Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, April 21, 1943, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    th Amy 'Paoslhi'es Tlhroooglh minraeD Ooiie
H
Enfidaville Taken
In British Advance
By WES GALLAGHER
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 21. W
The British Eighth army has pushed about two miles north In th
Djebel Garci area 10 miles west of Enfidaville In "very severs fight
ing." it was announced today.
Fighting raged on a 10-mile front as the dashing veterans of Gen.
Sir Bernard L. Montgomery pressed the battle to a bloody pitch after
rantnrine Enfidaville. anchor rjolnt of Marshal Erwin Rommel's south
LANE COUN HOME NEWSPAPER.
Loo
EUGENE, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1943 - ON STREETS 5c NEWS STANDS 5c
NO. Ill
Execute US
rmen, Saysi-Lm
L -nij ADril 21 OP) President Roosevelt announced
l"lNG. Snt today the "barbarous execution" by the Japa
R statemf t tocuiy i members ot the American armed
Ku into Japanese hands as an "incident of warfare.1
statement, is-
Zwhite House, was re I-. . , p
roim vaiue tui
ByOPA on Soup
. ... rkrict
irdepartmenttothej
government, j
i t. Rnnseveu sum, ,
ires, "-..:,
V, cameo me
-ivin information that1
were capiuicu w
'iober 19, 1942, he said,
mmeni learned from Jap-
fdio broadcasts of the cap
Li and severe punishment
Americans.
Led endeavor was maae
confirmation ana n woo
varch 12, 1943 that this
Lt received the com
U given by the Japanese
Ut stating that these
Lis had in fact been tnea
the death penany nau
lonoiraced.
Lane Death
as further stated that the
enalty was commuted for
tit president said, "but
tmtence 01 aeam naa
Viti to others.
tar deoartment's detailed
ion ol the American bomb
fokyo disclosed that eight
American fliers were pns-
were presumed to be
h of Japan,
(resident's statement, ex-
I feeling ol deepest nor
:h he said was shared by
lied peoples, did not say
lay of the prisoners had
tecuted.
Mubirooi'
recourse by out enemies
kfutoess in barbarous," the
it said. "The effort of the
war lords thus to inti-
luj wiU utterly fail. It will
te American people more
ned than ever to blot out
iimeless militarism of
K he had Instructed the
tptrtment to make public
of its note of protest, the
It said that In this corn
lion the United States has
Id Japan that the American
Btnt "will hold personally
Icially responsible for these
l cnmes all of those of-
the Japanese government
e participated therein and
flue course bring those of-
justice."
gent Homicide
is Scheduled
Mai of Milo Johnson nf
e, charged with negligent
. U1 be held in circuit
st Monday, it was an
I Wednesday, and after the
'on trial is completed the
w w excused until that
rason is accused of being
'.0l 'or the death of Em
,.131who allegedly died
"lines in an automobile
' the state highway
r- ..vicnce several months
P m was riding in the
W of the car which
as driving.
;rf in the case nf B n
L. M. Chapman, ini
l0?!!ing contract, re-
yerdict for the plaintiff
f "lernoon. Th nisini
t"JS,.Jin ,he ,irst cause
r- and SRfi m ,
tns " 1,1 me second,
s PUnitlVB daman..
of Wade M. Moore
General Insurance
Ot Amerirn u a
" 'suit to collect $186.75
' accident u.
ids -iv . ' a un mai
r o Gilbert,
JnSTeFrilnlt' Stella
R,iLS,uincr- Rob"t F.
i nam? o t .
t.J.-R'x. B.
M? Pleaded
I'vvA u years.
t,1 ' Passing a bad
kr;rrovie!Ur.
T Mn r.5 Was am-
Air Raid
Signal
''-In,,"1' 'i' raid
-w Hinal.
WASHINGTON, April 21 (U.RT
A sharp reduction m point val
ue ot all frozen fruits and veg
etables and all rationed soups
effective at 12:01 a.m. Thursday,
was ordered today by 'the Office
of Price Administration. .
Simultaneously OPA eliminated
black-eyed paas, a staple diet
throughout the southern states,
from the list of rationed products.
Point values of frozen foods
were cut more sharply in the
-commercial container sizes (two
to 10 pounds) than in the small
er household sizes. Officials said
this was designed to restore a
more normal flow of products to
hotels, restaurants, hospitals and
other large users.
Housewives, as well as Institu
tional users, however, may pur
chase the larger sizes.
Heavy Cuta
Under the new program all
kinds of frozen fruits, in net
weight containers of 16 ounces,
will cost six points instead of the
present 13 points. Point values of
frozen asparagus, green and wax
ed beans, lima beans, corn, peas
and spinach in domestic contain
er sizes, are reduced also from
13 to six points a pound.
All other frozen vegetables In
the smaller sizes were marked
down from eight to four points a
pound.
In commercial sizes of two
pounds up to and including 10
pound sizes, all frozen fruits, fruit
juices and vegetables -under the
reyised system will have a point
value of four points a pound. In
domestic container sizes (below
two pounds) the basic point val
ue of frozen fruit Juices will be
four points a pound, and of froz
en fruits and vegetables, six
points a pound.
Under the new program, the
point value of all canned and
bottled soups Is reduced from
eight points a pound to six points
except for tomato soup which is
cut in half to four points a pound.
The basic point value is the same
for both household and commer
cial container sizes.
Officials explaining reasons for
the point ' cuts said they were
prompted by the same set of con
ditions that brought about previ
ous reductions in point values.
Among these conditions, they said,
were slow sales, indicating con
sumer reluctance to pay the re
quired number of points, and the
additional factor of spoilage with
the approach of warm weather
and rising humidity.
Officer fo Enforce
Dog Ordinance Named
Arthur T. Hall, 469 Sixth ave
nue west, is Eugene's new hu
mane officer who will enforce the
city council's wartime dog ordi
nance in cooperation with the
Lane County Humane society.
Announcement of Hall's ap
pointment came Wednesday from
Sidney W. Claypool, society sec
retary, who said that Mr. Hall has
had extensixe experience in
handling animals.
"The society has hired Mr. Hall
and thinks he is well qualified for
the positioni" Claypool said. "We
have every tonfidence in his abil
ity, and feel that he will be able
to work out dog problems with
city residents."
Impounding for loose dogs will
begin this week, Claypool reveal
ed, and permanent headquarters
for the work will be set up on
FDR, Camacho I
In U.S. After
Mexican Visit
CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex., April
21. U.R President Roosevelt
ana resident Manuel Avila Cam
acho arrived here together today
as the Mexican chief executive
repaid the visit which Mr. Roose
velt made yesterday to Monterrey.
Then two presidents came here
for a luncheon and a big air show
at the navy air station.
Special cars for Avila Camacho
and his party of high Mexican of
ficials were added to Mr. Roose
velt's train before it pulled out
of Monterrey. .
Mr. Roosevelt and the Mexican
president were together until late
last night delving into the war
problems of the Americas and
charting co-operation in the peace !
to follow.
MONTERREY, Mexico, April 21
(U.R) President Franklin D.
Roosevelt of the U. S., and Manuel
Avila Camacho of Mexico, after a j
dramatic meeting demonstrating I
unity and friendliness among the
Americas, last night advocated a
worldwide good neighbor policy to
prevent the faults of ambition, imperialism-
and privilege from ever
causing another war.
Both presidents reaffirmed the
unity of the Americas and offer
ed the good neighbor policy as a
model for the world, once "the
machinery of barbarism con
structed by the dictators" Is com
pletely destroyed.
Mr. Roosevelt had arrived here
late today, one week after leaving
Washington. President Avila Ca
, macho honored him with a review
of a full motorized division of the
Mexican army. The two presidents
dined together and spoke from I
their dinner table. ,
praise Given
Each president, f 1 a n k e d - by
leaders of his own government,
praised the other's country in
combating the Axis and prepar
ing for the peace to follow.
"It is time," said Mr. Roosevelt,
"that every citizen in every one
of the American republics recog
nizes that the good neighbor pol
icy means that harm to one re
public means harm to every re
public. We have, all of us, recog
nized the privilege of interde
pendence one upon another."
Mr. Roosevelt said that the at
tacks of the Axis powers during
the past few years against "our
common heritage as free men"
culminated in the "unspeakable
and unprovoked aggressions of
December 7, 1941, and May 14,
1942, and the shedding of blood
on those dates of citizens of the
United States and Mexico alike."
".Those attacks did not find the
western hemisphere unprepared,"
Mr. Roosevelt said. "The 21 free
republics of the Americas during
the past 10 years have devised a
system of international coopera
tion which has become a great
bulwark in the defense of our
heritage and our future.'
That system,- he said,. Is based
primarily upon a renunciation of
the use of force and the enshrin
ing of international justice and
mutual respect as the governing
rule of conduct by all nations.
Sued zW.W ChoojKvA- M,ic.-tf rfyZj(i
1.. i aAk -fAxz
-Tcboursouk .. I JkJi
M. . .tIArouna .f j-,Font iu fiSSm affTT i . i,
V S ' M 'Aff 1 II
I 1 t. 7 XMiaktnff . fwhtint
0 Ijj Pichon .:,:;icherossSsprSiditlHoni Boyriijini TebmiTbTI
I T ST 7- 1 I .r s ' AAIn Groseiia X "pjtmtni
allied drive FontIouk yX Kmm" 1 K,n9r" Ztramedinc Bcn! Ho"" II
I 1 Ali-hild area Kci'jef jfe-
ern line of the Tunis-Bizerte defenses. They had already repulsed
four determined counterattacks.
While the British blasted at the caves and dug-ln positions, of
the Nazis and Fascists with artil-, ;
AN EIGHTH ARMY attack in the Enfidaville sector of the Tunisian batllefront has resulted In the
capture of that city, along with strategic heights no rth and west or the anchor of Rommel's southern line.
The First army has also made slight gains In the Mcdyez el Bab sector. Arrows show direction of allied
drives. . ' '
Jury Pondering I Banks Boost Kuban Battle
.aneDona i orai
Byrnes OKs Increase
For Pine Workers
WASHINGTON. April 21. W)
The war labor board announced
today that Stabilization Director
James F. Byrnes has approved a
wage increase for 26,880 employes
of 88 pine industry concerns in
the northwestern United States.
In general, the increase is 7 V4
cents an hour.
The WLB's west coast lumber
commission originally approved
the increase, with the labor mem
hpr riisscntinc and arguing for a
The war laDor
lnrppr amount. The war
hoard aoDroved the commission's
South Hilyard by next week at the j decision early in March by a 5 to
latest. 4 vote. Wayne L. Morse, a public
Pleased at being-named officer member, and three labor mem-
lor the controversial duty, Hall i bers were in ine minority.
said:
"I'm familiar with dogs and
have been practically all my life.
I like the idea of the control and
the whole set-up. I think the idea
of having a humane officer will
be in harmony with the ideas of
the people, who want their dogs
as well as their gardens protect
ed." The ordinance makes It illegal
for dogs to be off their owner's
property, except on a leash, dur
ing the six months starting April
1. Pets in violation -will be im
pounded, and the owner will be
subject to fine on second offense.
MINERS STRIKE
HARLAN. Ky., April 21. U.R)
Strikes involving 2.400 workers at
five rtiffnrwnt mine, rnntintiprf tn
stall production of coal today in , sen fined him $30 and turned his
The WLB acted prior to the
president's hold the line executive
order of April 8, but the decision
was referred to Director Byrnes
because of its possible affect on
price ceilings. Byrnes' approval
it was understood, does not neces
sarily authorize an increase in
price ceilings. .
Another Speeder Loses
Gasoline Ration Card
Another driver lost his gasoline
ration card when he appeared in
the Eugene Justice court Wednes
day on a charge of violating the
basic traffic rule. Harry Gordon
Olson was accused of speeding his
car at 55 miles an hour in the 25
mile zone.
Justice of the Peace John Bry-
Fate of Folkes
ALBANY, Ore., April 21 W
Eight women and four men jurors
began life-or-death deliberation at
10:15 a. m PWT today in the
first-degree murder trial of Robert
E. Lee Folkes, accused of the fan
tastic "Lower 13" knife slaying of
Mrs. Martha Virginia James,
The jurors mostly arm folk
took the case with Circuit Judge
L. G. Lewelling's detailed instruc
tions after hearing testimony and
arguments for 13 days in the trial
of the 20-year-old negro second
cook of a Southern Pacific limited.
The state asks his death for the
throat slashing of the attractive
Norfolk, Va., bride of a navy en
sign who lay in berth Lower 13
last January 23 as the train roared
past a village station near here in
the pre-dawn blackness.
The defense maintains Folkes
was in the dining car galley pre
paring breakfast at the time she
was knifed in the throat. She died
a few moments later in a pool of
her own blood In the aisle of the
sleeping car.
Judge Lewelling told the jury
lt could return any one of four
verdicts: Guilty of murder in the
first-degree which automatically
calls for the death penalty if un
accompanied by a recommendation
for leniency: first degree with a
recommendation for life imprison
ment; second degree which carries
mandatory life imprisonment; or
acquittal.
The court dwelt upon the Issue
of intoxication at length during his
43-minuie instruction
If the jurors found the evidence
showed Folkes was intoxicated at
the time he made his alleged con
fession of the crime, Lewelling
said, this fact should be considered
although intoxication does not
make a confession inadmissable as
evidence unless the person mak
ing the confession has lost posses
sion of his faculties.
As to intoxication at the time
of the crime, Lewelling said that
1 if the jurors ascertained that the
I evidence showed- Folkes was in-
toxicatcd, this should be weighed.
! But he stressed that intoxication
' does not excuse a crime.
"Intoxication, in the main," he
said, "should be weighed in de-
Purchases in the second war loan
Wednesday were almost doubled
over the previous day's figure for
Lane county.
Loan headquarters revealed that
of the $4,600,000 goal, $3,293,127
have been turned in so far. The
figure indicates that 71 per cent
of the quota has been raised. It
is a 34 per cent gain over Tuesday,
when the total stood at $1,709,715.
Bulk of the Wednesday pur
chases was $1,500,000 in govern
ment securities bought by the Eu
gene, and Junction City branches
of the U. S. National bank. The re
mainder was made up of Scries E
and other war bonds, sold to in
dividual buyers.
2nd War Loan Goal
May Be Increased
WASHINGTON, April 21. (A)
Treasury officials reported to
day that many communities have
reset their sights in the record
breaking $13,000,000,000 second
war loan campaign and are now
trying to double their original
quotas.
This development was reported
as sales passed the $10,000,000,000
mark and signs pointed to
achievement of the goal well In
advance of the three week dead
line. Because of the enthusiastic re
sponse throughout the country,
treasury officials said, many com
munities already have reached or
passed their quotas and now have
started out to double their ori
ginal goal.
"Double the quota" has become
the slogan for these communities.
Desnite the record outpouring
of funds, treasury officials, includ- asserted
More Intense
MOSCOW, April 21. P A
violent strupgle for an important
height marked the mounting bat
tle in the Kuban delta above Nov
orossisk today as the Germans
threw in more troops in an at
tempt to regain lost positions, but
nowhere did they succeed in gain
ing any ground, the Russians re
ported todny.
A dispatch to Red Star ,the
army newspaper, said that ar
tillery action has Increased and
there are more and more bomb
ings by the German air forces op
erating In strength from the wat
ers of the black sea northward to
the sea of Azov,
Pravda, communist party news
paper, printed a front line dis
patch which said Rumanian troops
were in the fight but that war
prisoners - complained the Ger
mans had abandoned them.
The Germans, using more tanks
to flank their increased infantry
forces,, smashed at the Russian
lines in one sector in a scries of
10 attacks moving in groups of
from 25 to 30 which were turned
back almost immediately, lt was
said.
The Nazis then shoved In two
more fresh infantry regiments, 40
more tanks and hew plane units
but after a two hour battle they
retreated, leaving 1,400 dead and
nearly a score of tanks destroyed.
Four hours later they tried to
attack again and lost 25 planes
shot down and eight damaged, the
Russians said.
(The German communique
broadcast by the Berlin radio and
recorded by the Associated Press
that the German air
ine Secretary Morgenthau
pressed disappointment at
sales of bonds to individuals and
made plans to concentrate more
heavily on this group during the
next two weeKs.
v PORTLAND, Ore., April 21
(U R) Oregon today chalked up war
securities sales of $24,707,064 to
ward its goal nf $100,000,000 in the
Second war finance campaign.
ex- i force shot down 91 Soviet planes
me m fighting yesterday south of
Gleemen Broadcast
Set For April 27
The Glceman radio broadcast,
called off Tuesday evening, will be
JJovorossisk and lost two planes.
Light German naval forces also
sank three ammunition barges, it
was cleared, but the locale was
not specified.)
cidins the degree of guilt.'
The court warned the jury held next Tuesday evening, April
. . ... . i . . . i no f. . vnnv i
against permuting me aymna-, ji, 11 was an""u"L,:'" company the vote among the em
lilies, renuiin-iii mm yuuuc J- ntancjuny. ine ,. in In o In zt,n nt lha
Tiiatriav ' - -
Workers At Two Lane
Mills Vote For AFL
Returns from two elections In
Lane county among sawmill em
ployes regarding the question of
union affiliation have been re
ported by Homer Haney, reprc-
i sentative of the carpenters' union.
At the Cottage Grove Lumber
lery and infantry, sleet and snow
storms swirlea over ine mountain-
ous area today and restricted the ,
great allied air offensive which !
had been summoned to paralyze 1
Axis airfields.
Accompanying Gen. Sir Ber
nard L. Montgomery's drive from
the south, which was opened at
11 o'clock Monday night with a
mighty barrage from hundreds of
guns, the British First army has
moved forward slightly in the
Medjez-El-Bab sector west of
Tunis, said a communique from
I Gen, Dwight D. Eisenhower's
headquarters.
27 Planes Shot Down
The newest assaults, aimed' at
collapsing the mountain rim held
by Marshal Erwin Rommel and
Col. Gen. Jurgen Von Arnim,
were meshed with the northwest
African air force's heaviest bom
bardments of Axis airfields the
campaign has been yet and by
violent air battles in which it
enemy, aircraft were shot down
yesterday.
Along with other planes shot
down on previous days but not
previously reported here, this
score brought to 151 the total of
enemy planes destroyed in the
last three days.
"Enfidaville has been occupied
and all initial objectives captured
after fierce fighting," the com
munique said. "Four enemy coun
terattacks have been repulsed,
Fighting continues,"
Falcrmo Damaged ,
While hundreds of Allied planes
ranged the skies, air reconnais
sance showed that Flying Fortress
attacks on Palermo, Sicily, had
caused tremendous damage, with
the harbor blocked by the hulks
ot 28 ships, sunk or damaged.
The sunken shipping consisted of
five merchant vessels, a destroyer,
another naval vessel and a mine
layer, an official report said, while
damaged shins included seven
merchant ships two escort vessels,
a tanker and a repair ship, in
active shipping in the harbor in
cluded four motor ferries,, at least
two ot which were sevetiy dam
aged, three hopper barges, two of
which were damaged, one subma
rine probably, damaged and one
.nerchant vessel.
The communique said it had
been found that 10 more Axis
planes were destroyed on Sunday,
the day huge German air trans
port tormations were shot up,
bringing that day's aerial losses
of the enemy to 98 aircraft.
An authoritative spokesman said
the Eighth army's assault was
meeting with "extremely vigor
ous" opposition.
The fact that the Germans
launched four counterattacks
"with great promptness" was
taken as an indication that Rom
mel was defending each foot of
ground to the maximum of his
ability.
The capture of Enfidaville It
self was not believed to be of great
strategic importance, but the tak
ing of the heights around the town
and the digging out of German
machine-gun nests one by one was
vital to further advances.
(Delayed dispatches directly
from the front, filed shortly after
noon yesterday, said the British
took Enfidaville itself without op
nnsition. but were still engaged In
a hitter hattle for Takrouna, five
miles northwest of Enfidaville and
nhont elcht miles inland.
(Takrouna. 48 miles south of
Tunis, was encircled by the Brit
Ish after a three-mile advance,
these advices said, but Montgom
ery's men had to turn back Ger
man counterattacks before contin
uing their storming of Takrouna
v age Itself.)
Montgomery's shock troops were
nfiltrat ng UD the sides of nllis
and crawling from wadl to wadi
In a slow, costly and daring ad
vance, but never halting.
The whole difficult operation
drawing upon Montgomery's ex
perience as a specialist in night
infantry attacks, was preceded by
a flying visit nf Gen. Sir Harold
Alexander, allied ground force
commander, and the Eighth nrmy
commander to Elsenhower's head
quarters the day before the assault
was launched.
The slight advance by the Brit
ish First army was said by spokes
men to have resulted in the cap
ture of the village of Smadia,
about three miles north of Mcdjez-El-Bab.
Describing the allied air offen
sive, an official statement said
'the full weight of the northwest
African air forces was turned
against enemy airfields in the j
northwest tip nf Tunisia. It was i
the heaviest and most successful
blow yet struck against enemy
airpowcr In Tunisia."
Rostock, Stettin
Raided by RAF
LONDON, April 21 P Heavy
British bombers attacked the
German Baltic porta of Stettin
and Rostock last night while
speedy mosquito bombers pound
ed Berlin in widespread raids
from which 31 planes are missing,
Uie air ministry announced today.
The night's operations also In
cluded mine-laying in enemy wat
ers and sharp attacks by fighters
and fighter-bombers on enemy
railways, barges and coastal ship
ping, a communique said.
The operations were favored by .
good weather and the bombing
attacks on Stettin and Rostock
which were carried out by some
nf the RAF's mightiest planes
were well concentrated, the air
ministry said.
The air ministry said tonight
that the RAF dropped more than
150 4000-pound bombs in 40 min
utes last night on Stettin, Ger
many, in addition to hundreds of
other high explosives and thou
sands of incendiaries.
Pilots who bombed Rostock said
they hit the main plant of the
Heinkel works about two and one
half miles outside the city. The
factory, normally employing 10,
000 persons, is the assembly cen
ter for Heinkel parts manufactur
ed elsewhere In Rostock.
Southeast coast observers said
the cross-channel offensive con
tinued late into the afternoon with
explosions in the direction of
Calais and Boulogne which wera
so intense they shook buildings
miles inland from England's coast.
Rostock Is the site of the Hein
kel and Neptuna works and the
communique said ' the port and
the Heinkel works were the speci
fic targets In last night's raid. The
last previous British raid on Ros
tock was. April-26, -1942 when it
was bombed for the fourth night
in a row. At that time fires were
set that were seen 250 miles away
and the center of the city wai
reduced to a heap of ashes. -
Medal, Owner
To Be Reunited
- Portland police, who are look
Ing for Granville M. (Jim)
Smith, former Eugenean, to giv
him a medal which he received
in 1922 will find him at 2135
Vine street, Klamath Falls.
The former Eugenean, son of
Mrs. H. F. Gerlach, Eugene, re
ceived the Carnegie award fSr
saving his step-father, Ham
Gerlach, on June 28, 1022.
Gerlach had gone into a well
which was being dug on his
place and was overcome by
fumes. Smith, 22, at the time,
climbed down into the well and
tied a rope around his step
father, making the rescue pos
sible. He was Identified through hlj
mother, Mrs. Gerlach. Smith
now works In a Klamath Falls
sawmill. The award was found
by Luther J. Neufer, now of
Portland, several years ago In
Klamath Falls,
SCHOOLS EXPANDED
BOISE, Idaho, April 21. OP)
Lowiston.and Albion state normal
schools, two-year institutions since
their establishment, will offer
four-year courses leading to a de
gree of bachelor of arts in educa
tion beginning in the fall of 1943.
MM.nl m illnnnrniral In tujav ...... 1 --m O ,n Din n
i.w... , v r ' i union
in reaming a veraici. over in jviuiuai coasi uciwui.
routes remain iiiiijmjvc, nrrangermiiva mr ,,"'"" . fl in -(.-- (-.rove
seemingly bored, during the were made through the efforts of "UP -"" ive.
AFL No. 2627, Lumber and
Sawmill Workers, is the AFL
southeastern Kentucky.
I card over to the ration board.
court's instructions
Wilbur Brinson, the slain wo-
I man s lather, ana ner widower,
j Ensign Richard F. James, were in
i the courtroom when the Jury re
i tired. Neither showed visible emo
I Uon,
the local radio station and the ai sncnsiromi iumoer com
chamber of commerce. The broad-1 P"ny the vote was as follows: AFL,
i. .iv.n m rfvorll E.iBene.l 83: CIO, 48; neither affiliation, 19.
although no commercials are used.'
The event was called oil this ween
because of President Roosevelt's
talk Tuesday evening.
Saturday Deadline For
City Bicycle Licences
Saturday, May I, is the deadline!
for purchasing 1943 city bicycle!
licenses, Chief of Police Carl F.
Bergman said Wednesday. i
Approximately 2,750 bicycles
are still without licenses. Only 1,-!
250 have been taken out so far.
The AFL group here is local No. ! Tne police ,tati,m open 24 houri
"m' , I a day and will Issue licenses at
The elections are held under df- I any .time. The annual fee ti 25 i
rectum of NLRB. I cent.
PARADE IT IN TOKYOI
Barkirtg touchy shim on
that outgrown baby buggy
every time you step into your
crowded garage is madden
ingbut Tojo loves Itl
Dusted off and sold you
can parade It In Tokyo. I'll
find the customer, you buy
War Stamps with the cash.
Uncle Sam will buy bullets
for General Doollttle's next
flight to Japan. Ain't that
smart?
I'm a Register - Guard
Want Ad. I send all kinds
of discarded things to war
every day.
rhnne mo at 1200
' and I'll send something
to war for youl
M f
v. :i
if-
i-