The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 05, 1944, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE-TWO
Dewey to Aim
at
i ALBANY, NY, Oct 4-flP)-Indi-rations
that Gov. Thomas E. Dew
ey" planned to direct larger share
of his presidential campaign ap
peals toward the so-called "inde
pendent'1' voters developed today
' as the republican nominee labored
on an address scheduled for Charl-
, eston, W. Va, Saturday night
Ready to reply to any attacks
President Roosevelt may make in
a radio talk tomorrow night, Dew
ey huddled with Elliott V, Bell, his
chief assistant in speech-writing.
Don't Expect Attack :
Although lacking any inkling of
what the president will say in bis
broadcast most of. the. Dewey
camp leaders appeared to believe
. the phase of the campaign repre
sented by Mr. Roosevelt's attack
Sept 23 on the GOP, and Dewey's
vigorous retort at Oklahoma City,
may have ended.
One close adviser, who pre
ferred not to be quoted by name,
said that barring unexpected de
velopments, the governor prob
ably would spend a major share
bf his efforts until November 7
attempting to convince undecided
voters In such states as New York,
Pennsylvania, Illinois, Minnesota,
jilassachusetts, and others with
. large electoral totals that the time
had -arrived for a change in ad
ministration. , , . " "
After Independents . .
.As this adviser analyzed the re
publican campaign thus far,
Dewey's appeals-in speeches and
conferences on his swing to the
west coast and back were geared
primarily toward the "independ
ent" vote. He said the Oklahoma
City talk appeared to have served
. as a stimulant to GOP campaign
workers besides offering the -nominee's
answers to the president's
v statements.
With the idea of taking advan
tage of developments as they oc
cur, Dewey and his advisers are
keeping his speaking dates for the
remainder of the campaign sub
ject to change.
In New York, the republican
: I national committee announced
October 24 had been set for Min
neapolis and the following day
for Chicago. James CV Hagerty,
the governor's executive assistant
said tentative arrangements had
, been made for Dewey to go to
Boston November 1.
Allied Planes
Sink, Damage.
10 More Nips
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS,
New Guinea, Thursday, Oct 5.
(47-AIlied i planes sank or dam
aged 10 more Japanese freighters.
pounded Japanese airfields, and
lashed at an -Important port in
sweeps from the Philippines to
Amboina, reported today by head
quarters. .
. Heavy- bombers ploughed
through fairly heavy antiaircraft
fire to attack Makassar. ' malar
Japanese port .on the southwest
coast of Celebes. They started 17
sizeable fires among oil tanks and
wharves during the assault Mon
day night and early Tuesday
morning. No allied planes were
lost. :..-r.:Si. u
Catalina patrol planes hit" the
largest ship of the bag in Amer
ong bay, Celebes, during the same
night They left the 2,000-ton
freighter burning and listing hea
' vily. "
The Cats also pounced on a
cluster of smaller freighters and
barges at Gorontalo, north-cen
tral Celebes, damaeintf three, sink
ing5 several barges and bombing
iana-installations.
; Earlier that day Lightning
fighter planes sank four 1,000
ton freighters in Ambon bay,-Amboina
island. Heavy units struck
the adjacent Laha and Haroekoe
airdromes with 955 tons of expos
Ives. Will Clayton Resigns
Surplus Property Job
WASHINGTON, Oct 4 - --
Resignation of Will L Clayton as
surplus .property administrator
was announced today, one day af
ter President Roosevelt signed leg
islation setting up a board to di
rect disposal of an estimated f 100.
000,000,000 of war goods, v i -
Clayton previously had called
the new setup unworkable' and in
dicated to President Roosevelt Tils
unwillingness to continue under It
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More Guns
Independents
McQuinn Gets a r Welcome
-
George McQuinn (running- towards
gets a welcome at heme after hlttinr a home ran in the fourth Inn
ing of the opening series game
wua utstretenea nwiil la Gene Moore. Browns richtflelder who
t scored ahead of MeQulnn for the two Browns tallies. No. C Is
, Mark Christman, Browns third baseman who was waiting to bat
Batbey In foreground is unidentified. The Browns beat the' Cards
-z to 1. (AF wlrepboU) - - -: .
Bricker Charges New Deal
Couldn't Pass Up PAC Funds
ST. LOUIS, Oct. 4-()-Gov. John W. Bricker of Ohio declared
tonight that "new deal" leaders were unable to pass by "the mil
lions of dollars collected, by the political action committee and
saw in them an opportunity !to buy this election."
- The republican vice presidential candidate asserted" that "pres
sure, regimentation,' threats and intiinidationMJ wehe'' tnerlnstrui-
of the PAC.
The millions of dollars' coltec
ted by Hfflman and his PACT
were too much for the new deal
leaders to pass by," Bricker said
in a campaign address over a na
tionwide radio (NBC); network.
"They saw the opportunity to
evade the Hatch act, to defy the
corrupt practices act indeed, to
buy this election.
Calls GOP'i Liberal
Declaring 4be Roosevelt admin
istrationdestroyedthe democra
tic party arid made it a reaction
ary force in American political
Hife," Bricker called the republi
can party; rtrulyrthe liberal party
of America. .
Appealing fof a "sincere,
straightforward and' truthful' po
litical campaign, Bricker said "cy
mcism, lnnuenao, liippant re
marks, evasion 'and synthetic hu
mor have no part In this wartime
campaign."
Large Crowd Present
. Bricker addressed a crowd that
nearly filled Kiel auditorium.
which seats" 3500, after attending
the opening game of the world
series.- - 1
.He said: .
"Our sons are pressing the fight
for freedom around the world.
Many of them are suffering the
agonies of death and disease. We
owe it to them and to ourselves
to-conduct this campaign with the
same - devotion to duty and high
spiritual purpose that they are
showing on the field of battle."
Refers to FDR
The Ohio governor referred to
the Sept. 23 speech of President
Roosevelt for the first time with
these words:
"It was a speech of evasion, of
name-calling, of muddled humor.
He tried to laugh off the confu
sion, incompetence, wast : and
bungling of the new deal."
Bricker' declared that "nothing
could do more to strengthen the
faith of the American people In
representative government now
than a sincere, straightforward
and truthful campaign." : ,r ' :
He remarked that campaign
promises oh both sides should be
Interpreted in "the light of ex
perience" and tested "by the In
tegrity of the candidates."
Then he stated the new deal"
had risen to power by "granting
special favors to special groups";
by setting "class against class";
by playing "minority groups for
their political support" ' i
Tod Late f to CSassif r V
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WANTED i'
Delivery, ' nan. . llodet
Who Is theMpn
Behind'
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Tht
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camera). Browns first baseman,
at Sportsman's park. Meeting him
-if , - .
Thumbnail
By the Associated Pra ..
Western Europe Allied .tanks
fight through Siegfried,, line
breach north of Aachen to two
.miles inside German border; In
northern; Trance, alUes fight in
. Fort Dnant Chief ; fortification
Eardmget:i-v ...
Russia - Yugoslavia offensive
continues; with Russians pushing
wxnun is mues nortnea&t oz Bei
gradeafler 27-mile advance In
one day: - : - .
, Italy Americans push
through -mud .three miles nearer
, Bologna; Italian-based bombers
. hit Brenner pass and Munich.
Pacific Allied , bombers hit
Makassar, - chief enemy port of
'. Celebes; 10 enemy freighters
sunk or damaged in widespread
;. raids. f.:;
China Japanese within sb
mues of Foochow, , China's last
big seaport; on Kwangsi front,
Yank .fliers, ; only: one of their
' seven bases left wage unequal
struggle to. halt Japanese offen
sive. ; - : . '" ' -
British Crimimil'.
List Includes Top
German Leaders " .
LONDON, Oct -Cff-The Brit
ish war criminal list includes Hit
ler, Goering, Goebbels and Himm
ler, the House of Commons was
assured today by Prime Minister
Churchill, but he said that was no
Indication they would be put on
triaL
"It should not be assumed,", he
said, "that the procedure of a trial
will be necessarily adopted."
Caught by a surprise question,
Churchill said he could not say
whether the nazi leaders were on
the .United Nations' criminal list
and declined to debate whether in
ternational! law failed to cover
Germany's leaders.
NOW SHOWING
Anciri rK
HEfiREID
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1
, ;- uawaw w iwot causa rtgacai
Co-Feature ,4
OI.IGON STATESMAN. Salem,
Walter Fitts
Services Set
Today at 2
..' Funeral services will be held at
8 o'clock this afternoon ; f r o m
Clough-Barrick chapel for Walter
Stanmore Fitts, long ' prominent
Salem merchant who died at a Sa
lem hospital Tuesday after a lin
gering Illness. . , . . ,;
Fitts with his family came to
the . Willamette, valley more than
40 years ago to engage in tanning
in rolx county. H was bom Nov.
S, 1868,; on a Bibb county, Ala,
plantation operated by his father,
but he came west as a youth,
working first In Portland, then In
St Helens 1 and later Joining his
brother, D. L. Fitts, in operatibn
of a farm at Sunnyside, Wash.
Returning to Alabama, he' mar
ried Lula Smitherman Elliott and
with herreturned to Washington.
They made their home t Walla
Walla before coming to Salem.
! In 1901, with $40 capital - he
opened a fish market on South
Commercial street which he op
erated later In the location cur
rently occupied by the Stiff Fur
niture store iand on North : Com
mercial street ' Eight years ago he
sold the business to his son and
daughter-in-law and retired. -
- Survivors are the widowf Lula
S. Fitts, and a son, Ira J. Fitts, Sa
lem; one daughter, Mrs. W.B.
Sparks, Odebold, la.; sisters, Mrs.
Hannah Woolley and Mrs. 1 Nar
cissus Smitherman, in Alabama;
brothers,' Cicero Fitts, St Charles,
La, and D. I Fitts, jr, of the
U. S. merchant marina In the Pa
cific and Walker S. Fitts. sta
tioned at Hueneme, Calif., with
toe navy. 4 -
Neutrals Told
To Confiscate
Hitlet's Assets
WASHINGTON. Oct
European neutrals were warned
today thai the United "States and
Britain expect them to eize con
trol or millions of . dollars worth
of assets which Hitter's Jienchmen
have buried abroad to-finance.'
postwar world nazism. . . " .
An American note informed the
neutrals that the United States
considers their cooperation '. "In
frustrating the nazis planito be
of "primary Importance'.,; v to
the peace and security of the post
war, world." ; v , . ) ': i;4mx i-r
The feritish have rmade "simpaV
representations to the -aVcdutii
tries Sweden, Switzerlapdj; Spaing
Portugal, Turkey and Eire, A not
was also sent to Tangier because
of its independent sUtur' and Im
portance hi relation to Europe.
-rto.-appeai was curected to Ar
gentina bat It was said - the mat
ter would be Hrousht In thu at.
tention' of ; that government Ar-
genuna has been described by
Secretary Hull as the headquar
ters of- fascist ooeratiom in thi
hemisphere.-' - ' v; .
FFC Acquires Different
Meaning in. SW Pacific I
WITH THE AMERICA!. US INi
FANTRY j DIVISION X Southwest
Pacific-(Delayed)-i5V-When ad
Joe of this veteran division uses
the initiais PFC he doesn't mean
private first .claW It's ! his slang
for "personal friend of the cap
tain." . Another new Gl slant ex
pression current going the rounds
tabs a soldier in the garbage de
tail as G-man,
Americans Take Two
New Hitler Weapons ;
FLORANCE. Franr "W
' """-I a uii
TWO Of Hitlr nMr 1
fell Into American hands with the
capture of the giant nazi arsenal
herei a 12-inrh
foot barrel and a new long-bar
reuea iuo, doui types which Ame
ricans had not Cn Hafm-a M-
battlefield. . ;
i
Terror of fho Poxiflcl
mm:"
J
' X
COAMING
SATURDAY
yMi'J- r; Nr
yf Ant
r
Oregon, Thursday Morning, October 5. 1S44
Alfred E. Smith Was First Man
To Be Governor of NY 4 Times
" " KBy the Associated Press) . -V'
Alfred Emmanuel Smith, self-styled "graduate of Fulton Fish
Market" in New York's lowes
to be elected governor of New
He was born Dec 30, 1073, under the towering span of Brook
lyn bridge, went to work Ihere at -the age of 12 and never was
I divorced from the accents, the,
neighborhood. When he ran vf or
the presidency in 1928, the first
campaign to make extensive use
of radio, voters west of the Alle-
ghenles were startled to hear him
speak of "raddio and . loyalty to
the. "Dahty.". ,
Losing to Hoover's sVeat popu
lar vote, he, nevertheless, drew
15,018,442 ballots. ; -Retires"
Once .
Smith, had already !. "retired'
once from public life, when he was
defeated in the gubernatorial cam
paign of 1920 after one term's ser
vice as governor. But he had some
back' to oppose William Randolph
Hearst, to win over the publisher
in 1922. over Theodore Roosevelt,
Jr in 1924 and Ogden I Mills in
1828. : - - y '-r
. He spoke . his mind and broke
twice; with Franklin Delano Roose
velt (who nominated him for the
presidency In 1028, giving him the
"Happy Warrior" nickname and
who had run for governor it is
sometimes said of New York state
to strengthen the Smith chances
for the presidency) but returned
to a basis of friendship So, too, in
193S as a director of the New York
Life Insurance company he nom
inated as a fellow director the man
who administered . to him the
crushing defeat of bis life Her
bert Hoover :"
Stm Teak Stamp 1 ' "
Although he "retired- after his
21st 'personal ' campaign for office
in 1928, he continued to take the
stump when the party called, cam
paigning faithfully for Tammany
and state democratic tickets, al
though the Tammany relation
ships were strained again and
again. .
Hunting Toll
Reaches Four
ASHLAND, Oct P) Ore
gon's hunting accident ton stood
apyf our today with the season
Just four days along.
"Charles Wolfe, 15, Ashland high
school student was fatally shot
2-"miles east of here, while hunt
ing with his twin brother and fa
ther. A bullet struck Charles while
he and his father were walking
through the growing dusk, sep
arated from the rest of the party.
C G. Fulton, 62, Myrtle Creek
mill worker, died while being
carried from the woods near Rose-
fcurg. He had been shot in the leg.
and authorities: attributed his
death to loss of blood.
Two other hunters a mother
of nine, and a 29-year-old man
were killed Monday.
Light Truck Production
WilTBe Resumed in '45
WASHINGTON, Oct 4-(ff)-The
war production board, it was
learned today, has decided to au
thorize renewal of production of
light trucks for civilian use with
manufacture of about 20,000
scheduled for the first six months
of 1945.' Production of light
truck was stopped in January,
T7
J31L
Lcwt Spencer Tracy In
Times "THE SEVENTH CROSS" .
Todor Plus "Oh. What A HighC
Sf oris Friday
V -
EECZIX
I I I "II " 1 i 1 1 I
Action Thriller!
Plus
TIIS LAST HIDE
with Uchard Travis - Chas. Lang
- b . m: - , n , j
1 Co-Feature
j ,, g
MioiHr-wrR-rninWif
east side, was the first man ever
York state four times.
manners and the traditions of his
Airnistice at
- CANADIAN v FIRST ARMY
HEADQUARTERS, France, Oct 4
(fl?)- Haggard . civilian refugees
streamed out into the countryside
from Dtmkerque today as Cana
dian and British troops impa
Uentlr awaited the end of a 48
hour truce before renewing their
assault on the historic port where
the- "miracle - of ' Dunkerque" oc
curred in. the spring of 1940.
At 6 sum. Friday, after- the be
leaguered vnazi garrison has had
time to dynamite and mine the
entrances to the refugee road: al
lied troops and armor .will begin
storming the last channel port
still in. enemy hands. There was
a. strong likelihood that the Ger
mans would surrender quickly, as
they," did after making a similar
gesture last week at Calais.
.Armistice terms . were agreed
upon ; at a conference yesterday
between representatives , of . the
British and German commanders
after allied artillery had laid down
a terrific preUminary bombard
ment on the town, which had a
normal peacetime population - of
35,000. .The first of. some 20,000
civilians remaining in.Dunkerque
began, taking to the roads in to
day's first cold light
WLB Rules
On CalPac
i SEATTU; Oct 4 -fP)- Rulings
In' two Oregon cases, one involving
70 employes of the Colifornia
Packing corporation, Salem, and
the other, 35 employes of meat
markets in Coos and curry coun
ties, were announced today by the
regional war labor board.
A premium of two and a half
cents per hour will be given work
ers in the Salem plant on duty
between 8 p.m. and 6 m. m. Men
will receive a minimum base wage
rate of 80 cents per hour; women,
68 cents per hour. Two and a half
cents per hour was added to wage
rates tor other job classifications
involved. ' - i
Jinhah Blasts Gandhi's
Stand, Moslem League
BOMBAY, Oct 4 -OP) Mahom
ed Ali Jinnah, president of the
All-India Moslem league, accused
Mohandus Ghandi tonight of at
tempting to discredit the league
in his statements concerning the
breakdown of conversations be
tween Ghandi and Jinnah.
Jinnah deplored to a press -conference
Ghandi's reference to the
presence of a third party (appar
ently meaning the British) hin
dering ' a settlement of the com
munal problem. I
Triple-Hit
Show!
i ie
pipi
kuwltavll .
EUCE
inns
: noun mawtr
Ends Today
Mm
01IM0MEFS0NI
It PAKX CICLD3
"Not a pair 'in your size,
"Madam,' said he.
And everyone watching could
plainly see . - . .
The scorn in his eyes "
As he spoke to me.
. V
And the plump little girl
With the curly brown locks
Was similarly un-immune1 to
" shocks.- 3:
When I tried to give her store a
' whirl, -She
made me feel like a first class
squirrel. ' ; . .
"We havent had those since '42,
"Unless ahem size . five would
do!
In department store '
And the corner shop - -"-Everywhere
Z could think to stop,
Props and clerks, alike, there
swore . , '
They re-ully didn't expect any
, .more ' .
Toe rubbers, overshoes, , gum
boots , . r -
(What though, my toes - were
sprouting shoots?) , . - -
On paper soles Xiord the floods
(No worse than other ersatz duds!)
The .rayons split and run and
' melt, .- , .
Jn the coldest rains I've ever ielt
As. I think of - the spinach I ate
..f. to grow. y
Science is a- wonderful thing, -1
know.
Could I do it over again, by gosh,
I'd grow the feet to fit the galosh!
Japs Now Say No Sea
Battle With U. S. Due
NEW YORK, Oct 4 The Tokyo
radio, which has repeatedly prom
ised that the Japanese navy would
soon come out for a big fight de
clared tonight that "there will be
no major clash between the two
naval forces of Japan and Amer
ica." ,..,-;
Instead, said the broadcast re
corded by CBS, "there will be e
continuous air. battle which prob
ably will decide 'the war." The
comment Was credited to a Jap
anese admiral.
United States Now Has
300,382 War Prisoners
- WASHINGTON, Oct 4-UPr-The
war department reported today
there were 300,382 ; prisoners of
war In the United States on Oct 1.
The . total Included 248,205 Ger
mans, 51,034 Italians and 1143
Japanese. ' .. , . . -.f
The prisoners are' held "at 131
base camps and, appiozJmately 300
branch camps,; which are located
a IN
Continnons from I f, M,
NOW SHOWING!- '
And Packed with Fun! :
AIMOte
nifie
DICK POWELL
UriDA DARNILL
JACItOAICIE
ID8AI KINNE0Y
JOHN HIUII!t
r- StO 8UMAN,
I OirecNdby
nriir piiid
v llLllb vLnln
o. CO-FEATUBE1 . ;
. CnOAI, ADDZD
nV ATnUlCTIOIiI
TATTLE CF MARIANAS"
- Actual Scenes en T T
, 'Salpaa Gsam Tialanl .;-
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K. f
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f climbed
y oFsae
) Bridge
O or :
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.
Unliv
Fiftli Trcop3 ;?
Only 15 rJilbs
From Bologna
ROME, Oct 4 -VF)- American
fifth army troops have reached
a point within 15 miles of Bolog
na, Important German communi
cation center In northern Italy, In
a drive slowed by mud and bitter
naxi resistance, allied headquar
ters announced today.
Clearing skies allowed ' allied
bombers to resume support of the
northern Italy offensive' and gave
promise of better footing. -
The British' eighth army on tte!
Adriatic sector was still stalled on '
the banks of the flooded Fiumicino
across which the Germans are
heavily entrenched.- However, pa
trols . crossed the stream and
probed enemy positions.
In the center of the battle line
American- troops moving along
highway ,65 advanced two miles
beyond captured Monghidor and
were within 18 miles of Bologna
while other American forces east
of the highway reached the area
just south of Boschi, IS miles from '
Bologna, a city of 270,000 -and a
major supply base for -the Ger
mans. "' "i !..-' . .
Wives of Jaycees
Attend 4Stag' Parly ; "
Wives of Junior'' "Chamber of
Commerce learned what their hus
bands' do at a stag party or at
least they think they did-when
they attended a "stag" party of the
Jaycees at Veterans' hall Tuesday
night" . ' T-W; lr'-yy
'"Games and contests . of a Hal
lowe'en nature nrovldcd '" th n.
tertainmenf 'for thaeveninff. ' Re
freshments of sandwiches and soft
drinks were served. .' Lyle Leigh-
ton was chairmanI5r the party.
1
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money. ..then
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with MARY ASTOa
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ACTION CO-F5ATUBfi '
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