2 -J T ITTl m,T VUOHlC&l r r. ETTOSS IUJ COOLS US mm I covered the waterfront" Mon day from Ferry-street to Division, Sam Simpson's immortal reference to the "Beautiful Willamette" ap ' plies only to the river in a state 'of nature. Man has touched it only to 'defile it. Now it is proposed to . add to the ugliness by locating a junkyard just south of the Salem end of the Inter-county bridge. No matter -if a board fence is - erected around the place, the ' in 'terior will be visible from the deck 'of the bridge, A tour of what or iginally ; was Salem's front yard 'chows that it is unsightly enough 'now without, compounding the dis grace with a junkyard. The original boat landing was at the foot of Trade street, now "thi site of the paper mill. Its lum--ber mill division (the did Spaul ding plant) ; extends down as far as . Court street. 1 Between"- Ferry 'and State are the piles of new sawn lumber, with a rail spur and loading dock by the riverside. Be .tween Court and Chemeketa is a log dump, where logs are rolled .from trucks down into the river. : Chemeketa street leads to the boat "landing, with some activity among small craft at the float. The gas company has about half a block, for its gas holder, warehouse and gas tanks. There are a few houses uid some open ground in the space between ' the ' gas plant and the highway bridge. t Between" the highway and rail road bridges is Water street, which parallels the river.- A row of old but comfortable and well-maintained houses front the street and the river, shaded by the. great ma ple trees, a sort of quiet eddy be hind the stream of commerce on Front and' Commercial streets. From Union to Division street the land is held chiefly in residential ownership." Under the railroad bridge at Union the city sewer was spewing a rich raspberry red (cannery waste) into the unlimpid river. Visible across the river from points above the highway bridge are i the used 1 car dumps that fringe the river on the (Continued on Editorial Page). Escaped Convict Cauglif; ge . One escapee of- the past week Was returned to the state peni tentiary here Monday and two .ether inmates ' of the institution made good their escapes. - Robert Clyde Dwigans, who dropped out of a gun gang work ing at the prison annex a week ago Monda y, captured, at the family home in Lane county' Sun day, was returned to the peniten tiary Monday morning. Trusties Robert Frazier, 27, and George G He n Graves, 29, both committed from Multnomah coun ty on charges of assault and rob bery while armed with a danger ous weapon, escaped at-approximately 2 pin. from fields of the annex where they were working although their disappearance was not discovered until late in the ; afternoon, officers : said, i r ' Graves, sent up "October J 25, 1930, was serving 15 years, Fra xier, committed in November, 1940 was serving two seven-year terms concurrently. , i Greeks Again at Thermopylae r ; JERUSALEM, Aug. 9.-(ffVHis-torie Thermopylae pass again was the scene of an important military exploit recently with Greek guer rillas destroying the -railway bridge there, causing a German military train with 25 i cars to plunge into -the . pass, . Greek ! re ports reaching here Monday i dis closed. - i - Germans : who survived f the plunge were slaughtered by: the guerrillas lying in ambush.- They salvaged ' : valuable : material i in cluding machine guns, these re ports said. " -' . Destruction of the bridge crip pled .communications between Salonika and Athens. . . Thermopylae pass is Chiefly fa mous for the stand made there by the Spartan; King Leonidas, 1 who was ' slaughtered in its defense along with most of his soldiers by the Persian; army of Xerxes in 480 EC Farm Marketings Increase Noted , WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.VPt- The agriculture department said today the income from farm mar- " ketir.gs plus government j pay k inents for the first half of. 1943 totaled $3,202,000,000 compared J with $815,000,000 for the same period last year. Dimout Tucs. . sunset 8 :23 7ed. gunrise 6:05 (Weather on p?ge 7) Two Lar NCIETY THX2D YEAR 12 Combined Sea, Land Batter Sicily Defense British Troops Mopping; Up South Slope of Etna . ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN German suicide troops recioled at Cape Orlando, 43 miles from seaborne and land attacks by Americans which overwhelmed the nazi mountain defenses on the northern Sicilian coast. ' , ' ' The San Agata-Cesaro line was obliterated and disintegration of all the Messina bridgehead was threatened" ' Trapped ; front and ' rear as the result (of a brilliant amphibious encirclement by doughboys from the Seventh army of Lt. Gen George S. Patton, jr., hundreds of Germans were captured in the rocky fortifications in the area of San Agata and San Fratello, five miles to the southwest. The size of this latest bag was not officially estimated, but the Americans a little more tnan a week ago rounded up 10,000 Ger mans and Italians by seizing the termini . of the San . Stefano- Nicosia road 'in a similar trap. British eighth army troops . were reported in late dispatches from the front to be only seven miles - soatbwest of the nasi base-1 at Randaxso . and Ameri cans,1 thrnstlng r eastward from Cesara were about It miles dis tant, j .: : ' (The" Algiers radio repoTted In broadcast heard in London by the Associated Press that the Brit ish eighth army ' was about nine miles from Riposot, half-way be tween Catania and Taormina on Sicily's east coast.) - The whole German defense system about the north slopes of Mount Etna, centered at the hill top town of ' Randazzo, was im periled." Allied aerial squadrons raked the axis holdings with bombs, shells and bullets on mission after mission, virtually unchallenged. Official announcements and press dispatches presented this picture of weekend operations by Gen. I Dwight D. Eisenhower's forces: ::" :- Men of Maj. Gen. Lucian Tru scbtf $ third division coupled a sea-borne flank attack from be hind the enemy lines with frontal pressure to capture the enemy fortress of San Fratello and San Agata, which had delayed the push ; eastward along the north coast from San Stefano. ' j Fifteen miles Inland, ether ; Americans slashed eight miles In straight line 14 miles by the winding, tortaoos and hea-i vily , mined road from Troina t drive the nasls eat ef Cesar,' Cesaro lies 14 miles west of Randazzo and its wreckage-clogged mountain pass which is the enemy's main avenue of retreat at the center. South of Cesaro were; Canadian and British units thrusting around Mount' Etna's base 'from Bronte. The foremost of : these was reported only 10 miles from Randazzo. Armor-supoprted British troops (Turn to Prge 2 Story G) j Officials Point Out Ways To Lessen Polio Spread As the total of infantile paraly sis cases in the Salem area re mained stationary at 15 Monday after; three days with i no addi tional reports of new. outbreak Ings of the disease, Marion coun ty health authorities -pointed out ways In which effects' of polio may j be lessened in both com munity and individuaT lives. ... ;V( At least . four persons suffering from; the paralysis have been tak en to Portland, where the Kenny treatment has been made avail able through funds from the Na tional Foundation f o r Infantile Paralysis, Inc and the crippled children's funds. Persons able to pay secure the same treatment as those receiving direct benefit of . the funds,' while training was provided doctors and nurses at institutes with fund J backing. Kenny-trained ; Dr Paul Noall, who is in direct supervision of polio cases receiving that treat ment in Portland, spoke Monday night at Salem General hospital to physicians of this area, ex Ty . ...... - - . Mi ES Yank,, Forces NORTH AFRICA, August 9-f) tonight on temporary defenses Messina strait, under combined US Recalls Ambassador Armour to Return From Argentina; Hull Won't Say Hovr Long : WASHINGTON, August 9 JF The recall of American Ambassa dor Norman Armour from his post in Argentina raised the question Monday night whether he would ever return to Buenos Aires, a cap ital which still maintains rela tiohs with the 'axis. 1 : Secretary of State Hull was non committal when the subject came up at his press conference today, 1 Asked why Armour was leaving his post, Hull said he was coming back to Washington, for conference or consultation ; concerning r all phases of the United States rela tions with lhat part of the western hemisphere and with special .ref erence to Argentine developments as they relate to the ; general : in ternational situation. j L - He was pressed for comment on reports that Armour's recall ' re flects American disappointment with the Ramirez regime, which promised closer cooperation with the other American republics when it ousted President Ramon S. Cas tillo last June but has continued to have diplomatic relations With the axis. Hull replied only that he thought that phase of the mat ter was "self-explanatory. I - . He added that he would leave it to his questioners to draw their own conclusion. ...... North African Mission Head i - Goes to London WASHINGTON, Aug. fr-iF) The state department announced today the appointment of Fred D. Koehler as: chief of the regional office at London for the office of foreign relief and : rehabilitation operations. . ?, yt.-' Heretofore Koehler has been chief of the North African mis sion of the Of fro, supervising re lief and rehabilitation operations in Tunisia,-Algeria and French Morocco. ' ' - Bombar-Dear Girl with most "seem and trimmest 'pursuit Job named tonight Read story page t. ' plaining how access to the crowd ed hospitals ( not filled with polio patients but" with others receiv ing care for other crippling ail ments) can be secured.. For the community as a whole. Dr. W. J, Stone, county health officer handed Tout some advice issued by the national .foundation: "Keep children away from large groups. Parents should reduce the number ' of associations f between children and other persons.' The policy should be one of staying at horn e. . Discourage : visiting and avoid parties, gatherings, crowds and travel It is the opinion " of medical authorities that tonsil operations ' should be delayed un til an outbreak of the disease is over. 1 . " "Don't become hysterical U cases occur in your neighborhood. The medical profession and , the health department will be using every ; known safeguard. ; Polio myelitis is a disease caused by a filterable virus. During an epi ': (Turn'to Page 2 Story A) Scdem. Orecjon. Tuesday Mamlnej, August MJD'(SrJ Troops Order in Italy After Bombings Germany Reported . To Agree to Return c Of Italian Soldiers By THOMAS F. HAWKINS BERN. Aug. 8.-iP-The Swiss telegraphic agency reported to day .that troops were used to halt the "desertion of ' factories' by workers in Genoa following Sat urday night's heavy RAF air raids which also blasted other Italian industrial centers at Turin and MUan; '- - ' me Cxenoa population "gener ally followed -the orders- of the government with discipline," due to the presence of the troops, the agency, reported from the Swiss border town of Chiasso. The dis patch added that "rapid and ef ficient intervention by the troots served to accomplish work on the regular schedule." - . The Gazetta Del i Popolo. was quoted as saying that German troops helped extinguish Genoa fires resulting from the raid. The editorial offices of the Corriere Delia Sera at Milan were hit by ; the British bombers, the dispatch said, and the roof of the lamed opera house La Scala was said to have, been struck bv 10 incendiary bombs, causing slight damage. . v . The disrupted electrical service of Milan was re-established - in some sections of the citv. An en damaged school there was ued to hce'thiS TiciheTess. Street car service- was, partially restored. Two planes were downed, falling in tne streets. v . . The - renewed air raids on northern Italy following the failure of the Badeglio govern ment to capitulate to the al lies, sparred strikes and uder tTouxti political opposition to the government. Socialists con tinued their efforts to bring abont a nationwide general strike,;. " . Meanwhile axis diplomatic circles reported that Germany had agreed that Italy could re turn, home all her troops which had been in the "fortress of Eu rope." This Includes troops in the Balkans. Those , already with drawing from France are being replaced by' German forces. . r: TbUs agreement presumably was effected d u r I n g the visit of Foreign Minister Ribbentrop to Italy last, week and confirmed at the subsequent conferences among Hitler and his war leaders. " If time and conditions permit all Italy's troops to return home. one great difficulty preventing (Turn to Page 2 Story E) Hop Wage Set At 3-Gent Top Three cents a pound was estab lished as the maximum price for hop picking, by vote of Marion and Polk county hop growers who met with '' W. E. Kimsey, state : labor commissioner, Monday night at' the Salem chamber , of commerce. This is an increase over the pre- vailmg 1942 price of 2 cents. although some growers , paid - S cents in that season. Any producer who intends, be cause of a poor yield or for other reasons, to offer a price in excess of this established maximum, will be . obligated to consult the labor commissioner before doing so, ac cording to a resolution reported to have been adopted unanimously. In setting this maximum price the growers took into considera tion the approximate earnings of bean and prune' pickers, and set tled upon a rate calculated to en able hop pickers to earn about the same amount per . dar but not more. The hop men pledged co operation to the bean and prune growers, declaring it their purpose not to entice harvesters' away from them by off ering higher wages, j There have been reports in Sa lem of .wage offers in excess of 3 cents a pound, and some grow ers at the meeting asked what should be done about such 'offers. No definite answer was provided. A minimum price, the other hand, was set for day labor in hop harvest, the figure being $7.50 per day or 75 cents per hour, y - Prune growers are scheduled to meet in .Dallas tonight and in Sa lem -Wednesday, night to discus! the "going wage" problem with the labor commissioner. Keep Price M 0 d Wcisliington , Watches Hitler Ousting Rumor By WADE WERNER WASHINGTON. Aug. S - UPi Made wary by previous tales of friction .4 between Adolf Hitler's political machine and Germany's muitary leaders, government i of ficials nevertheless showed inter est tonight in reports from Spain that Hitler is being shelved in fa- for of "the'militarr. " - .r. In the absence of olficial -back- in -for .word , from Madrid that ."powers of enormous magnitude" are 1 being given to Reichmarshal Herman Goering, there was a dis position among these authorities to await further information be fore believing .Hitler l has given way to military - triumvirate headed by Goering. : y ' 1 I Meantime, i OWI Director FJmr Davis called . the report ."pretty auDious," telling a press confer ence, mat no word of any such change had been given to the Ger man people and expressing a be lief that it would make little dif ference, anyhow, except that "we no longer would have the advan tage of Hitler's intuition." : To Recommend Timber Wage NEW YORK. Ausl S.-JPV-T. ivieicaiie. walling, aoininistrator oL the wage and hour and nubile contract division of the US de partment of .labor, - Monday an nounced appointment of a 24-man committee to recommend a min imum hourly wage rate for the logging, ; lumber and timber and related. products industries. " The committee headed bv George E. Osborne, of Stanford university, California, will inves tigate conditions in the industries and recommend to Administrator Walling the highest minimum wage , rate (above SO cents but not to exceed 40 cents) with due regard to economic and competi tive conditions in the industries. Walling said. Included on the committee for the employers was Georee Metz- ger, Eugene, Ore.; for the em ployes, J. E Fadling, Portland, Oregon. FDR Returns From Vacation WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.-UPh- Tanned by a week of northern Ontario - sunshine, : President Roosevelt plunged immediately Monday into the affairs of state and of war which apparently were also his vacation companions. ' : First announcement that the president bad taken Ma short va cation in Canada" c am e from presidential secretary Stephen Early at the White House. Mr. Roosevelt, the " statement -said, "has returned to Washington from short vacation on the north shore of Lake Huron near Mc Gregor and , Whitefish bays." . Then, almost simultaneously, came the announcement that the president had a luncheon engage ment' with Secretary of S t a t e Hull, a conference later with Gen eral George C Marshall," chief of (Turn -to Page 2 Story F) ) . Normandie NE WYORK, Aug. 9 The USS Lafayette, formerly the French liner Normandie, rose Monday night to an angle of '45 degrees the - position at c which engineers said actual salvage ope rations could beginv ;.y The 79,000-ton vessel, lying on her side since fire 'swept her at her pier a year and a half ago, had risen to an angle of 48.1 de grees Monday afternoon, then had slipped back slightly on an ebb tide, but lifted again' as the tide came in. " : - r-s .-' - Pumping 'operations j continued as the ship reached the 45 degree angle exactly halfway between vertical and horizontal. ' -Salvage officials said the work was progressing so smoothly that it might not be necessary to move the vessel out into the Hudson river to faiish the rihtLnj Job. 10. 1343 Committe No. US Reds Closing Encirclement Of Kharkov ; . Summer Kharkov ' Threatened as Hue 1 Nazi Forces Face Trap By EDWARD BALL Tuesday. Aug. 10.-(ff'J-Russian troops cutting in swiftly v from the north closed further their encircling grip on JUtarkov Monday, capturing poini 30 miles west of the big base ' and driving to within 12 miles north of it, and at the same time stepped iip their advance on Bryansk,' forcing the Germans 'in both areas to retreat with heavy losses. ZZT'V'r'l' The "red army was threatening to turn Kharkov' into a summer btaiwgraa as large numbers of Germans faced entrapment.' The soviet drive behind Kharkov was so swift that it seemed likely to trap at least some nazi forces even though ! (he Germans should be planning to evacuate as they have just done at Orel and Belgorod. A special Russian communique reported that the Russians had overrun Slatino, 12 miles north of Kharkov, and had taken Nikl- tovka, 30 miles due west of the city, ; , yfv.;r--y.A - . - Soviet ; planes . bombed troop trains and enemy military stores at the rail junction of Unecha, a town southwest, of Bryansk, the Moscow radio announced. -This raid apparently was' . designed to cut a feeder line into Bryansk as soviet Infaintrr- andT tank forces advanced overland. -t" - -sC? Moscow announced in the mid night, communique - today . that Russian. troops advancing on Bry- (Tum to Page 2 Story B) Woman Weeps For Child She Stole ALBANY, Aug. 9.-(Special- inrice-married and childless Catherine Earline Wriaht. 28. transplanted New York house wife, wept as she "sat in a hall way of the courthouse here Mon day night following her unsuc cessful fight for infant Judith Gurney she later admitted hav ing stolen. Slender, dark-haired and dark- eyed, Mrs. Wright is approximate ly 8 feet inches tall, wears glasses and , tonight was dressed in dark garments. ' I ' Curious onlookers specalated as te how she had managed to make the - yoang - army coaple : in whose home she lived at 1039 Moltnomah street, here, believe she was pregnant daring , the entire three months ef her rest- ' deuce in Oregon. , v. . t ' But they did believe it In fact, the story told to officers and re told here ' Was that they were apparently more cognizant of her condition" , than was Staff . Sgt. Jesse Wright, who .was reputedly surprised to learn on her arrival here that he was to become a father. ' -r: ' y- ;-- 'v. The Wrights and the other army (Turn to Page 2 Story D) 5c XI Arrow roLils ta the crib fr era uLkh' two-day -old Judith Gurney was ' rsesiy AP Creroa iit flzl Mm Co ' Albany District Attorney Reports Baby Positively Identified by ALBANY, Ore., August 9-&T-Police tonight found the mis sing Judith Gurney, kidnapped from. the Albany hospital last "f8? V?.w5l..'n,rBay sergeanty wife on a child-steal-ing charge.' , V: V " V ' -' . ' District Attorney Harlow Weinrick said the woman, Mrs. Cath erine Wright, 26, confessed the kidnapping late tonight after hours of steadfastly denying the charge. , . . i The baby, in good health and'apparently well cared for in the six days "since she disappeared from a hospital crib, was re- . T . Smiles Again it" A I L: . it. 4 Eight-year-old Marlene Gurney, shewn here with her mother in a picture taken months before Baby Sister Judith was abducted from her. Albany hospital crib, may not -have understood the tragedy which shadowed . her family . the past week,- bat she will anderstand the Joy that Is theirs today, newsmen ef this sector believe. The sweet face and gracious manners of the Garneys older daughter won the hearts of men and women sent te the Linn eoanty seat to cover an incident they feared might end only In grief or life long mystery. Marlene, they said, was precocious bat was too yoang to realise all of the heartbreak .connected with the Vale Area to Have - Conservation Project WASHINGTON, August 9 -VP) The J reclamation service has ap proved the 5000-acre Bully Crek water conservation project in Ore gon's Vale area, the office of Sen ator Holman (R-Ore.) said Mon day, but presidential approval is now needed. Crib Where Baby Was Cerrice. riedWomanii Footprints turned to , the parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Gurney. The mother, resting home, cried with joy, and Gurney, a labor union official exclaimed: "Oh boy, are we happy. ,Weinrick haidt Mrs. Wright had completely fooled her husband, Sgt. Jesse Wright of nearby Camp Adair, Into believing the child was hers. . .. . , J, . ' Mrs. Wright feigned pregnancy during the infrequent leaves of her husband, and told neighbors ten days ago she expected birth any moment, Weinrick said. One neighbor, Mrs. Robert Wheaton, . told a reporter Mrs. Wright said eight days ago she was going to the hospital to have a baby.' The next day . she . ex plained her labor 'hadn't started,. but she expected to go - to the hospital, again that night, Mrs. Wheaton said. The following day she was home with the baby, explaining to in credulous neighbors that she had an easy birth and was allowed home because of the shortage of hospital beds, Weinrick said. - Meanwhile a widespread search wag. launched' for thet:ity;.two days old when kidnaped, but it was not until late today that a suspicious neighbor reported see ing diapers on Mrs. Wright's clothesline. Investigation and the arrest followed. Weinrick said he was convinced the husband knew nothing of the kidnaping. The husband was held in technical custody for the mili tary police and was lodged in the Linn county jail tonight. Wein rick said he would call on him as material witness. The district attorney said the baby had been positively identi fied from footprints and by a hos pital bracelet, bearing the name Gurney," found in the Wright home, . six blocks from the hospital.:,- j. : Weinrick said the actual ar rest was made by City Police man R. L. Chandler, who saw Mrs. Wriht leave her home to night shortly after police had knocked at her. door without response. Chandler caught the woman within a block just as she was about to enter an . automobile where her husband and the baby waited, Weinrick said. At Chandler's insistence they drove to the hospital where nurses failed to verify her story, the dis- ' trjet attorney continued. She made no objection to a physical examination, and doc-, tors reported that she had not given birth recently, Weinrick added. .-: .!,.';: ! The child, daughter of B. W. Gurney, a labor union official . here, disappeared In the early (Turn to Page 2 Story C) Stolen taken shortly after mi .t last -1