o9 THE EEND BULLETINBEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, JAN. 2, 1945 PAGE THREE U.S. Takes Oyer More Properties Of Ward Firm Chicago, Jan. 2 dpi The govern' ment took over two additional warehouses of Montgomery Ward and company in Detroit today as Maj. Gen. Joseph W. Byron, army officer assigned to run the seized Wards properties, announced un cooperative company personnel would be removed to facilitate his assignment. Byron announced at the head quarters he has set up in the Montgomery Ward executive of fices that officers he had sent to Detroit to survey the Wards' sit uation there had recommended the government take possession of the additional warehouses to make the government's operation effective in that area. Byron said the additional Ward properties were taken over by the army at 9:40 a. m., CWT. Second In Week The government seizure of Ward facilities was the second within a week. The army last Thursday seized properties of the mail order and retail store firm In seven cities, including Detroit, for failure to comply with a war labor board order covering wages and maintenance of membership. The seizure last week met pas sive resistance from Ward of ficials in Chicago and elsewhere. In a statement released by the war department, Byron said a re port on the Wards case had been made to the department, of jus tice "with the request that ap propriate steps be taken, including investigation by representatives of the federal burean of investiga tion." Byron noted that Sewell Avery, Montgomery Ward chairman, and other company representatives had declined to conduct the compa ny's business under his direction. He said this made it necessary for him to place operating per sonnel at each of the seized prop erties. "This personnel will' include of ficers with long experience in the merchandising field," Byron said. Get Instructions These officers were instructed to replace all personnel refusing to carry out their instructions, arrange to handle receipts and ex penditures, examine books and records, examine payrolls in order to carry out their instructions, arrange to handle receipts and ex penditures, examine books and records, examine payrolls in order to effect the wage Increases di rected by the war labor board including retroactive pay, and deal with labor unions for the purpose of making WLB direc tives effective. "Instructions have been given looking toward the reclassifica tion under selective service of such personnel of the company as may be replaced because of their refusal to carry out my instruc tions Byron said." Move Explained Byron explained in order to take over specified stores and ware houses in six other cities, it was necessary for him to take posses sion of the main offices at Chi cago. "This was done because part of the operation of the properties, enumerated in the executive or der, at which labor disputes ex isted, are conducted from these offices," Byron said. "Since the business of the more than 850 other' stores and mail order houses and plants of Mont gomery Ward & Co., Inc., are also conducted from the main of fice, I have not interfered with the access of the company's officials there and have permitted them to utilize these facilities for the operation of the other business of the company. May Take Over "Should the occasion arise I will also assume possession of such other plants and facilities that may be needed In connection with my operation, as provided in the executive order." It was explained at the war de partment the latter assertion ap plied to various installations at the seven cities named in the ex ecutive order which as yet have not been taken over, but would not apply to other Montgomery ward properties in other localities. Utah Train Wreck Kills 48 ' 141 S It M I M i -Hiti Wlf r J AM - n i-tzs&tp5&" -jC Holiday Deaths' Reach 241 Mark ' (Hy Unit! I'rnu) Deaths caused by accidents dur ing the three-day holiduv weekend leached 2-11 today, Willi the col. i lision of two sections of a South ern Pacific passenger train claim ing -IS lives. Aside from the train wreck, which occured near Ogden, Utah, California led the stales with 22 deal lis. Pennsylvania was second with 18 and Michigan third with Through the nation, traffic accidents took more than 115 lives. On the whole, however, It ap peared unlikely that final reports would lioost the traffic toll to the 350 figure predicted for the week end by ihe National Safety coun cil. The Safety council estimate, based on previous holiday acci dents, included all persons who will die of injuries received dur ing the three-day period. Over 100 factories in Brazil are now making chemical products. Pacific Veteran Is Bend Visitor Elvin York, seaman 1c, is vis iting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. York, 2188 Awbrey road, after active duty in the Pacific. Elvin said today that a Jap dive nomher gave him a bad scare in the Philip pine area last fall when it cir cled his ship, coming lower and lower but finally decided to at tack a destroyer in the convoy. It was driven off by anti-aircraft fire before Inflicting much damage. Elvin, who attended Bend high school, entered the navy last Jan uary. Ills brother, Pvt. Harold L. York, with the air force at Norfolk, Va., visited Bend in early December. Harold entered the army two years ago. A mosquito survey now under way In Connecticut will not try to take a mosquito census but will endeavor to locate the mosquito breeding places and to decide upon the necessary steps to re move them. Between 50 and 65 persons were killed, more than 100 were injured in this wreckage of two sec-: tions of the Southern Pacific's crack westbound Pacific Limited passenger train near the shore of Great Salt Lake, 14 miles west of Ogdon, Utah, shown hero telescoped after the 12-cnr second sec tion plowed into it. ! Colonel F. S. Besson, Veteran Of Two Wars, Soon fo Retire (Colonel Frank S, Benton, who com manded Camp Abbot during the entire period it was in use as an engineers' replacement training center, is soon to retire, it was announced last week in a new release from Port Lewis. Recause of interest locally, and because the origi nal news release only partly covered Col onel Besson's varied services in two wars, the announcemen of the officer's retire ment is being- used in full today.) G. I. ORDERS TROUSSEAU Carrier Mills, 111. iu Fred Wasson, Carrier Mills merchant Mills, who is stationed in Italy, James Finis Holmes of Carrier has received on order from Pvt. which asked him to send a trous seau for his bride-to-be, an Italian girl. The only indication given of the fiancee's size was that it was about the same as one of the clerks In the store. Fort Lewis, Wash., Jan. 2 After 39 years of distinguished service with the corps of engi neers, Col. Frank S. Besson, com manding officer of the engineer section of this army service forces training center, has announced his intention to retire from active service. Col. Charles F. Baish, deputy commander of the engineer sec tion, assumed command of the section last week when Colonel Besson was admitted to Madlgan general hospital for a physical examination preparatory to re tirement. Colonel Besson s notable career began at West Point in the United States Military academy from which he graduated ill 1909 with high honors which brought his assignment to the corps of engi neers. While at West Point, the engineer commander won the coveted "Saber," emblematic of the year's outstanding athlete at the academy. Toul, Cantigny, Soissons bat tles of world war I, were mile stones in the service of Colonel Besson when he was in command of the First Engineers of the Firs't Division along the scarred Western front when allied of fenses raged through the Hun lines until November 11, 1918. For thia service, Colonel Besson was decorated with the French Four ragere for outstanding exploits by the organization he commanded. Since the battles of the first war. Colonel Besson enjoyed dis tinction as a graduate of the Command and General Staff school at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., and from the Army War college. He was later an instructor at the Fort Leavenworth army school. After serving as division engi neer of the Missouri river divi sion, Colonel Besson entered upon a series of training commands. In 1942, he assumed command of the engineer replacement train ing center at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., and a year later was named commander at Camp Abbot, Ore., where he built, opened and de veloped an" outstanding training center which was soon rated with the best in the country. . In 1944 the ASFTC at Camp Abbot was moved to Fort Lewis, Wash., and became the present engineer training section with Colonel Besson in command. After his graduation from West Point in 1909, he was promoted to first lieutenant on March 2, 1912, and to captain on June 31, 1916, and then rose to temporary ranks of major, lieutenant colonel, grets after Colonel Besson's de cision to leave his command was announced. The colonel won re spect and affection through his untiring efforts, his presence in the field where his men worked and trained, and for his interest in the welfare of those who served under him. Colonel Besson will leave many things behind him when he goes the Institution of the "Besson rod," a 40-inCh stick painted red and black which his trainers carry to check the dis tance between ranks, and inspira tion to hard work and practical application of the engineer motto "Essayons" ("Let us Try"). Tanker Captain And Funds Gone Portland, Ore., Jan. 1 dl') FBI agents, who previously refused to conduct an investigation into the disappearance of Capt. Ed ward Crabtree, master of an oil tanker docked in the Portland harbor, entered the case today when they determined that part of a missing $4,000 fund was gov ernment money. Capt. Crabtree was last seen on Wednesday, the day before he wa,s to appear at a hearing before a coast guard board. Missing, too, was the $-1,000 entrusted to him by a representative of a Portland transportation company for pay ing off crew members. A woman, whom the FBI re fused Murder Charge Faces Bud Harris Salem, Ore., Jan. 2 (IPi A charge of second degree murder was lodged late yesterday against George E. (Bud) Harris, 33, Brooks, who was arrested Sun day after the fatal shooting of Charles Batchelor, 35. Batchelor was shot, Harris told police, in a scuffle when Harris returned home early Sunday morning to find the other man there with his wife. The accused man said he fired intentionally at Batchelor's legs once, and that the fatal bullet was discharged while the two men were fighting. Harris had returned from a trip with some Boy Scouts to get his hunting clothes for a Sunday hunting jaunt. He called the po lice after the fatal shooting and made no attempt to resist arrest. No inquest will be held, accord ing to Coroner L. E. Barrick, who said that the facts of the case are known. Mrs. Harris was quoted by state police as saying that she did not "know there was a man in the house" until her husband re turned. Batchelor is survived by his wife, Mrs. Frances Batchelor of Salem, three children and' his mot her. War Briefs - (By United Tress) Western Front Germans re ported withdrawing from western to identify, said she had ! half of Ardennes salient as Amcii- seen the captain in a downtown can Third army crushes nazi Portland establishment Saturday counterattack on Bastogne and evening, and this fact gave the I wheels north into western flank investigators a new lead to fol- of enemy on 15 mile front. low- , I Eastern Front Massed Russian Before Crabtree disappeared, he , RUns begin levelling Budapest as evidently had written a suicide Hcd army. Inflamed by murder note and set afire his quarters in 'of two emissaries, declares no a cabin aboard the tanker. The i.,,.i,. r.,,. r--., i : suicide note was addressed to his wife. John A. Gauder Back in States Santa Barbara, Calif., Jan. 2 Technician Fifth Grade John A. Gauder, 27, of 571 Seward Ave., Bend, Oregon, is vacationing at the spacious Biltmore hotel sec tion of tlie army ground and serv ice forces redistribution station, Santa Barbara, following his re cent return from 30 months duty overseas. The Oregon veteran served as a tank mechanic with an armored division in the European theater. Under direction of the Ninth Service command, the redistribu tion station, one of five establish ed by the army to receive service men and women returned from overseas, offers a comprehensive program of athletics, recreation, and entertainment to returnees while they take part in reorienta tion discussions, receive physical city. Air War American heavy bombers and fighters roar over Germany for lltb straight day as Allied fliers count toll of at least 200 enemy planes in New Year's day combats. Pacific American land-based planes extended offensive against Luzon to almost 150 miles north of Manila. Italy -Patrols active on Fifth and Eighth army fronts while bad weather restricts air operations. Quich(letiet ROM SNmV, STUFFY 0 STRESS Of Head Colds! f sptctn, "TxK CooMt-OatT Now Oron V WortaFaimiiMWh.nl Ni Sv InuM.UI SlZJtSi Instantly, relief from SnUBy, sneezy distress of head colds starts to come when you put a little Va-tro-nol up each nostril. Also helps prevent many colds from developing if used in tune. Just try it I Follow directions in folder. VKatSYATROriOL and colonel during his world war j examin;itions, and al.p ass'i(;n7,d n I service. On February 2, 1920, he, nPW dulips on thp basis 0 ,.xpor,. attained the permanent rank of , ence antl skill major. Colonel Besson was pro- Cpl rjaude'r is a Eraduate of moted to his present, and per-. BUrns high school. Burns .Oregon, manent rank on June 1, 1938. ian, was formerly emploved in Behind the erect, iron-grey en- cVn service, prior'to his entrance gineer commander stands a mili- jn the armed forces. tary family active on many fronts I in the current fight. One son, Col. ; Ruv National War Rnnds Vnwi I Frank S. Besson, Jr., is commann-i er of the Iranian military rail road; another, Maj. Robert Bes son, is a prisoner of the Japanese: his- son-in-law, Lt. Col.. Milton B. Adams, is with a fighter squadron in the southwest Pacific; and his daughter, Mrs. Jean Besson Ad ams, is a service club hostess and a former Wac captain. ! To the colonel Is credited much of the development In training practices and in the use of train ing aids for his work at the three engineer training installations which he had commanded during the present war. His rigid insis tence upon perfection in training has shown results as thousands of well trained engineer soldiers have gone out from his camps to perform distinguished exploits on battlegrounds in many theaters of' the war. Officers and men of the engi neer section were expressing re-1 Barry (The Little Priest) Fitiger gorald who made you laugh, cry and cheer ... in ' Going My Way" ... is on his way again, with Paulette Goddard and Sonny Tufts ... in "I LOVE A SOLDIER" ! CAPITOL Wed..-Thurs..-Fri..-Sat. Check Their Eyes Don't send your girl or Iwiy to school handicapped with faulty vision. Dr. M. B. McKenney OPTOMETRIST Offices: Foot of Oregon Ave. Phone 465-W FLOWERS and PLANTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS Yon are always assured of lovely fresh blooms when you Phone 530 PICKETT Flower Shop & Gardens Phone 530 629 Quimby MONTGOMERY WARDS ANSWER TO THE ORDER OF SEIZURE BY THE PRESIDENT The order of the president to effect the seizure of the property arid business of Montgomery Ward is a vio lation of the constitution of the United States, which the president has sworn to uphold and defend. The Congress, which is the sole law-making authority under the constitu tion, has given the president no power to seize the non-war business of Montgomery Ward. The purpose of the president's order is to enforce, by an exercise of arbitrary power, orders of the War Labor Board which the courts have declared to be merely ad visory and legally unenforceable. The courts have held that anyone who refuses to comply with orders of the War Labor Board is not defying a command of the government and that, since the orders are merely advisory, no govern ment official has the right to impose punishments on those who do not comply. The president's order does not arise from any failure on Wards part to pay fair wage rates. Wards policy is, and has been, to pay wages as high as or higher than those paid by other employers in the community for similar employment. Wards only objection to any of the War Labor Boards wage recommendations has been in those instances where the board has arbitrarily demanded that Wards substan tially increase its rates above those of its competitors in the highly competitive retail field. The president has ordered the army to restrict the lib erties of Wards employees by imposing upon them the closed shop in the form of union maintenance. This is the final step in the coercion used by the administrative agencies of the government to force the closed shop upon employers and employees throughout the nation. Wards has long believed that when the public awakens to the ex tent of this coercion, it will rise in indignation. Wards defense of the freedom of its employees has not been prompted by any f e eling of anti-unionism. All em ployees at Wards are free to join or not to join a union, as they wish. Wards fully recognizes this privilege and has assured all employees that their opportunity with the company will be the same whether they are union mem bers or not. Wards cannot in good citizenship accept or obey the commands of those who have no legal power to give them and who are seeking to deprive Wards of its constitutional riqhts and liberties. Wards takes this position in defense of the constitutional rights and liberties of every citizen of the United States. The issues are now before the courts, where Wards has sought for two years to have them decided. Wards welcomes the opportunity to present its case to the courts. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. SKWEL A VERY Chairman