The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 29, 1943, Page 1, Image 1

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    v:
. - Beans,' most of them, are In the
bag. The season is about finished;
and it was in many ways dis
, appointing. Groweis will not show
as large earnings is might be ex
pected front the prices received.
Costs were high;
: of children were
where platoons
used picking
would run up
as much as the
and transportation
to 3Hc a pound -4
beans themselves-
brought a few
years ago. Canneries had their
difficulties : for lack of labor. So
. between high costs and losses due
to culls and delivery problems the
net to growers is not great.
t Beans rate as Ja "poor mans
crop for pickers too. While in
- mid-season pickers can make big
earnings, they make very little
per day when thu beans are be
einning to ripen, or at the end
of the season. -
t While the war lasts it will be
possible to encourage people to
pick from a - patriotic standpoint
After the ; war that will not be
possible. Of coursefwith: the : re
laxing of wartime! activity the la-
tor- supply ought : to be insuch
greater. But if it is not the valley
simply can't grow as many beans
as Jit has the past two years. :
Some growers are wondering if
mechanical - harvesting could- be
arranged, as for peas. But the
operation would be more diffi
cult, because what is wanted from
the bean vine ' is -the ' bean pod,
and from the pe 1 vine the peas
out of the pod. . ' lie enquiry in
dicates a groping for meeting the
uncertainty and 1 he-cost nf:har
esting snap bear s under present
'. One ' thing seems certain, the
present situation cannot continue
.: indefinitely,' using exhortation and
appeals, by news saper, radio and
- eound wagon;" to get workers . out
in the fields.' Nor is it too good
' -for 1 children of tender Tears to
work as hard as many of them
have this summer,
- There is more land available in
the valley for production of row
crops;-There Is a good market for
such -products tt rough canneries
and freezing plants. The apparent
limiting . factor 1 f r " expansion or
even for continui ig present acre
age is labor supply. After the war
if - there is a surp us of cheap la-
Vnr and migrants.' hit th - rnad
again this question may be solved.
Or we may- attn ct a 'permanent
class of ' "stoop ; l abor with all
' the accompanying social problems.
- We can't go or , like this sum
mer, .under heavy strain on the
part of grower t and canner, and
the' mass muster of pickers under
. high pressure methods.
He's The Man
On Flying Fort
-- US BOMBER BASE IN ENG
LAND, August 28-C?VThe man
on the flying trapeze was a little
behind Sgt Aubrey Bartholomew
of Danforth, Me., a gunner on the
Flying Fortress "Punchy Wolf"
he hung by his toes from a ball
turret over Germany. - -: -"' -
Bartholomew was on the 'Aug
ust 17 shuttle raid on Regensberg.
There was so much shooting I
don't know exactly 'what hit us,
the 27-year-old former lumber-mill
worker said. ' "But something
rammed into my baa turret and
knocked the door off. " ;;
5Beforet I knew it I was hang
ing out in the air thousands of
feet above the ground - and no
parachute. But when I slipped out,
my toes caught onto - the range
pedal of my gun and there I
was.
"At least 100 nazi fighters were
zooming around, shooting at us
and everybody else. I didn't have
much time to look, though. 1 don't
know how I did it but I lifted my
self by the toes back into the turret"
More Butter for Civilians
In Offing, Say Reports ;
WASHINGTON, August 28 P)
A plan to make more butter avail
able for civilian use soon through
curtailment of government allot
ments was disclosed today by of
ficials of the war food- adminis
tration. . -
their names not be used, also re
ported they are considering a num
ber of plans to bolster dairy pro
duction by . allowing price in
creases , for milk and other - pro
ducts. ' . .
An announcement . respecting
butter; may be made next week,
they said.- . '' "
r Under the projected order, the
' government would set aside 23 per
cent, instead, oi 30 per cent or ine
ration's production for govern
ment us a in September. In October
and possibly two or three addition
al months, all production of but
ter would go to civilians. ." .
' The WFA officials explained the
policy was in line with the plan to
store up tuttcr for military and
lendlease use during the summer
months of heavy production, and
How most fcf the butter manufac
tured in fall and winter to go to
civilians. '
nzrrnr TnnD yeah
Bombers
Siiiask' ::,
NiirnJb'er
33 Planes Lost7 J
in I3IOCK DU8r 6-
RaidonNa
- By GLADWIN HILL . -
' LONDON, August , 28 . -P)
The .RAF .:, bomber .. command
poured a colossal hail of block
buster ( bombs I last night on
Nuernberg, . nazi j pageant city
and "manufacturing center, and
overwhelmed ; defenses. 1
- The bomb tonnage in this sec
and saturation blow of the week
following up the Monday night as
sault on Berlin was not dis-'
closed. ; -f'i---:' .
V Thirty, three" bombers were lost
in t this .attack and other wide
ranging raids, including t Mosqui
to assaults on the battered Ruhr,
and fighter and intruder stabs at
airfields and railways in France'
and the low, countries. . ' .. ' . ''1 j
I It was the eighth raid on Nuern-
berg site of diesel. engine,, elec-;
tjic and aluminum manufacturing,
and. a railroad funnel to Italy.' It1
took the bombers on a . 1100-mile:
round trip. . .". '
y .The. Germans threw up a tre- j
: mendaas force ef ; firhters, the ri
air ministry reported, silencing ;":i
their ground gnns when search-; t
lights picked np the raiders, and
, UTurn to Page 2 Story D)
Yianks Ddivii
14. Jap Planes
At Bouganville
A I J.TED HEADQUARTERS IN
THE : ..SOUTHyES3"J., PAjQIFIC,
Sunday Augustv2-- Fourteen
Japanese fighters were downed in
a new air fight; over Japan's big
air; base on South Bougainville,
General MacArthur's headquarters
announced today.
i Below Bougainville . on the
southern i tip of Kolombangara,
Japan's by-passed air base of Vila
was pounded in its third straight
daylight raid. American troops oc
cupy New Georgia below "Kolom
bangara and Vella Lavella above
Headquarters also disclosed for
the first time that in the north
eastern New Guinea campaign; in
which American and . Australian
troops are closing in on the Sala
maua . airdrome, the land, forces
are under the command of Gener
al Sir Thomas Blarney, an Aus
tralian.. .
In that battle sector allied
planes kept up the, daily war on
supply barges above New Britain,
destroyed three coastal vessels and
fiv barges ia John-Albert, har
bor." On Jacqulnot bay, southern
New; Britain, three other barges
were wrecked. . -7- i i"-.
i Off Kavieng, : New. Ireland,
where allied bombers have been
find ins numerous shipping' targets
recently a ,.23,000 ton " cargo, ship
was bombed' and damaged. .
The big bag of Japanese ' fight
ers over Bougainville was made
while American bombers, escort
ed by fighters, 'were on another
in a series of raids on the Kahili
airdrome, the biggest one still left
- (Turn to Page 2 Story 'E) '
Approximately 210,000,
000 pounds of butter, mostly gov
ernment stocks, were . in storage
August !. The average at that date
is about 155,000,000. -
While WFA officials feel that
government stocks are not exces
sive, complaints from some areas
that housewives have been unable
to buy any butter led. to the de
cision to reduce' the government's
share. . " -.T "
Under s consideration - to spur
dairy production, they said,' is an
increase in prices to inillt produ
cers, to be offset with either high
er prices to consumers or exten
sion of subsidies. -
; I Milk prices have been at ceiling
levels for months and the season
al increases usually charged in the
fall and winter to stimulate pro
duction cannot be made .without
elevating the ceilings, or-granting
subsidies. "-':'" """r
One proposal being given con
sideratioa is one to allow farmers
increases of from 40 to C3 cents
a hundred pounds for milk during
November, December, January and
February, with smaller increases
fcr early fall and early spring.
1 V
Good Neighbors9 Here to
4
,i:S:...
It's foreixu army af Invited, invaders f rom Gobd Neirhbor Mexlee 1 (abave) " fUInr1 wn
. street late Friday afternoon to their mobile, emergency harvesters, easap f the war 'food adminis
. tratien at the Oregon state fair grounds. Ten minutes after their arrival,, (below) a Mexican got the
. "soath of the border feeling", and began to play bis gvitar. -
Boris Dies;
Assassination
Is Rumored
' By JUDSON O'QUINN
, LONDON, Aug. 28 - (J?j -? King
Boris III r of Bulgaria died today
at 4:42 p: m: (7:42 a. rn., PWT)
and ; his 6-year-old son, Simeon
succeeded to the throne, as . King
Simeon; II,' the German .radio an
nounced. 'S ' :. -:-.;;f
Boris 'death f at .the age of 49
-whether by- illness or assassina
tion raised the critical question
whether. the nazis would-be able
to tighten their.' slipping control
of the reluctantly-aligned axis
satellite," or whether as in the last
war: the Balkan nation would be
the first to open Germany's back
door to the allies. V .
Berlla breadeasts recorded by
. .
the AsMeiated Press said . Pre
mier Bosdan PbHov aanovneed
King Simeon's ascension In',
proelamatlon, calling Upon Bnl
: gariana to "stand still firmer
around the throne of the Una-.'
e The proclamation added that
the ministerial council "will take
over administratiort of Bulgaria
until a settlement of the problem
of. the : regency. et; .;,
-i The -Germans : said - Boris - had
died of ' sudden ' heart" ; disease
coupled with lung troubles after
a five-day Illness. Berlin vigor
ously denied that this illness had
stemmed from ' a violent 'quarrel
with Hitler at his headquarters.
When Borir reportedly refused to
send Bulgarian troops L to - fight
Russia..' j i ' '.
Unconfirmed reports received
in Ankara said Boris might have
been .shot ia the stomach by an
assassin. .: ' . - "-;":- --K
Boris, one of the foxiest diplo
mats in Europe, had been king 25
years and absolute master of his
country's political life for 15 years.
It was doubted whether any mem
ber of the Bulgar. royal family
would be able to held the nation
together.. .......... .
; Simeon's raeeessioa. wovU la
(Turn to Pass 2---S:ory BI -
Army, BoniLer
Crashes in Idaho
- FOUNTAIN HOME, " Idaho,
Aug. "3-(P)-A four-engine bomb
er from the Mountain Home army
air base "crashed late today "near
the Bruneau bombing range, 12
miles south of here. , ;..;' i ,
' Lt Malcolm Bratton, base pub
lic relations officer, said the plane
was on a routine training flight
Names and number of the cas
ualties were withheld.
Cclera. Oreca. Cur Izj
t I It I II III ! I llffi. V. J . .
Salem Woman
Loses Cash,
19 War Bonds
Three hundred dollars in cash,
19 - US war bonds ranging from
$25 to $100. in value, deed . and
abstract to residential property in
Salem, . one Oregon . Shipbuilding
I company.; pay check, and, literally,
on top of all of. that a robe, a
bath towel and a . luncheon cloth
; were contained in the small over
night bag' she left on a street bus
in ; Portland as she hastened to
catch ran inter-city bus to Salem
on Saturday afternoon, Mrs. H.
D. Weese told Salem city police
Saturday night
Mrs. Weese was coming to Sa
lem to 'look after property inter
ests ' 'and to get the family's
valuables into si "safety deposit
box No' such' box was available
in Portland, she 'said. " ' -
The' bonds, made out variously
to HD: Weese,' Howard D. Weese,
jr Vora V.; Weese,' Patricia Weese
and Margaret Mabley, were large
ly of $50 and $100 denomination,
Mrs. , Weese' said. The ,; deed and
abstract were for the family's Sa
lem residence, at 110 Academy
street . .
.The number of the city bus on
which she had : traveled to Sixth
and Stark streets. Portland, from
her, home at 9014 North Milne in
the St Johns district, and almost
the exact moment that she - left
the vehicle . were known . to Mrs.
Weese, who had . called bus com
pany offices and had instituted
an unsuccessful search before
leaving the metropolis. . .-
; Calling Portland police from
Salem, she was told to report her
loss here and to ask to have it
transmitted by police radio. 4
- Lloyd A. . Womack, 345 North
Front street, I Salem, reported to
Salem police Saturday that some
where' on the highway between
Eugene and; Salem he had lost
black suitcase. . , .
Slate Bar to Hear
Colorado Ex-Governor,
PORTLAND," Aug. 23.-(VEx-Governor
Ralph L. Carr ct Ctl
oradowill give the principal ad-,
dress at. the annual convention- cf
the Oregon ttatt tar here Thursday-find
Friday.; ' -
He will speak, at the , annual
banquet Friday niht-. On Catur
day, the Liberty ship Robert S.
Bean, named for the late jurist
who served more than 40 years ia
Oregon courts, will be launched
by Oregon Shipbuilding corpora -1 extinguished by members of the
tion. It will be chr is t en ed by Mrs. j Salem fire department early Sal
William O. Douglas, wife of thejurday niht after a half-hour
supreme court justice,- ' ' . :
I Terr J-.. JV.:"-l Z2. 1C13
idI?ar;:z2rr.
CspiU.1
s Point
To Staliii-FDR,
Churchill Meet
r By WILLIAM SMITH WHITE
LONDON, Aug. 28-P)-A series
ofj fragile but mutually .support
ing:, signs arose tonight to. suggest
that prospects had taken a bright
er turn .for a meeting of President
Roosevelt, Prime Minister Win
ston Churchill and Premier Jo
seph Stalin or their high repre
sentatives.", r s ' i :: , -'v'-; V
:The signs suggested, too, that
any such a meeting would mean
substantial satisfaction of Russia's
Insistence on at new front '
To inquiries bout a three-power
.war conference, foreign' com
mentator observed simply that he
was unable to comment whereas
the earlier reply, had. been 'that
nothing was known of such a con
ference." "
'The possibility of -the meeting
has leaped to the forefront of all
British discussion with- the pub
lication of reports that Stalin al
ready: had agreed to meet allied
leaders and circWation' of rumors
via Rome . that he was making
' plans to go to the Caucasus soon
to meet British; and American po
litical "and military representa
tives. : -:': ... -'.;..-.. -. .;
" The alteration in ; the atmos
phere was unmistakable. , :':.V
The anticipated return to Lon
don of former Soviet Ambassador
Ivan ,M. Maisky, although osten
sibly only to clear up his affairs
before assuming the post in Mos
cow ; as vice foreign . commissar,
has led to speculation which was
not noticeably discouraged that
Vyacheslav Molotov, ; commissar
for foreign affairs, mifiht follow
him here, -'s'" - '- . -. . ;. '-
The belief has greatly mcreased
that British Foreign , Secretary
Anthony Eden is going to tloscow
for a meeting which would bring
Stalin face to face with a man,
only a little short of the level oc
cupied by, Roosevelt and Church
ill In the direction of affairs ; of
the western allies. .. ..
The Evening 'news, in fact said
it understood that Eden would be
gin tlinnir. the- three-power
meeting even before Churchill re
turns home.. - -
Fiicmcii Put 0::1
llinpycod lie!"':!.! FIrn
- Fire, which threatened the J. H.
Silver residence ' and blazed : i '. ?
way across 1 spproximately two
acres atop Ilingwood heights, was
ibattl.
Sign
G
wwj y
71 -
MM " i .
"Of,;
Trafuc Tied Up
From Naples to
South by Bonibo
By EDWARD KENNEDY
f ALLIED IEEADQUAKTERS
IN I NOHTH J AFRICA, -August
28-(P-Tb.e steady allied air
scourging of .. southern ' Italy
railways' has virtually para
lyzed train traffic from the Na
ples area" to the- toe and ; heel of
the peninsula, airforce officers de
clared today, with fresh wreckage
strewn yesterday near Naples and
by Flying Fortresses; at Subnona
1C0 miles' east of Rome.' - v -Some-trains.
are moving, but
with great jiifficulty and many de
lays since mainline, tracks- have
been knocked out in countless pla
ces, switching stations and other
rail buildings ' demolished, . I and
yards filled with gaping, craters,
allied headquarters said. r
Wrecked Jocomotives and, pas
senger andl freight cars'; and "fa
some cases remains of entire
trains block ' the. tracks" at many
points, - especially ; at Benevento;
Junction near Naples where dam
. (Turn tot Page 2 Story F) ' ;
USSnprem
Over States .
In Y7ar, Ruling
WASHINGTON August 2S VP)
The war labor board ruled today
that during wartime the powers of
the president and congress super
sede acts 'of state legislatures in
labor relations matters. . ".
The opinion was written -by
Wayne L. Morse, public member
of the national war labor board,
in a case involving the J. Green-
baum Canning company, J&Hwau-
kee. Wis., and the Wisconsin Em
ployment Peace act ;
; The WLB directed the company
to grant a standard voluntary
maintenance of membership clause
and voluntary check-off to the In
ternational Fur and Leather Work
ers Union : of America and Can
ada, local 260, CIO. ;m I - 1.
" The company . objected on the
grounds that the board did not
have authority to grant mainten
ance of membership under the
Wisconsin act and under the pro
visions of the war labor board dis
putes act which reads in part that
"the , board ' shall conform to the
provisions of the . . , national la
bor relations SKrt:. ;.. '.;-;j ;- .
v Morse, dean of the University
of Oregon law" school, said that
the board was fully aware that its
decisions did not invade the pro
vince of state sovereignty, but ad
ded: i-rr i ?-v:M:- '.. .
THHo law of a state 'which is
aimed at inserting conditions in
a collective bargaining contract
ebtween an employer and the bar
gaining agent of the employes can
be said to supersede any order of
thewar' labor board regulating
relations between employer and
employe fa time of war when the
power to issue that regulation
flows from the war powers of the
United States. - r '
Swedish Plane
Reported Lost;
. STOCKHOLM, Aug. 28 -4T)A
Swedish civilian plane carrying
four crewmen and . three passen
gers one of whom may have
been ' foreign diplomat was
reported missing today, over -.the
North sea on a flight from .Scot
land.:: ' ' I.,:-; ',.-'.-' -.
Swedish planes and some from
the German occupation army , in
Norway- began a search. .5-, .
There , was speculation .whether
the ship was forced down- by. en
gine trouble, or possibly had been
the victim of a German, fish ter
patrol plane. , The Swedish ' for
eisn office emphasized, that It had
no Information, but it was recalled
that German airmen had molest
ed ..Swedish' planes on that route
previously., . . . ........
AFL Gc!3 E.Tr,'silt
Tha -ArL .'lasr.her -tr.d- ea".'Il
vcrL;rs-ur.ur! was. ccxil'i I?
the rst'cr.sl Ubor rds.-5 fc-orrd
today ss col":clive barssir.:.-. r--er.t
for err.;I-ryes cf the CcLLa cri
I.IItchtll -sawmill,'; Valsetz, .Ore.
Flant employes cast 3 votes for
C.e AFL end 43 for tV.CIO In
ter n a t ional Woodworkers, the
w7 "
r -- - v
neyt yonn, Ans. SX-OP)-Decanse
of "a pcssltly Impor
tant announcement" the Vat
ican radio la a broadcast to the
Eriilih Isles ts.ay. asked its
listeners to turein tomorraw,
U3 covernment 'monitors re
ported tonight M'- -
"lTCl enr listeners bei en
wskh for a possible important
announcement immediately aft
er mass broadcast tomorrow?
the announcer was quoted as
-saying. "We broadcast as usual,
-a mass from St Peter's at J0
a. m. (2:39 a. so. Pacific war
time). -'- ' - -
Tomorrow the annonneements
'and homily .will ; be in German.
; Immediately after .1 h e. .mass
'there may possibly be an Im
portant annooncement fat Eng
lish. . : ' . -: ' . -,
Keds -Nearer v"
Sryansli-Iiiev-
Key Railroad .
LONDON," Sunday, Aug. 29.-(-Soviet
troops, rapidly devel
oping their newest break through
the German - lines from ' fallen
Sevsk, plunged on over the bod
ies of. 2000 nazi .dead yesterday
for; gains of three to five miles
and recaptured, more than 50 vil
lages to draw nearer to the vital
Bryansk-Kiev railway, Moscow
announced today.
- The smashing red army col
umn was believed to be with-.
. In 15 miles of that transport
and communications link whose
capture would sever the Ger-
, man itithern and central
fronts.'"--',.
More than. 1400 other Germans
fell before the -Russian. armies
driving westward into . the rich
Ukraine from fallen Kharkov, far
south pf Sevsk. Moscow said this
column had captured more , vil-
lacs arAi reachod the Psel river
100 'miles: west of Kharkov, and
then veered southward in an en
veloping movement of Poltavia.
; Poltavia, historic battleground
where Peter the Great defeated
Charles XII of Sweden, is a rail
Junction 90 " miles southwest of
Kharkov and its fall would sever
one of the major links between
Kiev and the. southern front The
town was. heavily raided again
by soviet bombers Friday night,
as; was RoslavL midway between
Smolensk and. Bryansk." j
German forces fighting desper
ately to stave, off this enveloping
drive I counterattacked ferocious
ly near Zenkov,' 85 miles north
west of Kharkov, but Russian for
ces "developing their i offensive
gained favorable positions,'; the
Russian announcement said.
(Turn to Page 2 Story C)
War End to Strand
9,0,000 Portlandere
PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 28 HT)
Portland city officials said today
a preliminary study for the post
war "period indicated 80,000 per
sons, most of them shipyard work
ers, would be left unemployed in
this, area when hostilities end.
City and' county . agencies said
they would set aside $100,009- to
hire Robert Moses," New York City
park- commissioner, to plan a post
war nublic works program to take
care of the unemployed. -
Marion
County
BrmSeeks;$431, 700
Charted with the task of selling
war bonds in the amount of S4,-
931,700 in the campaign opening
September 9, the Marion county
war finance committee is. perfect
Ins? in advance of that date an or
ganization whose purpose will be
the. personal solicitation or every
gainfully employed individual in
the county. Toward that end, II -0
volunteer solicitors are -being
lined ur, Chslrrnan J. J. Card an
nounced EciurcLry;- . .-.'-'
The - county . quota,- Chairman
firA Tn?A Ctjt In- this: t tt
money-r&:n.-- -1
It-. tt ;t:. '.cry
s ' ' r roller -1
with lis 13 t :
goal, la hlz -1 c ' t'.it cf the
carrpa"ri 1: t 1 ; - taust te
reachci v i
bonl i
not t '.. " T
ia t" 's (
-c
by c:. '. '... :
diit:'. I
; i.ti'.u'.Ions
1 t- luy tons
3 - c.-
3 i:
are: EHverton, Jack
Ccr.ccr, witii - N. G. -Gundcrscn
rural ch-:rr.:.r..n; III Ar.c'-h J-rr.es
II. Fournierf Aurora-Donah;!. Fred
.Dentel; St Paul. S. J. L..
TTcoOhurn, Dean ELhc-rkk; Ccr
Vis, G. 'T.' Y.Tadsworth; Ercchs,
r.ccald Jones; JtiTirssn, J. C
7-7- . i r
T! ft ( ! - -
- -... 1 -
May QidC
Ahdi cation Due
If Danes Accept
Nazi j Ultimatum
By JOHN K. COLBURN ;
STOCKHOLM, Sunday, Aug
ust 29-P)-King Christian X cf
Denmark was reported today to
have threatened to abdicate If
the Danish ! government accents
German! ultimatum placing
kingdom under full nazi military
control. -S
Provisions! of the ultimatum.
brought back from Berlin by Ger
man Minister Werner Best were
said to have included provisions
for a state of siege, military tribu
nals empowered to inflict the death
penalty on saboteurs, a ban on
strikes,' an imposition of a heavy
line on the city of Odense where
the wave of. rebellion originated.
Swedish-Danish telephone com
munications i were severed sud
denly last night the usual nail
tactic when events of extraordin
ary importance are taking place.
Travelers from Denmark said the
government of Prime Minister Er
ik de Scavenius already has re-
signed. ; ' A " T '
Indications: that the Danish neo-
ple were preparing to protest the
change in - German policy were
seen in an order of the Danish
trade unions- ordering a general
strike to begin today an order
which would openly defy the re
ported ban on all strikes con
tained in the -new ultimatum. -
: (Three and a half hoars after
telephone service between Den
mark and Sweden was cut off,
telegraphie j communication be
tween the two countries also was
suspended, the Swtdl h 'otala
radio reported - In a broadcast
(Turn to Prge 2 Story G)
Be Drafted
Tomorrow9
: . . . By CHARLES . MOLONY
WASHINGTON, Aug, 28 - (Jp)
"They could; be drafted tomor
row." I
Thus CoL George Baker, chief
of selective service's manpower
division, summed up today the
situation of many fathers sitting
tight in non-deferrable jobs un
der the impression they are im
mune from the draft until Octo
ber 1 at least "
He" was speaking of pre-Pearl
Harbor fathers who haven't trans
ferred from) non-deferrable jobs
to other work, registered with the
US employment service to do so,
or volunteered for induction.
He was pointing out that there
was nothing in new draft regula
tions that guaranteed them im
munity. ' ' "
' An Associated Press survey
showed, however, that most-" of
the thousands of fathers in non
deferrable jobs and not eager to
get into uniform figure they're
perfectly safe in waiting to "see
what congress does" about the
(Turn to Page 2 Story n
Bond
Kester; Turner, Eddie Ahrens;
SUyton, G. F. Abts; Mill City, D.
E. Hill. I
Campaign chairman in Salem
Is Arthur W. Smither, "other lead
ers here being Roy Rice, county
agricultural chairman; Gen Vean
deneynde, county payroll savings
chairman; Douglas Yeater, retail
chairman; Charles A. Spraae,
Ealcm rural chairman; R. T7.
Land, special events chairman.
Csrr.paign headquarttr- ,wCl 1
opened Monday in t:.e EenaU ,r
hotet-. .- ' ;- '
.. Entire rr.c.r.t-:rih,'s of f ' "a
service cluls- lave teen -r " 1
for tpeeific, tasks. Lions rf L i
the downtown and Hollywood
cluts, fcr cxcrrple, wi'.l arr-:. t t. ?
payrcll J eduction chairrr.r.n. T":
retail division will have a chair
man L each cf the larger stores.
I "i ii Calem end throi:"u
,;t
V 1 t )
In
i - ,..:.;i will le direct: J ly
Knights of Columbus; in
Iter, by the firemen. For so
.. t.",.:j in Silvertc.n r. i lr'.-i-
U-.e
f -.
Ik:
ity 1C3 workers 1 - e L i '
t r. -n-J an ' e--'jal ni r ! .- .
Z -;. t ::i d:.!'!:t. TI ? i I
fr
(lCTtr;;j 2 r: j .