4 ; .PAG2 TWO QUI) Jap-Flanes iomb Mor 37 Shot Dowii S ? B (Continued trom Page 1) B and bomber ships and downed 29 them,-19 bombers and 10-figbt- Jera. ' -' !j ' ! Sharp - shooting mail aircraft )r batteries destroyed ;,tw addl- tlenal bombers and probably de ; strayed six more; feeVtetal of i 1 enemy ahlpr "destroyed or so ' .badly crippled that ibey, eoId : never reach- base. Osr twn loss-r ?es were relatively ughi. j 11 It was the second ( successive ;? heavy raid on allied positions in I New Guinea. Sunday too Japanese ?' sent 45 bombers and fighter over It Oro bay on the eastern Papuan t coast. Twtnt y-t h r e e-of those ? planes were shot out of action. , "Darin- the ; daya action In all p a r t s of the ertfceastern sector; the enemy lest fewer ' if ' than 52 aircraft. Ineladrar Scn y. day's losses at Ore bay, we bare now shot oat of actio to battle & It enemy combat craft. It Is be-. i- lleved the enemy' air offensive if ' bar been United aadVbJa taune '.' dlate plan dMeeated." . - st While the Japanese were raid- ins Port Moresby, allied bombers were busv elsewhere. The RabauL : m. V"t - - - - kAAtnlv .J tacked. " ' . " :C i "Our heavy bombers executed a '-: dawn v attack : on. the enemy air- dromes at rVunakanaua, : Lakuna, and Rapopo, scerinfr direct hits in dispersal areas and, starting num erous fires which were visible for ; .50 miles," the noon communique said. -' , : - ' v "An anti-aircraft battery was destroyed and an escorted enemy ' submarine on the surface in St. & George's channel; was bombed at I'low altitude and aink. - -' - k '- "In the course of these attacks ! -iine enemy fightera'attempted in- j 'i: perception and three were ? shot ; down "AIT oar planes retarned."- i Set Tiieay i PORTLAND, April 12.-(iiP)-The funeral of Dr. Wilson D. McNary, .former superintendent of the East ern Oregon "state hospital. wDl be "held here Tuesday; Dr. McNary, who died Friday, was president of the Pendleton Round-up associa- ;tion for several years. i Episcopal Bishop William P. 'Remington of Pendleton will offi ciate. Vault entombment .will fol low in the Riverviow cemetery mausoleum. Accident Injures Car Occupants When an automobile belonging to G rover C Goodlow, 244 Marion street, took oft over the gully side of the curve at Eola, landing on the railroad. tracks,, occupants of the car were taken to the hospital but no one was seriously hurt, hos pital attendants reported. The car was removed from the tracks un der supervision of state police. Ends Tonight fllW YOU nd "Menace of Rising Son' II ' I 1 '' J I , lv. r:; . hmr& feseim MfaralizedL f ' ' -Ju'"---:f4&flJ .mmnffiiinri . v V : -jl. 1 . .. J BCTtfmmaMormivw I i f tt U t Hi 1 - - .: . 'L7X)U may be eligibfe right how for m top '.X quality, moderately priced; new 1942 model Stude baker a good-looking, restul riding, brilliantly engineered new Studebaker . . Champion, Commander or President : Eight that was built by Studebaker's master crafts . men before car production stopped. J -, Recently liberalized rationing regulations ' extend the privilege of .buying a new car to a "v, great new group of motorists. " 1 : T In general, yoa are eligible if you come with - in the preferred mileage provisions for gaso lineand if your present car is a 1939 or Buddy Poppy V - i Shown battenbolmg President Roosevelt with : 1543 s first Baddy t nArM nilfla. :t mr old daoxhter of a deceased ex- service man. The curly-haired from a Mfehiraa home for widows and orphans of ex-service men. The annul Baddy roppy sale la eondacted by the Veterans of For den War to raise fands for relief work, TIN Photo. Japs Rushing Kiska Field Under US Air Bombardment Draft Qass Revisions Ordered A (Continued from Page 1) A embodied in a bill by Rep. Kil day (D-Tex) which passed the house, 143 to 7, today and now goes to the senate. It would give deferment priorities to men with dependents and also place draft quotas on a state-wide basis, di recting that no local board should call married men while other boards, within the same - state were able to draft single men. The selective service objects to the Kilday i bill on the grounds it would be too difficult to ad minister. I Selective service laid down for the first time a hard and fast rale aovernlna who is a father, as far as It is concern ed. It directed that local boards shall classify in S-A the division for fathers main ' joining a bona fide family re lationship with a chUd or chil dren men with a child bora before last September. 15. McNutt and Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey, dis cussing the revisions at a press conference, gave mis general sta tistical picture: Of some 14,000,000 physically fit men aged 18 through 57, more than half already are in the arm ed services. Of the Remainder, about 3,200,000 will be deferred for reasons or occupation or hard ship and the rest, regardless of dependents, will have to be draft ed by the end of the year. But even if deferments are held to an absolute minimum by strict rulings, Hershey and Mc Nutt said, the supply of physical ly fit men may well be insuf ficient to; meet manpower de mands of ' the armed forces this year. If that proves true, ;they add ed, it will be imperative to take at least one of these steps: Low er the physical standards of the . .. ' I I I I I I I 1 3 ' I ; --V. ' ' S. V. ! . a?- a)-i v 'r r v -t'iti ' for President A Ut traveled to the nation's capital A FAR WESTERN BASE IN THE ANDREANOF ISLANDS, April S - (Delayed) -(-Bombing notwithstanding, the Japanese are pushing to completion a long fighter field on Kiska and a long bomber field on Attu, the eleventh bomber command headquarters revealed Monday. The Kiska runway, which may have - Zeros zooming from it to meet our American bombers within two weeks, has been bomb ed six times and man-made light nings have plugged Jap workers and kicked up the frozen gravel repeatedly. Attu has been pockmarked with bombs twice when 10 Liberators unloaded 20 tons of explosives. And after the bombing, appar ently, the Japs crawled from their trenches surrounding the fiedls and used the loosened stone. These runways may indicate: First, the Jap is getting ready to repel a naval bombardment with Zeros. Second, to repel any landing on the few existing beaches. Third, to harrass our advance bases if possible. Fourth, to hit our shipping lines. Fifth, to launch an offensive of his own against Alaska. The use of transports June 4, 1942, indi cates that he has had this idea in his mind. To outfit these two airfields will require technical equipment which will have to be flown in or sent in by surface ship and submarine. The Japs have tried surface ships and lost 15 to navy guns, tor pedoes and army bombers. Their last effort at this writing was March 26 when a two-to-one outnumbered and out-gunned American task force turned back three cargo ships escorted by two heavy cruisers, two light cruisers and four destroyers. It ia not known if the Japs used subma rines, as they did at Guadalcanal. When Attu and Kiska runways are working, fighter planes will be able to fly from Paramushiro to Attu, 735 miles, and on to Kiska, 195 miles. armed forces; raise the age limit to take in men who have passed their 38th birthdays. s ! r - Jf ff ff 0 a. earlier model or has been driven -40,000 miles regardless of its age. L f , These new Studcbakers have beea'engi- neered to save tires and gasoline remarkably because of Studebaker pioneering in elimi nating .needless excess bulk. You mar be eligible for one.' Come in and find out eow. KEEP YOUR CAR UP TO PAB WITH STUDEBAKER SERVICE "STATEST IAir. -Salem, Follces Trial Defense Opens B (Continued from Page 1) B Lewelling said the trial would be adjourned untnj Wednesday morn ing at the request of Lomax physicians. He went immediately to a hospital to rest.. The ..trial was adjourned Saturday until Monday because of Lomax Ill ness. ' - - i C : ; v.. TcU -v; Despite his weakened condition and with a voice that was low and husky, Lomax questioned Wilson relentlessly this morning on state ments made previously to investi gator and at the trial in direct and cross-examination. - v He forced an admission trom Wilson that he once had said the man he : saw running down the aisle wore a brown pin-stripe suit and later testified wore a dark overcoat. Lomax asked: Wilson if he changed his 'story because District-Attorney Harlow Deinrick in his opening, statement said - Mrs. James' killer had on an overcoat. Wilson denied the prosecst r statement! had anything to do with his testimony. My de cision that the man were an overcoat camel after the excite meat had snbslded and I had time to give clear consideration to what I had witnessed," the marine said. Wilson said he talked to inves tigators at Eugene and , Klamath Falls, Ore, where the train stop ped on its run to California after the slaying. "Did you ever! tell any of those officers that the man who left the berth was a white man?" Lomax asked. :- "No, I sever did," said the marine. ' . "Was he a white man?" Lomax followed. "I don't know." Lomax questioned Wilson about a blood-spattered towel which had been. turned over to officers and was introduced in evidence today. Wilson said he had found the towel in a sleeper behind the diner after the train left Eugene. After the adjournment Wein rick was asked how many wit- nesses the state would call after Wilson's testimony had been com pleted. He said there would be 15 or more brought to the stand. Court Rules On 3 Cases WASHINGTON, April 12-tiP) A draft registrant, convicted of failing to keep his selective serv ice board properly informed of his address, obtained a supreme court review of his case Monday. The court, however, turned down the appeal of Rufo C Ro mero, U. S. army captain in the Philippines who was convicted of taking secret maps of Manila de fense from Fort William McKin- ley, photographing them and dis closing them to persons who, the justice department said, "were not entitled to receive such in formation." The draft case: involved Homer Lester Bartchy, alias Homer Brocks of Houston, Tex. He join ed the merchant marine and sign ed at New York for a foreign voyage when, the justice depart ment said,' his induction was im minent. .For two! weeks before his ship sailed he remained aboard. the department said, and failed to advise the national maritime un ion in Houston or the draft board of .his whereabouts. Bartchy claimed that he had told the board that his mail could be sent to the union. I In a unanimous opinion, the court also upheld $4,000,000 tax assessment levied on the Chicago stock yards company on the grounds that the company, to avoid payment of surtaxes, per mitted its profits to accumulate during 1930, 1932, and 1933, in stead of distributing them on its stock. The revenue act of 1928 provides a 50 per cent additional tax on the net income In such cases.'.""" r ' - cvcbvone knoos those c"o shows I ii ill -l.-t' 4.. T O D A Y T O D A Y HVCTrt jtAUfiHS r J aitfe t Itt-atl , ft Orgotu - Tttdoy - Kamlng; - April One Oregon Man Safe, One Dead, Navy Reveals WASHINGTON. April 12-W) The navy announced Monday 21 casualties in navy forces, includ ing 4 dead, 4 wounded and 13 missing. T-' f ' : h-.J?? This brines to 24.737- the total of navy, marine corps and coast ruard casualties reported to .next of kin since December 7, 1941, The1 grand -total Includes 7,078 dead, 4,864 .wounded and 12,997 missing. The casualties announced Mon day included those listed are na vy and non-commissioned person nel, unless -otherwise specified j : Oregon-Adama, Heraia aeaa fnreviously reported missing Jan uary 23). Father, Walter Adams, 1024 Floss Ave, Milwaukie. Prnsar. Bruce. TJaptain.' Ma rine. Safe. (Previously reported missing October 27, 1J wue, Mrs Bruce Prosser, Athena. Reds Repulse Five Attacks D (Continued from Page 1) D' by a counterblow and completely restored the former situation. said the communique, adding that all the Germans' subsequent stabs also were repulsed. "According to incomplete data. ft continued, "over 2000 bodies of nrmsn officers and men were counted on the battlefield and in trenches where hand-to-hand fighting had taken place. Several dozen Hitlerites were taken pris oner. Trophies captured included three guns, 46 machineguns, tune radio transmitters, a large quan tity of rifles and other war ma terials." The Volkhovo sector has been quiet for months, but the German attacks brought some of the heaviest fighting reported in re cent days. The Germans continued their attacks against soviet positions along the thaw-bogged west bank of I the Donets below Balakleya, with 160 Germans reported killed. The Germans drove at one point into the advanced lines of soviet defenses, but were turned back by a counter-assault, the war bul letin said. pn the Smolensk front, 200 more Germans were killed as Rus sian artillery and machinegun fire peppered nazi positions in an at tempt to clear the way for further advances. Despite these actionsthe com munique repeated the familiar phrase of recent days that there were no significant cnanges along the huge front. Keeping up the aerial offensive, Russian Stormovik planes destroy ed or damaged 30 German troop and supply trucks, blew up am munition dumps, and silenced ar tillery batteries, the - midnight communique said. Soviet guns rumbled in the Caucasus, destroying two enemy guns, six blockhouses and one ammunition dump, the communi que said, but it did not mention any ground fighting in this area. First Aiders Get 3 Calls Brian Lee Hanson, two years old, of 624 South 12th street, ac cidentally located some rat poison late Monday afternoon and samp led it, city first aiders who were called to his immediate assist ance said. The lad was taken to the Salem Deaconess hospital, where Dr. Gussie Niles said he would recover. A salem bride-elect, who faint ed in a downtown jewelry store, was taken home by the first aid car Monday afternoon. Pvt. Walter Durkiewirsky of Camp Adair, who became ill downtown in Salem on Sunday was taken to a nearby army hos pital by the first aid car, and James Cosgrove. who became sud denly ill at 3430 Portland road Monday morning was given first aid. . . Kaiser Attorney Denies Conspiracy : ! PORTLAND. April 12-PV-Gor don Johnson, a Henry J. Kaiser attorney, declared Monday that national labor relations board at torneys have failed to show a conspiracy ; existed between the Kaiser shipyards in this area and AFL unions in the negotiation of closed-shop labor contracts, f He' made th e charge during argument in support of a Kaiser motion made last Thursday for ri;niaT of CIO charges that the shipyards aided the AFL to obtain closed-shop agreements. TH KM'- THAT Hits t-wt-T I I Ki-J-. . ( Sed From 15.-113- Morgentliau Opens Rally C (Continued from Page 1) C bitter time when wehad to take blows without returning them, be cause we weren't ready all of that Is past. "Now we're ready to deal a few blows ourselves; and , they'll be blows; " I canromise you, that will rock nazi - Germany to ; its rotten bloodstained foundations.' Discussing the - financial needs of the war at the rally where the other speakers included Governor Thomas E.', Dewey,: Mayor F. H. Laguardia, AFL President William Green and jCIO president Philip Murray, Morgenthau said: . Ten per 'cent is no longer enough money, to put into war bonds. - "We : are ; asking every one to buy extra bonds this month, even workers who are now partic ipating in the payroll savings plan,- Morgenthau said. Dewey said that the bond drive was made real and vital because Americans were "giving up things so fighting men can use them." "Let no one think he added. "that when he help put the $13, 000,000,000 victory drive across he is just giving up dollars. ' Declaring that "the working people of America are in this war heart and soul,1- Murray said that there were 172,000 payroll sav ings plans in operation which pre sented a "picture of labor-management cooperation in support of the national war effort which promises great things for the fu ture welfare of this country. - : Speaking for more " than 6,000 member of the AFL, Green pledged "every last dollar above what it costs us to live for war bonds." If present taxes are unchanged, the treasury estimates it will have to borrow $25,000,000,000 in the period from May to August and another $25,000,000,000 in the pe riod from September to December The goal set - for the January- April period $20,000,000,000- will be reached with successful completion of the second war loan drive. Indicative of the tremendous public response to this campaign was one subscription of $25,000, 000 reported from . Philadelphia. In hundreds of newspapers today every line of retail advertising was devoted exclusively toward selling government bonds. ICC Revokes Freight Rise WASHINGTON, April 12-(P) By a 6 to 5 vote, the interstate commerce commission Monday suspended, effective May 15, rail road freight rate increases, aver aging 4.7 per cent, which were authorized a year ago to offset .higher wages granted railroad workers by a presidential media tion board. In a decision representing a major victory for the office of price administration, which had fought the increases, the com mission also revoked, effective the same day, a 10 per cent in crease in commutation fares but ordered further hearings on whether this revocation should stand. It refused to change stan dard passenger fares which, with the commutation fares, were in creased 10 per cent on Feb. 10, 1942. Ninth Flier Believed Dead WALLA WALLA, April 12.-JP -Mute evidence that Staff Sgt. H. C. Van Slager, South Bend, Ind, was drowned after he para chuted from a Walla Walla army bomber March 30 has been found on the Greyhound river, a tribu tary to the middle fork of the Sal mon river in central Idaho. Ma jor Harry E. Gilmore, command ing officer of the air field here, was informed Monday. As reconstructed by evidence found by searchers, Van Slager spent several days at an empty cabin in which he found food, then built and launched a raft to float down the small but swift stream. The raft was discovered 300 yards downstream from the cabin but no trace of Van Slager's body has been found. v ATI eight other crewmen of the plane, ; which crashed near Chal lis, Ida have been found safe aft er parachuting. V:"-.:v.;--:.-::s Too Lnte to Classify rot Sal: Wicker baby bury. P. S331 WANTED: S bedrnf. mod., turn, home in city limits. Write Box SS. Statesman. .. v The Pir. Card., j j Huh! It Was Justa,er - W adjamacallit ILWACO; Wash- April 12-(iP This city's sea monster story is turning out just like all the others. It's an interesting story, but, oh, what the biologist do to It. . ' Th xtnrv: started . with a huf e carcass washing ashore. Villagers decided - it was the remains , of a two-ton terror with leg-like flip pers, a mean head and a meaner looking 15-foot tail. : Fishermen had never seen its like before and were considerably awed. But a biolocist. Dr. F. J. Kohl russ of .the University of Portland, arrived today, peered and prod at the carcass and then ex claimed, r "Why, 1 t's a n elasmo- branchiL" ;;f ' A - ' " -. . This, he explained, is a rela tive of the shark, a survivor of olden1 day, j It didn't have, leg like flippers i and what everyone thought was a mean, face was only the snout Kohlruss added. But he conceded It probably did weigh in the neighborhood of two tons. .... I : - C - . House Fights Ruml jQuestipn WASHINGTON, April 12 -flP) Republican Leader Martin, . flatly rejecting Speaker Rayburn's pro posal for bi-partisan support be hind a 26 per - cent withholding levy without any tax abatement, moved Monday to. bring pay-as you-go legislation to a new house vote by a petition discharging it from the ways and means com mittee. If th republican petition ma neuver succeeds, the house will vote again, on the Ruml plan, to skip an income tax year, defeated two weeks ago 215 to 198. ; A bill canj.be pried out of the committee by 218 signatures of house members on a petition. Mar tin is hopeful democrats wanting a "compromise,' abating a part of a year's j taxes, will join the re publicans, supporting the -Ruml full abatement proposal, ,and di vest the committee of further con trol over! the! legislation. . - Coalmen Rap Conciliator NEW YORK, April' l-(fl)-South-ern coal operators complained to President Roosevelt Monday night that John R. Steelman, head of the US conciliation . service, has persisted in j- an effort to obtain wage increases for soft coal min ers, despite the presidential wage freezing holdthe-line order. Former Nebraska Senator Ed ward R. Burke, president of the Southern Coal Producers associa tion, made public a telegram sent to the president, declaring that "without violating your executive order, no agreement can be made that would grant a single one of their (the miners) demanded wage increases."-. He asked that the president take immediate fac tion to "cause the dispute to t be heard on its merits by the nation al war labor board. - . ? Crash . Kills Medford Flier SAVANNAH, Ga, April 12-ff) Names of seven US army air corps fliers who were killed when their medium ' bomber crashed near Ridgeland, SC. Monday were announced by Lieut. J. H. Casey, public relations officer of the Savannah army air base. The plane was on a ' routine training mission, flying from Wal terboro, SC, to the Savannah air base, he said. The list of dead Included: " Pilot, First Lieut. Lester W. Shep herd, next of kin, Alice E. Shep herd, 608 Clark street, Medford, Ore.. j y: ' :. ;y.- .j HURRY LAST 1 1 Spring Comes ; ; Just in Time t : For Stockhien : PORTLAND, Ore April 12-CP) fear of a heavy loss, in Pacific . northwest livestock herds ended Monday as ranchers turned sheep and. cattle onto .the range In in creasing numbers.'' v ' ' ' A ' long winter - hadaunost ex hausted feed . supplies. A late spring retarded grass growth and the range was In no. condition, to support livestock..;;:-:;;- . Losses in the ' early lamb crop consequently -1 were heavy, and Stockmen feared r their . cattla would starve if the situation con tinued. ' , , ;" Then spring came in with rush. Almost over night grass ap peared on the range. For " some . stockmen it came just in time. Their animals were thinned down to the danger point. Range grass is. fattening the stock now, though, -and livestock 'experts predict the market will be up to normal at selling time next falL 1 There is still a hay shortage, however, and agricultural experts advised farmers to Increase hay plantings to avert further trouble next winter. j. ' ', ', : ; . Russ Raid Rcicht wnwN, Apru -19. T n7 xne ; Berlin radio, in a broadcast re corded by the Associated Press, re ported T ue s d a y that - "enemy" ' planes were over northeast Ger- j many last night and British quar ters unmeaiaieiy specuiaiea inai . the Russian air. force had struck , again at the reich.' ' While the German broadcast did not specify the nationality of the pianes, we lacx 01 any unusn an- -noun cement ' concerning RAF ac tivity indicated strongly, that they were Russian. ,'r i Only last Saturday . night the Russian air; force' heavily raided Koenlgsberg in northeast Gti-!many..;.;j,V'f;--,-t-"':.":- ; -t-..1 Pioneer Surgeon : Dies in" Portland ; I ' , PORTLAND, April 12.-iP)-Dr. Andrew , C. ..Smith, S7, physician and surgeon who came to Oregon in 1884, died in a Portland hospital late Monday, after a three-week illness.' " J ' ' :' . V. Dr. SmifJi was first. prestdent ef tne state board or neaitn and or the Medical Arts Building com pany here, a past president of the State Medical society and a for mer vice president of the Ameri can " Medical association. :. ENDS. TOD AY "EYES IN THE NIGHT, with Edward Arnold, Ann Harding and "Fri--day.' Seeing Eye Wonder Peg. , . - ., STARTS WED. to r.n:n;"m -PCU8- ."THE MAN. IN Z, THE TRUNK Sfsrfc; Ucd. -3X I-... with DIIOND O'BRIEN BARRY FITZGERALD ARTHUR TREACHER iim tiTotpcsr ; sun 'wicrai' ' CO -FEATURE Men with an ideal so power ful it soothed the worst Nazi tortures . ... ' "THE PUI1PLE V" TIMES TODAY m mm m il t . mmtm -rs --ft qgHo GaE Sotveso, One. ' Salem, Oresron -with '" 7'rrT',7 s M tmJ ko ELAINE BARRTMOWE in JOS HALL - SABU t0mmJ t il ... .. ; S70 N. Cl.nrch CL DEAL IV net! AY 1 H OV TO UNDIUSS IN FRONT OF YOUR HUSBAND 1 4 r -. .Bex Office Open f :45 i j - r 1 ' 1 km i ! l .mi