1- - FACE TWO. Tfc OZIZGOII CTATZIMAII, Cdsa. Ors-sa. Cslurday IZznZzj. Cc?lcisr CO. 1SU Five Salem Men Get Mott Appointments " Representative James W. Mott, here lor the congressional recess, Friday announced the ' appoint ment of candidates . to take en trance examinations for. the Unit ed States military academy at West Point, NY, and the United States naval academy at Annap olis, Md. , - . 1 Naval academy Principal, Harold W. Heacock, a 1c. Hills- -boro; first alternate, Claude King Grosno, USN, Toledo; second . al- . ternate, John Peter Crockett, a 1c, Salem. : Principal, ' Richard J". Sullivan, r2c, Salem; first alternate, Ken neth Robertson, s 2c, Salem; sec ond alternate, Donald W. Zieg fer, cm 3c, , Corvallis. Military academy Principal, Pfc. Thomas B. Kay, Salem; first ', alternate, Pfc' Arthur Ray Wil liams, Carlton; , second alternate, fSgt James M. Trullinger, Glad - stone; third alternate, Pfc. James C. Jardine, Corvallis. i Principal, Pfc. E. J. Hesacker; Banks; first alternate Pfc: Richard M. Ward, Philomath; second alternate, Pfc! Raymond E. Page, Salem; third alternate, Pfc. Robert E. Skippon, Salem. - ' Mott first nominated LL Mar y cus - J Youngs, jr.; Milwoukie, as principal candidate fdf appoint ment to the military academy but later was advised that . he had been wounded in action with the J63rd infantry in Italy. where he Is now hospitalized. The wound necessitated the amputation of his foot which made it impossible for him to accept the appointment. ' All of the principal and alter i nate" appointments to - both the military and naval academies this I year, were awarded to boys of the first congressional district onac- tive duty with the armed forces. . Jaycees Get 10 Per Cent Of All Paper The, Salem Junior Chamber of Commerce has accounted for 10 ; per cent of . the total , tonnage of salvage paper collected in Marion county since, the start of "the campaign, Elmo Lindholm, co chairman for the Jaycee paper drive, announced Friday. -As long as Salem residents co operate as in the past, collection boxes will be left out during the winter months, I4ndhoIm said. Persons are asked t "place their' donations inside the boxes so that rain will not damage .the. salvage, paper. - Money received by the Jaycees for scrap paper; is being used , for' various civic projects including an Americanization program, outfit ting of school boy safety patrols and sponsorship of .Boy Scout troop 17. ; f Surplus funds are being in vested in war bonds for, use in postwar civic activity. Definite plans for postwar projects will not be made until local Jaycees in the, service return home and can take part in the- planning, Wendell Ewing, president of, the . Jaycees, explained. V-3 Rocket Newest Nazi Secret Arm LONDON, Sept 29 .-UP)- The existence of another and still unused German secret weapon, the V-3 rocket with a blast area of about two miles i was report ed today among American Third army troops advancing, upon Ger many. . .: r":"r The source if 'the" reports was not clear, and details were, scanty, but the soldiers picked up Infor mation . that Hlflcr't ttsnsuAM weapon now was a 14-ton prU Jectile. shot vertically into i&&AJ:?tttt , propelled, by a mixture of liquid air and . alcohol, . and; guided ,by radio. ' v r z'-;:-: .:. That was asiar as the informa tion went, but it was believed the Germans have not yet got to the actual operation; stage with , this latest successor to the Y4 robot bombs and the V-2 long range rocket, the latter also evident, hus far only in.wodsv '-'U 'j Auburn Residents More To Rickey District : RICKEY Mr. and MrsVOrvtn Fryslia of Auburn are moving" to the Eoff and Downing; farm. Frys- lie was reared In this community and lived here until last fall when Claude C -Ashby purchased, the Frysi farm and the . Fryslies moved to Auburn.,- ; a XZ-:;j - i. J - r n m r-y r"" ; u . j t d Flrlag sqoad of metropolitaa police carries ant the sentence of death ea Pietra Csreso, former 'Rom pe liee chief, ecnvlcted af collaborating with the Germans. ;The execution took place lit Port Bravetts : the e-ntsklrts of Some. Picture by William Allen, AP photographer with the- wartime still picture , pooL ; (AF wtrephoto) ' .!- - -t ' I , I " - ',' " " ; f . - .V M i Ma -jrWI C- I .i . V; r ' - r:rTrtr ' - -, -y- Draped with nasi flars, five men accused of being traitor to Luxembourg; are ; marched through the streets of the tiny country's capital to prison under guard of members of the Luxembourg forces of the interior. (AP wirephoto) Lto.GoL BoUrne Woimdednut IsRecoyering . " Lt.' CoL Joe : 11 Bourne, battal ion commander with the 104th division when it was stationed at Camp Adair but currently serv ing with Mark Clark's Fifth ar my, has been seriously wounded in action but is recovering satis factorily at a hospital near Rome, bis wife has been notified. . Bourne . received shrapnel wounds in his right shoulder and arm and several bones were brok en. He was commander of the bat talion chosen to -guard Winston Churchill when the prime minis-, ter Inspected the .Tilth army re cently, in the newsreel taken at that time, Bourne is pictured to the left of ChurchilL j CoL Bourne went overseas March 28 and first saw action at the Anzio .beachhead. Mrs. Bourne and their . three daughters, Cyn thia, Sharon Lee and Jo Ann, are residing . at the home in' Salem they purchased when Bourne was first assigned to Adair. Missing Stayton ; STAYTON l Darel Lewis, who was reported as missing in action last week, has written his wife; Mrs. Henrietta -Lewis ol he fnirrt3l of Capri., Only v details; divulged were that he was substituting fox a crew member on another plane than his regular one and was shot down over - Yugoslavia. Upon re turning to his base in JLtaly , he found that his . own.; crew and P1?"? overdu it3th mission. Buys Monmouth Shop MONMOUTH New residents here are Mr, and Mrs. . O. Fet ters of Long Beach, CaliL Fetters bought out ' the J. C Wilson blacksmith shop recently and. is taking possession Oct 2. ' , VJ.W. Victory Club 1111 ! I Old Time Danda; ; ; Vc!:rci3 IZdl , Corner need aad Clrareh, . EtreeU A I. tlnsle by. , , " C3ab Members Os!x A Collaborationist Is Executed - . Thumbnail Off VJnrl By Um AaodiM I Western Europe Allies open offensive at Belfort gateway to Germany, near French-German-Swiss border; allies gain slight ly in other sectors . of 1460-mile front, as Germans rush rein forcements to Holland and . de stroy bridge approaches at Arn T5n. ;-! ; A'"!;t-; yf: j Russia All Estonia, except two small islands, taken; Riga, Latvia, still in German hands; . Russia forges further into Hun gary. ' ..V K Italy Rain and mud slows allied advance into Po valley. Balkans Headquarters silent on allied operations in Albania; Tito's partisans approach Bel grade. i :i Pacific Widespread air at tacks 'spread damage, including : 89 ships sunk or damaged in Philippines; three small Palau isles invaded, .but Peleliu holds out j ; ;' ;- ' V" .,-. '! - : ' China Japanese within 35 I miles of Kweilin, break into city of Paoching; weakened Chinese forces thought unable to support . possible allied landing on China 1 coast"'-'"-: ''i ' - Stayton Flower Show To Be Held October 6 STAYTON--The annual flower show of the Garden club will be held at the Women's Community club houseTTrlday, October 6. Rib- bams -will be awarded the prize winners.' . : ; r ; . , . Classes include specimen, artis tic arrangements, Halloween ar- rangements and niches, with sev eral subdivisions under each clas- sificaUon. r -TvL" V , Mrs. W. A. Inglis, general chair man, states chrysanthemums will have a large representation momg tne blooms entered. w LAST TIMES TONIGHT a Continuous from 2 P. 1. 1 -ussssssssk a, 1 I , M i, . ' s 4 11 -i 1 Vl v . Allied r lanes i Slug 17 Jap r Shipga Barges HEADQUARTERS, New Guin ea, Saturday, Sept SO-CflV-Head- quarters' communiques today re ported widespread Southwest Pa cific air activity In which 17 small Japanese ships and barges were either sunk or damaged. The communique, covering raids made in mid-week, listed these achlvements: ; ; Off thai southern Philippines sis; surface craft, . including two small freighters, two coastal ves sels and two barges sunk or dam aged by night air patrols. j Off; Dutch Celebes seven, in cluding a small freighter, two bar-, ges and four small craft "destroy ed or crippled H ; Off Borneo a small freighter damaged In Makassar strait Off Ternate la the Halmahera group a barge loaded with Jap anese destroyed. - -,.--! -, Off Boeroo in the Banda sea: Two coastal vessels , destroy ed or damaged and a parked bomber set afire, - . '-- : The Japanese sent six bombers in a night, raid against the Philip pines . invasion base Gen. Douglas MacArthur is building at Morotai in the Halmaheras, 300 miles south of Mindanao but the communique said the raiders dropped bombs harmlessly." x , Bicycles 1 1 LJou f tffiJTS 0 W0ME:r3 II0DEL3 Montgomery Ward 155 North liberty ON the H0LIEFR011T - By PAETX C'mI.D3 ;-.- Those persons who consistently read . - The Statesman -: from "It Seems to Me" through the classi fied ads, not skipping page 2, know that among my treasured memo ries which ever and anon must, like cream on aging milk, rise to the top of my thoughts, are i few airplane flights. - . ; v.-' f ' ' V- "' " ; X had never been higher . than Pike's .- peak i that bleak August morning when Post and. Will Rog ers ; cracked up--and - when the man in the little red Stinsoa drop- ped. out of a high fog onto our airport. ---';" -, :-' Vili:.-- j By nightfall I had an. hour in the air to my credit but thrilled as I was over that experience (and'; I mink the plane's. owner and its Irish pilot were genuinely , tickled with my newspaper description of same), I found a greater and less- publicized delight in having met and made friends with a real in ventor. But the great things in life we seldom make Into conver sation pieces so I was silent. : No perpetual motion machines for -Stanley Hiller! His genius had brought about the great cookers and rollers and sieves used, in the processing of scrap fish into oil and meat He had invented a good many other things, too, but we lived 'in the coast country and to us he was the father of the pil chard Industry. V -: '-J .'l1 You may recall how not very long . ago I sounded off about a flight above the : Golden Gate- that story bf the dark cross rising shining from a sea of fog X count among my best The ' trip - was made in the same little red plane. This, time the pilot was a young adventurer who had been i em ployed by Pan-American, and when he suggested that I bold the stick X shivered and hesitated until oar host said, laughingly, "My boy could fly a plane when I had to hold him on my knee so he could reach the instrument board." , In Mr. Holler's office later 1 met the boy, still in knee-pants sit ting on the 'floor and working with a small motor. He nodded his head gravely when we were intro duced, but apparently : found no difficulty in concentrating on his "work." V. :' "-' i ' The years and the miles have intervened and X doubt if the In ventor whose infrequent appear ances in Oregon brought such ad venture into my life would re member me si other than (ah, I hd thought never to admit to the title here) V "the Pilchard Queen," but ou will tmderstand why I "have b e e n so interested, have felt such a personal triumph hi the "Hfflercopter (Time Mag axine, Sept.-18) .' v ' ! The fact that Henry Kaiser plans- to manufacture Stanley Hiller, Jr.'s, practical little flying machine for popular use at the close of the war is exciting to me, but not half so pleasing as the memory of the father of the pil chard industry as he stood ;grkv nlng down at the small boy on the floor of his : office working with a motor and he said as he stood there "He wW beat me at my own game ' i - ! . ... . .. - .. - . j ... Norman Thomas Raps Unconditional Terms ilJOS ANGELES, Sept 2-(JP) Norman Thomas, socialist candi date for president charged to night that 1 continuation of : the European ' war is due "in I very large part" to a demand for un conditional surrender by if Ger many. A i He referred to Prime Minister Churchill's speech In the house of commons yesterday and declared that "once more he condescended to give to the world information tiiat our own government has not yet deigned to give us; French Crack Do wiiV, i . PARIS, Sept, 29vP)-The French government , has cracked down on: workers who have tak en possession of factories In.-vari-ous parts of France, declaring such seizures axe illegal, unless author ized by. the proper authorities. . mm-"-- Tl ' ' V ilQHEDEl Udll Limited Quantity I2Avjtx:cz::3 : . vjzz'jl c:::a 29.95 IUtion Free toijTI want a Ward llaw thorne! Lishtwelht .". strong -specially built for. easy -pecIaEIas-war--tine transportation. These are available thrcvh ocr'calalcs or der (!:p2rtnczt.-. 4 These 2121 Deivey Calls on Free Press To Resist Federal Domination ALBANY, N.Y Sept. 29P what he called "tendencies of the governmeni in power, aenareu tonight he had "every confidence that our free press will con tinue to resist government domination.' - . ; He did not specifically "name President Roosevelt nis No vember opponent in. the presiden tial election. . , i - The dictators have given .the world a bitter and bloody demon stration that government tyranny is still the great enemy of free press and. speech,! , Dewey .declar- eL; ?Measures to . suppress com pletely the freedom of . the press were carried out by every one of the dictators as natural and essen tial steps to their success. t t Applies in .UJsVs . . ;-"'- 1 X- The lesson is not without some application to our own country, as has been indicated by some of the tendencies of the government In point against which most edi tors and publishers have been watchful." - . s I - The ; statement was Issued in connection with ' National News paper week, Oct; 1-V as the re publican presidential nominee rested from bis three-week cam paign, trip to the, west coast and back. J ! : ; - . He slept late this morning and aides said he had not engagements for the Week .end,' part of which may be spent at his.' farm in Paw? ling. Active cmpaigntog tenta tively is: scheduled to be renewed next Friday with a speech ; at Charleston, W.Va. ' ' May Speak Soon'"- ' There has been some discussion of a radio broadcast from Albany before then, but no definite deci sion has been reached.-! , V Republican national ! chairman Herbert Brownell, Jr.; iwho - told the governor yesterday the latter had coralled "hundreds of thou sands of independent and demo era tic votes" by his Initial tour, returned to New York City today to complete the itinerary of Dew ey's expected swing through the middle west 1 ' In his message to the publishers and staffs of American newspa pers, Dewey declared "our people are indebted for a great service of enlightenment 5 2ExpL orers Return Safe PORTLAND, Sept M.-JPt- Charles I, Wheeler, Jr, San Fran cisco, and Alexander Paterson, Seattle, arrived here by plane to day after a hazardous; eight-day trip in rubber boats through the Snake River canyon. y s The men boarded a plane on an alfalfa field about 80 miles south LAST i TIMES TODAY. Ilis Very; Laicsi He's rough, tough, two-gun and terrific when the chips are down and he battles for a lady that's known as Lfll 1 -O'lns-T Co-Feature! Blvsterv 1 "Crime by ; , Nijhr with Jane Wyrnan t 11 J w m m Siarls Snay - 2IIib ' I i r r Tf 1 Co-Fcitur - 0II, WHAT A IJIGUTT Clarjaria Carleaa jeaa barker - Gov. Thomas E. Dewey,; citing Best Gamst jf-mfm :ws.J - - -fj, ssfasa(-Oto:-Msw-JraM Selected as the best the shapeliest aad the most beaotifal pair of gams in all i the land were these legs . of Actress -' Iduatne Day. The selection was made by . the Lea ' Fanciers . Assodatlen - of America; with' headanartcrs la Chicago. . ;'v; r :::ir ; rj of lwiston, - Idaho; while, the other two members of the party- Amok - Burg, ; Portland explorer. and Dr. Russell C" Frazier, Bing ham Canyon Utah continued the swift water run. to Lwiston. A rough trip, with the boats turning turtle several times since they left Huntington, Ore, Sept 20, was reported by the two men. One boat wouldn't work at all and Shipbuilder Wheeler-i-who Is vice-president of a. steamship firm Improved a seaworthy ;f aft from a wooden boat borrowed from a Snake River ranch. The boat was used to carry the party's heavy equipment . Mrs. Cerny Back Home ; DALLAS Mrs. John Cerny has returned from the Portland sani tarium where she underwent a gallbladder operation three weeks ago. Mrs. Cerny is making satis factory recovery but will be I con fined to tier home for some time. TWO BIG HITS Biff-Bang. Beery! JH - - r. x: i"! 1 Jap Forces Enter Gates Of Paoching CHUNGKING, Sept. " 28 (F) Japanese forces' have broken into Paoching and are being engaged by battle-weary Chinese in bitter, street fighting, while another, in vader column to the south plung ed ahead 20 . miles . to within S3 miles of the . Kwangsi .capital' of Kweilin, the high 1 Chinese' onv mand announced ' tonight? ' "". Invasion units entered Paoching through Its west gate yesterday. Paoching,: less than 150 mues north ' northeast of . Kweilin, has menaced the enemy's right , flank in the attempt to envelop Kweilin, site of a US 14th air force base. . To the ; southeast "Japanese troops driving along' . the . West river moved closer from two sides" to Tanchuk, " also the. site" of an advanced American air base, some 90 miles from. Kweilin., These columns drove to within 20 miles of . each other, one . of them to within three miles of the base, some. 47 miles west of Wuchow, but .the Chinese .said they, were repulsed. , , . . . ; Homicide Prisoner , Coes Free on Parole r. ASTORIA, Sept 2-(ff)- Sen tenced to three years In prison, on a conviction of negligent homicide, Harky Oscar Clark was free on parole today. f-:t- v:-jr.- George Robert - Cameron, -state policeman, was fatally Injured by Clark's car on the . Coast high way south of here last July 5; - Ketone Last' Times Joday MICkEVSlN DOUBLE TROUBLE IT'S "Andy Hardy ' . blende Trouble" - ;F wUh -Iliclrey Dceney CO-FEATURB-- trcr.:iLEY PURNETTE Tke leva story irenedUnne. alan marshalv Co-Featctre Joan Davis' in Tcsatifui Cut Ercie r - . t C J V V 1 . fstgatl -fx?)