The OREGON STATESMAN, SaUin Oregon. Wednesday Medina. May 16. 1945 PAGE cEvnr Victor Crocker Is Rlissing in i Pacific Action ALBANY Leland Victor Crock er, machinist's mate SC, is miss ing in action, his wife, Martha Lean Crocker of Albany, has been notified by the navy department. The message conveyed no data or indication of the area of the action where Crocker was engaged, i He has been in the service about 19 months and had been i aboard a destroyer In the south Pacific. " Arthur Harris Out of German Prison Camp . I' ' " JEFFERSON Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Harris received word from the adjutant of the army, saying that the secretary of war desired him to express his pleasure that their son, Arthur I .Harris returned to military control 'April 15, 1945. Private Harris had been in a pris on camp in Germany since Octo ber 19. WITH THE 1104TH ENGINEER COMBAT GROUP IN GERMANY In! little more than a year's time the first squad, second platoon, of Co. VCn 246th engineer combat battalion finished its training at Fort, Lewis, endured a; turbulent Atlantic crossing, disembarked in England for continental invasion training, landed in France D-day plus five, and literally worked and fought its way through the Nor mandy, Northern France, and Germany campaigns. The squad includes CpL Robert E-i Brown of Salem, Ore. j i Chi Omegas at Dyer Home1 Mrs. William Conn ell Dyer and Mrs. Claybourne Dyer were hostesses to the Chi Omega alumnae at ' their North 13th street home Monday night. Bridge was in play during the evening witn prizes going: to Mrs. Robert S. TarrelL jr., and Miss Edith Libby. . i A late supper was j served by the hostesses. The supper i ta ble was centered with a bou quet of red and white! carnations flanked with red candles. Attending were Mrs. George Hill, Mrs. John Fredin, Mrs.! Ir win Harris, Miss Edith libby, Mrs. Paul Nieswander, Mrs. Richard DeCamp, Mrs. Elwin White, Mrs. Conrad W. Paulus, Mrs. Robert Farrell, Jr., Dr. Hel len Pearce, Mrs. Grey Munjar, Mrs. George Neuner and the hos tesses. I i I Miss Lorafc Kate Griffith, who is a cadet nurse at the Univer sity of Oregon Medical school, was here from Portland for i the weekend at the home of her par- - a- ' f r ' t - fiM enu, nor. ana jxirs. ixwu urn Cth. Saturday Mrs. Griffith, ac companied by Mrs. William Pau lus, attended the cadet nurse in duction program at the Neigh bors of Woodcraft hall in Port land. j The National association of Letter Carriers and auxiliary met on Monday night at the chamber of commerce rooms. They decid ed to assist in the sale of pop pies and to make a donation to the Red Cross for the purchase of a record player for the Cor vallis naval hospital. Hosts were Mr. and Mrs. Mem Pearce i and Mr. and Mrs. . John French.1 I The Royal Neighbors will hold their regular meeting) tonight at 8 o'clock in the VFW halL Mrs Winston Purvine, juvenile direc tor, will Sold a ; get-acquainted meeting for the juvenile society members in the VFW hall at p. m. Mrs Lester. I.. Colgan.. of " Grants Pass is visiting at the home of Mrs. G. . H. Colgan 1349 Waller street ' CpL Lester Colgan is now in Germany, his family has learned. ; 1 Major and Mrs. Woleott E i Buren have returned from I week's trip to San i Francisco, I Berkeley and Modesto, Calif. At I the latter city. they visited with Major Vera W. Miller. 1 Maccabees Willamette No. i thimble club will meet today for ( a no-host dinner at noon, at the home of Mrs. Elisabeth Taylor, ! 523 North J8th street. Mr. and Jfrs-B. E. 'Owens en tertained at dinner and bridge f Sunday night at their home for ; the pleasure of members of their . club. Covers were placed for 12 St Agnes Gnlld of St Paul's Episcopal church will meet I to night at the parish house; at 7:30 o clock. j ' Mr. and Mrs. Arthvr ColUn of San Francisco are visiting here a few days as the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Kiches ii ' - j .;; . ei; Inn i. ii i ii -i ill. DFC Awarded to I Dallas Man ! DALLAS Hi CpL Kenneth G Steele was presented a Disting uished Flying! Cross and an Air medal during an impressive mfli tary formation held recently . at Hamilton Field, Calif , CoL Curtis A. Keen, commanding officer of the Hamilton1; field base unit of the air transport command's West Coast wing, making the presenta tion. The awards Were for meritorious achievement In participating In more than 200 hours of operational flight over enemy territory while stationed in India. The son of Mrs. E. J. : Steele, the has spent two years with the army air corps in India. ! per has notified his mother, Mrs. Mable Knight that he has Clifford HelgerSOll enlisted In the navy lmmedl- UI JJaiiasf JJies 111 aboard a flagship in the Pacific DALLAS -& Mr. and Mrs. Clif before Ids first leave home, 2S ford P. Helgerson received noUce montns mn im seam or we Friday of thi death of their son equator. Since then he has been pfc Kendall Helgerson, 20, whd stationea at uceanside, cam. Was seriously wounded in Ger many, April 8. Ho was being treated in an English hospital. Born in Dallas he had lived his entire life here graduating with the class of 1942 from Dallas high AN EIGHTH AIR FORCE LIB- schooL Aftef training with a mili ERATOR STATION, England tary police organizzation he went SSgt Carl H. Gustafson, 19, son overseas early in the year. He was of Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Gustafson, a truck drryer in a MP battalion 889 Blaine st. Woodburn. Ore., I attached to the 89th infantry regi was recently awarded the Air ment : Medal for "meritorious achieve- Surviving! are his parents and menWin aerial combat with the a sister, Pft Elogene Helgerson, 453rd bombardment group. He is serving with the WAC at Dale a nose gunner aboard the B-24 Mabry Field, Tallahassee, Fla. Liberator 4Crows Nest" ALBANY It Is First Lt Ron ald J. Bowerman now, according I to word received by bis parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Bowerman of East Albany, He received his pro- JEFFERSON Leroy Heiser, motion and , also the Air Medal re- seaman 1c. is spending a 30-day cently. ; Lieutenant Bowerman, co- leave with his parents, Mr. and puot on a B-29 bomber, has flown Mrs. Frank Heiser. In the naw on combat:-missions both over for Vi years he has participated China and Japan. He is a gradu- in action in the Philippines, Mor- ate of Albany high with the class ati, Marshaus, and Marianas. ox vin anaj nas Deen in ue army two years and overseas smce No vember. 1944. Before enlisting he seaman First cusa Kiebaxd w. emDloved by the Tarlor Print- waiter COOnse, USNK, IT. Of in CnJ nf Alhanv. saiem, is at tne naval training CHICAGO (Special) Ens. Sgt. C. II. Gustafson Awarded Air Aledal Leroy Heiser Spends Leave With' Parents AUMSVILLE Wiiford LaFoan- talne, fireman 1c, stationed at San Bruno, US naval advance base, was visited In San Fran cisco recently by his parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. LaFontt taine, and his sister, Lonella, ill ol Avmsvllle. II IM PH.. B WJiw IJ. W IJUJIIIIIJIilWUUJH I 1 ' - 'z mil mil l"' t; Miimi'miiii mm n nmi t"-V 1 iinaMamsimLl station, Norfolk. Va.f to undergo stroyer of th. Atlantic fleet He l:9?? usseD' "V5??" recently completed a period of training at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Salem, Oreif recently reported to the officers! school at the naval Son of W. S. Coonse of route two. T V V T. " el, " " " IT"' receive instruction for duties Salem, Coonse has a brother, Bill, aboard , destro r toe AUantfc an electricians mate second class, fleeL Ens.iRusseU is the son of in we navy, i IWr nf Mre t! I nucull not N. Liberty st.. Salem. His brother. somewhere IN THE WEST- Leland, 19.11a a private in the ERN PACIFIC Rollin Dakynr I army. Before enlisting, Ensign Page, 1623 Chemeketa st, Salem, Russell was employed by R-'L. Elf Ore., has been advanced in rating strom in Salem. from seaman second class to sea man first class. He is on duty at one of the gigantic mobile supply and repair bases which operates in the forward area of the Pacific. First Lt Francis A. Harris (left) Portland, former Willamette university stndent Is eongrafa llated by CoL John Haghes Std- jter en receiving the bronze star medal for meritorious service. Harris, signal officer of an jjA.4 Imerlcan liaison team attached lie the Chinese expeditionary iforee In soathwestern Yunnan province, participated in the jSalween offensive which in elht months, drove Jap invaders from the province, making possible the peninr of the new Stllwjell Xedo-Barma) n road. Colonel iStodter is eommaader of the ; liaison gronp. i; Rice. Beatings Provide Diet r Of Prisoners : CORVALLIS NAVY HOSPITAL (Special) -The second Battle of Manila Bay and its after effects convinced Gunner Lee G. Mills, 32-year-old regular; navy warrant officer, that stateside - duty is great - particularly after an ab sence of five yean, three of which were spent as a Jap prisoner in the Philippines. ; Mills, who reduced his weight fit one time to 89 pounds while on a dainty Jap diet, is now conva- escing at the UJS. haval hospital. Corvallis. He has a wife and two daughters in Portland. - When the war broke, Mills was serving aboard the Finch, mak ing nightly exploratory sweeps to prevent Japs from planting mines in Manila Bay and in the China Sea nearby. The day after Bataan fell April 10, 1942 the Finch was sunk by aerial bombs; C - On May 6, the Japs took over after losing 5,000 troops the prev ious night Mills and other Arner- cans spent the next 20 days on the "Rock" helping bury and burn the dead. Then the 9,000 prison ers were moved to Manila and marched up Dewey boulevard to Bilibid prison. ' i t To Cabanatuan, 110 miles away. 2,000 Americans again were, moved in crowded box cars. i I Mills said they were placed in a fenced schoolyard, greeted by six inches of rain and no sleeping ac comodations. 1 i - i "The next day we were ordered to march. Heat exhaustion i af fected many of the weaker ones but none .were molested until a- bout 50 had fallen. Then suc ceeding stragglers I were jabbed with bayonets and beaten with ri fie butts j j '. 'The next day we were fed .just rice. The guards I were i changed to second line troops of Japs born in Formosa. Later, at the largest stockade visited during our , im prisonment, we broke ground, cut grass, farmed and chopped wood. Colonels, doctors, all of us had our hands in bard labor while a goon squad of brutal Japs club bed those who loitered, ate, or stepped on plants. - Three years later, seeing the Jap guards scurry away leaving SIXTH ARMY GROUP, Ger many PFC Robert R. Akers 2397 Hazel ave, Salem, Ore-! is among the veteran doughboys I of the 142nd infantry regiment Who experienced some of their hard est combat in mora than 350 days of battle recently when they broke through the Moder line at Obfer hoffen, captured Wissemboujrg, and slashed their way through strong Siegfried Una defenses, prior to the nazi surrender. ; MONMOUTH Of interest here is the marriage of. Sgt James C. Chatzauk of Monmouth to Miss Lucille Miller of Sioux City, la which occurred April 13. Chat- zauk's mother, Mrs. Mabel Pollan, and grandmother, Mrs. C C. Yeat er live here. He was graduated from Monmouth high school, serv ed a 3 year enlistment in the army at Fort Lewis, and re-enlisted the day after Pearl Harbor. He served in the south Pacific as mechanic with the AAF, and for the last yeas has been asigned to a post at Sioux City, the home of his bride: Dr.: and Mrs. Frank V. Prime, sr., have received word that their son. Corporal Robert Prime, is now In France. He left the states in March. Before going overseas Corporal Price was stationed at Fort Columbia, Wash. His wife, the former Willetta Griffith, resides in Salem. : AN EIGHTH AIR FORCE BOMBER STATION, England Staff Sgt. Harold H. Digman, 27, of Salem, Ore., waist gunner on a B-17 Flying Fortress, has been assigned to the 95 th bombardment group, cited for leading the first; American bombing attack on tar gets in Berlin. His wife, Mrs. Gwenevier Digman, lives at 491 Nqrth Winter st, Salem. J. Iloah Ward, enarman first class, is spending his leave in Sa lem at the home of his brother, ' Connell C Ward. The visitor has been on duty on-a mine-sweeper for the past year in European wat ers, and previously was stationed on the Atlantic seaboard for 18 months. He participated . in the Normandy invasion.' 20 Savirj en Fire fcssnisce Witnout sacrifice of safety. . I - "Good Insurance risks need no longer pay for the bad. BUY "GENERAL" AT UUGGINS OFFICE CHUCK IfJSURAWCE "Oregon's Largest Upstate Agency' Salara end Coos Ear -123 ITJ Cosunerdcl Salem - 4403 iiyMIJ UllMlru I 1 DnmiJBS GCOD EYE SIGHF! Whether you'ro bowling for a strike or piloting a P-38, correct vision is the key to success. Coordination In every $aily pursuit requires fee utmost from your eyes. Be sure they are correct; To do a good lob you must have coordination. To have coordination you must have good eyes. - - . Consult . , DR. E. E. BORING This consultation and examination will provide the correct information regarding your eyes. If correction is needed, ' Boring's skilled technicians will prepare the right. corrective lens. t J ' I 1 ' " " 1 OI2ce Hours: 9 a. m. to S:33 p. m. Phone 6506 for an Appointment or Come in at Your Convenience V mm 383 COURT STREET ; PHONE 6506 f - 5 ORCHARD HEIGHTS 'PTC Rob ert A. Gannon, whe mads his home here with Mr. and Mrs. Wlllard Beehmer before enter' lna the service, was liberated from a German prison camp, Staler n B, April 13. He enter ed the service ta March. 1943, and was with a para troop dlvi- sien when he was taken prison er la January, 1944. Exeept far low of weifht, he is said te be la fair health. Lt. and Mrs. Howard '.; Jenks Visit Relatives ALBANY Lt. and llrs. How ard Jenks, who . early this - year came to the United States from London, England, where Lieuten ant Jenks had been stationed with the AAF, and where Mrs. Jenks had always lived, are visiting rel atives in Linn and Marion coun ties. -..- Lieutenant Jenks Is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Jenks of Salem and Tangent, who are now at their country home near Tangent. He is a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. James Jenks, Tangent. Jenks wears the Distinguished Flying Cross, Air Medal with two silver clusters and three campaign stars. ' He participated in the r day invasion of France as pilot of Martin Marauder. Following their visit here, Lieutenant and Mrs. Jenks will go to Santa Mon ica, Calif., where he will await iur ther assignment. T5 Alviii F. McCarthy Discharged After , Long Pacific Service ! T5 Alvin F. McCarthy, who came home from the south Pa cific, where he had served 38 months, on a furlough following the death of his mother, Mrs. Frank McCarthy, 864 North 16th st Salem, was presented with his honorable discharge at Fort Lewis on Sunday. ! ; McCarthy, who saw action at Hollandia, Saipan and Biak among other places, was employed by large bakery in Los Angeles prior to entering the army. He is here now with his father. ALBANY Mr. and Mrs. B. C Baxter of Albany have received word from i their son, Harold R. Baxter, that he has been awarded the Purple Heart for shrapnel wounds received' on April 21, in the Philippines. The Baxters are former residents of the Millers- burg community. the Americans free agents again was "pretty nice. Archie Brower ori '. JEFFERSON Archie Brower, seaman 1c, in the Pacific area for 10 1 months, is spending a 25 day, leave with .his parents, Mr. and Mrs. K S. Brower. In the navy for 17 months, he received boot training at Farragut, then transferred to San Diego, where he trained at the sound school. CORPUS CHSISTL Texas ' Robert Lee Simmons, son of Mr., two, box 194, Silverton, Ore, has been graduated from the naval air training base here and was com missioned an ensign in the U. S, naval reserve. He is a former stu dent of the Willamette university, SalemJ, ' ' Additional Servicemen On Page 12 , ! V f.iAi::n::znc to; B.G3 iDESSiES'yIa FREQUENT FLIGHTS TO Portlsnd, Soatllo, Chicago Costcn, tlovf York, . IVeshlngf on, D C NEW LOW FARES T W.stl Ms , iMaiiJiiL-ijj iiu' i 'fln rTr Tti n it r uti nnli n ir Yw-f -'f fiT r t "t "TTi -iir iff ir i'rnirt inas Ji'irwi aei ' IHTJfcrd SU Airpert ititpkm asaa 1 Dream, tidy, 'dream! And while you dream of tne most wonderful kitchen you ever saw, it is actually feeing- planned for you now . . built around a beau tiful new. r.CE . Certified Performance Gas Range. If you're "dreaming of easy, carefree cooking... of pcxf ea meals tbat seem to cook themselves . . . of the acme of cleanliness ia the fuel and the range . . . of 'precision tutofsatic heat control... of instant heat without waste . . . of unusual beauty in design . '. . and modern conveniences that make cooking a pleasure . . your dream is taking form right now and will be a reality soon after war production ends. 9 Tot perfect cookery roasting, baking, broiling, and top unit per f ormance . . . f or beauty in the kitcheoi ' aCP" ... Certified Performance Gas Range avail ; able in peacetime) will more than fulfill your, dreaiajj I This Certified Performance seal on any modem gas range u the mark of compuanca with th highest standards of manufactoraT Availahl after wat producdoa is finished . . , the gas Industry's contr&u tion to postwar prosperity and pillions cf fnan-hourj 1 ef productive employment, p-oin'T l a n d .ens a e 0 he ;g 0 pan -v ! BUY 7AR BOtiDS H0V....A BEAUTIFUL VCP CAS DANCE AFTER THE UAH