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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1945)
i r Bonneville to Help In OSC Project PORTLAND. July i4.-flVRe- search in1 additional uses of hy-I droelectric power in agriculture and industry, to be conducted at Oregon State college with finan- rial aid from the Bonaevnte pow- i er administration, won approral today from the state oara oi higher education. j Assured by OSC President A. I. Strand that there were no polit- leal implications in the arrange- ment wherein tne couege wm contribute $18,000 and ; Benne ville $29,650, R. C. Qeoesbeck, - Klamath Falls, changed "his "not vote to - make approval wani- mouj. ' . ' Projects will include studies of sprinkler irrigation materials, farm refrigeraUdn unita, dairy water neating, eiecuic g, eiecuic racuani iESST and feecttn .ejeoer- and reversed trie heat storage, forage crops, and feeding. exper imenU with artificially dried hay. ;The board paued Aipon dormi- tory .'development plans at the University of Oregon, approved I an administration reorganization in the OSC extension-service, and allocated $220,000 mi special equipment funds appropriated by the legislature. A $100,000 grant from the W. K. 1 Kellogg foundation was accepted on behalf of the University of Oregon Medical schoel, Portland, for graduate and postgraduate training of doctors released from service. " I An incidental fee of tS-per term I 9, was approved for the state col- I lege and 4he university, and a 5 fee for the colleges of education at which the previous $2 fee has not been collected. I Proposal to change opening schedules to allow students work- treasury department. He propos ing as harvest hands more time to ed that the treasury have "policy get .crops in was rejected for a plan to allow these students ad- mission Without penalty and a chance to- make up - assignments missed. Heads Paralysis Fund lAii-r' - - yio campaign MINNEAPOLIS, July U.-iJty- Bing Crosby has accepted the na tional ' chairmanship' of the 1945 campaign this fall to -raise funds for? theuiaiabeth Kenny Insti tute.for vthe treatment of in fan til paraiyais, the institute's board of directors announced today. In his telegram of acceptance, the actor and radio singer said that "As the father of four chill dren I have a deep appreciation of the work that Sister Kenny and the Elizabeth Kenny. Institute ace 1 doing. This year's camnaiiin will have as a goal $5,000,000. No definite dites have been set for -the cam paign. Columbia Has in Irrigation Plans Put Uuclefc Wav 11 . - j ' . 1 . . . .1 iw loaay xarrea comirucuon 01 n access roaa 10 tne aite or a feeder canaT above Grand Coulee dam to be -constructed as aoon as funds are made available. Frank A. Banks, bttreau of regional dU lictor reported. - - The canal, to lead from the out- let pipes of the rnimpins slant to north Grand Coulee, would carry virtually all the water needed to irrigate Columbia . beein lands Banks said. . ttt No AhanilAnMl It;! M-: Here, UlficertSayi " A six-months-oJd iabT who came under the care of Marion Countr w u Ttiun uixiovr fiona w nite ' on luescay is not available for adop tion, nor was he "abandoned," Mrs. White emphasized Tuesday night The lad's-young mother ap parenuy aid not understand the regulations at thr boarding home where she left him last week, and where children are not as a rule kept over weekends, Mrs. White said. Reports thatUn 'abandoned" red haired baby boy had. come under authority of the Juvenile court brought a number of Queries from persons interested in adopt ing child. FOItTLAQ ICE ARENA M. W. 23tt at Martaail HOT? FLMK3-: t:!;its mi tt Smu, MertsW 2:39 I CUTEST ICE mrr iw w-r ttmn. 1 , I1T3. IUI . S tUl, Crosby Vfltk Mia "" aniHllS DMM Kamikaze Hit Light Gruiseri But She's Back for Olunawa WASHINGTON, July U.-(Jty- Japanese suicide planes seriously hurt the light cruiser St. Louis in j the battle for Leyte gulf, but they couldn't keen her from coming back for the Okinawa campaign. The navy told her story today. p the Okinawa operation, the 10,000-ton ship lobbed a total of 26,365 rounds of five and six-inch projectil, weighing 2,116,585 pounds, Into Japanese' installa- tions. in the fight for Leyte, the St Louis had delivered close support to the Philippine landings for IS days when, oh November. 27, 1944. ,ne came under suicide at tach .... -.!;; . ; - -Wj; She was engaged in fueling ex- Asks Congress tt up if fOilirUl j -.P Over Treasury - I .1 ... .WASHINGTON, July i-Pf Herjry Morgenthau, Jr., who rt- tired yesterday as secretary of the treasury, has recommended to con frees that his successor be given policy control over all spending, lending, and insuring done by gov- ernment agencies. "No man can be a real watch dog of the treasury under the present set-up," he told newsmen in commenting on his final report to Congress, released for publica- tioii today. He -also disclosed that he made the same recommenda tions to President Truman on May Morgenthau said he would have likid to stay in office until V-J day, but that Mr. Truman asked fori his resignation.' He recommended that the bud get bureau be put back in the control" over lending and borrow ing activities of -the federal loan agency, national housing agency, and agriculture department and "policy influence over the feder al reserve system "and the secur itie$ and exchange commission. My Build Canal rrura nivcr 10 Lake Vancouver PORTLAND, Ore., July The Pacific Coast Association of Port Authorities will immediately start a survey of coast sites suit able for laying up surplus govern merit hips after the war, the group's president said today. T. H. Banfield announced the arrival here of Capt. L L. Lind, who will inspect Columbia river sites for possible moorage of small naval craft Lake Vancouver will be on the survey list. The survey was suggested ; by Miller Freeman, Seattle publisher, to I investigate public opinion as well as possible anchorages and repair facilities, Banfield report ed.! The Vancouver project would include drainage of the lake and building a canal to connect it with the Columbia river. . . , jOlympia Cafes to Close 2 Days More i 1 1 1 1 mirin, uij .-vri-virm I Pla cafe owners decided tonight to keep "closed' signs up for at le&st two more days while a com- mittee of four investigates so caned "discrepancies'' in point al lounents. All ut two of the city's 38 res- I tauranta have ! been closed since aaturaay ana tne owners said to- j night's meeting was merely to -(discuss the situation. They said they had set Thursday night as a I Ume for a "decision meeting. Lunch boxes continued to be the n4e of the day for Olympians, althouzh: statehouse emnlovas I who desired to eat out could be I served at the canitol restaurant. I ' rV e b I- W 1 m j ... f v 11 11 1 li. 1 J . I - -AWN MILLER l i t f 1 I I r-fv- --'-- er y fi V'fA I T71T I I " 1 ' Jrr ' 1 . ITlL-a mm , aualolarV .1.-1- , "Ow.. : ' ST S I - . Ill - ' IjilAl i i-Afc'- L f ' III M dan a M ...... a 1 ii' .. 11 -, i. 1 ..n .-r .. .111 vw jriii. a . w -.iii- . ' 111 Luuiif 1 l 1 2 li r.i aiii r : " ! -"twia vt mu WMfAm, ; .y. -3JUUAg 4 ; II - ' "N, . - Wm iji - - jutest News llu?est- The m a Jar i ercises when a Japanese! plane dived out of the clouds to drop a bomb. Hardly : had the' bomb splash disappear when . a - for mation of ten em ty planes ap- pea red overhead. One was knock t out' of con- I trol and crashed i flames against I the cruiser atari ard side. ' 1 Fire, and expl attracted h i I other suicide plan if the ten at-1 Altegethet six tacking planes we: shot down In leM than 40 minutes. 1 The St Louis lost li I men killed! I i I I i 4 Although! seriously damaged, lawyers; charged with de the St Louis was full o. fight 'ending Petaiif became so wound wh th vr attacks'; ended. P Wtt charges and counter- After repairs cJme the jreturn to action 0 1 uaanawa. g B-29'8Latilat Iwo Juna When Fuel Gets GUAM. Wednesday. July IS-VPi I "Heavy dank" W seven inaus- trial targets . of Japan's Osaka- Naeova industrial areas! was re- ported todajf by the 20th su force I after yesterday's ecord-btealting assault br 625 Suberfortresses. "I could see our bombs go down and when II looked again, the buildings weren't there,"' said CpL Anelo Vassalla. Rochester j N. Yj IS . . ; - I reporting o damage to the inv mrtant Kaw.nishl aircraft com- pany plant at Takarazuka, $ miles northwest of Osaka. If ju.lj a single ouperiururta w 1 lost, the 20th air force announced, j hut ISO of the hi nlanes landed at Iwo Jima enroute home because of battle ! damage lor dangerously low fueL- Pilots said antiaircraft l ' . ..I i 'i j.i 11 1. had seen over Osaka, although Japanese air opposition! was at most negligible. L'-? If , The ZOtn meanwniie , cyaimea 1 89.S per cent' destruction of thai Jnctfiritr of NumazuSin the previous raids the most complete ous raios me mos icqmpieie 1 kOf ny enemy cijrl Gifu tt was ?4 percent destroyed, ruin which previously was labeled j the most completely destroyed. . W,U" "V : "IH-"' ies of Ja. t .. noon pf marking 1 we aecona uro wict June 28 that the iSuDerforts. had - t .a:- ' j a. iw moved bfazenly against mainland Cl-T-.uw4i,- hutt bombers snlit into task forces ta n. . wxtK ,-;U I high. hfaj pimaI ..wjwuh bombs that iweighed from 500 to 4000 pounds: eadu 4 . 1, - il I t s : Ner Fire Breaks t Out in Panhandle MISSOULA. Mont, July 24- (P)-U5. ! forest service ! firefight ers were again rushed to jnorth- ern Idaho's, Panhandle .today to battle a new blaze: in the Kaniksu forest, estimated to have :burned 40 acres last night. ; ",i I -.-. U. forest service fire control officials here said 75 men wer uui.ui we; . I j . . ... All otber jfires. in northern Ida- tana, fought by more thah1000.j men, including 'army paratroops. oyer the weekend Vera, reported under control.; , ' t Stricken Corporal Develops Pleuris FORT WORTH, TexJ July 34- Vfy-Corp. James j Newman had the group had adopted a resolu developed a, case of pleurisy today tion asking .the US attorney gen- to add to u the tuberculosis and other diseases contracted In a Japanese; paison camp.; Members ot nis xamuy saio, however, that he appeared to be ; holding his own. . t . . p j in wes zus teters xne corporal - .1 received today were notes; of en couragement front Scotland and Canada. New South Wales was the first colony to be established in Aus tralia.' ( :' : ' I - ! 51 - ' III - r-V. rr,z. C . I DESIAHNAZ .. KSlV !lfi ?il tf J OREGON STATESMAN, Solem, Denies Blood Money! Deal in u wiin iiaiv i PARIS, July l4.H?VItt sharp contrast to the! opening day of Fe- tain's trial, the overheated court- room was slightly less crowded and was calmer than yesterday, when a near-hriot broke- out. . It bad settled dewn to- the serious business of trying: a man for his life. .- .;M : I - - At time Reynaud and the charge of diplomatic move that one Juror plaintively demanded thai the trial should return to the question of Petain. Heynaud's disclosure of t h e proposed "bipod, money' deal with Italy was! brought out as Pe tain's lawyers j attacked his testi mony. The point was brought out by I Defense Attorney Jacques Isorny without warning in a "voice drip- ping with sarcasm, I a a a ? . . I . Almost in a casual conversa- tional voice, he said: "And now E. Iteynaud, would you like to tell the high court un- aer wnai, conpuons on aoay z. 1 1M0 you off erM Mussolini, with-I out mgiand 'as knowledge, co-do- minion in Tunisia and equatorial m . u r i 1 ' I Amcai ; I Reynaud turned abruptly, say- mg -inas a airy taw mat neeas and deserves explanation." Rynaud told about a letter he nn written Mussolini suggesting VTT m ourcountoes.J . I Reynaud finished, Isorny I . y w . . 3 Charles Roux, a French diplomat. -Ha - mm mm 1 mil ! that a dble ad- iaressea to iuhm cnvuuea oner- H ccdpixiinium over Tun- -SlI mT rencn equawr ial1 Ali I w - ; fc -v-j- -ntnh ii nfWfl I Wf'Cf I UVUI 9 "XT m'"- 11 "WVf. 1 20Y eOT W atck i "i k " CAM iMTrtltfTn T.. . T..1- A in iTaj av '( vaaMwwa t-.. ..i .whM! e?enV army con-j HL""T -?X predicted the albas will have to " , One or tl-jfew tngh American 'iWtaf ttie ,Paeifie jand Europe. Gen. Patch, arrived i here to take his army . ana pmn the training of thousarithi of jtroopar-fori the Ta- cific area. Commentinf ; on the r arrest of 80,000 Germans in raids by Am erican forces of occupation. Gen. Patch said: j fNo doubt, there will be many more of these; raids. There is no I hope of re-educating the present German, at least among the I younger generation, transfixed try nazism. We I m u s t maintain a large, Quick-moving standing 1 ai hit tauwuie; oi suppressing muj uprising which might occur. y apato Group on Record to Push Japs Oiit of U.S. WAPATO, Wash, July 24,-tt1) -Officers of "Remember Pearl Harbor Ieau- junit said today I eral to formulate legal measures I for "the removal of dangeorbs en f emy aliens- from the nation 1 speedily as war conditions will permit, I The resolution called for t . f T I IrTni I T C T i. I. -Opens :45 P. M. irbwj Playing! Oregon, Wednesday Morning... HOOVER ksasit Beraert lleever tsyletaresl la 8aa Frtmebca as ks broad aast a pie for the rstiaeatka by U. 8. Wssiats mt ta United Thumbnail By the Associated Press .. Japan American and. British carrier aircraft continue; attack on major combatant ships and other targets around Kure and Kobe..: 1 .. ,. . Aerial 850 Okinawa-based planes return to Shanghai -area to .crater three airports, sink or damage IS warships arid freight- ers and break up convoy. i China Chinese press closer to vital airbase sites of Kweilin and Yungsu, in south China. Borma Desperate f ap troops . pocketed in Pegu section ox southern Burma prolong attack along 77-mile front. Borneo Aussies continue mov ing down east coast to! within 50 miles of objective, the Samarinda 1 field. Refuses to Aid Exj)t3sg PORTLAND, Ore; ,July-, UHJft rChief Deputy US District -At-. tbrney Mason.' Dillard pvivn: legal barrier today against OPA's suit against two -Russian citizens by withdrawing his s i g n a'i u'r e from the mjunctiorf preceedingsv . Tne suit charged Mr. and Mrs. A. Poraushin with obtaining 53 pairs X)f rationed shoes without points end trying to export 'them to Russia. Nan Wood Honeyman. federal customs collector, was also listed a. defendant Dillard declared today he did not believe it proper for one orancn or. tne government to sees: an injunction against another branch. He warned that interfere ing with the citizens of an ally "might ib treading j on dangerous eTound.!'! F. C. Butler, assistant customs collector speaking in Mrs. Honey- snar s absence, said today, "the permits sought by the; Povalish- ins are by no means put of the ordinary. It is quite possible for a family i!. . to have use for that many shoes. Mrs. jHoneyman tells me that she herself: has 90 pairs." .;. y 1 j.- curity and safety, alleging that "return 1 and infiltration of Jap anese alien enemies of the nation is under way in the valley, aided and encouraged by various selfish and sentimental interests." -j- Opens f:45 1. M. How Phyirg! V FUN-FILLED FIESTA! OF OH Sanla'Fo" 24. 1943 -r-i I ": r"'-: - ' July Probe Bares Pri$on Vices ' In Michigan LANSING, Mich... July 24r(P)r Charges! of general maladministra tion and moral laxity that permit ted inmates of the state prison of southern. Michigan to receive women in the prison hospital, to visit houses of prostitution In Jackson! and operate gambling games vfithin the institution, were made today by State Attorney General! John R. Dethmen. The charges were contained in the first of series of reports fol lowing four months of investiga tion. ; j "f . I" Describing the prison as "a veri table cupid club for lovelorn in mates," Dethmers said: "Some inmates were permitted the solace of wives or sweethearts in screened hospital beds. Inmates were transported by prison employes to nouses 01 pros- titutionlin Jackson. Inmates were taken for a weekend party with women ! to the resort cottage of a prison ffLciaL" ! I Otheri charges included:! A group of prisoners exercised "improper control'' . over . inmate assiamnenU and exacted tribute from prisoners. ; Gambling was carried on with as much as $1500 at stake in dice games. " IiquOr was smuggled into the prison from outside"; Sexual .perversion has increased among, inmates and tnsuincient measures taken to control it. Monopoly, rights were held by certain inmates on concessions which did an aggregate business of more than $100,000 a year. Chinese Drive NeareRw On Two Sides ! CHUNGKING, July 24 HJPr Chinese troops,1 sweeping toward almost-isolated Kweilin from the south,- have battled into the out skirts of the former VS. 14th air force base of Yangso 44 miles south of Kweilin; Chinese artillery 13 miles north east, ttf j KWeilin opened an artil lery bombardment of Lihgchan on the enemy garrison's 'escape route to 'central' China in -an -effort to prevent a Japanese withdrawal, headquarters reported: ' ' . Xlse where in China, commun ique aaid the Japanese-had launch ed a sweep south of the Yangtze river jto protect Tokyo's- vital transcontinental corridor from Korea jto Hong Kong, and bitter fighting report etuy conunuea a long China's invasion-vulnerable coast west of Formosa. RFC Sells Building Materials ; Housing Project Is Halted PORTLAND, July 24.-(ff)- Buildmg materials, : including a large amount of short length lum ber, were announced for sale to day ' by the Reconstruction Fi nance corporation after work on a housing project was stopped. - Coatiauaus fraoa 1 P. at. Hon Showing! i . . . I Bartered f XJ His genl I L- far ; Eternal f TevtH! V . ' ' V.:' j'' iy . Vf'S'L. I Leopold Ready To Surrender Early in Drive .BRUSSELS.: Juiy 24-W-For-eign Minister , Paul Henri Spaak toM parliarnent jtoday that King Leopold had pm-Gerrnanr in his entourage in 1840i and accused the exiled monarch of- naving 0 clared at that time that the allied cause, was lost." ti'4 V-.v'M- ' Answering a ' tMro-hour; defense of Leopold by Henri De. Vlee- schouwer for the jCatnouc 1 pro- Leopold) party,! Spaak asserxea the cabinet then I believed tnat Tonnld had surrender in nuna early in the campaigrt Har aaid tne caoinet s last -ana juobv pi ful" interview with Leopold took place near Bruges the night of u is-ii 10401 The cabinet rexnonstrated against me sang a HiHiion tiotto leave Belgium and carry on as coihstitutional mon arch from, abroad. oremen AsIc Raise in Hourly jWagcj WASHINGTON. ' July 24-UFV- Harrr Bridges- head of the CIO loneshoremen's union on the west coast, today asked the war labor board to Increase hourly rates from 11.10 to S1.20. - Bridges and Lloyd H. Fisher, Mu,nli tiwtnl- frtr. th linlntl. Lsaid that earning of the west coast longshoremen, on whom new bur dens have been placed with the concentration ofjj the war in tne Pacific, were receiving less "take- home" pay than their fellow work en on the east coast. Fisher accused the Pacific A- merican Ship Owners association and the Waterfront Employers as sociation of the ; Pacific Coast of engaging in a "campaign of slan der against this union. Can Company. Builds E. Oregon' jWarehouse! MILTON-FREEWATER.' '-' July. 24.-rirst building of the n?w; Amencan can company piani, , a. warenouse, lor iionox Jnuuon canst has oeen completed. . mw& w wci - f . v , , Lrongsii ilO -Companion Feature Bed Ryder'. IlIJPUNCH-PACICED! i j v Mf ivy i i7 C023Y Dl AUC0 FLE Russians Grill GoingiC Luxur y Decried MONDORF LES BAINS, Lux-, embourg, July 24.-4P)-A group of Bussian interrogators arrived here recently to Question some of the 52 nign-ranains nun uncimu u tha fnrmtr Palace hotel . r and scared the ' daylights out ct Her mann Goering. 1 I .. Goering was looking dut the window of his fourth I floor room when the - Soviet representatives arrived. . i He leaped up .and cried: "The Russians; they are here.-, I won't see them. I won't talk to them. But he did they questioned him for two days; I v i No other Russians nave visited Mondorf recently. And no one here is able to explain the Mos cow radio report a few days ago lhat lUbbentrop, .Goering, Striech- Vaccr!nir and other former Tvr bigwigs were living a life of luxury behind barred doors. The i Moscow radio deplored what it-called "the Mondorf lux ury," saying the finest wines and foods and late tnodd automobiles were available to. the prisoners and- only newpapers- were denied them "so as not to spoil their ap petites." "None of them has had ;a drop of wine since they've leen here," said Col. B. C Andrus, the Amer- lean corn mand ing officer of the. enclosure. "None of them foot outside the stockade. has set V The basic unit of currency m China is the Chinese dollar.' NOW, SHOWING CO-FEATURE Action-Romance! A Sporting Chance' Ominj: Friday Sea cl Lassia Continnons . from I ri to tii ttfum ? - S r -, - - - - , i Ilcvrcsi Oil! : ,Mit . .J..... .... . . , , ; , i ' ; ' I ' 'I