The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, December 30, 1944, Page 1, Image 1

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    Vestlier ;
Ifaxlmnm tempt rstnre
Friday 43 derrees, minimum
37 degrees; '.IS in. rxia. riv
er 1 ft.lt in. Partly cloudy
with scattered anew flurries
ever and east of ;. the - Cas
cades Satarday. Sunday in
creasing eloedlness with ee
easional rains northwest
pertlesi . by Sunday sdght.
-
iniJETY-rOOBTH YEAH
10 PAGES
Salem. Oregon. Saturday Morning. December .C3, 1S44
Prici 5e
No. 244
rut'
SEKKEQB
V V I I I I
"v. isiias ari e mm mm
; This Is the season when proph
ets flourish. They gaze into the
crystal ball and with marked self
assurance predict what, will hap
pen in the 12-month ahead. A for
tunate thing for these forecasters
Is that rarely or never does any
one take the trouble to look back
to see how accurate they, were on
their former prognostications.
The reason the weatherman
gets so many slams is because he
forecasts the weather for only a
day or two ahead. His customers
can jtfmember that long; so his
mistakes are currently known. If
be laid out his predictions for a
whole year, as daf the almanacs;
he would be saf ft from chidings.
- ; Patrons of this- column may re
call that last January I X dared
put on the spectacles of prophecy.
They have doubtless forgotten
what I predicted; but at risk of
my own exposure I am going to
review that job of forecasting.
- WAR, that was first on the list
At least I didn't get dumped in
dating the end of, the war, merely
aaying "no surrender by Germany
In the first half-year.",; I missed
It on the prophecy that progress
from the beachheads would be
flow.' It turned out to be so
fast that "supply had trouble keep
ing up. I guessed wrong in offer
ing the opinion
(Continued on Editorial Page
... ,T . : . ...... ........ ,
Yankees May
Have Stopped
Nazis in Italy
ROME, Dec. 29 -(JP)- German
attacks down the Sercluo river
valley near the western end of
the Italian front appeared to have
been checked , tonight after four
days of hard fighting in which
A'merican troops were forced back
along a six mile sector and driven
from at least two towns..
An allied announcement de
scribed the situation as "fairly
quiet," indicating that the main
force of the nazi assault had been
spent. The announcement conced
cd that the enemy had captured
Callicano. 15 miles north of Luc
ca, as well as Barga, two miles
'to the northeast.
Therefstm was nd official esti
Ijaiate ofj the Germans total gain.
v.ithr iwai there an indication
Whether j the attack merely was a
larger scale diversionary raid in
tended XO relieve pre&suic w
defenses south of Bologna, or was
a genuine attempt to break
through to Lucca and Livomo
(Leghorn). .
Baby Receives
Chilly Entry
But Survives
-'...". s . " I
CLEVELAND, Dec.' 29-)-The
Stork fell over a snowbank in front
of St. Luke's hospital today and
Teri-Ann Zelman had a shivering
reception into this world.
. Mrs. ; Harry Zelman, I being
helped into the hospital by her
husband and brother-in-law,
slipped and fell on the snow and
was carried into the hospital's
maternity ward.
: A few minutes later, a ' motor
ist entered the hospital and shout
ed: . ' ..."': -
' "Hey, there's a baby lying outr
aide in the snow."
It was Teri-Ann, protesting the
situation with all the strength in
the lungs of a minutes-old baby.
Taken into the hospital, the in
fant was placed in an incubator
and nurses report her little the
worse for the experience.
Stork Gets Unexpected
'Advantage !n Race
With Colorado Doctor
DELTA, Colo., Dec. 29-aVrhe
stork got an unexpected advantage
j 44. mm urHh Ttr T? A. ITnder-
u ' -
wood today.
' - Answering a call from a woman
expecting a baby, the doctor drove
hia car into the wrong yard. As
'he was backing out, the car got
stuck in the snow. Doctor Under
wood thrust hir'foot out the open
door to give the car a boost and it
truck a. gate post, breaking , his
leg. .-
. Another doctor won the race
with the stork. ,
FDR Refuses to Veto
Dill Abolishing Project
; WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 V
president Roosevelt refused today
to sign a bill abolishing the 222,-COO-acre
Jackson Hole monument
In Wyoming which he created by
. executive order last March. .
Disappointed Wyoming legisla
tors Dromptly promised to renew
tvhen tigress convenes their bat
tle against the monumenw .--nne
"fisht has just begun.,, declared
rep. Barrett (R, Wyo), author ol
the bill which the president gave
"a poclcet veto.
Reds In
Heart Of
Ferocious Fight
Rages' in Streets;
i losses nmn
By W. W. Bercher
LONDON, Saturday, Dec. 30
(JP) Russian shock battalions
smashed into new -sections of en
circled Budapest from the west
yesterday and began 'slaughtering
a trapped axis garrison in hand-to-hand
fighting raging through
streets clogged with enemy dead
and wrecked guns and tanks, the
Soviet high command announced
at .midnight. , :
Berlin . said the Russians al
ready were in the "heart" of the
burning Hungarian capital, lock
ed in a struggle unrivalled in fe
rocity since Stalingrad, where an
other German army met disaster
in the snow.
Trap Tightens Pv , 1
As the great churning struggle
raged on the western side of the
Danube, in the Buda section of
the tottering capital, other Soviet
units tightened their death trap
on German -Hungarian units
caught in the Pilis hills north of
the city, killing -2500 of them dur
ing the day and capturing 2200
the previous day. ;
Still other Russian units forced
the Hron river, one of the last big
water barriers to the Bratislava
plain leading to Vienna, Austrian
capital, and sped two miles' be
yond? .capturing Nana and Par
kany near the Rhon's confluence
with the Danube.' :
Make Good' Gams ,. '. .
.Th,is last stroke - put the Rus
sians within 76 miles southeast of
Bratislava and 105 miles from Vi
enna. Other sections of the same
army arrayed on a 35-mile front
along the east bank of the Hron
to the north were only 64 miles
from Bratislava, and they killed
or captured 11,000 Germans in
two days, the bulletin said.
South of t he Danube, mean
while, other mobile Russian units
were attacking on the approaches
to" Komarom, only 53 miles south
east of Batislava and 81 mn
from Vienna. The phalanx of the
two armies moving . westward,
even without awaiting the fall of
Budapest, was 100 miles wide.
Panama Has
Political Woes
BALBOA, Panama; CX, Dec.
2MiP)-Steel-helmeted U.S. miU,
tary police and white-clad nayy
shore patrolmen were on duty all
along the boundary between the
canal zone and Panama City to
day as political agitation increas
ed in Panama with the resigna
tion of the cabinet
Fourteen deputies 'who support
ed a manifesto Thursday calling
in effect for the replacement ?of
President Ricardo Adoffo. de la
Guardia were In the Hotel Tivoli
in Ancon, Canal Zone, awaiting
transportation to the Mexican em
bassy, which offered asylum.. :
. ' .
All NortheraiEngland
Sfiaken by Earthquake
LONDON, Saturday. Dec. iO-UPi
Northern England !was shaken by
an earthquake at fc36 a.m. today.
Buildings in Manchester were re
ported to have j been "violently
shaken." The vibrations, which
continued for two "minutes, were
Kelt at West Bromwich and Leeds.
Budapest
Britain Wants United fBig 3!
Policy for Liberated Lands
L , By Alex Singleton , v
. LONDON, Dec. 29 -( Allied
diplomatic difficulties stemming
from Europe's ideological strug
gles raised the likelihood today
that Britain soon would attempt
to establish a united "b?g three",
policy fori preventing violence in
liberated lands.
"Amid sharp criticism of Bri
tain's intervention in Greece, the
report circulated, in London's di
plomatic colony that the joint
policy effort would be based on a
proposal to establish a temporary
inter-allied control over newly
freed governments if trouble
threatened. .:- y '
There were reliable reports that
ibis "suggestion" had been circu
750 Gram Baby Bornf65 Days
Ago in California Still Living
SAN DIEGO, Calif, Dec. 2M)-Birth of a 750 gram baby de
scribed as a rarity to medical history, was disclosed today, 65
days after the arrival of the infant, Elizabeth Ann Beyman, who
now weigns wree pounas, six ounces. ; . ' .
- The attending pediatrician, who saide750 grains' was equiva
lent to 25 ounces, started medical records show only a one per
cent viability, or ability to live,
among even 1100 gram " babies
the lowest viability worked out
for Infants.
The baby's physician reported
that despite her size, Elizabeth
Ann was relatively : strong from
birth, being able to kick her pen
cil like legs and fling her tiny
arms about. She was fed a car
bon dioxide mixture for almost a
month. Now her diet has changed
to a powdered milk formula, and
she has been on the bottle for a
week.-.; -
Elizabeth Ann still is in an in
cubator in a hospital, , and her
physician will not permit her out
until her weight tips the five
pound mark, which will be 28
days from now if she continues to
gain at the rate of an ounce a day.
Even the baby's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph E. Reyman, have
not been allowed to invade her in
fantile privacy. But they have
news of her and have been told
her eyes are blue, and that the
spare fuzz atop her cup sized head
is sandy colored. The father owns
an electrical appliance shop.
U. S. Bombers
Blast Siupping
oiindjj
: GENERAL Ma c ARTHUR'S
HEADQUARTERS, f I Philippines,
Saturday, Dec 30 MltcheU
bombers bit Japanese shipping in
Lingayen , gulf, off ! the western
coast of Luzon island in the Phil
ippines and heavily damaged
7000-ton freighter. Gen. Douglas
MacArthur announced today.
Nipponese, planes again attack
ed American positions on Mind or o
Pthe 23 attacking 'aircraft were
brought down. .
Another 268 dead Japanese
were counted December 27 in the
mopping-up of isolated ' enemy
units on Leyte island.
- American heavy bombers drop
ped 72 tons of explosives on San
Jose airdrome of ' Panay. island,
between Leyte and Mindoro, and
knocked out six grounded planes.
Nazis Worry
Over Patton9s
Heavy Blows
LONDON," Dec 29 Berlin
military; commentators ' focussed
the home front's attention tonight
on the southern flank . of Field
Marshal Karl von . Rundstedt's
front, where Lt Gen. George S.
Patton's sledge hammer blows
sobered . the. hitherto optimistic
broadcasts. ' . ' ' . - :
Berlin radio spoke concernedly
of the marshal's problems in the
south "where the German flank
is exposed to the strongest pres
sure from the .Third American
army.". " !.''-'
"The Americans are" storming
with vastly superior forces and
have at .some places continued to
make further gains of ground,"
said Capt. Ludwig Sertorious.
Condon Condition Fair
NEW YORK, Dec. 29-i!P)-The
condition of Dr. John F. Condon,
who as MJaf siew was an intermedi
ary in the Lindbergh kidnaping
case, was described as fair tonight
by his physician.
Condon, 84, has-, been suffering
from pneumonia. '
lated among some of the exiled
governments In London.
- The .possible attempt to extend
the allied control commission plan
originally intended only for en
emy territory was hinted at in
Churchill's declaration that some
kind of "international trust may
have to be set up in Greece if a
compromise among fighting fac
tions cannot be reached.
Significantly, in mentioning this
possibility at an Athens press
conference, the prime minister did
not confine lt to Greece. He said
that he, Premier Stalin and Pres
ident Roosevelt would review the
situation "in not very long
time," and added that "we can
not afford to see whole peoples
drifting into anarchy."
3
Berlin Authorities
Battling Serious
Epidemic:Threat8
STOCKHOLM, Dec. 29-(JP)-Ber-
an s municipal , autnonues are
battling . the threat of epidemics
In the ruins of the capital, - the
German controlled news agency
Scandinavian telegraph - bureau
said today.
The dispatch said Mayor Steeg
called the ruined sections of the
city a "constant danger" although
health authorities had thus far
managed effectively. "
Runs Ward's;
Hearing Jan. 8
CHICAGO, Dec. 29-fcP)-Maj.
Gen. Joseph W. , Byron and his
staff went briskly about the bus
iness of operating Montgomery
Ward and company properties in
seven cities in the name of the
government today.
Sewell , Avery, Ward's board
Chairman, was in the headquar
ters buiiding today, his secretary
said, ' but i on-the-spot reporters
said they did not see him enter
his private office" or meet General
Byron. - '-. . ' - '.'l-
, A action continued on the fed
eral court front, Judge Philip L.
Sullivan set January 8 for a hear
ing on a government petition for
a declaratory judgment establish
ing legality of .the seizure and the
executive authority under which
it was made, and for an Injunc
tion to restrain Ward's officials
from interference, should any de
velop, with the army men in
command. t f -
V The,' court told Hugh B. Cox,
assistant to the solicitor general,
if interference arose before Janu
ary 8, the government 'could j ask
for an immediate temporary In
junction. Cox told the court he
had not yet heard of any inter
ference. , . . '
More Helpers
x ...
Needed for
Farm Census
Difficulty has been met In se
curing sufficient help to make the
agricultural census scheduled for
next month, despite the fact that
an - enumerator , working eight
hours a day should make from S8
to $14 a day, John Kallak, district
supervisor, declared here Friday.
; Much of the difficulty probably
has, lain in a misunderstanding
concerning the pay of supervisors,
Kallak; suggested. Payment is
made for each farm enumerated,
rates varying I according to the
distance between farms, difficulty
of travel, etc,-,' . '
Persons interested in working
on the farm census should get in
touch with their local supervisors
(in this district, James Rogers,
823 Morgan building, Portland 5),
county agents or U.S. ; Employ
ment service, Kallak said. Three
day schools for enumerators are
now in progress and- will con
tinue until, sufficient help has
been sent into the field.
25 Oregon Counties
Pass E Bond Quota
PORTLAND, Ore, Dec. 29 -UP)
Twenty five . Oregon counties
have over-subscribed their E
bond quota, federal reserve bank
reports showed tonight.
Marion county was included
with 111.1 per cent Eleven other
counties all were ; over 0 -per
cent The state as whole passed
its E bond quota Thursday.
Reds Say U. S. Victories
Worsen Jap Conditions
MOSCOW, Dec. 2-5)-Pravda
said today that steady American
f Pacific victories "had "sharply
worsened economic, especially
food, ' conditions inside Japan,'
and also declared that the fre
quent Superfortress raids on To
kyo were affecting the general
Japanese Internal and political
situation. v
Army
Briskly
. ' - ' .-. -, - -.
General Arrives at Ward9s
f -"Bl"". ' ' ' 'L"JI'" ' " '"1
. i."v;.-:..
f '
I -:--v. ',-
a"--. ' ... r- - rm-T-mrTmmrmm
MaJ. Gen. Joseph W. Byron (In overseas cap) reaches the desk ef Re
ceptionist Helen Love In the corridor of Montgomery Ward A Co.
at Chicago, to present the army seizure order. With him at left Is
Lt CoL Paul M. Hebert (AT wtrephote) -.
Brig. Gen Anthony McAuliffe
Commanded Valorous 10,000
Defenders of Bastogne
By Edward D. Ball S
BASTOGNE, Dec. 29-Pr-The commander of Bastogne's valorous
10,000, who made history with a single word "nub", wig 46-year-
old Brig. Gen. Anthony ; C. McAuliffe, one of America's youngest
generals. ' '
, He was acting commander of the 101st airborne division and odds'
and ends of the US Third army's ninth and tenth armored divisions.
which had been thrown In hur
riedly to stem the. German rush
toward Sedan, v ?s.;i; :...-.
This soldier from Washington,
DC, and his troops bad been In
tough spots before, for they were
in the Normandy landings' and the
airborne penetration of Holland. '
Sends Answer ' ' '. ""i
' And so .when the commander of
the German forces drawn up in a
siege ring around Bastogne sent in
an ultimatum to surrender, Mc
Auliffe sent back this now-famous
reply which deserves to rank with
John Paul Jones' "We have just
begun to. fight! -
It was simply this one word:
Nuts!V
Rally ing Call
- .Then the young general told his
tough fighters what he had done,
and this typical bit of American
repartee became a rallying call for
the garrison of 10,000.
Besides the 101st ("Screaming
Eagle") airborne and the ninth
and tenth armored divisions, these
other Third army . divisions took
relief roles In the Bastogne drama:
the fourth armored, ' the 80th
("Blue Ridge") inf antaj and the
26th ("Yankee) infantry.
Papei
r Praises
Lt.Gen.Patton
' LONDON, Saturday, Dec. S0-(JPf-IA.
Gen. George S. Patton,
who dashed from the doghouse to
a pedestal in the Third army's
drive across France, received a
tribute today in a Daily Express
editorial for his slashing pf Field
Marshal' Von Rundstedt's flank.
There ; is need" f or a'piick
thruster as well .as a deep thinker
to show the way to Berlin. A fine
example of the thruster is Patton.
As he led that amazing ; oasn
through the gap in the Normandy
line right , across the width of
France his . soldiers said, "Give
Georgie a pint of petrol and he'll
go anywhere
" "Patton's vigor once caused con
troversy. There is nothing but
praise for him today."
. : . V. V
Marshf ield Is
Dead Forever
"e?v-:.:i- fv- ' -. - ' : ... '. ; "-'',
i COOS BAY, Dec 2MhRsi
dents of this coastal community
have decided they're happy with
the town's new naroe-Coos Bay.
They -don't'want it changed back
to Marshfield.
A vote of 34 to 583 upheld the
title Coos Bay yesterday.
: "And we hope that that's an end
of it" said , tired postal and tele
phone workers constantly bom
barded with Jotb names.
. - The town was officially re-
christened alter voters . endorsed
the change at the November 7
election. But a group of bid-timers
fidgeted uncomfortably under .the
strange name and successfully pe
titioned the city council for a sec
ond ballot
Legislature to
Hear School
Support Bill
An amendment to the existing
state income tax laws to provide
an additional $5,000,000 annually
for state school support will be
introduced early in the 1945 legis
lature and will be the only meas
ure needed to meet the recom
mendations brought by represen
tatives of a large number of state
wide . organizations at a - school
standards meeting here earlier thi
week. :-v
This was accepted as fact among
state capitol officials Friday.
The present law allocates 85,
000,000 of income; tax funds an
nually . for state " j school support
with a cushion of. $5,000,000. The
proposed new amendment, in real"
ity, merely would cover this cush
ion. .." ..
Air Assaults
Go Full Blast
LONDON, Dec. 29 ' Two
large fleets of RAF heavy bomb
ers kept the allied around-the-clock
aerial offensive against Ger
many going tonight by blasting
raQyards at Troisdorf, near Bonn,
and, a synthetic oil plant at Schol-
ven-Buer in the Ruhr valley.
The double night raid followed
daylight attacks by some 2300
heavy - bombers and more than
1000 fighters on the transporta
tion network serving the Germans'
western offensive. The day raid
ers dropped nearly 9000 tons of
explosives on nazi targets .
The US Eighth air force spear
headed the attacks again, send
ing 800 Fortresses and Liberators
with an escort of 700 fighters
against communications behind
the German lines. Ten! bombers
and three fighters were, missing
tonight-. i v.- . . !-....
Tax Refund Law Declared
Unconstitutional by Court
The 1919 law : providing that
county courts shall refund taxes
paid on property over which the
tax levying body hid no author
ity to make ; assessments is un
constitutional, the state supreme
court declared here Friday.
Writers of the law: violated a
constitutional provision when the
subject of the law was ; not in
cluded in the title of the bill as
lt was submitted to the 1919 legis
lature, Circuit Judge ; L. G. Le
wellicg, Linn county, had declar
ed in handing down' the 'decree
which the supreme court's Friday
ruling upheld.
Under the supreme court opin-;
Corriddr
To IB.
M
Heavy U. S. ; Blows
- - r 1 , , . ;
Enemy Appears to Be Preparing K
For Defensive itand on Lines
Of Bulge; FirstjNear Rochefort
By EDWARD -KENNEDY J;
PARIS, Dec 29 jf AP) Powerful blowsV the US Firet
and Third armies have knocked back the Germans 12 miles
at the western end of their thrust into Belgium and corn
possible on the lines pf their bulge. Observers reported in
There were indications that the Germans, their initia
tive lost," were preparing for a defensive stand as long 'as
possble on the lines of their bulge Observers reported in
tensive movements inside the enemy salient and at many
places along the perimeter nazi soldiers were feverishly
throwing up fortifications and planting mines. ' " f .
: The First army,
reached the edge -of
punching
where the German advance once
was within three mile? of the
Meuse river. : .,- :' '
At the same time jLt Gen.
George S. Patton's Third army
pounded to the reich border at
three points in northeast Luxem
bourg, broke the enemy' Sure
river line and cemented' positions
four miles north of Bastogne
only 13 miles from the point where
the First Is fighting down from
the north.
Corridor Strengthened
In a dispatch covering develop
ments up to yesterday . morning.
Associated Press Correspondent
Lewis Hawkins laid the corridor
into Bastogne was strengthened
against stout resistance from the
west, but lesser opposition from
In this period at leak 15; more
towns had been overrun by - the
two American armies I and Field
Marshal Karl Von Rundstedt's
steel spearheads had jbeen. shat
tered with fearful slaughter;
Some of the best news was that
clear weather returned today to
the Third army frontThe sky was
laced with condensation trails as
everything from heavjy bombers
to fighter -bombers Diasieci- xne
Germans who for two days naa
moved under the cover of fog.
Germans Kouted . p i " '
; (Reuters k Correspondent . Will
iam Steen with US forjees in Bel
gium said the German! withdraw
al from the Ardennes salient "has
developed into a rout j at aome
points tonight.") i ;
Once more supreme i neaqquar-
Al A.
ters was able to announce uiai
the Germans had beer unable, to
score gains up to yesterday morn-
ing. - ' r -':A'" ''
It is almost-three days now
since there, was an announcement
mat the Germans bad advanced
in Adolf Hitler'syambitibus scheme
to crack the line and toll up the
allied front from behind.! ,-, -
Division Identified j .,j-.:y.
Supreme headquarters disclosed
that three divisions figured promi
nently in stemming Tthe'TjGerman
rush the First Infantry which
landed on D-day and (broke the
Siegfried line at Aachen; the Sev
enth armored which saved the
Antwerp offensive by jbeating off
German counter-blow, and the
82nd airborne, which j landed In
Cherbourg and in the Holland in
vasion. ;
Ration Board Hours for
Next Year Announced
George W. King, chifef clerk of
the Salem rationing board, . an
nounced Friday that starting next
week the board would be open
from 10 am to 430 pjn. except
Saturday when hours will be from
10 a.m. to noon, and would con
tinue to be open Tuesday evening
from 6:00 to 10:00 o'clock.
ion the First National bank of
Corvallis cannot recover from
Benton county taxes on personal
property which the bank paid
during the period of 1930 to 1937.
After the bank had paid, lt dis
covered that ! the property ... was
not subject to "the Ux. y
Judge E. M. Pagie of Marion
county was : reversed in another
supreme court opinion which or
dered a newi trial of the case of
Maude Flatman vs. Lulay Broth
ers Lumber company and Al Lu
lay. ' Mrs. Flatman had appealed
in the suit for damages for per
sonal injuries allegedly resulting
from an automobile accident
Reduced
iles By
forward a mile and a half,
Rochefort 12 miles from the point
British Forces
Now Hold Over
Half of Athens
ATHENS, Dec. 29 British ':
forces now hold more than half,
of Athens and .have acquired Pi
raeus, harbor area of the embat
tled Greek capital, as a solid base
for operations against the Elas, it
was announced tonight I
(King George of Greece con-'.
f erred with Prime Minister Chur
chill In London tonight after the
latter had reported to the British
war cabinet on the results : of his
personal intervention in the Greek
civil war, an official announce- .
ment said. . King George came to
see Churchill and they remained -together
a "considerable time,",
the report said. No other details
were given, although . they un-V
doubtedly discussed the question"
of a Greek regency.) .
V.S.Officers
Called Home,
Some Demoted
WASHINGTON, Dec 29 - (4)V
The department has recalled sev-'
eral officers from overseas com-"
inands within recent months, de
moting some of , them, It was
learned - tonight ' ' -f 'Atv ii ' :
. The recalls have been individ
ual cases, not involving any sin
gle situation, but are manifesta-.
tions of a firm policy adopted by
the department 1
The most recent case is. that of
a major general ordered back -from
France and reduced j to the ' .
rank of colonel. This case pre-"
dates the present German offen
sive.
Henry Maitland WUs'on
Upped to Field Marshal
LONDON, Dec 29-pj-Gen. Sir'
Henry Maitland Wilson, new chief
of the British joint staff mission in
Washington has been elevated to
Field Marshal, the war office -.-
nounced tonight . j , ; , ;
Wilson, former supreme alh'ed
commander in the .Mediterranean "
theatre, succeeded the late Field
Marshal Sir John Dill in the as
signment at the American capital. .
HEROIC STAND
AT BASiUWNE
"America east
Bastogne
remember
Witii those words, . Kenneth
L. Dixon, one of the outstand
ing correspondents 1 In the en
tire war, ends an epic saga on
the editorial page of today's
Oregon Statesman.
It Is the kind bfY story only
Dixon could , write and the
kind 3 which the Associated
Press is proud to speed on its
world-wide service of news.
This newspaper already, has
relayed to Dixon, righjt up on
the front communications from
its readers applauding his work
and he will continue to be fea
tured daily In ; j .!" -; -
The World ct Your
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