The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 21, 1944, Page 2, Image 2

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    Earl Adams
GOP Winner
For Constable
Pinups in Corps Garb
Allies Smash
Hitler line
In-Big Drive
Greatest '
Air Raid
Hits Nazis
German Army
Fa$es Toted ,
Destruction
(TV'",""'
- v
OHtheflOlIEFROirf
I (Continued from Page 1) I
over the state for the,' short terra
. position as United .States senator.
carried his own . Marion county
with 5696 votes to Victorious Sen.
Guy Cordon's 4379. Black polled
173 votes; McBride, 250.
Marion' county was not a re
flection of the other votes of the
'state in the Morse-Holman cam
paign, giving Sen. Rufus Holman
6439 votes to Wayne Morse's 4513
. Fisher polled 987.'
Democrats in Marion followed
the. state trend, nominating Ed
i 'gar W. Smith for the long-term
senatorial competition by a vote
Of 2308 to 1189 for Whitbeck. Wil
lis Mahoney, unopposed for the
short term, polled 3132 votes.
O. Henry Oleen, unopposed on
the democratic ticket for, con-
gressman. was given 3008 votes
in Marion.
Republican Congressman James
W. Mott held a comfortable ma
' Jority here as over the state, with
8946 votes to Dan Harmon's 4128.
Attorney General George Neu-
ner overwhelmed his Opponent
LeRoy Lomax, over thejstate, and
In Marion county held 7254 votes
to 2454. Bruce Spaulding. who
will run against him in the fall,
polled 3507 democratic primary
votes.
r Denver Young, erstwhile chief
deputy in the office of Democratic
Sheriff A. C Burk, not only led
the .field of four candidates for
nomination as sheriff but car-
- ried a majority of the votes, with
. 5939 recorded. Pittenger polled
J846; LaBranch. 1628; Ashby,
1122. Bark got 2814 votes on the
; demo ballot.
Other votes, in the county:
Republican national committee
, man Cake, 6543; Paine, 3574. Na
tional committeewoman Mrs.
Gerlinger, unopposed, 8187. 1
Republican delegates at large
Farrell, 7609; Ross, 7328; Laflrr.
6796; Metscban, 5557; Belton, 5,-J
iz; raget, 4170; CampbeUT 3,
794; Johnson, 3401; Rynerson, 3,
245; Richardson, 2971; Sandblast,
2348; Metsker, 2834; , Moorhead,
2438; Welch, 2263; Dodd; 1853;
Black, 1769; Shand, 1571. "
Republican district delegates;
' Paul B Wallace, 7379; Winslow,
6689; Telford, 2663; Cock ell, 2,
73; Nash, 2073. Electorsno
. competition; votes ranging from
7746 for Adam Lefor of Marion
county to 7428 for Van Boskirk.'
Marioti county republicans cast
8815 votes for Miller Hayden as
district .attorney, unopposed; t,
SI8 for County Commissioner Roy
Rice, 8094 for Assessor "Tad"
Shelton, and 8934 for Capt. Har
lan Judd as county clerk, all un
opposed, wv
Democratic . national commit
teeman : Lew Wallace, 1549;
Hyde, 1247; Latourette, 1238.
Committeewoman Nancy , Hon
eyman Robinson, 2115; and Ed
son. 1651. .
Delegates at large W. A.' Del
sell, 2158; Hess, 2158; Mahoney,
2114; Anderson, 2082; ' Eckersley,
1949; McPherson, 1810; Winkler,
1771; Nathalie Panek, 1752; Boi
vin, 1624; Peterson,! 13J9; Bevans,
888. District delegates J F. Ul
rich, ,3140; Charles J. Officer, 2,-
94. . ' K . -.
. Electors Walter M. Pierce. El
, ton Watkins,.Starkweather, Scott,
Celia L Gavin and' Amanda J.
Hart defeated Albert Abscher.
A.C.F. P
PPPV
Dies at Local
Golfc Course:
A. C F. Perry, assistant .state
engineer, died from a heart at
tack late Saturday, afternoon on
tne Salem golf course.!" He had
een playing golf alone all after
noon, ana was on his way from
the clubhouse to his car when he
suirered - the attack, which
sudden and unexpected.
1"i
w , -trrry ana, nis wife had made
their home at 166 West Washing
ton street in South. Salem. They
va come nere from, eastern New
xoric some years back.' 1
- . . -
in aaaiuon to his wife, Mrs.
Aietha Perry, the deceased is sur
vived by a daughter, Mrs. Eleanor
Baker of Brooklyn, NY; a son,
Teen. Sgt. Charles B. Perry, now
serving in. England; one grand
son, Roger Douglas Baker, Brook
V. wr; and five brothers,
Charles L. and Frank T. Perry of
New York; Lyman Perry of Mary-
iana; tgDert Perry, of 'New Jer
ey; and Reginald. Perry of Wash
ington, DC
. tne waougn-jttamck company
has charge of funeral arrange
ments and announcement will be
made at a later date.
Long Eastern Front '
Reports Quiet Day
" LONDON,' May 20-A$-The
long eastern front was reported
Quiet through another day , today
as lncreasicg signs came from
'Moscow of mounting tension in
' the soviet capital over the pro
pects of opening a western lapd
front against the Germans.
22,000 JaTwteericai'
JJovcd From Coast
I V AS UI2IGTON, May 20-JD
The war relocation authority re
ported today : that about 22,C30
JapaEcis-Arsericans; have. been
estt!!;v.2d ixvsrious parts of the
country, away from the . Pacific
Hello, Beys! Film Stars Martha
ngni; ptay no lavernea wnen
the niTj. aaarmea. air eerpe
Veterans Run
True to Form
In State Race
PORTLAND, May 20-()-Vet-
eran vote-getters ran true to form
in legislative races in Friday's pri
mary, late returns showed tonight.
Final returns, however, will not
be known for several days be
cause of the large number of po
sitions filled by write-in votes.
In the only senate contest out
side Multnomah county. . Marius
Petersen, Klamath: Falls, defeat
ed Melvin Dix, Bend, for the dem
ocratic nomination in the 18th
district
Nominees for Multnomah
county's five senate seats are: re
publicans Sen. Jack Lynch,
Frank Deich, W. W. Banks, Frank
H. Hilton and Sen. Coe A. Mc-
Kenna Democrats Sena. Thom
as R. Mahoney and Lew Wallace,
Jack T. Summery Hie, William J.
Murray and Walter J. Pearson.
In Benton county, where Rep.
A. Rennie died a tew days before
election, the voters wrote in the
name of Howard Hand, who
served several terms as Corvallis
mayor.
Winners In other house races:
First district Fred A. Hellberg.
Astoria (R).
Third district Anna M. Ellis.
Garibaldi (R). 7 v
Fourth district H. T. Heese,
Hills boro, and J. O. Johnson, Port
land (both R).
Sixth district Dean Bryson (R)
and Jack Bain (D).-
Seventh district H. H. Chind-
gren, Molalla; J. S. Greenwood,
Wemme, and A. W. Meyers, Mil-
waukie (all R). -
Eighth district Carl Francis,
Dayton; and Eugene E. March,
McMinnviUe (both R).
Ninth district H. R. Kauffman,
Toledo (R).
Tenth district Lyfe D. Tho
mas, Dallas (R). ,
12 district W. W. Chadwick,
Paul R. Hendricks. H. R. Jones.
and John F. Steelhammer, all of
Salem (R).
13t& district Max M. Landon,
Sweet Home, and Harry R. Wiley,
Lebanon, (both R.) i
14th district Truman A. Chase
and John R. Snellstrom, both Eu
gene, and Earl H. Hill, Cushman
(all R.)
17th district Stella A. Cut
lip, North Bend (R).
18th district W. W. Balder
ree. Grants Pass (R).
ltn district Frank J. Van
Dyke, Ashland, and O. H. Beng
ston, Medford (both R). ,
All multnomah county incum
bents who were candidates
renomination.
won
Argentine May
Try to Break
United Front
WASHINGTON, May 20-(ff)
Belief was expressed in some dip
lomatic quarters here tonight that
Argentina may attempt to use the
new agreement on settlement of
tJie .'Ecuador-Peru boundary dis
pute as a lever to break the united
front on non-recognition of. the
present Buenos Aires regime.'
.This belief was voiced as Pres
ident Roosevelt wired Presidents
Arroyo Del Rio of Ecuador and
Emanuel Pardo of Peru that he
considered their agreement on a
definitive settlement of their dis
pute to be -an outstanding con
tribution to inter-American sol
idarity, . '
The dispute has. been dragging
on -for more -than a century. In
January, 1942, at Rio de Janeiro
the two nations signed a protocol
of peace, friendship and boundar
ies which was guaranteed; by
Brazil; : the United States. Chile
and Argentina. : Recently thv
greedi on interpretations of It 4
Simultaneous with the release
of t Mr. Roosevelt's telegram to
night, it was, learned -from high
diplomatic sources that while the
presidents, of Brazil and Chile
also were sending messages of
congratulation it was not known
here what Action Argentina inight
It s.i' " - t'
I:
DiiseeL Evelym Ankers, Asom Gwyane and Grace McDeaald (left to
n eemes te service men's ptB-p- pictores. The emttes are attired far
and army, respeettrely. (Tat Ilensl) -
rmy
First Orders
FrqmEngland
E (Continued om Page 1) E
gas mask, Field Marshal Lord
Birdwood, "father" of the British
army, warned that "although Hit
ler has promised that he win not
use gas, he may at the last mo
ment, jflce a mad and beaten dog,
release gas not only on the troops
but on the country as welL'
The Germans tried eae
last night to feel eat the chan
nel darkness, bat area their ewa
aeoeaat ef widespread X a tat
persffoBi left it evident that
the British naval forces axe not
eonteat with screening their
ewa ; coast and are earrytag
their eperailans ahaost to Ger-maa-gvarded
beaeaes,
The: German news agency DNB
reported that the nazi E-boats
warded off repeated attacks,
acknowledging- that the channel
initiative was held by the British
and said that some British ope
rations extended to just west ; of
Dunkrque and off the Channel
islands. - . ;
These islands are the Ger
mans farthest outposts, seised
without a fight at the time ef
the fall ef France and likely to
be cleared of their limited nasi
garrisons In the event ef any
invasion ef Brittany or Nermaa
dy, whose channel approaches
they guard. ' ..".!'
The Germans also said British
bombers repeatedly . strafed the
island of Ouessant, rock guardian
of the strip of Brittany. I
In the Dover strait, where only
a 20-mile gap separates Britain
and France, the silence was shat
tered twice last night by German
long range gunfire. The shelling
stopped traffic in cliff-front Eng
lish towns, but most- likely the
firing was directed well offshore.
As the forces of attack and de
fense girded for their; decisive
test, Nazi Propaganda Minister
Paul Joseph Goebbels appealed in
Berlin for "stout nerves, atbut
hearts and above all a firm re
solve never to aive in."
In London, Sir Stafford Cripps.
minister of aircraft production, de
clared that "in these world-wide
upheavals civilization is. working
out its destiny."
Lincoln County OK's
State PUD Measure
TOLEDO, Ore, May 20 -UFV-
The four county public utility dis
trict measures to annex western
parts of Lincoln, Douglas, Lane
and Coos counties into the state's
proposed largest PUD were ap
prove4 by overwhelming majori
ties in Lincoln county's five spe
cial PUD voting districts but de
feated; here. - 1 -
The Toledo vote was 293 aealnst
and 217 for. Each votina district
held its own separate local house
election.
1
Chinese Troops Crab I
Rail City of Kioshan
CHUNGKING. Mav 2(WA
Chinese troops damned a firmer
hold on their re-won seciinn - nt
me Piping-Hankow raHwav to
day, capturing the . rail city ! of
Kioshan, no miles south 4 of
Chenghsien, the high command
nnounced.'ln the north, field dia-
patchea reported the encircled de-
zenaers 01 Loyang were doomed
to massacre if they failed to break
th Japanese siege. ' - . , j . .
One Industrial DeatH 1
QcGiin,inT8si..reeki
One fatality, 1113 covered acci
dents .'and 15 . claims for occupa
tional, disease benefits were filed
with, he state Industrial accident
commission here during the week
ended May 19, the commission
reported here Saturday.
The fatality involved Frank J.
Stantsrd, Klffrra'A rails,
Labor Picture
Brightens as
Strikes End
Bar tha Aaaoelatad
- The picture on the nation's la
bor front brightened considerably
yesterday as hundreds of work
ers, obeying; war htbor board di
rectives, returned to their Jobs.
Although these-were an estimated
2330 employes still not at work
as the result of labor troubles,
settlement of some disputes was
reported imminent.
A new work stoppage occurred
yesterday at the John Deere Har
vester plant at East Moline, HL,
when 2000 employes failed to
show up for work. Union officials
said the dispute involved vacation
pay. The president of the United
Auto Workers - CIO) local i said
an order had been issued for the
men to go back to work after un
ion officials received the request
for -the order from the WLB.
In Detroit officials of the Unit
ed Automobile Workers (CIO lo
cal representing approximately
10,000 idle Chrysler workers, who
walked out last Tuesday after
dispute over 1 delivery- of soft
drinks to the company's Highland
Park plant, were scheduled to
meet today with the management
to discfuss their dispute.
Settlement of the Chrysler la
bor controversy would bring to a
virtual end recent numerous
walkouts in Michigan war indus
tries. However, at the Buick
Aluminum foundry in Flint, 1400
were out;; ijjuo ; remained away
from their (Jobs at the Chevrolet
transmission plant in Saginaw and
600 were out at a Muskegon foun
dry. ! , -,
Allies Reveal
Neiv Secret
Portable Span
WASHINGTON, May 20 -OP)
Another new allied weapon a
knocked - down, portable bridge
which can be quickly assembled
to replace l a demolished span
was disclosed tonight -," ..-
Announcing' its development.
the British ministry of 'supply
mission called it the "most , suc
cessful quick-assembly . spanning
device now in use under fire" and
predicted it "will speed the move-j
ment of United States and Brit-I
ish armies into Europe.
It is already in use in Italy and
is being manufactured both in
this country and Britain for the
British and American armies. - .'
Called the Bailey bridge after
its inventor, Donald: Bailey,
civil engineer : with the ; British
ministry of supply, the -bridge
can be put togethet-at great
speed and flung over a river or
chasm to support the heaviest ar
tillery, armor and transndrt" the
British announcement said.
"Its sections are easily portable.
yet amazingly strong, and the Ger
mans have nothings like if
Details of the, bridge, especial
ly those regarding its fast assem
bly, are still secret. : . .
J. M. Bennett Wins ;
Reelection in Albany ;
ALBANY' Ore- Mav 20PV-
J. M. Bennett, Linn county schooi
superintendent, won reelection on
the non-partisan ticket today, de
feating Gladys McKnight, 47S2 to
1940. . '
O
O
o
DEPENDABLE
f Two of Ortgcafr Host Upto-Doto'
; . .. ,Oi2ca.tatSnr To-' y - :
CHUCK
-I LI I.
insunAKCE
"Oregon's Largest
Cclaa end
r : 1:3 XT. CcassisrcLl
3 (Continued from Page 1) O
with a 21-mHe range, along the
fib German high command
acknowledged loss . of Campode
mele, southwest ef Pico and with
in a few miles of the Pico-Terra-dna
line)i . .
In nine days of this offensive
intended to r crush the German
10th army, 5500 nazi prisoners
have been taken, with more com
ing in, and the Germans have suf
fered considerable losses in dead,
innumerable guns and tanks, and
vast supplies.'
j The enemy nevertheless re
sisted stabbernly, aad the cam
paign remained hard slogging
match with the allies trying to
throw ia powerful new blews
while " the Germans still are
groggy. Formidable German de
fenses stm guard the Ltrl val
ley and the moan tains in the
Casslne area, and' a' front dis
patch from the eighth army
eautlened thai "apparently very
eosily flghttag stUl la to prea
peciT MoreaTer, the advaaeea
kave Increased allied supply
difficulties, y
US troops plunging mrough the
coastal sector captured the Ap
pian road Junction of Itri, the sea
port of Gaeta on a short penin
sula to the south, and Tlrove north
from Itri, sweeping up vast booty
denoting j hasty German with
drawal, i v ,,.r:;.
I Allied warships shelled Ter
Jradaa, aad the air ana, Cbjtar:
2271 aorttea Friday, blasted
heavily agala at the creaking
Geraaaa ran aaWl. highway saa
: plyaetwerk.
i Hammering at German "Hitler
fortifications in the norm, eighth
army -tanks and troops thrust
through barbed wire entangle
ments to the fringes of Aquino in
the Liri valley, and opened an at
tack on another stronghold, Font
ecorvo. : -
Still farther north, Polish forces
fighting through high mountains
seized Villa Santa Luda, i 2ft
miles northwest of Cassino mon
astery, moved up into .Pieaunonte,
lust off highway 6, the road
to
Borne, and mopped up
heights. 4 !
other
1 l, - ;
Morse Urges
Vniiy of GOFs
In November
j PORTLAND, May 20- (JPi
Wayne Li Morse, Eugene, nomin
ated -by .Oregon republicans for
the US senate seat of Sen. Rufus
C. Holman, issued this statement
tonight: ?. r I
t "Mt nomination has oiled me
with a deep sense of appreciation
for the vote of confidence which
1 have received from my party.
On such an occasion one feels very
humble indeed.: j
f I want to " assure all republi
cans in the state mat I shall de
vote myself to giving , the very
best that is in me to the task of
winning a complete victory, for the
republican ticket next November.
"Our party not only has an" op
portunity but a great obligation to
perform for the future of our
country by following a course of
political action which will result
in the defeat of the bureaucratic
New Deal administration, j
"We can win. if we now stand
united as republicans In the ser
vice of our party ; and our coun
try. The keynote ; of ray leader-
shin as a candidate 4or th ys
senate in: the final election is set
iout in the great paragraph of re
publicanism spoken by Abraham
Lincoln . in his - second inaugural
address, and with which para
graph closed my primary cam
paign. ' ' ' ; ."i i - .
.T repeat it now in asking all
republicans mduding those-, who
opposed me as well as' those who
supported me to unite under, its
rich and significant meanings,
because with such unity victory
for the republican party: ticket
wO be certain. , v
"Thus Lincoln said: With mal
ice toward none; with charity for
all; with firmness In the right, as
God gives us to see the right; let
us strive :;on; to xmisn tne.wors:
we are In; to bind up the nation's
wounds; i to care for him : who
shall have borne, the battle, and
for bis. widow, and his orphan--
to do an which may achieve and
dierlsh a Just and lasting peace
among ourselves and with all na
tions.' - - . - J r
Upstate Agency'
9t
tlaxtY.ZsAd '
- ZzLzx - Did -UCD
While on the j subject' of poli
tics, or were we? v f f T': ;
Amonff the Muvmiri j of that
staunch democrat. A.j Ml Dalnrm-
ple, is a 1904 Jeffersonian ban
quet prograni. s - i
Tartw in - turn frr h ttntl
across the street Marion to you
but. the -Hotel Willamette to , the
Salem elite .who gathered there
the banquet, which! beaan with
eastern ' oysters and consamma i a
la . Savarin and ended -with Bur
gundy, Rjeslingjand cigars,:, was
.aerveo. vr: -:.,.?: -AjT
But it Isn't th food that Ttai
Dalrymple ' remembers, nor : even
tne-toasts ana responses althoueh
Dr. W. SV Mott was toastmas-
ter and a 'brilliant one, it is said.
tie aoes remember th fin mn.
sic of Hallie Parrishi Hlnre. the
Oregon nightingale, whose contri.
ouuon to any banquet was suffi
cient to draw aj crowd of music
lovers, . v 1 . -A I , -, (
And it is no slur on Mrs. Hinees
art that he also; remembers that
Prison SudL Gednre Downincr w
there In fine fettle. jWhether bo-
fore or after thi Burgundy. Reia-
ling and cigars he 1 did not
tell me. But Mr J Dalrymplea eyes
tvmxie and lusigrinJ broadens' as
he relates the story I of how tha
prison superintendent (before the
days ox wardens), way down the
table from Gov. Chamberlain, roc
to his feet and deraandml that that
cannon" (the very firing piece mat
now graces the armory parking)
be removed or at least turned tha
other way; J . : I
The nose of the-gun waa point
ing in his direction and Down in
was not at all jsure there mizht
not be same republican, in the
crowd who would take! delight in
operating it! 1
On the well-preserved paste
board program appear the names
of Hon. P. H. D'Arcy, who talked
on "The Achievements of Thomas
Jefferson': Hon William Gallo
way, representing bench and bar;
"on. an, they were all honor
able men. save! the Dr. and) its
pretty, hard to put an Hon. before
a Dr. Anyhow
in the
list
are W. H. Holmes, John M.
. . m a . T '
Gearin, M. A.
Miller, Samuel
White, R. A. Miller. Dr. Harrv
Lane J. A. Jeffries. IGov. Georee
E. Chamberlain. , ) ;
Tom R. Wilson, . t Fraiier
and A. M. Dalrymple ; comprised
w oanquet commtltee. r. W,
Durbin, A. Huckestein, F. W.
Steusloff. W. T. Slater and ni Ji
rry were the reception commit
tee.
Yanks
Out Japanese
OnWakde -
A (Continued from'Page 1) A
Concentric rings jef ) airborne
and Infantry troops L tightened
their cordon areand the Japa
nese garrlsen trapped at Myit
kylaa, then- north Bnrma base,
and the j surrounding Jungles. ,
"It seems we hare jMiltkylna, '
14. Gea. Joseph W. StttwelT
eemmeated tersely as his troops
ateadfly poshed back the flere-
ty resisting enemy garrisoa and'
mewed dawn petrels j trying to
escape along Jangle paths. . . -.. ;
A three-pronged Chliese drive
from the east to join j StilweU's
forces advanced on both flanks
but ran into severe fighting .on the
Tengchung. China, base.! t
Confidence that nothing "shall
ston America trnm hrintHnir all
possible and prompt aidf to China
was expressed by Vice ! President
Wallace as he left for Chunzkma
on a personal- mission j for Presi
dent Roosevelt 1 - ...j
Chinese irmW hadlv In Tnaorl
of modern battle; equipment, Jell
back ' again Jn porthern Honaii
province. Invading Japanese, who
have '" conquered! - thousandsv'oi
square miles of rich wheatlands i in
the last month, appeared to be
preparing to put their fanuTiar!
pincer squeeze to jworkfon Tungk
wan, gateway -to northwest China
and the .supply road from Soviet
Russia. -:. . f !
r. 1
!13 XL UbertT tV
Wipe
U "
1 r
j o
1 " 1 Ti ii a r ui
B (Continued from Page 1) B
area of Dieppe and ether null
tary targets, striking la strength
at the contfaent twice dminr
the day.
Three Marauders and two Ha
vocs were lost in the double-bar.
reled assaults, but all their escort
ing fighters returned. ; flak" was
reported especially - heavy over
Dieppe, which' was' pounded for
the second time in two days.
American and British fighter
bombers . with fighter escorts
swarmed over northern i France
and Belgium by : the hundreds
throughout the day.
I The US ninth air .force alone
sent eat more than 1009 of these
Mastangs, Thunderbolts and
Lightnings, and AEAF head
. quarters described the day as
the most strenaeaa operations la
the history of the ninth fighter
command,'
j In all of these sweens the ninth's
planes encountered not a sinale
enemy fighter, and only one Amer
ican plane failed to return.
Like the medium and Iteht
bombers, "US Thunderbolt fight
er-bombers made a double attack
against five rail Junctions.
I Todays stabbing blow brought
10 zu& the number of raids made
on rail centers in Germany and
occupied countries by allied day
and night bombers since March' 2
when they opened their camoaian
to wreck. as much of the nazia
rail facilities as possible before
the invasion from the west heeina.
An indication mat GermanY waa
being attacked again at nirht bv
the RAF came at midnight (con
tinental time) when the nazi ra
dio warned of nuisance raiders
over the western reich.
Throng Hails
Capt. Gentile
C (Continued from Page 1) C
view let loose a roar that welled
above the pounding rain. .
Gentue. accomsanied frr hf
mother who met him Thursday in
Washington, climbed from his an-
tomooue. women and mm aiit
rushed forward. They grabbed at
him and kissed him. Gentfle grin
ned warmlr and tried to shake
hands. His- father and sister
lunged '.forward and embraced
him. - -
The little family rrouo tried
to move toward the house, but
the crowd closed in and literally
earned, the flier : toward the
porch. "' ' f
Edith was sobbin on her fa.
ther'a shoulder.
"Tve read about it In' bhnk
rve seen it in the movies. I never
thought all this could happen to
me," she cried.
Holman Won't Talk
To News Repbrters I
PORTLAND. May ?fl" wm- tw
leaiea ot warne i. Mom fnr re
publican nomination. Sen. T?iif
C. Holman today refused to talk
to reporters. His residen aafif ha
was not home and mat he could
not be reached.
OQc Suppliea
Offlca Desks .-
niM' Clicdtsi
Greeflng Cards "
' rBoo-Gifm
' V?'V.Weddmg
''AaawaiieemeBta ' . ' :
rtfrifliFortfallea
Co.
370 Sled Street
Tics C7Si
m aaaaaai .
1 . . - II
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D (Continued from Page 1) D
tiona with slowi planned with
drawals aad have small losses.
" The allied armies never would
be able to advance fast enough to
turn the German flank in this
type of fighting or break through
deep enough to imperil the whole1
German' army. -Iar this way the
Germans could fight all the way
to the Po river and keep their
army intact t . " - '
Instead of that Hitler has or
dered his troops to stand on fixed
lines, with the result t h a t the
powerful allied onslaught hag
broken . through their positions,
with the French crashing through
the center and the Americans ap
parently turning the flank of the
Hitler line on the coast capturing
Gaeta and advancing beyond. :
Cordon, Morse
Sure Winners
For Senators
F (Continued from Page 1) F
ta the primary, was reneralnat
ed almost by a 2 to 1 margin
ever Daa Harmua ef Newberg.
In the only other congressional
contest, t Lester Soeeley defeated
L. Nicholas Granoff for the demo
cratic nomination in the third
district Sheeley will oppose Rep.
Homer D. Angell in November.
, Atteraey Geaeral George Nea
aer had ae treable la whining
reBwhUeaa seaeaalaatiaa,1 get
ting almeat twice as snaay vales
as Lerey L. Lemax, Portland
attorney. Nenaer wul face
Brace Spaalding, Salem attor
ney who Wear demecratle noaal
aatlem wttheat epposition, aext
. .
. Republican National Committee
man Ralph Cake won reelection by
defeating Charles L. Paine of Eu
gene, while! Mrs. George Gerlin
ger, republican rational commit
teewoman, was unopposed.
But the democrats rejected their
party leaders.
State Sen. Lew Wallace was
elected democratic national com
mitteeman, beating Howard Lat
ourette, the incumbent, who ran
third. Clarence F. Hyde of Eu
gene was second.
Nancy Honeyman Robinson of
Portland was elected democratic
national' committeewoman over
Emily F. Edson, the incumbent
AFL Will Endorse No
Man for President
KANSAS CITY, May 20 -OPr-
Preserving its traditional, non
partisan policy, the American Fed
eration of Labor will endorse no
presidential condidates in 1844,
William L. Green, AFL president
said while here to attend the wed
ding of his eldest grandson, Capt
Robert McGriff en, and Miss Jane
Force. ; j ' ! -:-v . '
Announcing the
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