BHW TWrt 1 TVi. OHKTirJN STMTtSMAN. ?lrrlm OMnniL ThUTSdCtT MOnUna. JUTl 13. 134 - " - i V ii i iii 1 . . - t: : . ... l . ... I Nazis Launch Counterblows .? . ... . . .. ;:0n Normandy ' D (Continued -from Page 1) D j.- forces iarmer, casw wm. i , first enemy attack fat . force la i that area. . . - -i' '. . , -Elite German parachute ? troops .were given the Job but failed in ,va headon collision with Lt Gen. Omar N. Bradley's doughboys. Despite the loss; of ,lontehourg, the Americans were- declared. by headquarters to be holding firmly . a . A i - onto positions on both sides of that Cherbourg- peninsular town. Montebeiirf, M mttea south east of Cherbourg and fire miles inland, and Troarn. seven miles east of Caen, , changed hands several times. in. the see saw ground conflict, which still rared last ntzht. ':. . In the 20-mile cauldron between Troarn on the east and TUly-sur Seulles on the west the Germans poured four armored divisions twice as many as formerly against the British-Canadian -for ward line, but faileuto gain ap- -. preciably. - ; -ir-:, '.!'- In a supreme effort, these four armored diTtelonir launched at tack sftrtatUikrow the snMiUderinr ndns of those that . had gone bcfopehKBt snied 1st . army r1rtoup-lieadliMrTers de clared' iu UiesHtffl' heid- the Initiative, ok) jtbez iiintli .day of. the inTiakviB4 , pointed utA that the ene shad been: ua able to offf4h aexar-f ' ' - ' sive conn wriirWi , pusv y aaa . been expected AiiUe- "The enemy i fighting uur bat tle instead of his ewn thSrrnJ- - ground headquarter "a toouiored' On the northwest .ct thX bridge head line, on tne nanauoz tne Am erican Fourth division, " German counterattacks pushed the 'Amer icans back slightly from positions they had taken up astride the road leading northeast from ' Monie bourg towards St Vaast, but the loss was counter-balanced by con tinuing American gains southwest of Le Ham, two miles southwest of Montebourg. ; - Equally strong German blows failed to break the American 29th division's " gains west of Carentan, road-rail, hub at the base of the Cherbourg peninsu la, where the German : radio acknowledgod that . the Ameri cans had advanced several miles and taken several villages. With ' With six divisions officially dis closed to be in action, the Am- erican. army under Lt Gen. v Omar N. Bradley was the lar gest thrown Into a single battle since 4919-1 v Along the southern bulge of the batUefront, from, the Cerisy for est through the 'Illy , woodlands ; reaching eastward, the allies" held ; firm and were credited with some : indeterminate gains toward St Lo, but their advanced patrols gave ground north of Cavmunt and Vil lers-Bocage, 23 miles from the coast "" The allies deepest penetrations : were slightly more than 20 miles ; inland in the. hills east of St Lo. ' The situation was ' too fluid to trace an exact line as rival patrols prodded forward and pulled back repeatedly. The Germans said St Lo was in flames. . Ed Spa Killed By Log Boom : LYONS Ed Spa, 41, was kill ed instantly when a boom struck ( him as he worked as head loader "at the Mt Jefferson Lumber com pany logging camp at the edge of Lyons . shortly before noon Wed- .: nesday. -: -'. t Holland Berry, injured in the same accident,' is believed not to be in serious condition. He' -was operating a donkey engine when the boom fell on the cab. He is at "Salem Deaconess hospital. . . - Survivors of Spa are the widow and two daughters, Jacqueline and Marilyn; his parents in Portland sisters, Mrs. Gertrude Jubb and ;, Mrs. Emma Ferguson of Portland, and one . brother, Harry Spa, in the navy now serving in the South Pacific V . : - ; : ,; ' Funeral arrangements had ' not i been completed Wednesday. v - Multnomah Votes I SiiUNotFflcd The state elections bureau here Wednesday was awaiting the Alultnomah county canvass of votes at the primary election to complete the state canvass which :has been in progress for three weeks. "zr'r v:, :. . Only close contest Involves one or two candidates ior delegates to ' the republican national conven tion. i-7.V- ?.f-i-.-. " "I Jh" i A . I I . ........... .... i . ... ; -I House Group Criticizes Colonel, Contractor at Pearl Harbor " . f WASHINGTON, June 14-iTl-The German born contractor on defenses at Pearl Harbor were cri ticized by the house military report said, left the installations for ..the 'Japanese 'J 1 While the work fell behind, the Wyman, jr of the onny engineers accepted lavish entertainment from the" contractor, Mans -WIl- helm BohL . in parties that in volved. Uquor , "by the case" and cneap, commercial party gins. It said the colonel was at RohTa home hr Hawaii when the Jap anese struck Pearl Harbor,' and that he rushed to his office "in ci vilian clothes and in a drunken condition.' , "Howl- did . it so happen," . the committee - asked, "that after nearly 30 years without taking the - steps necessary - to becoming a citizen, although . meantime en joying the fruits of , government contracts, he (Rohl) suddenly be gan using every possible effort to become naturalized in order that he might be permitted to go -to Hawaii,! I115 litUe less than three months before the attack on Pearl Harbor?" Rohl was naturalized in Sep tember und the Japanese hit Pearl Harbor in December.' Referring to the award to RohTs company of some $125, 000,000 in contracts which in cluded work in Hawaii and con struction of a far eastern air route by way of Christmas is- ishdrCanton, Nandi, New Cale- doma-artd Australia, the commit tee cormaeT4fed:;A- - ItjJsi ecedingifficult . . . 'comprehend inaat so crucial i tijaiend wbjthjnecessity for euiciency was paramount . . . a man known to be a German alien was selected- and actually put in charge of the planning, specif ica tions and performance of the con tract . .;, "It is not simply a matter of conjecture ... that had the per manent i aircraft warning stations (at Pearl Harbor) been operating on December. , 7, 1941, the ap proach i of the Japanese planes would have been detected." In, Los Angeles, where he still is in business, Rohl issued a state ment through his attorney say ing that an official report May 17, 1944, by Lieut Gen. Richardson, commanding at Pearl Harbor, "completes exonerates me." Japs Gross River Defense Of Changsha CHUNGKING, June" 14 -(JP- The Chinese command announced tonight that Japanese forces driv ing on Changsha had crossed one of the river defenses of the Hu nan province stronghold, and spokesman said the enemy -had thrown! 200,000 men into battle in an effort to take the city at any cost One force east of the provin cial capital on a second attempt threw a bridgehead across the Liuyang river, which forms part of the defenses north of Chang sha, but was pinned there In se vere fighting, then Chinese , com munique said. A crossing at an other, point was frustrated. To the northwest reinforced enemv ItrooDS hammered aarainst kushanj, only six miles from the -capital, but the communique said the enemy was held all along the arc of the front extending from northwest to southeast of Chang sha. US planes bombed and strafed j Japanese concentrations. The spokesman, P. H. Chang, said Changsha was not encircled, but was being hemmed in three sides. on INVEST IN INVASION! -BUT MORE WAR BONDS! THC IfTTlC HOOSC WITH Tut I wrT OPEN :4 P. M. - FriSTon fosto imAPJOTj3 coinTi Crcs. THE DIG ST03E" Groiicho, Ilarpo ' . Chlco and Zeppo . CARTOON -IY.3 UOYD 7ftPW i:ou!i r&3 NT. I Pfs-s, 11 1 colonel in charge and the committee for delays which, the incomplete and the way open - - . - committee said, Col. Theodore Mightiest Air: E (Continued from Page I) B. bombs came irom Britauv where' planes took off on an estimated 10,000 sorties that i rained explo sives and bullets on the enemy in France, Belgium, The Netherlands and Germany in both tactical and strategic support-of the invasion ground forces, v I - Simsdtaneoasly another esti mated 2009 sorties were flown from ! Italy and Mediterranean bases against a half doaeat oil refineries In Hungary and Tu gslavia. ' S - f'.. r ' In all, about 4500 tons of bombs were cast on enemy territory din ing the day. i The Italian-based heavy bomb ers encountered considerable aeri al ' opposition, but the British' based forces reported little trouble from the luftwaff e Besides the great British based mission of more than 1500 heavy bombers escorted by some 750 fighters, the skies reverber ated (rem dawn until dusk with the ; constant eomutg and going of", medium, light f, and fighter bombers closely- sixpperting , the v cross - channel ground Assault. On D-day, about 12.00S sortie were flown, but at least 2009 of these; were at night. X The: communique pointed out that the operations of the heavy bombers "exceeded even yester day's figures" when Fortresses and Liberators slashed into France twice,!! once in the morning and again just before dark. f Escorting fighters found only meager a e 1 1 n in this role, shooting down two German in terceptors, and later swung over to strafing numerous road, rail and military targets In and bet hind the battle area. J Medium and fighter - bombers ranged far into the interior of France Traffic points and mov' ing targets in Chartres, southwest of Paris, rail trucks when of La val and railway guns south of the battle lines were pounded. Then late in the day they crossed the channel on a second mission and carried out a series of bombing and strafing attacks directly behind the enemy lines. One of their targets on this eve ning assault was a strategically located enemy gun position facing American troops on the north' western flank of the allied line fn the Cherbourg peninsula. i Approximately 400 Thunder bolts and Lightnings alone flew 15 missions between daybreak and P.Bt j . . French Cheer Gen. De Gaull B (Continued from Page 1) B Bayeux, I the first city, in France liberated by the allies, to help In the battle to free the country. Canadian "Press I Correspondent William Stewart said in a dispatch from the beachhead. " f (The general said he had come to Normandy - to Salute the city of Bayeux and he announced the appointment .of .- a local repre sentative. ; 1- ; (Tou have seen the enemy flee from here and he : will flee fur ther,";! De Gaulle said. 44 We will fight to the end. We will fight by the side of our allies for the sov ereignty of France so tnat our victory will be the victory of free people.") f : : INVEST IN INVASION! ! BUT; MORE WAR BONDS ! thc MouT;t that wits suhT ' - OPENS 6:45 P. M. - NOW PLAYING! - f CO-IHT1 1 Bob ; Steele ? mtnuphigs Eurqpe v . V f el Aaietica's f ROARING i-- V- RAIDERS! 1' . , Pearl Harbor : Blast lolls : At Least 27 WASHINGTON, June 14 -Wi The navy announced tonight-that men were killed, 100 arc miss ing and 380 were wouunded in an explosion' that destroyed several small land craft in Pearl Harbor May 21.; . . T ' r;. At the same time u reported that a magazine at me ammuni tion depot at Oahu island explod ed last Sunday, killing three men. Seven others are missing as a re sult of this accident " - The explosion emonf landing craft in Pearl Harbor was report ed previously by Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, Pacific fleet; commander chief, who said that it occur red while ammunition was 'being unloaded from one oi the small craft . 'J The casualties caused by the explosion and . subsequent ' fire were: Dead, army 8, Navy 9, ma rine corps to; missing,-army .-53, navy 21, coast guard 29; injured. army 56, navy 143, coast guard "3, marine corps 159, and civilians W In the explosion last Sunday, the Pacific fleet headquarters said, several torpedo warheads being transferred from a truck to a plat form were detonated. Damage was caused in the general ; magazine area and minor damage was done to power : lines and railroad tracks. Names of the three men killed and the seven missing are being withheld pending notifica tion of next of kin; - Newton Takes Halseysjbb C (Continued from Page 1) C planes and tens of thousands of his slippery minions whence they came, never again to attack our flag nor the 1 flags of our allies. You blasted the Japs in grim victory at Guadalcanal, you drove him back and hunted him out, you broke nis oiiensive spirit in those smashing Bougainville-Ra haul blows at his ships and planes and troops in November, and you smeared him: and rolled over him easily to occupy Emirau. Now carry on the smashing south Pa- cmc traditions under your new commander, and may we join up again farther along the road to Tokyo." Vice Aimiral Newton came to the south Pacific command early this year after serving as depu ty commander - in - chief of Pa cific areas under Admiral Chester Nimitz at Pearl Harbor. Newton formerly, was deputy chief of naval operations tinder Admiral Ernest King, command er-in-chief of the United States fleet, and figured prominently in planning and executing grand na val strategy in the Atlantic and Pacific, work for which he re ceived the Legion of Merit , Allies Drive Japs Back SOUTHEAST ASIA COM MAND HEADQUARTERS, Kan- dy, Ceylon, June 14-(-The Ja panese have been driven from i ridge 18 miles northeast of the al lied East India base of Imphal and RAF fighters have attacked enemy dumps and motor trans port on the road south to Tiddim. an allied communique announced today. - "!"'-"' Invest in . Invasion Bay How Showing! 1 6 K a it sp Co-Kltl : Three Sea .4 HAYMZS 1- NANCT Iaraslon News Flashes with Lowt3 Thomasl i ..... ONthe While war - bond - buying pa triots are at It,. they i might save some rnoney on entertainment, we figure -after hearing' E.I C Sam mons tell about the style show he and Mrs. Sammons put on recent ly in their "lovely Portland: home. One of the children .Insinnat- actually came right out and said that Poppa-was getting fat. So Poppa boasted i he could put on his sojer suit of World war I and did after mucn noiaing or breath., Which inspired Mrs.. S. to get out her high school grad uation frock. She got into it and they paraded around thc house, They and the "children are still laughing, says State War Finance Committee . Chairman Sammons. Mr. - Sammons " company in peacetime builds a furnace, we might suggest mat laughing is al so a sood way to keep warm cheap. t ! Finns Resist Reds Fiercely H f Continued from Page 1) H Tfier stout resistance of the, Finns' , and the marshy nature f the terrain which made tanks almost uselessiln some sections apparently was' giving the Sov iet' forces difficulty. " : The points they announced cap tured during yesterday'i heavy fighting wire oo small to show' on maps available here.! German commentators contin ued to regard, the battle on the Finnish front as merely a prelude to bigger action yet to , begin on the eastern front, j i " A Transoeean broadcast from Berlin ; emphasised, that - the German high command expects 'the main blow of the imminent "Soviet offensive In the south" and added, the Soviets will strike in the east v only when fighting m western Europe Is fat fuU swing." ii ! Moscow's only mention of -other sectors of the front, was an as sertion that German resistance un its southeast of Stanislawow in old Poland had been xefused. At least eight more strong points 'were captured by the red army yesterday in contin ued advances along-the Isthmus, the Soviet command announced la itg communique last night, while the red air force in an other spurt ef heavy twmbings attacked ' enemy airdromes at Brestlitovsk, Blalystofc Pinsk. Minsk. Bobruisk and Orsha, be hind the German lines on the eastern front, destroying "many German planes" and setting fuel and ammunition dumps afire. , While the main Soviet forces still supported by strong alrpow er and naval bombardment ef coastal , fortifications i came to grips with hastily - summoned Finnish reserves, other red army units slashed hard at the enemy', flanks. Moscow reported that Russian forces were plunging through the Viipuri highway "sector wi knocking out an Intricate net work of steel and granite gun em placements and many anti-tank traps. This tricky defense area served by a recently-built . rail way running . south from the old Mannerheim line. More and More War, Bonds!. - cW-rYE Matinee Daily from 1 P. Mv f .... HOUEFKOWT grazing advantura, when revolt red mm Sahara's sands ...and Tarzan racoe te rescue a levory maid beset : -by katfearte bordeal a milUEB JOHNNY KELLY SHEFFIELD DirtcUd Jar wmUM"tiU - ii: J J Wolves 1 f : V- Bond Sales In County At $275,000 F" (Continued from Page 1) V ing Supply CoV bond workers will set up small bank, 'cashing. pay checks' and -writing; the bond or ders, which will put . the plant employes' group 'over the top ahead' of every other industrial concern in the county and among trie 'leaders in: the state. andr na tion. : i'v f r;:'z.d "v The 340 persons on the pay roll there wQ have averaged in dividual purchases pf "10O each before the bank? closes Its doors, Industrial Division Chairman Har ry Collins figures. County Payroll Chairman George Riches, Fred McKinne3r i from the First Na tlonal bank and Lawrence Fish- of the US National bank will operate the payroll cashing enter prise, central feature of the bond rally. ' -. ' ' Mrs. E. B. Henningsen, Talbot community chairman, ' and Mrs. William Wiedekehr, Sidney chair- man, are completing arrangements for an over-the-top rally at Fri day night's meeting of the Sid ney -'Talbot Farmers Union. They credit their committees with' the rapid success in reaching Quotas. On the Talbot committee 'are "Da vid Turnridge, Delmar. Davidson, Mrs. Ernest Truman and Keith Allen! while t Ray Abheyy -Mrs. Clifford Johnston, Jake Gilmour," Mrs. George Maria th and John Finlay comprise the Sidney com mittee. '- - r " Douglas Yeater, county war fi nance committee chairman, with Art Smither, chairman of special solicitation, Rex Gibson, secre tary - treasurer of the Marion county committee, and Gene Van- deneynde, cities chairman, will represent bond headquarters at the-meeting. ; J Wednesday night's successful baseball season opener, concern ing which details appear on to day's sports page, was only the first, of a series of special events for the Fifth War Loan drive here, Yeater declared Wednesday night as he prepared for weekend re ports of heavy purchases. mum Poors Open t:45 F. M. lion Shonicg! Continuous frtm l F, SL Tour Favorite Screen Couple T itl Seelasssssuui Sensational Fre-Invasioa Scenes 4 . Secret Weapons Revealed! I Blountalns of Tanks, rianes! mochester -1 J Companion Feature I i M : r i I ' Color Cartoon . I Latest News . 1 V is ii MissBayliss Elected.Girls State Head SUBLIMITY Margaret Bay- lias of Albany was elected gov ernor of Girls' State for the year 1944 as the annual self-governing camp for approximately 100 Wil lamette : valley girls opened here this week. Miss Bayliss gradu ated , from Albany , high school mis year. . . . , Gloria Fahlgren . was elected secretary of state and Norma Lou Kroeger of HiOshprp, state treas- Dan McDade, department com-' mander- of the American' Legion, and Fritz ; Niessen, department adjutant of the Legion, I'were vis itors at the camp Tuesday. ; Miss Seanor Stephens and two members of her state library staff presented the fireside program Wednesday night as they review ed books of interest to the girls. Dorothy McCullough Lee, for mer state senator from: Multno mah county who . now is a Port land, city commissioner, .'arrived at the camp Wednesday, to serve as a member of the-staff. Hoiise.Defeats Textile Plan G (Continued from Page 1) G federal district courts to tefts. of OPA rules.. , 1 . With the house changes, Ma jority L e a d er McCormack (D Mass) said there was an "excel' lent chance', of perfecting in con ference a bill which ! President Roosevelt would approve - Without the legislation, price controls expire June 30. v ; McCormack'i statement w a : based on an expectation that sen ate and house conferees, correlat ing the separate measures, will throw out the Bankhead - born plan. :- . -. ;" ,,., - -T; : The parity amendment which the house approved overwhelm ingly by voice vote provides that irrfirK $1 FASHION ON PARADE tfOLD NO LININO r 0Tenever you set a man waHung along en a hot summer day with that tmort. cool, contented look . . . ten-fe-one Us weening a4Fotd Palm Beach Tie by Beau Brummel Tev w. you coa feel the temperature drop the moment yW hot smart dimpled knot gentry against your nedcEncv 4Fbld Palm Beach Ties are even cool to look ot . ; . in their trotty-toned colors and patterns. And when you knew they're guarain washable and have that pateimKl dfoWJna.finingl ComtrvctioB--me what are you waiting fotf Rush right in, today; and grab yourself a handful of these 4eat-oeatersv JXade ivtiA Cat n6i genuine without this iakl " rca ma Ajyuro rosccs . PAUi IZXZW ?CL0 KlltCZU nzi - C!ach cad Kegu!t!oa CiaU O. D. 5 - i ITDn: 'Mamas'" SDnoDip AIOXLEY & The Store of Style, Quality & Value 416 STATE STREET - any predecessor of an agricultural commodity who fails to pay a par ity price may '- charge nov more thin ga per cent or tat-WA- ceil ing price for the finished article. (Parity is the price. whicnitne agriculture-department figures win give a farm commodity me same purchasing power; in terms of things farmers buy, that it had in '-a past base period;: usually Ren. Pace (D-Ga), author of the provision said it would affect cotton, ? wheat, rye ana several other commodities now selling be low Tjaritv and that it would mean "hundreds of millions of "dollars to the nation's farmers.'. 7: f 'fJY.i ": fx. Allied Sniris Sink3 o SUPREME HEADQUARTERS ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE; Thursday, June 15 -(P) Two allied destroyers utercepted seven 'German mine sweepers off the coast of France early yester day and sank three of them and seriously damaged the other four, supreme headquarters announced today.,. ',V In another naval engagement yesterday northeast .of Cap de la Hague, the communique said, tight allied coastal forces attacked three enemy patrol boats. " iii PEnsoii 4H - -Iv ; and his Western and j Hillbilly ; v V Jamboree j Stale Theatre Saturday-Sunday, June 17-1S THt SUfJ ! HUNTINGTON ON THE STAGE! ' V m i r - - i