The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 01, 1945, Page 2, Image 2

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1-
PAGE TWO SECTION 1
New Secretary
igencies
Labor
Would
Unify
, By Harold W. War
WASHINGTON, June M.-
, '-Lewis D. Schwellenbadi, new sec
, , retarjr of labor, said j today his
, first job will b to reorganize the
department, in which, he hopes to
centralize all agencies 'related to
labor by September 1.1 I
' To accomplish this task, Schwel
i lenbach, former federal Judge in
Spokane, Wash:, brought with him
v old and. trusted friends who wiU
'be my eyes and ears" in Jdeter-
" mining the how and wliere of
,f reorganization.
, Some of the agencies which may
be brought into the department
include the national labor rela
. tions board, the. war labor board,
. the U. S. employment service and
various labor advisory committees
' in the war production board and
war manpower commission; ;
Schwellenbach will meet with
I the heads or representatives of
f, the AFL, CIO and United Mine
', workers and railroad brothers
the coming week. "'. v ..r ,
y He said he had no hope
stopping all strikes or solving
r.
the problems of labor, as all signs
pointed to more labor difficulties
. la the next three or four year
Allies Mark
r
Out Official
German Zones
PARIS, June 3&-0fT) -American
and British troops yilt begin with
drawing tomorrow from their pet
si tions in Russia's official zone xf
occupation in Germany and by
July 4 the readjustment to final
occupational boundaries probabljr
wui ce completed, (it was a
nounced tonight.
"Concurrently with this rea
Justment," an official supreme
headquarters announcement said.
"British, United States and French
troops will move -into Berlin."
The announcement did noi spec
ify the final boundaries of the
United - States, British, Russian
and. French occupation rones in
Germany. It was believed here,
however,, that the soviet anf-
nouncement several weeks ago de
fining the Russian line from Lue
beck to the Elbe river and around
Thuringia to the Czechslovak borf
der probably was correct and still
.held.
Firemen Put Out
Rubbish Blaze
Frantic residents near the .corf
er pf Marion and Liberty streets
feallid city firemen to Dut out a
rute$ish fire Saturday night. Njj
aarryagfe was reported.
"en, Worn
WILL YOU TAI(EfJ Y. PLACEpz J i c . :
A hugs fcrm-help shortago oxlsti tn
. this area! Our crops must be saved !
Get farm jobpro time, week-ends. Sundays.
during your vacalioa. Help feed our Armed Forces;
our fighting Allies, eur cirilisai population. i
The war effort needs every acrap of food grownl
Yet-lf tho 194S food crop iftto be sared;
-200
Cherry dickers
day cssraiai, JuIyWT-A8X. at Fam-Labor.
uiiice.. .
fe.5i3ler fw t1V la the Hay fiekU.
Doa't delay. ThU fa aa Emergency. Acf eott. j
Report Received From Trailblozeri
Little Newspaper
Tells 70 th Division Activities
' By Isabel Chilis
' City Editor, Ths Statesman i I
Because it carried a news story quoting The; Statesman on
portended , changes at Camp Adair,
70th division's TrailMazer newspaper was lorwaraea xo bus news
paper last week by PFC D. 15.
To newsroom personnel who
activated at Camp Adair, two
years ago June 15, who had known
many of the youths the 70th two
years ago consisted largely of 18-year-olds)
with the white pole
ax; the green fir tree and the
snow-capped mountain peak a gay
patch of color on . khaki shoul
ders, the four-page newspaper
published V "somewhere in" Ger
many" contained much of interest
besides its mention of The States
man. .
' ' j
The Trailblazers still officially
carry that name with , which they
were christened at Adair, but men
of the Z76th have a new moniker,
bespeaking recent activities they
are thet men of the Bloody Ax
outfit.
ColAlbertC. Morgan, only reg
imental commander who has serv
ed witfc5H0th since its activa
tion, adaressed his regiment, the
276thJ at solemn memorial serv
ices .held on the division's birth
day. But the services did iot
commemorate activation, nor were
they in honor of Infantry day!. On
Lorelei rock, where once nazi
orgiastic ceremonies were held, the
276th remembered its dead bud
dies, with a roll call of names of
men killed in action and a re
sponse by. friends in each com
pany. .. ;!j
The 274th regiment marched
smartly past a reviewing stand at
Wiesbaden that day.
Men of the 284th even in peace
time do more than parade some
of them have been taking scenic
trips down the Rhine on the gobd
ship Willem III, Rhine river pas
senger packet which served Gen.
Omer Bradley as a private yacht
before the general came back 'to
the USA. . "
-
Lt Col'. Loren T. Jenks,
divi-
sion chaplain since June 15
1943,
has been named chaplain fbr the
XIX th corps Salem folk heard
him fairly frequently for awhile
at patriotic exercises. Capt.j Will
iam T. Powell, 276th, is (acting
division chaplain.
Units of the 70th captured Ju
lius Lippert, former lord mayor
of "Berlin and one of the large
fry nazis sought by allied authori
ties since the collapse of the Ger
man reich," the little newspaper;
declares.
But the 70th does a few things
which indicate that peace has
come or is coming to Europe: j
An investigation is under wy
as to why If other's day gifts pur
chased and mailed last winter are
B55S5 -.--j -"Altera '11 i-:
III W MM it . , I II i
Vcltslstr Hon ia Yczr Area!
Register low at the Farm Labor Office.
3Sl- ChemekeU St, Phone 21CS3. ' i
needed
The
From Naziland
the June 21st edition of the
Hardcastle. t i 1 -.'
baa seen vie xrauDiaser aivuuoa
just beginning to arrive In this
country. .-"'". " - 'j !
The "rowing season" has opened
on the Rhine for men of the 274th
. . . and staff photogs caught a
good! picture of it; Basketball and
softball pictures (t & E surgeon's
office squad, and; Dog company
teams, respectively, shown in en
gravings). : ' i , ' I ;
Qiurchilllo
Quit if Tories "'!
Lose Election
LONDON, Junf SMPrime
Minister Churchill said ' tonight
that he best could lead the, nation
through "the dangers' ahead and
that he would Quit the soVernment
if the labor party Won the! July 5
election. . it i
"It would be impossible I for me
to -serve in a labor party govern
ment when that party Is wedded
to policies which I regard as ruin
ous to the future of this! coun
try the cortservaitive leader de
clared In his final campaign ad
dress. i .
Churchill said a . labor 'victory
would lead to factional strife and
that without a strong government
Britain might quickly be reduced
to a secondary power.
"I ani convinced,1 that I can help
you through the dangers and diffi
culties of the next (few years with
more advantage than would fall
to others," he said.- -
Germans Get
More Bread
By Howard Cowan.'
MUNICH, Germany, June 30-
C(P)-The shift in the occupation
zones - which gave the Russians a
portion ; of the Thuringia
of Germany has sent 65,000 Poles
fleeing into 'American-occupied
Bavaria, Maj. Elmer Daniel AMD
food officer in Bavaria, said to
day v'..,:j;--4 - I -
- Major Daniel said 40,000 Poles
are in camp at- Wildlocken and
others are at Bamberg and - Co-
burg, k , !;;!'; "jt-
Military government authorities
announced an immediate SO per
cent increase in bread rations for
civilians in Bavaria as grain and
flour shipments fod displaced per
sons ' began to arrive from the
United States. i . i
4,fXX),C00 volunteer farm workers will have to help.
You can do no more patriotic act than help brins
in the food. YouTl enjoy the healthful, outdoor
life and you'll be paid prevailing rate as you
erre your country.
1 A CUITIS FUSLICATIOH i -
This campaign Is one several sponsored by Th Cmrtl
FwAr.ihing Cm. lis mttpport of th sw JorU It u turf'
placed Li ncteeptr$ tr?uhout tl er'rT jXj CottRl: '
OREGON STATESMAN, Salem,
Balloons Fail
To Stop Yank
Fight for Oil
MANILA, Sunday, Jul 1 -V?)
The Japanese defenders of Balik-
papan have strung balloon with
explosive - garnished cables rover
that flaming southeast Borneo oil
port' but failed! -to prevent con
tinued heavy bombing by more
than 123 allied planes. Gen. Doug
las MacArthur's headquarters dis
closed today. . ',; -KW;-r; vr-.; ;;,
The Tokyo radio contended that
allied minesweepers covered by
naval gunfire cleared the Balik
papan , approaches . yesterday in
preparation for ("imminent" inva
sion, but MacArthur's communi-'
que still did not confirm such a
development. -. j ;." j .-
More than 230 tons of bombs
were dropped on the town's oil
storage facilities: and defenses and
on nearby airfields in the 16th
consecutive dayj of all-out aerial
preparation, however, and return
ing fliers reported a steady decline
in antiaircraft defenses which un
til recently were so heavy "you
could walk on the flak."
Warships Reported Near j
The Japanese barrage balloons;
with silvery explosives balls at
tached to their cables, were sus
pended at 500 to 1800 .feet.
in unconfirmed reports of al
lied sea operations against Balik
pa pan, the Japanese ; said a fleet
of 50 "enemy" warships and trans
ports was In the ykinity
.Australian invasion forces in
northwest Borneo have extended
their hold in the Brunei bay area
with the occupation of Beaufort,
about 60 miles northeast of Bru
nei. .... J . ;
Catch Up with Japs f i '
The Australians pushing south
west down the north Borneo coast
made their first contact thus far
with the Japanese who have been
withdrawing without a fight front
some of the world's richest petro
leum and rubber areas.'
In the Philippines the VS. Sixth
army yesterday celebrated its sec
ond anniversary of almost con tin
uous action against the Japanese
by pressing its pursuit of shat
tered -Nipponese ''units in the
mountains of northern Luzon.
U.S. Poles Refuse!
To Recognize Any
Warsaw Government
- - ; l. - - i
WASHINGTON June 30 - (ff) -
The Polish American congress has
sent a letter to president Truman
asking him to withhold recogni
tion of the provisional government
of : Poland in Warsaw, i Charles
Rozmarek, president of the organ
ization, announced today, j
More Longshoremen
Needed in Portland
PORTLAND, Ore., June 3fHPh
Two hundred longshoremen are
needed at once to handle increas
ing trade in the! Portland-Colum
bia river area.
it
natej
3aUGESaI3QEl
Orojotu Sunday Morning. July
TEiuEiibEiail
- i K .f
By the Associated Press
Japan -4 Army " Thunderbolts
raid southern Kyushu; ; Super
fortresses achieve "excellent re
sults" bombing oil refinery in
southern 'Japan without loss. V
Kymkyus - Japanese make
three small air-raids on Ameri
can forces! on Okinawa; Tokyo
radio contended suicide air force
still Intact! despite .loss Of OH
nawa. ':-f :. -r;
Philippines Guerrillas and
U. S. infantry push cleanup on
Luzon and Mindanao.
Borne -i- Australians p usji
down coast beyond Mirt
Chins Chinese recapture of
Liuchow, former U. S. air base;
American air blockade of China
coast continues.
Legion Inyites
Japanese! American
Veteran to Join
SPOKANE, ; June 30 - UfS - The
adjutant of a Spokane American
Legion post for World War II vet
erans said tonight the post would
consider sympathetically an appli
cation for membership from PFC
Richard H. Naito, Spokane Japa
nese-American, as soon as he is
niscnargea irom ine army. -
Naito s application to join
Spokane Veterans of Foreign Wars
post was rejected, and a petition
signed by 500 combat veterans was
sent to the post asking reconsid
eration of the application.
Legion members pointed out
that race, color, creed, or variety
of ancestry are not listed among
the membership requirements.
ssaki tovb nasr
STMTIITICTIIIS
i
j IXTQA :
TIME TO RI-TIII
tn-Ctr. Of.
'wei
SiS Marlon Clrssi
.).---.- i ; -
' lr : ..'M i ."""l- ; ii. u i ,4-.j. . -. wjpr-.ijM v-..'j'..! ii.ij.;Ji.i --i--. T. ,, r. .'1,.-..:..' - ' .-..-.' 1
1, 1945
Politics Boil
As Governors
Prepare Talks
By D. Harold Oliver,
MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich,
June SO-iTV-One of pthe- most
momentous of all the conferences
of state' governors will convene on
this historic, ' auto-less island ' in
the Straits of Mackinac tomor
row, ; , .".. ' , .. ...
Chief executives' of more - than
40 stater will give almost exclus
ive attention during the four-day
session to -reconversion and post
war: problems and - to further
steps for winning the Pacific war.
Speakers will . include three
prospective candidates . for the
republican presidential nomina
tion in 1948, and top: command
ers of the army and navy. Be-v
cause of official duties President
Truman today declined an Invi
tation Ho address the conference.
However, Rational j politics, - a
hot sideline t. the 1644 confer
ence because of the closeness of
the ' nominating convention that
chose the governors of New York
and Ohio Dewey and Bricker
as the GOP presidential ticket,
may not be as evident on the sur
face this year.
"It is much too early to start
thinking about the ' 1948 conven
tion," commented Gov, Earl War
ren of California,- himself a pos
sible candidate and who Is down
for a speech Monday afternoon
on "Decentralization of Industry
A National Problem.'
Other possible GOPj candidates
three years hence are Gov. Tho
mas . Dewey, who will address
the conference Monday morning
' " '-'7 r-'TV X
X VVA
Tnp,'yonTl be barking np the right tree if you'll tell your
Blaster all about the new Fisk Air Flight DeLuxe, It bat a
pedigree for top quality that goes bade more than forty yearsl
. Thst slow wearing tread on the new Fisk bites through
slushy road film for sure, safe stops faster than yoa can sink
your teeth in a dog biscuit. It grips the road as surely as
yoa grip Junior's pants in a free-for-all.
"And say9 pap, beneath the tread extra strength cord is
. regular watch dog against bruises and ' r
blowouts, adds months and miles of
tire life
"So make
vsssva
wnen your blaster imys Assa; be rides V
on quality ln
mm
Vulcanizing and Recapping
- Sea Barry John Vsrstesg
in! responding to a speech of wel
come by r Michigan's ; uovernox
Harry F. Kelry,; and Commander
Harold IL Stassen. former gov
ernor of Minnesota and delegate
to the United Nations conference,
who speaks Monday night.
Copper is very seldom discov
ered by itself; it is generally as
sociated with other valuable .met
als. , r '
w it rr ,11 .at
Holly' Jackson
Says---
v June is cone but she may
love you, In July too, o
better come in. and seei
the new shipment oC dia
monds just received.
Choose ftie 'stone then
select the mounting
. we will 'assemble them
to make the perfect ring.
I.
1
1
a
a.
a
I Jackson
i
225 No. Liberty Opposite Golden Pheasant
w!rNlv?K5K5hyiv9KmKN5h!rK!rKrKWKKyivirl
"Listen, pup! That tiro cortif
icato can't bring you any
thing but a stomach acho.
But it can bring your master
long miles of safo driving
.t.withFISK!
no bones abont it, pup. fT-
m saa m " tl -
t
-
f
t
f
5 Thee 3412 - l - :v :-.'T ' A
ww ' T9.tM.li nr.m
$4,500,000 T7ar Bon
TACOMA. June 30-0iP)-Tac
a KhoW DUt on al
man, vit, -
7-ZLa rA today by the Firs
troop carrier command and airj
borne troops oi me mruxj j
f nrre and Uter contributed puif
. (i Knn nna in war bonffis
cnases - - ,-, a
in the seventh war loan oxivc
i :i . -X
Jewelers
S6.70
MWt
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