Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1943)
wsamtmtammimr. "r.l'frrr 'fnK- PAGE TVO : : , i ... I &"'-iiSsCOIl' "STATESMAN CkwiC'Orr'Saadai Monilncj,' March 21. 1313 -r- i f n i World Police Along With Christian Ideals After War Says iBj tDITK. CHICAGO March ICHJPylfJla&am Chiang Kai-Shek ed Saturday" "that ethical conceptions underlying Christian, prin ciples and ideals were the only world, but that they must be The wife of the Chinese Gener- . alisskno said -that she dfstinguish ed between brute" force and; disci plinary force and cited 'municipal police , xorces as a , necessary' ex-j ample of the latter; j She " stated her opinions at press . conference, after which she received' Airs. Emmons Blaine, daughter of the late Cyrus McCor I mick, who assigned to the Gener atissimo and his wife the proceeds from $100,000 from the McCor mick. estate for. "use .as Madame chooses," preferably "for "Chinese was orphans. When: an international board of arbitration was suggested as a fu ture means of maintaining peace, the diminutive wife and co-work er of the GeneraHssimq of inyad ed China tok a deep breath and drew herself upv,;. Eyes flashing, shefreplied that Maqcnuria of 1931 brought such a commission ot , rnembers. 'from Great "Britain, France and Ger many v and- an observer from the United State J v " ". The commission found put abou the .Manchuria - problem,- Mme Chiang asserted, 'but China lost Manchuria,, " . , .... .. . - , She declared that China has b -territorial alias or ambf-'j boat Jkat Intends t regain -ter ritory that belongs to China, Asked' whether China' Would welcome' the Soviet ' union as" an alley, Mme, -Chiang . replied that China welcomed, all ipeople who hold . that human freedom is the goal and that certainly included Russia. 9 Die, 16 Hurt Iii Bus Crash GRANITE CITY, t HI., March 10-(VP)-Nine persons were killed and 16 were injured Saturday in a bus-train collision which could not have happened a second or .two later. An intercity bus almost had cleared the last rail of a grade crossing at the moment a fast Il linois -. Terminal . electric train sentVit whirling lop-like, smashed its .'front on. the rebound and rammed its shattered chassis be tween" twol rows of telephone polcs4 cpPS-r-. Aff me deaof aild ti of the injured- were -en thef'.Jms. Two trajpiwEingei Were injured ilightfyiltfiough the three-car mi em ban remained on the tracks and continued its run after slight delay. 2 (Negroes Shot Ajk Policemen Pjatrol Gotham , IfEW YORK, March 20-VTwo negroes were shot and killed by policemen in Harlem Saturday night as a special detail of 1483 ex tra'officers patroled through areas ofpiarlem and Brooklyn to halt a recent wave of muggings and banditry. police Commissioner Lewis J. Valentine, who ordered the spe cial detail, largest in the depart ment's history, announced that he had taken yet another step to meet the problem. He said he asked white and negro clergymen to hold Joint conference Monday to dis cuss means for stopping the dis orders and assaults on pedestrians In; the city's dimmed out streets, j Vet Hurlers for Idaho MOSCOW, Idaho, March 20- The University of Idaho baseball team, which had its first outdoor practice this week, has two veter ans back this year, Vic Berllus and Jack Newell, to strengthen the team on the mound. f Former Governor Lowden Dies: x tvice isonsiaerea tor t resident 5 TUCSON, Ariz., March 20-iSVDeath came Saturday vto Frank O. Lowden.) son of a blacksmith-Farmer, who rase to the EOVemorshin of Illinois Hur-int . .ij . . - W1C uiuie lor me republican presidential nomination -He was 82 years old. Alreadv . fehl anrl in ill VonltK v. . 1 .... i iicoiui. tic was siriciten with pneumonia two weeks ago and grew progressive ly w o r s e until his death. Active in poli- rtics sitae e- the t x r. l iuu ainner nan I A 1 ... 5?T j'j c a m p a 1 g n J i f f , f flPresident Mc- Z ' Kinley in r; 1896, iixwden sought the republican Ipr. e si dentiai nomination in 1920, but with Idre w on the lei g,h t h .ballot rraaa u. mwicbv a e n ine con- if v 7 It 11 ' ' venlion i became deadlocked,, and Warren G. Harding was nominat . ed on the tenth. ' r .: y r. i i,;-j-2 A serious : contender in , 1924 when he was strongly 'backed by . the midwest farm : bloc, Lowden saw the nomination go to Calvin T v Coolidge. He refused to accept the' Force Needed !..- Mme. Chiang GAYLORIfc . declar- ones that would save the post-war implemented by. disciplinary forc$. innor Class Wins Glee C (Continued from Page D C Sackett of Sheridan won first for music arid second for words for the senior class, with their: pre sentation being judged j second. Third place song, "The Gremlin Hop" by Bill Byrd and) Marion Crews of Salem and Louise Wris ley of Port Townsend, Wash., was sung by the sophomores j to em phasize the decoration theme for evening, and to win two; fourths for; the song and third in presenta tion. Freshmen, the largest class, presented their song, "Keyboard Cogitations' by Gloria Wunsch of Glendale and Faith Idso of J Sa lem for second place in words, third in music and last in pre sentation, j The Glee was dedicated to Dr. G. '; Herbert Smith, president of Willamette, and memorials were made to. the late Dr. James T. Matthews, Dr. Carl Sumner Knopf and! Miss Clara Eness. Glee Man ager Reid Shelton of Salem gave the ; introductory welcome , and presented Paul Jaquith of New berg, freshman class president. Wallace Sees New Highway SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, March 20 iJP) Pan-American highway engineers told Vice President Wallace of the United States dur ing his inspection of the link un der construction in Costa Rica Saturday that a passageway from the Mexican border to the Pan ama canal would be completed by next spring. When the sector in southern Mexico is rushed to a finish next year, the much dreamed -of route from the United States; to the canal will have come into exist ence, ii win De suriacea mostly with crushed rock, but paving will follow. Wallace flew to a banana plan tation on the Pacific coast Sat urday morning, where he : saw a demonstration of spraying, irri gating ' and cutting bananas. After his night back o San Jose he went immediately, by automobile on a. touf oftoe cottt- pleted section; of the highway arid lunched at workmen's camp. Takirji'MTIi'Harshber the US, irbKc "roads administration's field chief in Costa Rica,! in his car, Wallace plied him wjth ques- tions ceaselessly and rode to the j southernmost point of the pleted highway, 31 miles San Jose. He talked ,to Rican workers in Spanish. com from Costa Dakota Farmers Hear Spring Plowing Citll, Leaving Shipyards PORTLAND, March io Jack Murray, personnel j manager for the three Kaiser shipyards in this area, said Saturday I that Da- kota . farmers who camel here to spend the winter in the yards are beginning to return to their farms. Despite this, he said,! employ ment in the yards increased 7500 last- month, bringing th4 total to about 88,000. To Divert River SPOKANE. March 20 4- The course of the Yakima river will be altered for a mile and a half west of cie Mum to itraighten uie mam ime oi me .northern Fa- .ua- iwi7 were, judge Robert -i . . S. McFarlan. Soattl I dent it of the road, annduced , in statements made public! here to- iui wunu war ana twice was nomination as vice presjdent. His farm plank figured again in the convention of 1928 when his name appeared on the Indiana rr . . V"" "iUC "e jcnoice was n3ZL Z-lLii te:nT.ri.".q- iwo eiecuve oinoes congressman ih;1906-li and governor, of Illi nois m ISI7-ZI." - M - : Alttiough - he -had lived tif. oi retirement ince 1936, advanc ing -years aia not dint jhls mind, and he occasionally emerged " to make a speech and; annually granted an interview iri which discussed nation p I jfipd world proWerns..; ; - r.; - - - In; the l last such 'infarvi- the occasion of his C2nd kmmm January $6, he asserted a lack: of energy io discuss controversial i- sues, but forecast victory for the Allied I Nations in the : nm-x world war and expressed hope for enaunng peace in the lend. 'Chute Troops Led in Africa Assault, Told LONDON,, Sunday, March 31 American - parachute -troops led all other air-borne soldiers in to action in north Africa and were the first frying fighters of the AI- lied Nations, to be . flown direct- j lt battle from, distant bases, disclosing; details of the Novem-r ber operation for the first time. British parachute troops did not fly directly into the fight but were used to capture enemy airfields in the second phase of the allied landing operations! They left southwest England November 10, three nights after the Americans departed. " - A few hours before the opera tion started," the Americans' were quietly assembled at two air dromes in southwest England. They didn't know where "they were going. Awaiting the ' zero hour, they checked their weapons and ammunition while air crews were briefed for the long journey. At various group headquarters, officers waited for the signal. To ensure against mishaps, a chain of officers was asssigned to a tele phone hookup to receive the radio message from Gen. Eisenhower's headquarters and transmit it to dispatching stations for action. At the pre-arranged zero hour, all listeners lifted their telephone receivers and heard a wireless operator say as the dots and dashes came through: "It's coming through. Advance." Tints the commander of the force received the action order ' In England five minutes after It was sis-nailed. It was only then that the parachute troops were told of the task assigned to them. Not a single hitch marred the takeoff. C-47s started taking off. circling the landing field with navigation lights on. More and more aircraft took off until the sky seemed filled with red and green lights. Then when all the air lights were extinguished, the force started its long flight to north Africa. As dawn was breaking the next uiuiuiug, me iorce arrived over Oran. They landed near the La Senia airfield which they captured ana neld unaided for 48 hours against "very stiff opposition." 2 Pedestrians Hit Saturday Automobile-pedestrian acci- dents sent two patients to hospi- tals in Salem on Saturday night cnaries Jones, about 45, resi dent of 83 Park avenue, was taken to Salem Deaconess hospital with a broken leg after he had been truck as he jaywalked from alley to .lley-thpCbloek. jState srreer. at loS p'cioct, ciryponb sa(d. Walter Letz, route fivV, was anver or the car, according to the investigating officer's report. Ten-year-old Ellis Von Eschen, jr., 68 Kiverview drive, West Sa iem, son of a Salem electrical goods dealer, sustained scaln l cerations when he was struck by a car earner m the evening. He was taken to Salem General hos pital. Neither Salem nor West Sa lem police had a report of the ac cident 13 Billion War Loan Campaign to Rely on Papers, Advertisers iwnmui iviarcn 2a. m. nj1 e treasuT Morgen- ' surr,13,. 000,000,000 second war loan cam paign today with representatives of the newspaper industry and government officials. The purpose of the meeting, Morgenthau said in a brief state ment, was "a comprehensive pro gram for newspaper and adver tising participation in the war fi nancing drive," which will begin April 12. Grant County's Wild Horses Reprieved rAWvov mrv , Gov. Earl Snrfl - ' v.. va xx. ourrn 2UWal , .v'ye ZSJ. fW 0 w ..... uccu kucq uled for extermination, beginning Sunday. County Judge Jess Allen said he was notified by the governor that the! order authorizing cattlemen and forest service officials to shoot the animals on sight has been re scinded, perhaps pennanently. Church Leader Dies MOUNT VERNON, NY, March 20-f)-The Rev. William Thomas Boult, 57, since 1923 treasurer of the Board of Home Missions of the; Congregational and Christian churches, died Friday. He also was treasurer of the general pnimni congregational Densions hoard M,teft..?.th iated; organiza- riJ assets pf more than Ration UnlilciTv Usr- , .NEW YORK, s March 201-Benjamin- Wood, ' managing 4i recjor of the tea' bureau, .- said Saturday a special .report pre pared by the organization indi cated the . present tea conserva tion prder might be an adequate substitute 1ror "coupon f rationing. Hejadded that it is by no means a r foregone conclusion : .that ; tea will have to be rationed 'this i year." :H ill ' -.:f!-f -Vi iToo Late to Classify WANTED: 1 riders Commercial yards, day shift. Ph. 642, , Rise in Living v . " 200 i 1 1 180 . 160 40 WORLD WAR II August 1939 s IOO 20 00 July 1914 1915 1916. 194Q 1 1941, EgAug.19391 3P 7 I his chart shows comparative rises in the nation's cost of living for World war I and World war TL Based on US bureau of labor sta tistics and estimates of OPA chief Prentiss Brown, present living costs are 23.S per cent above Sept. L 193. These increases lag iar oenina taose or lsit-iszo war nd post-war periods, when prices advanced 40 per cent In comparable period. During present war, prices rose abruptly after Peart Harbor, tended to flatten oat after April, 1942, price controls went into effect, la the first war prices increased after mid-1916, rose j abruptly la 1917, and went to ZOO per cent In mid-1920. AP Telemat Seattle Ousts Witnesses' SEATTLE, March 20-v53HSev- eral thousand of Jehovah's i Wit nesses, a sect, Saturday were de nied use of the civic auditorium for a mass meeting to "help win the war on the home fronts and Viaov M U V XT V l- :-;''fw L .uxv ox uie waicn lower so- The lease was cancelled after City Councilman James Scavotto pointed out that a 1938 ordinance forbids use of the auditorium "for any purpose which will tend to engender religious or racial an tagonism." Police were dispatched to the auditorium to oust 250 members of the sect, but later Police Chief Herbert Kimsey conferred with Mayor John F. Devin and decid ed to permit the organization tn hold rallies in the auditorium this afternoon and tonight, "because they had rented the building In good faith." Tonight, addressing the - final meeting of the sect, in the audi torium, Knorr announced: "This is just another reminder that there is a real fight for lib erty .otfitjtihijine ppnt I think IT1 hivi 'more to say'lbOtti .that tomorrow nighOueopautioriV al right to preach has TSeea idV nied." He said arrangements had been made to carry on the rest of the meetings in two other Seattle halls. Mother Who Saved Children From Fire Has 50-50 Chance FREEPORT. Tex. March 20-a Physicians Saturday night said Mrs. Lee R. Page, 48. had a 50-50 chance to recover from body burns she suffered in dragKuur her four xaiauy Durned children from a blazing cottage a mile and a half west of here the night before The woman, who was exoectine her fifth child, fought through kerosene-fed flames that envel oped the house to carry the charred bodies of her children, two at a time, into the yard. Witnesses said the house was completely envel oped in flames when she returned to it the second time, brought the two older children out and -then collapsed. Farragut Gels First WAVE FARRAGUT, Idaho, March 20 (P)- A tipple of excitment is passing through the Farragut naval training station, a ripple occasioned by the arrival of the station's first WAVE. She is Ensign Marion B. Hol- don. New York City, whose im mediate task is to make prepara tions for other WAVES expected shortly. j Cal Wins in 18 Heats BERKELEY, Calif., March 20 (-California beat the University of Santa Clara, 6-5, in an 18-in-cing baseball game here Saturday The score was tied at 5-5 for eight LIUIUIgS. Jnlcc Ilccisa i-2 CSecInr Hlxennsiic . H ywr-suffer'-'trom rtumti. ' ; Ulrtti or neuritis pain, try this simple Inexpensive . hoiwn.' 7 ar ands axe astar. Get i Mcki of ikriuix Qiun. Af Mialx. 7r ' " reriKjns. hi easy. 1 U9 .trouble at aU and nixj . vTJ ned. only S tablespoons two trm m y. Often WithUl 48 houn oanij- lesve and it you do not feeroette?. umjh,etnpty package and Ru-Ex wUl cost you nouunc to try as it to old by your drug-gist under an abso i$ZL norlr-ek arattee.i Hu.Ek Compound u for sale and recommend ed by fred Meyer Drug store anc drug stores everywhere, i Costs Compared A 4 WORLD WAR I 1913 Avrig rlOO I: - " Is7 jn 1; s - I "17 L 19171 1918 1919 I 1944' I 1920 1945 1942 I 1943 EONtheHOMEFRONT By ISABEL CHILDS Having lived on literally "bor rowed time" the past Week, J now take this occasion tn oVnMfo n I ... . " ay preciation to Judge I. M: Schan nep, state highway department ti we examiner, for the use of his alarm clock, and to assure him I Will return it Monday. : - V i This week I shall be aroused by the bell of the little clock Bertie Glaisyer took to college with him. That was before he became Capt Herbert B. Glaisyer of the US army air corps. It is safe to as sume that at the post in Arizona ne is awakened by a bugle. At home probably his young son, Johnnie, sounds an even more ef ficient and earlier reveille," . i So, you see, my friends arid, ac quaintance should be everf hap pier than I at the WPB .xleclsbm; announced last week, xhatr a', ley; alarm clocks may once again ' be manufactured in these Jjhi it e-'di?" e The hearing: testimony states. sHbwever, if the highwaoorh mission is unable fas warini matid recently) to eet niHorittei ip materials needed to keepVhKh tia n condition so that Ttndi SaWc Column nt trnnnv nve sfhapthlyiust who is going helP me o&tsiSS rorUy for an aiarm clock, when thiedfurnn is anything but 'smcoth'" hovmSfler how! early I arise? HsfSl I v wen in Khaki, more numerous and j in many cases more boister ous,! lost the center of the stage in i Salem on Saturday night to girls in white. (Willamette co-eds weap white for Freshman Glee.) Passed up by a group of laugh ing lasses, one soldier was heard to I remark to h you i suppose mere s Deen an air raid alarm? They smell too flow ery jfor nurses, but they were talk ing about someone sounding sick!' Giving Up Sugar Stamp for Home Canning Fought PORTLAND, Ore.. March 20(;p) Morton Tompkins, Oregon State grange master, Saturday protested proposal that housewives surren der; an eight-point blue ration stamp for each pound of sugar: to be used in home canning. The proposal would discourage housewives from one aim of the rationing program to make fam ilies as self-sustaining as possible Tompkins said in a letter to the OPA. The proposal now is under consideration by the OPA, Tom kins said. We carry a complete and in f teresting selection ef garden ' books that will galde yen In - preparing a Victory garden -ef your two. Here are a few i eotstandhur books - that . will , 1 help ' yoa produce, an ,ent standlng Victory garden. 4 Priced ; Xronk $UM to S ;i iv-V""The''Netr -i O s Garden; Encyclopedia T The, Gardener's How . .' U Book k vi .'-Snnset'H-r!nninfe.e Carrlen'Rortlc' 7., gardening - - 'fn Color Ceammereial Beek Store ' 141 K. Commercial SalesB, Ore. f ! Bloodless CoUD . i w ma sis CAYENNE, - .French Ouinanai March 19-( Via ' San Juan, De-layw)-)rA peaceXul, bloodless coup carried out on March 18 by nign colonial army officers-with the backing of a 'population en thusiastically supporting both the anu-axir French factions of Gen erals v C It a tf 6S. and Ds' Cauiie brought France. largest rwesterh hemisphere possession' to. the al- lied .side , fnthe' war.' ' : r to the midst of the rc vol against "Vichy connections,' Gov. Rene ; Veber " a n d four cabinet members' fled. (A dispatch from rariunariDo, Dutch Guinana. Sat nrday said Veber and four other oixiciais had taken refuge there with their families and "will be under control of the Surinam ov- ernmenv) xne governor resigned after representatives of the army and the people had forced him to Issu a declaration advising the United States and Brazilian 'consuls that iSi?Ktf French Rebel Rumors Grow g (Continued from Page 1) E conuict. one placed the number of organized insurgents who were reported adequately suDolied With foorl anH smn,mSx:. high as 7000. Another said the chief center of resistance wa nr. Jiaute Savoie, but the wilder re- gian or Averyon. However, this couia not De confirmed. A dispatch from Auxerres. in north central France, to the Del- mont Democrate said the vmith of J ranee "suffered cruel disiilu siorunent the past few. days, during which reports circulated from the Vosges mountains to the Pyrenees and from" Dunkerque to Chamoinix . that Americans. JEJiglish and Fighting French would "certainly" land in Nor mandy, Belgium and Norway. Fund to Finish Dam Favored WASHINGTON, March 20 -uP) Appropriation of $500,000 for com pletion of work on Bonneville dam this year was recommended by ar my engineers during hearings by the house appropriations commit on the war department civil functions bill. ; V The committee took no action Was made public Friday. i The extra money is needed, en gineers testified, because the ur gent demands for power necessi tated a speedup of the building program, which increased costs above the current $4,166,000 ap propriation. Maj. Gen., Eugene Reybold, chief of the army engineers,- told the committee that some difficulty had been exnerienced in crettinff mate rials and labor, causing some delay. Idafipvernor Orders Sffices Back to Capitol BOISE, Idaho, March -P) governor iJottolfsen said Safur day he is notifying departm&t heads whose offices are located outside the statehouse to be ready to move back, into the capitol building by April 1. The only exception, he said, would be the state department of public assistance,, which will be left at its present offices in the building that was used as a tern porary courthouse while Ada county's new courthouse was be ing constructed. Tri-Qub Ski Meet On PORTLAND, March 20-V ine Multnomah Athletic club, Cascade Ski club and Oregon Winter Sports association will sponsor races Sunday over the Multopor slalom course. Filling Prescriptions Fcr Ileallli Daily we centinae te serve the, deeter and , the . patient by liUlns; all vpreseripUeas , aecarately and -promptly. ' We ju-e Always ready te give yen complete and Immediate atteatle. All rreserlptleas filled Promptly See Tear Deeter First 1899- -1943 ssnziEFim's . DRUG STORE Pheoe 51S7 er 7023 135 N. Commercial aaaisk Skilled Seamen 1 17 For Sea Duty .; NEW YORK, March 20f(ffV tuuiiea;iormec ssuuea . seamen throughout the nation were urged Saturday j to report:; immediately for-assignrrient la i the merchant marine. asSan official of the; war shipping i administration I a n nounced that the fleet was faced wiuV-."critieal shortages' In f cer tain jratlhss' . I Marshall E. Dmock,-whose ap- polntment as assistant deputy administrator, f at the recruitment . I and manning organization o - the ; I WSA ; was- annduhced'; Saturday from Washington, said -that the ratings in ; which the - shortages have occurred include . first and second mates, firsti second .and able third .assistant engineers, bodied seamen, and; chief cooks. It. is urgent," Ihef said. that skilled men , m these ratings re- port at once by wire or in person to ' the'' nearest i port ofncf of RMO, or to the proper US em- ployment office. I Au8trpMackL Seen its Pro ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, March: 20-flmVice a am. ju, neiiricn, commanaer of The Netherlands naval forces in the southwest Pacific, said I Sat urday there was 'still too much wishful thinking about Japan and declared that vmt th Jinlnn are strong enoueh ther wiUlcer- I tainly attack Australia for they are efficient, ready to fight and Idt nd ahnvs Htbstf.ciiui'-'' The . Dutch admiral, who fcom I manded thjs United ' Nations' out- nDerea land overpowered fleet in the battle of Java Sea, has just completed! a tour Australian bases. I Income Hits Riecord WASHINGTON, March 20 -Pl Secretary of Commerce Jone4 said Saturday ?that national .iiicome 1 1 : Vi -- 1 j . recora mvei of 11S,. in 1942 land predicted the 1843 Income would be in the neighborhood of Ij.OOO.OOD.OOO. The 1942 figure wai k substantial mcrease oyer the 1 $95,600,000,000 income tcfr 1941 Blake health a weapon for Winninir war TRANSPARENT PALATE pENTALl PLATjESfl Made with - the improved material dentists recom mend for its -adaptability and faithful ; tYproduction. Giims that match your own in color j and a clear' palate that reflects mouth 'tissues and makes for,! greater re semblance.' -in TRANSVCEST TEETH Ml- 'Ml r add lifelike i- b j .a.j appearance to new style platefc:; ;:;. .-.pp. - xou canTOW ooiain gr tificlal teeth I! the shajle and shape' of tiatural teeih. Translucent . teeth : absorb and reflect liehl m Ha vi4t present ieeth. ?iey have the same Irregular ;contoura the same soft : lustre anf the same color lints as nat ural teeth. Ill f if s ff; Mm rt I . jll Wnrm m Mir I K I W i ' " - - ;S! x X s. " -i . fS. I on; PAirjLEss parser. X11C H1- ELEPI)NE Other Offices ln?Eugene j Portland,' Tncbma, Spokane. Seattla And in All Leadins pCirio rTTT?'' ieattI ,; I --! I -4 : Rains Calm Tunisia Front H (Continued from Page 1) P him and the coastal "road, Mar shal Erwih Rommel will be caught hvthe Maireth.Une.withput means of" supply, between the Ameri can! and'th'e British Eighth army. The'rlval'alir Torces were held In check by, the weather, too. al though the superior allied formations-made unopposed: sweeps and patrols over the northern front. . The six-mile Guetaria pass be yond El Guetar was softened too much by. the rainisv tov permit Pat ton's tanks to move forward and most-air Strips In the north and center were too muddy . to allow the big bombers to rise. . Escort; Carrier Plans Revealed PORTLAND, tore, March 20- I (P) Aircraft escort carriers of a anti-submarine Convoy duty, are being- constructed by. Pacific coast shipyards and-some already are In service, the navy -disclosed Satur. day: , -J:. : ,'- -The 'disclosure-' came with the announcement that the. jH. M. S., Tracker had .been completed by Wulametfe.Jroh"5e Steel corpora tion" here and turned, over to the Pritish navy under lend-lease. : H.; M. ;-, Tracker, '. sister ships previously v -complefed at other yards " arid ; those 4 undef" construc tion" are - converted earriers, the navy said, uilt on Hulls original ly designed -for "carga tfups. The ships" are being built for "both the Ameriqan .and British navies. .The,, carriers, ; which -"also are adaptable to , of fens! vje - .aiction as fleet units,, have a 3 14-foot flight deck .and 'more speed than most ' cargo vessels but less than regu lar TJ, S. navy carriers1 like the Lemington - and Enterprise. The navy sdid not disclose other details of construction' or ' performance. The carriers are Indentical to those-Henry ;J. Kaiser announced in Washington Thursday he is building in his Vancouver. Wash.. yard..'.' : - v. .V" - Means Milrtdni of work days were lost ':by5nalfon hard pressed war industries last year because Woess and : accidents. 'Tootlr?i neglect leads to serious Iffa. DR. PAINLESS PARKER SAYS: j rrhe effect resiirSng from layoffs due to accidents and poor health jl in J Jhe Unitde States in one yearfcorrespond to the damage that-might have been done if bombers had at tacked a vast numbe of plants and put them out.pf opera tion. By giving teetjt constant care you -protect strength and vitality, avoid many , discom forts and ailments. - ACCEPTED . CREDIT permits you to jpay as . you are paid v There is no longer any ser ious reason! for ..postponing dental care.! You can enjoy the advantage of paying by the week or month. Begin work immediately-.: and pay later. Why not make dentist ry a. priority in your budget for the duration?- -' . : r ! ,;M ' i- : ' Make your own credit terms, . within reason DE3YTISTRY OF ALL KINDS Extractions, milngs. Inlays. f. dlwop": Plates. nates repaired and re lined. - ' '" , if; Keep fit for war Job with dental care. . i! CORNER STATE : SALEM 8825- : - wwxw VIUCS t Mi BUY T 1 exifta ..WAR T i STAMPS Dentist i I j r '!'! i i " r 2