PAGZ TWO " Tne OZZGOlt STATECMAIL Colea.' Oregon. Tuesday Morning. IIovemIer 21. 1344 Congress Set: To Renew FR's War Powers . WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 - -A one-year's extension of the see ond war powers act .keystone of the war production- and rationing program started on Its . way through confress today. A sub-committee reported the extension to the house judiciary committee without recommenda tion after a one-da hearing. That means any changes in the act must be worked out by the full commit tee which meets Wednesday. Although - the sub-committee's action did not give the measure formal approval, there was every Indication it will have no trouble getting: through the short session of congress. There may be minor changes. ! Without renewal the war pow ers act would expire at the close of . this. year. Administration spokesmen say the renewal Is needed to keep the war production program Intact until the end of hostilities. t i- ONtheHOMEFRONT By ISABEL CH3LDS -It's the usual story in reverse. ' -: . ' -V- , But I suppose there must be other selective service, boards that have been defended 'by - parents. The mother of thejrouog man involved- wanted us to be sure to mention in a story in the; service, column that he had ENLISTED, not because she thought there was anything more noble about enlisting than about being selected, but because she knew the draft board in her district had been pretty, thoroughly panned by the" neighbors. . : -. ,- Like to meet those neighbors, wouldn't you? Ordinarily the cri tics are after the scalps of the selective j service boys because they've left that perfectly able-' . Wiled young 1 man" in civilian clothes when likely as not the AB YM has asthma so' loud you can hear him across the street, is ane mic, has two children and an in valid wife and besides wears, thick glasses and is employed at a high ly technical task in a war indus try). : !-"- -V; But these neighbors thought, the herb of our story, or rather the ton of our heroine, should have "teen left to run the farm. He had an' agricultural deferl tnent, his mother says, but' h4 wanted to go so he went Now, she wants the -members of the selec tive service board to be received again in polite society, so we win please tell the world her son was n't drafted. We will. And, per sonally, "we think she deserves a medal, too. Council Allows Spur For Paper Company - ' Whether the Southern Pacific railroad has agreed to repair its roadbeds in Salem streets was not mentioned, but Salem" city coun cil; which two weeks ago held up action on a proposed SP spur track to serve Western Paper converting company j here, , to emphasize its dissatisfaction with tardy section work, : meekly passed the- ordi nance last night Only dissenting vote was that of Alderman A. H. Cille. Alaska Senator Walker Dies in California JUNEAU, Alaska, Nov 2HX) The death of territorial Senator A. P. Walker in the naval hospital at Shoemaker, Calif., was announced her tonight - - Acting Governor Williams said he was contacting Governor Gruening in Washington, DC, rel ' ative to . the calling of a special election to fill the place of Shoe maker, who died Sunday night Too Late to Classify A GOOD- duplex houses full bsmt. tf bl. furnaces, in tin ahap. S6000. , . ' F. H. Weir 46S CeaUr REALTOR Ph. Mil la A. dose in. Good S r. houa with S stoves At some furn. Including 1 lec. range. Att for S3800. - F. H. Weir 461 Ceater ' KZALTOa Ph. Mil ENDS TONIGHT! -70! !SI OF THE TO W " .and ' T 7 DATS ASHOST J !7eaesdar, Thursday, Friday S DATS ONLT Holiday MaSnc Thursday CriOAL ATTBACTIOIf Dinah Shere Dana Andrew Constance DowCng ; and TH3 GOLDWYN CSZLS 'v'u? .lt la Technicolor - Proposed Boundary Extension Is Painlessly Injected Issues for Special Election , The plan to submit a proposed extension of j Salem's boundaries at the February 19 special city election we injected into last night's council considexttioa of park snd potter questions almost as rapidly and painlessly as a blood trarisfuslon. : ! j. . ; : . By resolution, against which only L. P. Le&arie voted, the coun cil authorized the special committee on hire individual or company to pre-1 pare a legal description of' the proposed new boundaries for sub mission at the special election. OK Recommendations v Before consideration of. ordin ance bills, the council approved committee recommendations . ; to hold up. establishment . of special loading zones for suburban buses until results of a recent ; traffic survey have been scanned, to. put ixf a new streetlight at 19th and Virginia streets and to grant West ern Union a new franchise similar to the one It' holds which is ex pirinf. ' In the absence of Mayor I. M. Dough ton, Alderman Kenneth Per ry presided and sent to committee requests from residents of the area of 13th street and Mill creek that a Cottonwood tree in the street be removed, a petition for a street light at. Columbia and Water streets and a petition for vacation of Water street between Columbia and ' Grove. . ' , " ,rf ' Committee Named . ' By resolution the council au thorized the mayor to .appoint a special committee to study the curfew ordinance with a view to possible relaxation of some pro visions. By resolution also the council commenced vacation pro ceedings for a 10-foot strip of Tile road between the Southern Pa cific right - of V wy the fairgrounds. Following adoption of the or dinances calling for a special elec tion, the submission of the Bush's pasture purchase and issuance of bonds for payment the Salem Electric franchise and the boun dary extension, the council ap proved a resolution calling for a survey of the city's park and playground properties, needs and funds. The resolution was submit ted by Aldermen David QUara and R. A. Forkner, from the north end of Salem where the only or ganized opposition to . the Bush land purchase has been expressed. Argument Met One of the arguments of the op position was met before the ordi nances were presented when a" let ter was presented from the agents for the Bush properties offering $500 a year rental payment to the city while life interests in the es tate exist This amount Is ap proximately the annual tax, he council was told. Vv1 Speakers in behalf of submitting to the Voters the plan for pur chase of the property .were Carl! Hogg, president of Salem Cham- ber of Commerce; Winifred Petty john arid Ralph Campbell of the chamber's committee; Dr. L. E. Barrick, school board chairman; W. W. Chadwick, former mayor and president of the Kivlanis club; E. J. Scellars; Phebe McAdams, president of Salem Business and Professional Woman's club; Milton Meyers of the park board, who de clared he spoke as a private citi zen; Prof. Cecil Monk of Willam ette university, who pled for re tention of at least a portion of the land in its native state for its sci entific value. Lestle J. Sparks and Robert Fe nix of Willamette university; Eliz abeth Lord of the park board who declared the board was interested in developing parks in other por tions of the city as well as that at the Bush place and who urged preservation of rare and lovely trees at the Bush site; E. Burr Mil- LAST TIMES TODAY Wallace Beery in' "BARBARY COAST CENT" - Plus Co-Festatc - "UP IN MALES HOOM" STARTS WED. Thrill to its magic beauty . . its glorious tunes . . '.. . the comic pranks of the lovable dwarfs . . ,", all its excite ment and enchantment And share the fun with someone youna. . , mLreisrs jaa rcrsraa area CO-FEATUSE Roacnce! Music! i Comedy! 'AcfionI wttk KZ fSZZ IS KSS2 KSS'SX . cs3ff3gtey)iirLsri: tsa KZU mi U filiw riakjl L Zs JS Ttl extension of city limits to ler, Salem Lions club; Ivan Mar tin, who declared the city hasn't a place to hold; band concert; Wen dell Ewing ol the Junior Chamber of Commerc and Harry B. Bead of Salem Electric, who injected a bit of advertising" for his own" con cern and a light note into the dis cussion. - j Cost BroaghtiTs- J. B. .Protzman, auditor, urged the. city' to consider the cdst, and Mrs. Protzmalh spoke against the purchase, j ; ;., ' David O'Hara, chairman of the ways and meant committee, de clared he mjght be doing a dis service in vcpng to : submit the matter to a frtrte of the people, pointing out jthe expense involved and maintaining that The biggest mistakes this council : has ever made have been unanimous and have had,; tle. backing of many residents of tne city. But he vot ed, to submit it. r ' B, O. Levfls declared the city was paying cfut one third of its Operating cces In interests on a bonded indebtedness of more than $2,000,000, that bonds had been refunded and refunded again, and he refused td jyote for submission. Alderman A H Gille came back with ' a quotation from a city bond-selling 'letter declaring that all bonds were being paid as they fell due, that the city had never defaulted either principal or in terest payments and that Salem municipal bonds ere considered gilt-edged securities. Not Worth PHce' ' R. j A. Forkher maintained the land lis not worth the! $175,000 it Will COSt. : ; Mrs. Gertrude Lobdell said she would favor submitting the ques tion but would prefer that the money be invested in a number of smaller" paf-ks to provide play places for boys. v '' ' James Byers Joined Forkner and Lewis in Ivoting against sub mission, j ':,.!.- Read, Glenn Hogg, farmer who said he waa interested in a better economy for jthe entire area and Attorney 1 Rofj. Hewitt spoke for the i cooperative's franchise. Cus ter Ross, PGE 'attorney, urged that it be submittal to the voters. Paul Wallace suggested that .the disv cussion be kejnt to the question of submission aid maintained that the council shbuld ask the voters to decide av Hatter, which might be considered ) a right-about face from commission control of public utility rates Sto the competitive system, w h lii h he declared the public had once discarded. The decisi to; submit the question of granting the franchise was voted over the opposition of French, . Gille! Forkner, Lewis, Mrs. Lobdelli and OHara. Only Forkner - and iewis opposed the special election. t i Car Accident Reported ?. State polic reported carry this morning that -an auto accident oc curred late Monday night near Hubbard, in hjrhich the two cars were badly damaged but no one seriously injured. Details of the accident are hacking. LAST TIMES TODAK . Ronald Colmem In "KSMET Kus Ina Hay Huttoa TVER SINCE EVE" ljflTTTTT STARTS WEDNESDAY tsw ... . CO-FEATUEE r on v A as i ruzziiK!::SHT VimdMW I tnt iAWttl " (hy Um Aacoclatod Praw) Westers Europe French for ces reported building' bridges across Rhine river into Germa ny alter 20-mile drive through 'the Burgundy gate at allied ar mies surge Into the ! Rhineland and Saar , basin; organized re- i sistance ends in Mete. 1 1 . " Kosala Germans report the Russians have launched their great - winter ' offensive in the north against 300,000 nazig pock eted in western Latvia; reds battle into the outskirts: of Mist kolc.'Htmgary's fifth- largest ci Italy Counter. - attacking Germans push Polish troops off Monte Fortino. 3 . miles south east of ; the Bologna - 4 Rimini highway. j " i Padfle American carrier planes knock off 118 Japanese ' planes in raid on Manila area; Yanks fight off enemy counter- attacks ! on Leyte- and . tighten grip on Japanese trapped in the . northoi) Ormoc corridor.. China Two Japanese for- ' ces, 'striking through Kwangsi province, effect Junction near Liuchow and chop China in half. Meetings Set At Gty Stores Sixth War Loan; meetings to be held in retail stores will push the drive among- employes." Here are the meetings as so far scheduled by Dr. Ed Boring, retail chair man: Tuesday Montgomery Wards; Wednesday Sears Roe buck; Friday J. C. Penhey's; Tuesday, Nov. 28 - Wool worth's; Wednesday, Nov4 29 Miller's; Thursday, Nov. 30 Fred Mey ers..: . . Schools; also were beginning Monday to show interest In meet ing bond quotas. First buyer at the Richmond school, one of the first, to get under way, was Billy McKinney, sixth grade pupil. Women were preparing Monday to sell half a million dollars worth of bonds under leadership of Mrs. Winnie Pettyjohn, chairman, who will conduct a class at headquar ters at 2 o'clock every afternoon to instruct women in selling tech nique. BPW Women, junior arid senior women's clubs and the B'Nil B'Rith women ' also "were organ izing to sell enough s bonds for bombers, planes and ambulances. ars LOS- ANGELES, Nov. 20 - ) -. Naval authorities tonight disclosed the disappearance "under most mystifying circumstances" of Lt William Kent Tralle, 35, from his stateroom aboard a ship recently arrived from the Pacific.-. " . Investigators ' said " Lt Tralle, commander of a i gun crew, has been missing since Saturday and that a three-inch knife was found on the floof of his -stateroom, al though -there was no "sign of " a struggle, t Drops W brbod leadhui to the hospital door. nearby were found in the corridor.; - A - f'The Officer's disappearance' wai preceded by stranke behavior, his wife, Maurene,; told i authorities. She said he awakened in their home early Friday, said he had uih geht work to do, then drove to the ship Tike somebody wild."'. I - 1 tOMttS Navy arxe JJisappe M. JL .1 .. Legion Builds Punch to Help 6tli War Loan . America will win this war, but maybe the hard way if her people don't support the Sixth War Loan Bond ' drivev " Col. Carle Abrams told Legionnaires of Capital Post No. t at a meeting Monday night. "I attended a bond selling plan ning session 'in Portland few days ago," Colonel . Abrams con tmiied, and- we -were told - there was . , general feeling the .' drive might fail because many persons believed the war was about over and the; annjes of the allied 'nations- could skip to victory -no mat ter what "the etttcomev ox 'this driven. tC:X V r ri 'Vvv'-' "As a : matter of fact! Abrams said, "since that meeting probably more American boys .ave been shot down than during the rest of the entire war. We are asked to raise $1,000,000 from E bond sales December 7, Tearl Harbor day', and we're going to do if J ' ' - Legionnaires by unanirnous vote authorized drive for .gifts to be placed in a pool for "gifts to Yanks who jave the presents to be de livered to veterans in hospitals in Oregon.. Gifts will be accepted by any f member of . the post The theme is: "make up a present just like it was for your -son or daugh ter." : - . -. . 'Nubbins' at Hospital for Examination (By the Associated Press)' Swathed in blankets, Forest (Nubbins) Hoffman, three-year- old Cheyenne, Wyo,l boy whose dream Christmas yesterday at tracted nationwide attention, ar rived at a Denver hospital tonight Nubbins and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hoffman, and the child's doctor. Dr. G. B. Sav ory, made the 100-mile trip from Cheyenne by automobile in an hour arid a half. An examination will be .made- tomorrow by Denver urologist who asked that his name be withheld. Dr. Savory said he didn't think the trip to the hospital would do any good but that they were try ing everything The doctor said the 'child was "in pretty bad shaped . -: . -V f ' "The child's father, in reply to a question, said that Nubbins felt terrible" Asked If Nubbins en joyed his Christmas, Hoffman re plied, "he didn't have a chance." have said Is incurable. Because they were afraid he might not live until Dec: 25, his "Christmas" was arranged yesterday by his parents.' House Badly Burned Firemen were called Monday night to 677 S. Commercial to put out a house fire,, belonging to G. W. Carroll of Salem? One side of the house was badly burned and severe 'water damage to tne iurmture was reported. BUY, THAT ; BOND TODAY THC MOHliC THAT MTTS BuiCT OPENS 6:45 P. M. - ENDS TOD ATI ; i JANE FRAZEE ' "ROSIE THE RIVETER" BOB STEELE "THE UTAH KID" TOIIOlinOM! Music Thrills FCN-rACSSD co-cm . 4 . , j- , XT Gcnc Autrey 1 OHt SOSANNAr Burnett JJ W1 xmtzrs fimmr LyDONr" Nazis Have HitUfsWm LONDON, Tuesday, Nov. 21HP) The Daily Sketch said today that "according to information received by two diploma ticsour ces here the nazi party is how in possession of Hitler's will and this Indi cates Hitler is 'dead - M The wilt T the Sketch' added, leaves all Hltlefs property and business assets to the .nazi party and disinherits. his relatives. - j ; Hitler's main estate'ls his' in terest in the Eher Verlag, the pub lishing firm which made a vast 1 fortune out of Mein Kampf . His only: property in land, which is Berchtesgaden, ' also, goes to 'the party," said thepaper. J Leaders of Bolivian aicvuii ixrv iuixuicu LA PAZ, Bolivia, Nov. 20-OP)-Four men were executed today in the city of Oruro for an unsuccess ful attempt to overthrow the gov ernment of President f Gualberto Villaroel, it was announced by the fovernment radio. 1 : s They were identified as Colonels Eduardo 'Blanco " and .' Fernando Carron and two civilians,. Miguel Brito and Fernando Loyaza Bel tran. Demos Would Lower ': Voting Age to 18 j : ? POBTLAND, Nov. 20 -(ff)- The Oregon demdrcatic dubs passed a resolution tonight asking the state legislature to lower the Oregon voting age from 21 to 18 years. 'ii Mrs. Maude B.-Thomas, Oswego, who introduced the .resolution, ' DICK HAYMES ENDS TODAY! - JUNE HAYEK -.1 MONTE WOOLLEY ,TH1SH EYES ABE ! SMUJKG" . CONTINUOUS SHOWS Gcc! What . SONC5 i ) icisa" or the: cowBoys' , - Vt - ; $ . -:rr W MOVIES sJv:H'v:r::e I Amor . "Tha Mem sf -Soatoplf-'lfcMsaf "Od Santa F - -Cowbof 'JubftV -JMi 'W CoHborr ' Trie Hml fist A frsttf Flaw- .tSeWks' . - Kspey Cy Is Levi bVIMms" Sr ,f - f. KiwiITahttl ll I U 1 EatiioICi. u - vr tA ' U : .'lo ll A t : r -' ' A " - ' ' Antwerp Port 1 " ' i Etcpsaedl -. Charles Smith -;;-.V ' ! - :jO said; "When men are taken into the army to take up arms they should be allowed to vote for the persons directing the affairs of the country for which they are fighting."-- - . f . ' - - i Qosed Shop Outlawed In Florida by Voters t - v TALLAHASSEE, " Fla, Nov.- 20 BUY BONDS -BUT BONDS! OFENS : r. sJU - ' TOIIOimOU! .. DOUBLE FUN! KOMANCE! r" . ' ANN SAVAGE TOM NEIL rONWHITTEN CODE" DAILY FROM 1 P. M. t -I LjWlMURRAy CO-HIT tOKtiC.dctiC'Rici ' ' - ' : a Thanhcsivins Fccist-o-Pun Starts Torxibrrot7!1 CL V xJKJi 1 iaa . '".'.v .'. liuiwial 'v vtCAS v x,K A on d-i-z-z-yloe's 1 I , Agasi! iieiiiiy AiDmcn's latest FUN PACKED MISADVENTURE! UIIAT (-'Complete official returns from the Nov. 7 election showed . today that a proposed ; - constitutional amendment to outlaw the, closed shop in r Florid was ratified by a vote of 147,860 to 122,770. It was the heaviest vote, fever cast on a constitutional amendment in Flor ida, ; it C?D3 TODAY! PSESTON FOSTEK . "EERMUDA MYSTERT"; riere'a T.oj in im newest Tflere!!l aeeejiV4l L Q "ecuon aand ronsonee! - t . ' ci-' v 'A Roy regales you with vcwaw 1 w a., f " m w .: V; 1 A e iHA i Ml N U 1 Wl atl ;.:. ; OWltSi. CtAltf ov stir tCTOiAN sd v .h f t 1 -r. REPUBLIC nerutt m tdoddle Ai Buy o Eon4 . . . . Flcrj Tops tot the Japal . i ll' ..Jj CO-EUT! Awaits SSc: Children Z3e -; TLIs ti:oyr Only V tS A0I4AH, ?tk2 riiAirrci-r :;o..4