i . i i, . - - ! Vim out ) i I i --3.' ;:. JSaL sunset 7i04 Sun. sunrise 7:39 ! Weather on page 9) Today Forget Your Points And Eat Anyway (See story on this page) t r KDirTT-ETCOKD TEAR -I Satan, Orogon-Saturday Morning, March 9. 1943 J Price 5c No. 253 i'OMf ! : W UN i-fi ffl M - :'.iA:v.-r. j ' J 1- Little . ; Taxpayer Favored - Table below shows how fa mine tax redaction plans being threshed out In conference cena- mlttee at the legislature this morning would compare with . present payments required of a married man without children, ignoring deductions other than the $1599 marriage exemption: Snyder- Walker Gru Present McKtm Plan Income Tax Tax -Tax . $ 2,909. f It. f t. $ . 2,500. 25. ft. 15. 1,599. 95. . 25. . It. 4,500. 115. 55.- Ct. 1,500. ITS. 95. 195. rM9.-- 5. 145. 147. 11,500. . StS. U5.4 57. 21,504, wts its. ni: Modified Walker Plan Expected Out This Morning - By STEPHEN C. MERGLER - A-third of the income tax- papers of Oregon would receive an 80 per cent cut in their tax next year, a few who pay this ' year would have nothing to pay , next and the remainder would receive reductions ranging from 31 per cent upward under the compromise senate-house plan that appeared Friday night to car ry most favor with the conference committee named to iron out dif ferences between the two houses of the legislature on the tax pro- ' gram. . The conference committee is to meet at 9 a. m. today with the anticipation of reaching an early agreement to report out a modi- t fication of the Walker plan which the senate approved 24 to 6 Thurs day afternoon. Rep. John H. Hall may bring in a minority report holding out for a reduction in in come taxes payable in ,1943 as .well as in 1944..,-1 . ;.. iA h Named Friday afternoon as sen ate members of the conference committee, Sens. Den Walker, In- dependence, and Coe A. McKen . na, Portland, had already met with the house members, Reps. Burt K. Snyder, Lakeview, and Hall, and asked tax experts to work out details of the compro mise plan. The new '- plan would hand back , approximately the same amount of surplus from the In , come tax fund as the Walker plan but would favor the small ever the big taxpayer, a pro posal advocated by Rep. Snyder and adopted by Sen. McKenna. It .would retain the section of the Walker plan that calls for reservtns; a 55,000,009 cushion fnnd for future property tax re- faction, alonr with $9,509,000 to " offset s t a te and elementary j school taxes and $4,990,999 to offset school district levies, or a I total of $18,590,000. The Snyder-McKenna plan pro vides that for each $2,000,000 in Income tax surplus existing above this sum, the taxpayer would re ceive a one-half of 1 per cent - (Turn to Page 2, Story C) Nazi Warships Said Grouped p- Off Norway LONDON, March 5-(JP-London newspapers published dispatches Friday saying a powerful concen tration of German warships has been assembled in the Trondheim area of Norway. The stories carried in the Eve ning Standard and Daily Tele . graph, without giving the source : of their information, declared the concentration included the battle ship Tirpitz, 35,000-ton sister of the lost Bismarck, at least two - cruisers of the 10,000-ton Hipper u class and a number of fast de- stroyers. h ; : The .aircraft carrier Graf Zep pelin, which was laid down in 1938, also was reported to be in the group, along with the 28,000 ton battleship Scharnhorst, which was reported in the Skagerrack between Nonway and Denmark three weeks ago. ; .. The. articles stirred immediate speculation - over the possibility .that the German fleet was pre- - paring to make a forceful attempt to attack, the allied supply route to Russia. ; t V Such a breakout, unofficial -v sources pointed out, probably would involve'' the British home ' fleet in a hunt greater than that - for the Bismarck and Prinz Eugen ' early in the war and the , possi- , ' bility of a major naval engage rnent in northern waters. - Unofficial' naval sources said yi there was a possibility the Ger man fleet was concentrating "for one big fight against heavy odds rather than face scuttling as did the high seas fleets to 1918." Hole Russian Forces Wound Rostov Residents of Rostov; so about their work near the wreckage of the jbuildlng which housed the executive committee of the jsetlet deputies or the working'; people. The bultding was described as "blown up by the Germans.' Soviet troops took the key city en the Don river February 14. This picture was seat treat Moscow to the United States by radio. Associated Press TelemaU Adiou mment House Denies Jlevole . On Wine's Sales ; Bills Conflict! By RALPH C. CURTIS Roaring ahead on the overdrive toward a sine , die adjournment goal, Oregon's lawmaking machine burned out 0 bearing Friday night and it was a widely jield opinion that the mishap wrecked whatever chance there may have been for sine die adjournment at a theo retical with the clocks stopped 11:59 p. m. tonight. The house of representatives earlier Friday had adopted a con current resolution' providing for a windup at that hour, j The senate, working hard but in no such haste. had scheduled measures as "spe- LEGISLATIVE CALENDAR Third readings Saturday: In Senate: SB 275. 297. 298. 300. 303 255. HB 23, 209, 264, 291, 365, 392, 397, 391,(320. In House: HB 89 197. 223. 229. 244, 252, 372, 381, 384, 399, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405j 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412j 413, 414, 415, 417. SB 12, 23, 59, 74, 94, 95, 96, 103, 108, 117, 179 181, 185, 191, 211 223, 230, 238j 241, 242, 256, 257, 267, 271, 286 292, 299. cial order" for Monday. President W. H. Steiwer said it was "up to the members" but j he held out slight hope of ending the session tonight. Bnt the larboard--honse mo tor already was j smoking from the friction of dally battles on major issues. The breakdown came half an hour after the night session opened when: Rep. A. W. Meyers, Irked by a dais ling series of ! parliamentary moves whereby Speaker William M. McAllister sought to expe dite bills onto the Saturday cal endar, demanded jMcall of the house." Several members were missing so the house adjourned for the night. Even so, its cal endar contains 55 bills and sev eral memorials and resolutions. The house disposed, beyond rea sonable expectation jof reversal, of the fortified wine ?ssue when it refused by a 30-30 vote to re consider its earlier! approval of the bill placing these wines exclusive ly in the state liquor stores. Of (Turn to Page; 2 Story A) 3 Marion Men War Prisoners WASHINGTON March 5-OP Names of 471 United States sol diers held prisoners of war i by the Japanese in thi Philippinetis lands were announced Friday! by the war department. The next of kin have been noti fied by the war department. Other lists ,will be issued, later. Friday's list included: - Oregon: Pvt. Lyle E. Lee: ther, Mrs. Flora Lee, 1985 Maple street. Sales i Pvt George Linsen; mother' Mrs. Jean Linsen, Portland. ' ! Pvt. AloysJus ! F. Kktliag; mother, Mrs. Mathilda NleUing, route one. box four, Sublimity. Pvt. Bill Peat; mother, Mrs. Katie Peart, Coquille. j j Pvt. Lloyd S. Pollock; mother, Mrs. Mamie Pollock, Woodburn. . Pvt. James A.Sapp; father, D. A. Sapp, route ne, Portland. - Pvt Gerald L. ;Sherrett; mother, Mrs. Anna Sherrett, Eugene, f ' 5 : Pvt. William A. Southall; moth er, Mrs. Clara Southall, La Grande. Pvt. Willis Ci Vincent; uncle, Walter W. Vincent, Malin. . i . PlansAwry && ' (if- Science Fools I 'Brick Feet9 PORT BENNING. Ga March 5 - (P) - You may fool the top Jksck. .but yon ant . fool science and so the army's j "gold bricks," who would avoid work by pleadlnr sore feet, are right back on active duty. It's done at the Fort Benning station hospital, when the moan-and-groan crew shows up with minor foot ailments calculated te gain relief from work. And experts of the orthopedic sec tion say the object lesson is rentle but effective. The geld bricks merely are shown a plas ter of parts reproduction of a pair of feet. One of the feet has only three toes. The other has but four. The whole structure - of each foot differs so from an ordinary foot that the malingerer won ders - bow: they could be used effectively for walking. "That man." says the! expert, holding up Urn easts, the one who ha those jTeet, is eapable of a 19-mile march. He still is in the army and doing Import ant work, because he feels it is his Job to serve his country in this service." Usual result, reports the or thopedic section, is that the foldbricks turn brick red. Most frequent sources of the injuries treated are parachute Jumping-, obstacle course run nine; and automobile accidents. Raver Calls PGE Rates Profiteering PORTLAND, March 5-jP)-Bonneville Administrator1 Paul J. Raver testified at Friday's SEC hearing into the Portland Electric Power company's reorganization that rates of Portland General Electric company, a subsidiary, were below average but he i be lieved the company still was profiteering. He was convinced, he said, that PGE was making more than 6 per cent of investment Referring to a $750,000 Irate reduction offered by PGE if Bonneville would grant it a pow er contract for the war's duration, Raver said Ormond RBean, state public utilities commiss loner, told me he was going to make the reduction regardless of a Icon tract" . : "I asked Bean why he didn't order it before the" hear-in ! and he replied he was afraid it would throw a monkey wrench into the proceedings. I told him he ought to make it right away." Raver testified that a misunder-' standing resulted in an editorial in Former Gov. Charles; A. Sprague's Salem newsnaoer which asserted that he had opposed the cut because Bonneville wanted to acquire PGE properties land wanted them as debt-free as pos sible, j j "I have the highest respect for Sprague," Raver -said, "I am sure Mr. Bean would not have given any misinformation ,. . . there was some misunderstand. ing. Bonneville is not ! interested in buying this property unless the public wants to buy it": i 1 i New Ship Astoria To Slide Today WASHINGTON, DC,! March 5 (A3)- Oregon congressional delega tion will travel with a navyj party to. Philadelphia Saturday to wit ness the launching of the new cruiser Astoria. j j - The ''; vessel will be ; christened by Mrs. Robert W. Lucas, As toria, Ore., daughter of Oregon State Sen. Merle B. Chessman. ; Soviets Sweep For Smolensk 100 Localities Freed; Nazis Clinging to Some Sectors By The Associated Press LONDON, Saturday, March 8 f Smashing stubborn nazi resistance southwest of Rzhev in the central front sweep toward the enemy an chor at Smolensk, the Russians have freed more than 100 locali ties in two days, a midnight Soviet communique disclosed Saturday. I Fresh raids also were reported on the southern front where a 50-mile-wide red army salient was being driven westward to cut the Bryansk-Kiev railway in the sec tor between recaptured Lgov and Sevskv This maneuver, also was aimed at turning German defenses hinged on Bryansk and Orel to the north and northeast - 1 ; ' Approximately 2000 Germans were reported killed - and 1145; captured daring Friday's opera tions, but the Russians' did not claim any advances in the Don ets basin, where the Germans for days now have told of suc cessful counter-attacks that have reralned Kramatorsk, Slavyansk and Lisle hansk in the sector north of Satlino. The German high command de clared Friday that the Russian Third army was encircled south of Kharkov and about to be wiped out. The Russians also were silent about further operations in the western Caucasus where the Ger mans still are clinging to posi tions pivoting on Novorossisk, Black sea port A new Russian attempt to land from the sea at that port was re pulsed by German coastal , bat teries, the Berlin radio said Fri day night in a broadcast recorded by Reuters. . j On the central front the imme diate Russian goals appeared to be Vyazma, 80 miles south of Rzhev, and Gzhatsk, 60 miles to the southeast Although the Rus sians gave no indication as to how close their armies were to these points, the general direction of the Soviet drive made it likely that they intend to strike behind Vyaz ma between .there and Smolensk. The latter point is 230 miles west Of Moscow. "I I "The Germans are displaying stubborn resistance, throwing injto the battle infantry, tanks and ar tillery," the communique said. "Our troops are smashing the en emy "defenses without giving them the opportunity to entrench on convenient positions. I This central front push has (Turn to Page 2, Story D) Folkes Trial Set April 7 ALBANY, Ore, March fM) Trial of Robert E. Lee Folkes for the "lower 13 slaying of Mrs. Martha Virginia James was set for' April 7 Friday after the 30-year-old Los Angeles negro en tered a plea of innocent before Circuit Judge L. G: Lewellingj of Linn county. j j The former dining car cook! is under indictment on aTcharge of knifing Mrs. James to death as she lay in berth lower 13 ; of a limited train January 23. - : Leroy Lomax, Portland attor ney representing Folkes hinted; at the -trend the ; defense will take when he asked permission of the court to read the alleged confes sion Folkes made to Los Angeles authorities; , . f . "As you know, the Los Angeles police .are, under investigation 'for brutality of ; methods," Lomax remarked. ; j . i ' 1 ' .Plaiiies'Fj Im BisiimaFck. Blast at Coast- Dunkerque Believed Target - Berlin Radio Silent ; Explosions Rattle . English Windows By Tho Associated Press LONDON, Saturday, March 6 -The RAF sent its big bombers on their tenth consecutive night raid over the continent during the night and repeated; blasts along the French coast were heard on thiazide of the chanf nel. : Huge flashes, apparently the result of the explosions, also could be seen shortly after the bombers crossed the channel. The explosions were so terrific that residents reports they rattled windows in buildings on the British side. The roar across the channel was in the direction of Dunkerque which had been at tacked several times recently. Many European radio sta tions were silent Friday nbjht including the Berlin radio. It went off the air at 9:15 p. m. about the same time It was i closed last Monday when the nasi capital get Hs heaviest pounding of the war. ' RAF bombers carried their as sault on .the continent through the ninth straight night Thursday night laying mines in enemy wat ers and attacking targets in the industrial area of western Ger manyC " ( ' The Air Ministry New service said Typhoons and Spitfires of the-Fighter-command returned to the attack Friday and made a day light sweep over the Netherlands coast on which they sank two small enemy torpedo boats and heavily , damaged two others. Black Market Hit in Control Of Slaughter WASHINGTON, March 5-P) Strict controls over the slaughter of livestock and the sale of meat designed to stamp out black mar ket operations, will go into effect April 1. Secy, of Agriculture Wickard, announcing them Friday, said he did not regard the controls as a "cure-all for the defects in the present meat situation," but part of a broad program which includes consumer rationing and uniform retail price ceilings. One order requires all livestock slaughterers who sell meat in- f eluding farmers and local butch ers, to operate under a permit sys tem. As an aid to enforcement each wholesale cut of meat must be stamped at least once with the permit number. 1 Livestock dealers also must ob tain permits to buy and sell live stock and keep complete records of their transactions. While farm ers need not obtain permits, they were asked to keep records of their purchases and sales. - Uniform ceiling - schedules, ef fective April 1, were issued for pork, and OPA said similar maxi mums would be 'worked out f or beef, veaL lamb and mutton. Luncheon Without Rationed Foods Served in Red Cross By MAXINE BUREN There was no point at all te the luncheon served to Red Cross workers at the chamber ef com merce Friday noon, but there was plenty of point to reportaof suc cess of the war fund campaign, given during the meeting that fol lowed the meaL - , Members of the nutrition and canteen committees of the Marion Total t - funds:" gathered In Marion county's Red Cross war fund - campaign according ! to Friday ! reports, is fl2,2M. Minimum goal fa $42,f99. ; r 7 county chapter, headed , by Mrs. Bjame Erickson, served a lunch eon which cost not a single food -r ' v.' "1' ,-" I , By July 1 Approved; By SubcdrtiiMiiee By FRANCIS WASHINGTON, March 5tVA-pay-a-you-go plan f or all 44,000,000 of the incorne taxryers the wage'e led man, the farmer, the baker and the candlestick rnaker-was approved tentatively Friday by committee, to be effective July The subcommittee skipped unisia ressure Patrols" Said Active In North; 8th Army Feels Out Enemy ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, March S-(ff)l Enemy forces in northern Tunisia kept up their pressure in the face of stiff allied resistance . Friday while advices reaching here from the southern sector reported that the British Eighth army in its first feeler brush with axis troops Thursday inflicted on the Ger mans "very heavy losses heavy enough to remember." i , American patrols clung to Sidi Bouzie, about 25 miles south of Faid pass where the withdrawing nazis hold hill positions overlook ing the valley. Keperte lasC-frUay UW "said American; troops arei near the western end of the pass but their location was not given. The ; Germans still held on. to Gafsa in the south and Hadjeb Et Aioun, about 22 miles northeast of Sbeitla, where French patrols had contacted them. French patrols pushed to a point a few miles west of Pichon In the central sector and in the far south other advanced . French elements continued to" move forward east' of Nefta. These units were "con tinuing their action in an easterly direction," a French communi que said. Tank forces of the British First army were said officially to have beaten off violent German attacks in the streets of the highway junc tion town of Sedjenane, along the Mateur-Tabarka road in northern Tunisia. Germans attacking down the road 1 gained a foothold In the village Wednesday and remain there through the night Then 40-ton Churchill tanks and in fantry drove them out in a fierce dawn attack Thursday,' front dispatches said. .An allied communique said that axis activity was intensified "all along! the Mareth line Thursday and that allied patrols in that sector were -"very active." Canned Goods Now Take Stamps, Ugh! REDMOND, i March: 5 Making her periodic visit to a Redmond grocery store Friday, a squaw from : the 'Warm Springs Indian reservation or dered her usual supply of can ned coeds. "Ughr she, said, when the grocer took all but one stamp : from her ration book. ration point, yet brought most of the guests back for "seconds." ; ' Crisp carrot and apple salad, ntaearoni and cheese, bread, butter, tea with cream but no surar, and apple pie. made up tho menu. The dessert, the com-: mlttee explained, was subsU tuted for a reUttae-frult mix ture previously planned, - enly because some ef the men on the; Red . Cross committee Insisted that "fcucar r j ne sugar, . the great American dessert Is al ways lnarder. . ' The luncheon, although proving that i a - mixed crowd can eat an un-rationed meal and like It and even clear off f the- table for volunteer v kitchen workers, - was primarily, planned for checking on progress made toward collec tions for the war fund drive. . Heavy r Camp VQV: I - f ori Temtlhi Ni : . i i M. LE MAY t 4i 1 the house ways and means sub 1. - ' r i I .over the baffling choice among tht- Ruml plan to cancel a year's taxes-and the I various proposals for amaller amounts of abatement tossing this problem back to- the full committee1 ... T " j Carman D o u g htsv i (D-NC) called the fuU) committee j to meet Monday ' and laid be was elated over the . prospeet9Mf" speedy , ac tion.:- .J. I J - Under thef plan tentatively approved all taxpayers niust file their tut returns and pay the first 4 a r r installment by . March! 15 and the second by June 15. As for taxes after July 1, Chairmanf Cooper (D-Tenn) of the . subcommittee utlined the prbposalS as follows! ' j 1. Wige and salary eprner-rAjl withholding levy of 20 jper cent would be imposed on the taxable! portion of wages . and salaries through weekly, semi-monthly or monthly deductions from pay en 4 velopes and fjsalary checks.. Thisi covering bothj income and Victory taves, Would"; not be an Additional tax but would be applied to taxes duo on the basis of computations to be made at the year end at ttie statutory v?tes , and . eernptipnsi The ' wage and .salary earners would file. Returns the following March! 15 asi usual. 2. Men in jthe-armed forces, d mestici servants in the home and agricu would tiiral J labor these classes be exempt from the,20er (Turn to 3 Page 2 Story .1 Naval Board ; Inpejts:Uj For Training j A survey of Willamette univer sity and related city facilities was conducted here Friday by a board from ijthe 13th naval district in accordance vith naval bureau of personnel instruction with a view to possible establishment of a basic training coitrse here for; approxi mately 400 iew class It students, Capt f- riedrick, who beaded the surveying group, told ljie States man Friday! riight , j :;, Findings pf his beard, he said, would be given to the bureau and any announcement as to the j rU sults Ivoulct come front it I The training course hich may come jto Willamette woiuld be fr officer: i candidates, with trainees enrolled for a minimum of four i 6-week periods, it is Understood here. J j V ' ' .1 " Willamette was the past week listed among 238 colleges and juni versities approved byj the jwfir manpower jcommission jfor use by irmy iaiid iiiavy in basic and spe cialized war training programs. '-. The! survey here included! not only" , educational . facilities I but housiogr. recreational facilities, wateri supply and similar features of the cityj ! aign i Tbe; women's teams, headed by Mrs. Charles A. Sprague and di rected by j Mrs. Douglas McKay, Mrs. William M. Hamilton, Mrs. Ev M. Page 'and Miss - Dors then Steuslbff; reported ;- ever $6000 collected f romr the residential dis trict,! topping their quota by $3000. They jesthnate that another $1000 may j be collected during the re miuider o the. week wVp.; Men's teams reported less com plete I results, - but all speakers were; confident of their success in collecting pieir quota. j Further : interest was given to the luncheon when Judge George Rossman, chairman ot the Marion County Red Cross for! the past IS yearst presented William M. Ham ilton ' charier membeir and active worker, with a boquet of red car nations on'; his "40th't birthday. . 1 i Stevivoirs: Mitt Jap Lifehoats Sunk; Enemy Bases Raided i .'SearAiely Survivor'. Said Remaining in ' . Reinforcement Try ': By The AaaociaUd Ptmo ALLHSD HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, Saturday, March 6-An allied airman saw 200 Japanese troops . in three lifeboats-all that remained of 15,000 spilled into the Bismarck sea by in sinking of a 22-hip convoydropped his bombs and messaged his base:, "No sur vivors. ' That - ended -one of the most brilliant -aerial strokes by Ameri can and allied fliers in the south west Pacific, a spokesman said Saturday . in commenting on the high command communique an nouncing "there . was , scarcely survivor." r The final score: i" For Japan Ten Japanese war ships, cruisers ' and - destroyers, sunk; 12 merchantmen, transports and cargo ships sunk; more than 80 enemy planes destroyed or put out of commission; and the troops, estimated at 15,000, which the Japanese were hurrying to their threatened foothold in the Lae Salamaua . sector . of ' upper '.. New Guinea. - -. ; . For tho allies only one bomber and three fighters lost The mopping up of the surviv- . tors off the New Culnea coast waa -carried out methodically Friday by allied bombers and long-range fighters sweeping the sea. t " " ' More than 499 Japaaese per ished In the final operations in an area from 29 to 75 miles off the New Guinea coast in Huon gulf. Barges. lifeboats and rough ' log rafts to which the enemy troops were clinging were torn up by high explosives or ripped apart by the fighters' machine- . guns. By nightfall only small bits of wreckage and on slicks were all that remained to mark the grave of the Japanese. armada that had! set out from Raba'ul, New Britain, "Our long-range fighters and bomber units swept the entire area (of the Huon gulf) complet ing mopping up of barges, life boats and rafts from sunken ships of the Bismarck sea convoy," the noon communique of Gen. Douglas MacArthur reported. "Efforts at escape were largely fruitless and practically all were destroyed. There was scarcely, a survivor so far as was vknown.7 The convoy of 10 warships and 12 transports was sunk in a three- day attack, beginning Tuesday, aij tne Japs sought, to send badly needed reinforcements to its gar rison at Lae, New Guinea. ' At Lae, seising upon the op portunity presented by the dis- ruptioa of the Jap, planes, Mac Arthur's ' planes for the second straight day gave that Iluon gulf bise .a terrific pounding. . "A series of coordinated attacks by all categories of our air force were made on the airdrome snd adjacent installations through the day."; the communique said. "Fires were started which were visible for 40 miles. Weak enemy forces attempted interception but were dispersed by our cover. Three enemy planes r were shot down." ' Mention ef the weak Intercep tion appeared highly significant in view of the fact that in . Thursday's4 stepped-up aerial operations at Lae. allied planes had to battle more than a score of Jape, shooting down , 17 In addition to blasting six which were on the ground refueling. Boston . bombers, ' Beaufightera and Warhawks raked Lae while Flying Fortresses bombed and strafed Gasmata, in New Britain. Liberator bombers bombed Saum lakl in Tanimbar island in the northwestern sector above Aus tralia. Sea Lane Geared - BALBOA, CZ, March 5 Rear Adm. C. E. Van Hook, "com- " mander of the Panama sea fron tier, declared Friday that the sea lanes between Panama and the United States had been cleared cf U-boats as the result of an effi cient anti-submarine campaign plus the , enemy's necessity for using the submarines elsewhere-.