M The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morrdng, March 9. 1944 PAGE NUTS D 01 AvrvawA ai ft- at.w m 1 ClidJL vc; OllU YYD r- r 1 ."' oDeea Looms Derby Threat African Sun Cops Tropical Park Co Promoted . -i I MIAMI, Fla., March 8-P)-War- ren Wright's Pensive looked more 10ce' a Kentucky derby colt" today, finishing with a burst ol speed to take second place In a Tropical park sprint against older horses. : The six furlong dash was won by Julea Fink'i four-year-old Anniversaries Celebrated ! AtlUnionvale UNIONVALE Mr. and Mr. Claude Shelburns who were mar ried March 6, 1929, entertained at their'home Saturday. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Trent of, Bellevue who were mar ried March 6. 1943. . i Guests honoring the two couples I and attending were: Mr. and Mrs. Howard Baker, Mr. and Mrs. John Clow, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Geiger, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Sergeant, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Trent, Mr. and Mrs." Oaude Shelburns. Mrs. Shel- burne is sister of Mr. Trent Love ly gifts were presented, j, Marine Recruiter ters Run Interference i Against Zeros (The following story was writ ten by Master Tech. Sgt. Maurice E. Moran, of Pittsburgh, marine corps combat correspondent, and distributed by! The Associated Press.) V... ':. .. v UNIONVALE Mrs. Jessie C. Smith, Mrs. Ivan Crawley, Mrs. J. R. Panek and Miss Dorothy i SC March 1 at Corpus Christl, home following a business; trip, to Tex accordin to word reeetv-1 Salein. j , gelding African Sun, but Pensive jit's now Aviation Machinist MatelLanner of Broadmead visited rel- would have won in another lew j j,C Orvflle i Mall, apped froml atives and friends while enroute yards. The photo showed Aincan Sun the winner by a head. Mar garet McCaUum's Reztips was third, three lengths back of Pen sive. The time of 1:12 35 was ex cellent for a wet, slow track. " I Despite the fact that he was running against four proven sprinters and that he was unim pressive in his ,1944 debut last Week,' Pensive was backed down a . oa t fiuftpiticm VTa naid 43.70 to place and $2.70 to show. V fl 1 1 pv I I SI I African Sun returned $8.60, KJvJVJ $4.50 and $2.90 across the twara, and Reztips paid $2.50. ji Jockey Conn McCreary kept Pensive under restraint in the earty stages ' of the race, while iMile Caffarella got African Sun off to a flying start ing. ! The resources of the American Red Cross In .. meeting . certl problems of servicemen and their families were discussed at the Pensive turned on the heat " Willamette Valley area. USO staff h stretch, however, and was tunning over ! the winner at the finish. .':!' . ea ox nis parents, mr. una ana. Mrs. Arnold Brown ana son., John O. Mutt, 1139 Norway, 5a- Donald of Portland, were Sunday lent. The former Salem high guests of her parents, Mr. and school athlete graduated from Mrs.: C J. Countiss. Mri. Doris aerial gunnery school at Kings- Braat and William Maxwell, 86, ville, Tex on February 84 and 0f Portland, were weekend guests to now bacx at tne corpus of Mri and Mrs. Martin Braat. Mr. Christl base for further train- Maxwell is uncle of Mrs. Braat and remained for a visit Leonard Verhagen, Mr. and Mrs. Cjur, and Mrs. Carr of Portland were en route to the coast Mr. Verhagen is a cousin of Mr. Braat 1 Mrs. J. W. Forest, 75, who has been convalescing from recent op eration at the home of her son in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. George Westf all, expects the last of this week to join her hus band at the home of daughters at Clatskame. Staff Meets First Lt Gray P. Minor, US ma rines, newly In charge of the . Portland recruiting district, with tub-stations at Salem, Eugene and Klamath Falls, paid an of ficial visit at the Salem station which he Inspected Monday, and then was introduced to the edi tors of the Salem newspapers, Mayor Doughton, and other city officials, selective service head Quarters and the local . draft board, after which he visited with Gov. Earl SneH In his of fice. He was Introduced around by Sgt. Herman M. Doney, who Is In charge of the Salem sta tion. Lt Minor, whose home is near Oakland, Calif came to Portland ' from the recruiting district at Butte, Mont, and re lieved Mai James B. Bardie, who had been In charge for' the past eight years.. V'. ; Baltsi? Haw, Haw, Sez Nova PORTLAND, Ore, March 8-JF)-S o m e o n e mentioned Joe Baksi. - Lou Nova, the Calif ornian who used to be a heavyweight title contender, leaned back and laughed loudly. "That's one guy I know . I can lick," said Lou, who will go 10 rounds or less here Friday night with Nasb Garrison, another Cali f ornian who never was a heavy weight contender. "Why, that guy was nothing but a paunching bag for me." ; , . .; Nova gave the ' impression ' he regarded Baksi, conqueror of Tami Maurillo, about as highly - now as when- the young Pennsyl vanian was his . sparring partner. ' But that was back when Lou was training for Joe Louis and Maxie Baer. " - At least Lou seemed to have -convinced his new manager, Ray Dodge. If Nova looks sharp against Garrison, Dodge said, they'll try . to make Baksi Lou's next oppon- nt ' I conference held at Corvallis USO this week. H.i R. Anthony, pro gram director of Chemeketa strj USO, Salem, presided. j Mrs. Mildred B. Merryfield, ex ecutive secretary of Bepton coun home service supervisor of Mar- ff f-jrit UlireCLUS Cr5ss, Were the guest speakers, A round table .discussion fol lowed. j4 Committee Slashes Home ilv Capt RusSel Floss, special sei ices officer and Mrs. Margaret! C. Blodgett director of Service Club No. 1, were present from Camp Adair. Representing Salem were Adj. B. W. Glaeser and Miss Jes sie Cook of Court street USO 'and R. R. Boardman, Mrs. O. K. De- Witt and Mr. and Mrs. H. R. An thony from Chemeketa street USO. ! Officers elected for the next three months are both from $a- lem. Adj. Glaeser will act; as chairman and Mrs. Anthony secretary. The next meeting, April ; 4, will be held at Chahe- keta street USO. ;j Canning Workshop Opens Tomorrow Here Toddy - -Gone Next EVANSVILLE. Ind March S (A-Pitcher .Paal Trait, t tl game winner last season, was among the early birds at the start of Detroit Tiger spring training today, but he didn't . slay long. . Arriving here six days in ad vance of the starting date' for Detroit regulars, Trout found rders te report Friday for his selective, service physical ex amination and left at once for Detroit "' WASHINGTON, March! 8-(P) Displaying liberality towrd war agencies but sharply slashing home; front bureaus, the house ap propriations committee has ap proved a $500,103,748 deficiency supply bill, $92,235,064 below bud get estimates. I The bilL first of its " type for 1944, also provided $382,314,000 In transfers and contract authoriza tions, i .'-'! Except for $240,108,9311 in new fundi made necessary for over time pay and other compensation increases for employes of the 32 as. agencies and bureaus financed by the; bill, the bulk .of the money was earmarked for community fa- I cilities, ; veterans' hospital facil ities I and the postoffice g depart ment 1 ,, The $30,000,000 requested by the veterans administration was granted to the penny. The com mittee explained that it was need ed tq provide additional beds and ' construction for a program envis aging : 300,000 hospital beds for war veterans soon. . The new funds, the cornmittee Vocational agricultural and home economics leaders from four north western states will participate in a school community cannery work thnn nt Wnnrihiirn rmoninff XTri. day and continuing until next said, will bring , the number , of R. E. Naugher. specialist in lag- 1U10- aaoiuonai j 100,000 ricultural education from Wash- 0605 iar expected to De acquired inaton. DC. will be in charae of f or ekting facilities under army the training oroeram for home and t control and 1 100,000 economics and agricultural state more are l De ootamea later. Greshani to Get 12 Days Racing PORTLAND, Ore., March 8-flP) The Multnomah County Fair as sociation has been granted a per mit for a 12-day horse racing sea son at Gresham June 5-17. Chair man Henry W. Collins of the Ore gon racing commission announced - today. Dates for the annual Multnomah Kennel club dog racing season here have been set tentatively for June .19-August 19, he said. supervisors from Utah, Washing ton, Idaho and Oregon. The pur pose of the cannefy workshop Will be to give practical training in planning and producing the fam ily food supply, organizing and establishing school canneries, plant management and methods of pro cessing meats, vegetables and fruits. A similar training work shop was given at Peoria, 111., j for vocational leaders in that section. The cannery at Woodburn Was one of the eleven school canneries established last year by local school boards and the state divi sion of vocational education. Dallessandro 4-F I .READING, Pa, March 8.-P)-Dominic Dallessandro, C h i c a go Cubs outfielder, was classified 4-F when he took his army physical examination at Alentown, Pa to day. He was rejected because! of a head injury he suffered in 1939 when he crashed into a wall while chasing a fly bait j Maxie Baer Proud Papa Third Time SACRAMENTO,- Calif, March 8 -iP) Staff Sgt Max Baer, form er heavyweight boxing champion now in the army, became a father tonight for the third, time when his wife gave -birth to a daughter at Sutter maternity hospitaL The Baers' two other children are boys. Baer arrived here from his Texas camp In time to take his wife to the hospital. He is con nected with the army's physical training program. . Ttf . f - Calmest - tesMilts. Aausiar iccCESt . for sooe yr la Cktaa. N wattcr with kit ym mrm ArrtJCT- KD terers, mdUi, heart, Imar, Uvtr kidstyt, itomaca, gas,- - eoastipaUoa, utetn. , la tetu. f trer, tkim, frnuU -Ulata ... IIDFDIAO ; Al a Traxnicg Field Somewhere J. plane comes in for a landing. In it are t two r n7r men, one a : veteran of C. KVILfc: many hours in the air, the m m ;w aaa - ij .i,t j. wum m uiu tuu iui teens. The instructor climbs out and as he $teps to one side he speaks thev 1 4 - words the lad has been waiting many long months for. QJC, Bud, take 'er up alone! The boy experiences a sinking sensation at the pit of his stomach, his hand trembles as he grasps the stick, his throat tightens as he inches thes throttle forward. The motor roars with life as the plane gathers speed down the runway; the ground seems to fall gently away: and he is in the air; He t circles the field a few times and comes in for a perfect land ing. As he steps from the plane he experiences the greatest thrill he will ever knowhe has made good on his first solo flight He is one of the lucky ones his vision rates 100 perfect or he would never be allowed in a plane in the first place. His skill is largely; responsible for the success of the flight but also responsible; are the ones who built the plane. Suppose their vision had been faulty, would that, plane have brought him back for a safe landing?) 'I DONT GUESS -: BE SURE : , '-. " - -bn'- S. ill 1 ': ' Phcne 5438 ) . -. . . , i 148 N., Liberty Figb BOUGAINVILLE, Solomons Is lands, Feb. 29.4-(Delayed)-Tbis Is a story of fighter pilots who ran interference "while : their mates- scored against fate Zeros.4 . " " Among these unsung block ing back af the air are Uent (Jg) Richard W. Moore, ts, of XaGrande, Ore, Ens. Louis B. KeUey, It. ef . Oklahoma City, Okla and Llet (Jg) Paul Beanmont 24, ef Pico, Calif. : Lieutenant Moore has flown 80 combat missions over such widely divergent spots as Attu and Ra bauL "Lieutenant Beaumont has numbered 55 missions and Ensign KeUey about 50. , "None of these navy Hellcat pi lots has bagged a Zero. But neith er has any of them lost a bomber he was assigned to cover. Nor, a fellow fighter pilot on whom they have flown wing, protecting their mate's tall as he made a success ful run on a Jap- - ' j - Tve only had a squirt (short burst) at long range," said Lieutenant Moore, a powerfully big lad whose wife Uvea la Al bany, Ore i But they didn't mention the times their tight flying kept Ze ros off the backs of the bombers or from jumping pilots making a run on another Jap. And Moore and Beaumont didnt bother talk ing about, the strafing runs they made at Attu in' impossible fly ing weather with, bombs lashed to their ; wings.' ;yv--; V vvs: S' Moore tried mechanical engin eering at Eastern Oregon college in his home town but he wants to go back to farming. , - Red Gross Gets High Average At Mt. Angel MT. ANGEL ' The Red Cross drive is coming along fine in this district and the aim is to finish the canvassing as soon as possible. The quota Is $2200, the largest ever given Mt Angel and environs, but the district bids fair to 'meet the test - . . j ; ' Peter F. Gores Is general chair' man and the same division of terri tory and solicitors that brought in last year's record amount are be ing used. Besides the town proper, the -district includes the farm dis tricts of North Howell, Hazel Dell, McKee, Grassy Pond and Har mony.' ' ; .. ' , Some of the solicitors finished their district on the first day, March L Others are finishing this week. In some of the completed ones the average donations per family was larger than that need ed to fill the quota. Seriate to Ask FDR's Files In RE A Firing WASHINGTON, March Counsel for a senate investigating committee has called for White House files on the rural electrifi cation administration and, ' when told the request would have to be made to President Roosevelt him self, declared the committee would do just that . ","J.sf';;: The unusual call for opening of the chief executive's files to legis lative .investigators raised anew the possibility of. a congress-White nouse ciasn,. , . . y i Mr. Roosevelt had moved over the"? week-end : to '. avert such a head-on collision by Instructing Jonathan Daniels, one of his aides. to answer the committee's ques tions concerning White House; ef forts to secure the resignation of Harry Slattery as REA adminis trator. Daniels . had. refused ear lier and had been threatened with contempt proceedings. ' . ; j , After Daniels testified , today, Carrll L. Beedy, counsel for the senate agriculture subcommittee investigating, the REA, asked that the presidential aide produce the complete White House file of cor respondence land- memoranda dealing with 'the REA f ! Daniels said he considered these to be the property of the presi dent but agreed to determine whether it would be "proper or possible" for him to request them on behalf of the committee. Beedy told him that if he did not pro duce them, the request would .be made-directly to Mr. Roosevelt ' . Before the committee, Daniels testified that his efforts to secure Slatlery's resignation were made with the knowledge and approval of Mr. Roosevelt - ; ' " " Father Farmer Gall Issued ; MT. ANGEL The latest draft call sent to Mt Angel men includes -a, number of farmers, and. fathers are receiving orders to report An swering the call within the next ' weeks will be William Bean, pro prietor of the Hotel Fountain, two children; Leonard Picker, assistant postmaster and the .father of V son; Harold Bourbonnais, who has one child and is farming the Phil May farm and hop yard. Two'bth- er young farmers whose farms will ' be left without tenants are Daniel i Revamping of Slate V' Health Services Urgetl PORTLAND, March 8-ff)-Ore-gon will be asked to revamp its health services to avoid duplicated work by different agencies,1 "Dr. Frederick D. Strieker said today. ' The state health officer said ;a survey by Dr. Carl E. Buck of the American Public Health associa tion showed overlaps in the work of the board of agriculture, indus trial accident commission, ' board of education, and state board of health. . Buck's report was based chiefly on Jackson, Josephine and Des chutes counties. ' i While the bill carried ko new funds for the navy," it authorized the transfer of $262,314,000 from funds previously earmarked for ordnance and ordnance stores to 13 other naval appropriations, mostly for the maintenance and operation of naval training sta tions 'and shore establishments. The $171,895,680 in new money i for the postoffice department, the committee explained, was neces sary, largely because of new over time pay laws and the increased volume of free mail for members of th armed forces. 1 In recommending $127,500,000 for construction of community fa cilities by. the federal works agen cy, the committee cut i $22,500, 000 fjrom the total requested. Fa cilities covered include schools, child-care centers, hospitals, clin ics, recreational facilities and gen eral.; Utility systems. While com mending the program for which $367,500,000 has been appropria ted id recent years, the committee I said it believed the new allotment was adequate. ,i .' ' " "j '' (' 0A ; o o o y . -' tsO 0nsBO te gdcsoQ y&rHEREV&L he may be, his country W has provided him with the best guns, the best tukifbnns, the best food that skill and money can produce. V.-' But there are some things that cannot be handed out by Government Issue. And these are the things he misses most ; ; . his Dad's friendly counsel, his moth- ers homey touch. These are the things he needs . . . the things he gets through the Red Cross, your Red Cross Pbh home away from home. t ' -: They seem like little things In print ; : ; coffee and doughnuts after a long march . : ; a bed with real sheets when he is on furlough ... real American cigarettes and chocolate bars . . and men and women stationed everywhere, at every tiny out post ... to bring him comforts, service and companionship. Little things? Perhaps. But these are tne "little things that count the things that help your boy to do his man-sized job. These , are the things that prove to him when the going is toughest that bis people haven't forgotten him. For Red Cross isat his side; You have given your sons . ; ; Sell GIVE TO THE RED CROSS sYou have done the extra work. . . do nated your blood and bought your bonds; i i Yes, and you have helped the Red Cross before. Giving to the Red Cross has always been a great proud habit of thirty million American families . . . proud that they amid give . , . proud of Red Cross that made giving -worthwhile, h ; But this year, when the need is greater than ever, when we serve more than eleven million American boys - all over the whole wo rid . this year you. will j want to give more . . . to give freely to your own Red Cross . to : your own sons in the service; J This year dig deep and be j glad. For wherever he is : 1 a cm . - if ff M ' - ... . - : . fl ds liiiBS sidle CI SiniD Slrc:l Sal:n, Orcgoii Chines Xlerb Co. of net Eears Only Tom. a aa Sat.'. a. m. ta y. . and. a a. , u wea., a. m. tm 19:Z9 p. m. 128 IT. CoaX St, Ealera, Ore.