v .1 . . ; HD 3- : U L1UJ (Story in C o 1 um n 3) rn rx 1 Hearings!, Scheduled 3i re-raii do m, 1 , - 1 ) 'V ;t x I - ' . y v . I I v . . ' '', ' I t . V :- . ( i BAN FRANCISCO, Dec 20. CONVICTED OF MANSICGHTER--Mrs. Annie Irene Mansfeldt (left), being led from courtroom here last night shortly after a Jury convicted her of manslinghter In the gmn slaying of Mrs. Vada Martin, 36-year-old nurse (AP Wlre- phoU to The Statesman). (Story There was something plaintive in the tone of comments of Euro peans following the decision of the UNO preparatory commission to locate the new world capital within the United States. The London News-Chronicle, which had stronair ODDOsed such a location, remarked: The decision shows to what extent the political center of gra vity has shifted. North America and A&U have grown in import ance. Continental Europe takes a back seat" l The Yugoslav delegate, S toy an Gavrilovic, said: ' The main issue is out of the way. resulting in a shift of the center of world politics to the new world. It had to come, but many Europeans were reluctant to ad mit that Europe Is no longer the Thus is cxmflrmed the prophecy of Bishop Berkeley in his verses entitled "On the Prospect of nanting Arts and Learning in America:" ' "Westward the course of empire takes its way; The first four acta already past. The fifth shall close the drama with the day; Time's noblest offspring is the last." I Of the virtue of modesty Americans have never been very richly endowed. From the time the republic got well on its feet our . people have . realized they "had something" on. this conti rent which Europe (Continued on Editorial Page) Columbia Empire Industries Elects Inches President PORTLAND, Dec. 20.-(-Co- lumbia Empire Industries, Inc. today elected Lloyd Riches, Salem, president. The new head of the organiza tion, which expects to resume its pre-war program of publicizing Columbia Empire products and industries, is ; vice president and general manager of Western Paper Converting company. - . Other - officers, all from Port land, are: PhD E. HodeL first vice president; J. A. Brewster, second ice president;- Henry H. Pein, secretary-treasurer. CHECK. DOUBLE CHECK ' WASHINGTON, Dec 20 -VPf The senate, rushing through a mass of legislation today trying to get 'away for the Christmas holiday; passed a resolution call ing for an end of butter rationing. OPA ended butter rationing Nov. J4. Anlma! Craclten ' By WAXEEN GOODRICH "When can I ttart shaving (TTP J Soviet Papers tKDGDOa mm on pare I), . Demand Land From Turkey MOSCOW, Dec. 2H)-De- mands that Turkey cede a stra tegic 180-mile stretch of her Black Sea coast to Russia were published prominently today the Big Three foreign ministers conferred again on problems vi tal to world peace. U.S. Secretary James F. Byrnes, British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin and Foreign Commissar V. M. Molotov met for two hours and 20 minutes today. The demands for the area were made in a letter from S. R. Djan ashia, doctor of historical science, and N. Berdzenishvili, both mem bers of the Science academy of the Georgian republic, declaring: . . "We a p p e a 1 to world opinion about the situation of our ancient land, taken by Turkey. "We are not talking about some small . territorial dispute. This concerns the seized cradle of our people a crime which has cut in two our living national body. The Georgian people must get back their land." Salvation Army Lists 513 to Receive Help Five hundred thirteen persons are on the Salvation Army, Salem post, Christmas list this year, Capt R. B. Lesher said Thursday as proceeds from the Christmas cheer kettles were totaled. In 124 family groups, this' cumber in-' eludes small children, widows, the aged, the ill, those who have met with other misfortune which has kept them from earning a living or enough to provide more than the bare necessities, Lesher said. - ' The kettles, . which' hang on downtown street corners during the Christmas shopping season, to date have had SI 172.24, largely in small coins, dropped into them. Occasionally a large bill is shov ed beneath the wire netting, but $171 in such larger. - bills and checks have been-taken into-the citadel offices. Last year, when many types of 'merchandise cost less, the Salvation Army- Christ mas Cheer .-fund here amounted to about $1750, Captain Lesher said. . " " f-: feather Wax. 14 -S3 t 40 ' Mia. li 2S 39 M ' - 44 Rain SaIciii .49 Eugene Portland .24 -43 SeatU San Francisco 4 - 45 Willamette river 1J a c rORECAST from VS. weather ba- beau. McNry fiehf. Salem): Modetite to liht rains througout the day. Tem peratures will remain ingnuy aoovt freezing. Maximum temperature 33 de grees. Salem's Service Victory Clothing Collection for To' conduct the-Victory Cloth ing Collection in the Salem area for overseas relief, representa tives of Salem Ki wants. Rotary and Lions clubs - have already completed over-all committee or ganization and secured a down town collection dspot, F. G. Star re tt, general chairman for -the drive to be held here in January, announced Thursday. - The new R. L. Elfstrom store at 840 Court st .formerly Ham ilton's) will provide receiving space for the collection of gar ments and letters. Henry Kai ser, nationwide chairman of the coPection, which is a feature of the United Nations relief and re habilitation administration's plan for aiding the - needy in war- 16 Mounting WASHINGTON, Dec 20.-)- Tire rationing will end at 12:01 a. m. on Ji.n. 1, price adminis trator Chester Bowles announced tonight. j U j He said the rationing program can:f be terminated then- ''because production of " tires," particularly passenger) tires, the shortage of which has been most acute, .has increased: steadily during the past two months, reaching : an output for;.; this quarter of about 11,000, ooo;tt it. ' li'l -: Bowles said OPA and the civil ian! production administration had agreed that rationing; ; could be lifted when production reached this level. f - . ' Holders of tire purchase cer tificates 'will have through Dec 31 to turn in ration coupons to dealers and obtain passenger or truck tires before unrationed sales begin. j ' j - f ; ' After tomorrow, no additional certificates will be -issued except in 'emergency cases. i Bowles warned that .termination of rationing does not mean there is -an ample supply of tires to meet all; requests. Tor many months,: he added, "it ; will j remain important that motorists' continue to do every thing possible to avoid excessive wear 'and tear on tires." . I "The prohibition on spare tires for , new! cars will be continued, along with restrictions on white side wall tires and tire exports, Mac Denies Intent to Resign TOKYO, Friday, Dec. 21-- General MacArthur : today flatly denied he had any intention of re signing his post as supreme com mander of the Allied powers. The denial was - included in a : state ment which declared that Russian participation in the occupation of Japan is a matter for other de cision than my own MacArthurs press relations of fice issued the statement in reply to questions concerning a broad cast from Tokyo by Larry Tighe. American Broadcasting corp. cor Tighe said that MacArthur told the U.S. state department if he were not let alone and if Russia were allowed any further partici pation in occupation! affairs he would resign. - I f ; fl. ; - .: Geri. PattonTaking for Worse -li!-. Heidelberg, . Germany, Dec, 20 -(fl- Gen. George S. Pattpn, Jri today contracted a respiratory infection, taking a turn for the worse, and tonight's medical bul letin declared "his i general con dition fls not satisfactory.' f! Army sources at the 130th sta tion hospital, - however, . said there is no cause for alarm" and no immediate indication that the partly-paralyzed Patton might be contracting pneumonia. Clubs stricken countries, has asked this year that a letter be written in warm neighborly spirit to accom pany every garment f to its new owner;- " 'i . L .. On the general committee as signed ' the task of obtaining at least one garment and one letter from' every resident of this area to" serve as a gift for overseas people are Starrett, ; Ed Majek, Louis duBuy and Lyle Leighton. Leif Bergsvik heads fhe publicity committee, , with Clay Pomerby, Bob 'Fischer, Dr. CTarles Durden, Gene Vandeneynde 'and "Julian Burroughs. Forrest f Breakey is chairman of the educational com mittee, with Lee Ohmart, Harvey Aston,; Frank W. Test and Mrs. Ora Mclntyre Hutcheon as com mittee I members, r I WNETY-FIFTH YEAH Rubber Output Combine PAGES President Signs i! WASHINGTON, Dec. 20. President Truman (seated) signs Into law ' as congressional leaders look on. Murdock (D-Utah), Bep. Carter ; Sep. Jlliaa BL 'WhUtingien (D Coast Cities Parties for Over 100.000 . SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 20-" (-West coast port cities were planning Christmas parties to day with more than 100,000 service men from the Pacific' as guests because they can't : get home; I Nearly 120,000 soldiers, sailors and marines are looking for rides from the western ports, and the pre-Christmas rush is bringing them in by ship at an average of about 15,000 a day. Hopes of moving 25,000 . by rail and a few thousand more by air, bus and automobile daily were dampened by these developments: . Severe cold and snowstorms east i of the Rocky mountains have slowed the train schedules, and jdelayed airplane flights. Shortage of railway cars con tinues to be critical because of a' delay in construction of 1200 government troop sleepers, ex- Gen. Marshall Lands in Qiina i : ' U ' SHANGHAI, Dec. 20-(Gen-eral - Marshall arrived today on his mission of peace, for China as rximmunists in Chungking spurred hppesjfor unity by asking for an immediate halt to all hostilities. ; ' Hardly had -Marshall's 'plane landed after a flight from Manila than word came from Chungking that the communists not only were ready to stop fighting but were- prepared to, make conces sions for permanent peace; It furnished an auspicious start for the general, who will; fly to Nanking tomorrow for the open ing of talks with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek. j i to Overseas Relief Howard Maple heads the col lection committee, on which; also servei Harold Davis, Chester Hamblm and Ray Morrow. Clar ence Shrock is chairman of trans portation, with Kenneth Wilson, Christ Seely and Dale Flippo. Chairman of packing and . ship ping is Floyd Seams ter, who .will be assisted by Virgil Hume, Lee Haskins, Kenneth G. Manning. (Hothing security committee chairman is E. C Charlton, Iwho will be assisted ' by A. A. Guef froy. : : 1 ;r;;V:'::. A;; .;;-, E. H. Craven heads the special assignments committee. H. A, Simmons, Urlin Page and Forrest Stewart are members of the com mittee. H. L. Braden has been named .reports secretary, j. Conduct POUNDDD Scdextu Oregon. Friday Morning. December Agencies Reorganization Bill -- - : .; ?S Iq group j (left te right) Sen. -Manacso (D-AIa), Comptroller-general Miss). AP. wirephete to The Statesman) - Move to Provide Yule tide "pected to be ready by Dec' L C E. Peterson, vice president in charge of Southern Pacific pas senger traffic, said strike con ditions were, holding up deliv ery of the cars. t , . . . c . However, Peterson said the . Southern - Pacific had cancelled coach space on eastbound trains for all civilians except members of servicemen's families. San Francisco's backlog: of service men increased to 51,000, while the 1 number in Portland soared to 6030. Similar crowded conditions! in Tacoma, Seattle and the Los Angeles area ac counted for-the others. Los Angeles moved 12 trains yesterday with 4661 men, flew 356 eastward and plans to' add two army! planes to fly a total of 480 daily. Port officers in San Francisco arranged Christmas parties with Red Cross bags of gifts for Congress Votes . , $100 'Subsidy' to Pay for Melons WASHINGTON, Dec Congress cut a 1100 melon todayj f or Rastus Davis. r ; ' One hot July morning Rastus strolled ont te his watermelon; patch near Winona, Tex and noticed: (a) that 300 of his prize melons were missing,' and (b) that a well-beaten path led from; his field to nearby Camp Fannin' military reservation.. Rinds and seeds completed the chain of circumstantial evidence. , The senate completed action, on the $100 claim today. It's up to President Truman now. ' We're Sorry, Too, But--- The' Oregon Statesman's comic section wilTbe a tem porary war. casualty Sunday, December 23. '; V With federal paper ration ing still In vogue (and with but slight if any chance for improvements in the immed iate availability of supplies even when rationing is lift ed), The Statesman is 're-s luctantly forced to take this means in order to insure con tinued publication of regu lar issues which it has not missed, I holidays and all, during the entire emergen cy. - r 1 - i .' The Sunday comics will be back in full, as a regular fea ture, on December 30 ' in TOUR HOME NEWPAFER 1651 t l i ! . i - - . --. .- i . I 21,' 1945 the agencies reorganisation bin Pat MeCarraa (D-Va), 8etu Abe Lindsay C Warren and Servicemen stranded 'service men." A jitter bugging Santa . Claus has been added ' io the entertainment group aboard the port's welcom es vesaci. r I jjz dock, for a Christmas day show in the event service men have to remain aboard ship for lack of space in staging areas. Ad ditional staging areas are to be opened. I The army ordered Christmas in . quarantine for 1861 service men aboard the troopship Grun dy,! which debarked one man ill with smallpox at Astoria, Ore. The vessel was ordered to put in at Portland, where it will be un der! quarantine until Dec 26. - Among 13 Oregon men on the vessel's passenger list are T5 Walter F.' Ebner,' Woodburn; T5 Dor an E. Hockbaum, New berg, and T5 Irvine O. Smith, Albany. . i 3 More Fliers Safe in China TIENTSIN, China, Dec 2HJPh Three more survivors of U.S. ma rine I plane crashes were brought here: today by a rescue team which was fired upon three times by un identified snipersJ '.- i The rescuers persuaded the Chi nese; communists to -accept a re ward of 2,000,000 in virtually- worthless i Japanese puppet cur rency for the safe deliverance of the airmen. They .said they were wined and dined by the communists. - : '. Camp Adair to Go on Block,! Industry May Use Facilities Camp Adair will be on the mar- j ket ? as surplus, the; war depart-; ment j announced Thursday In Washington. : , 4 ' - In Portland offices of the sur plus property adniinistration no notification of the listing of Ada fe tor sale had been received Friday night.! -r,M .:; i.: V-vl.vV , First notification to . come to Salem was sent by Mrs. Dorothy E. Woodring, secretary to the late Rep, James W. Mott, who is still mamtaining Mott's office in Wash ington. . ' I.; .. - -J- - , Industrial possibilities of the camp site will be inspected today by Chester H. Spiering, Industrial field man for the Portland Cham ber of Commerce, and Chester K. Sterrett, industries manager for the Portland chamber, f With Clay Cochran, Salem Chamber of Commerce manager, and a group of businessmen from . I 1".- 7--' : ,:- ' No. 231 oard S To See Firm ' By the Associated Press President Truman stated yes terday that fact-finding .boards investigating labor disputes "should unquestionably have the right to ; examine the employer's books. This . does not mean that the government or its fact-finding board is going to endeavor to fix a rate of return for the employ er," he added. The president later told a news conference that boards also should , have power to examine a labor union's books. 'AbUitrto pay is always one of the facts relevant to the issue to an increase- in wages," the president's statement set forth. ; .The Question whether fact finding boards should consider profits and prices in connection with wage increase demands had stalled the first two such boards appointed by the administration. in the oil industry's .wage , dispute and in the General Motors strike. Without mentioning General Motors or any other industry in his statement. President Truman's statement concluded mat it would be "highly unfortunate if any party to a dispute should refuse to cooperate with a fact-finding board.", i : . Later, - the presidents state ment was handed ) to the GM fart-fijvltog. board, which was in session Charles E. Wilson, GM president, said it "would not alter the company's stand. (Additional details on page 16) O T 1 state to Lose Blanket of Ice The i icy sheath blanketing much of northwestern Oregon to day will end this afternoon, the weather bureau . forecast last night. Temperatures throughout the state generally were below freezing this morning. Baker with a minus 1 degree was a sharp contrast with Newport's ! 38 de-i grees and Roseburg's 38. Other points ' reported were Bend 23, Klamath Falls 12, Pendleton 15, Medford 31 and Portland 29. Sa lem temperature at midnight was 34 degrees. All Columbia river highway traffic was stopped at i Crown- Point Thursday. Santiam Junc tion said that roads were slippery. Bus service from the south was running one to two hours late, and schedules from Washington were delayed because of ice. SHS HOMECOMING i : Graduates of Salem high school j are invited to attend the annual homecoming Christmas program school auditorium. (Program page 10) . r APPLIANCES PRICED ! WASHINGTON, Dec 20 it Small electrical home appliances will come back on the market at approximately . the same retail prices charged before the war, ' OPA said today. . : Salem and other munidnalities in the new "Seven Cities Develop ment", organization, Spiering and sterrett are to he taken on - tour of the camp. ' Activated, in the summer of 1942 Camp Adair provided major basic training, for the 104th, 96th and 70th divisions, while the 91st have a portion of its training there and a number of separate units were based there during training prior to August, 1944. Last whiter the camp became an army depot, with prisoners of war handling a per-. tion of the work, and last June the army ground forces took over operation, of the post as an army replacement depot, service which was discontinued at Adair in Oc tober. Details" of the disposal have not yet been worked out, war depart ment spokesmen said Thursday night in Washington, Price, 5c Records To Begin Total Stranded Near 120,000 as Problem Grows ' : WASHINGTON Dec 20l-(JPy-An investigation of de lays; in homeward.' transpor tation . for ..veterans, bndins: at west coast ports was . or- dered today , by tbe senate's war investigating committee. . It called public hearings for to morrow and asked CoL J. Mon roe Johnson, director of defense transportation, to appear as the , first witness. - , - ' - Chairman 1 Mead (D-NY) " said the committee was concerned over "the bottleneck in transportation : which will prevent returning serv icemen land women who are dis embarked on the west coast from reaching their homes promptly.' Nearly 100,000 Pacifle veterans Christmas at west portTby lack of sufficient transportation eastward. 1 Port of embarkation ' officials said today troops were pouring in- to west coast ports at an estimated rate of 15,000 a day, far faster than they are moving out. Nearly 120,000 were stranded at the ports , today, many of them std aboard their ships. Secretary of War Patterson ap pealed to civilians to stay - off trains and help the army and rail roads get homeward bound troops to their destinations. - ' Kimmel Sent 'A. War Warning ; WASHINGTON- Dec 10-UPH The navy's -1941 war plans chief contended today that the Pacific fleet 'got- specific orders 10 days before Pearl Harbor which should have -sent it onto the high seas ready to fight ' ' -. i Admiral Richmond - KeRy Tur ner told the Pearl Harbor com mittee that he had assumed for days, in fact, that the , fleet was at sea until, news came of Ja pan's disaster-dealing Dec .7, 1941, raid on the anchored ships at Hawaii. At sea, he declared, was "the place for them and er Admiral Kimmers operating plan." Ad miral Husband . Kimmel was commander-in-chief fte Paci fic . fleet when . the Japanese struck. In brief, the navy department's view , here, as Turner presented it, was that navy men had talked for 25 years of a possible attack on Hawaii, there was correspon dence with Kimmel about, air de fense, and "splendid plans" were received from Hawaii; i (Additional details on page 4) lTHCienilC Cl0Se8 j SllVertOn oCllOOiS SILVERTON, Dec. 20 Silver ton schools were closed at noon Thursday because of flit which has reached the epidemic stage. There were 90 students -out of the high school classes and 160 out of the grade school. The high school students had their annual Christmas assembly Thursday' morning. The tirade program was postponed until Jan. 4. The schools will re open Jan. 2, according to ached v'. ur less the number of flu cases continue high. No serious cases were reported. s IwOULDNTTSTAYINTHE TOO L0N6,SQ -TUEEE ONLY f lSHOPCWGCV Christmas Pre-tHarh r 1 L