Tho OSEGOII STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning. November 23, 1313 , PAGE TWO . 1 i i sr.. Reparations By SIGRID ARNE $ ATLANTIC CITY, Nov. 2S-(JP) I The determination of the occu- pied countries to demand repara ' tions from the axis was implied here in the first roll call vote taken in the United Nations Re & lief and : Rehabilitation confer--1 ences a" roil call which leaves intact the principle that the axis & must pay for relief work done in its territory.'.- ' . It had been decided in a sub- committee that all expenses of : UNRRA in axis territory "should X be carried by the ex-enemy "coun- -Fallen Nations S- When the sob-committee's approved draft was presented to the general committee on policy, an amendment was of fered which would have asked that UNRRA exact pay from the axis only "to the fullest ex tent possible. The amendment was offered to give health authorities of UNRRA it. freedom to spend, UNRRA funds in the fight against epidemic dis- ease. The worry was that axis coun tries might run out of funds and, & even though they were rife with contagious ; disease, it would be impossible "for UNRRA to enter '5 their territory to protect neigh- 4, boring allied nations. : . Z The amendment was defeated, t thereby continuing to place on axis shoulders the, responsibility ifor meeting whatever relief work j Is done in their countries. jS The vote on the amendment split the "blr fonr" nations which recently signed the Mos- 4 cow pact agreelnr to cooperate Today and Sat. 1 tteHAYILLAKD CU1SWINGS lAflt CHMUl MNI I! CARSCI CCSf WY1SA2I -CO-FEATURE It's yenr last chance! Dont miss it! It's the most en usbtenmsr picture yoall see for nlte awhile. "The Baiile if Dnssia J Cowl Today from 19 A. ML M TODAY AND SAT. One of life's Greatest 8tories Comes to the Screen! MARY O'HARA'S "Ily Friend j Flicka" TS TECHNICOLOR with Roddy McDowell - Preston . Foster - Rita Johnson -FEATURE- ? M Alt - I The 135 II. Commercial Thouoondo who ouffor fram SmVnytthm ,riti Cold Spot Com ReEof. 'OOOtlfMilf OER-MA-MOL UUioW 50c 1 7" wMMnttmiMm e4f &i VuW UmWc OA. f ' 94c &i I I mr.m threurh the war and Into the peace. .. . , . . -'-' - ' - - - - -" . Russia voted against, thereby implying she expects to demand that the axis pay for whatever as sistance it get The rest of the "Big Four" China, the United Kingdom and the United States voted for the amendment. Senate Spurns romise On Subsidies WASHINGTON, Nav. 25 -ay-Con fident they have the votes to smash consumer subsidies, senate foes today spurned administration attempts to win a compromise lease .on life for the president's cost-of-living control program. "There'll be no compromise,' declared Sen. Smith (D-SC) "not for me there won't. If you try to compromise with evil you get evil and nothing else!" . Even administration support ers i admit privately that they see scant hope of-mastering the Votes to save the food price subsidy program which the house trounced earlier In the week. "Opponents say they have the strength to override a veto should the president use that executive weapon in an effort to keep the plan going. Farm organization spokesmen who fought at house hearings for higher market prices will . begin shelling the subsidy program on the senate side when the banking committee starts taking testi mony on the bill Tuesday. . Administration forces plan to bring in Mayor La Guardia of New York and other big city ad minis tra tors to talk subsidies in an attempt to neutralize rural opposition. Sen. Taft. (R-Ohio) said he would demand a full report from government food agencies to show exactly what subsidies are cost ing in the holding down of family grocery bills. Some senators said the thump ing house vote against the pro gram, coupled with the obvious senate opposition, might lead to the administration reshuffling en tirely its system to hold down the cost of living by subsidizing far mers. Tonight and Saturday ADVENTURE! BILL BOYD o fopalMT Cassir 9 i News - Serial - Cartoon Comp 1 i I F" a r m VktW JOY 7 5SKwj' CO-FEATURE Tk.tt.rT tfr J plus jtojA Original "YELLOW FRONT9 Drug and Candy Special j Sole Agents for Penslar Remedies for Marlon Coanty Prescriptions Filled 1899-1943 o J. i 1 MM mm 'DTriAr.iic I TONIC I V r I Thls fine tonic combines mineral aalU with Iron. Popayottup iy sharpening the appetite. Thou, aanda take It. Sold only by ; Reds JPierce Carman line Near Gomel C (Continued from Page 1) G dens power, soviet units slipped throngh forest land and swamp to overwhelm Uw German do-' fenders,: r inflicting high casoaf ties and taking great quantities of war materlaL In one sector alone almost 4S00 ' Germans wore declared completely root ed. They were said to nave left" behind seven tanks, 25 field guns, seven self-propelled guns and eight stores of. army sup plies. A larre number of pris oners,' unable to flee, fell Into Russian hands. Propoisk, a district center, was captured and the soviet -tide flowed on. to engulf Juravichi and Korma, 15 miles southeast. Kor ma, a few miles behind the west ernmost advance, is 43 miles north of Gomel. utner Kussian forces success fully held the German counter attack battering at the Kiev bulge and made new advances in the Dnieper bend, where they cap tured a district center and several strongly-defended hamlets. They also seized eight more . German strongholds in the Pripet marshes. The Germans, who for several days have been hinting at a ma jor . Russian attack in the area "southwest of Krichev," admitted in a Berlin broadcast today that their "covering forces had to be taken back to new positions in the face of . numerically superior soviet units. - All But Spirits Dampened SILVER TON Karen Meyer, aged 3, and her playmate, Johnnie Haskins, of an equal age. chose "Wednesday forenoon in which to explore their world. In the meantime, a frantic mo ther, Mrs. L. A. Meyer, and an equally frantic aunt. Miss Althea Meyer, combed the town, Mrs, Meyer by car, Miss Meyer by foot Mrs. Lee H ask ins, mother of John nie, was equally frantic at home caring for the three months old Carole Meyer, and her own in fant son. Police and friends joined in the search, and it was not until two hours later that Lowell Brown of the Interurban Telephone com pany discovered the two playing at the edge of Silver creek back of the telephone office. Little Miss Meyer was minus not only her golashes, but her shoes and stock ings as well. The youthful Mr. Haskins had managed to rtnoe his Qvershr- but knots in his shoe strings stumped him. How ever, wading had not been bad even with his shoes on, the ex treme wetness of his attire indi cated. The two admitted, that before going down the alley back of the telephone office, they had been wading in the pool provided for that purpose in the city park. It was there that their tricycle and their skooter, with which they started out, were found all fully ten blocks and across Silver creek from their homes. i Everybody Welcome Salen Armory Tcnigtl Sponsored by Capital Peat No. f . American Legtea The part of the : prescription druggist in times of war is to help your Doctor keep you well by following his instructions ac curately when .filling your pre scriptions. Yon owe it to your self and hint to be sure that only the. finest and freshest drugs are used and you can be cer tain of that if you brinj? your prescriptions to SCIIAEFER'S. fa oack aoslril for toI5 50c oooaorfilnoiMO. 50c ONtheHOlffiFRONT By BASEL CTTTT.D3 r From the sidewalks of New Yprs; to those of Salem is a long distance. Most of Oregon's khaki' clad visitors from the eastern state aren't ready' to see much similarity either. i . But the seven "New York Clbw cops transplanted into th 70th division and now serving in that divisions military Douce unit felt pretty much at home here Satur day night. - :Wiv,- -.V Just xettin nieht sticks ln(n their hands was a Measure thv didnt hesitate to show, Fm told. most ox our MPs on Salem streets are from the Adair cost unit, h the way, but now and then some irora the training divisions are sent in to tromp the pavements. British 8th ' Takes Sangro Bridgehead B (Continued from Page 1) B exposed position, but the Nazis were expected to rush strong re serves to that point and to fight aesperately for every yard of ground. , German broadcasts conceded that the Eighth had established a bridgehead and was fighting forward with the aid of tanks that had been brought across the swollen river. Montgomery's feat In crossing the Sangro and raining a solid, srmor-lnforeed foothold against a strongly-entrenched enemy appeared to have been one of the most re markable feats of the Italian campaign. Near the center of the Italian front other Eighth armv units whn on the previous day took the hum. ed and deserted town of Alfedena, were reported engaged in brisk skirmishes with the Nazis west of Castel Dl Sangro. Only artillery exchanges and patrol clashes en livened the mired-down Fifth army front. American and British fighters and fighter-bombers braved storms which would have groun ded civilian planes to give close support to the Eighth army as It consolidated its bridgehead across the Sangro. Eight for mations of light and medium bombers attaeksd in waves, smaihtnr t strong- point In the high ground looking the lowlands. ,' EVERETT, Mass. -UP)- The fel low who was shoveling coal in Mrs. Susie M. Whitman's cellar wasn't the delivery man it was a thief who carted off a ton and one-half of the precious substance. Mrs. Whitman reported to po lice she thought it was someone making a delivery when she heard the coal being shoveled, but, to her chagrin, discovered that the bin had been emptied when she went to get a hod. Store Pksne 5197.9723 CIHKEQOLA COUGH SYRUP Cam RtEef hr mm Irritu. " l r Tniii 50c RELIEVED VVheaabeodookl or hay fever koa, caused your boo . I 10 stop up pui a r few drops or TZrlSLAXl AQUEOUS UOS2 .DROPS . in each nostril. Clfiaf tfk n ttmr frmMr Imothlno." Seco Stimson Refuses Patton Gourt Martial A (Continued from Page 1) A approve of the. statement issued at allied headquarters in Algiers Monday which said ' Eisenhower had not reprimanded Patton and implied that the report of the slapping incident was not' true. Stimson said he did not believe Eisenhower approved it since cor respondents next day; were , al lowed to send the full story. The Tuesday dispatches explained Pat ton was not reprimanded in the technical army usage of the word, but said Eisenhower informally gave him a dressing down. 3. The war department knew about the incident when it recom mended Patton for 'promotion from the permanent grade of col onel to the permanent grade of major generaL President Roose velt sent this nomination . to the senate October 1. There has been no action on the nomination and the senate military committee de cided yesterday to hold it up un til a full report is received from Stimson on the slapping. As for the disciplining of Pat tern, Stimson diL not speak direct ly of the current case but said he and Gen. George C. Marshall, ar my chief of staff, had adopted the basic principle of selecting the best possible theatre comman der and allowing him a free hand. Along with Patton's nomina tion, the senate military com mittee is holding up IS others. One member, who declined use of bis name, said s bi-partisan majority was concerned lest Lieut. General Brehon B. Som .ervell be named chief of staff when General Marshall relin quishes the post to become Eu ropean commander of the allied forces. ' ' - --- Allied Deaths Increasing ; In Europe WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 American casualties in Italy are increasing steadily as Allied for ces come to grips with what sec retary of war Stimpson says Is "heavy resistance" by German troops in the mountains. Stimson reported today that casualties since Lt. Gen. Mark Clark's 5th army landed on the beaches at Salerno on Septem ber t are 1,U killed, M1 Shredded Wheat 0 Wheaisv7orlh 0 D D Pancalio Flour Walter . T?-.-J. KendalTa U UU & UUU Rich in n Sofa Wafers n Bradshaw's Honey s.ib.im $2.25 M iillV IllCC UrGQu Antiiio fMMAM m:ooMN I I Large u .., n Aol2.; 1 ,..:... i: D 0 wounded and 2.CS5 missing, a total of i?,63J. . . -.. On -November 11 Stimson re ported that the casualty list stood at 1,235 killed, 4,784 wounded and 2,497 missing. v ; In a press conference review today, Stimson 1 said -"enemy "re inforcements have reached the battle line and a stiffening of resistance has resulted." ' Little progress was made by. the Allied armies during the last week. Stim son noted adding mat "foul wea ther, with heavy rains. ' seas of mud, rivers' in flood and bad roads, had greatly restricted op erations.':1 -"crV r Wvr :" Casualties among -. the British elements of the 5th army were slightly, less tbin those of the Americans, Stimson said. " "Our success in the. Gilbert op erations,' Stimson said, .is largely due to the fine support provided by naval and air units. The enemy attempted unsuccessfully to launch air counterattacks, but they -were beaten off. The Japanese, navy failed to appear. The victories in the Gilberts thus far have opened "relatively small cracks" In the outer arc of Japan's defenses, Stimson said, but, "we hope thes cracs will de velope into beaches through which our forces may move to assault the inner and more important bastions." . ; v Tug Uouii fwif Hrrj BunT ' Box Office Opens 6:45 P. M. Now Showing . -SOUTH of the BORDER PLU"JUNGLE GIRL D P DO (ELY 110 170 r'tsTi. humpvy SSoS. Laff- I r Backs! I J Fcalhers- -ju Cm0 'C X (A Breakfast Cereal, pkg. Fisher's, 2-Ib. sk. 160 27-oz. pkv 23c, 600 Wb. pkg. Vital Vitamins .lYx-lb. loaf 120 430 .QU jar Ivory Soap t Sce 10c lied Bar Camay Toilet Soap 70- Bar 1-Lb, Carton 3-Lb.-Carton 720 250 Dam in Utah -Wins Approval WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 -FJ-Legal obstacles have been cleared, Interior Secretary Ickea1 an nounced today, to permit Immedi ate construction of major features of the, reclamation bureau' Sco field project 'in Carbon: county,' Utah. - . , - ; The job is construction of an earth-fill dam, 58 feet high, 420 feetvjong andSO feet wide at the crest at an estimated - cost of $720,000. It will replace a sim ilar structure buHt in 1925-26 bu( in. danger of collapse, and fori this reason is designated as af flood-control as well- as a food production project : . . j , The secretary's statement says the dam will stabilize the water supply for 12,000 acres of ; irri gated land of the Price river val ley and form the basis- for pro viding supplemental water to th nearby Gooseberry project of 30,- 000 acres. The Gooseberry project To Marshal Joseph Stalin: "I congratulate yen on the brilliant victory at Stalingrad. The one hun dred - sixty-two days of epic battle . for the city win "remain one : of the proudest f chapters in. the war of the peoples united ; against Nazism - and its : emulators .... ." .; f Pres. Franklin , D. Koosevelt l 'J: h c Ealnslia THE SECRET WEAPON THAT PUT NAZI "SUPER-MEN" TO HYSTERICAL, FLIGHT! Coming Sundays to the Grand Toealre WO GGLY P .ft J Visit Curtis Blarket today and see the fine display of . top quality government inspected meat. You, will be pleased with selection available. , ; j j Vj OPEN DAILY TILL 7:30 P. If, Fcr Ileal Id Eal4T7e Cantl Do Dso! Chili Con 3 iroco anne riarn ; l' : '! - . - . . j. ... . I . i i ; . ; j , Prune Juice itponU2-ozj 1120 jTomaio Juice e ts!!.- tin 230 OCiD KerSd Corn r1' 2LS0 S MMMaMMOHNMMeaoMHMMMMOOaOMSMOMSMMMOOM .onaioes S!tL!!!bi 150 Dnz Oxydol I 1 iki has not yet been cleared throug the war'prfduxtioa board. ; Cont. Shows frca 1 P. II. i KOW SHOWING ilU$httQUM jo CO-HIT! Rochefie Hudson MQueen of! Broadway ! Open 6:45 PJM. t 1 i i .Guardians of India's Kyber Pass! ! Cooper Franchot Tonf Desrjal ! co-mtr iMore Thrills! "SUNSET ON THE DESERT CARTOON a pn n I". ill! Q D i.r. q t r4 r '42301 , L, i 1 1 1 Lancer" j Roj ,iW"7 ; .i fry a a w t Dennisdn's, Points, 16 oz. 250 i - ITT e PointsLi ib. or : 230 I0 i i u i "! iJLJ . f . .v . r " v ,-. Jj-CJ CZ3,CZi:.CD tO Zi G::!I:1 d.IZ'irlO CJ ..LJ