P AGS TWO The OnZGOII CTATECMAN. Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, April 11. I$i3 Japanese Navy Masses for Assault C (Continued from Page 1) C range, are within easy .striking distance of Australia.- . (In Washington,- Secretory of the Nary Ksox, comacnUnr en- General Blarney's observa tions, had said: " mast re 'mejnber that aa attack en Aus tralia awt be ictiiwilri by a : tremendous - sea I force , aod there la no tedlcati of a cen tra tratten pelntlag to that.") 1 . ' Commenting upon the strategic potentialities of the war In the , southwest Pacific. General Mac Arthur said,-"The Japanese, bar ring our submarine activities which are not to be discounted, have complete control of the sea lanes, in the western- Pacific and of the outer approaches towards - Australia.. c- "Control of such sea lanes no longer depends soleiy or even . Derhaos - primarily upon naval power hut upon ir pswer oper ating from land bases held by ground troops all supported by naval power. ; "If the enemy w4ne eeatrel srf the air, his naval anils eaa at once bring forward conveys f grevnd forces to tenttnae hU attack to the at ward te a limit Imposed only by the ef fective range of his land -baaed lair sopport. A primary threat to Australia does not therefore require a great Initial local concentration of land based aviation. As a matter of - fact, Japanese naval forces In treat strength, although now be yond our bomber range, are witn- ln easy striking distance of Aus tralia. ! IThe vital factors therefore in the southwest Pacific with itj countless island groups and in numerable archipelagagic reaches re the air forces to strike and the ground forces to conquer and hold. The allied naval forces can be counted upon to play .their own magnificent part but the bat tie of the western Pacific will be won or lost by the proper appli cations of the air-ground team. Attorney Sums Kaiser Brief i I : : I PORTLAND, Ore, April 1S-JP) Gordon Johnson, attorney for the Henry Kaiser shipyards, wound up arguments to dismiss a CIO charge gainst the ; shipyards Tuesday with a threat to "parade witnesses Into this courtroom all summer." - The CIO accuses the shipyards of signing illegal closed shop contracts with, the AFL. The Kai ser interests seek dismissaW of a specific complaint that the ship yard management asisted the AFL. In gaining the contract, Johnson , told a national labor relations board examiner, "We'll answer the testimony of board witnesses with evidence that will blow their testimony to bits if we nave to. We'll bring in witnesses that they interviewed and then were afraid to bring into court. 1 "It will be a shame and a dis grace to the war production board if men have to be dragged off im- portant jobs, to answer this silly nonsense and tommy rot." " -, Charles J. Janigan, AFL attor ney, joined Johnson in asking the dismissal, commenting that the NLRB case was "completely bar ren" of proper evidence. He added, "If contracts are to be set aside on such slim showings (hen we have built up a Franken stein to destroy organized labor." ; ; Two other AFL attorneys are scheduled to speak' briefly Wed nesday, then NLRB attorneys will begin a rebuttal. " Labor Problem Cited ! PORTLAND, April ia-JP)-The next six months will determine whether American war production can continue with voluntary labor or whether some form of com pulsion must be adopted to fill Jobs, Dr. William Heber of the .war manpower commission-said Tuesday,;:: ;:t-:'Vv"C:;r:::--, Plus This Smash' " ( Comedy Hit! "1 f Alan Hale ffflt,HffMW3x6)i) EI -s - Marjorie I Eambeaa I,""---- As "Annie" Another Sullivan Joins Navy r V r 4 Genevieve Sallivaa. sister of the five 8alllvaas who lost their lives in the slaking af the cruiser Janeau. Joined the navy as a WAVE at San Francisco. Bliss Sallivaa, right. Is helped with her new uifersa by Ileal Teve U Petersen (left), procurement officer. After cosaplcttng a tour of war plants and navy yards, she prob ably will report to the WAVES training school at Hunter college. New York, officials said. Associated Press Telemat. ON THE HOME FRONT By ISABEL A woman's page writer for the San Francisco Chronicle recently turned the tables as she criticized mildly Junior Leaguers for misspelling proper names in their magazine. V . -v- More difficult to get than news is the proper spelling -of proper names. I .Because I am not now a wom an s page editor I may note the strange fact that the woman who "writes up" party or club meet ing, sometimes spelling the same name three different ways, is quite often the one who criticizes the fact that her own name "just never comes out right In your paper." , On the other hand, it is true that most persons, are perfectly willing to .spell out names over the , telephone, if a s k e d. Even then, the understanding may be a task. Native-born Salem may -some times be troubled with poor tele phone connections, but it has no Mrs. Andersons to compare with my Mrs. A. : Why she had been named pub licity chairman for a suburban PTA was one of the riddles that haunted me my first week on the society desk of a newspaper in a town that was totally strange to me. Our only regular contact was by telephone, and she spoke not only brokenly but rapidly. When she told me disgustedly for the third time how to spell a good Finnish name, she added this ex planation that it began with "V as in flower." ; V Although I never' learned to speak Finnish there came a time when I found Mrs. Anderson easy ro unaersiana, wondered at my own earlier lack of erudition. In a hospital far from family and close friends, I looked forward to her laugh, charming, ringing and musical. The potted plant with purple flowers and rough leaves she left on i my office desk one gloomy winter day gave me some thing resembling itch but did bet ter things for the spirit than the skin. Not the easiest person in the world from - whom . to learn the spelling of names, she did have one field in which she excelled: As a giver of the "cup of cold water" my Mrs. A. is i probably a champion 1 . . "C as in friend." Tonight and Thursday Two Hits ore v Ronald (How scores; II I I 11 ommf CHHD3 Speech Club Takes Second In Tourney Salem Toastmasters walked or better talked off with first and second places in their two-way- tournament with the Eugene Toastmasters' club in Salem Tues day night. Robert Nixoxy Pacific Telephone and Telegraph ' manager here, speaking on "Too Much Democrat cy," was declared winner, while Harry . LaDou, Salem restaurant operator, took second place with his speech on "Power." Eugene "Bill" Wheeler, Eugene, used as his subject in the compe tition, held as a feature of a joint dinner meeting of the two clubs at the Marion hotel, "Boys Who Fight for Freedom." Capt Roy Seigen thaler of Eugene spoke on "A Little Lesson in. History." judges xor tne contest were Ralph Murphy, speech teacher at Salem high school; Ll Col. Carle ton E. Spencer, former law pro fessor at University of Oregon, and Dr. G. Herbert Smith, presi dent of Willamette university. Sixteen Eugene dub members attended the session. Milk Rationing Is Expected s CHICAGO, April 13--MilX rationing, may be established in some parts of the country this year. Dr. T. G. Stitts, chief of the dairy and poultry division of the food distribution administration. told the American Dairy associa tion Tuesday. "There is an adequate supply In right for this summer, he said "But there is a definite possibil ity of a shortage of fluid : milk supplies In many areas In the fall or sometime after July 1." : Dr. Stitts explained that ra tioning, '"If undertaken, would be planned with the purpose of in suring adequate supplies of milk to hospitals, ' children and those who need It most. Toars of practical experience and study hare made the Mnr 9akots loaders hi their 'trade;.. -i. 5: AT YOU3 GnOCX3S Red Attacks Drive Nazis -From Forts BULLETIN f MOSCOW. April 14 -JP)-flerce fighting far Donets river positions soath of Balakleya con Uamed Taesday night with aboot 20t Germans killed la the ac tion, the Soviet noon common Iqne said today, r LONDON, Wednesday, April 14 (AVRussian patrols; thrusting for ward on the Smolensk front dis lodged the Germans "from forti fied positions of great importance,' Tuesday, while to the north on the Leningrad sector the Soviets have turned back in outbreak of nazl tank and infantry attacks with "heavy losses" to the Ger mans, Moscow announced early today. Several score Germans were killed by Russian patrols that pusnea Across a river ana snaked through mine fields! In the heavily fortified sector west of Moscow to seize the strategic but uniden tified positions, said the midnight communique as recorded by the Soviet Monitor. Two companies of German infantry were wiped out by artillery and infantry fire, it added. ' . v " r . On the Leningrad front, "Ger t - man infantry supported by tanks attacked our positions continuous ly during the day," but all these charges were driven back, with the Germans losing . heavily in manpower, the war bulletin as serted, i . - t On the Talkbov front ahent ft miles to' the soatheast where the Rosslans yesterday had. re ported repalse of five bloody nasi attacks Soviet artillery fire destroyed 17 pillboxes and dugouts, and a patrol captured sat enemy trench seising pris oners and returning- to the Rus sian lines. i The Russians took the offensive on the now relatively dormant Donets line south of Balakley, charging in enemy trenches and killing more than; 100 Germans, the communique said. The Russian air force, which has raided Koenigsberg in East Prussia twice within the last four nights, continuedj carrying the fight to the enemy, and destroyed five planes on a jnazi airdrome, the Russians said. Soviet guerillas In the Smolensk ragion derailed a! German troop train March 26, smashing a loco motive and nine cars, and killing 20 Germans, the communique re ported. Two days later guerillas on an other sector mined a rail line and blew up an engine and IS cars, killing or injuring 300 Germans. Agriculture Fund Slashed WASHINGTON, April 13.-P)- Extensive restriction of agricul ture department activities was recommended by I the house ap propriations committee Tuesday in approving a $707,040,844 fund $240,093,647 below budget est! mates for its operations in the 12 months beginning next July 1. In a statement, James G. Pat ton, president of the National Farmers union, charged that ab olition of the FSA was part of a plan by the American Farm Bu reau Federation for "complete balkanization of American agri culture.' President Edward A. O'Neal of the farm bureau had urged at committee hearings that FSA be abolished. . The committee recommended that the farm credit administra tion. In taking over FSA functions, be given $12,000,000 for rural re habilitation and ' $40,000,000 of RFC for loans, j Tax Payment I With the deadline for receiving 1943 state income tax returns to expire tt midnight Thursday, April 15, plans for handling the eleventh hour taxpayers were an nounced by the state tax com mission Tuesday. L "' - The Portland office of the com mission is opei evenings to re ceive returns while the Salem of fice will remain jopen until mid night Thursday. Returns placed in the mails before midnight Thurs day will be received by the com mission without penalty. , - i. l a x commissioners reported heavy incoming mail during the past few days. Only a small per centage of the income taxpayers have taken advantage of the 1943 legislative session law allowing quarterly payments, j-1,- ' t- Hunting Complaint Panned by Ji PORTLAND, April lJ -ftPV-As- sistant US Attorney : William M. Langley sought permission in fed eral court Tuesday to file com plaints against a half dozen hunt ers for shooting ducks after sun down last falL'; C- " r ' . "What's that got to do with win ning the war?" Judge Claude Mc Collocb demanded, i - : - i ... : i Langley explained he was mere ly - following instructions of - the attorney general's office. "Better keep f the complaints awhile and think It over," the judge said. :. " Expe Navy Official Visits Front h V'- iii ' " - Ready for conferences mn progress of the war In the Pacific, the Den. Ralph A. Bard, assistant secretary of the navy. Is shown being ereeted by Admiral Chester W. Nlmlts, commander In chief of the US ractfle fleet, foUowing his Board Probes Wair Leaves B (Continued from Page 1) B superintendent said, had indicated their interest In the various ser vices. One resignation tendered Tues day! night was from Miss Marie Houguez, commerce teacher at the high school who has been serving i a substitute replacing a man in the service. Miss Houguez de clared In asking .to be allowed to resign that she could obtain permanent position and could not Jeopardize her future chances for employment by remaining on-a job which would be taken away from her at the close of the war, an at titude Bennett said he expected to find more common among substi tute! teachers., Also accepted were the resigna tions of Walter Bowman, typing teacher at the high school, and Martha Jane Adams, Englewood teacher. The resignation offered by Miss Esther Arnold, m edict! corps at Camp Lewis, was held in abeyance until the military leave policy could be more defi nitely determined. Mrs. Jean Beutler was named to replace Mrs. Ruth Hockman at Bush, granted a leave of absence, while Mrs. Grace Schmidt was ap pointed to replace Mrs. Mildred L. Query, on leave from Highland. Mrs. Pauline Cohen was named a substitute to fill Bowman's place. A one-year leave was granted Mrs. Hazel Bean; the one-year leave of Mrs. Martha J. Pinson was extended for another year. New contracts were offered Miss Isabel GilL Newberg, for primary teaching here, and to Mrs. Ellen Speerstra Foster, also Newberg, for intermediate work. When and If the military of the TJoiteA 8ti need typewriters badly enengh to reqnlsltioa them they will be welcome to one-fourth of these In nse in the Salem school sys tem, -board members indicated Taesday night as they voted down a reqnest to sell the gov ernment 25 per cent of the dis trict's typewriters. Typewriters In use in Salem high school s commercial depart ment are used each of the six periods of the day and some of them are utilized for an after- school class for which the system pays a teacher extra, Supt. Frank B. Bennett told the board. Some school systems, he said, use class room typewriters for one or two periods a day. . Typists are sousht in various war industries and their training has been declared a war need, it was pointed out. The Board Tuesdav nltrht vot ed to accept $862-56, insurance representing 100 per cent navment of loss Incurred in the Englewood school fire, im possibility . that Leslie iunior high and Salem, high school cafe terias may be used as communi ty canning centers operating un der. Smith-Hughes Instructor su pervision, was expressed by Ben nett, who explained that the nlans for t operation of such a: center would not be adopted if they con flicted . with - commercial cannera' plans.i T ; I- ". , ' Mobile Farm Army Difference Fixed Washington. Apra is.-up Senate and house conferees set tled differences Tuesday on legis lation creating a mobile army of farm workers. They agreed to re-, duce the appropriation from $40, 000,000 to $26,100,000 as originally drafted.' j -; ---. The measure retains the senate's provision permitting recipients of old age assistance to be paid for farm labor without losing their benefit payments, l, ; THE MOOSE THAT HITS fcUIlT I fcSecd Froa The IPeTiy Garden:) Jfl a "v we" IXArNTE TSAKKYMORK fcs x -HOW 'TO UNDRESS IN -FRONT OF YOUR - ' ' n'. recent arrival at Pearl Barber. '.- FR Praises Hemisphere Solidarity WASHINGTON, April 1S-P)- President Roosevelt declared Tuesday the - United States Is proud to be "working shoulder to shoulder" with the republics of South and Central America to ward "the world-wide concert of free nations which will constitute the International society of the future." In a message commemorating Pan American day tomorrow, Mr: Roosevelt told the . governing board of the Pan American union that the Increasing observance of the day reflects the progress that has been made "in converting the dreams and aspirations of the founders of our continental Inde pendence into effective and har monious means for international cooperation. Plane Crash Kills One CHICAGO, April A flight of five service type navy planes ran into adverse weather conditions Tuesday while making practice flights from the deck of the training aircraft carrier, Wol verine. Two of them crashed into Lake Michigan, killing one pilot, and a third was still missing 12 hours later. Ensign George Henry Bartlett Green, III, 25, of Boston, a re cent bridegroom, was killed when his plane crashed several blocks off shore on Chicago's north side. The best man at Ensign Green's wedding, Lt Arthur Hyde Phil lips, 22, of (61 West Vernon) Bos ton, crashed about a block from shore and was rescued by a city life guard In a surf boat He suf fered minor injuries. Incentive Pay Is Suggested WASHINGTON, April 13-(JP)-Incentive payments to labor for increased Individual production, on an industry by Industry basis, would help the manpower short age problem, Almon E. Roth, al ternate employer , member of the war labor board, said Tuesday. Roth, president of the San Francisco employers council, also told the house military affairs committee , he "fully- supported1 the Austin-Wadsworth bill per mitting the drafting of men and women for war work, adding that "the country is prepared for . a measure of this sort." He said incentive payments would - be "inflationary in one sense because it would fatten the individual pay envelope, but that It would be no more inflationary than hiring additional workers to produce the same amount. Snell Requested - To Name Judge MARSHFTELD. April Gov. Earl Snell was urged by the Coos county republican central committee Monday to appoint one of these seven nominees to the va cant county judgeship: - ":-K Ray McNair, Bandon merchant; P. W. Culver, county commission er; J. P. Beyers, former county as sessor; Harry Slack, president of the Coos County Bar association; Levi Bunch, merchant; Dr. Ralph Milne, former Coquille mayor, and J. E. Norton, former acting county judge. ,.-: -i-.w:'i HUSBAND' , Cox Of flee Opea C:4$ j J Second US Funds! Assured A, (Continued-from Page 1) A for a second USO unit In Salem, had failed,: Doughton declared. Senator McNaTyste1egranrrneans that the whole main floor and the basement of the Breyman-corner will be leased, furnished In an up-to-date manner and operated as a general recreation center for soldiers by the Salvation - Army, under the USO." . ,:!-'F; v, ! Doughton " declared "himself "highly pleased with the action, adding : that "Even then Salem will not have enough recreational facilities fdY IsoldSersJ'-: The' city's 'second USO center, a temporary I setup,' : going into- operation Easter weekend In store building, is' to be used only until the larger clubrooms are rea dy, it is currently planned. The temporary quarters are to be lo cated In the S00: block on Court street.' ? '1 1 j'V: ' First USO tenter . In the city. -that operating in Legion hall at Cottage and Chemeketa, "bulges1 on weekends, volunteers working there with the paid staff declare. Funds . for the enlargement of that structure were sought last year unsuccessfully, although re creation authorities here have de clared they would ask again. ' Although USO, or United Ser vice Organizations,- operated cen ters are maintained for non-commissioned men in all branches of the service, and the Salem cen ters are: no exception, those here are most heavily : patronized by the army. ; i Rent for the first center is pid by the federal security agency. while the staff,' USO-appointed and paid, is from the YMCA. Staff of the second center, like wise selected and paid by the USO, is from the Salvation Army. Adj. C. H. Thomas, who with Mrs. Tho mas, will direct the second "center. is to return to Salem next week from New York. City, where he has been attending a USO training school. . ; i -. ' - , Much of the equipment for the second center lias already arrived in Salem; some of it will be used In the temporary quarters. . Albany Lab Planned Soon WASHINGTON, DC, April 13 (P) Transformation of the aban doned Albany college buildings in to $500,000 electro-metallurgical laboratory will get underway soon. Sen. Rufus C. Hohnan (R-Ore) said Tuesday; , , The bureau of mines plans to assign an architect to the Oregon site when the 'budget bureau re leases funds for the project, ex pected within , a; few days, Hol- man said. t EVERYOKNOWS Tcday liSiiiiil iVliTi)(T)5v)jii? mi 4 to WMv 12 DLi Ilib ' 25 Year Jail Sentence Is In Balance' SPOKANE, Wash Aprn W-P) The delicate scales of Justice, were balancing 25 years, of Elmer' EL Cox's life Tuesday with one bottle of wine as the counterweight. 1 ' ' Cox, on parole from the Idaho penitentiary where he served less than five years of a 30 to 60 year sentence for rape, was accused in federal court of transporting the bottle of wine ontoi the Colville Indian reservation. 1 "If I sentence this man he may be taken back to Idaho as a pa role violator and required to serve 23 years, said Judge Lewis B. Schwellenbach, adding, to Cox: "A man who has that much time hanging over him should not be monkeying around with wine on an Indian reservation." ' Sentencing was deferred until the court could-confer 'with the federal probation officer. Federal Aid For Oregon Schools Asked WASHINGTON, DC, April 13 (iflPJ-Federal aid for Oregon's war crowded school system was sought here last week by Rex Putnam, Oregon, state superintendent of public Instruction, and Mrs. Will iam Kletzer, Portland, president of the National Congress of Par ents and Teachers. . They asked support of Oregon's congressmen for two pending bills. One calls for $2,390,000 In federal assistance for state school systems until June 30 and $3,500, 000 per year thereafter. An alter- " native measure would provide $2,884,000 and $10,000,000. Sen. Rufus C. Holman said he favored the federal aid program If confined to the war emergency - period. Schools should remain un der local control, he said, to pre vent government dictation of what should be taught , Pan-American Award Given to AP , HAVANA, Cuba, ' April 1S-JP) The Colombista Pan-American so ciety, an organization which works for , Inter-American unity. Tuesday announced an award to The Associated Press and Its af filiated organization La Prensa Asociada for bringing about an in-. creased Interchange of news among the American republics. The society announced that It had voted the AP and La Prensa Asociada a scroll of merit "in rec ognition of ' the ' perfect organiza- tion which has permitted them to bring about a greater Interchange of news about Inter-American af fairs, thus contributing to the mu tual knowledge of the peoples of this continent.1 i THOE GWP SHOWS j k j !c: (hn'U:m4h Iff )