PAGE TWO
The OniXSOIl CTATTfllAIl Sclsrw Oregon, Weclaesday.llonii June 21, ISli
iV
Anti-4th Term
Demos Veto
GOP Coalition
- - By the Associated Press.
, The anti-fourth term American
democratic n a 1 1 o nal committee
first approved, and r later killed,
yesterday a suggestion that the
republicans nominate a coalition
ticket such. as Gov. John W;
Bricker of Ohio and Senator Har
ry F, Byrd Virginia democrat .S:
In voting against such a recess
mendation, the committee heeded
arguments of former -Rep. John J.
; O'Connor of New York and others
that it would be better to exert
efforts against a fourth terra at
the democratic convention. ; '
Winding up a two-day. meeting
the troop voted to call a. ceoven
, tion of "all anti-new deal organ
, izations" if the democrats renom
inate President Roosevelt.
The committee's caucus got no
official recognition from republi
cans already on hand for the par
. . ty's national convention beginning
Monday. ' . .; '.
GOP Chairman Harrison Span
gler, . expressing belief: there
would be no- deadlocked ballot
ing, predicted to reporters that
the convention 'will nominate a
presidential candidate on its third
- day and wind up on its fourth aft
er selection of a vice presidential
nominee, f
'. The resolutions committee gets
down to wofk ; today on a pro
posed platform. Subcommittees
already have done much prelim
inary work.
In Texas, the state -supreme
court is ' expected to rule today
on a move by a pro-Roosevelt
democratic faction to have demo
cratic presidential electors chosen
in the July 22 primary. '
Enemy
Engage
Navy
(Continued from page 1)
unhappy, even with our plane
production.
Nimitz, whose announcements
and observations were made at a
press conference, expressed con
viction that the enemy so far has
been able to replace plane losses
in the war to date.
In operations of fleet against
fleet, he pointed out the Japs
have the advantage of Laad
based . air reconnaissance west
f the Marianas and the Ameri
ca fleet has as Its first abllga
tlon the protection of the Sai
pan Invasion troops. ...,,
With -their reconnaissance ad
vantage, the Japanese decided
Sunday they had enough Informa
tion to launch carrier-based plane
strikes on the fleet, the admiral
noted.
"They have made a very strong
bid but took a very severe beat
ing in losing 300 carrier type
' planes," he said. I
Such carrier planes are most
valuable to the Japs because of
the long pilot training required
fori carrier operations.
Concerning the strength of the
American fleet off the Marianas,
Nimitz remarked:
"I can safely say that there was
enough power to be favorable to
us in a decisive engagement
"We hope the Jap fleet will stay
in that area. As long as they stay,
we have a chance to get at them."
Because of. the Marianas' Im
portance in a ker defense line
for Japan, the China coast and
the Philippines. the enein Is
snaking tremendous effort to
hold Salpan. Nimlts explained.
- He said the Japanese lacked
; the sea strength to use the Mari
anas as a springboard for any
strike east at the American force
"but the Japs need to hold them
to keep us from penetrating west
of their island defense line."
Tm not ; optimistic enough to
say we will finish Saipan in two
or three days (it was invaded
June H and the southern end now
has been boxed off by a drive
from west to east) but we've made
good start ' . .
"Once we've taken the Marianas
It will be like money in the bank
and we can project our sea mvw
hundreds of miles to the west of
there."
i"
Evenson New Curate
For Portland Church
PORTLAND, June 20-CD-Ap-pointment
of the Rev. Franklin I
Evenson of Sifverton as curate of
Trinity church, Portland, was an
nounced today by Bishop Benja
min D, Dagwell of the Episcopal
diocese of Oregon,
VED.. THUBS.. FBI. SAT.
4 DATS - 2 BIG SHOWS
TBS 5
jon "Aeete W
May
V:
a - - '
ON the EOLIEFROirr
- It OAXZL CTTTT.n -
Say what you 'will, preachers
do have lottsa fun. - .
Take our friend the Rev. George
H. Quiley, for instance, who has
the honor of being father to the
last, of that line of, gifted men
who have been at various times
our "major professor."
..-Nothing; particularly, pedantic
about either father or son, pert
haps oat's why X like this wasn't
to be. about my likes and dislikes
but about those of other folk. j
A year or two ago, Mr. Quigley
Lsenior toek a trip and on the little
ship he met a charming young
woman who - asked him if i she
should marry the man In whom
she was , currently interested. : I
guess he didn't tell her "Yes" and
he didn't tell her "No" but sug
gested some ways to think ' out
the question herself. Last week he
went up to Seattle and performed
the wedding ceremony.
.More recently he went to Cor-
vallis lb baptise the first chOd of
the Earl Latwillers at whose wed
ding he had officiated six years
earlier.
; v
There are those- who think
newspaper work glamorous, but
here I sitj glued to one office and
(me city, while others travel I'm
positive that preachers, or at least
some preachers, have lottsa "fun.
t
French Guard
1900 Germans
(Continued from page 1)
the peninsula were believed under
orders to contest every foot of
ground at this point so that the
shattered nazi 14th army heat the
west coast might withdraw in as
much order as possible before the
Americans and French of Lt. Gen.
Mark W. Clark's fifth army. Pe
rugia is only 72 airline miles from
Florence.
. The French crushed the last en
emy resistance on Elba yesterday
when a 300-man earrison of Porto
Longone on the eastern, shore of
the historic island hoisted. a white
flag and surrendered.
C of C Committee, Vote
Sent to Washington
Votes of members of the legis
lative committee of the Salem
chamber of commerce with refer
ence to policies which if accepted
twill be .recommended j 4by the
United States chamber f of com
merce were - taken here Tuesday
and sent to; Washington to be
counted among those of similar
committees over the country. The
policies referred to concern va
rious national questions varying
from science invention and na
tional progress to capital markets,
water resources and highways.
Eagles State Meet
Set for The Dalles
THE DALLES, June 2(h-JP)-The
Eagles lodge will hold Its
20th. annual state convention here
Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
One thousand delegates are ex
pected, including the national
president, Robert Hansen of Mil
waukee, Wis., and State President
John Bennett of Salem.
SALEII
Leslie School Field
2 Big Days 2
Toes. - Wed.
27 Jnne 2C
WORLD'S LARGEST
S!i- CIRCUS
NOV VELDID INTO
ONE GIGANTIC SHOW
with "TV
3B23tt'
IN ..PERSON ir J
IATTUNO . S
40 SAVAGE, CRUEU BLOOS
TWISTY UONS AN9 tissls
IN MAMMOTH STTO. A&INA
e HtmrfrMli ! 9m4 IwU
' e Srt ! Mf nifkMt Mkih
'- e Ctm GUr e Acr f ? '
1 1
Great Fleet
Of Bombers
Slugs-Nazis
(Continued from page 1);
Calais Installations from which
the Germans have been laun
ching i their winged rocket
bombs sinee last Thursday
night. ' y -;; J
Forty-seven' bombers and 10
fighters were missing from all
the deyVoperations while 6S Ger
anan planes were shot down,-41 by
the tfg fighter escort ;
-Between attacks by the largest
total force of heavy bombers ever
put up in one day, the allies made
at least four other assaults; against
the. rocket nests with every type
of daylight bombers based in Brit
ain. ;-;:;: :; : )-;,;::;
Americas Marauders and Ha
vocs tlew against j these em
placements twice and retained ,
without loss. The RAF sent'
Mitchell median bombers, Bos
ton light bombers; -mud Mus
tangs and Typhoon fighter
bombers against the same la-'
atallatlons. , ; Y, r
By dark from 4000 to 4500 tons
of explosives had rained down
from the bomb bays of at least
3000 bombers and fighters. : j
As the procession of heavy
weights an armada matching the
biggest ever J flown, winged
across ; the channel, the one-ton
flying explosives from the Pas de
Calais area of France passed far
below in the opposite direction,
but the German robot attack j was
on a somewhat reduced scale, pos
sibly the result of II heavy allied
attacks on the launching ramps
since the first robot plane took
off last Thursday. ; j j '
Early this evening another
great bomber; force was seen
streaming over the English coast
under a fighter escort in the di
rection of Calais, perhaps to. de
liver another crushing blow at
the flying ramps.
S, Grayback
Lost at Sea
WASHINGTON, June 20P)
The American submarine Gray-
back which probably carried on
her log a record of the sinking of
a Japanese auxiliary cruiser and
other enemy - ships,
lost I, -- :
The navy gave! no
nouncing today that
is presumed
details in an-
the 1475-ton
submersible is overdue from! pa
troL It, didn't even siy where her
last mission was
But her skipper, Commander John
Anderson Moore, 34, jfctowell, Ariz,
holds a navy cross for "extraordi
nary heroism" as commander of
an unidentified submarine,
sumably the Grayback.
pre-
State Bond Sales Hit '
Total of $15,992,520
PORTLAND, June 20-(P)-Fifth
war loan bond purchases of $15,
992,520, up approximately 12,
000,000 since yesterday, were re
ported tonight by E.C. Sammons,
state chairman of the Oregon war
finance committee, j. j
The total represents 12.7 per
cent of Oregon's $125,000,000 quo
ta, Sammons said. E bond pur
chases have reached $6,764,291.
STARTS
THEY HAD i TO LIVE AND
. X DANGEROUSLY
1UPIN0
; j-'-jiaij-vr;,
MID
nxitflos.-
Companion Feature
ACTION WITH
The ComedT King of the West!
Starring
Smfler.
Burnette
'.With,,
Sonny
"Sunset"
r Carson
:V,V::-
. 3 - -e N r
CoiirPRules
tea
(Continued from page 1
stenographers, four . witrn
testified that the defendant toI
untarOy eenf eased te the mur
der tn great detail, that ae witness-
at the'trlal denied that he
had committed the murder and
ne witness denied that he had
confessed to the efflcers: both
la Lee Angeles and Albany.
In view of the unimpeached
and uncontredictory testimony, of
witnesses, to the confessions, cou
pled with strong corroborating ev
idence of passengers on the train,
me jury; could not have properly
arrived at any other verdict' Er
rors which might warrant reversal
under other circumstances did, not
warrant it here. '
The episloa enoted. trm the
tate constitatlon which prorldes
thai If the supreme court shall
be eg the opintoB that the J4-.
meat was such as sheald have:
been rendered la the ease such :
Judgment shall Tm affirmed not-'
withstanding any error commit
ted during the trial.
. Justice Rossman, in his dessent
ing opinion, wrote that If the dV
fendant Is guilty his guilt should
have been established in the way
prescribed by law. j
"He ought not te have beea
handicapped through.placlng in
the scales of justice prejudicial
Blatter which weighed heavily
against him and which consisted
f several accusations of crime,
including rape assault, threat
to kill and ethers, of which he
was not guilty. Justice Ross
man continued, j
, "He .should have had the ben
efit uniformly accorded all others
accused of crime, j of having the
jury instructed, that his oral ad
missions should have been viewed
with raution. A judgment of death
which is infirm through grave er
ror, ought not to be affirmed. The
case should have been remanded."
Folkes has been in the peniten
tiary here since his conviction.
The supreme court Tuesday also
stayed the execution of Richard
Harry Layton, Monmouth, under
death sentence for the murder of
Ruth Hildebrand, 17, Dallas, last
June, pending application for a
review of the case in the United
States supreme court
Layton was slated to die in the
lethal gas chamber at the peni
tentiary here on July 7.
The application for stay of exe-
How!
IIIVASIOII
MFICTUBES!
r-;F.;'"- i Mr';- r
Eye-Witness Scenes of the Nor
mandy! Beachhead Fighting!
GINGER
ROGERS
Companion Hit!
"You Can't Ration Love"
Now Showing
See . ' See ; . Today!
Actocd Combat Scenes
Bushed From
NormandT Batueironl
O Beachheads Taken
O Strafing Attacks
LOVE i-
TO LOVE AT ALL!
V
Nancy COiEA4ANMary BOtAND
Vkfof FRANCEN . NAZIMOVA
III
r7 I)
cution was filed by Laytoo'St t
tarneys. : Miss Hildebrands body
was found floating In the Willa
mette river 10 days after she was
reported missing. - v
; Layton was later-arrested by
state police. ' ' - J
Nazi Invasioii
TrySmaslied
(Continued from page 1)
meant by setting? in motion. Set
ting in motion, in: the -sense of
crossing the channel no. ' But
fretting in inotioo in the sense of
making very heavy concentrations
of 4roope and ships io cross the
channel yes." -; j j
any of .this shipping
asked Ma). Adams, "Ever emerge
from ports across the channel?" -
Wot to my belief Churchill
answered, dispelling" the- more
lurid legends. "A great deal of it
was sunk In ports and then they
changed their mmds."
Porter Rites
Set Friday j j
WOODBURN Funef al services
for Robert Porter, who died Sun
day night at his home south of
Hubbard, will be held Friday af
ternoon at 2 o'clock from the
Ringo chapel here. v
Surviving are his widow j Clara:
sons, Charley W. Porter of Wood-i
burn, Lawrence and Earl Porter
of Parker, Kans.; daughters, MrsJ
ntmi vntm rr;u t.i- ir: i
Mrs. Genme Coy of Hubbard, Mrs;
Minnie Ferteson, Parsons, Kans.2
Mrs. Oelmond Roshand,! TacomaJ
Mrs. Gladys Cripps, Woodburn;
Mrs. Clara Wimer of, Donald; and
sister, Mrs. Rosie Ellis, also of
High Point
First Baptist Church
Sets Service Tonight
Members, especially new mem'
bers, and friends of the First Bap
tist church have been urged to
attend an acknowledgement re
ception and praise service at the
church at 730 o'clock tonight
BUY MOKE BATTLE BONDS!
TwC UTTlt HOUSC WITH TC IS KT
- OPENS 6:45 P. ML. -
NOW PLAYING!
HE LOVED. ..TO HATfl
CO-HIT!
"WHAT'S
'buunirt :
y.f
Alibi's Ism. a
W SB VI pi
m :
raw aem I
STONE ROOKEY
! ana m I
PARKER HOLDEII
BUY, BONDS TODAY!
i
THC nous Tm nrti SmLf '
- OPENS :45 P. M. -
NOW SHOWING!
r
i .;
TJedr LaMarr i
Walter Pidgeon
"UIII7E !
CAHG0'
Iff
r CO-lHTl ;
f
Hoy , Rosen
Start. CZf UM
ssassa?.
v.
County
Bond Sales
(Continued from page I)
duced Harry V. Collins, industrial
division chairman. who 'spoke on
the campaign and presented two
sons of a plant employe. "4;
Jesse W. Nelson and Roy Nel
son, brothers who served at Gua
dalcanal a n d elsewhere, in the
south Pacific, agreed that fwar is
hell? as they addressed briefly the
friends-of their happy fathers
Charles, M13hinny; discussed
dencrscxand Payroll Deduction
Plan Chairman George H. Riches
spoke on continuous buying of
bonds hy allowing a portionof
the monthly Income to go tobond
purchases. u -.
While" Reinhoidt dc- Lewis and
the Keith Brown Co. have-led Sa
lem industries by going over the
top in the first week of the cam
paign, other 'plants are nearing
their quotas. Kay Woolen Mills
employes expect to have made the
100 per cent record late this week.
Salem r water commission em
ployes have approximately 80 per
cent of their quota, -i -.
California Packing : Co. em
ployes, now near the top, have
announced they plan a surprise
for the committee next week.
Ending Tc 3ay wilh Ilalinccs Only! '
Ann Ilillor NaSi i2ds Jam Session11
BasU
I ' . Continuous Shows Dailj from 1 P. M.
Produced and Directed
' . ..byn ' -
JUIEli DOVWER
" the man who gave you
"Flash and Fantasy
, and
Tales of Manhattan'
Gay Ilckdic
Co-Feainre!
FLIiSII! Fir:! Firiics d MciLiirjsJia Fizn:c! Till
Ito Veil Puzrrcza cl ti I2:dia
Approximately 70 per cent of
the ; quota assigned employes of
Side's Brewing Co. has been pur
chased. :
Oregon Pulp & Paper Co. paper
division employes "j have made - a
bi dent in the quota assigned
them, j and : Reid Murdoch com
pany men and women have pur
chased about 50 per cent of their
quota.! ' '";
5 The bond committee emphasized
Tuesday that it would offer no
prices' or incentives ..other than
those to be given away at the close
oT thej drive, for whtclt all pur
chasers of bonds after June 1 of
this -year to the time of the awards
will be eligible. :'r. - .:,-t--
Marionr county persons who
have bought bonds and have: not
received tickets for theprixes may
take their bonds to any bank in
Marion county to have thenr vali
dated and at the same time re
ceive the tickets, County. War Fi
nance Committee Chairman Doug
las Yeat i said Tuesday. ; a
No auctions or other prize draw
Ings are planned, by the commit
tee. Yeater, said. ' so those, who
buy now win lose nothing of great
value in. the future. There may
continue to be moving picture pre-.1
mieres sponsored by, the theatres,
but those who obtain tickets to
these will not lose their right .to
tickets for the long list of prizes !
headed by a 1941 automobile. "
(Picture of first -firm in retail
division over the top appears on
page' 5 today). ": '
nalhBcne - "The Scarlel
Z-.S
RICHARD WHORF ALLTH JOSLYH
ELLEN DREW PETER VAN EYCK
Job Qdtlen Eddie Qnilltn Ralph Morgan
erbourg
FaUBelieved
Imminent
(Continued from page 1 )
one Is defeated and can no longer
escape, gave up the fight and they
have hot regretted their decision.'
V Anyhope- of the German, Cher
bourg: garrison that Marshal Erwin
Rommel's tank forces could break
through to it was "out of the
question,' he ) told them. Rom
mel's main tank forces consist of
four envisions which are engaged
ia heavy fighting against allied
units fin; the St Tuo-Caen sectoa
on the eastern end of the front,"
he said: . ;
Faulliaber Indicted -On
Larceny Charge "'
' t . 1 i :'? r- i
Charging that he entered the
residence premises et Thomas
Newman. 1 approximately one mile
west of Woodburn, on June 12
and took therefrom a J22 calibre
automatic rifle belonging to Jfew
man, the Marion county " grand
jury I Tuesday indicted ' Marvin
JohnfFaulhaber on a charge of
larceny In a dwelling. The in
dictment was the only one brought
in by the grand Jury in its final
session. ";'. v''
Claw"
m mP I!
in
with
(