew special ! fight ing section of the Nazi Elite guards, has been killed on the Russian front, j the German radio reported Wednesday. He had been decorated with numerous honors, including the Knight's Cross. Washington Off the Record Willi jr., Chaics' Like DadK By MARGARET KERNODLE Associated Press Features Writer WASHINGTON If you'd been in the capital lately, here are some things you might have seen which you'd; enjoy telling the folks at home about: Will Rogers, jr., chewed on a straw at an! Oklahoma recep tion. He certainly would've re minded you of his papa chewing gum. ; Jesse Jones, after all -his years as a Texas publisher, apparently hasn't got the hang, of reading type. Somebody presented young Rogers a plate from which a pro gram head had been made in honor of Will Rogers. And Jesse Jones handled it like! the rest of us would, turned it upside down and around until finally a pocket mirror made the type! readable. Amazed marines caught sight of a womaci wearing insignia of a marine major on a marine uni form for the first time. She was Mrs.'James Streeter, head of the marine corps women's reserve, making her initial appearances in Washington but the boys didn't know that. j j A WAAC officer's hat blew off on F street just as aa en listed man started to salute her. He eosddnt decide whether to pick up the hat first or salato first, and tried to do both as the wind blew the hit agamst his foetL j Clare Booth Luce tried to smoke a cigarette in a committee meet ing. She didn't seem to want photographers to take a photo of her. smoking. It got to be quite a game. She ; Iinally threw the cigarette away. What to do; about the women heading the uniformed auxiliary services put Mrs. Alice Fox Pitts of the American Society of News paper Editor i face to face with protocol. She found the answer in the military rule of the oldest ser vice being the j ranking service. So CoL Oveta Culp Hobby, director of the WACCs, sat on the right of the center place at a luncheon; Lt Comdr. Mildred McAfee of: the WAVES sat on: the left of center; Lt Comdr. Dorothy Stratton sat on the far right; and the newest lady leader of uniformed women, Mrs. Streeter pi the marines, sat on the far left. Te rsSsve tstress af ESarSLY tTMca.ise yea CSSSXT, tZZVSSS Lsdla S. Pinkhamls Vegetable Com pound Is made erpeeiaUy for women to relieve perbxUe pein wit weak, sficiua, btne fsrttnts duo4ofaao- ncuUrty nnknam'a Ooenpotmd helps bwfld. up veslotanos -assfst vouow awet u i benefited I THE OLD JUDGE SAYS . . "looks like a pretty expensive cigar youVe got there, Jodge.- I ; -jr- " Yesiree, it's a real good one. Bin. Won it from Chris down at the cigar store yes-, terday. He got pretty. positive in a dis-: cussion we had and I had to take him up on it Bet tne three good cigars to my one that the three states that stm have pro hibition have Jess crime than the other states. WelL all I had to do was step across the street to my office where I had some recent F. B. L figures in my desk drawer.; Why; on the average, those three states have a worse crime record than the whole rest, of jthe country. And there's a good sound reason for it, BUL There's so such! thing as; a dry community. It's only a ques tion of whether liquor is sold lezaOy xf & UzaUy. And when it's sold iOegaUy it means : bootleggers, gangsters and more crime.'! TT&e War JMowo j..-:.' j f V By KTRKE I SIMPSON Wide World-'- War Analyst, for The Statesman 1 n 1 1- : The 'battle of the Bismarck sea ait one stroke set invasion apprehensions; in Australia definitely (at rest. To what extent the Japanese offensive-defensite perimeter in the southwestern Pacific,', already dented at Guadalcanal and Buna, was further Hope vvell .Women Sew, Red Cross HOPEWELL Twelve club members sewed for the Red Cross knitting and made fancy articles for the autumn sales at the regu lar monthly meeting of the Sev enth Day Adventist Dorcas socie ty held Tuesday afternoon at the home of the leader, Mrs. Hiram Terrell. The next meeting will be at the same home. A patriotic program, was held Thursday night at the Seventh Day Adventist school, under .the leadership of Mrs. . Lowell Camp bell, the teacher. t Howard Wcxthington is recov ering at the McMinnville hospital where ho 'was taken a week ago suffering with pneumonia. His six-months-old son, Howard, jr., suffering with same ailment, is at the home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh Worthlngton in the- Wheatland district. Mrs. Ed Look and Mrs. Guy Freshour were guests of friends Friday at Forest Grove. buckled and rendered vulnerable is yet to bo revealed. There can be no doubt, however that a blow to Japanese prestige and to- Tokyo's dream of conquest out of all proportion-ta the oner sided losses Inflicted on the fo has been dealt. It has definitely moved tip the "hour when Japan can be brought to grim reckoti- ing. ' - " $f. . The-tmly logical explanation yet available of Japanese purposes in risking the disaster was to rein force beleaguered and critically important outposts in northeast New Guinea. MacArthur is-stem ily closing in on Salamaua atta Lae, southeastern protective eraf doubts for the whole Finschhafen peninsula. ' . That bold promontory juts eastward to farm the south western shoreline ef Vltist , Strait, the narrow waterway tha separates New Guinea and New Britam. In allied hands M would be a menacing jumpoff across CS miles or so of sea to a: landing on New Britain. It also would brlns; allied air bases , within less than 400 miles- of! Raman!, main Japanese eon t centra tion base and from which the Ill-fated relief convoy start ed. Rabaul lies on the north eastern tip of New Britain. ; It is to be assumed that Japanese strategy in hoping to run the Aus tralian-American air gauntlet to New Guinea relied both on weath er and on a protective sir unv brella. The expedition moved down the coast of New, Britain to enter Vitiaz strait so close Inshore until it was scattered by the allied air attack that short-range Jap anese planes based in New Britain should have been available to cover it i They proved utterly incapable of doing that against the sus tained long range- allied air at tack. That was - due In part to previous allied bombing of every Japanese advanced field in New Britain, in part to waning Jap anese losses. One ability to replace' her air .-J 1 . . T 1 immediate jresult must be to release . additional elements, of MacArthurs forces, for offensive use in bis campaign to clear north eastern New Guinea as well as the Papuan I peninsula.! of Japanese. ; lVtrs.JVIercer Reelected Head West Salem PTA ? a. SALEM 4- Tuesday bight the West Salem PTA met sit the school! gym. Election of officers re- suitedim Mrs. Mercer Deing re elected president Miss Groves, vice president and Mrs. CV Rust, secretary-treasurer. -; . Funds were voted to finish pay ing for moving the boys' j work shop and to buy a flag for the Girl Scouts, a subscription.; to the Red iCross and material for a kitchen' table for the gym. Mr. Bradford was employed to build it. At each meeting,, a prize j of $2 Is 1 giyen to the? room with the greatest number f of parent nem bers in the PTA; The third j grade won the prize. A program was pre- sented by -tne scnool band. I Refreshments were served by Hull Proposes Refugee Help WASHINGTON, March -(Pi-Secretary of State Hull has pro posed an Anglo-American confer ence at Ottawa to explore the pos sibilities of International action for the relief of political refugees and victims of racial persecution, Hull's . proposal is contained in a note to Britain February 25, the text of which was : made - public. Wednesday night by, Acting Sec retary Sumner Welles. It empha sizes the view that the refugee problem cannot be solved satis factorily by any one government and calls for intergovernmental action, on a wide scale. 1 It summarizes the many steps taken by the United States to ex- tend assistance jto oppressed and persecuted peoples and mentions that since the advent of the Hitler regime more than 847,000 Ameri can visas have been issued to na tives or nationals of countries now dominated by the axis. Father Carbcrry Is Japanese Prisoner SILTIETOy That Father Richard Carberry, former pastor of St. Paul's Catholle church at Stlverton, Is a Japanese prisoner on the PhCipplnes was the In formation Mrs.' J. HV McCnl loath received Wednesday by airmail from Mrs. Rosella Song hasa. a sister of the j Catholle priest, j . Mrs. Songham wrote from her homo at Ames, Iowa, that the war department had notified the family ef Father Carberry 's cap tivity She added that new they would be able to write and hear front him threngh the Ked Cross. This was the first definite word had' from him in many months. the mothers of the third and fourth grades, j 1 j- ff'fi IMSTAMT COOKIMSJ A f ?fS0 WHOtB WHSAT If! I fops jiY ,J? txtuk - j I BiU.E S IIADEET ! . . : Ulj state St . . Salem- r ' - . BSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSBSSSSSBSBMBSflHBSSSBSSeHBMBHBBBSSaBSS ftufiwm eXtoifafif tmmm& IrnMrk. tm.' ?jADipnv7ClC2 r I SO BMUIABT CSNTSaS rowatruutfs the nation's highways have gone to wax. Over them the bus lines axe , moringyital minpowct-lmUitaty personnel on important rnisiloris selectees to Induction centco farmers on their "must tripsworkers to war .plants and shipyards business men and women or their, essential activities. Greyhound is concrmt Inff Its buses rollinjor over a vast network of routes. At the same time we are saving precious rubber, fuel and steel by mass transportation of war travelers and by expert main tenance and asperating effidencj. I 1 We are putting jmrythlng we h ave Into the war effort ...glad that our broad experience, widespread facilities and skilled personnel are available for the Vital Job of moving manpower. With your cooperation, we shall continue to keep the highway t at Uwrh fir Victory to Sri vaass TO SeSfMSSS CSHTSSS VART1MI TRAVEL SUGGESTIONS - ' "--!' ti I '' i--' ' 'I -':'J' : -: ' Yyonypb yo wm fb&ow L-Lk " SgUPVHRSw Jw4bw f'wbVsSSBSBw SvWo ovisRls9s9VsT J sWoPs SvfBwVe wwVSSsAvvw f, AmJJJJf h PmtUihi j osr tUit wtf mbtmd tfthm j .... ..... u I - ( . B ' . 4. Cmry mi UttU igxtt?i imptitmHy csm. Depot! 223 NXSgh CU FhonttiSCSl O Agenii W. V7. CSicdwide to seaAi eonatswiTiis -,QD ED. K I I P. B Ur I.N O D II I T I O 8 I A T I S ; 7iB . .... O N D 8 A tl D I T A H P S - 1 " - H ' - M f