PACT TWO Salvage Fence Gets Exhumed By City Council A (Continued from Page 1) A otsm is paying him We one apeaker suggested. If WPB will five him priority for the metal fence; why should be ask-for1 the Wooden one, another asked. The fence would take a half ton of metal, according to Stein bock, who measured it off In terms of bombers, and Who said he had already bought 1300 worth of lumber for the board barrier. But the loudest of the disagree ments arose on matters of pro cedure, whether to refer: to com mittee and how to count the votes, with a mere 10 minutes de voted to the subject of waterfront beautification which has been first on the council's hit parade since mid-summer. Most disgusted member of the city's governing body was Alder man L. F. LeGarie, who thought confused Mayor I. M. Doughton was trying to put something over when he declared that the "ayes had it on the final vote. A roll call had been requested and the coun cil had apparently approved it, and LeGarie was concerned over the mayor's acceptance of a voiced vote. Roll can gave the imauy .adnnted measure seven votes, cast by Armstrong, Fry, Jorgensen, Mrs. Lobdeu, Nicholson,. erry nd Riedon. to six cast by French, r.iUf LeGarie. Lewis. Berg and O'Hara. I Indicating that it considered at least part of the war was over, the . council set aside its rules ana aa- nnted after a third reading in one meeting an ordinance to. repeal Salem s Diacxoui ana oudmh w 'dinances. The action was recom mended bv the civilian defense committee in preparation for com plete relaxation of dimout regu .lations anticipated in this area -shortlr. i . . The twin ordinances on salar ies and overtime were referred to .committee, gave two readings to .an ordinance which would kill for .the duration the city's bicycle or dinance and refused, on the vote of Gille, to suspend rules so that the repealing bill might be given a third reading, . A roihlie utilities committee re port recommending that the coun cil act 6a the petition of the Hall way Express committee by mak ing a study and attempting to tax equally all public utilities car riers using city streets was -accepted. Assurances that next Saturday's J market would have as many buy ers and more sellers than ap peared at the first farmer's mar ket in Salem last Saturday was -given by Alderman A. H. Gille, 1whe said his committee would meet again Tuesday night and -that it considered the first day's -operations good. -: Purchase of an ..inter-department communications set for po lice and fire stations to help speed -service of police patrols for fire -lanes, was approved. Attending his first meeting as an -alderman, Kenneth Perry, elected ".by the council to fill XL B. Per rine's unexpired term from ward one, was named to all the commit tees on which Perrine has served. Oaliu Island Sounds Alert ' PEARL HARBOR, TH, Oct 18 JP) The mighty fortress of Oahu was thrown into an alert before dawn Sunday by the approach of - an unidentified aircraft which turned and sped out to sea when It was caught in the beam of a powerful searchlight.. The unidentified plane ap proached from the sea toward the "naval air station at Barbers Point, the navy announced. It appeared "to be a small float-type mono plane. ."It immediately dived in an at tempt to elude the lights," the navy said, "reversed its course 'and sped out to sea at low alti tude." , The navy announcement said it was surmised the plane "was launched from a submarine and that its mission was "unsuccess ful." r ' v , ' - j ! Honolulu was disturbed in March, 1942. by enemy aircraft ""which dropped three or four 500 pound bembs in the wooded Tan ttalus drive region. No damage ..was caused outside of cracking a .plate glass window in a home a -quarter of a saile away, r The approach of the plana yes terday, the navy said, "would ep--pear to Indicate it was an enemy craft on a reconnaissance nus eion. - Apparently after the recent -conference here of too-ranking 'admirals and the devastating raids tV Mmnll V.Vml Mm jtea. the Japanese are anxious to .knew. what, may be breewing at the giant Pearl Harbor cauldron. :Tne plane's mission amay have been linked with the raid ever .Attu, ia da Aleutians, last week, .in which the enemy sought to de termine the disposition of -lean forces. To Leave f or TTheeler " MISSION BOTTOM Mrs. 'Lloyd Johnston win take her mo ther, Mr. k Mary IOectynski to Wheeler, Ore, for medical care, Sunday. Era. William McGilchrist -will accospacy her. They expect to be gone a week, v Achievement Justify Cost, Says Arnold B (Continued from Page 1) B German brains are still working.' 7. The Germans have drawn on their fighter strength everywhere to concentrate on defense against the bombers, stripping Italy and leaving relatively few" in Russia, 8. Japan now most nave her "fifth or sixth team" in the air over the southwest Pacific. " General 'Arnold recounted the early . controversy ' over, daylight precision bombing, championed by the US air forces with its big bombers built specially for such welfare. "Some feared we'd never be able to reach our objectives with sufficient density f o r t effective precision bombing, he said. "Now there is no challenge as to the merits of precision -bombing." Specifically reviewing some de- velopments accompanying the growth of American and allied airpower, he gave these high lights: ? The German air force was split in half for the attack on Russia and it was split overall again when the allies occupied North Africa.! German fighter produc tion : dropped . approximately 10 percent from August to Septem ber, due to bombing of factories . . . ,The German defense of the Schweinfurt ban-bearing, industry was so well organized that Arnold personally wondered if the Ger mans hadn't had advance infor snation ; (as reported by neutral sources) . . . .The Regensburg Messerschmitt airplane factory, manufacturing Messerschmitt I09's was knocked out for two or three months by a raid thus rob bing the Germans of probably 500 planes. ; New Landings Aid Allies Push Cennaiis Back J (Continued from Page 1) J heights north of the Volturno after fierce ahd fluid fighting in which i units frequently became Isolated. CanceHo, formerly an important . axis air base eight miles from the mouth of the Vol turno, fell to a British force in an advance from the sea. Both the British and Americans had to fight off vicious nasi counterat tacks in their advance. ' On the Eighth army front fight ing was reported raging through the streets of Montecilfone, 10 miles southwest of Termoli on the Adriatic. Field reports said enemy resistance was increasing all along that front. British and American engineers have won tributes from allied commanders for 'speed and effi ciency in reopening communica tions routes and constructing fa cilities to handle the constantly mounting allied strength on the peninsula. I Allied heavy bombers from the middle east attacked Maritza air field on Rhodes and Cos harbor in the Dodecanese and Syros har bor in the Aegean yesterday. Bombers and fighters of the northwest i African force contin ued to rake the enemy's com munications behind the fighting line in Italy. Three allied planes were missing from all operations. Allies Plan Big At nca-Bntairi ShutdeRaiding P (Continued from Page 1) D ing attacks also includes German. held industries in the capital cities of Budapest. Hungary; Vienna, Austria, and Prague. "In the vulnerable Balkans are the capital cities of Belgrade, Bu charest and Sofia, and imoortant oil fields and refineries centering around FloestL The North Africa airforce an nounced its intention of rionins nazi 'communications to shreds, particularly the vital Danube wa terway over which the Germans move oil and other strategic sup plies. ! Berlin also will be a mime tor- get when air fields near Rome are Puerto Rico Seizes German Drag Shipment SAN JUAN, Puerto' Rico. Oct. It -(Ay- Federal District Attorney Phillip Herrick announced that a shipment of drugs and chemicals from Buenos Aires belonging to a "wholly owned suskiiary of J. G, Farben Industries' of Germany was seized .today in San Juan harbor.- . ; : :.-:i, - ; The shipment consisting of 25 cases of vaccines, pharmaceuti cals and raticides valued at 1100,- 000 had been consigned to La Guaira, Venezuela. hesaidL add ing that tha seized cargo was tak en, from the Argentina ship Rio Grande. . F.Irs. Brfesslcr Better liOUIHrrS Mrs. Trances Bress ler has returned noma a f t i t spending several days ia the hos Thm Seat Back Jap Thrust at Base O (Continued from Page 1) O additional heavy Japanese r .: air losses. . ' - In an effort "to avenae his.Ra baul losses bv attack on our ahia. ping, the communique said, the enemy sent 35 planes in a renewed attack on Oro bay. Twenty-four of the attackers were shot down. Last Friday the Japanese lost 28 bombers and 20 Centers in an at tack on Oro bay in which not one allied plane was destroyed. Four allied -lighter planes were lost in the new engagement but one of the pilots was saved. diarn units-from Admiral WI1 liasa E. IIalseys command bomb ed the Ballale airdrome to the Bain area and escorted heavy bombers attacked the nearby Kara airdrome Explosions and fires were seen est beta "sfreaaes. Fighter Mtroli destroved a troop-laden barge and a coastal vessel ia the harbor at TnnnM Bougainville island, and strafed otner smali shippings ; A- heavy reconnaissance plane attacked and sank a Jananm submarine chaser off the coast of New Britain. - Further reports of the attack Saturday on Wewak. in which M bombers and fighters were de stroyed or damaged, boosted the enemy aircraft losses there by 19. Fifteen of these were destroyed on the ground and four intercept ing lighters were shot down. F liberator bombers made a 2200. mile sound trip to bomb Temate in the Halmahera group of islands lying between New Guinea and Celebes. This .was the first Amer ican raid on this "spice islands" port which the enemy uses for his shipping! between the Phfliiw pines and Netherlands East Indies and New Guinea. V U : Capt. C A. Cunningham f La. conia. Ind. and Lieut. Max Ross of Benton City, Mo, said the at- ukjc jen tne heart of Ternate in rums. - : The attempted landin at Finschhafen was made Sunday. The enemy troops approached on xnree tMrges. Two of these were' sank and the third ; disappeared. Thirty even Japanese who suc ceeded in getting ashore were kill ed and 50 others fled northward. Only a portion of the main Aus tralian force particinatod in the action. v:. - ' General MacArthur's anokea- man said the Japanese have con siderable forces in 'the Satdberg area. -; . The past week has been one of terrifie leases far she Japan ese air farce. Stepping up the tempo of con flict in the south-southwest Paci fic area, allied pilots destroyed, probably destroyed or badly dam aged nearly 400 enemy planes' in the 7-day period ending with last Saturday, a tabulation of official reports indicated today. Air losses for the United Nations forces - in the same period were reported as 10 planes downed, five damaged or missing and an unspecified , number of others damaged. ' , - ' , " , Latest of the enemy aerial de feats were those reported by Gen eral Douglas ; MacArthur yester day. In these engagements, fought on ; Friday and Saturday in , the New Guinea-New Britain area, the Nips lost 123 planes on the ground and in the air while 43 others were . probably destroyed or damaged. ; , DroBfoDine Dies After' Car Accident . PORTLAND, Ore, Oct. 1S.-C53)-Funeral services for Dr. Charles D. BoDine, 70, who died today of injuries suffered in an automobile collision yesterday, will be held at 11:30 Wednesday morning at J. P. Finley U Son, I The physician and surgeon, who with Dr. A. H. CantrH estab lished a medical clinic here in 1929, was thrown from his car following the collision and suf fered head and body injuries. Born in Peotone, UL, he gradu ated from Northwestern univer sity medical school and practiced In Wyoming before coming to Oregon In 1909. A former mem ber of the staff at Emanuel hos pital here, he was a fellow of the American College of Surgeons and a member of the American, Ore gon State and Multnomah County Medical associations: He was a lieutenant-colonel in World war Tu Survivors include the widow, a son, a daughter and three grand children, all of Portland, Bill TTould Let US Buy Bond AcLs In Newspapers W AS H 1 NGTOIf, Oct It -ff) Pending legislation to authorize federal expenditure of 3,C53,CS0 a year to pay for newspaper ad vertising of government war bonds was revised by its authors today to forbid "interference with the independence or freedom of any newspaper or its responsibilities to serving its readers." Senator Bankhead (D-Ala) also changed his tm to provide that the funds ahould be divided equally between papers published ia towns of 10,JC3 popul . m am , . v - less ana taose oil3,c;3 er over. CZTGOII'CTATECMAII. Cdzsu Oregon, Tuesday I Zozxln?, War Prisoner Exchange T7ith Reich Started . WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 ..-(- The fust repatriation of American prisoners in Germany was utmW way tonight, the war-department disclosed, with four American of ficers and" 11 enlisted men in a group returning to the United States. Several thousand nrisancr Hii ing from various parts of the Brit. ish empire also are on their way home from German prison camps. The war department announced that under an agreement between flje United States and- Germany for mutual repatriation of sick and wounded prisoners the first group of American personnel already is "being embarked at Goeteborg, Sweden." : The ' group, comprising grades from first lieutenant to private. will return to the United States by way of England, v "The British and American pri soners who are bema renatr!atd at this time," the department said. "are the first to be repatriated from Gexznany. "It is expected that further re patriation movements - will be agreed upon from time to time." The limited number of Ameri can personnel exchanged as com Dared With the Hrich prhmwi of war, is due, the department said, to the fact that there are relative ly few Americans held by the Ger mans. X Names of the Americans in volved will be announced, the de partment said, as soon as next of kin have been notified by tele gram. - Connally Vole Would Garrya APPoll Shows By JACK BELL WASHINGTON. Oct 18-UP) Fifty senators one more than - a majority -find the Connally reso lution on postwar foreign policy substantially acceptable - to them and would support it on a show down vote, an, Associated Press poll disclosed today. With a large bloc of senators de clining to commit themselves be cause they want to write more specific language into the proposal, a canvass showed that only six of fine 58 members willing to ex press their views, are -unalterably opposed to the Connally measure in its present form. These six include Senators Wheeler (D-Mont), Smith (D-SC), Keynolds (D-NC), Willis (R-Ind), Johnson (R-Calif) and LaFouette (Prog-Wis). Approved by a subcommittee, the resolution will be submitted to the full foreign relations commit' tee tomorrow in this form:' "Resolved by the senate of the United States: "That the war against all our enemies be waged until complete victory is achieved; "That the United States cooper ate with its comrades-in-arms in securing .a Just and honorable peace; "That the United States, acting through its constitutional process es, join with free and sovereign nations in the establishment and ynniTitonwnf nf international au thority with power to prevent ag gression and to preserve the peace of the world.' Almost every shade of viewpoint was resresented among the 31 democrats and 19 republicans who found ; themselves hv substantial agreement on the proposal. Their approval ranged from a reluctant acceptance of the meas ure by Senator Nye (R-ND) as unnecessary but "harmless, to its endorsement by Senator Tun nel! (D-Del), a foreign relations committee member, as a resolu tion which "Says enough to mean something, but is not so specific in details as to run the chance of dividing public opinion." ::i The measure, represents a com promise in viewpoint among sev en subcommittee - members who voted for it They are Chairman Connally (D-Tex), and Senators George (D-Ga), Barkley (D-Ky), Thomas (D-Utah), Gillette CD Iowa), Vandenberg (R-Mich) and White (R-Me). La Follette was recorded as opposing action at this time on any post war policy res olution. ; , Tabulation f the poll shewed ; Sen. McNary (K-Ore) the only v northwest senator est the com- mittee; Senator MeNary was ' Bsted as amonr theae f er the resetotton. t Not committed were: -Senators Bone ; and WaHgren, democrats, Washington; .Clark, democrat, Idaho; Kolman, repub lican, 1 Oregon, and Thomas, re publican, Idaho. Resigns Presidency SILVERTON Mrs. Ida John son, who has been president of the Veterans of Foreign Wars auxil iary far the pest two years, has moved to Salem. She. has resigned her presidency out WEI preside at the next meeting when her suc win probably be named. Weather Cool, Showers Near Coast Forecast PORTLAND, Oct. 18(-Cool weather, with showers near the coast. wv -iicmL2 Jxr -" forecast which the weather bureau has made public since the United States declared wax. CcjrJfEolds .; Employer. E5ay. Express Vievs I (ontinued from Page 1)1 1 do as they please without fear of retaliation by the company. Also today, the court postponed further proceedings . involving a constitutional test of the so called "death sentence" clause of the 1835 public utility holding com pany act and the anti-trust suit against the Aluminum company of America until a legal quorum of six justices can.be assembled to act on the cases. - r . - Action on the two cases -foas been held up for months by the fact that four of the present nine justices are disqualified. Most of the four, if not aU, were connect ed with the litigation before they were appointed to the tribunal. -- Unless legislation is p a s s e d changing the present situation, the court will be unable to act until one of the present disqualified justices leave the bench and is succeeded by a jurist free to par ticipate. 3 Yugoslav Annies Lock With Rommel C (Continued from-Page 1) C ing two towns in a definite men ace to German river traffic. Tito's liberation army, wreck ing rail links and trains in a re treat from Zenica, in Bosnia, con tinued their ' attacks r elsewhere against reinforced German garri sons between Sinj and the Port of Split on the Dalmatian coast, and near Bakar, southeast of the Susack-Fiume port area, a free Yugoslav radio broadcast said. The newest drain on Rommel's already thinly-drawn forces in the Balkans ; was in Albania Some 35,000 nasis were reported in Cairo dispatches to have been rushed from Macedonia to Alba nia to reinforce German forces under almost dally guerilla at tacks. . There was no bint that the forces of Tito and MahaHovic, long at-odds, had joined to oppose the- invaders of their homeland, but It appeared that ssme of their activities might overlap. Bands representing ooxn . zorces are fighting in Bosnia and in Serbia. Fjiled Yugoslav government informants said at Cairo that MahaHovic's ' part-time farmer soldiers had captured, Brza, Pa- lanka and Jubukovac in south eastern Serbia and were driving toward Donji Milanovac, on the western end of the Danube loop above the Iron Gate rapids. WarChest Solicitors Due For Surp rise (Turn to Page 2 Story F) Mrs. Chester Nelson, $364; Liber ty, Mrs. C W. Stacey, $675; Bethel, Mrs. Lucille Haines, $300; Labish Center, . Mrs. Fred . McClowghy, $189; Pioneer; A. D. Falkner, $250; Pratum, Fred deVries, $50; Wa conda, Mrs. B. H.Aspinwsll, $200. Swegle's quota is $693, Pringle's $504, Madeays $150. C A. Kells, executive secretary of the War Chest organization, addressed a meeting of solicitors at Chemawa on Monday. As a contribution to victory, Charles A. Sprague, president of the Oregon War Chest, discussed the operations of the chest at the kick-off breakfast Its sifting pro cesses, its low administrative cost (less than of 1 per cent), and the fact that It combines many agencies into one for the purpose of solicitation, he declared excel lent talking points. But la the aid It promises to the peoples of Europe and Asia, Americans at home are making a large contribution . to victory. Sprague said. lifting the morale, encouraging the guerrilla warfare against the axis, making friends for the peace time to come are part I of - the acrnmplishments which may be anticipated, he Bishop Bruce Baxter of the Me thodist . church, former president of Willamette university and key-: noter for last year's War Chest drive In Salem, dwelt largely up on the character building agencies. their battle against . delinquency and ; their important place in ; a warring world. Urging solicitors to encourage, residents of this area to "give un til it hurts," Baxter declared that -A gift that hurts Is a gift from the heart" 'V' ': - - -Examples of the generosity of twrryf contacted on the pre- caxnpaiga 'solicitation were ipioted by Loyal Warner, general chair man who presided over the break fast and introduced division heads. Rev. Vri-Iit TuIies Silverton CZixirch ' SILVEKTON The Eer. L. W. 7riht cf Cand point, Idaho,' has T-taJ. vacancy left by the nev. Dewy Ilessho re sisaed his pactorsie cf ths Zsca ef God to accept cae at Dua. La. CcioLcr IS. XCI3 J C "- K-r' k OlItliDnOIIEFEOIIT : Lu.UL CrXTliC ( Hear Jhat long-drawn howl? It's the wolves again, or so I am told. And rumor is that ; a " SHverton gang and the Salem pack are at sword's or maybe jackknife points. V If my friends the WOHFs (Wolv es on the Home Front to 'you un initiated) were -not the lads who were milling around Capitola rink Sunday night,' reputedly ready to take lesser beings apart, they should write me another letter and 111 see that the law-enforcement agencies are told they're on the wrong trail. No, really, the Sunday night in cident prooawy couia ne , more than - matched by many adults about whom the police haven't time -to bother. But , one lad did land in the county bastue, and his cohorts of the pack did go to the sheriffs office," just as some did that night last summer when the WOHFs first. tangled with the law. However, at the courthouse, they were this time early enough . to see their buddy before he was locked up (although since the Jail is on the ground floor, the term should be locked down") and all they wanted to know was whether to tell his folks, how mpch ball would be needed and could they do anything about it. Monday night some youths sup posed to be the same lot were picketing the rink not touching the would-be customers but at tempting to reach their hearts and ito keep them off the premises from which they apparently had been barred. V Personally, I like the Wolves Pve met (that is the WOHFs), and that is .why I get so provoked when they or someone claiming to be a member, of their gang pulls a dumb stunt If you see me sport ing a fur coat you may investi gate to see whether Fve succumb ed to temptation and skinned a Wolf or two! Virgil Hagan Shoots Down Jap Plane By WILLIAM BONI SOMEWHERE TN NEW GUI NEA, Oct It (Delayed)-i!P-An Oregonlan and a Mirmesotan set the pace yesterday for allied fight er planes participating in a great 1 aerial battle in which 48 Japanese planes were shot down. They were Capt. Gerald R. Johnson, 472 West Broadway, Eu gene, Ore, and Second Lt Fran cis J. Lent, of 5508 Queen ave nue, South Minneapolis, each of whom shot down three enemy planes. Capt. Johnson shot down two dive bombers and one fighter, giving him a total of eight, Fliers credited with one plana Included Second Lt Tirgfl A. Hasan, 1315 North Cottage, Sa lem, Ore . . Russians Gain Four Miles AtDnieper II (Continued from Page 1) H topol area, where the Germans vera making a supreme stand as they did before they were engulf ed by a soviet pincers at Stalin grad, has heen going on for snore than two weeks, but red army units smashed into the center of the city last Wednesday. Since then both aides apparent ly have suffered heavily in night and day close 'Quarter : combat spurred on relentlessly hecause of the big stakes involved. Melitopol is the last German stronghold keeping the soviet flood away from the Crimea, 70 miles to the south But this death grapple southeast of the Dnieper bend may be nulli fied : by an expanding break through to . the . northwest inside the Dnieper loop. . Berlin broadcasts not only ac knowledged aociet penetrations in side the loop, but also told of large-scale battles north of Kiev, below Gomel, and in the Nevel sector above white Sussia where the red army; last was reported only S xnues from .the . Latvian frontier.. 'v.; . ':: This soviet pressure at key points on a 750-mHe front pre vented the Germans from rushing reinforcements to any single sec tor on a larga scale, and Moscow dispatches said the Russian threat to Kiev had now grown so acute that the Germans were bringing m troops from Poland, France, The Netherlands and Denmark. TLast - Toiiljti CZ ZD f - "t ,K'J7.v RAF Follows . Jeavy US Raid ii fOyer: Germany S (Continued from Page 1) 2C enemy territory and blasted down one nazi fighter plane which had attempted to make a getaway. Three Thunderbolts were reported missing; hut force ; headquarters said it was not believed that any were lost through enemy action. : (US monitors, reported that the Deutschlandsender, main nazi ra dio In the Berlin area, the Dan ish and Kalundborg stations, also under nazi domination, and the Berlin DNB wireless transmitters ceased operations last nights in dications that BAF bombers were out over those areas again.) Mosquito squadrons dealt Ber lin its first blow since October 9 the night before and also pounced unannounced on targets in west ern Germany, while fighter planes roamed over northern France to shoot up air fields and communi cation linnes. " . - 7-- .'' Other formations laid mines in enemy waters and' some fighters attacked shipping off the Dutch coast, "where one squadron leader reported sinking a tug and at least one barge. . Spitfires of the BAF fighter command also spent a busy day and shot :; down three enemy planes. ."'-x: " One train-hunting squadron of Spitfires shot up seven locomo tives on the Cherbourg peninnsula, and Typhoons damaged two tugs, an B-boat two barges, a dredger and a 1000-ton coastal vessel in jabs of f the Dutch coast HullandEden Open Moscow Conference E (Continued from Page 1) E other Russian persons. We have lots of work to do together, and I have no doubt we win do it in the best of spirits and resolution." - aaun 1A not make . a pablie address. Vat exchanged greet tnga with the Sussiaa delega tion. - American, British and Soviet flags flew over the airport gates. Tn red army band played the national anthems of ; the three great allied powers while a smart guard of ' honor, with bayonets gleaming in the sunlight marched in parade step down the runway past the visitors. - Molotov was accompanied by Maxim Litvinoff, vice commissar of foreign affairs and former Ttnr?n ambassador to the United States, V. G. DekanozQV, another vice commissar of foreign affairs, other officials cf the foreign commissar iat and representatives of the red army general staff at the recep tion. : Hull's plane came down first on the broad grass runway. The T2- NOW PLAYING (SMSWll-JQWRINME AIE0SSJ1ITH hi mm em Mum hit Shad- COBURN gXgXD COUL15IS5 : CO-1TATUBS LAST TlAlfcS TODAY K FIVE GRAVES TO CAIRO Franchot Tone - Erich Yea Strohefxa - An --:.: : Baxter PLUS "OVER MY DEAD BODY ' with ; MSton TJerle - Mary XSeth Eagnes ;; CO-F3rATCKS ; $ZC! YA Laaxh ttot! J i J 1 - ss- ' 1 j I STARTS YTEDNXSTJAY . year-cid secretary t.T-e-l none tl.e worse far wear after an arduous t:? cf tbeut H.CC3 rrilei from 7!ij.o3. After a brief tal tlcloiov sal Hull drove to the embassy. EJsa's s"rr circ'Jr? Cs field, landed soon after Hull's. The British ambassador, Ir Ar chibald J. Clark Kerr, talked with. Eden and Llolotov. The trip to' Moscow was ths first airplane flight for Hull, who brought with him his personal physician, Dr. llatthew Perry. Talking through a translator with Molotov, Hull said: "It's marvelous the way your armies have been Cshting." Coal Miner Straaale Bach By fh Associated Press An mmt mal Anrtrnvm affect ing household heating as well as war production plants showed signs last night of tapering off as striking miners straggled back to work and the government or dered a day's output of more than 1809 mines speeded to waiting re tailers. ' - Secretary Ickes, as solid fuels administrator, announced that most of the bituminous mines east of the Mississippi have been told to divert between 300,000 and 400,000 tons to retailers from whom they now have unfilled or ders. '; -. In Gadsen, Ala, two more open hearth' furnaces were taken out of production at the B e p u bl i a Steel corporation plant increasing the number of idle steelmakers to seven in that area and slicing "dai ly ingot production by about 3509 tons.1::;.. A steady but slow back-to work movement In the coal fields gave promise, however, of more fueL fignteen oi ci union mines, em ploying about 3500 of the 22,003 union miners, resumed operations. More were expected to follow in a day or two. I -. . r tirs S70nv of a ED17.0. Glenn Ford i .Btorrnerite Chapman I EDDIE QUILLAN JOAN WOODBURY "Here Ccncs Kelly" T. C ' ' C --".' - r-t t 4 rtwHiiii 1 C2VT1SC?-) mm f" " rf ml ' 4 . Of . 4 w V'l - 1 Second Ztlx TTA - Ecxh . HZstr . Herbert Henaey 0z Ecra Every sss- o2 i r -