The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 19, 1945, Page 1, Image 1

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J'LPCD olds
' A principl thesis of Wendell
Willkie's One World was that
western political Ideas were pen
etrating the colonial world, that
M ... fi . .rlnra -WOrka
- 1UIIKUW VIA.
His thesis finds corroboration
In current events in southeast
Asia and the adjacent islands.
i ' KitivM In I n d o-China rebel
' - against tne -reswrauon ox xrcncn
colonial government In Java an
Independence movement shows
ttrengfh" -and colonial adminis-
trator resigns - because he dis-
agrees with i the- policy of The
-Netherlands j for government of
the Dutch East Indies. These for
- merly docile peoples have drunk
' the wine of the four freedoms.
It may be true that the revolu-
' a a J
Uonary movements - are iea oy a
, few who have had western edu-
cation, but the masses, at least
in Indo-China, have' been really
say that the thrust for independ
y ence ls merely the plot of am
' '.- bitious young politicians.
" '; " The United States has no dis
:f position to restore colonial em
: pires for European countries.
Fortunately our army and navy
pointed across the islands to Ja
. '' pan,' without being diverted to
: tasks of driving the Japs out of
Sumatra, Singapore and Saigon.
.. Whatever military or police prob
lem there is will have to be dor
by the countries with' claims to
these far eastern possessions.
; At the same time it was the
military might .of the United
States in crushing Japan which
forced the surrender of- the Jap
anesearrisons in these outposts
.of Japan's conquests. The United
States , therefore has ,
(Continued on Editorial Page)
I Final Issue of
Camp Adair
Paper Printed
CAMP, ADAIR, Oct. 18-(Spe-cial)-The
final issue of i the
"smartly-edited .AGF pews was
; distributed here today, carrying
as its ead story a message from
MaJ. Gen. F ' B. Mallon, com
- manding general' of replacement
depot4, who thanked Mach ! and
. . n iuv. ...i.
did spirit of cooperation.
The army ground forces re-
- placement depot, constituting j a
- personnel of more than 20,000, is
being inactivated. Remaining is
the complement of the 8th ser
vice command, civilian help and
' prisoners of war. -
"It has been a fine and heart--.
ening experience to be associated
with you men and women. May
you have every success in the
future, both in and out of the
service, General Mallon said.
The replacement depot includes
personnel which served together
- at Camp Robinson, Camp Fannin
and Fort Meade before coming to
- Camp Adair nearly four months
ago, and the general, said such a
continuity L , has provided us
with an esprit de corps which I
am certain all of us, new men as
well as old, have been proud to
hare."
The final issues of the AGF
News, printed at the plant of .The
Statesman Publishing company in
Salem, carries a written and pic
torial resume of many of the
camp's activities, Including a
- story of the last review held Sat
- urday with 5000 troops passing
before General Mallon and Dr.
1 Harry K. Newburn, president f
the University of Oregon.
OSWALD WEST ILL
PORTLAND, Oct U.-For-tner
Governor Oswald West was
.-seriously ill in a Portland hospital
today with a heart ailment Strick
en yesterday,: he was taken at once
to hospitalj ! Attendants- said he
i was improved today, but still
weak.
Antnisl Crackers
:IV WARREN GOODRICH
WW-
1 itU ya frozen foods are
ell (Ac thmg--ueU gtt some
1 -pound cartons, a snappy
label and BINGO, we're
i 'WS. . y J.
;v ' J : By Eton C. Fay
WASHINGTON, Oct 18.-(av
The allies Indicted Hitler's hench
men today for a quarter century
of conspiracy culminating in the
world's worst war and the mass
murder of ten million people.' ; ,
specifically accused before the
war crimes court are 2i Individu
als (Hermann Goering'a cameled
all the rest) and six organizations.
The indictment said the nazi par
ty, with Adolf Hitler , assuming
leadership in 1921, was the . in
strument of cohesion for the con
spirators It traced the evolution
of the plot against mankind all the
way back to that time. .
- The accusers who will prose
cute their case before the interna
tional military tribunal sitting in
the ancient German city of Nu-
Price Of
Butter To
Get Boost
Ceiling Rate to
Go Up 5 to 6 Cents
Pound Nov. 8
WASHINGTON, Oct 18 (JP
The retail ceiling price on butter
will be boosted 5 to 6 cents a
pound -Nov. 8. i
Stabilization Director John C.
Collet announced this today in
withdrawing, effective Oct 31, a
wartime subsidy of 3 cents a
pound paid to butter processors.
Price Administrator Chester
Bowles, in a concurrent statement-expressed
the opinion that
the effect of the butter price in
crease on the cost of living will
be offset by a decline in other
items.
Bowles said the over-all cost
of living had dropped two-tenths
of one per cent between July 15
and August 15. He said also that
there was a subsequent drop in
the costof potatoes "and other
cost of living items.
For these reasons, Bowles said,
"the consumer will pay no more
for all items going into the fam
ily budget as a result of the in
crease in butter prices than the
prices he paid at the time of the
surrender of Japan.
The butter subsidy went into
effect June 1, 1943. Since that
time the reconstruction finance
corporation has paid out $174,
691,000 to processors.
Secretary of Agriculture An
derson approved cancellation of
the subsidy, the announcement
said, while "demand is still strong
enough to : maintain returns to
producers and processors." "
'Hot Beer9 May
Solve Problem
PORTLAND, Oct 18.-C?VGroc
ery stores would sell beer as ap
petizing as luke-warm dishwater
if state liquor control commission;
er H. R, Kirkpa trick had his way.
He told the commission his views
at a meeting today. Consumer
who buy chilled beer are tempted
to .drink it in the car, he said.
But warm beer sudsy and unpal
atable would be carried home for
cooling. ,
Tax Cut Hacked
By Committee
WASHINGTON, Oct U.-VPh
The senate finance committee to
day hacked a prospective $4,780,-
000,000 on tne nation's 1946 tax
bill but held off a decision on
trimming special excise taxes back
to their pre-war levels next July.
.The cuts so far agreed upon
approach the treasury's recommen
dation for a maximum $5,000,000,-
000 cut although they fall short
of the $3,300,000,000 reduction
voted by the house.
Cuts approved so far include:
-Individual income taxes, $2,085,-
000,800. , i
Repeal 9 the automobile use
tax next-July 1, $140,000,000. i
In addition, the finance commit
tee okayed the house action in
freezing the social security pay
roll tax for another year at its
present rate of 1 per cent each on
employers ! and employes. :
Meeting to Decide
Night School Work
Plans for nizht school classes
which persons under 18 who are
not .high school graduates are' re-'
quired, to take under a new (law, I
will be made at a meeting to be
held at 7 JO p. m. Monday in room
127 of the senior high school build-'
ing. First classes will be taught a
week from Monday. , 5
Persons required to take I the
night schooling and adults inter
ested . in , the .work should , attend
so that their preferences for speci
fied courses - may be expressed,
Supt. Frank B. Bennett said Thurs
day. No tuition will be charged
those who ; must enroll in night
school, he added.. ,
ernoerg were me prosecutors lor
the four major 'powers--the
United States, Great Britain, Rus
sia and France. ;. 'i , ' ; ,.r
" 'The text of the 25,000-word in
dictment was . Issued simultane
ously in the four capitals. It ar
raigns, the nazis on four counts
and documents the charge in this
Scanner: . ..' -.vb-;
COUNT ONSflTh common
plan of conspiracy to overthrow
the treaty of - Versailles, rearm
Germany, acquire "Lebensrauxn
for the reich at the expense of her
nieghbors - - and do this by. any
means including n "force and ag
gressive war." '. " ', ! r '
1 COUNT TWO: Crimes against
peace, in which fall- the defend
ants with clivers other persons"
NINETY-FIFTH YEAH
Peron Release
i r . ,i v
for
I BIJENOS AIRES. Oct 18-6SIV
Argentina's economic and indus
trial life was paralyzed today by
a 24-hour nationwide strike of
workers celebrating the return to
power of Cot Juan Peron. !
i The work stoppage appeared to
be 95 per cent effective all over
the country. Thousands of work
ers marched ' through Buenos
Aires' streets, crying Viva Pe
ron." Street car, subway, bus and
taxi service was stopped, and all
but the smallest commercial
Shops were closed. The railroad
union claimed train traffic was
halted throughout the country.
?! The government ministry of
posts and telegraphs transported
its workers in trucks. Light, wa
ter, and telephone services were
not affected, but there were no
deliveries ,pf milk or meat in the
city. i --i. ..
I In the center of Buenos Aires
posters hailing Peron as "the
next president" appeared on shop
windows and Subway entrances.
I - '. ' . .
Truman, Attlee
Vary on Jew ;
Ouestion Views
S WASHINGTON,, Oct l8.-(P)-
The United States never will sup
port a final decision affecting the
"basic situation in Palestine with
out first consulting both Jews
and Arabs, Secretary of State
Byrnes said todayV
I He made the pronouncement in
a statement discussing the prob
lem of Jewish immigration into
the Holy Land, shortly after Presi
dent Truman had gone into the
same issue at his news conference.
Byrnes called attention to the
president's statement that the Brit
ish still have under consideration
an American suggestion that 100,
000 stateless Jews from Europe be
allowed to enter Palestine. Mr.
Truman said Prime Minister Att
lee has indicated he favors a fig
ure around 1800 a month. ' 1
GERMAN CHILDREN IN PERIL
1 STOCKHOLM, Oct 18H)
Count Folke Bernadotte, chair
man of the Swedish Red Cross,
today quoted an American mili
tary surgeon in Berlin as saying
that 50 per cent of German 'chil
dren under two years of age twill
die this winter from lack of Ifpod
and shelter. Bernadotte returned
today from a week's trip to Ger
many. " - 'i?
flHlap'Tells
Y5
4
GEN. HENRY H. ARNOLD
I WASmNGTONJOct 18
Two scientists who&elped harness
atomic energy denounced admin
istration bills for its control today
as an invitation to the world to
get into an atomic bomb race.
H This description came from Dr.
Occasion
participated in planning and. then
waging wars against Poland, Brit
ain, 'France, Denmark, Norway,
Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg,
Yugoslavia, Greece, Russia and
the United States. - ' , :
' COUNT THKEZ: War crimes,
embraced in the doctrine of total
war which included violations of
the laws and customs of war such
as "deliberate and systematic gen
ocide." (The extermination of ra
cial and national groups). The
indictment alleged mass murder
by cities and districts in Russia,
Poland and the Balkans which to
taled 9,465,000 and mentioned
numerous other cases wherein
"thousands" died by gunfire and
torture. j. r .-
COUNT FOUK: Crimes against
humanity in which all the de
. .-: t lOUNDBBs 1651 " U'"7'i-, -!!T.- '-VM-" -:- ...V" :
16 PAGES.
Scdem,
Japan Boasts of
Dropping Bombs
At Seattle 'Docks
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 18.-W-Larry
Tighe, American
broadcasting company corres-
Jondent, quoted an unnamed
apanese official in a broadcast
Smght from Tokyo - as saying
a ; Nipponese plane, launched
from a submarine, flew over
the Seattle dock area Dec 22,
1943 and dropped incendiaries
in the vicinity of the city "with
Unobserved results."
f Tighe said he heard the Jap
anese official tell army and
navy interrogators that the
small pontoon-type plane took
off 50 miles from the Washing
ton coast
ft
President to,
Set Wage-Price
Course Today
Washington, Oct. uhjp)-
President Truman will take up
with his cabinet tomorrow the
course on'wage andr'Wcrtlicy4tiXd(SM ?0t 7 ' r
Tk- rKMffl tnM vs. T,.J7Ht Ambassador Gromyko came
The president told his news con
ference today he might make' a
public statement on the issue af
ter the cabinet discussion.
The present policy of the ad
ministration, he stated, was re
flected in speeches by reconver
sion director j John W. Snyder in
the past, two days. Snyder urged
increasing wages but holding the
line on prices.
While Mr. Truman spoke. Dr.
Frank Graham, a former member
of the war labor board, was tell
ing a senate group that the coun
try's biggest problem was to work
oura wage-price policy to replace
the wartime powers of the expir
ing WLB.
Baker Strike in
Spokane Ends
SPOKANE, Oct 18 -(f)- A
three-day. strike by members of
the AFL bakers and confectioners
union ended today pending fur
ther negotiations but "bread lines'
still were forming in Spokane and
northern Idaho stores which were
able to obtain bakery supplies
from other sources.
Walter. James, business agent
of, local No. 74, said the union
members had VQted-to return to
work today, pending negotiations
for a IS per cent wage increase.
INQUIRY TO BE HELD
PORTLAND, Ore., Oct 18.-(ff)
Inquiry into the shooting of Rob
ert D- Hess, 21, killed in a gun
battle with police at the central
bus depot ; Oct I, will be held
Octl 23, Coroner Earl Smith said
today.
(Dongress off Future's Wipged
OD
i4
TeBevised
Harold Urey of Chicago and Dr.
H. J. Curtis of the Oak Ridge,
Term, who objected at' a news
conference to secrecy . regulations
proposed for an atomic energy
commission.
The two scientists got backing
from others who worked with
them, but their position varied
widely front that of Dr. J. Robert
Oppenheimer, ' former . California
physicist, who also worked on the
bomb. Oppenheimer told the house
military committee he favored the
general provisions of the admin
istration bill to set up a govern
ment commission which would di
rect both development and control
of . nuclear energy. He asked for
confidence "in the government of
this ! country." Hearings by that
group were closed after. Oppen
heimer's appearance. i
iThe scientists' statements were
lendants are accused of partici
pating. In Ger- :;',-V.-..,.'..
many, in those
countries cou
pled by the Ger
man armed for
ces lifter the be
ginning of the
European war on
September 1,
19391, in Austria
ad Czechoslo
vakia and Italy and on the high
sea, The crimes involved, among
other things, the murder and per
secution of any person even sus
pected of being hostile to the nazi
party or its plan of European ex
pansion.' Through the whole huge docu
ment runs the thread of premed
itation - - of long plotting to in
flict -on man the inhumanities and
This syaee re
fT fr Butter's-
yUtare ti
a4 ha ai
foa aa la-ilctcl..
Oregon. Friday Morning, Octboer 19. 194$
an
to
Diplomatic Rift
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 -(JP)
President Truman sought today
to allay fears over troublesome
international developments .with
assurances of eventual settlement
through negotiations.
' Replying to pews conference
questions on differences with
Russia over policy in the Balkans
and Japan, and with the British
over 'Palestine, the president de
clared that:
j 1. The stalemate over the Bal
kans at the foreign ministers
meeting in London, which now
Has spread to questions of far
east control, will be worked out
in .correspondence with! other
governments.
2. Generalissimo Chiang Kai
Shek's suggestion that the Japa
nese i people determine Emperor
Hirohito's future is a good plan,
as he views it
t. No new "big three meeting"
is in; contemplation to iron out
difficulties which developed at
London.
to Washington .on a flying trip
this week, wishes he did, and can
only suppose it was on the am
bassador's personal business.
Army Gives Up
Ward Control
i . i
CHICAGO, Oct. 19 -(A1)- Mont
gomery Ward and Company ter
minated the maintenance and
memberships and dues check-offs
installed by the army during the
period of government control, to
day, j r x
These provisions, a major point
during the .mail order firm's long
dispute with its employes and the
war labor board, were terminated
the moment the army relinquish
ed control at 11:59 P-m. (EST)
last night a company statement
said.
PORTLAND, Ore, Oct 19 4JP)
MaJ. A. T. Vollmer, commanding
the army unit which has been
operating the mail order division
of the Portland Montgomery Ward
store,' said he had been ordered
to relinquish control at 11:59 pjn.
last night ;
The unit probably wHl move
equipment from tb building to
day, j ; ', .
SERVICEMEN TO ARRIVE
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 18-ff)
San Francisco military authorities
made ready tonight to greet an
estimated 22,800 servicemen sche
duled to arrive tomorrow; from
overseas aboard 17 - ships. In
cluded in the group of returning
veterans will be 1494 members
of the famed 43rd "Wing Victory"
division. ; ,
rum
Smooth
Over
Atomic Cocet!: Bomnilb
made while Gen. H. H. Arnold
was I telling another conimittee
that the next time an atomic bomb
is used It probably will be in a
winged, guided missile, launched
from aircraft far out of the reach
of defenses. -
Urey summed up three objec
tions to the! pending legislation: j
' - 1. The administrator of the pro
posed atomic energy commission
would be a "potential dictator not
subject to any elected official." ;
2. The bill provides "no incen
tive to' science or ' industry to
worklin thiT fields - J ;
c S. It "would serve notice on all
foreign governments that we in
tend to indulge in an armament
race." . '
General Arnold, chief of the
air forces, told a ; senate commerce-military
subcommittee it
would be possible now to equip
on peoples tha war miseries that
ultimately were uaed-as -means to
achieve nai ends. It is exempli
fied in the "Indictment's story, of
the development of the war itself.
The section; on crimes against
humanity centers on the plan for
annihilation of the Jews. '.The ex
tent to which that plot succeeded
is described thus: "
"Of theV f ,600,000 Jews .! who
lived in thA, parts of Europe un
der nazi dy&knatian, it is conser
vatively estimated that 8,700,000
have disappeared, most of them
deliberately. put to death by nazi
conspirators."
This annihilation of the Jews
was an "official state policy," de
signed to implement the "master
race" theory of the nazis, says the
indictment,- including Robert Ley,
leader of the German labor front
Lumber Czar
Frederic E. Weyerhaeuser, head
of ene ef the larr est chain of
lumber operations in the north
west who died yesterday fat St
: Paul, Minn. 1
Long Illness
ST. PAUL, Minn, Oct 18.-)
-One .of the leaders of : the vast
Weyerhaeuser lumber empire,
Frederick E. Weyerhaeuser, . 72,
died today after an illness of sev
eral weeks.
He became associated with his
father in the lumber industry aft
er his graduation from! Yale in
1890 and at the time of his death
was president of the Weyerhaeu
ser Timber Co; A son,xCharles
Davis Weyerhaeuser, lives in Ta
coma. Weyerhaeuser m aintained a
summer home ion Ihe McKenzie
river, and spent much time in
Oregon on business.
He served as an executive of
the numerous lumber , companies
of the Weyerhaeuser group, which
operate extensively in the Pacific
northwest and J was a director of
the -Great Northern railroad and
the First National bank of St
PauL
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;:t ......
ntMBMMilKi jmmi Jv i urn nrftrr mmrmm mmm
nfeyerhaetiser
Following
Pigeon-Feeder Nabbed by
Police0!aced Fine, Jail Term
PHILADELPHIA, Oct IS Xff)
A retired -railroad clerk who's
been t feeding pigeons for 58 of
his 78 years war arrested today
for the first time in his! life on
a charge of feeding pigeons, pun
ishable under a new ordinance by
IS fine or 10 days In JaiL But he
won his-freedom when; the city's
the devastating; new mechanism
with wings and a television head
and loose it from a plane more
than 300 miles: from the target.
The United States, he added,
has no anti-aircraft defenses that
could stop such missiles.
The general sounded a note of
urgency on scientific develop
ment in general with this asser
tion: - ; ;
"Every day we wait for some
thing to happen deprives us of
that additional punch we need."
He pointed the argument up with
the declaration r that the -United
States I will be the first target of
any . future aggressor and there
will be no time for gradual mo
bilization. i ' ' ;
The fact that this country has
been the deciding factor in two
wars, Arnold said,' is "too plain
for the next aggressor to miss.''
and a relchsleiter; and Julius
Stretcher,- general of the state
police and a Jew-baiter , : -
; The indictment; lists only the
names ' of. major ! nazis in the
hands tt the allies and ready for
trial it does not include the
name of Hitler as a defendant! r
' Some, like Goering and Rudolph
Hess, are named on all four
counts; others, like Franz Von Pa
pen, -who became Hitler's ambas
sador, face only some of '' the
counts. ' . ' '-
: About 4,000,000 persons . were
exterminated at Auschwitz, about
1,500,000 at Maidanek, says the
indictment
Along with adults, the indict
ment says, the nazis "mercilessly
destroyed even children. They
killed Jthem with their parents in
Prlca 5c
No. 177
Power Still on
. . i . - i
By the Associated Press
Two thousand CIO workers
walked out of a . big Michigan
utility company yesterday but
the management said, failed ; to
cut off electric ' service in a ter
ritory of 2,000,800 inhabitants.
Muskegon and environs, with a
population of 150,000, was dark
ened, for about an hour after
strikers pulled switches.. State po
lice restored service. -
The Consumers Power com
pany, serving nearly all the
southern Michigan peninsula ex
cept Detroit said emergency
crews of supervisory workers
were keeping operations general
ly at regular levels.
Other important labor develop
ments included:
1.- Insurgent AFL . longshore
men's leaders reversed their po
sition and ordered followers to
resume work in the port of New
York, tied up for 18 days by a
strike.
2. Soft coal " miners began re
turning to work four days, ahead
of time set for ending six-state
strike that involved 218,000 per
sons at its peak.
3. The national total of persons
bn strike or not working because
1afs fwmrtlax tiro m nKtit liO
000, including ,the miners and
about half of the 33,000 long
shoremen originally on strike.
AFL Pursues
Hot' Lumber
PORTLAND. Ore Oct. 18.-P)-
AITj lumber workers, their picket
ing stalemated by growing court
injunctions, cruised after "hot
lumber" today in an effort to
implement their five-state strike.
At Aberdeen, where an anti
picket injunction was made perm
anent last night, cars of AFL
members trailed a few lumber
loaded trucks from CIO plants.
Once dumped at the destination,
the AFL said, the lumber lay idle.
The report carried out earlierfton
lon warnings that carpenters an
building workers would not touch
any lumber from the strikebound
northwest.
chief pigeon executioner failed to
appear against him.'
No complaint, no evidence, rul
ed Magistrate Joseph A- McDev-
"You don't have i to cry; pop,"
he told Harry A. Hayward, dis
traught by his first arrest
"I only fed half, a bun," said
Hayward. : ! ,
"I wasn't advised of the hear
ing," protested Herbert M. Pack
er, chief of the division of hous
ing and sanitation assigned to ex
terminate the virus-infected pig
eons. "Had I known, I would have
dropped everything to prosecute
thtf man."
l Meantime, the battle that has
divided the city of brotherly love
continued despite the pigeon, kill
ers ordinance ' victory. Pigeon
lovers approved as humane two
Cjt Packer's traps, and fired a
petition at. Mayor Bernard Sam
uel for repeal of the ordinances,
i The pigeons continued to dine
on the; steps of city hall.
Editorial Writer1 :
Paha UN Charter -
PORTLAND, Oce Oct 18-(P)-
The atom bomb already has out
dated the work of the United Na
tions conference in San Francis
co last spring, Philip IL Parrish,
editor of the Oregonian's editorial
page, told a civic club today;
"It will not serve for peace and
it will not prevent war," he said
of theUnited Nations charter. :
Utility Strike
Hits Michigan,
groups and alone. They klllest
them in children's homes and hos
pitals, burying the living 'isi
graves, throwing them into flames,
stabbing them With bayonets
poisoning them, conducting ex
periments upon them, extracting
their blood for the use of the Ger
man army, throwing them ins
prison and gestapo torture cham-f
bers -and concentration c a m p
where the children tiled from
hunger, torture and epidemic dis
eases." i , t
- In 1 the' Nuernberg . trials,', ttua
basic, points have been laid doraa
for the court's guidance ! by the
four powers. The first stipulates
that waging a war of aggression
is a crime.; The; second provide
that common knowledge may b
accepted as evidence,
(Story also on page If)
iiified !
Command
Marshall Would
Unite Services h
Under One Head
WASHINGTON, Oct. IP
( AP) Gen. . George C Jlar
shall urged congress today lo
mersre the armv and riav v
into a single, potent military ,
force that will "command the,
kespect of the world." 1 r
ne said it must be backed by
a single, - "businesslike intelli
gence service to keep us abreast
Of what other countries are dSing
and planning. ! -
The only safe road to peace, the
army chief of staff told the sen
ate military affairs committee, ris
to be so strong that nobody can
"get & running start and over
whelm us.- ' - ; - j '$ -
As steps in that direction! ho
proposed: I I
1. Consolidation of air, land and
sea branches under a single cabi
net officer.
"2. Passage of a law requiring
the Joint chiefs of staff to draft
an over-all .military prograni
yearly for submission to th
president and later approval or
rejection by congress.
3. Substitution ! of a single,
world-wide intelligence system
for the pver-the-coffee-cup re
ports on. which he said this, coun
try depended before the war. i
k; Marshall indorsed a pending
measure by Senator Hffl (D-AIa.)
to fuse the army t and navy into
one organization, with three co
ordinate branches for air, land
and sea . !
Goes to Claim .
Polish Bride
WASHINGTON, Oct 18 -(P)
Love laughs at red tape, too.
Frank J. Kraker, 28, 'World war
hero from Cleveland, Ohio, hi
that pass do rt he needs for a inn
back to Europe and -the pretty
foi&n girl he wants to marry and
bring to the United States.
"I'm very happy about it" said
Kraker, former sergeant and
wearer of the silver star, who has
spent a week in Washington seek- .
ing some way of getting to Eu
rope to rejoin Cecylia Lanska,
cenration camp" in Germany, i
Kraker received his nassnort
late today from the state depart
ment Java Revolt
Threatened
BATAVTA. Java. Oct l.-4r
The Indonesian nationalists toda v
demanded absolute independence !
from the Dutch, asserting the al
ternative was revolution.
. Rejecting a Dutch DroDosal for
partnership in the Netherlands
empire. Dr. Mohammed Hatta, na
tionalist vice , president declared
that never for a moment will In.
donesia countenance any form of
colonial status, whatever I new
garb it asumes or whatever fancy
name is given it -4 i . p
"War or revolution raging fierce
ly for years and years will he the
only result This may be the Dutch
idea of bringing peace and order
into the country, but certainly it
will never end in Indonesia being
brought, under Dutch control," J
Hatta declared at a press confer-
ence.' ' r
DOCK STRIKE DENIED j
PORTLAND. Ore 'Oct IMR
Longshoremen here tonight denied
rumors that six Pacific coast wa
terfront unions might stage a 24-
hour strike in sympathy with. New
York strikers. !
Weather
San rraacisco
Satan i
Evffeiw
Portland
lift.
6
eo
6
VtnC Rain
S3 - tra-
' 8 .
. M M
36 JO
- as j)
Seattle
Wlllanwtte river -3 J ft.
FORECAST from VS. weather bu
reau. McNary field, Salem) : Local
morning fog, clearing to scattered
clouds after 10:30. W aimer this after
noon, mgaeac to degrees
Proposed
U4