rv n t i III-' Mf TUT) lTini"3 Patton Rites Set For i I ' . I . : - : -i Luxemboui Soma of our western town sever teem to grow up. They want to pose as reiki of the old west of the fun-toting, rip-roar-Ing, hell-for-leather west, most of which never was. Legend always exaggerates, and the wild west which survives In western movies and western adventure stories is the magnified glorification of a west which was by no means uni versal. Most of the western towns were drab, dull, uneventful. The holdups and the shooting scrapes were occasional, just as they are today. Only in the mining settle ments was there any steady run of killings. There the combination of gold and liquor, of greed and re venge, kept the crime chart at fever stage. But this pose of being wild west, of being tough and primitive, teems to have a grip on some of our cities, until even the respect- , SDie elements, wno reaiiy ar in big majority, accept the pose as cenuin and meekly acauiesce. This observation is prompted by a recent report of the grand jury of Klamath county respecting en forcement of gambling laws in Klamath Falls. The authorities ' . t t J were recenuy crc.ea uuwn w n wT law violators and confiscated slot JrOStmeil WOfK machines. The grand jury, after 'commending the district attorney and state police for vigilance "in detecting and suppressing viola tion (Continued on editorial page) By Richard Ai OTteran - HEIDELBERG, Germany, Dec : 22-vP)-Past sorrowing lines of his comrades in arms, the body of Gen. George Smith Patton, jr., was borne tonight to ancient Villa Reiner, where the warrior will lie in state until funeral services tomorrow. . Patton, one of the most vivid figures in American military history, will be laid to rest Christmas eve in a JJS. military cemetery at Hamm, Luxem bourg, in soil hallowed by the blood of his fellow fighting men in the gallant U.S. third army. The steel casket, draped with the banners of the UJS. third, seventh and 15th armies, was placed in the oak-panelled drawing room of the villa. The spacious room was filled with fresh roses and carnations flown in from France. The somber tones of an or--gan, played In an upstairs room by Sgt Joseph Crosby of Cor vallis, Ore, broke the solemn silence. NINETYIFTH YEAB 16 PAGES Salem, Orecjon; Sunday Morning, December 23. 1945 - Price 5c No. 133 Ilolld SL V S """""" . .. e '.- inangiea g I Today ', At dusk descended over this old university city, a regulation army ambulance beating ' the body moved out of the yard of the ;130th station hospital, where Patton died late yesterday. A staff car and three ; military jeeps, flashing red lights escort ed the machine. 4 Silent American soldiers stood stiffly at attention, their arms raised in salute, as the proces siori wound through -iihe twist ing' cobblestone streets. Stolid Germans wat c h e d unemotion ally.) I . ' Patton's comrades will con duct Episcopalian services to morrow in ancient Christ church of Heidelberg. fe; Mrs. Patton, who flew to her husband's bedside after the au tomobile accident which para lyzed him, will attend the ser vices with her brother, Freder ick Ay er of Boston, Mass., who home for Christmas was running flew here several days ago." It ghort of I time today, with little was Mrs. Patton's wish that her hope for newcomers to western ; husband be buried m tne sou norts which have about 168.000 Stranded GIs TTotal 168,000 Remains of 'Navy Truck Little Hope Seen For Servicemen Left on Coast k . ; ! I - 1 : SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 22-(JPi The army's ' "operation s Santa Claus to get Pacific warriors ::. he 'did so much to liberate. Today to Deliver Christmas Mail Staff Sergeant Storms Sweep Pacific Coast, Warnings Up By the Associated Ptcm Gales swept areas of the Cali fornia, Oregon and Washington coast today, while heavy rain throughout most coastal regions became a hazard to highway travel. Two disturbances were traced by the weather bureau in the east ern Pacific, and storm warnings were issued along the northern California, Oregon and Washing ton coast A small craft warning was In effect off touthern CaU fornl.' " ' The weather bureau reported a disturbance which -formed about 600 miles west-southwest of San Francisco brought on the gales along the California coast Storm warnings from Point Conception to Cape Blanco, Oregon, have been extended to Sunday noon, j An earlier storm, which cen tered about 300 miles off the As toria coast today, was moving northward. Southeasterly gales in Washington and Oregon resulted. The warnings were extended to Include inland waters of Washington. For the first time en Sunday la many years mall will be de livered today In the residential districts ef Salem. This an nouncement was made late Sat arday by Postmaster AI Gragr. The delivery will clear eat the heavy backlog ef Christmas eard and letter mall received late Saturday and early this morning. Delivery of parcel pest mall win be made today as It was last Sunday. While it was thought all out going package mall had been re ceived earlier, considerable was taken In Saturday afternoon. At time I the line of persons waiting In the lobby was so long - that a second parcel post win dow was opened. Faces Charge Of Espionage SAN RAFAEL, Calif., Dec 22 P)4A good looking army air cprps staff sergeant is held in solitary : confinement at nearby TTamOtAn flp'M th armv ctatMl tw rHVi .nvirnr and navy headquarters. against his country and dealmg I San Francisco area had the with German espionage agents. mImm ontVinH-ro tka orsr Hw I OOUfc ,VW, W1UJ OIW W move Housing Looks Dark to Snell I "It looks as though things may get worse before they get better," Gov. Earl Snell averred Satur day as he discussed need for housing facilities . for ; returning servicemen. "I have received letters from mayors of many Oregon cities which Indicate that there is not enough room for many of the men now returning home," Snell declared. The letters were In re- sponse to a request Dy we gov- ctavtrt xrrnnlM m:11 ernor that mayors survey housing conditions and appoint commit- Pays $11,000 BonilS places to live. Epliraim Tutt's Creator Dies After Illness NEW YORK, Dec. 22 -AV Ar thur C. Train, 70, lawyer, novel 1st and creator of "Mr. Ephriam Tutt, a fictional character whose corporeal existence was taken for granted by countless readers, died today in Memorial hospital after a year's Illness. Train, reelected last week as president of the national insti tute of arts and letters, had been in the hospital several times since spring undergoing a series of operations. He was a native of Boston. Equally capable as a lawyer and writer, Train received his greatest tribute as an author last year when Ephriam Tutt, fic tional lawyer with the stovepipe hat became the subject of a legal wrangle. Train and Charles Scribner's Sons, publishers of "Yankee Law yer," were sued in supreme court by an attorney who charged that Mr. Tutt's failure to materialize ii- the flesh constituted fraud. awaiting ; transportation. Army land navy officials ex plained that over-taxed transpor tation facilities were assigned on "first come-first served? basis and that the thousands, arriving from now until Christmas day had lit tle hope 1 of getting on a train or plane going east of the Rockies un til after Dec 25. With indications that the port cities of 1 San Francisco, Los An geles, Seattle, Portland, Tacoma and Sani Diego would likely hav at least 150,000 stranded men of both services on Christmas, thous ands of turkey dinner Invitations for the veterans poured into army jS n SAN DIEGO,! Dee, 22. Pictured is the nvy ammunition trnek which exploded on the coast highway aear l Jells, Calif. One thousand persons' were left homeless by the flaming explosion. Rockets, depth charges and shrapnel shells ripped through Torrey Pines and Camp Callaa housing centers. tmsxhing every window and leaving etrery house uninhabitable. Empty shells and (at extreme right) can be seen an unexploded shell.' Intermational Soandphoto) .... ! Er aven to 39,000 U. Si Ito Ofifer; 1 1 . ... I EiiroDeah Rfefueees! Yearly I ; O 1 I 1 east today and 3348 arriving by ship. The navy's backlog rose to nearly 9000. J About 45,000 soldiers, sailors and marines are . scheduled to be brought ;to. western ports by the Pacific transport fleet in the navy's "magic carpet" operation ! from now until Dec 26. - Christmas trees on. all ships and piers and at all camps where vet erans are billeted, distribution of presents, entertainment by-crivu? ian nmfMinni1i fia nroll fiarm entertainers and, most Important, f ffinrnnd 11Kn1 innlnA&t ICOnflrmed It. in the elaborate plans to make the ,Tv never mentioned it before," delay pleasant. - luie acwr scuo. aiayuc same pw in aaMtinn w. win pie will think I shouldn't have to send to Germany information I church services. Everything I dpne it I was only doing what partment, Identified him as 30-year-old Frank Hirt, formerly of North Babylon, Long Island, N. Y., tod? more recently of Petaluma, Calif, r :',". "It Is expected that he will be tried by an army courts martial within the next month at Hamil ton field," the statement said. Sgt Hirt native of the United States, j lived with his grandpar ents' in Germany for many years. He enlisted in the U.S. air corps sooit after returning to the Unit ed States. ; i ST He is accused specifically, of conspiring with German agents in Europe and Brazil to obtain and Joe E. Brown Dropped Comedy To Kill Japs. General Reveals j COLUMBUS, O., Dec. 22.-53-How Joe E. Brown switched roles from actor to fighter and, killed two Japs in a foray on northern Luzon was related by the comedian today for the first time. - ! : I i 1 -,! .The incident was disclosed by Major Gen. Robert S. Beight- er, commander of the 37th (Ohio) Quotas Remain Same Under! Brown reluctantly about VS. military airplanes. Sailors Take TcLxicab East possible through tlves of the men and special pay advances are being made so ev erybody will have some funds. CHATTANOOGA, j Tenn- Dec 22-4ty-Four Atlanta sailors and one; from Chattanooga licked the transportation problem and came home for Christmas by making a shuttle taxicab trip from the west coast ; I f; r-v,o .o tnA u the state of Oregon Not From Qioice! The Stateaman'a Sunday comic section b missing to day but not from choice. It will return in full next Sun day, and we hope from then on the supply of still-ecdrce newsprint will be such that, well never have to pass up dandle and our other comic friends again. j j STAYTON, Dec 22-(Special)-Chrisunas bonuses aggregating $11,000 were distributed to 50 em ployes of the Paris, Woolen' mills, according to J. B. Powell owner. All employes who have been with the company since July 1, 1945, through December 15, re ceived a bonae at the rate of 10 per cent of their yearly earnings from January 1 through December 15. Animcl Crodccrs By WARKEN GOODRICH I mJ toy could I borrow one of your itocJkins for tne Is beins done to nut every one else: was doing trying communications to rela-P neP wm war." : "Besides," he added, "the Japs were shooting at me." ! And they were, reported Gen eral Beightler, who was host to Brown when he 'visited the 37th troops last June in . his entertain ment tour. He said: i "One of our men standing be side. Brown was shot by a Jap sniper and wounded.1 Brown and Beightler had a re union last night on the stage of a local theater, where the actor at the WWte 13 playin m show? "Harvey " X was U1C1C Hk DdK'iwa. wiu Oreson Man to Receive Honor For! Volunteers ,An Oregon man, to represent t w nA volunteer, unpaid members of the unobtainable. ift a, d"win nxt In Dallas they transferred to Z ,T 1' vloolOR' another cab which took them to stale selective service director, an- Atlanta. Harris made the hop nouncedhere Saturday, fmm th rwria Htvfto rhntta. Qregon representative will nooga on a bus. be chosen from among 101 volun- m . ..iA- u I i w iwve scrveu va iucu tuc uiy cash was iusue ut uus i. - i, . . , , ; ... days and cost the sailors $55 Hthe inception of the piece. .-.&? I - on.L j : wi. v.u i (VU. IUWU1 WW US UC1U Ul tVia ATomitilfA A mi rv Ami TSum rarreli Urges Safe - Iday with Mrs. Earl Snell, wife Tln'vlnfy Ovor TfhliMva K Oren's governor, picking the -""r- .Z?ZZ7i - numberifrom a hat aeCTeiary ox wvefvoo o. ected will be no Farrell, Jr, Saturdajt issued an ni-tpi- anA 1mv. the Christmas holiday season. At- tentlon was called to the unsatis factory condition of highways in many parts of .the state. Both car . drivers and pedes-1 trians were asked to observe traf fic regulations, o ington about January 15,, Unemployme CathoKc, Lutheran, Episcopal :nt Hits New High Churches Plan Yule Services Christmas day church services in Salem will be held by Cath olic, Lutheran and Episcopal churches, and midnight services will usher in the Christmas day at St Paul's Episcopal and Amer ican Lutheran churcheev " The first mass will ' be cele brated Christmas day at ain. at St Vincent de Paul's church. It will be sung by the children's choir and win be followed by low mass at 7:30 and the second sung mass, "the Mass of the Shepherds, wiU be at 9 o'clock. The last will be a low man at 10:30 which win be followed by benediction. Hisses are Scheduled The first mass at St Joseph's will be a solemn high mass at 7:30 followed by low masses at 8:30 and 9:45 and the last mass will be sung at 11. Christmas carols will be sung at each of .Oregon's unemployment reach ed a. new post-war high last week as 24.Q67 payments were made to those without Jobs, the state un employment compensation com mission reported Saturday. Not since April, 1938, j have so M.1 . , j,t I many weekly checks been sent out the masses. Confessions wul beJT7j,,J", . : hMrri Simdaw mrui Hi . . by the . coinmissioiu . , .. : . V i. ..j The number of payments com Joseph's from 10 to 530 and I nrmm ,M . XVMv aa fiom 7 to tZQ pjxwwblle at St I -1 VT C ZZZ ended ; October 6. 8658 for the week ended November 3, and 18, 383 for the week ended December 1. More tSas. $400,000 was paid this -week, and officials said the amount showed no signs of falling how Brown Went into combat j Elaborating today, General Beightler said; . j Joe was Worrying the life out of me, because I personally felt responsible for his safety and he insisted on staying up at the front when he was j not putting on a show. ' ' ' "I finally asked him if he would like to help capture the town of Bambang, and Joe thought that would be swell. "I put him into the lead tank. and the attack got underway." j As the spearhead broke into the town, the general related, Joe popped out of the tank and began firing a carbine at the Japanese. During the attack, a machine gun in Brown's tank exploded and a soldier was stunned. When the skirmish was over, the colonel and Joe had a friendly argument over who got two Japs lying near them. The Gi's set tled it by .awarding to Brown flag one Jap carried. Vincent's the hours will be from 330 to (30 and 7 to pjn. on-Monday.-; . --iM ' - Mass on Christmas day at In dependence will be celebrated at 9 ain. f in St Patrick's- church, which Is a mission of St Joseph s jpring when con- Ui i IMJCUS ttructiotv lumbering - and other seasonal -operations will be re- - The American Lutheran church revemll to ll ta 5 Volumt o'clock Monday night Then , on Christmas morning at 11 o'clock J Igalhcr will be held. . Central Lutheran church wiU hold its festival program at 10 o'clock, Christ's Lutheran church service will be at 10:30, and St Salem ; EuseiM - rorusna Seattle Max. S2 - 85 40 - II Via. , ss 38 .33 33 S6 Rain j03 At JO - .33 San Franelaeo . S3 Willamette river J ft. forecast (from UJS. weather bu Jnfin! Tjithenn foctttral unHM miu. McNarv field. Salem 1 : Cloudy Occasional iini ram tooajv ana ihiuih Abundant Meal Awaits Patients i I . - , Christinas; Day CORVAIXIS NATAL HOS PITAL. Dee. 22 - (Special) -There isn't any half-way meas ure in providing an abundant dinner for the naval veterans here on Christmas. Here's the dinner menu: Shrimp cocktail, sauce a la Benson, saltlnes, Jumbo olives, stuffed celery, sweet mixed pickles, roast young torn tur key, Virginia style baked ham, wmpped iron potatoes, can died j sweet potatoes, buttered fresh asparagus : tips, iceberg lettuce quarters, French dress ing, mayonnaise, hot Parker house rolls, butter, plum pud ding, 1 hard sauce, fresh - frozen strawberry sundae, cigars, cig arettes, coffee, milk. STATE TOPS E BOND GOAL PORTLAND, Ore, Dec 22-ff) Oregon's -Victory loan E bond sales topped the state's quota to- day. Total sales, of $22,858,659 were 101.6 per cent of the quota, state war finance officials said. FLIGHT TO ENGLAND NEW YORK, Dec &2-(VCar- rying 21 passengers, a Pap Amer lean World i Airways clipper; took off today, inaugurating the .com pare new schedule of daily flights between New York and England. BNRXA Ut "FULL STRIDE" WASHINGTON, Dec 22 HP Recent American contributions have enabled UNRRA to reach "the full stride of actkm," Direc tor General Herbert H. Lehman said today, t ; TO RESTORE POWER MOSCOW, I Dec. 22 -m- The Soviet Union will " complete the restoration ; of all war-damaged electric power stations by 1948, Planned Policy WASHINGTON, Dec President Truman today directed the entry Into the United States within. .. established immigration quotas of European war refugees at the rate of about 39,000 a year. Most of them. will come from Thousands Wait ' Ati Depots for f Transportation By, the Associated Press . The worst traffic jam in his tory spread throughout the nation last night as servicemen, civil ians and brand-new dischargees surged into trains, buses and planes in a gigantic home-for-Christmas movement' Determined to celebrate the gayest Christmas in five years with their families at home, tens of thousands waited ' in endless lines at ticket windows, pushed : into - buses, stood ' for hours Jammed in the aisles of trains, and some even slept overnight at airports in the hope mat someone might cancel a reservation. Ignere Warning No longer , obligated to. ask themselves "is this trip neces sary," the holiday travelers ig nored warnings by railroads that . space was at a premium, that mil itary travel was at its highest peak - in history despite the end of the war. Travel reached such a volume that the New York Central sys tem suspended ticket sales at a number of points "until further notice," i and in Washington all lines shut off ticket sales to ci vilians for 30 to 90 minutes at a time, i Air lines had 40 to 50 persons on waiting lists for each flight Telephone jams developed as thousands besieged railroad sta tions for reservations. ' 15,808 Left In Chicago, a Union depot sta tion master said 15,000 were left in the - station last night when trains pulled out without them because of lack of space. Shore patrols and military police sup plemented regular policemen in keeping order at the stations but minor stampedes - still were re ported. In Madison, Wis, a sailor 22-iJPf I suffered ji mangled leg when a surging platform crowd acciden tally pushed - him under the wheels o a train. Aggravating the national 1 tie up was shortage of equipment re ponea oy au ran lines as a re sult of wartime deterioration and central and eastern Europe and the Balkans where approximately I military demands. 2,000,000 persons are said to be I - (Additional details on naze 61 homeless. I - ; Theeffectof the order Utore-ITVT,4T J quire that the regular immigra- j 1 1 CW ILuglcinCl be filled with persons whom the 4jl V0ifl llttf war drove away frpm their homes ' VA and whof for one reason or anoth- LONDON, Dec. 22.-WVM o s t er, are not returning. There will delegates . to the United Nations be little; room left for other na- preparatory commission appeared uonais oi mose countries wno may tonight to favor some small New want to come here England community in the vicinity "This (is the opportunity for 0f Boston as the permanent home America to set an example for 0f the world peace agency, the rest of the world in coopera- The New York City area was tion towards alleviating human considered a close second, but misery,"! the president said In a other areas still were in the run statement ; ning, and many delegates said they Along with the statement the stm had orwm mind wniie nouse maae puduc an om cial directive to six federal agen cies to put the-plan into effect The shift to New England de veloped in informal discussions after the commission voted 20 to 5 to establish the permanent head- 5 RAF Men Ambushed By Indonese Rebels BAfAVTA, Java, Dec 22-ipy- British troops and tanks battled Indonesians in the troublesome Kramat- area of Batavia tonight after five RAF men had been killed in ambuscades there earlier. Four men were killed and two men wounded when an RAF truck was fired upon in the Kramat sec tion, the British announced, and the Dutch news agency Aneta said that later a flight lieutenant was wounded .fatally and his Jeep driyer hurt. when they drove through the same area. ders as Denver, San Francisco. and the Black Hills area. Panama Kevolt te? of tT- Iganization in the eastern United A .J,sj. . States,:thus eliminating such bid- mu tV unrest PANAMA CITY, Dec 22 -JP)-Former President Arnulfo Arias was arrested today by government authorities on charges of instigat ing a short-lived revolutionary at tempt at Colon last night in w.'ch seven persons were killed and seven wounded. The arrest of Arias and a na- Ickes Urnes Hawaii as State WASHINGTON, Dec 22.-CTV The admission of Hawaii "in the tionwide roundup of his followers state in' the union was recom- was ordered after a meeting of the mended today by Secretary of the cabinet S called by President En- Interior Ickes. - rique Jiminez. Felice reinforce- The people of the Padfic ocean ments from Panama City were outpost already have voted in the Hurried to Colon, at the northern ratio of 2 to 1 in favor of state mimA " 9 ..j) am h -1 . - official statement said the situa- The final decision on admittance tion was. "perfectly under con-1 will be un to conaresa which will trot" Simplified Tax Form to Lower State Revenue Mnimum of 3 check up on the territory's quali fications through a committee visit I - i. pected. Not long ago be said thai he.-doubted whether he would make any recommendation on the issue before next year. , State income tax revenues for 1946,1 based on 1945 incomes, will be reduced at least three per cent by use of the new simplified in come tax. form approved, by the 1945 legislature, state tax .com missioners said here Saturday. "'Sending out - the , short 'forms will jstart, this week. ! The law providing, for use -of such; forms was held valid by the state; supreme court here Friday In a decision on a suit brought by F H.-Young, manager of Ore gon Business & Tax Research, Inc Young contended that the bill signed by presiding officers of senate and -house of representa tivei and hj the governor was not lie one approved by the legis lature. , . A : . ': Under the new law individuals ed gross Income may take a stan dard reduction of the federal tax, plus per cent- of the adjusted income, except certain taxpayers, including estates and . trusts and those Who file returns .for less than Sri 12 months period. ;: - ' : These who have adjusted gross income: of more than $5000 can not use the simplified computa tion but may use the standard reduction of federal tax, pies 1350. U v : . The exemption for single per sons is reduced from 1300 to $750 j a year while exemptions for mar ried persons remain at $1500. De pendents, based on July 1 of the tax year,' also remain at -$300. Officials said that while ap proximately a million short forms would! be printed only. 400,000 would be sent to individual tax- - SSejBSSSSBSBl 61MME A QUICK HAIRCUT AND SWAVEJVEOKJLYOOT jZfl I TtEFT UNTIL - I I nV J I CHRrSTMAS j ; i - wfil be at 1030. the news agency Tass said today with,' not more than 503 adjust payers,;'.;.:; temperarar ss aetr. --