The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 04, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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    VXC2 T0Z2
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"No favor Sways Us; No Fear ShaU Au?"
rnaa Flnt Statesman, March 23, IM1
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY
, CHAItLES A. SPRAGUZ; Editor and Publisher
' Member of the Associated Press - ;
g The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.
I Unwanted Children V -V
j- One problem in connection with after-war
Germany which is already causing heads to be
! scratched in Washington, London, and Moscow
"! is what to do with the thousands and thousands
' of small German children which have been
born in recent years as a part of the third reich's
' calculated plan for raising another crop of sol
diers for 20 years hence.
Most of these youngsters, -although by no
i means all, have been born out of wedlock. The
boys, as future soldiers of the reich,' have been
reared directly by the German state in large
' orphanages, or by the father himself. The
mother, in either case, is disregarded. Girls,
' however, do not receive state upbringing or
state subsidies, and are left for the mother to
rear' as best she can. - i
The primary consideration in bringing up
-the boys, however, is to see that they are deeply
indoctrinated in the nazi faith from the first
; faltering word and goose-step. The orphanages
: are nothing more than great state training
schools where the master-race and Aryan su
premacy, doctrines of the nazis are carefully
, implanted on minds' far too young to ever dis
' criminate for themselves. If left in their pre
sent form, such schools would in due course
x turnout a crop of helots passionately con
vinced of the perfect justice and desirability
v ' of the nazi rule of terror and exploitation. Even
the girls would know that their duty lay in
1 only one direction--the provision of even more
soldiers for the armies of the next generation.
I Obviously, the dissolution of such schools
must be assured by the allies as part of the
; necessary program of re-education in Germany.
, " But something must be done about the children
themselves, mostly motherless, many unable
even to say the name of their fathers. There
is a very present danger that in the surge of
revulsion -which will probably; accompany the
fall of the nazi edifice, .these children will be
even more abandoned than at present, since
even their non-assertive parents may desire to
forget them as, a reminder of the debauched
. days of nazi birth-politics. !
One suggestion has been that the children
should be taken into the homes of other na
tions in Europe and perhaps in this country
and reared in an atmosphere totally different
from that of even postwar Germany; which will
doubtless remain deeply marked by naziism
for some time. The objection hitherto presented
to this has been that no French family, say,
which has suffered the absence of loved ones
in German prison, camps, or the execution of
others as hostage
----,t)'ttfTectioraehild of the erstwhile mas-
i ter race, lio child reared in such an atmosphere
X would havt a particularly good chance of a
I pleasant youth; and there is not much in making
the children pay fortheir elders' sins. ;
The better solution is probably to continue
the orphanages as they are but to alter the
educational program basically and radically to
' conform to the school curricula in . democratic
countries. Undoubtedly the children themselves
will have to remain wards of the German state,
whatever that may be; and at best their future
is none too gaudy. Certainly .they will be better
off, however than the legions of Russian chil
dren who ran homeless and wild in the cities
of that country in the years immediately follow
ing the 1917 revolution, and who had neither
food nor bed, much less education or affection.
But if their childhood and youth are, at best,
; sadly warped, and their future is never very
bright, it is simply one more crime which can
be attached to the burdens already borne , by
the nazi party and its inhuman protagonists.
resorted to after political medicine has failed
to effect a cure. ? - v. t -
Political medicine failed- in -1939 and there
was resort to political surgery jjButmow we see
rather clearly why political medicine failed. It")
failed in Italy and Germany because the patient
refused to take it. Italians and Germans were j
"not interested in politics." More apparent 'X
every day now, is the fate to Which their dis- '
interest led them. As for, the Japanese, they
didn't even have reliable physicians on hand ;
to prescribe good medicine.
Elsewhere, in the democracies, political med- I
icine was more successful; the failure was in
not recognizing that the political sickness pre
valent in continental Europe and in east Asia'
was highly communicable. Remember when
President Roosevelt spoke dramatically of
."quarantining" it? He should have advocated
vaccination. At any rate,! our failure was in let
ting , the sickness spread-when a minor oper
ation here and there might have stopped it.
Now the major operation is hearing a climax
and may within a reasonable time be over. If
the patient doesn't die there will be a long
period of convalescence in which medicine
good, carefully prescribed medicine will be
necessary. j ' M "'; v--: : i X
"Not interestedin politics?,,v You are if you
care at all about the world's future and your
own. There's 8r primary election week after
next. If your are registered, yout voter's pamph
let should have arrived by now. Better look
it over and find out who's running..
1 i&rzx??;" !
:
i s vV' .'x
! ft A. y s -tjA
I? 4 V A
IT O rvv W
"Short Cut to Dunkerque9?
News Behind
The News :
By PAUL MALLON
Today's GadS Prograiniiis
hi
War and Politics V
"I'm not interested ' in politics this year.
.There's a war on." - .
" Whoever has expressed, that thought, or
thought it Without expressing it; or without
thinking it has paid keen attention to the war's
progress but none to politics, is guilty of over
looking an important fact: , ' -War
is politics, i ...
' More specifically, was . is political surgery,
Onterpreting
The War Wens
By KIRKE L. SIMPSON
. CoprxKbt 1M4 by th AiwcUUd
i London reports suggest an impending significant
change in allied pre-inyasibn technique that could
be the curtain raiser for the final air action to open
up continental beachheads for sea-borne Anglo
American, troops.
British- night-flying heavy bombers laid off for
the first time in the non-stop assault and Ameri-'
can weight carriers shifted their daylight opera
tions from strategic to tactical targets. They were
just over the channel from their bases in Britain,
beating at ; invasion coast targets in the Calais
. erea. ; : ' ". :';Y ; . :-"- . :
.- Weather conditions could account for what seemed
partial lull on the 19th consecutive day of the
pre-invasion barrage. There was no hint or storms
or baffling clouds over more distant nazi targets,
however, and jthe relative lull in long range oper-,
ations from Britain 'could have quite Another sig
nificance. It could mark a regrouping ond re-,
equipment of planes for the mass air attack in'
support of ground troops stabbing into the German
(Distribution by Kins Features Syndicate. Inc. Re pro-
duction in wbo) or in part strictly .prohibited.)
WASHINGTON, May S General MacArthur ;
fooled the Japs completely before, moving into
Hollandia and Aitape. " ff; . v:
They observed our ships steaming up the Newj
Guinea coast from Lae and- Salamaua, and natur- '
ally concluded we were to hit '
Wewak, their point nearest to
us. By every trick possible, ?
MacArthur encouraged that im-
pression.'
1 Thei Japs hastily assembling ;
most of their Jorce around Hoi- f
landia (probablyabbut two di
'Visions) rushed them to We- 1
wak, whereupon MacArthur by- '
' passed them,' proceeded along ;
the coast and took Hollandia
Paul MaUon. - without much resistance. ; j
The weakened Jap garrison there had no inclin-
ation for a last ditch, death-loving fight Frankly,
they fled to the hills.
The bulk of the Jap force lured into Wewak will
face the kind of starvation-depletion fighting that ;
has come to characterize the whole South Pacific"
war strategy, even the island-hopping part of it. X
That mode of warfare works like chess. You
push fingers swiftly outitoward objectives in the
rear of the Jap frontal positions, either dot-atolls f
or mainland bases. " fii : .1 . .
The Japs still hold islands within sight of long
conquered ' Guadalcanal, lor instance, and several i
Marshall islands eastward of our advanced posi
tions on Eniwetok and IKwajalein. So the Japs
are always ux the rear of our lines, and we of
theirs. :'";.VI. -f'-'vl
But we have the air and sea power, and this we
use to starve the by-passed Japs. The Jap-held -MarshaU
islands of Jaluit, Mill, Wotje, etc, as 1
well as the ones off Guadalcanal, are swept almost '
daily by our air bombing. j :
No surface ships can easily get in to bring them'
supplies. They have no planes at these points gen- j
erally, and the only safe avenue of supplies for
them is by submarine. Not much ammunition or
food can be brought. in that way.
Our advanced bases thereafter are strengthened-
1 with plane 7 runways and suitable ship facilities 1
for the next by-passing jump.'. j
Already our new holdings at Hollandia and in
the Marshalls and on New Britain give us an air
sweep (but not air control) over a vast arc reach- i
ing the southernmost Fhilippine islands, all the
Carolines (including Truk) and even the base of)
the Marianas (Yap, Saipan) which are the last;
island outposts to be hopped south of the Japan- ,
ese mainland. . " f. .v: j.
No place In this area can be used as a Jap Pearl
Harbor, not "even Truk,.;' which we have already
bombed 32 times, and thus have reduced to a sec-!
ondary outpost Most of me1 important Jap holdings,
ap" airfields, not naval bases (three at Truk, for
'Instance). . ft
' Perhaps this explains why the Japs so seldom
these days exhibit a desire for death in the last
ditch of futile resistance.
A.
No general movement; of nazi; troops from the
east to the western front to meet us has yet been
observed. True enough, the battleline Is only about j
half as long as last year, and the enormous Rus
sian claims on captured men and material is nearly
overywhere conceded to be of little benefit as mili
tary information, although they may be good pro
paganda. ' :
But both the numbers and equipment of Russian
troops on the fighting front have been constantly
increasing. It would be imprudent for the Germans
to withdraw any large numbers of divisions and
switch the emphasis of -their fighting effort pri
marily against us. t -t x .
As a matter of fact, their recent reinforcements
in Italy, the Balkans, and along the northwest coast
seem to have come entirely from reserves held in
Germany, Czechoslovakia, - Austria, and Poland.
Some Swedish reports say 15 divisions were used
in policing occupied Russiav suggesting these are
Atlantic wall defenses under cover of a giant air now available against us. That is no doubt what
K SLM MBS THCESD A Y 13M KC
6:30 It's the Truth.
. :4S News. - . ' " : ; '
' T0 News.
7:1 rarm and Home Program.
130-Shady valley.
T:45 Morning Moods.
Good Snip Graca.
S JO Orchestra.
S:45-Wax Shop. ;
:5ft Boaka Carter.
80 Pastor's Call.
t:15 Pastor's CalL
9:30 News. -t:45
Campus rrcshmaa.
; 10i)0-Hardy, News,
i 10:15 Jack Berch.
' 10 JO Let's Be fTharmfaig.
; 110 Cedrtc roster.
! 11:13 US Navy.
! 11 JO Skyline Serenade. r
11:45 Around Town.
i 11 4)0 OrganaUties.
1S:1S News. . k
; 120 HiUbilly Serenade. '
r U35 Nashville Varieties.
L 14)0 News. -
IAS Spotlight on Rhythm.
: IdS JLum 'n' Abner.
130 run Speed Abead.
i S. DO News.
: 2 AS Broadway Band Wagon.
2:15 Don Lee NewareeL '
'., S:4S Radio Tour.
S 4)0 News. ' . -" ' " ' r '
3K5 Concert Hoot.
' 3:45 Johnson- Family.
44)0 Fulton Lewis.
4:19 News, i
4 JO Lullaby in Rhythm.
4:45 Roundup Revelers.
54)0 Malta Militalr.
S:1S Superman.
- 50 Music.
I 5:45 Gordon Burke.
: 8:00 Gabriel Heatter.
6:15 Nick Carter.
:30 Cote Glee Club.
r:4 Sports, i
?4W-Gardcn Talk.
7:15 Commentary.
.7:20 Interlude.
730 Cisco Kid.
84)0 Pick Ac Pat
830 Art Wilson.
8:45 Music
4)0 News. f
BrlS Rex Miller.
S30 Fulton Lewis. '
8:45 Music. ! '
10:00 Wings Over West Coast. ,
1030 News.
10:45 Music ;!
114)0 Music .
1130 Sign Off.
KOIN CBS TBUKSDAT St Kft.
8D0 Nortnwesl. rarm Beporter.
JS Breakfast Bulletin.
S20 Texas Rangers
845-Koin Klock.
, 1:15-New. 1
730 News. . , i
7:45 Nelson Prlngte.
84)0 Consumer News. - i
8:15 Valiant Lady.
830 Stories America Loves.
8:45 Aunt Jenny.
84)0 Kate Smith Speaks.
8:15 Big Sister
830 Romance of Helen Trent i
8. -45 Our Gal Sunday.
104)0 Life Can Be Beautiful 1
10:15 Ma Perkins. j
1030 Bernadine Flynn. ' i
10:45 The Goldbergs.
114)0-Portia Faces Life.'
11:15 Joyce Jordan.
1130 Young Dr. Malorte.
11:45 Perry Mason.
124)0 News.
12:15 Neighbors. I
1230 Bright Horizons. I
125 Bachelor s Children.
14)0 Broadway Matinee.
135 Dorothy Fisher.
130 Mary Marlia.
15 Scott Show.'. i
24)0 Open Door. -
Id5 Newspaper of the Air. :
2 -45 American Women. , '
34)0 News. " -MI
3:t-State Traffle. ' 1
830 Stars of Today.
3:45 World Today.
335 News. : -.
44-Lady of the Press. . -4:15
Bob Andersen. News.
430 Tracer f Lost Persons.
8:00 Galen Drake.
S:1S Red's Gang. -
S30 Harry nsiiBsry. Mews.
S.-4S News.
S 25 BUI Henry. -40-MaJor
Bowes.
30 Dinah Snore.
14)0 The First Un -
730 Hera's to Romance. -
Si)0-1 Loves Mystery. '. ,
8:15 Passing Parade.'
838 Death Valley Days, i
835 News. -
84)0 Music
8:15 Dan - Harmon, v
f 30 Orson Welles. '
re-00 Five Star FmaL
leas Wartime Women.
IS 30 Gardening witb Bouquet.
11 4)0 Orchestra.
11:30 Airflo ef the Air. '
ll:45-OrchesUa.
1155 News. '-'
' g-M ' Serenade. !;
U30-44W ajav Musfe and New.
l:4S-Captain Uldhlght
64)0 Schools at War.
30 SpoUicnt BaMa.
-Tbe b
Story Teller.
74)0 Raymond Grain Swing
T05 Appointment, for Life, j
' 736 Red Bjrder.
- asm News. - i
SOS Lam and Ahner.
30 Oregon's Own.
84)0 Stop and Go.
: 830 News. 1 i-1 :
8.45 Portland Plan. 1
10.-00 America's Town Meeting.
11 0 Concert Hour.
KKX BN THtTKSDAT 1188 Be.
64)0 Musical Clock,
35 National Farm At Hone.
6:45 Western Agriealture.
74)0 Home Harmonies. r
74)5 Top e tbe Morning.
7:15 News i :-.
730 Tames Abbe Observes. -'
7:45 The Listening Post, j
4)0 Breaktast Club.
4)0 Christian Science Program.
8:15 Voice of Experience.
830. Breakfast at Sardl's ;
104)0 News.
10:15 Sweet River; r
. 1030 Ted Ma lone. j .
10:59 Buddy Twin. ' i
114)0 Bauknage Talking. V '
liaS-The Mystery Chef, j
11-30-Ladies Be Seated. !
124)6 Sons, bv Morton Downey.
11:15 Hollywood Star Tims.
2330 " News. . j .'
1.-00 Sam Hayes.
1:15 Bob Nichols. - - 1
1 30 Blue Newsroom Review. .
2 -00-What's Doing. Ladies.
' 130 Babies .Institute.
2:40 Labor News.
2:45 Music.
.84)0 Grace DUott. i
3:15 News -r.. L
' 3.-45-Uusic.
44)0 Kelly's Courthouse. !
430 Hop Harrtgan.. - ;
, 4:45 Sea Hound. '
8.-00 Terry and the Pirates.
sas Dick Tracy. . :
838 Jack Armstrong.
OtP
S9SMJDS
WD CDOS
. KGW NBC THtmSDAT-
44)0 Pew u Patrol.
635 Labor Newa.
64K Mirth and Msdnese
' " News. ' I
74)0 Journal el Living. i
i 7:15 News Headlines.. ! ,
. j 730 Charles Runyan. Organist,
i 75 Sam Hayes. j
84X Stars of Today.
8:15 James AbbeTKews. !
- 630 Music of Vienna.
8:45 David Harum.
84)0 Personality Hour. ; i
10:00 School Prorrara.
10 30 News. -i 1 ':C
10:45 Art Baker's Notebook. P &
114)0 The Guiding Light.
' 11:15 Today's Children.
11:30 Light oi the World.
11.-45 Melodies c Home.
124)0 Women of America.
12:15 Ma Perkins. (
1230 Pepper Young's Family, i
12:45 Right to Happiness. i .
v 14)0 Backstaae WUe. i ;
1:15 Stella Dallas, f ; ,
138 Lorenzo Jones.
1:45 Young Wldder Brown, i
34)0 When A Girl Marries.
8:15 We Love and Learn.
230 Just Plain BiU.
245 Front Page FarreO.
34)8 Road Of Ufa.
3:15 Vic and Sad. -
330-B. Boynton.
3.45 Rambling Reader.
44i0 Dr. Kate, t
4:15 New of tha World.
430 Carl Kalasn-; Orchestra, f
4)0 OK for Release,
5:15 Tunes at Sundown.
S 30 Day Foster. Commentator.
' 8:45 Louis P. Lochnsr. - I
64)0 Music HaU, 1 t
30 Bob Burns. 1
74)0 Abbott and Costeuo.
. 730 March of Time,- .
84)0 Fred Waring in Pleasure rime
8:15 Night Editor.
8:30 CoUee Time. i .
8 4)0-Aldrich Family.
8:30 EUery Quea.
10 4 News Flashes. ' 1
10:15 Your Home Town News, -1025
Labor News
1030 Charles LaVcre. Singer.
1045 Voice ef A Nation.
114)0 Hotel Biltmore Orchestra. '
1130 News. . I
- -12 4)0 3 a. nv Swing Shtrt i
(Continued from Page 1) . .
were forming In Europe, Knox
had a brilliant group of corre
spondents there, headed by Ed
gar" Mowrer who later! was ex
pelled from Germany by Hitler.
Leland Stowe was one of this
group. '
Knox, himself made a v trip
through Europe and became so
alarm that he used the News to
warn v the i people j of danger
ahead. If was his position on for
eign questions, probably, which
Induced Roosevelt to Invite him
to a cabinet position.
I well recall 4 the
had the -privilege
last time I
of '.meeting
Knox. He spoke at the gover
age - f j "if-' a - ruiox. ne spoce a me gover
I OUQV S laOrClCn rw conference 5 at Quincy In
umbrella. - - . : '.'- -I '
That will come one day. It will be the supreme
test of air power's-ability to deal effectively with -coastal
defense raised to the Nth degree by years
of toil since France and the low countries fell be-' -fore
German conquerors; The problem faced by
General Elsenhower and his staff calls for that!
There would be no reasonable hope of an allied
break-throurh without sky-flooding fleets of planes ,
U lead tit way.';: -J-y - :;L :.v;-.t'-How
lo2 the concentration of thousands of al
lied air units against the nazi coastal defense area
- j t'.: tiztcrlzr.i ccmnunications may be destined
to 'nuvwhea it docs start, Is beyond conjecture. Not
even the men v. ho have planned it can be certain
tllhcv-''! :-y nevr Mrs d-f.rJ.3 prcliainary re-.
n::it) tr---- ' .' -
the nazis want us to believe.
, It is too much to say as some noted military
authorities arethat the German retreat was a
strategic maneuver, designed to reinforce the west
era front. The retreat has cost the Germans rather
heavily in a few places where their encircled troops
have: not-escaped.-;. v-:-;" I..-;-. ;;:
. They evacuated most of their men from the Cri
mea, but had to leave some behind. They also es
caped from Tiraspol where several divisions had
been surrounded. But at Odessa, and at least two
points in the Dnieper bend, they lost some divi
sionsno one knows how many.
The Russians-unquestionably are preparing for
a new drive and the true situation is one of doubt
that the nazis have sufficient force to attack them
ia advance cf the tbw ta cfirtt its v. c:;hL
By LILLXB MADSEFi
Mrs. S. T. sends me a leaf and
a bloom which she owns up to
having "snitched from a com
mercial garden during the past
week. I have never seen this,"
she adds, "and X just cant make
it out.', The flowers look like
azaleas but the leaver don't look
like anything I know." ' -
This Is a rhododendron orio
traphis. There! I ieel very smart
I didn't know either, until X vis
ited a - commercial garden this
past week, but Instead of "snitch
ing" a piece, as Mrs. S. T. puts
It I asked the owner of the gar
den what It was. He very kindly
told me. Most commercial grow
ers are very glad to teU one the
names of the plants In their gar'
dens. This particular rhododen
dren is delightful. It IS a rhodo
dendron but it has flowers like
' an azalea - and foliage like the
native manzanita. It is quite on
usual but it Is also quite attrac
tive. I have only seen it a couple
: cf times, so take It that it Is
, net too ccnuaon. ' ,
1941. Which is the site of the
great Fore River . shipyards.
Members of the conference had
visited the yards and seen the
great ; battleship . Massachusetts
under construction, j ;
A dinner was held that night
which was addressed i by Mal
colm MacDonald, son of the for
mer prime . minister of Great
Britain; and by Secretary Knox.
Mr. Knox told of the tense situa-;
tion in the north Atlantic with
reference to the movement of
lend-lease supplies to Britain,
and he came close to expression
of a policy of action on our part
-When the v dinner j ended, I
went up and shook hands with
him and inquired: "What are
you -waiting, for?" Hoc. leaned
over and remarked, "Word from
the chief." WeB. the word did
not come from the chief; it came
from the Japs at Pearl Harbor
not many months .after. -Frank
Knox rests in the sacred
soil of Arlington, but he leaves
a record- of devotion which
should long be an inspiration to
plain Ansricass,
K.OAC THCSSDAY 556 Ka. 1
104)0 News. - t
10 as The Homemakers Hour.
114)0 School of the Air. ?
1 US Melodies for String. , !
1130 Concert HaU.
124)0 News. i f ' j
13:1S Noon Farm? Hour. ' !
1.-00 Ridin" the Bang. ,
1 :15 Treasury Salute. ' 1
130 Variety Time.
' 8 4)0 Home Garden Hour, j
830 Memory Book ot aiuste
34)0 News. N . i
SlS-Muste i '. i .
44)0 D.A.R. 1 !
430 Traffic Safety Quiz. i
45 Excursions in Science. '
-. 84)0 On the Upbeat.
.830 Story Time.. !
S:5 Ifs Oregon's War. ,
6:15 News. I '
630 Evening Farm Hour.
' 930 University Hour.
830 Oregon's Own.
84)0 Music That Endures. -
' 830 News, i - i
645 evening Meditations.
164)0 Sign OH.
Mother Helct
War Prisoners Aid Cares
For Thousands of Soldiers
latest figure on casualties of American armed forces reveal
that there are 33,223 of this country's fighting men who are held ,
by the enemy as prisoners of war, and who are potential redp-
. .. i ' ; j j i ttt r! a l j
lenis ox aid ana coauort pxvvaucu uj n a nuuuui awl umuu
ber agency of the National War Fund, according to advices today
to Charles Ai Sprague, president of the Oregon War Chest This
aidto the prisoners of war is made
possible In part by contributions
to the Marion County War Chest
' The most recent compilation an
nounced by the office of war in
formation covers thei period "from
Pearl Harbor through April 7, and
also Teveals that to date a total
of 1902 American prisoners of war
have died since they were taken
prisoners, most of them in Japanese-occupied
territory, i - j " i? -;;
Of the total of American prison
ers of war, 32,043 are men of the
army, while 8282 are navy per
sonnel In addition to the service
men held prisoners, there are thou
sands ox American civilians who
are Interned in enemy concentra
tion camps and to whom War Pri
soners Aid also sends assistance.
War Prisoners Aid ships to
Americans confined in prisoner of
war camps and concentration cen
ters in enemy-occupied territory
books, musical instruments, -ath
letic equipment and similar ma
terials which relieve the madden
ing monotony of prison camp rou
tine. Under supervision of visiting
neutral representatives of War
Prisoners Aid educational classes
are conducted in many of the
camps, and musical and theatrical
organizations are formed to pro
vide entertainment
In one camp for women, a rep
resentative of War Prisoners Aid
recently discovered a complete
lack of anything to afford diver
sion for the internees. When this
condition was learned, they were
Immediately supplied with, a ping
pong set, volley balls, a piano ac-
cordion, a phonograph and re
cords, sewing materials and books
and magazines. -
" ' ' - ST ' t gfr
:V -":o,-.lij- - -
-if----i-Tif1irftBWnr-yasar-BBB8
Mrs. Ann Standing ef Sacramento,
Calif., wife ef an American sol
slier. tn Sicily and mother ef four'
children, was. reported booked'
at Sacramento city prison re
cently en a charge el attempted x
mnrder ef ber infant , daughter,
born April IS. The Infant .was
found In the basement ef the
Standing heme by neighborhood
children looking for waste pa
per. The babe, still alive, was
wrapped; in a blanket and 1st a
cardboard box. Rushed te a hos
pital, the infant is reported do
' tng fine. The Infant is pictured
held by Nam Jean Wilson at
the hospItaL
Library Looks
For Magazine
Back Issues
A call to Salem's reading pub
lic for magazines and periodicals
missing from the library's files
went out Tuesday from Neva Le
Blond, acting city librarian.
The list was much longer orig
inally, but it has been reduced
through exchanges made with
other libraries up and down the
coast, and by soliciting aid from
special back-issue magazine
service operating In New York
City."' 1 -'.-I--
Inability thus far to. locate cer
tain- issues of Current History,
Nation, New Republic, Scholastic
and ' Science- News Letter have
held up bindery : orders for the
compilation of these particular
periodicals. Anyone who may
have some of these back copies
Is. invited to contribute them to
the library.
Following is the complete list
of the missing issues:
Annals of the AmericanAcad-
emy of Political and Social Sci
ence, Sept; 1942; Etude, Feb. and
Nov, 1941: House Beautiful. Feb-
1944; Hygeia, July; 1941.
Current History, Oct 10, 1940:
Dec, 1941; Jan., June and Dec,
1942. ,;?,r-U X''-""--
Musical Quarterly, April, 1942;
Musician, April, 1942; Nation,
May S, 1941; New Republic, Jan.
19, 1942 and June 29, 1942; North
west Mining World, March 18 and
June.. 17, 1942; Popular; Science,
-an, 14A - :,v s .. rk-.Z
New York Times Magaiine Sec
tion (Sunday NY Times) May 11
and Sept 7, 1941; Nov. 22, 1942;
Jan. 17, 1943; Jan. 2, 1944.
Scholastic Nov. 25, 1940 (voL
37, no. 11); Science News Letter,
Oct 9, 1943;' Survey I Graphic,
Nov, 1942; Vital Speecehs,' March
IS, 1941 and July 15, 1942. '
Stockman May
Be Candidate
Forjudge
Jay Stockman,! for nearly four
years attorney for the state in
dustrial accident commission here,
is an avowed candidate for circuit
judge of Multnomah county, to
succeed Robert Tucker, who died
there Tuesday, j his friends de
clared here Wednesday. 1 ., . i .
Prior to coming to Salem Stock
man practiced law In Portland and
was attached . to the district at
torney's office t of Multnomah
county for nine years. .
. Appointment of judge Tucker's
successor probably wul be delayed
until the return of Governor Earl
Snell who left Wednesday for an
eight days tour ; of 'Southern and
central Oregon, j - ;
- Stockman' has resigned as at
torney tor the industrial accident
ctrrr.i::!.:: ciclive I.y 13.
Aliimiii Plant
.--.' . , .f , .
Work Stairts
Construction of' one block of
buildings for Salem's 14,000,000
alumni plant .Is now 1 in progress
under the direction of the Ross B.
Hammond Construction company
of Portland. .
Hammond's contract covers con
struction of an office structure,
locker building, maintenance shop,
warehouse, - gate house and four
lookout guard stations.; The con
tract provides' that construction
shall be completed within 45 days,
r Brick will be used in construc
tion of the three major structures.
Baldock Wires
For Go-Ahead
On Road Jobs
State highway engineer R. H.
Baldock Wednesday sent telegrams
to Oregon's delegation in congress
urging them to confer with the
war production board in an effort
its obtain a favorable decision on
the proposal of the highway com
mission to immediately start , im
provement of three sections -of
the Pacific highway at a cost of
$2,500,000. -The
proposed improvements in
volve the Salem-Jefferson, Harris -
burg and Grave Creek -Wolf
Creek sections ot the highway.
Information received here from
Washington, D.CX indicated that
the war production board recently
rejected similar highway improve
ments -in the state of Washington
on the ground that' men suitable
for highway construction opera
tions were required in war industries.
There also is a possibility, Bal
dock said, that the congressional
delegations of Oregon,- Washing
ton and California, would appear
jointly before the war; production
board j Plans for the Oregon high
way improvement already have
been completed. ; -
Baldock said a recent survey
Indicated that awarding of con
tracts for the three improvements
on the Pacific highway in Oregon
would not interfere with essential
war industries or I increase the
seriousness of the manpower sit
uation. ' :;-:.'. " ; .'
The Salem - Jefferson - section ,
improvement includes construction
of a bridge to cost $300,000. . , v
Ask C S. McElhinny
' n " '"'-'; " -i -"' : ', .V '
F.zzU Get ths t!c$t Isssrssct
) iTotec&a it Lest Cest
Y
?
i
Let him givey on
the full detail,
on' the 4-Wsy
complete pro
tection of the
f fasv 4e4j8er'
- PU.
OREGON MUTUAL LIFE
IHIUIAHCI COMMHI
C S. ncELIIINNY
Dreymaa Cuilding
Stevens
- )' - f?-2ah
' Credit
XX Desired
ROSE POINT
GLASSWARE
Come in and see
our distinctive
line of Cam
bridge Rose Point
Crystal. New; un
usual and beau
tiful. '' ' '