PAG- TWO Hi OrXiOtl CTArrM."!. Cilsa, C.-f;ca. Cdrrj Hciri:?. Aest c i::3 Diluting Eum OdorsOne Aim 'IriSnellPlaii r - B (Continued from Page 1) B . Of enne tome ef that . from the - federal government tad ' uliu fram fh aabbIIm. - fflnstraies the bulk f theeldage ..usbtjLaeaflnxBefatv problem. N , , Butter hew it's cat, the state . won't 1m nhlst 1a enrrv lids laaul- along with the remainder ef Us , Mirations, wlthont that Uq Yet there is nothing to preyent . a simple amendment which 1 will , Joss the liquor ; revenue into I the general fundA where it and its odor will be diluted, and (then 'provide for withdrawing ; the old age assistance and other welfare , funds out of the general fund wunout rexerence to - ltt ; source. . though the skeptical may call it just a political "ouL" there's an other way of looking at it j Just because the need for old age as : sistance funds and the opportuni ty to raise funds through a liquor monopoly developed 'almost sim ultaneously, was that any; Just reason for. tying them . together? lVi antwa anVrvrirvi ia1-v la eA " mw p i mm ww w wm w avwai j am Gov. SnelTs proposal has the additional merit that it will elim . inate uncertainty as to the; ade quacy of public " welfare funds. The uncertainty will be trans ferred to the condition of the gen eral fund, but it will be able to . weather' the storms, with some what less difficulty. Chances are there will be less excuse to holler - "special session' every three months. Oil thoHOl lEFROltT Cy DATTL CXHLD3 ' Lee Moody. 653 North-, High street, is a permanent shut-in be cause of arthritis, hut Jie u not a shutout, by any means, f or - his door is open to the people he loves to meet . - "'"f Vs --YX'XfXM' fir'fX 'RwcMttlv he has found a new way to become acquainted with new ' persons (or, at least, tnose new 5 to him!)--he is registering. hop pickers from Salem and vi cinity .to work at Golden Gate hop ranch (formerly Wigrich).- Sometimes he meets the would-; b workers f over the telephone; sometimes they go to his bedside. Frankly, the grin shown in the picture here was on Lee's face long before the chance to ao mis work was offered nuri by Louis Barton, labor relations man with the big ranch. But I am told that now It is a wider smile and that nart of the ioy in his work lies in the fact that he is aiding the war effort by , helping with the harvest of a vital crop. aa in The Statesman have k r n ii f h t excellent results. Lee says. Lee is doing a fine job of securing the needed pickers, says Barton. And all of Salem says, I mm it that all wars are not won on the battlefields. Russians Drive On Kharkov E (Continued from Page 1) E Appeal Voiced By Red Cross tf -: .,. . i j ... GENEVA, Switzerland, Aug. 7 (JP) The international 'committee of the Red . Cross has appealed to warring nations to respect the in dividual's - claim . to "justice and . protection from arbitrary meas ures" and to renounce unwarrant ed destruction and "methods of warfare which are prohibited by international, law.? j Dated July 24 and released to day, the message said: . "The international committee, of the Red Cross, confronted by hor rors, distress and injustice result-' ing from war, has maintained as hitherto that it was their consis tent duty to testify to their moral position and desire to "serve' by deeds rather than words." BombaiDear Decision Will Be Told Tuesday -Eye-Music by the cavalry band will be a feature of the program Tues day night at. the Grand theatre, when the titles of "Miss Bombar Deari "girl with the most zoom" and "neatest pursuit jobT are --. awarded to three Salem young women as T5ombardierV goes on the screen for its final showing 1 at that theatre here. ,: Not only Tuesday night, but ; tonight and Monday, as well,-the i military band which has appeared . on numerous occasions here, will t play at the Grand, Chief Warrant ', Officer Marion C. Walker, direc-;- tor, announced Saturday Brazilian Ship . Torpedoed Sunk RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug. 7-() : The steamer Bage, largest Brazil ian merchant ship, was torpedoed and sunk off the state of Sergipe the night of July 31, it, was 'an nounced officially Saturday night, and persons missing were report : ed to range from 4- to 7i. '. The s Brazilian n e w s agency Agenda Nadonal quoted the ra dio operator oi the vesseV as say ing it -carried -20 passengers and a crew of 105. The dispatch, sent from Aracaju, capital of Sergipe state, said the- police' department . there had recorded 84 , survivors, leaving 41 - unaccounted for. . ,' Xarlier reports said' the "Bage was carrying ?129 passengers, "---of whom 41 were missing, and a crew of 102. Women and children were among the passengers. V The attack occurred at p. m. July 31, the ship being hit by a torpedo. It sank quickly1. - " -, th annroaches to Kharkov yes terday by ousting the Germans from Graivoron and Syennoe, 32 miles northwest of Kharkov. These advances cut tne nnponaraiuMr kov-Bryansk line. : ..1n I capturing - Borisovka, 43 miles northwest of Kharkov, the red army encircled a consiueraDie number of German . troops and then wiped them " ou V said the midnight communique, recorded by the soviet monitor; " in one eneaeemeht a tank unit killed 800 Germans, disabled or destroyed 10 German tanks, took 150 war f prisoners'; and captured 60 trucks and 16 big guns. . Above 'the Ukraine. Bryansk was menaced by seviet" troops spilling through J the - gap at i OreL The eommunique said that in the past few days they have kiUed at least 4tt Germans. Gains of seven miles ' were made during the day and the red -army was believed to be within 30 miles of Bryansk, hinge; of the German central and southern'fronts. Graivoron, like-lochev, is on the Kharkov-Bryanik railway, and its -capture indicated the Russians were, cutting, a wide swath after their t earlier brak through at Belgorod on a 43-mile front .The sweep west aad seeth west of Orel was se swift today that 108 villages were wrested frem the Germans. . 7 The bulletin, recorded by the soviet monitor, said the Russians caDtured Shamardino. -10 miles west of Orel, GnezdUovo, 39 miles to the southwest and the railway station of Stakhanskaya five miles to the south. The nazi-controlled Paris, radio, in a I broadcast recorded 1 by the Associated Press, said the Russians were pouring wave upon wave of massed tank forces - through the break at Orel as they slashed to the west and southwest. - .-, Friday, the special - bulletin said, Russian troops on all fronts disabled or destroyed 43 German tanks, and 80 enemy planes were brought down. "' Realty Group Asks Easing - , Of ? Rent Control EUGENE, Ore, Aug. 7" -Pr The j Oregon association of real estate boards "closed the annual convention here today, after ac cepting a resolution"' asking con gress to ease OPA rent control rules. ' f t lz- :: -V' t- " William W. Bai-endrickV 1 32, Portland, - was elected president R. C. Dale, Klamath , Falls, was elected a vice-president Direc tors ? included ;H, "Baker, Grants Pass; E. VC Chilcotte, Klamath Falls; Leo NV Childs, Sa lem;! Roy C Young. Roseburg. Willlue at Home TalW 'No Polities' RUSHVILLi; Ind, Aug.! 7-ff) A source close to Wendell L. Will kie said Saturday night the 1840 republican .presidential nominee's conferences at his RushvQle home this week were "just good, old fashioned, over-the -fence talks and no political decisions - were reached.'' ' - WuHde steadfastly declined to comment on Oie conference, which . ended last nigfit - W Eight republican "state national committeemen were Willkies guests. They w e r e ' jl Kenneth Bradley -of Connecticut Robert Burroughs of Hew . Hampshire, Harvey Jewett of South Dakota, Sinclair Weeks of Massachusetti, . Ralph Cake of Oregon, 'Wilson i Williams of Georgia, Mrs. Grace Reynolds of Indiana and Freder ick Baker of Washington. All left for their homes, last i nightr .,; - Trbina Falls To Yanki Hands C (Continued from Page 1) C coastal sector to the north, naval units continue to coopeateJ 't i Troina fell early. Friday morn ing. - - U.;--j.i The mountain .fortress town fell before ,a withering artillery bar rage - and. infantry- charges,- -posing the First division for a thrust to Randarzo. 20 miles east - ? War-sick Italian; troops; in Bi ancavilla, 16 miles below Troina and 15 miles northwest of Cata nia, hoisted white flags to sur render to British Eighth army troops yesterday ; after a heavy air attack; Associated Press Cor respondent Joseph Morton report ed from the field. r ,--. " Biaacavina is ealy two miles . from the key com m nn Icatlons center of Adrane, on the read skirting Mt Etna U the west where the Germans are retreat- - Allied planes shattered the last axis escape port of Messina with 350 tons of bombs in an unpre cedented raid, and smashed com munications in a growing aerial offensive such as blasted the way to victory in the final days in Tunisia. The ' east coast retreat road to Messina was again ripped by British naval shells, j American naval and military units have occupied the little vol canic island of Ustica, 40 miles north of Palermo in the Tyrrhen ian sea, headquarters also report ed. ; No Italians are fighting any where on the front, reports said, but the nazis are resisting desper ately, slowing the allied advance to a carpet of demolitions, mines and ; booby . traps. .Nine bridges were blown up on a 12-mile stretch of road by Germans falling back before the Americans. ' J,,;v Troina the forward screen pro tecting the German retreat from the south on the road west of Mt Etna capitulated to Allen's . men after a creeping artillery barrage and overwhelming air attacks fer reted out and destroyed the ma chinegun and mortar nests of the elite . German 29th motorized di vision, killing many of the nazis. It was a five-day battle of the most, savage fighting the Ameri cans have encountered, and it took three days of concentrated fire power to destroy the enemy de fenses on the mile-high positions. (Premature field reports on Tuesday had said Troina was tak en.) v i - .v.i- r- i-.; . Peesfble ebjectlves now ahead of the Americans are Bronte, 12 miles east ef Troina, Cesare' eight miles northeast and Raa darso. Troina's inhabitants were bitter against the German. - 'British Eighth army forces swung up five miles from Paterno to seize Biancavilla, -and presum ably were pressing the last two miles to Adrano. This town also is threatened by Canadians -and British from the west There were no reports of the progress of American - troops on the. north coast, or British forces pushing up the east coast ; - About .100 Italian soldiers and sailors were captured at Stica, and 216 Italian civilian prisoners were found on the island used as a fas cist penal settlement The Ger mans had abandoned the isle, two miles Ions and a mile wide, on July 1L and many civilians were destitute and lacking water. Besides pounding ? the eastern Sicilian coastal road. . near Taor- mina, - British warships patrolled the eastern ' waters I. and , mine sweepers began clearing the chan nel 'into Catania. American de stroyers and patrol torpedo boats ranged the . waters about : north eastern Sicily seeking to break up evacuation attempts by sea. Canadian '! Wellingtons raided Naples to prevent help from there to the Sicilian garrison, and one pilot said there were so many fires in Napier last night .that he first mistook the city for Mt! Vesuvius and "couldnt tell the difference until we got over the target area.' Blockbusters added : anew to the fearful wreckage in the port The many hundreds of missions flown yesterday cost eight allied planes. -.. Yoiing Favors US Mffltary, Rule of "Japan A (Continued from Pace 1) A maintained, telling of ' captured motion pictures - showing tortures designed to make other civilians accept their Jap. conquerors yoke. With Arthur Wilson, KSLM news commentator; and world traveler, he discussed the Japa nese economic background for the war, the number of shipbuilding ports, the quantities of supplies obtained from the United States prior to December, 1941. Total of bond and stamp sales made during: the Saturday -night program was not tallied, although sales amounting to 33000 were re ported at one time. ? ' j;. ':i-tC-': Women in quaint old-fashioned dresses, clutching pitchers as re minders, o f the- Revolutionary service of Molly Pitcher and a means of raising war stamp and bond sales, said business was good. During the day, their; stamp sales alone" had mounted ' into the thousands' of dollars and the day's totals 4 6t KaSi and stamp - sales were estimated at $5000 by Mrs. Admiral ;.TaEib Glob e trategy D (Continued from Page 1) D launching this fall of a campaign to drive the Japanese out of Bur ma and reopen the Burma road. At present all supplies to China move by air from India.) Walter Spaulding; chairman, . 'The cavalry Jband stationed tn this area, directed by, Chief War rant . Officer. Marion ; C. X Walter, provided the music Mor the eve ning bond rally.; King, commander in chief tf the United States fleet and a member of the highest aded war councils, discussed the fundamentals of pre sent stratejy tn an interview with wire service reporters regularly as Signed to the navy. The conference was requested by .the newsmen because this is the anniversary of the landings on Guadalcanal, start of the first American offensive of the -war. :V7-! 'X ; 'X- X"'tX-'l While the main effort of 4he al lies has been directed against Ger many and Italy, the admiral -explained to them. Pacific operations thus far are rather more' than what are commonly called holding operations.': He said this was true ''because we have a general plan' Swiss A: Svjajr -m v A ISTAIJDUL, Auj.- 7 HD George Klosseivanov, former Bul garian premier, was reported Cat 'vxdaj to have teeii summoned from virtual, exile as minister to Switzerland to confer with King Doris at Sofia. It was believed here that the former premier may soon replace the pro-axis Bogd&n and. begin negotiations with the allies. , whereby we maintain unremitting pressure on thejapanese wherever theymay begot at with the means available.'" ; . Too Late to Qasaif y LOST: Lady's Grucn wrist watch. R4Fwaid. Return to worm's star. 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