Tai OHIGO:i STATESMAN. jZdLaai. Oregon, Saturday 'Kornlas. Jcsucry 3. 1C 11 P AGS TWO US Vengeful Of Torture ! By Japanese D (Continued tram Pace 1) D . ends. Hull, who rarely authorizes 1 ' direct quotations at his press con ferences, deviated from his prac cftice to castigate the Japanese.. Said I.. Hull: i "According to: the reports ef be necessary to assemble to gether all the demens available . frem anywhere aad combine the fiendlshstes which all ef them embodied te order to describe " the eesdwt of those who Infllet- ' ed these anthlnkable tortares on - Americans and Filipinos as re . ports elte." .-. , i 1 i - Hull also said that this govern ment has collaborated with Brl- "tain on the subject of war pris 'oner treatment Foreign Secretary ' 'Anthony Eden told commons in '' London today that thousands of 'British troops have died as pris oners of the Japanese after being compelled to live under incredible conditions without adequate shel ter, clothing, food "or medical at tention. Britain, like the US, will '-not forget, Eden -vowed. . The details of.i the "march of death from Bataan and the other subhuman acts there and at Cor ; regidor,-documented by three of ficers who escaped, showed Japa- nese perfidy in all its , hideous light, : t For the Tokyo government gave assurance two years ago through the Swiss government ; that it followed the international laws on treatment of prisoners and civilian internees. A week after "they made the pledge, however,! Gen. Douglas MacArthur accused the Japanese of mistreating the prisoners on the Philippines and cited cases, Including a Filipino hero wan tonly bayoneted. ji , The execution of the Tokyo : air raiders, disclosed ; several ', months ago, moved Secretary. Hull at that time to sajr that such "de pravity" would pe remembered . and the officers "responsible had Just about signed their own death warrants. There was at least one demand Joday for immediate punitive ac- tion on the Pacific war front. Said Chairman Mayj(D-NY) of the ; house military committee: "We ought to quit fooling ! around with islands and outposts . and steam straight into Tokyo and blow it into Hades." Other members of congress were more inclined to avoid such ; references to war strategy, how ever. In equally shocked- tones, they commented: Sen. Thomas (D-Utah) The . Japanese army stooped to depths It never has known before.. Rep. Engle (D-Calif) The Jap anese . are "nothing but a savage, uncivilized people and not sun burned Yankees.;! I am glad the army and navy have finally seen fit to let the American people . know what typer- of enemy they ; are fighting so we can get down to business and get this thing over with." Sen. Clark (D-Mo "Hang the Mikado" and "bomb Japan out of : existence." ; Sen. Hill (D-Ala) "Gut the .. heart" of Japan with fire." - Sen. Hatch (D-NM) Japan has forfeited "any right : to any association with he civilized na- tfons of the world" and should f be isolated forever unless she in l stantly abandons' such barbarity. Sen. Murdock (D-Utah) "To f Tojo, to Hirohito, I want to say: ; some day a morning will come when the sun will not rise on Ja- Pan ' 1 T Sen. Chavez (D-NM) "Even at .;, this late date our military strate gists can r should get busy in . the Pacific." i To Have Operation WASHINGTON, Jan. 28 -&)-Rep. Lowell Stockman (R, Ore) said today he would enter a naval hospital February 1 for a nasal l- operation and would return to his i office around mid-February. He described the operation as not se rioua. .. STEAKS C 3sea in ..'''in lm I 1 N 1 3JLoWLAal Today ADS9 DIIjillG 10913 . (Not a Cafeteria) n- Under1 New Management r " ' ' v- '- - - ' " l - V J Open; Every Day 6 :A; M. to 9 P.; M. V. ; Cntcizl Sanday Dinners. li A. M to 9 P, M. ; " T c.Ming Brcakftsta O Banquets Solons Okeh Social Security Tax Freeze G (Continued from Page 1) G main to be threshed out, in ad dition to! five miscellaneous amendments, including a propos ed : tax : on pari-mutual betting. Chairman George (D-Ga), of the senate group said he hoped to complete the bill tomorrow. As it bow stands, experts from the Joint taxation commit tee staff estimate the measure will bring la $2,315400.000 ad ditional money, for a total gov ernment income of more than $4300.000,000 a year. The bill carried $2,139,300,000 when it passed the house. $275,600,000 when it passed the senate. Women got a small break to day. The conferees reversed an action- of yesterday and decided to make the tax on cosmetics and toilet preparations 20 per cent in stead of 25. The present rate is 10 per cent. The tax on electric light bulbs, now 5 per cent, will rise to 20. The house voted 25 per cent, the senate 15, and the conferees split the difference. They accepted a senate amend ment to the 20 per cent jewelry tax,! the effect of which is. to re tain the current 10 per cent rate on watches retailing for not more than $65 and alarm clocks sold for $5 or less. Other types of Jewelry, however,: will carry the 20 per cent rate. The conferees voted to repeal a "windfall" provision of the pay-as-you-go tax law which had been intended to recapture some of the sudden income increases attribut ed to the war. This provision, hotly debated at the ' time pay-as-you-go was en acted, laid a special tax on the ex cess over a "normal" year's in come, plus $20,000, and in picking normal years the taxpayer had his choice of 1938, 1939, or 1940. Senators on the joint senate-house committee adjusting the new tax bill contended the provision caus ed many inequities, in addition to the complicating tax returns. Rotary Chief Sees Changed America PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 28-(P) The president of Rotary Interna tional predicted today that post war America, affected by modi fied communism in Russian-dominated areas, will no longer be "democracy as we have known it in the past." ! Charles L. Wheeler warned the West Coast Lumbermen's associa tion here not to expect as great profits as they have received be fore. "We will have two main types of government in the postwar world" the San Francisco man said, "a modified communism, and our American way of life a modified democracy." Both, he added, will be affected by each other. J. Philip Boyd, director of the war production board lumber di vision, warned retailers that only a trickle of lumber can be "spared from the increasing demand for wood which will follow. the pro gress of; invading American troops. He urged lumbermen to fill a goal of 34.500,000.000 board feet this year. "We must meet our re quirements by production," he said, asserting that lumber inven tories are nearing the danger mark. Dean Johnson, Toledo and Portland lumberman, was elected president of the association. George T. Gerlinger, Portland, was named vice president for Oregon, and C. H. Krieienbaum, Shelton, vice president for Wash ington. Trustees elected for five new districts were E. A. Middleton, Aberdeen, Wash.; E. C Dwyer, Portland: Fred W. Powers. Leban on, Ore.; Frank Graham, Jasper, Ore.; and A. A. Tausman, Med ford. Ore. 'j : " Orville R. Miller, retirin Pres ident, urged lumbermen to draft immediate plans for converting from what he termed "costly and Inefficient . wartime production to peacetime industry. .. He warned operators to study proposed "sustained yield" lecis- lation to make sure it would not close the lumber Industry to all except giant-scale operators With sufficient lands to have constant new timber growth. food 3 CHOPS British Fleet ; Bombs Berlin; Calais Blasted B (Continued from Page 1) B German fighters while six aircraft of the attacking force, of which two were Canadian, failed to re turn. ' ::! nit The - joint British-American communique said that the nazis put up weak opposition to the Liberators ; and Thunderbolts. The Canadians made their, bag of four planes in a Lightning four minute encounter over the old ca thedral city of Chartres, 45 miles southwest of Paris. ! j - I Germany's main radio system the Deutschlandsender went : off the air. at dusk. Indicating the RAF might be back over the con tinent for the second night in suc cession. The nazi ; station came back on in mid-evening. ' ; , ' Thirty -four British; aircraft were.mssiog from1 the attacks on Berlin, Helgoland, and other tar gets ! in - western Germany and northern France and from : mine laying operations. i . . j The Americana described their trip as a "milk ran" with no fighters and little defense fire encountered. The most ex cltinf Incident was the! loos by one liberator crew of its rap ply i of candy bars whipped out an open bomb bay door by a freexmg wind. -The US announcement said on ly that a f "military objective In northern France" was attacked, but the Paris radio reported the Somme department; adjacent to the much4pounded mystery , de fenses of the Pas-de-Calais area, bore the grunt of the assault I Russians Cut Railway Line At Lake lime C (Continued from Page DC The line was lost to the Rus sians in the early days of the German invasion two and a half years j ago,', and its return should prove to be of great strategic value to" the' red army along; the entire northerns front Stalin's ref erence to it as "the October rail way line" f a patriotic reminder of the soviet revolution! indi cates ft importance to Russia. It was laid .along the; bee-line route connecting the former crar ist and the present soviet capitals, planned in 1851 when Ctar NIch olas ruled - a line on a map be tween the two cities and said: "Build it here." His engineers did. The LeningradtVitebsk railway was cut in at least two places be tween the junctions of Batetskaya and Dno, said the daily Moscow communique, recorded by the so viet monitor. This left the Germans the L e n i n g r a d-Pskov-Warsaw railway as their only rail retreat route front the north. v The Russians captured 84 towns on the three sectors of their north ern offensive today, the soviet bulletin said, i Announcement of the - virtual clearing of. the: Moscow-Leningrad railway Indicated that the Ger mans had held even a smaller stretch of the line than! had ap peared from recent soviet com muniques, f Wallace to Be ! Gue8t?in Portland! PORTLAND,. Jan. 2&-VPy-Wee-president Henry Wallace will be honor guest at a public reception in the Multnomah hotel from? 3 to S pjn. February 8, Dr. M. A. Mime, president of the Oregon Jackson club, announced tonight The vice-president and Oscar R- Ewing, vice-chairman of the democratic national committee, are scheduled to speak at the an nual Jackson club dinner that eve ning. I ,i - ! , f -A' Irish Are Hazy j PORTLAND,; Jan. 28 -(V The Irish are rather hazy on United States geography, Mayor Earl Ri ley said today. . : , s . '' He told the Lions club that dur ing his recent good will tour of the British Isles he was introduc ed in Ireland ! as "the mayor of Oregon in California, on the Pa cific coast of North America." 1 : . PDS-UZD We Have CfcslG Fir!: 21ir TTar DaUeries-Erery Type for Hvtrf Car ; OH the HOME FRONT, Bt nra. CH3X3 " . If they ever can. take another noon ' hour . off from their office, members of the staff of the Marion county public . welfare organiza tion are likely to be asked to re peat the presentation they made Friday noon before some 50 per sons at the regular luncheon of the Marion county social workers' association. 'I Six days of the week they in terview the needy (and because there are still old persons, ill per sons, deserted mothers and handi capped children In the world there would still be the "needy" if money flowed down the gutters) and, I assume . the i seventh day they dream of the needs and the forms they rnust somehow fill. . ; But along with all of this they remember the funny things: that happen. - I The only reason. I can imagine why they might not want to do the now-prepared panel - discus sion over again Is the fact that once the real work of the welfare office is generally understood not half so many odd occurrences could be anticipated. Increase Due SEATTLE, J a n . 28 The west coast Is going to get a chance to chop 5000 barrels from its daily gasoline; consumption without a ban on pleasure, driving if ridef sharing ; is stepped ; up, George Schwart' Welder, office of . price administration mileage rationing officer from Washington, DC, said today. ;- ' i . I . Meeting here with ration board and transportation committee rep resentatives, Schwartrwelder j said further curtailment of Issuance of B and C ration books also will be undertaken as a conservative step. ; : - : ; ,: . "There Is no imminent plan for reducing ration values," he said. "Through ride-sharing we believe we can take enough cars off the road in the 5 western states cov ered by the OPA regional, office in San Francisco to save 5000 bar rels a day and cut down the ra tions issued to the reduced supply now available." ' ... . . s Women Welders! TestQiampionship PASOAGOULA, Miss., JanI 28-(P)-The women's ' welding cham pionship of the world goes on the block tomorrow, with a California housewife as the challenger and a former Mississippi cafe waitress defending; the crown. -j j They will meet in the mammoth Gulf Coast yard of the Ingalls Shipbuilding corporation, - where champion Vera Anderson, 20, won her title a year ago. The chal lenger is Mrs. Edna Slocum, who came east after 'beating 10,000 women welders on the Pacific coast where she works for the Moore Dry Dock company at Oakt land, Calif. i Juliana Predicts Fine" Era of History SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 28-PT Princess; Juliana of the Nether lands predicted today "there will be a very fine era of history after this war," and she added "other--wise, it 1 wouldn't be worthwhile to fight it" ' - ;:t'00 -' ' Arriving for a five-day visit to the San Francisco bay area,' she told a press conference it would be "hundreds of years" .before the people of Holland can cease to hate the Germans. - i Eagles to Help Vets PORTLAND, Jan. 28-Py-Rob ert ' W. Hansen, . grand worthy president -of . the Fraternal Order of Eagles, told members here to night the lodge will help the 104, 000 Eagles in the armed services to get -jobs and. readjust--tbem selves to civilian life after the war. He win visit The Dalles tomor row and; Salem Monday. , 4 .; Too Late to daasify LOST; Brown billfold with personal papers St money. Take the money St return thm papers to BUca HoieL K WM 1 Flijil ;2ScS:! Tires Sharing AHies Smash Nazis in Air, -At Bridgehead A (Continued from Page DA "tiger" tanks, in preparation for a determined assault against - the confident superbly equipped landing troops. American and British fighter pilots had a field day in breaking up the enemy's first really big aerial onslaught against the allied invasion fleet The Germans hurl ed 100 fighters and fighter-bombers Into -an attempt to halt the flow of reinforcements and sup plies onto the beaches, and in the many terrific sky " tangles that took place some; blazing nazi planes ' fell at the very outskirts of Rome. So fierce was the allied resist ance . that many German planes jettisoned their bombs and fled. Of the' 28 enemy craft shot down, eight fell to the guns of a negro P-40 Warhawk fighter squadron. Another 22 German planes were shot down by - American Flying Fortresses and Liberators and their escorting: fighters in big and successful bombings of three nazi airfields in . the - Marseille and Montpellier regions of southern France, bringing to 50 the number of enemy craft destroyed during the day. Seven allied planes were missing, and the pilots of three were, saved. In some respects, this' was the outstanding allied i aerial - victory of the entire Mediterranean cam paign.; A. greater number of en emy planes were destroyed on a single day during; the Tunisian fighting. f s But many of those were un armed . transports, j while all 50 shot down yesterday were combat ships.' - 4 : 'Hog' Motorists Cause Accidents The attempt on the part of mo tor vehicle drivers to "hog" the right of way at intersections ap parently; is responsible for a large number of traffic accidents, Robert S. Fan-ell, jr, secretary of state, reported here Saturday. ; In 78 per cent of the accidents involving angle . collisions, at in tersections during 1943, the car on the right struck the ear on the left Farrell said. ; Farrell warned j drivers that they forfeit their' right of way privileges in the event they ap proach an Intersection at an un lawful rate of speed. Harman Files, Representative . Dan Harman, Newberg automo bile dealer, Friday filed in the state department here for the re publican nomination for repre sentative in congress from the first congressional ; district at the primary election, f - This office . is i now held by James W. Mott republican, of Sa lem. ' ' . ! Harman's slogan! , "Our postwar congress must be composed of more honest capable businessmen." . ! - ; It's Major Stewart Now, Movie Fans A US LIBERATOR BOMB ER BASE. England, Jan. 28-(JP)-lt' Mai. Jimmy Stewart new. The t former film star, leader ef a Liberator b ember squadron. Is exchanging the bars ef a captain fer the golden oak leaves. The pre motion came throagh the day after friend. tooted him aa having tamed down a majority "antil my Jaaier of fl eers . get promoted - from Ilea tenant" Apparently his saperlors had arred acceptance. - 2 cf lio Grcdcd v Who Doesn't Like The Product? SAN DIEGO, Calif J Jan. 28 : CAVFredneers of the Balls 'ef Moatesnma, marine corps base radio program, know they have a listener in Brooklyn. NY, bat -they doobt he pays close atten tion to the weekly broadcast The - program publicises the ' marine corps. One Brooklyn resident wrote: "I have nsed the p redact ad . vertised on year program for many years and have been high ly satisfied with the results. Keep p the. Bridges Seeks Force FDR's Intentions F (Continued from' Page 1) F the name of his candidate, or could simply designate the party for which he is voting. Republicans argue that this pattern would give a break to the democrats should President Roos evelt seek re-election because he has so long been associated in the public mind with the presidency. r ' Bridges suggestion; for an ear lier date for the democratic con vention resulted frora the conten tion by some administration sen ators that j names of candidates cannot be printed on the- overseas ballots ; because f the democratic ticket won't be picked In time. The republican Convention -will be held June 26. The demoratic date hasn't "been finally fixed but it is planned for mid-July or late Juir. r - - .1- ' ' Sen . ' Vandenbersj (R-Mlch), stepped away from republican op ponents of the war ballot bill to day, announcing he will support the measure to assure military voting; to the November election. He will put in an amendment too, however. In an effort to give state ballots equal standing 'with the federal 1 ballots in mailing prior ities to and from the armed forces. Both amendments probably will bring renewed debate to the con troversial measure. - Its adminis tration Jackers already have an nounced they will resist by Sens. Green: (D-RI), and Lucas (D-Ill), after a coalition " of republicans and southern democrats beat the first attempt at a uniform absen tee voting law for the armed forc es more than a month ago. FDR in Good Shape Despite Heavy Year, Mclntire Reveals WASHINGTON, Jan. , 28 -(-The physician who makes a daily check on President Roosevelt's physical condition said . tonight that the chief executive was "ba sically in fine shape for a man of 62 surprisingly good shape." , , Rear Admiral Ross T. Mclntyre, Mr. Roosevelt's personal r physi cian, said he felt that the presi dent was "all right" from the health standpoint ignoring the at tack of influenza from which, he is just recovering. j Mclntire remarked that Mr. Roosevelt who will be 62 Sunday, wait through his recent trip to Cairo and Teheran! "in grand style," ' although it was "a tough physical proposition." 80 Per Cent Meat To Go to Service SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 28-flJ) The regional office of distribution of ' the . war food administration announced today t ha t effective January SO meat packers operat ing under federal inspection will be required to set aside 80 per cent of all canner ' and cutter grades for the armed forces. B. F. Maben, western regional OD ' director, predicted reduced quantities of beef for civilian con sumers unless slaughter operations are increased proportionately. ilciica Pcicd Dnir:i3 m f ,r; in ' m . W "jyt ' . f f"" '1 V f I M I III .-V. , jj u ! Pacific States, Britain Riled By Atrocities B (Continued from Page 1) E At the Arizona centers guards were tightened and evacuees for bidden to leave their projects. Leroy- Bennett director of the Rivers center, said Japanese coun cils had been called into session to pass resolutions condemning the acts, and commented that "we have 200 men 'out in the Pacific; if they fall Into - Japanese hands the will be treated worse than Americans." - - - -' .' . ; ' Charles Hancock . Forster of Oakland, Calif., who was . in charge of Red Cross activities In the Philippines and returned re cently on the . exchange : ship Gripsholm, said' one report he re ceived indicated bodies of, Amer icans, 50 at a time, "were thrown into trucks iand buried in com mon burial pits." He added; a raj of hope, how ever, with the comment that re cent reports indicated that "men who survived the horor of 1942 were getting along fairly welt" ' By ROGER GREENE , "LONDON,; Jan. 28 -(P- Thou sands of Britons" have- died In prison camps in Asia, the victims. of "unspeakable savagery" in flicted by their Japanese captors. And repeated - British representa tions have brought only "evasive, cynical or Otherwise unsatisfact ory replies from Tokyo. Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden gravely told the house of commons today. Eden, citing only a few of many authenticated cases of torture, drew a grim picture "of the bar barous nature ' of our Japanese enemies." A I shocked house heard that - allied f soldiers with their hands tied jwere 1 "systematically bayoneted from behind,", and how a British officer captured in Bur TT STADalTIG Extra! 'Conrad, the Sailor" Merrie Melody Cartoon ' "Cave Dwellers in - : Italy" In News of the Day Pitt: rjvXwr.. . 1 fanmu Etci b Ha Shron ca it iw;s3 I Mi It r ma" was cluLLd across the face with a sword and then tied to a stake with a strangling rope noose around his neck. , The Japanese "have violated not only the principles of interna tional law but all canons of de cent civilized conduct" Eden said. "The British government repeat edly has made the strongest possi ble representations to the Japa nese . government through' the "Such replies as have been re ceived have been evasive, cynical or otherwise unsatisfactory. . ' "Let the Japanese government reflect in the timer to- come "that the record of their military au thorities in this war will, not be forgotten." . - t i US-Spanish Policy Due To Be Changed H (Continued from Page 1) II nancial arrangement between the Spanish government and Germany designed to make available: to Germany substantial peseta cre dits which Germany unquestion ably expects to apply to -augmenting espionage and sabotage in Spanish territory and to! inten sify opposition to the allies in the Iberian peninsula.' ; MADRID, Jan. 28-(;P)-Author-lzed Spanish sources said today the planned suspension by the United States of oil : shipments from the Caribbean area to Spain during the month of February had "no political " significance", and was concerned rather with "ne gotiations of a; purely commercial character." ; News of the embargo was - not published In Spain. - . i It Ends Tonite! J EitoI Flynn in ll ' n fa w Companion Feature- "YOU'RE A LUCKY FELLOW, ! MR. SMITH" Mickey Mouse Club Today at 1 P. M. -, Something Different! SUEBiW ' i BETTE DAVIS v brilliantly teamed again with her co-star of THE OLD MAID'. : GIG YOUNG JOHN IODEI OOlOlfS MO SAM hT VMCMf SMHMMM CO-FEATURE ; t'lZvfaC'ijr" l'JZ1 IL3 Szno Kckiii! c:i a i:n::oo:ii immwm 0 Lay In 12m norning and f.!;ht rrem Murder at nl-hfl The sus pense It terrir.c and Joan and Fred art wst the pair to make the most el every action-packed moment! i - O Luncheons u:r3 tr::::3 CIS IS6SAQ "4 Phone CCSS v . . ' Cntii t:ia