Wy EDITION
CITY EDITION
TODAY'S NEWS TODAY
LAME COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER.
Wearing
tat Victory
wGuinea
V.Lti.fl Fiereefv
lu!,l Beachhead
I row -
m Buna, bona
( jbtARTHUH'S HEAD
ES; Australia, Nov. 21
Km the nrth New
. ..j ,.-;ih the
L 4torr of e southwest
fcoopaim- ,,.,.
, Japanese "?""'
MSft their backs to the,
Led to s beachhead ex
miles along the co.v
t Bum and Gona and six I
to the native vi sage j
wtt. on the Bima-Kokoda
v . M the fiiriwu
c c awwa -
t .. v , Allied '
alter "uut "
, ripped Be Japanese w
... machine ffUn
ftaing them for the final!
Appear ,
st Heel oi enemy
. UtmiW in rPtriPVP the 1
12 IB buckik
aoi
ra into action yesterday
n the Allied positions,
ccf forces of enemy Zero
raked the Allied lines
boob ana macmne guu
Marines 'Take
Care Of Army
Reinforcements
HEADQUARTERS, UNITED
STATES PACIFIC FLEET, Bearl
Harbor, Nov. 20. (Delayed) UI
A group of army men who land-1
ed on Guadalcanal recently with a
big supply oi food should have
known the marines, but they got
to know them the hard way.
When the troops landed, Lieut.
DeWitt Peterkin, Jr., New York
City, said today on his return, the
marines were most solicitous for
their welfare.
Especially the malrnes showed
the troops hod to dive swiftly into
fox holes when an air raid alarm
sounded. When the first alarm
came, the troops carried out the
dive maneuver perfectly, and
emerged with the ail clear to find
that the marines had swiped their
food.
EUGENE, OREGON, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 3942
OH STREETS Sc; NSW3 STANDS Se
80, H
ItSHlNGTOX, Nov. 21. W
iiwrlsn troops on Guad-
fcil aland Id the Solomons
tidrsnced their western
U Into territory former
1 bj the Japanese.
tort to reduce the steady
on the beachhead.
L Japanese seemed prepared
i last ditch stand in pre-
positions which extend
Bout to Gona on the coast
sad! I triangular area to in-
Soputa village.
seriean troops were attack-
6 enemy on the outskirts of
rale the Australians ham-
K it strong Japanese de-
pocket tt Soputa.
MFiiblh)! Tet
etaf vas heavier than In
Pe so (ar In the southwest
lite Japanese had the
a! ol light artillery In ad-
10 taeir mortars and ma-
IBB nd they kept up an
pa ore.
P-Tinf. to the rapidly grow-
(Bed strength in the south-
Bfl South Pacific, it was an-
pl todaj that well equipped
asiano torces had arrived
pes. New Caledonia, south
r Solomons, to reinforce the
it (States trooD slremiv
&MlrK frnm C... I M
t-r-. ..u, OU.H, 111 U1C
fill bllnrf - XT
Sr.;i ecntalnwt lha nF;i.,i
FfW that strong United
Li "t re now stationed
SsiansShow Fresh
Win Attacks
November 22
'Chest' Sunday
Pastors of all churches In Eu
gene are expected to call upon
their congregations to participate
generously in Eugene's first Com
munity and War Chest campaign
this coming Sunday.
Sunday, Nov. 22 has been set
aside as "Community and War
Chest Sunday" in the city's
churches, as a day on which to call
the attention of the citizens of this
community to the 15 social welfare
and foreign War Relief appeals
merged in the united campaign.
. .Ministers are expected to an
nounce the purpose of the cam
paign and explain how, with its
$39,043.50 goal, the Community
and War Chest combines eight
local social weifare agencies, two
state organizations and five for
eign relief organizations that are
striving to maintain the home
front in Eugene and aid millions
of people in the war torn lands of
our nation's allies.
In addition the pastors are ex
pected to point out the individual's
obligation to support the agencies
represented more generously than
ever before in order to implement
the nation's war effort and also
perform their Christian responsi
bility toward aiding others.
The Community and War Chest
campaign includes the appeals of
United China Relief, Russian War
Relief, Greek War Relief, War
Prisoner's Aid Committee, British
War Relief, the Oregon Protective
Society, Boys and Girls Aid So
ciety of Oregon, the Eugene Y.
M.C.A., School Milk Fund, Boy
Scouts, Girl Scouts, Y. W. C. A.,
St. Vincent de Paul Society, Sal
vation Army and University Y.
M. C. A. The Chest appeal will
be the only campaign for these
agencies for a full year.
Solons Clash
With Jef fers
On Gas Ration
Administrator's Charge
Draws Fire From Group
Seeking Postponement
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21. 0J.B
Irate western' congressmen fighting !
a last-ditch battle to delay nation-!
wide gasoline rationing demanded
today that Rubber Administrator!
William M. Jeflere be called on the j
carpet to explain his charge that
"people who should know better" j
are financing opposition to the!
program.
Rep. Hatton W. Summers, D.,
Tex., chairman of a steering com-:
mittee directing the postponement !
drive, was bitterly critical of Jef-
fer's statement, contained in his;
"unalterable opposition" to delay- '
ing rationing beyond the Dec, I
deadline. i
"Amaied" at Statement
"I am amazed," Sumners said.!
"Such a statement is utterly uo-:
warranted."
The dignified Texans asked
newsmen not to quote him fur
ther because "I'm mad now."
Rep. Jed Johnson, D., Okla., who
served as chairman of the caucus
of 108 western congressmen who
opened the postponement drive,
paraphrased Jeffers' statement
that he was "unalterably opposed"
to postponement:
"We are unalterably opposed to
Washington bureaucrats making
unreasonable restrictions on the
country for the purpose of trying
to make people more war consci
ous. Our people already are more
war conscious than many ot the
bureaucrats.'!
Flans Not Discussed
Although all committee members
refused to discuss their plan of
action, there was growing indica
tion that 8n appeal to President
Roosevelt would be made, prob
ably by the middle of next week.
It appeared that only presidential
action could postpone the dead
line. '
The committee planned to wait
theaoutcorne of hearings before the
house interstate and foreign com
merce committee, studying war
time production and consumption
of rubber. Chairman Clarence F.
Lea, D., Cal., said his group would
consider the advisability of post
poning the rationing program at
hearings Monday and Tuesday,
Allies Advance to Outskirts
Off' ISizerte. Tunis Dri Sitter FogSnt
Enemy Hemmed
In Along
8th Army Hits
Rommel 70 Miles
From El Agheila
British Column Races
Across Desert After
Capture Of Bengasi
CAIRO, Nov. 21. m Racine
westward at a speed unequaled in
modern desert warfare, the British
Bth army today hurled its forward
elements against Marshal Rom
mel's rearguard at Agedabia, some
70 miles from the narrow El
Agheila defile.
The British, apparently making
a supreme effort to keep Rommel
from organizing a defense at
Agheila, pressed on without pause
at the heels of the enemy after
triumphantly hoisting the union
Jack over Bengasi yesterday for
the third time in this war.
Already the Bth army was half
way to Tunisia from its starting
point at El Alamein in Egypt, end
more than half way to Tripoli.
Contact was established with the
Axis rearguard at Agedabia, on
the coastal road 100 miles soulh of
Bengasi, by one of General Sir
Bernard L. Montgomery's forces
which made a beeltne across the
Libyan hump. Other 8th army
forces followed the lower route
around the hump and marched into
Bengasi.
Air Blows Struck
Supporting the two-way Allied
Nov. 2!.-MSuc-
r- 'fining heights at Stal-
lri.Il "Poriea showing
-iui me oerman
ft the night a
'is'it 5nuweasi
fc. - - me mid-
i, northeast of
F-C ninth. .
. L-. unit was
Wh killing lOOfnemen in
attack such a, the
1 cam h& . .
"ratal for several
fcs " 0!i'm?rad attacks
Cr groups were re-
fcr M m the southern
t..tare Rd cr,,mt.r
Jr height a few
I is ''.".sve scouting
'renchei
I u- uermans
j lines in Stalin-
t saXT" saults since
k nt brealt-
fces "ern workers'
f iKteJ 1d in an 'he
Kf7S TAKEV
-"V (AIriy,
Air Rom
I - it, minuie.
Police Face Difficult
Task in Poison Case
SALEM, Ore., Nov. 21 (U.B
The investigation of the roach
powder poisoning case that was
fatal to 47 patients at the Oregon
state hospital was still mired deep
ly in the process of checking and
re-checking information from em
ployes and patients, according to
Captain Walter Lansing, of the
state police.
"To understand our difficulty."
said Captain Lansing, who is han
dling the investigation almost sin
glehandedly, "It must be under
stood tha,t e great deal of our
discussion must be with the pa
tients of this institution, and their
Information is not reliable.
He told of getting several "beau
tiful stories" from patients, only to
have them refuted. One man's de
tailed account evaporated when
his doctor said he was confined
in another part of the institution
all during the time of the poison
ing. Although several theories have
developed, the question of exact
ly when or how the fatal dose of
sodium fluoride contained in the
roach powder was mixed with the
scrambled eggs has not been de
termined, Lansing said, adding that
he was working on the theory that
the power was brought into the
kitchen on the day of the poison
ing. The last time the powder
was used for Its normal purpose
was over a month ago, according
to present information, he said.
"W hen we determine who
brouRht the powder into the kitch
enaid Lansing. "We will have got
to the bottom of this case."
Governor Charles A. Sprague,
who has been keeping in cloe
touch with Lansing's work, said
he was confident a solution would
be reached.
Dr. John C. Evans, hospital su
perintendent who has been assi't
ing Lansing, particularly with the
questioning of the patient', had
little to say regarding the progress
of the case. His chief concern was
with the welfare of his stricken
pxtient. .all but a half dozen of
whom have recovered, and these
are improving.
"We are having trouble keep
ing them in bed." he said. "They
want to be up and around."
Long Distance Phone
Rales Under FCC Fire
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 "
The federal communications com
mission today ordered the Ameri
can Telephone and Telegraph com
pany to show cause why its long
distance telephone rates and other
charges should not be substantial
ly reduced.
The commission said figures re
ported to it by the long lines de
partment of the company Indi
cated earnings on net book in
vestment at a rate of 24.37 per
cent annually before making pro
vision for federal income taxes,
and a rate of 14.82 per cent after
providing for the new federal nor
mal and surtaxes.
A. T. & T. was ordered to
answer the commission's order by
December I and to appear at a
hearing on December 16.
The investigation, the FCC said,
"will cover not only rates but all
charges, classifications, practices
and regulations in connection with
the communication service ren
dered by the long lines depart
ment."
Butter, Cheese Hex!
On Rationing Lis!
S FAIN" sty
t. alt Aft ALGIERS
OR AN
m.
T ITALY
V
)CREECe4 TITVPV
STATUTC MtLCS
SWING IN TO CLOSE TRAP ON ROMMEI. F.eht.nff French force wa tms3.ii.sf
through Libya to help close the trap on Bosnme.'s baffereti fortes sfiil in retreat south of
Bengasi. Vanguards of Hie Biiiwh 8th army raced westward alone the coasttat hunts an
drive against the Axis in Libya ! south of Bengasi area in attempt to cut off foe from i Agheifs corridor. The allies con
and Tunisia, Malta-based bombers tinned to push eastward into Tunisia. Dark shading of areas in joHie?s 55-tJitaiss sppraxi
yesterday bombed Catania, Augus-1 mate penetration,
ta and Cosimo airdromes in Sicily !
and struck new blows against Axis
shipping in the Mediterranean.
- Flying from Malta tq the support i
ui jxiuccictiii tfiia oi lush uuui
closing in on Bizerie and Tunis in
Tunisia. British bombers also at
tacked a large Axis vessel off Cape
Bon, Tunisia, and raked it with
cannon fire.
Two German planes were shot
down in the same area, the com
munique said. One British plane
was reported lost in the operations.
Laval AdYOCateS JWadn Brief
t
German Alliance
VICHY From French Broad
casts), Nov. 21 W) Pierre La
val advocated an alliance with:
Germany aa Eurane's sofle hone
i ne occupation ot Bengasi nra lor peace in a broadcast to the
been expected for hours since the people of Na2i -occupied France
mr the tfaltet! Pm
LONDON Allied columns close
In on Bizerte-Tunls and Gabes In
Tumi; royal air farce hit Turin
with strongest attack on Italy of
war; waters off Spain- and Bale-
lialyGeisWorsi
Bombing of War
arics mined; Pierre Laval .olZ'S'iVi that fighto FresKh Be
30-Mile Strip
Sitter Ftgfttmg Rfjges;
1 Hitier Reportediy
KBSiimg Keinforcements
By ItOGEH D. GREENS
Associated Press Vtt Editor
Affierlcaa snd Ecttish troops,
sicoring a five-mile advance In itw
direction, pitched Into tlw GermaJi
on ihe muier defemset of Bijerf
and TBnis today while If. S. Fiyin
Fortress rained deadly punish
ment on the enenty hemmed ta
along a 38-mlle-wSae coastal atrip.
German reports aaid. Adolf Hitler
rushing a strums t1 sir-ijonse
reinfosvements, iJwstwSing; tsnks,
across the Mediterranean In s d
perate effort to (ent t AUiel
offenilve.
Fit-id dispatches ait tfca bi
growing more biiiw notsr by
flour, with Allied troops stormissk
Nri toctltlcsttons only Bo miles
from coin cities In tea Trectelt
North Africa colony.
One Aiiiwf vanguard was ?e
perferi to have driven forward five
miles to point 25 tniles southeast
ot Tunis, the capital, fighting over
ancient hatUeiields ot t Csci'nt
ginlan empire.
Jiessiss Clsim Seceew
liallsn hdqrtrs sssertesi Bve
baitla wee developing "os &
Tunisian-Algerian taoMet" aoout
S3 mile west of th cea ae
srribed by Aiiied riiapalchea xrA
decisred ihst operstlon "beve
(one to the sdventojes tS the Axis."
A Fa-cist communique said Beit
lh and American troops w ,
iumtd back in lis frroiiier region
afier imint armored cars end
trucks.
The German radio claimed that
AkIs torces Thursday night seized
a railway ttatioa east of Tabarka,
es miies- west of Bi2eri, end re-
yesterday that the port had been
abandoned by German troops,
Agedabia, where British forward
troops were reported In contact
with the Germans, is about 100
miles south of Bengasi and approx
imately 70 miles northeast of El
Agheila, where Hommei is expect
ed to take advantage of favorable
terrain and make a stand.
Coffee Sales Suspend
At Midnight Saturday
France toward military partner-
gmp with Germany,
ROME British attack cctuces
immense damage at Turin.
last night and declared new volun- S""r m pIf ?raT
teer leiions wonM h ri?s , Shaii. advance guard hiia NaJia at
Jsst night by HAS. fenmbera in
litical heir to Marshal Petain.
He accused the United States
and Britain of tearing away bit
by bit at ihe French empire be
cause of (heir losses in the Pa
cific; said he was ccriain of a
German victory.
"From what has happened in
North Africa we have discovered
PORTLAND, Nov. 21 W
Coffee sales will be suspended In
Oregon and throughout the naUon , ,he late lhat wai(j! us tomorrow if
, , ltev(lt gets away with U La
""""rr . ubmil 10 fnation by com-
- i munlsu nrl Jjw
iGsullist troops had been thrown
: raid whicb sn aoihoriiaiive Briiish t t(t ,
source termed toe "heaviest yeti Jyszi fcroadcaat said li Ai
: m on lla'y- Ht -teni,. r,ri t MiMjBi ran
Of scores of Siiriin3, Haiifa-xra, w drstrosred in Use first clash
Lanrasiers and Weiiingiona s-! u, Tunisia.
signed to the mission, ftree failed
to return. ! Ax rlnn ta Caast
inforcements reported moving to? The nihera Jaade the ISO-miie! A Nazi broadcast oiioiing Allied
Siriiy. round trip sucrrssfuiiy to . Spni3h Mororra, said
j MOSCOW Bussian irmA more " sksi-ks uias are prov- iiilfj fOTr had reached the area
qures; aiis ana Humaniana lose " " r i e Uimiwmtt, aisout 4 mite
heavily southeast of Nalrhifc. ! the industrial vitals of the Axis, j jguineaj, cj Tunis, on the ult ot
GW. Uc ARTHUR'S HEAB- A terse alt- commanlque said Gah,
QUARTERS Heavy fighting In onfy; i -j,, if confirmed would mean
Buna-Gona area; New Zealand j "The attack was heavy and con- j the Afiirj had now pinned the Aait
iroops in ?f r-w Caledonia; Amerl- eentraled but dense smoke from j inio a small corner of the msnseast
cans in FS jjj. many fires made observation of the j Tunisian coast and cut off th
AT THE BUNA FROff T resnif a difficult." j route ot retreat to Italian Tripoli-
American general swims for life Clear wesiiicr gave fte largess j tnla. In that case, the two mala
sharp outlines, however, snd an xls forces in Tunisia and Libya
Italian communique itselt said the wouid be split.
British, attacking In waves, "drop- j The Algiers radio said French
pad incendiary bombs la great ijjoops below Tunis bad captured
auamniea, maimy in an ceniraa jome Naiis in I igist northeast ot
the Port ot Gabes.
answer "the fresh insults which , rr'
fr.. , ., . ly raided.
Allflr aTJ. ANKARA-Large Nari air -
rica.
"We are again seeking recon
ciliation and an entente with Ger
many," Laval declared In his first
address since he was given dic
tatorial powers and named es po-
when Jho plane sinks trawler.
PKAHi, HARBOR Americans
prepare to knock Japanese oft
Guadalcanal.
tionlng books may buy one pound
of coffee with sugar stamp No. 27.
covering 1he period from Nov. 29
to Jan. 3.
If by that time all-purpose ra
tion books have not been issued,
other sugar stamps will be des
ignated for further coffee pur
chases. Those without sugar ration
books will obtain from their local
ration board sugar books with the
first 18 stamps removed. These
they may use for coffee purchases.
Persons without sugar books
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2t flifS 1 whose sugar stocks are exhausted
A nationwide milk conservation s e're aii-purpose owns are -
nrogram, bunt arouna sinngcni
i hntter and cheese rationing to ci
! vilians soon will be inaugurated,
: a top-ranking government official
i reported today.
1 He said the program, to be di
' rrctcd bv Secretary of Agriculture
i Claude R. Wickard. will provide
J for tight federal control over all
' m-nnHa bill rine not con-
sued, also may get sugar ration
books from the local boards.
Industry Accident Toll
Dwarfs War Casualties
:i Poll Tax Bill Appears
z Doomed as Vote Hears
district of ihe iwn."
The Italians said the British te-
fllcled damage and spread fires!
and listed casualties at 20 dead and ?
(The dark little collaboration- Hftftmdfl 3? VAtA HASfC 120 wounded.
isi's talk of volunteer legions """"" ' Member of everaJ Canaaian
such as ihe rielarhroenia which so.urf'on wbirh psriiripaied in!
have fought alongside the Ger- f WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 .. (he raid said Turin's air defenses i
mans on the Russian front sug- j Tfle controveraal anti-poll tax bill, included only one searchlight. i
gested that Laval was not pre- flustered for ven days, was Fires were visible SO miles from i
pared at this time to thrust the oeor ihe sensie fodsy but under the city, they said, and smoke from j
nation into a formal state ot war nwKc-snii agreement nir p-; one noiahly large one rose v ai
Lehman Seen Choke
For Relief Director
NEW YORK, Nov. II 1 The
New York Times reported today
agaimt the allies He did not men- Paren' do0!n h! most iS.909 W One filer said i President Roosevelt was -
Z :"he tTisCftSS I armyTeal: ' f ! bed an oil j J? sBriM SZTSS
mentsand the Toulon-based fleet ern senators called o!tdump was hit. Another said ft . ""i
whl-h .(ill tk. . s their f ilibmier last night after the taw "one bla building fall apart" to wid-wide post arimini-
whlch still take orders from
Vichy.)
In his IS-minuie speech Laval
assured his people again that Ger
many would not lose the war, de
clared he had tried to maintain
peace wiih the United States and
bill's proponents- agreed 1 iheivejwtvm two-ton block-buster burst siraior of feeding, rioihsnj and
It Monday if tnry fait to get two- j on It.
thirds vote for a rarelv-invoked i
cloture drastic gag rule limiting i
debase.
They are highly confident that
! Plywood Wage Boost
gunpoint after centuries i
ship.
jTire Disposal DeodUne
rehabilitating countries friendly to
or occupied by the United Nations.
Lehman could not be reached
for comment Immediately,
The artieie aid the pot "i
one of such magnitude" ihat ii is
believed tne effort -would Be un
dertaken jointly by the United Na
tions, but with th United States,
bearing th
g 0JZtzl Order Clarified
nturies of friend- kwv , , j
shared hv some whn b-ked ihe( PORTLAND. Or.. Nov. 51 : as th wealthiest.
measure and Sen. Albert B. Chan- f The wt coast lumber commls-; largest harden. Lehman would not
dier, D. Ky contended his slde slon today clarified an order es Rave any Qomesue looa reapoRii
was already defeaird. i Nov. 9 which made a 7i-rni-n-; biiiiis.
CHICAGO. Nov. tt 1 The . , . . "I don't se why iiiey tfcml hour wage incrrase granted Myi
. . , ? ft,.;A milk at : ,t t..A rYfintOft 1 A llflrfimhar I ...iV..i-,... i I 'ri'. in , .. . - anlfl i...ri. in ? it
this time. i pared total casualties of 3,8,S00 idead. Why spread the funersl cut Oregon nd WashingVm plywood 0 At tea Taift f eeartflrt
I Rather, he said, a principal ob- ; among war workers since Fcarii WASHINGTON, Nov. 21, (UBi over three daytl" i plants retroactive to Jan. IS, , T VflVC iGftC tlt.GJCU
i iprtiv-p will be to meet ail civilian rlaroor to 4.s casualties in tne ocre "i s ane senaie w jo meel ax noon,) ana amenoea oraer aaia mti .
i rf,.manrf for tnts nroauct or i ermeo torces as arim evioence; ..-.- yy nnyv mr ooiure pruiion, aea or i TFiuwi-Mi-a w mui
! rArti of less nufritionai ! (hat accidents drain the nation of Nov. 22 to Dec. J, the date sched- Democratic Jjeadrr Alfcen Yf. by Dee, 1 to all employes
( i. t lime. . M9nnnwr luMiM Inr virinrv f Uled for ihe Siart of nationwide ! RarkV t tJentlllcv mint lie oavrolt as of Feb. 15. Emoloves
meeting huge dairy food needs of '-Those who die in battle die for (toline rationing. ; over one full legislative day before 1 who left their employment since PORTLAND, Or., Nov. SI JS
ithe armed forces. la cause," said Ned H. Dearborn,! Possession of tires In excess of il can be acted upon. The vol will Feb. IS hut prior to th e!fectivj State police headquarters her
Declaring that immediate sctlon executive vice-president of Ine: 'iv per car, with on additional; be taken at I p. m., Monday. date of tee increase shall rceivf announced today tea capture of
is imperative to svosd serious dis- council. "Those struck down by 'or each running wheel of trailers ; The measure, to outlaw poll tax' rrtrosrtive wages from Feb. IS tofTurrnan Wilson, IS-year-oid -,
ir"iir.Ti during the current low- accidents die in vain." i or simitar equipment, will be If- payments in eight southern siaiee ! ihe dale they iefl provided they ; viried rapist and esrapejl renvJri,
,DCa " . -..( i, ;x Ii;.. (Mat 1h ISnI nf nl mmlh ; .. - 1..,- . ) a . k l ,1. t .,..-.-
prixi'jction season, mis minin . tim iuiwi t,uBnm .- , ... nB m a,i,u,,,c , vi,,,s "
(said Wickard's food requirements . American workers since Pearl under gasoline rationing reguia- federal elections, would expire
committee la expected to rom-j Harbor up In Nov. IS have been tions, j automatically with tins session ot
(nlete oreparalions for the pro-j 44.500 dead and 3,gno.OOu wound-j I congress on Jan. 8.
' gram "within a matter of days." ed. Government figures for cas
j He described as a forerunner, ualtles In the armed forces during
hi not an actual part ot the pro- the same period were S,M deao,i
tVei Convict at iaSrande
worked 38 days or more before Sin ihe ciima of wild automobile
departing, the commissi said, j chase near LeGrande, Ore.
The commission pointed out Officers said they understood
that non of th parties mad any j Glenn Wilson, Turman1 i1-y-
UtiTCH TOW FINE!) j i fc,4n. i in S ij,li'rni raHrnai TMl
1JNDON, N. 2t tJPl Th ft-FME MfMSTKX BfK i The youth escaped the Oregon
u, -ihi' war ornduclion :SA3S wounded and 3,27 missing Germans hsi-e Imposed tMft.non! CAPETOWN, fViuth Africa, Nov.! Frank Morris, manager nf i slate peniieniiary yesieniay, lie-
board order freering for war uses ', or prisoners. The iolal nation! fine on The Netherlands town of St. V General J. it. M. Hert- j Springfield Plywood piant, said j srenriing from the roof on a "rep
' aooroximatclT 40 per rent or i acrident toil since Pearl Harbos Blormendaal after Jhe cutting of i"g, 7, who ws pnrne minister of ; that he believes tne lumber toro-j of ioweis. Wssfl an cider brother,
'nearlv 35 000 000 pound of th ! hss been B,00ff killed and ap- several rabies belonging to Nihe Vn'm of Swath Africa at the' mission's ruling would atfed only; Rsssie, they were serving JonJ
I roid storage butter sup-j proximately ..800,000 wounded, occupation forces, Anela reported outbreak of Woiid War ff, died I Af L sawmills. Th Springiieldi term tor th rsc o two St,
Spues? 1 th council said. itoday, 'today, j r-lsaat i under CQ. iJohia, Or aJrS.