Three More Jap Vessels Sunt .. C (Continued from. Page DC '"'a'fter losing three warships and ' Probably a fourth. ' -v Two Avengers and two Mitch -ertls failed to return 4 rem the vnuuhing attack. , r- . " Bombs Lash Opposing " ; Ends of Jap Defense ' . . ' By tbc ' Assoc U ted Ytcaa " Two of' the longest bombing flights' ever made 1 have brought (' -Japanese defense positions under ''pressure in the Kurile islands of "-the Norm Pacific ana at ceieoes ' Island in the Dutch - East Indies, Nearly 4000 miles to the soutn. The first American raid against v i,the northern Japanese Islands was t announced Tuesday Tithe navy department along with a. disclosure ...that it is planning for the war against Japan to last until 1949. . i Bis American Liberators: struck t Paramushiro , In the .Kurile is . , lands on Monday, just a day .after - mother Liberators .bombed ceieDea 4a a 2000-mile round-trip tugni from Australia. . . The Norm Pacific! flight appar ently started from :! Amchitka or aome other American base in we s- western Aleutian islands. Para- xnushiro is 861 nautical br 897 land mil, from there. If the raid Started from Amchitka it would have required a round trip flight of almost 2000 rnfles. - :' ' In long distance bombing attacks the two flights rank secona only to the 2400-mile round trip bomb ing of Wake island by craft based 0Jn Hawaii. Both distances are al Lmast double the London 4e Berlin U mileajce. . Paramushiro is at the northern r end of the Kurile chain about 1200 'miles north of Tokyo. A n a vy - sDokesman said clear weather en abled the pilots to smash' at their .targets with precision. The island .: j usually log-bound like the Aleu tian. A number of fires were ob ' ' served and near hits were scored : on ships. I,- The northern tip of Paramu- .ihiro, where the military positions it 'are reported to be, is separated by '; strait from Snumushu ; island, ' 'which is just a few miles south of ' the Russian Kamchatka peninsula. Paramushiro is the Japanese base that lies astride of the Russian supply route from the Uni ted States. " Corres Tells Lesson Of By JOHN GUNTHER Xsprascnt. Combined American Press (Distributed by ths Associated Press) HEADQUARTERS OF 1 STH ARMY . GROUP-(Delayed)-Lieut Gen. Andrew McNaughton, com- xnander-in-chief of the Canadian army, visiting here today, told me the chief lesson of the Sicilian landings is the evidence they pro vide that she allies, are now ca pable of striking with tremendous efficiency and force on any front (It was announced -officially at allied headquarters in North Af rica Tuesday night that Gen. Mc Naughton had been to the Sicilian front and had returned to North Africa; Gunther's dispatch carried no date.) .- : This correspondent, who is the only American newspaper man at tached to this advance headquar ters, got a sharp impression that the veteran Canadian general spoke with Japan in mind. In fact McNaughton said our invasion of Europe, begun so auspiciously by the Sicilian operation, is certain to damage the morale of the Jap anese as well as the Germans and Julians, since the Japs now know we can " marshal overwhelming pressure to bear on any place, at any time, from the four corners of the earth.' . - J- Early Oregon . Resident Dies PORTLAND, Ore., July 20flP) Mrs. Julia Hall Powell, 83, early resident of Oregon, died here Tuesday. She came to Oregon in 1879, settling at Silverton. . Surviving are two sisters. Mrs. Agnes Jones, Marquam, and Mrs. Roma I Hunter, Salem, and four children. Funeral services will be held in Portland and Woodburn Thursday with burial at Wood burn. ' : ' pondent Sicily I Two Big ITflTljT Tonight & Feature . fX itit I I IMij Thursday i YOU'LL C GHATCFUL YCJ if i y ; : j , J J '(b . i .... . .Kni Cartoon : . fw;-ri! srrrrr 7-?;'"; ' 1 -'pg J iiiiiii 1 1 ii .i iiwsaBaasawsgBsoMaBi, Yanks Form Human Chain to 4 KV-". r: f r r ft. " ? - New Guinea depot aflaxae Working against a spectacular background of smoke and flame, American - soldiers form a Sanaa chain as blase caused by Jap Incendiary Astoria Fire Razes 1 Block E (Continued from Page 1) K blaze, and the coast guard blocked off . the whole section which,, was littered with 15,000 feet of hose, Coast guardsmen forced resi dents of neighboring districts to evacuate their homes, held them from the danger zone at gunpoint, and then removed household equipment from the endangered buildings, Piling the streets high with furniture, bathtubs and dios. !--';-; . - . Homeowners in a four-block radius used hoses to put out roof fires started by flying embers. The buildings destroyed includ ed the five-story Hannula hotel, a landmark of the Finnish dis trict, the Lopakka rooming house, and several large buildings di vided into flats. The 'western end of the city is comprised largely of a long-established Finnish colony, many of whom : have been engaged for years In off-shore fishing. Jphn i Lopakka,' owner of the jdaUta . rooming house, saved $10,000 in." cash entrusted to his safe-keeping by- tenants. He wrapped the bills in-sheets, dashed from the doomed . build ing, and left the - money with nearby merchant. . It was the worst -Astoria fire since the December 8, 1922, con flagration hat destroyed -virtually the entire-, business - district ' at loss of more than-$11,000,000. The fire raged - for blocks, sweeping under the pilings on which the district then was built The - district now has been re built into a modern, fire-proof business section. The western end of town, however, is. old and largely , of wooden construction. The homeless were finding shel ter all over the city Tuesday night A Finnish steam bath house pro prietor opened, the doors of his establishment for 25. The USO pavilion took in many, and others found lodging with private fami lies. British Boys To Mine Coal LONDON, July 20-Py-Ernest Bevin, minister of labor, told a meeting of the Blackpool Mine Workers federation Tuesday that 8 to : 18-year-old boys must go into the mines to maintain war- essential coal production. . His announcement that Britain must call the youth - to the " pits ust as though drafting them for the armed services appeared to be the newest-phase of a government solution of the' urgent war-time problem of lagging coal produc tion and an increasing . shortage of miners. Nary Declines Offer NEW YORK, July 20.-jPThe navy has declined the offer of James C Petrillo, president of the American Federation of Musicians, to make records free for sailors if t were considered necessary for morale, he disclosed Tuesday. they remove precious oU drams while ethers seek to Quench the fierce bombs, IIN photo. ; ONtbeHOUEFRONT BT I3AESL CIELD3 He-was only 17 years old and an almost perfect physical spec! men, and ' when he was rejected for enlistment- in. t h e 4 marines there was genuine bitterness in his cup, says Sgt Herman Doney, Salem marine, recruiter, who re layed the story of this Willamette valley boy to us. , Reason for -rejection was the fact that the hero of this column gave as his occupation "farming.1 The marines will not accept any man engaged in producing . food for the war effort So the lad returned i to his father's farm near AumsviUe to continue to milk eight cows a day and to assist in raising 2000 chickens. He: likes farming and before bis rejection - he had told Doney that : he hoped to come through the war alive, to return to the task he. was leaving. But today: he -carries a greater burden than the pails of milk, the bale of hay, the chickenfeed. For with him ' wherever f he goes in his home community is the heavy echo of the word "patriotic" neighbors ' are calling, him and that word Is "slacker." So, he has vowed as - soon as he is. 18 to run away from the farm to enter some other form of work and to try again to enlist in his nation's armed service. - He is young and to . face-the neighbors whose own sons have risked their lives' or others draw ing down .good salaries - in the shipyards is to him more .fright ening than to walk , through ma chine gun fire. Perhaps, oner ol the gifts h will receive-on that 18th birth day, which Is now only a few months distant, will be under standing. ' And he - will know that to give one's life sometimes means living it in unhappy surroundings just as surely as it means laying down one's body for a - country or ; a set of Ideals. As for:: the neighbors, they are, of course. representative of that great cross- section that does not know the meaning of the ideals for which their own sons .fight nor stop to realize that for those who bear guns there must be those who feed the chickens and milk the cows. Goyette Rites Slated Sunday . SILVERTON Funeral services for Joe Goyette, 60, . who died Sunday while at Bay Ocean dig ging, clams, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday from the '2 k m a n chapel. Alr-Condltloned Cool TODAY AND TOURS. rxzz.si av rr -Pins- A HHarioas Comedy Yanks Ahoy" TVCIUm Tracy Joe Sawyer COSIING FRIDAY YOU'LL face death in a depth-bombed submarine! YOU'LL .., ashore with a shoot-'em-cp Com mands crew! . , hunt the secret' Nazi- weapon . , the mys tery Q-boat! , HUM":! PJ aV"tw-. " Save Oil Brums J Catholics Deplore Raid A (Continued from Page 1) A Press, called the news "grievous tidings - indeed1" and" suggested that efforts be made to have Rome declared an open city. Britain VI s c o u n t Fitfalan, Catholic nobleman,- asked in the house of lords whether the bomb ing had been necessary and whether damage bad been to cul tural or religious buildings. The leader of the house, Viscount Cranborne, replied, only that 'no detailed information was avail able. United States The most Rev. Edward Mooney, archbishop of Detroit and ' chairman of the ad ministrative board of the Nation al Catholic Welfare conference, expressed "surprise and regret" but said the- Italian government could have made- the bombing unnecessary. But from bomb-pocked - Malta came' another type- of comment Under chalked signs of "bomb Rome" on the walls - of buildings of this much bombed island ap peared a postscript: .... "Thanks."" Axis Speeds , Reinforcement To Dodecanese IZMIR, Turkey, July lOHJPf A new German brigade was re ported Tuesday moving down the Aegean sea in the direction of the Dodecanese islands. The , first unitsof 7 the brigade, which was reported to Include all battle elements, were said to have reached Rhodes on the Dodeca- The reinforcement of the Italian Dodecanese islands in the eastern Mediterranean Indicated that the axis might fear a new allied as sault from large allied armies re ported stationed in the Levant or perhaps a revolt of the Italian garrisons there.... . Draft Violator Is Sentenced PORTLAND, Ore- July 20 -C(P) A federal court jury Tuesday con victed Howard M. Agan, 19, a re ligious sect member, of violating the selective service act , no zauea to report to a con scientious objectors', camp as or dered by his Woodburn draft board. Tc t that mrj e-'CT Box Office Opea C: JOEE. BROWN 14 ; L J i V -J'' t ' ; mi H i M i i Ansrieaiis-Aii: To fll S:cily; B (Continued from Papa 1) B Agrigento, front dispatches said. Other units already about ZO miles, inland bore a more danger ous threaV aiming at Sicily's cen tral lifelines. From captured Cal- tanissetta, US troops with Cana dian ': forces are throwing - a r pin cers upon Enna, key . of the isr land s inner defense astride main highways:. and railroads east .and west The Americans also - may be thrusting 'northwest, toward Palermo only CO airline miles dis tant on the northwest coast'' .' Central (Canadian), sector: Dri ving- north of Piazza Armerina upon Enna,- 'c a n a d 1 a n troops struck strong opposition from the German 15th armored division. but "continue ' to fight their way forward." Eastern (British) : sector: Qui side the Ver gates, to Catania, waves of desparate German, tank attacks were blasted on the rolling plains with heavy losses to the nazl units, including the Goering g r e n a d ier regiment, parachute troops and infantry. The famous British Eighth army Is "gathering strength and arm ored1 patrols are probing the de fenses,'" said headquarters, end observers here said Montgomery apparently . was getting a ,' firm grip on Catania plain as a spring' board for a gigantic jump against Messina. .. The communique's wording in dicated that the . methodical, tho rough Montgomery was readying a typical-crusher assault by tanks; artillery and Infantry. His ob jective would: be not only the battered ' seaport of Catania only three miles ahead of him, but a pell-mell ; rush 50 miles up the coast ' toMessina, some military quarters said. - The Germans were fighting as though: with the realization that on ! this battle depended the fate of Sicily. Catania is the last great natural stronghold below Messina. Italian War Prisoner Flees OGDEN, Utah, July Yo-VThe Weber county sheriffs -office said Tuesday night an Italian prisoner, of war had escaped from the Og den internment camp. It was the first escape reported at the camp. Sheriff's officers said the man was 28 years old, 5 feet 8 Inches tall, weighed 159 pounds and had black hair. He wore a blue shirt and, trousers marked, with, the large white T PW" symbol, mean ing prisoner of war. t Ramp to Be Feted On 93rd Birthday BROOKS B. JT. Ramp , of Brooks will be 92 next Friday. A picnic will be held in honor of the occasion .at. the Brooks school on Friday July 23. Refreshments will Deserved. Slzxh Tciiy d 1 ..j: f j, ., ' i ';' 11 liiUlS MmW L Remember the stony hearted Raven of Thia Gun for nire and the death-on-rats gcniaan of The GXzsa Key? Well, Set set for new thrills because that LadTs oa the loose again . . . in a picture all his own and he's better than ever!' V I V,' -- 4 ' ' -. PLUS C0T.IP ANION FEATURE f , Shcchonc: SiitrZ Annual fSun Bance9 FOT I1ALL. lZh, Jcly 3 (T)- raist-streaked redmea cf the Eaanack and Shoshone In dian tribes responded to the thudding beat ef the tom-toms to begin at sundown Tuesday xught their annual sun dance. Around skull-topped poles at Eannatk creek 'and Bnf Isle Lodges on the Fort Hall reser vation, tLe Jtndlans began their thjree-day shuffling' ordeal that they believe will assure Csera good health during the eemiag year.-:. - ZZlddle-aged men and a few sqmaws participated, . replacing' the usaal yeothf ol bucks who tiis year., are la the military . service ef their eoantry. Conley Takes 6-7eek lieave " Civil Defense Post To Be Vacated for deeded' Vacation - A six-weeks leave from " his duties as Marion county civilian art Oil. .mV n w ley by,:the;;; executive coarndttee of thcrvflian dfni Thm mtm w.. t.v. ,.nt representatives announced Tues- more time to devote to his home and to be with his wife who Is at Salem Deaconess hospital, where she was brought the past week- end following a harvest field ac - ddent Helpin with the Jbaying uk uciu u znexioa nrar ui coast, ar. j-o a i a UZI feTfc K ... JJl i!Lf WM ihf SntSf S ESSSi S rv.rT :rrr civilian defense offices . here, in ZZy.rZ ZTt, T iTiT &JVLmJZ u jtuaii inuuuus, taxuu vycucu p. m. Tuesdays ahd Thursdays, members ' of the CD staff an- nounced yesterday. FR Deplores Raee Riots WASHINGTON, July ZQ.-&r- President Roosevelt has asked the attorney general and heads of sev eral J other government - agencies to give- special attention to the problem" of race riots in this country. .- The president's action was dis closed in a letter to Rep. Marc antonio (AL-NY) who had written the chief executive about riots in Beaumont, Texas, and Detroit P. IL - 2 Ilib! :' v ' : ' "' " '' m ALi DODO I Helen Vallicr "9 : I J .1. f If - M 9 P (Conticugd-' from, rage : 1) D was taken in. an advance north of Orel which , taw '?, ;G srmans killed, and .23.,. enemy tsiJis. dis abled, the midnrc-t rxrnr?iuniqpie said, and ' the harried Germans were driven out of -several strong ly rfortmed-towns :;east of pre! af- ter tna Red army forces smashed across a stream to hammer at the nazi (editions.' , The .-Jlussians ', said '-. they de stroyed about a regiment of ene my. Infantry, destroyed, or disabled sj: German ,tanks-- and vaptured Jarjfe quantities - of . yrs materials xrpa Uie . uermans, - ciestroyed 13 tanks and Z2 gusv. ar: i-took a great number of prisoners in-an other sector , -. w.'; ' . ;" 'South of Orel, our troops, over coming stubborn enemy resistance, continued to 'advance," the war I bulletin declared, with the Ger mans losing more than 1000 offi cers and men killed and wounded In futile counterattacks. 7 Another 34 German tanks and 18. gun batteries- were destroyed I and more prisoners were taken in the fighting south of Orel, it was! said. ' - . Offering more detail on the Sov-! let thrust In the Belgorod area. Moscow said 400 Germans were killed and 17 tanks - and three i 118 suns were disabled. 'W -f iS?? .,ou te I miles were recorded in the north i Or sector, it was declared, bring- IJSJi R? fams to trom " w misa "env. J : "V Ppriivian Opa ItYlclll Vfit5 - r o - JrriCeS Set ""A, Peru, July 20.-ff)-A new Peru-American agreement Peruvian, mineral product. ,was ined Tuesday afternoon by' W- nnce Minister Julio East and American Ambassador Henry R. Norweb. " foUow toiilar agreement "overall metals and mineral, agreement- which was I gQ( Jq 1942. Fresh Fish Price li. j WASHINGTON. July. 20 Maximum retail prices, on fresh fish were prescribed Tuesday by the office of price administration in an action interpreted by some officials as an effort to. end the "strike" of many fishermen. tdj? n , N0T7 SHQCKING HUNDREDS r Defeat IS ONLY MOMENTARY THEN ; The White Heat of Revenge! The Bitter Vow of Freedom Loving People Who Refuse to Be , . conquered mm u i- i- . :a s&et 6e siest exdSaa efvaa-; : rere of the war tie tree story af . tW bmss - end wiw who LZaS r - - ICZP T,2 tVrZI . i. r ' f s Mm0 - -I Jl rugf sj sir tK"asr V v . t&V ''f ' ,. .---aL u I -T . "". - n 9 m. ' X m mm ,r 7 0" rcr.TL.?;r, c.-s j; - V , Crval Yclcn. Cr;r t ccrr.'.y war bend cr.ilrcr.sn, tz:zs ti Tcrt Ircd Tczzlxr ti iwif? a t trlrt DavlJ Eccles,' iliia hand cLilr- man. was en hand to see he did a good Jsb. . - -ii ;1Tokom donned a. white wl?gs , uniform ' and,' ' witnessed 'by 'a" victory." center crowd," give'" a . downtown black a good gclrg- . ever.-. V,1, ' It was 'the result- of a water that Grant county wocll not fsimi ilj Jane bead crcta. If the qaota had been filled, Eccles woolJ -have goao to Canyon City to milk a cow. v. r -r . i etwiesi nssrssst t J i : -:i v.. .! L r. , v. : - . i j v.--' "i -1