The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 12, 1943, Page 2, Image 2

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    8:
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a PAGE TWO'
IWOSEGOlf STATESMAR, Salem, OreonV Friday Uoq.'ltorlat 12. 1343
Yanks Take
Over Control,
Bougainville
E (Continued from Page 1) E
, gtroyers were sunk, two cruisers
and two d estroyers damaged
.Without loss of a single Ameri
can warship, headquarters previ
ously had reported. That battle
prevented a Japanese task force
from setting closer than 40 miles
to the marine beachhead, estab
lished several hours earlier. '
: (The only comparatively recent
American warship losses in the
(Pacific to be announced by the
fiavy were two destroyers.
. t f (Tokyo radio has been flood
; ing the air lanes with reports of
$5 allied war vessels sunk by na
"yal and air action within a period
.f less than two weeks, of the Jap
: anese naval commander-in-chief
; being congratulated and of spec
ulation that it will be a long time
'before the American navy can
Tecover from such an alleged set
back). I, In the first hint of the military
Strategy dictated in the northern
Solomons invasion. General Mac
Arthur's headquarters announced
that paratroop marines who went
shore from ships October 28 on
ChoiseuL southeast of Bougain
ville, now have been withdrawn
Inasmuch as they , were only in
tended to divert the enemy from
ihe impending operations at Em
press Augusta,
U However, it appeared that the
Americans and New Zealanders
; who landed October 27 on Treas
! ury island, 30 miles south of Bou
gainville, intend to remain. To
day's communique told of light
enemy air raids there.
A The securing of the Bougain
ville beachhead meant definite
failure ef the Japanese te pinch
It eff by patting several hnn
I'dred troops ashore from barges
the north end to exert a
squeeze with the help of ether
Japanese bypassed to the south.
1 General MacArthur's spokes
man said the Americans now are
firmly in the rear of Japanese po
sitions at Buin on Bougainville's
south shore and in the nearby
Sbortlands. The secured beach
head also places the Americans
directly athwart the Japanese line
of supply to the Buin-Shortland
area, he pointed out.
( Today's communique told of
new air attacks on Rabaul, 260
miles .northwest of Empress Au
gusta, during which an air tor
pedo hit probably was scored on a
cruiser in Keravia bay. During
" other raids this month there, one
heavy cruiser has been sunk, five
heavy cruisers and two light cruis
ers damaged and another cruiser
js w wa-w it-m- in
The communique also . reported
the sulking of a Japanese de
stroyer off Kavieng, New Ireland,
by a four-engined reconnaissance
bomber at night
7 The latest attacks on Rabaul
also were made at night by limit
ed groups. First medium bombers
raided the Rapopo airdrome and
scored the probable hit on the
cruiser. Later Liberators struck
at LakunaL another of Ra haul's
five airfields, causing fires which
could be seen for 50 miles. Jap
anese night fighters intercepted
and one Liberator is missing.
'The communique also told of a
22-ton raid by Liberators on Soer-
sbaja, Java, entailing a roundtrip
j flight of more than 2000 miles
from Australia. The raid on the
former Dutch naval base was made
; at night during bad weather which
I made it impossible to assess the
results.
i Planes of Admiral William F.
Balseys south Pacific force, which
I have bombed out Bougainville's
: air bases faster than enemy en
gineers can restore them, thus
keeping Japanese air resistance
: no closer than Rabaul. dumped 68
: more tons on Kahili and Kara
! near Bain in two midday attacks.
I 'Mitchells also went after Buka
r a Bougainville's northern tip.
County Extension
Services to Start
Farm Radio Talks
AA daily farm and home program
to be presented by the Marion and
Polk county extension services
will be heard over KSLM at 7:05
to 7:15 each week day morning.
The program is designed to pre
sent information to the farmers
and home makers of Marion coun
ty. This represents a change in
time from the former ' program
presented by the Marion county
extension service.
.The program of Miss Frances
Clinton, noma demonstration
agent, . will be presented every
Tuesday moraine at 7.-05 'and of
the 4H club agent every Thurs
day morning at 7.-05. Monday,
Wednesday and. Friday and Sat
urday programs will be presented
by 'the county agent offices from
Polk and.Marion counties.
Odd Psxap&s Grass
, Hoot Is Acquired -
t ' , ... - " ::-:".
T SMITliriELD A lavender-
uedPampas grass may adorh
the yard of Mrs. S. N. Ediger in
due time, "for she recently" ob
tained a root of the unusual grass
from a woman In whose yard she
had previously seen It blooming
in . TigardV; The Tigard woman
from whom 'It was obtained is,
trrs. Edier discovered v the
j. f ' usLter-In-lar of the pioneer
J whom TIard .was earned. ;
Stackpole Says
Early Peace
Leads to War
A (Continued from Page 1) A
with "big name" orchestras, was
one of the closing events of the
day's ' celebration. .More than
$7000 ; worth of war bonds had
been sold by 11 pjn. The Veter
ans of Foreign Wars and auxil
iary also held a dance at the
VFW hall. Both veterans groups
held no-host luncheons following
the patriotic exercises.
A parade in which khaki and
school sweaters and band, uni
forms predominated swept be
tween crowded sidewalks preced
ing the Victory center program.
Largest group of high school
.pupils to participate in any simi
lar patriotic event in recent years,
a block led by members of the
Girls' Letter club competed with
veterans' groups for marching
honors and, in the last block of
the street performance with
school and military bands for
noisy; jubilance.
' A second parade across the sky
was formed by pigeons loosed
from their cages by men of the
signal corps at the air base, where
the winged carriers are trained.
On foot and in motorized
groups, army representatives . set
the pace at the head of the line
of march, bringing the parade past
the reviewing stand and to its
breakup place near the Doughboy
statue exactly on schedule.
Britain Gives
US Billion
In Lend-Eease
B (Continued from Page 1) B
"Are we renting airports to
help defend England? Is it true
that the British charge up to re
verse lend-lease the repairs of
old estates, publicly as well as
privately owned, for use as bar
racks for our troops?"
Senator Mead (D-NY), one of
the five senators who urged on
their return from a world in
spection tour that reverse lend
lease be translated , into postwar
assets for the United States, said
he was satisfied "the British are
willing to furnish without ques
tion everything we ask for."
House Majority Leader Me
Cormack ef Massachusetts call
ed the report a rood one and
said It met "a lot of these lying,
sniping rumors and attacks
made en lend-lease."
On the point of airports and
barracks charged to reverse lend
lease by ihe British, Mr. Roose
velt said that included only new
construction.
"They do not include," his
message said, such faculties made
available to our armed forces
where no out-of-pocket expendi
tures have been made for their
construction since our entry into
the war."
The president's break-down of
British empire reverse lend-lease
showed $871,000,000 coming from
the United Kingdom, $196,000,000
from Australia, $51,000,000 from
New Zealand and $59,900,000 from
India. Canada has no lend-lease
arrangement with the United
States and pays cash for what
ever it gets from this country.
(On August 25, Mr. Roosevelt
reported that lend-lease exports
to the United Kingdom through
June 30 aggregated $4,458,000,
000, and to China, India, Austra
lia and New Zealand ),$1, 133,000,
000.) He said that reverse lend-lease
from the British commonwealth
currently was at the rate of about
$1,250,000,000 annually, not tak
ing into account the anticipated
exports of raw materials and
commodities for which arrange
ments have been made and for
which British shipping will be
made available under lend-lease.
Turtle Gift Meant;
Water Liked Better
WITH THIi SECOND ARMY
IN i TENNESSEE (P- When a
farmer preferred a bucket of wa
ter to two thirsty bridge guards
whose canteens had been dry since
early in the maneuver battle, the
two grateful soldiers drank long
and hearty.
"I aimed to tell you boys," ex
claimed the farmer, "that I'd
brought you a pet turtle in that
ere bucket"
Brains Set for Cal
LOS ANGELES, Not. 11
UCLA's Bruins finished their drill
tonight for Saturday's, game in
Berkeley against the University of
California and Coach Babe Hor-
rell said the squad was in tip top
physical condition.
Horrell's starting lineup shows
the team at full strength,
Hill Military Smacks "
Seattle Eleven, 32-0
i -. .--....
- PORTLAND, Ore, NovV'll -UP)
HOI ; military academy's gridderf
defeated Puget Sound naval acad
emy of Seattle today, 52-0, Half
back Alex Chementi scored four
of the winner's five touchdowns.
1
Firemen Called to Spa '
. City firemen were called, ta the
Spa for a chimney fire at 8:40
Thursday night It was their third
call of the day.-' v ' VV-
. .'-,- ..-'---'5 vT"-. . .'
RAF Bombers
Follow Up ;
First Raid T
D (Continued from Page 1) D
city of Muenster, bombers of the
Eighth air force shot down 10 en
emy aircraft, while Thunderbolts
and Lightnings running their in
terference accounted for eight
more. i
A communique said four heavy
bombers were missing from the
Muenster operation, but gave few
other details. iff ;
Tonight, one ef the greatest
radio "blackouts" ef the war
blanketed the continent. The
German radio shot down along
with, many others, suggesting a
new and mighty RAF operation.
The British air force last night
'. used one of its greatest forma
: tions in the raid en the Mont
Cenis tunnel, which the Ger
mans only recently opened to
military traffic after a devastat
ing British raid October 1.
In the attack on the Italian bor
der tunnels the British and Am
ericans worked together to devel
op a coordinated pincers blow.
"We swooped down on the tar
get like a pack of wolves and be
fore long the valley was full of
fire," said a pilot who participat
ed in the assault on Modane.
The Vinchy French radio said
Annecy, a textile and glass center
in France 20 miles below Geneva,
Switzerland, was attacked this
afternoon. St. Raphael, 15 miles
southwest of Cannes on the Medi
terranean coast, and Briancon, 100
miles north of Cannes, also were
bombed, said the broadcast re
corded by the Associated Press.
The location of these object
ives su nested they probably
were targets of the newly
formed American 15th air force
operating from Mediterranean
bases. This force dally has been
extending its range into south
ern Europe. A railway viaduct
at St. Raphael on the route into
Italy previously had been hit
by a secondary force in the
BAFi first attack on Modane
September 18.
"Just like pouring water down
a funnel," one RAF pilot said in
describing the 1200-mile round
trip to .blast rail installations at
the, Modane entrance to the seven-mile-long
Mont Cenis tunnel
through the Alps. "As we left the
target three big explosions fol
lowed one another, and it ap
peared we hit an ammunition
train."
The RAF used one of the larg
est forces ever sent so far south
in this concerted strategy of dry
ing up German supplies and rein
forcements streaming into embat
tled Italy. The bombers were pre
ceded by a pathfinder force which
dropped flares to light brilliantly
a target already etched in bright
moonlight.
Britain to Have
Reconstruction
Committee
By E. C DANIEL
LONDON, Friday, Nov. 12-iP)
Prime Minister Churchill has cre
ated a ministry of reconstruction
with the task of rebuilding Brit
ain after the peace, it was an
nounced today. Lord Woolton has
been shifted from the food minis
try to direct the vast program.
Lord Woolton. a self - made
business baron whose administra
tion of Britain's war - time food
rationing has been one of the out
standing successes of Churchill's
government, will be reconstruc
tion minister and have supreme
control of the rebuilding program
and a degree of authority not be
fore given a member of the gov
ernment. The man who taught Britons to
eat dried eggs with a smile and to
accept a concoction of carrots and
vegetables known as "Woolton
pie" will have a seat in the war
cabinet as a result of the shift.
Creation of this over-all re
construction post, which had been
forecast for several years, is
Churchill's answer to long - con
tinuing criticism that he was ne
glecting postwar planning. -
The selection of Woolton was a
political surprise but it was almost
certain to receive public applause.
Baker Tips La Grande
LA GRANDE, Nov. 'll.-tfrVBa-ker
high school defeated its tradi
tional rival. La Grande, 20-19, in
a nip-and-tuck football battle to
day. The half-time score was knot
ted at 8-5. The Armistice holiday
crowd numbered 2,000. ;
Down Two Deer
BUENA VISTA Fred Walker
and-; Wayne Moe returned home
with venison from . deer hunting
" , . '- . . . . . a
tnp iui wees, ucn oaggeu a aeer.
Leland Piather, Wilbur and BUI
Gray and Wesley Thomas brought
back a deer after a trip to Marion
Forks, v " ; . '
f Evcrytc3y
Sponsored by Capital Post
ONtheHOMEFRONT
By ISABEL CHHJD3 ;
Not for the old-time wardogs
but as a benefit for "Dogs of War,"
the Salem lions club plans to
serve' as sponsor again for a dog
show at the Salem armory Sun
day, November 28. n'
V
Now there may be those of you
who believe that lions and dogs
should not be mentioned in , the
same breath. t" - F
Once I, too, felt that way.
Then X met a little lion that
was being reared In the same
household with a dog and I learn
ed they were fast friends.
Lion Harry Wlllett and Lion R.
Kv. "Joe" Land are finding the
drug store and the office equip
ment businesses so stiff in war
time that they might welcome life
even in the doghouse.
Anyhow, they haven't given up
their liking for man's best friend,
so they are chairmen of the com
mittee on the dog show.
Herman Johnston, Dr. Daniel
Schulze, Edward Majek and Doug
las Y eater (all those names should
rightfully be prefixed by the word
"Lion" but getting the name of
the organization too close to that
of Dean Schulze might turn
thoughts from doghouses to the
lions' den of Biblical - fame)
anyhow the aforementioned mem
bers in good standing of the Sa
lem club are captains. Whether
they are captains of lion teams
or dog teams, the lions bulletin
does not say.
The ones of the group I know
best might well be said to be
captains of their own souls and
anyone who can manage a soul
should do all right with a mere
handful of lions or a kennelful
of dogs, particularly when the
dogs are the high class varieties
the club's annual show has always
brought to Salem.
Eden Declares
Moscow Parley
Reassuring
F (Continued from Page 1) F
ped at Moscow, Eden emphasized,
and there was a "useful ex
change of views" also on econo
mic questions.
"I am not going to pretend for
a moment," he added, "that we
agreed on every point. That would
be the international millenium.
But we do know now each other's
point of view on all these sub
jects." . .
Eden did not mention specif
ically the b anting question ef
Polish-Russian relations, bat the
stnbborness ef this problem
was again Indicated today when
the deputy prime minister of
the Polish government-in-exile,
Stanislaw Mikolajexyk, declared
his government's desire to col
laborate with Soviet Russia bat
renewed Its proposal for a post
war federation of European
states which authoritative sov
iet sources have condemned as
"anti-soviet"
Mikolajczyk, who addressed a
luncheon commemorating the 25th
anniversary of Poland's indepen
dence, said that Europe must be
protected from "Germany's eco
nomic hegemony because it in
evitably will lead to her political
domination.
Indirectly a d d r easing the
French and Poles, disappointed
over the non-inclusion of France
and Poland in -the Moscow talks,
Eden denied that the three pow
ers aimed to dominate others, but
added:
"The truth must be faced that
it is upon these three powers prin
cipally that will lie the responsi
bility for ensuring that this war
is followed by a lasting peace."
Klepper Enroute on
Talent-Search Tour
PORTLAND, Nov. lL-P)-The
general manager of the Portland
Beavers was enroute east today in
a search for new" players for the
Coast league baseball club.
William H. Klepper said his
buying itinerary would take him
to Chicago, Detroit, Buffalo, Bos
ton, and New York, where he will
attend the major-minor league
meetings December L
Gaston Tarern
Loses Beer License
PORTLAND, Or, Nor.
The Oregon liquor control com
mission today ordered the retail
neer license of the Ave tavern.
Gaston, suspended, for 21 days.
The operator, -Walter L. Oppen-
ianoer was charged with main
taining -noisy and disorderly
premises.-- -..
licenses of two Portland
parlors also were 'suspended.
7c!ccz:3
Ne t. American Legion
Allies Attack
Mignano; Nazis
Destroy Ports
C (Continued from Page 1) C
barrier to ihe Po valley in north
ern Italy. ... ,...,:..
Leghorn, ' largest port between
Naples and Genoa, .is nearly 200
miles up the western Italian coast
from the - present fighting front,
while Pescara is some 25 miles up
the Adriatic coast from the. Eighth
army's position along the Sangro
river. V-iTv
The demolitions demonstrat
ed either that the muds . have
very little faith in their present
"winter line" or have active
fears that allied amphibious op
erations will take them from
the rear and split their Italian
forces.
Photographs showed the Ger
mans had scuttled the obsolete
Italian cruiser "Quacto" and sev
eral merchant ships in the en
trance to Leghorn harbor, ef
fectively blocking' the big port. At
Pescara the enemy has destroyed
one quay by blasting and has
prepared another for similar de
molition. Destruction at both ports
resembled that done at Naples by
the retreating nazis.
While Lt. Gen. Mark W.Clark's
American Fifth army fighters
clawed their way onto the heights
near Mignano, Gen. Sir Bernard
L. Montgomery's Eighth army
pushed five miles through snow
storms in the Apennines to cap
ture Rionero, 10 miles : northeast
of Isernia, and near the Adriatic
pushed up to the south bank of
the Sangro at numerous points.
Casalanguida, 15 miles inland
from the Adriatic, and Roccasi
cura were taken in the advance.
Other villages occupied in the al
lied drive through the mountains
were Colli at Volturno, Monta
quila, Rinalli, Gaspari, Carpineto,
Furchelli, Rio Nero and Prefalve.
An allied communique empha
sized that all advances were made
in the face of extremely bad wea
ther and against increasingly stiff
German resistance. The Germans
burned Rionero before evacuat
ing to the British.
Gen. Clark's Americans seised
Meant Rotonde in hard fighting
after they had broken np prep
arations for another heavy nasi
counterattack such as the nine
that were thrown against them
in that sector the previous day.
Mortar and artillery fire broke
up the nasi infantry concentra
tions. Allied fighters and fighter
bombers flew in the teeth of the
weather to rake the enemy along
the fighting front, concentrating
on the Fifth army front in the
vicinity of, Cassino and Frosinone,
where r they attacked V bivouac
area, gun positions, a radio sta
tion and a 10 -car train. In the
day's operations four enemy
planes were destroyed and two al
lied craft were missing.
Fighter - bombers crossed the
Adriatic to bomb and strafe tar
gets along the Yugoslav coast.
with American Mitchells bombing
oQ tanks and destroying eight
barges at Durazzo and scoring di
rect hits on a 5,000-ton merchant
ship at Split. In a night attack
RAF Wellingtons exploded a gap
in a railway viaduct at Recco,
east of Genoa, and destroyed a lo
comotive. Toronto Ties Detroit
TORONTO, Nov. 11 -(P)- A
picture goal by the veteran Lome
Carr in the last seconds tonight
gave the Toronto Maple Leafs a
2-2 tie with the Detroit Red
Wings. It was the second tie game
of the National Hockey league
season between the two teams.
N1T.73 - CASTOON--
flIDlM55IG)l1 . XPA
Tonight and Saturday ; ' Ml
n CUM IAW OH TUB ; : " $0V
BEKS6AB3 BANC3 ffc
t S WIH ---rfcL22 ," an
V . K2 . LENA HORNE
:fejU ,KIT,Ir
yleSnd V Mystifying Co-Feature
I S Hit! ' I- .... ' . i i ll " ill-.
A- Yr. ., - - A W ' ; Dick Parcel
ft M j Q ; JTgEjyS FLASHES O
ftif. ir:t c;u..,'.::c-:
Sybil Spears Elected ;
Student Council Head
AtWIamette University
First woman president of the
Willamette university student
body is, Sybil, Spears, senior from
Salem, who was elected to the po
sition lat the , regular meeting of
the student council this week. She
served as first vice president of
the student body during the sum
mer semester and fills the unex
pired term of John Macy, also of
Salem, who completed his navy
training work in October, A new
vice president is vto be elected
soon, probably this week. ' -- -:
The new president is a senior
scholar in. geography and has been
active on the Collegian staff. Last
year she was a member of the
homecoming committee and was
a. princess' at the annual junior
senior, prom. During her freshman
year she was elected vice presi
dent of her class.
Miss Spears is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Spears of
Salem and is a graduate of Sa
cred Heart academy. She is a
member of Beta Chi sorority.
Lehman Hints
Postwar Plan
Of -Rationinfif
By SIGR1D ARNE
ATLANTIC CITY, Nov. ll.-iff)
-The 'first implication here .that
the United Nations relief and re
habilitation administration will
ask post war rationing was made
tonight ty the new director-general,
Herbert Thman, hi his ac
ceptance speech.
He said "We will certainly be
confronted during the early sta
ges after liberation with a critical
world shortage of supplies.
"One of the chief objectives of
UNRRA must be to see that world
supplies, so long as they are lim
ited, are' equitably distributed
among those who need them to
maintain life, regardless of the
economic position of the nations.
"Until the critical shortage In
supplies has disappeared, a care
ful and a just and equitable dis
tribution of essential commodities
must be maintained if urgent
needs are to be met and if we are
to avoid an inflationary scramble
in world markets which can only
be ruinous to all nations."
. Lehman was nominated for the
director generalship by Dr. Tung
fu F. Tsiang, Chinese delegate.
The- former New York gover
nor, as US director of foreign re
lief and rehabilitation, directed
initial relief work in North Africa
and Sicily. Lehman's new position
absorbed the old one.
Fire Named
Wartime Menace
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 11 JP)
Half the fire fighting equipment
is obsolete In every big Pacific
coast city, and saboteurs could
set fires which would do ' more
damage than a dozen air raids.
Jay W. Stevens, regional fire pro
tection chief for the office of
civilian defense said here.
Stevens, after an inspection
tour of west coast and inland
cities, said in a statement that
he found fire a greater menace
than any other wartime hazard,
including air raids.
He paid tribute to auxiliary
volunteer firemen as helping
avert major catastropbies but said
their numbers were insufficient to
cope with an extensive outbreak
of fires.
If-J. VTNPJI
'-JLrxlKLUd
uk -' i -ViZL i
TV III . I -Att- I I I J StiimiKU:
Longer Season
For Hatchery,
Men Proposed
. A' longer season for the hatch
erymen of Oregon, made' possible
by ' spreading ' the . dates for . pur
chasing baby chicks and, poults,
would be a benefit to the entire
poultry industry, according to dis
cussions at the annual fall meet
ing of the Oregon Baby Chick
association, held in Eugene re-
cently, reports Noel L. - Bennion,
extension poultry specialist. J
ABennion led a panel; discussion
on this subject, where many facts
concerning early and late hatched
chicks were brought out. It was
generally agreed that there is . a
definite place, for the production
of birds grown from chicks other
that those bought in the peak
months of-March and April. One
advantage of spreading the hatch-;
ing season is that this would per
mit producers of hatching eggs to
invest more money in better
breeding stock, as the returns
would be larger. . i
Attempt will be made by the
industry to hold prices . within
bounds ' by voluntary agreement
and thus' avoid threatened price
ceilings on hatching eggs, day-old
chicks and poults. If prices get
out of line such ceilings, with the
attendant difficulties, are certain
to follow, the association mem
bers learned. . ' J
The evening banquet was ar
ranged as a surprise tribute tq
H. E. Cosby, who has been con4
nected with the Oregon poultry
industry for 24 years 17 as ex4
tension specialist at Oregon State
college and seven in his present
position as head of the poultry
department. He addressed the
meeting on the work of the Pa4
cific coast food industry council,
and was in turn presented with
a leather traveling bag as a token
of appreciation from the associa
tion.
KC Degrees Will
Be Exemplified
Sunday, St. Paul
Members of the St. Paul and
Woodburn councils, Knights of
Columbus, 'will be initiated at a
large joint initiation on Sunday,
November 14, in the community
hall at St PauL
Exemplification of the degrees
under direction of District Deputy
Marcel Van Driesche and Grand
Knight Ross, Coleman of St Paul
will commence promptly at 1 pjn.
and continue throughout the af
ternoon with a banquet in the
evening served by members of the
Altar society of the St Paul
Catholic church. f
State Deputy Otto L. Smith of
Klamath Falls , is expected to at--tend.
All three degrees of the or
der will be conferred. Many
members of the order from neigh
boring councils are expected to
attend. 1
. I
Parkers Visit
- ? . -
WOODBURN Arriving Mon
day night ,Mrs. Ivan Parker and
little daughter, Mary Martha,
have been visiting Mrs. Parker's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mills,
while Mr. Parker attended the
state conference of high school
principals at Salem. They will re
turn to their home In Heppner
this weekend. Mr. Parker is prin
cipal of the Heppner high schoot
Cont. Shows from I P. M.
lion Sfcowicj
Subsidies I
Compromise
Is Studied!
L WASHINGTON Npv. 11 -(
Administration leaders in con
gress conferred with President
Roosevelt today onj the question
of subsidies andj afterward put r
pui : leeiers lor a compromise t
opponents jof this method of hold-l
ing down foo4 prices. ." f-
f They were hopeful, it waif:
learned, of, obtaining! an agreement;
with opponents to permit the us
of subsidy payments! but with a.-;
ceiling onthe total, jwhich migltt
be spent for that purpose. V : l
f No figure was suggested, bul
house banking committee, menl
bers who favor thej subsidy pro
grain estimated $900,000,000 would
be sufficient to finahce a nroeram1;
limited toimeat, butter, milk and I
bread - to so-called "must" fooji
items. , 1
J
Mack Says Bender to
RetiirntoAihletws)
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 11 -&)
ConnI Mack Said todav that rhUC.
Bender, his great tndian pitcher
of former; years, is coming back;
to the Athletics, i
Mack did not say
vhat Bendij
will do but presumably he will
coach young
pitchers as he did'
for the New York
Yankees two
years ago-j;-Y
The Athle
IS.
ties fnanager dis
counted reports that Al SimmoQsJ
might return as coach next vearJ
He said Simmons Wrote him from -
Milwaukee recently
that he wanpl
to make 3000
hits before hanging
up his glove.
Simmons was
re
eased by the
Boston Red Sox several weeks ag4J
NOW1; PLAYING
Story (ot fee Naughty 90's
"HEAVEN CAN
:.. - i vArrn
I In Technicolor
. ' '' ' wtthjj . , -1 ":
pen! Ameche -Gene!
Tierney rf .Charles
j Coburq
- Ico-feAture .
THE DEVH.! WITH
t HrnxR" i'
with Bobbr ! Watson
Alan Mowbray
CONTINUOUa DAILY f
, LAST TIMES TODAY
j H$, Diddle Diddle.;
. i'wiuS Adolph jMenjou i
" I Martha Scott
; Pennis p'Keefe .
!co-feature
"santa fe sootjts"
with Bob Steele
Starts
Saturday
it
IbupAerfhm MWf
'neFitMio-l
' SYDNIY
4 strrra loiu
1 Brando MorshoB
li
iMtttT iHf IMAK
MOMCriOM
cutfici )l:V,
UUIFOIDS
.ST''
" . , - -:
..y VILLIAM
lHr l
V - Mi : : t - - j
J n
I M J - i
U I
- -CO-FEATURE
IctPLO
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