hi fAGE TWO Plaster Berlin In Night Blow k LONDOK, Tuesday. 'July ;' Swift BAP Mosquitos, capable of ' carrying two-ton blockbusters" plastered Berlin with explosives - last night after some ! 2009 US '., heavy bombers and fighters had ; hammered German communica- tions over a wide are In France ; yesterday. ' j .-v . v .-.v - The raid on Berlin was first !' announced by the German' radio ; and was confirmed later by an r official . British announcement , The Germans described the as ... '.'sault as a fnuisance raid," but : the preliminary British announce- ment gave no details. The j daylight assault by , the Americans ranged over ? wide C arc around Paris and in southern France. ': These blows came as the Rus . sians in the east disclosed that their fighters had been attacking targets in east Prussia, thus mak- ' ing a three-way. offensive against the Germans. ! ''.i'- ! Most of the Fortresses and Lib erators thundering against the continent from Britain in. force .. for the fifth time in seven days ' split into task forces and spread havoc 'among enemy supply routes, staging their deepest pene tration of the campaign to isolate the Normandy battle tone. The rest of the big planes, how ever, renewed their fight against the robot raiders of southern -Eng-, land, attacking supply dumps for the flying bombs at Rilly La Mon- : tigne about seven miles south of : Reims, third storage point for the winged projectiles' to be bit 'by . the allied heavies. FDRSdysHe Would Vote For Wallace (Continued from Page" 1) ' expected to' bring into clearer fo f 'cus the scrap that has been rag ' .ing around the vice presidential ; picking the one big issue of the - convention. . Dated July . 14 at Hyde Park, NY, the letter said: i, The White House :. Washington ' My Dear Senator1' Jackson: , In the light of the probability : that you - will be chosen .perma nent chairman of . the convention, and because I know that many ' rumors .'accompany, all conven - tions, I am wholly willing to give you my -own . personal thought, in . regard to the Election of a cen- . didate for vke president I do , this at this time because I expect , to be away from Washington for the next few days. 4 "The easiest way of putting it is this: I have been associated with Henry Wallace during his past , lour years as vice president, for ! eight years earlier while he was : secretary of agriculture, and well before that. I like -him and I.re r spect him, and he. is my personal friend. For these reasons, I per r aonally would vote for his reno ! mination if Lwere a delegate to the convention. . ... !v "At the same time, I. do not i . wish to appear in any way as e dictating to fee convention. Obvi .j, ously the convention must do the deciding. And it. should and I :! am sure it wfll-give great con :') sideration to the pros and cons ;, of Its choice.-" ,". "Very sincerely- yours, !l (S) Franklin D. Roosevelt." 5 China Throws Back Fresh Jap Attacks CHUNGKING, July 17 -P)-Fighting bitterly.; with little hope " for relief, encircled Chinese troops in the Canton-Hankow rail Junc y tion of Hengyang .have thrown ' back fresh : and heavy Japanese attacks on the city, but at second breakthrough has been made by ;. the enemy in attacks -from the , soutnwest suburbs, ;the Chinese , high command admitted tonight. A communique said a ' strong enemy force attacked in the sub urbs last night and some stormed through as far as the city' muni-! - cipal hospital. ; The hospital "and ' other original Chinese 'positions t were retaken In counterattacks; -. tne bulletin said. . v , . To the south in the Lieyang sec - tor, the Chinese continued to at tack, the communique said, but from Chaling, about 60 miles east of Hengyang, the Japanese launch- . ed another drive yesterday morn' V ing. This force reached "the north shore of the Chaling river, above Chaling, where it was attacked by the Chinese and repulsed, the high , command said. . i Drowns in Blue Lake C PORTLAND, July 17-(P-Ray r.iond L Ungermann, 17, drowned r in Elue lake near ;here yesterday . when a canoe upset He could not swim. Cmfr"m Ty ' Marlon Herbert Buell. 82, at the tMidrncs. 1360 Waller street, Monday, July 17. Survived by wife. . Anna Jtuell. Salem; .two daughters, Lena P.uell. Salem, -and Mrs. Mary Wren. Washout's. Wash.: one son, Herbert Anson. Si!?m: a brother, Chrl- W, Uuell, Jetterson; seven frsndchiiJren iinl four crest erand children. , An ' nouncement of funersl arranfmentl luer Irom Wai iter-Howell t uneral Yanlts Find Smashed Jap Guns at Heavy Japanese guns, never installed, were found wrecked en flat apag barber, Salpan island,! by fled bland in the Japanese enter Farrell Seeks Funds to Add On Institutions More important than a legisla tive act to remove from the shoul ders of relatives the burden of paying for care of patients in Oregon's state hospital and in stitutions is a plan to make those institutions physically capable of caring for state wards. Secretary of State Robert S. Farrell, jr, in dicated Monday. , : Previously the secretary of state had announced he would ask the legislature to change the law which requires families "of pa tients and pupils in hospital and schools to pay for their care when finandaUy able. Farrell declared he would' pro pose to the state board of con trol, probably at its next meeting, that funds from relatives and oth er sources paid in for support of patients at the state hospital and other Institutions be earmarked for - building and. Improvements and that other money be bor rowed from the state land board to make possible construction as soon as possible. Remodeling of the state hos pital here to meet increasing de mands, construction of two new cell blocks at the state peniten tiary, building of an intermediate Institution . for teen ace inmates of the prison and a stru&ure for the criminal insane were listed by Farrell as needed improvements. with the state hospital an urgent necessity. ...;.-v - . ' ; ;; AU of the improvements Far rell figures at less than $1,000,000. Oregon now receives approxi mately $223,000 annually from relatives and estates of patients in the hospitals for the insane and state wards in some other institu tions. The secretary of state did not say that the -earmarking of the board and room" payments for construction purposes would do away with or delay his previous- y-mentioned 1 request from the legislature. , But he did indicate that board funds would be repaid. under this' plan, from such mon ies, indicating. that the change in system, might not be sought for several years, if at all. Allies Steadily Drive Ahead (Continued from Page 1) Yank troops driving directly up the west coast reached the edge of Montenero, four miles from the heart of Livorno, and drove the enemy from Mt Magglore, four and a half miles southeast of the harbor. Eighteen miles inland an other American column slashed through the heavily defended town of Capannoli in the Era valley after repulsing a violent counter attack by German tanks. T h 1 Yank - force -was but five and ; half miles from the Arno river at 'point northeast of Livorno. G.E. Montgomery New- President 1 Moose A. Croup ' EUGENE, July 17 - Up) - G. E. Montgomery, Hillsboro, today was the president of the Oregon Moose association. . - . ' .. : , He .was elected yesterday, suc ceeding Ray Van Meter of Mer- nU. Other officers named .were Dr. All Swennes. Eueene. ' first vice president; and A. E. Hedme, Salem, second vice president Fortland was selected as the site' of the next annual convention. It KM1 J Last Times Tonight 1 .-i.teolOT O et "a Friend c .. in.. I jme v . i nc av- i 1 Tank forces which took the base. ring of islands. (International.) : Water Street Property Gpen To Gravel Co. (Continued from Page 1) nection for Brooks avenue- with the Pacific highway, the first such link in nine blocks. 1 The city ' recorder was ! author ized to call S400Q worth of 1936 and $13,000 worth of 1937 gen eral fund, refunding bonds. Two street-cleaning carts not in use currently will not be loaned o the city park board if street committee recommendations ac cepted i Monday night are fol lowed. No reason, for the refusal was given, but when the request was made it ws understood that the carts were out of use for the duration only, ; , . : ; ; An inventory of city property was .asked by the property con trol committee and approved by the council. It la heeded to facili tate shifting of equipment when possible and to aid in providing insurance coverage, 0Hara said. The city audit, which ! contains one general criticism was turned over to the ways and .means com mittee I for examination as to bookkeeping suggestions." A dif ference in ; the f estimated f out standing taxes due the idty and the figures on the county records is considerable and should be cor rected, the auditor declares. t " Purchase of six fire hydrants was autnorized. Cleasing or number of ditches was authorized. construction Of a. retaining wall at 971 South 22nd street, and lay ing of sewers Jn block 23 .of Yew Park addition, with the provi sion that most of. the work shall be done when; money and mater ials are available.. The ; recorder was likewise? instructed; to no tify residents fin the area of 14th and Mill streets, and particularly a cannery that no refuse: is to go into the ditches there. R(toGet Pacific Role ; OTTAWA, July 17 It was learned here jtoday that Air Min ister C G. Power1 is preparing an announcement which: will- dis close a new roll for the Canadian air force in the Pacific theatre. The announcement may -disclose that "air air mission already has been sent to Australia for the pur pose of making : preparations for the establishment of ', Canadian squadrons in ? that area I and also possibly to make arrangements for a flow of trainees from the commonwealth air training plan to the Pacific C i It is understood there is a satur ation of air crews" at British bases and the allied high command now feels that at least part of the out- put of the big plan can be turned oyer to the Pacific war. ; OH MARGE. HERE COMES THE NEW FURNtTURE 1 BOUGHT FROM I SALEMS ' HOME FURNITURE 1 8k$mM -30UE FUPvIIITURE CO .137 SOUTH COMMERCIAL ST. . 5 I . I rag i cars near the seaplane has at Tan Salpan was the mast heavily fortl - . Biggest Yank Batuestatisi Pound Guam 1 ).-.!. (Continued from IPage-i 1) onn,r US outpost, of rer, a, one of its greates prizes its west coast port Apra, one of the finest bar bora in the Pacific). Hake Installations "Gun emplacements and "other defense installations on Guam is land were heavily shelled by battle shirfcnuanddesbttyersot f TtV,. gitud?U--date)r W tonights; press release, ::, i -i "Enemy shore batteries returned sporadic fite but did no damage to OUT surface shins! 11 i This bombardment occured on toe same dajr that carrier I planes struck Guam's bivouac with rock-; ets ana bombs, an attack reported yesterday in a press : release.- : ; Tordghfsi report i carried , the Guam attains through ttie 13th straight day! by saying that on July Id latilT IwlaMi a44sfktt atliiJ aircraft batteries, barracks andi a radioi station with tocerary oomos ana rockets at m cost ox one dive bomber. j Hmulmls Die Ea;T0rrif ic : Nav j- Blast (Continued -front Page il) through the wrecked war-boom community's as the. dead and jh4 juredl weref evacuated in a steady stream of ambulances, i , A' 1 Berkeley motorist, ,M. ;F Daye driving nearby, said ;a grea Dou pi name snot iniOj me ciear night' sky, jshooting up great cir CK3 jot iignu inen jcame uc thumping ound of fee explosion. It was lik4 a clap of thunder !. 1 almost deafening. None of us had any idea of what happened.' It j Port Chicago was plunged into darkness by the concussion; bam? poring extrication jof the; dead; the dying and the Wounded, one eyewitnes kaid. The I town's : Amer lean t Legion hall was j converted into a hospital. X, M i , The Contra Costa aheriff s off Cce, hrooting a telegraph-lineman who witnessed fee explosion from a mile away, said a; sheet of light blazed across the sky followed in stantly by two terrific blasts, ft ,- This lent strength to reports two ; ammunition ships; had ex ploded.; ,..--..( PauUneBetzVicior ' HAVERFORD, Pa, July 1-V Pauline Betz, Los Angeles, nation al tennis j champion, made her first competitive appearance here today, defeating two opponents in the opening round of fee 44th an nual? Periftsylvaniai and eastern states lawn tennis championship irTrXr1! HrfttweViF a, r Or. v AT ! QX Crtcsa. Ivasdsr I !sri7. July r : 5 ... T ....... Soviets If lake I i .( .J ...... .. ' Big Advance Against Nazis (Continued from Page 1) Daugavpils, and. the old Lithuan ian capital of Kaunas, the Rus sians refrained from giving spe cific locations. Holds Being Extended v ' t- iney annuuiiccu muj uut uicu holds below: Kaunas - were .being extended, with more than 20 towns captured. They last were reported 10 miles southeast of Kaunas Sun day. V . ! ;::,; ."i-:: I ' The Russians left no doubt of their aims in that direction, how ever, for; Moscow dispatches de scribed them as less than 40 miles from the original borders of East Prussia and Jsald : the red army's battle cry had become 0n to ;Konigsberg ; -i. (" :-:;'.v t The Moscow radio said early today that I Reichsmarshal Her mann Goering had flown to Kon ' igsberg for crucial conferences .on the defense of East Prussia. . , 1410 Townr Captured . More-thai 410 towns and vil lages were captured in Monday's drives, ; said the . broadcast com munique recorded by the. Soviet monitor while front-line fighter planes swooped over East Prussia in strafing f attacks which gave that Junkers homeland a bitter foretaste of Invasion. , Previously - the Russians have been reported 'at:. the borders , of the; Suwalki district annexed to East Prussia in 1939 and within 40 to 45 , miles of the- original reich's frontiers but late Moscow dispatches said in some sectors the I advance had gone much nearer. Konigsberg, chief East Prussian city, was about 140 miles -distant as the Russians approached, from but the Germans appeared sfiU unable to stem the .ivance erf even upset the'Soviet --m,, ThT krnuffht im freah I divisions straight from Germany Ua tnaV a! desnerat last stand. I K,,t th Bussian aald these far- ma tions were being smashed down I m the same manner as the nazi I armies they have been ripping armies they have been apart since June 23. INaziPlanes Jim ! ngyflim irilV fWtUI ff WASHINGTON, July 17-)- The German air force has been driven to a kind of desperate guerrilla air warfare, Assistant War Secretary Lovett said today, but may yet be able to return to full scale iaction as a first class war machine. Stressing the recuperative .pow er of German industry, Lovett told a press conference he was unable to understand "the amaz ing wave of reasonless optimism of some quarters back here.' "Some people ask me whether the war win be long or short," said Lovett, assistant secretary for air who has just returned from Britain and Normandy. "I haven't the faintest idea, but I'm convinced it is going to be a darned sight longer than 1 anybody back home, except the military command, thinks it Is.1 Last Times Today! " ' JACK BENNY iivVCf' "CHAELETS AUNT' ntCOERS OF RIO GRANDE? . Opens t:45 P.M. : I TOMOBBOWI TYRONE POWER GENE TERNEY ' ' ' "S:a ci ftij" GEORGE SANDERS roddy Mcdowell " . . CO-FCATUEE ; - U SaOLy : t Jr c 18. IS i I 4 f 4 OllthoflOlIEFROllT tj OALZL CUES ! men the Roll Is Called fUp Yonder . , j Tn one of ' Salem's, large and dignified churches the minister's custom of calling attention to .the nresence. in the congregation of prominent personages , considera bly lowered tne lemperamrc v hot Sunday morning! i : TOMvine. asked several personi to rise and shine, fee good clergy man reached "'the 'climax of his morning - pastoral in some such terms as these: ; 1 - ' Now, X am told that Governor : Sprague the BEST governor, Oregon ever had is in the bal cony. He's in the balcony wear ing a grey suit, I understand' Governor Sprague ..'... . ; v - vw -, . 4- The gentleman who whispered in the minister's ear may sim ply have been; saying that if he wished the ushers would open or close certain windows. He might have been : doing a kinder deed. for the paean of praise fori the gubernatorial . church - goer was concluded by the apparently vn- flustered preacher "I mean Gov ernor SnelL" . CurtinSureT: Of Jap Rout CANBERRA, Australia, July 17 -ffy Predicting Japan would be as decisively beaten as the Nazis when Nippon is hit with full Bti fish and American Land and air power, Australian prime minister John Curtin told parliment today that Britain's main efforts against the rising sun empire must await Germany's defeat. The chief of the commonweeuth added, hawever, that : large 1 and powerful British forces would be thrown against Japan this year. ' The prime minister, a recent vis I tor to the United States and Lon don, discussed machinery for the preservation ox peace alter tnewar. He expressed the opinion that the great world powers were obviously the backbone for any world peace preservation council that might be created. DfDS TODATI ? LORETTA YOUNG "LADIES '""' COURAGEOUS" . "TwUitht On The Prarle" Ik r f7t LONCHANEY I ANN G7YNNE V EVELYN ANKERS St. Lo,UjVfecy Crack Under Allied Bloxzs l Continued from Page 1) bridges, leaving; the enemy only one main road from the town the highway on the south. Blight Make Stand - Whitehead said it was - not known whether; the Germans in tended to, make a, long stand . in the rubble and it was believed some might already have pulled out to the' south, but meanwhile they - resisted yard by yard tn some of the ' bitterest ; fighting since D-day. : Pressure from 'the north was growing greater. Doughboys, had stabbed .. a - m&e south from Le MesnQ Durand and were little more than 2 miles northeast of St. Lo. Farther west they widened their bridgehead across the Lozon river with a gain of more than half a mile and captured Samson erie and L'Abbaye. . Moving like wraiths In the morning mist, the Americans, un der orders to advance silently, bayoneted the enemy in his fox holes and swept into St Lo from the east after seven days al as sault. " - - ; . -. ENDS TODAY! .Brian' .. Kussell Aherne WHAT AWOJIAIT nenry - ' CBAD Fonda . XXANNA" im rtCMMicet CO-FEATUEZ Shews Dally From 1 F. . - a ffodorroui FAST. FUEIOU3 FUNI . . . SET TO MUSIC FOR ALT. THE PEOPLE) iiaaiM CceJL '?rai(Lt j tut O'DRIEtJ LAHR - -I" 1ACr; .-l.VJUNI : RAG LAND ALLYSON CHILLING CO-FEATURE I WA loul:s coluci RALFII MOr.GAII U. S. ; Engineers Hepair Cherbourff Tcrt! . . - De GatiHe i Confers with Cctcrg Kzzi 'Secret Marion Buell ; Dies Monday Marion! Herbert Bueltt, bora at Elkhoro and for most of his life a resident of Yasiha county, died Monday at fee family residence, 14$0 Waller street He had re sided for the past, 18 years In Sa lem, where his widow Anna Buell, one daughter, Lena Buell, and one son, Herbert Anson, sur vive him;: Another daughter, , Mra, -Mary Wren, lives at WashougaL Wash., and one brother, Charles W. Buell, , in Jefferson. Seven grandchild ren and four great grandchildren also survive him. He was a mem ber of the . United; Brethren . church. f 'i . ' . Funeral arrangements are in the care of the Walker-Howell .Fune ral home. . .,'';;.-; v ; y;. .. Red Bombers Sink Last Finn parsnip - LONDON, Tuesday, July 19 -(P A supplement to the Russian com munique 'said today that bombers of the Soviet red banner Baltic fleet had! sunk the 3900-ton coast defense ship Vainamoinen, Fin land's orjy remaining naval ves sel of arrysize;i:V.v':?'a.;:' -, Opens f:45 r.lL . TOMORROW! l: Two Joy Bits! 7?n M. n i 4-i- EOPLrTX ( HAVE MORE FUH J . . . . '. i Sad tips Whhpariaj llack Moglcti V A Cor8ts...torl.9.CJIwf Y tAJS, TiTcc?cr.5r