Ltt YOUR Answer To
Bombt Be BONDSl
' Bay War Bond! uj (tamp
TODaV Contribute to the war
effort of jroor nation. Patriot
Um. your own self-protection
demand! that SOU do oar
part NOW!
On The
MAO. TRIBUNC
Want Ad Way
Quick Results .
At Small Coit
MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1943.
NO. 169.
U ail ad P rasa Full Leased Win lJJJfr , . United PressFull Luud Win
United Proaa Full Leased Win -'
Thirty-eighth Year -
1 fflLLSp M II
. . f-
TRUCK CARRYING t
MEXICAN WORKERS ri
4
i i i ii i i hi i ii i nit i?i
lodiutonirtu . j
News Behind
The News
by Paul Mallon
Washington, Oct. 7
gressional reception
treasury tax program
faol Malloa
The con
for the
was ex
pected to be
discouraging
but not as dis
couraging as it
turned out to
be. .
Economic
Stabilizer Vin
son was sched'
uled to appear
next day in
support of
Treasury Sec
retary Morgen-
thau. When he
did not, excuses were made that
he was not fully prepared. What
he meant was that he was not
prepared to meet the sour re
jection Morgenthau had en
countered. The administration
obviously needed more time to
regain its countenance.
THE congressional committee
attitude is not hard to ex
plain. The Morgenthau plan
seemed to lack a convincing
ring of either sense or security.
Indeed, it appeared to have only
feeble political Justification,
Mr. Morgenthau condemned him
self with his own argument. The
proposition he offered was sim-
nlv this:
. The people have $25,000,000,-
000 of excess spending money.
This causes a dangerous threat
of inflation.' We need to tax it
I into the treasury. Then almost
V in the next breath, he said:
. "Four-f tfths of this dangerous
excess is in the hands of people
37 Men on Machine in
Smashup on E. Main St.;
Men Enroute to Orchard.
(Contlnurd on Pago Bli)
RE-l
Bnntnn. Oct. 7. (U.R) The
American Federation of Labor
voted unanimously today to re
admit the International Associa
tion of Machinists which broke
away from the AFL last May in
a dlsoute with the executive
noil over work lurisdiction.
Addition of the machinists
will- give the AFL an even
orontsp numerical advantage in
fnhir negotiations with the
CIO. which claims a member-
hn nf more than 5.000.000.
The action by the 63rd annual
AFL convention came amid per
tstont reports that John L.
LBuHf.' United Mine Workers
nrnuld be in line for re
admission. The Lewis matter
probably will reach the conven
tion finnr enrlv next week.
oirrpplnz to accept the
" Machinists, the AFL swelled its
membership by 484,000 to make
the total membersnip o,oo,ii
the highest of all time.
r ARGENTINA RECALLS
. AMBASSADOR TO U. S
" Washington, Oct. 7. (U.R)
Argentine Ambassador reupe n.
Esnll. who has represented his
government here for more than
12 years, has been' recalled to
Buenos Aires, Espil's office said
today.
Fcnfi hn hem a strong pro-
nnnnnf nf rinse relations be-
turoon Aroontina and the United
States, and it was largely
through his efforts that a re
ciprocal trade agreement was
nesntintpii between the two
countries.
SIDE GLANCES
TRIBUNE REPORTER
Jean Watson remarking that
the world had come to a pretty
pass when the wife of a clean
ing establishment owner nas w
press her own suits.
Charley Clay invading foreign
territory to clean up on a World
Series operation.
Mildred Cowglll enjoying her
shnrt visit in the old home
town and regretting she couldn'i
German Tune -Bomb Kills Many in Naples
One Mexican National was
dead and 14 others were in Sa
cred Heart hospital today with
injuries they suffered when
two trucks sideswiped each
other in the 1600 block on East
Main street about 7 a. m.
Killed in the mishap was
Rosendo Garcia Arriola, 49,
whose home was in Mexico City.
According to Deputy Coroner
Carlos W. Morris, he sustained
badly crushed ribs on the right
side at the spine and probable
punctured right lung and liver.
He apparently was killed in
stantly.
En Route to Orchard
State and city police, who In
vestigated the accident, said
Arriola was riding in a truck
loaded with 37 Mexican Na
tionals en route from the farm
labor supply center at Camp
Prescott to their pear harvest
ing job in a local orchard.
The truck, a ton and a half
model A Ford, was operated by
George E. Wilson of Eagle Point
and was owned by Southern
Oregon Sales, ' for whom the
Mexicans -were working, police
said. - . , .
Aonroximately 400 feet from
the too of thehlU on East Mam
street the heavily-loaded truck
and a 1936 two-ton Dodge truck
driven by Theodore V. Down
ing of Camp-U-Rest, traveling
toward Camp Prescott to pick
up other harvesters for Bear
Creek Orchards, sideswiped
each other, police reported.
r- Truck Demolished -
Following: the . impact the
Ford traveled 246 feet before it
stonoed. while the Dodge went
96 feet 11 Inches before it came
to a rest on the left side of the
tntatt. The Dodse truck, empty
except for the driver, was to
tally demolished, with its front
wheels and axle Knocitea on.
Nnither truck overturnea,
and state police said the injured
Mexicans were apparently no
ins nn the left side of the Ford.
The body extends out from the
cab and it was this side wnicn
was struck. ' ' , .
nnumlnff escarjed injury
while Wilson received a bruised
le8-
Maadliants Diamwu
sinto nnlice Quoted both driv
Dr. aa nvni nicy wcv
traveling at an excessive rate of
.mopd. and Downing as declaring
that tne neaaiiB"" "
truck blinded him. Police were
n,cinninB Wilson this after
noon in an effort to determine
whether either or both drivers
tn hlnme for the accident.
There will be no inquest, the
..mnn'i nffice saiQ.
Hospitalized lor meaicai i-
tention were Jesus n. u...,
on. Syrian s. Cheerake, 28
Jesus C. Geronimo, 38; Manuel
c,k7 2fi: Luis Garcia, 30
... rv Ksnulvel. 43: Jese V.
Trueillo. 31; Bonifacio C. Mar
tinez, 40; Franquillno H. Urinva,
42; Francisco u. t-asmas,
cvirin A. Rlncon. 30: Angel H,
Hernandez, 38; Luis Orozio Gar
cia, 30 and Dometrlo B. Vidales,
30. . . .
nf thpm were not
ously hurt, suffering cuts and
hut three or four of the
laborer's were believed to have
extensive injuries. They were
being thoroughly examined this
afternoon. .... ...
Arriola was married, his wife
now residing in Mexico City.
Her name ia Valeria Dlez De
Arriola. He has a brother be
lieved to be working on a farm
In California. The body is at
Congers, who are awaiting word
as to its disposition.
Guerillas in
Siege of. Zagreb
T.nndon. Oct. 7-AI.B Jugo
slav partisan troops, battling
four to five German divisions
.-t hv nlanes and tanks.
have placed Zagred, capital of
puppet Croatia, under near
siege In an advance that cut
ih. ritv's communications, it
was reported today.
ijCOWGILL AWARDED
: . . 1 INCREASE OF $695
rTR IN CONDEMNATION
War Bulletins I YANKEES WIN 6-2
BY 5-RUN DRIVE
.' (Acm TtUphoto)
Here's one of the two Army
Flying Fortresses over Yankee
Stadium a bit low that caused
delay in the opening game of the
1943 world series baseball game
and aroused the Ire of both May
or LaGuardia and Yank Man
ager Joe McCarthy. -
Federal Court Jury Ups Gov
ernment Offer on Land
in Brief Deliberation.
165 DEER PLACED
NINETY IN G. PASS
7
Local hunters returning from
trips into Oregon forests have
brought back at least 165 deer.
placing them in cold storage
plants in Medford, since opening
of the . season." Local storage
plant operators reported today
that many who have never be
fore been regular hunters are
apparently feeling the effects of
the nation-wide meat shortage.
and have donned red hats and
shouldered guns to attempt to
alleviate scarcities on the family
table this winter.
The Medford Ice and Storage
company reports 135 deer and
four antelope brought in for
storage up to this morning. Big
gest single day this season was
Oct. 4, when 49 deer, two ante
lope, and one bear were re
ceived. The largest deer received
weighed 182 pounds, and was
killed by W. L. .Seward of Port
land. A rather large percentage,
anoroxlmately 25 to 30 per cent,
of the deer are does, and most
of them were brought in from
the eastern Oregon area, near
Lakeview.
The A-One Brewing company
has received a total of 30 deer,
besides five taken earlier from
California sections. The biggest
single day was last Monday,
Oct. 4, when 26 arrived. Rollie
Holmes brought in the biggest,
weighing 185 pounds. Approxi
mately one-third of the deer are
does.
- The Grants Pass cold storage
plant reports that 90 deer have
been received, mostly mule deer
from the area east of the Cas
cades. Approximately one-third
of-the number are does. '
Deliberating less than 45
minutes, a federal court trial
jury late yesterday afternodn
awarded Brig. Gen. Ralph P.
Cowgill, Portland, head of the
Oregon State Guard, $1,962 for
two tracts of land he owned in
the Camp White area.
Represented by Attorney
George A. Codding, Gen. Cow
gill had asked for $3,500 for
the two tracts, $1,000 for one of
13 acres along the Rogue Kiver
and $2,500 for 160 acres of pas
ture land. The government had
offered $1,267 for the tracts, the
jury giving Gen. Cowglll an in
crease of $695 over the govern
ment deposit. William uicKson,
special attorney for the depart
ment of Justice, represented tne
government..
- carmean base neara
' Exnected to be completed late
thl afternoon was the condem
nation suit of the government
versus M. L. Carmean, who is
seeking $17,170 for Zl.7 acres
against the government offer of
$1,200; . -Attorney rvxeprge. -im,
Roberta is - representing Car-
mean.
Drawn this morning was
jury to hear the George Gllman
land condemnation case, which
will be tried upon completion of
tt,o Cnrmpan case. Gilman,
thrnnah Attorney Roberts, is
asking $2,400 damage to his land
because of strip tne govern
mnt took nrior to the construc
tion of Camp White. The gov-
crnmcu. t ,
The Jury, which viewed the
premises this morning, is aa ioi-
1raraf
Mrs. Josephine Sleight, Victor
C. Sether, H. B. iieliom, mrs,
Agnes Evanson, Mrs. Ruth Boyd,
Mr. Kothprlne McAllister, Mrs
Alice Helman and Wilbur L.
Gardner, all of Medford; Ray A.
MinVlPr and William Piatt, Ash
land; Charles Cook of Grants
Pass and Andrew .Hearn of
Phoenix.
London, Oct. 7. 0J.PJ The
Russian front biased up from
end to end today when the
Red army swarmed across tha
Dnieper river at a number
of places, liquidated the
Axis operational area in the
Caucasus bridgehead, and
shredded the German lines In
new onslaughts below Lenin
grad. On the ' middle reaches of
the Dnieper, a Moscow com
munique revealed, the Rus
sians forced the mighty water
barrier In at least three
places north of Kiev, south
of the town of Pereyaslvl, and
southeast of Kremenchug.
Chungking, Oct. 7 (U.R)
Halting a big-scale Japanese
offensive in eastern China,
counter-attacking Chinese
forces have thrown enemy
troops Into "disorderly re
treat" south of Kwangteh,
Chekiang province, front line
dispatches said today.
NOTICE TO TOKYO
E
E
Recofd Crowd Sees New
Yorkers Take Advantage
of Two Red Bird Errors.
Clark In Naples
TO BUILD LINE
Sacramento, Oct. 7 U.R)
Charles E. Carey, regional di
rector of the U. S. Bureau of
Reclamation, today announced
award of a $258,841 contract to
the Larson Construction Co., of
Denver, for building of the 100-
mile Shasta-Oroville transmis
sion line. -
F
KILLEI
Gold Beach, Ore., Oct. 7 (U.R)
Oregon today recorded its
fourth deer hunting fatality this
season with the accidental shoot
ing of Roland MiUer, 21, by
life-Ions friend.
Miller was wounded in the
mountains near Gold Beach
when John Nowlin, 16, fired as
a deer jumped through the
brush. Twenty hours elapsed
before Miller could reach' a Gold
Beach hospital, where he died.
A former woman veterinary
surgeon in Hollywood is now a
WAC veterinarian. .
Nazis Taking Treasures of Rome;
Vatican Fears Abduction of Pope
Stockholm. Oct. 7 flJ.FO
A fascist plot to kidnap Pope
Pius was balked at the last
minute by the Germans who
were afraid of world reaction,
a Bern dispatch to the Stock
holm Tidningen said today.
London, Oct. 7. (U.R) Re
ports reaching London today
said the Germans have embark
ed on an unparalleled campaign
of looting in Rome, confiscating
priceless paintings, manuscripts
and other art treasures, as Al
lied r.rmles draw nearer the
Italian capital.
Special Nazi squads were said
to be stripping Roman palaces
museums and private houses of
masterpieces on a scale dwarf
ing their sacking of Paris and
Warsaw. The London Dally
Mirror reported that several
trains laden with pictures, books,
manuscripts and statuettes al
ready have left for Berlin. Some
however, were derailed and
burned by saboteurs.
The London Daily Express
said the situation in Rome ap
proached a siege with the in
habitants bordering on- starva
tion, while a German broadcast
acknowledged there was food
sufficient for only 10 to 16 days.
First reports indicated that
the Nazi looting was confined to
the Italian part of Rome. Vati
can City apparently has not
been touched, but a Dally Mall
dispatch from Madrid said VatW
can authorities feared that Pope
Plus XII might be carried off
a hostage.
By United Press
The third American air-sea at
tack oh Japari's'island Outposts
in five weeks without reported
enemy retaliation, served notice
in Tokyo today that the United
States navy is preparing to roll
the enemy forces back across the
Pacific.
The latest attack was on con
quered Wake island. An an
nouncement from Admiral Ches
ter W. Nlmitz at Pearl Harbor
gave no details but the attack by
carrier-based planes presumably
was similar to those against the
Gilberts Sept. 18-19 and Marcus
island Sept. 1.
Assaults Hinted
A Pearl Harbor dispatch said
the operations by an American
task force moving on a destruc
tive path along the wide reaches
of the Pacific was added evi
dence that naval assaults on a
big scale were about to start.
Elsewhere in the Pacific Al
lied forces scored new successes.
Australian troops moved down
the Ramu valley in New Guinea
to within 50 miles of the Japa
nese base at Madang while Fly
ing Fortresses and Liberators
rained bombs and machlnegun
shells on enemy roads and bases
on the northeast coast.
Rabaul Hop Looms
Gen. Douglas MacArthur's
spokesman announced that con
tinual air attacks had nullified
Japanese aerial strength on vital
New Britain Island north of New
Guinea. The statement appeared
to foreshadow an over-water hop
from New Guinea in an attack
aimed ultimately at the big en
emy base at Rabaul, New Brit
ain.
Admiral Lord Louis Mount-
batten arrived in New Delhi for
conferences preliminary to set
ting up his new southeast Asia
command. He planned to con
tinue on to Chungking later.
Stassen Is First '
Formal Candidate
Lincoln, Neb., Oct. 7 (U.R)
Former Governor Harold E.
Stassen of Minnesota today be
came the nation's first formal
candidate for the Republican
nomination for president when
his name was entered in the Ne
braska Republican preferential
primary.
The Intent to file was made
by John B. Quinn, Nebraska as
sistant secretary of state, - who
resigned simultaneously to di
rect Stassen's campaign in Nebraska.
Yankee Stadium, New York,
Oct. 7 (U.R) Smashing a crum
bling Cardinal defense, the New
York Yankees poured five runs
across the plate in a big eighth
inning today to beat St. Louts,
6 to 2, before a record world
series crowd of 69,990 fans.
The Yankees batted around
their entire lineup as they took
advantage of two Red Bird er
rors and five base hits to blast
the series debut of Rookie
Southpaw Alpha Brazle and
the Cards back to St. Louis for
conclusion of the classic trailing
by a count of two games to one.
Good Until Eighth
Showing good control, a fast
sinker and tantalizing slow
curve, the straw-thatched rookie
had given the Bronx Bombers
only three hits and one unearned
run going into that big eighth
inning.
Then the stadium fell In on
him.. .. - -
He had weathered two Car
dinal errors previously, chewing
gum placidly as he mowed tne
Yankees down, and it appeared
that eight years in the minors
would pay off after only two and
one-half months in the majors.
Box score: -
CARDINALS
AB R H O A
Klein, 2b .... 4 0 0 2 2
Walker, cf . 4 0 1 1 0
MusiaLrt 3 1 11 1
W. Cooper, e 4 0 1 4 1
Kurowskl, 3b 3 1 12 2
Sanders, lb .. 3 0 0 8 2
Litwhiler, If.. 4 0 2 3 0
Marlon, ss .... 2 0 0 2 4
Brazle, p 3 0 0 1 2
Krlst, p 0 0 0 0 0
Brecheen, p.. 0 0 0 0 0
O'Dea 1 0 0 0 0
POSTOFFICE SITE
OF HEAVY BUST
com
mander of the U. S. Fifth Army,
Gen. Mark W. Clark, center.
goes "sight-seeing" in Naples
after Allied troops had entered
the Nasi-defended Italian city.
British Film Unit photo by U.S.
Army Signal Corps Radio-Tele-photo.
Naples, Oct. 6 U.R) A Ger
man time bomb . exploded zu
minutes after Lieut. Gen. Mark
W; Clark, commander of the
allied Fifth army, rode'past'the
tourist hotel section of the
Naples waterfront today. No
body was injured.
Totals 31 2 6 24 14
Batted for Kurowskl in 9th,
YANKEES
AB R H O A E
Stalnback, cf 4 0 1 10 0
Crosetti, ss - 210240
Johnson, 3b 4 1 1 0 10
Keller, If .. 3 1 0 2 0 0
Gordon, 2b 4 0 13 2 0
Dickey, c .... 4 0 2 6 1 0
Etten, lb 4 0 19 10
Lindell, rf 311200
Borowy, p211200
tStirnwelss - 1 1 0 0 0 0
Murphy, p 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 31 6 8 27 9
t Batted for Borowy in 8th.
Cardinals 000 200 000 2
Yankees 000 001 05 6
Runs batted In Litwhiler
Johnson 3, Gordon. Etten.
Two-base hits Walker, Kur
owskl, Borowy.
Three-base hit Johnson.
Sacrifice Crosetti..
Left on bases Cardinals
Yankees4.
Bases on balls off Brazle
Borowy 3.
Struck out by Brazle 4. Bor
owy 4, Murphy 1.
Hits off Borowy 5 in
Brazle 5 in 7 13, Krlst 1 in 0,
Brecheen 2 In 23, Murphy none
in l.
Double plays Marlon-Klnln-
Sanders, Crosetti-Gordon-Etten.
Winning pitcher Borowy.
Losing pitcher Brazle.
Umpires Rue (A), plate;
Stewart (N), first base; Rommel
(A), second; Reardon (N), third
Time 2:10.
Attendance 69,990 (a new
world series record).
(See
FLIER KILLED
Hamilton Field, Cal., Oct. 7
(U.R) 2nd Lt. James W.' Van
Dyne, 23, was killed yesterday
when his single-seater fighter
plane crashed in Pinole Canyon,
Hamilton 'leld officials an
nounced today. Van Dyne was
the son of Claud L, Van Dyne,
Dayton, Ohio.
Play-by-Play Raport
Page Seven)
SURGEONS TO MEET
Seattle, Oct. 7 (U.R) The
Association of Military Sur-
geans of the United States will
hold its 51st annual convention
in Philadelphia October 21-23,
it was announced here today by
Rear Adm. William L. Mann
M. C, president of the associa
tion and district medical officer
for tha 13th naval district
The
tAcmt Radlo-TtUphtol
rough and ready
Bomb One of Series Left by
Retreating Nazis Stark
Scenes Follow Explosion.
By Reynolds Packard
United Press Correspondent ,
Naples, Oct. 7 (U.R) An ex
ploding German time -bomb
shattered the Naples postoffica
in the heart of the commercial
section today, killing perhaps
several hundred civilians In a
new disaster to the war-torn
city. .
The scene of the tremendous
explosion which rocked or
wrecked nearby buildings was
the most horrible spectacle I
have seen in this war.
The postoffice building, on
of the few left Intact by the
Germans, was being reopened
to the public when the bomb
went off.
On of Series
The bomb was one of a series
planted by the departing Nazis,
many of which already have
been discovered. On exploded
yesterday in a hotel just after
Lieut. Gen. Mark W. Clark rode
by. .- , .
I- helped American military
police and Italian firemen and
carabinierl remove the victims
from the postoffice. The body of
one woman was headless yet
clutching the charred body of
a baby to her breast.
Washington, Oct. 7. (U.R)
Sen. Alexander P. Wiley, R.,
Wis., led a group of colleagues
in a movement today to make
public war reports made to the
senate in secret session by five
members recently returned from
a 40,000-mile tour of world bat
tle theaters.
Wiley said during a luncheon
recess of the secret session that
Sen. Richard B. Russell, D., Ga.,
chairman of the globe-circling
group, had given the senate in
formation which ''the state" de
partment should have been giv
ing us all along."
T think the whole country
should hear it and I am going to
propose before this day s over
that the report be made public,
he said.
Russell was the only one of
the five travelers to speak be
fore the recess.
'It s tremendous," Wiley re
ported. . "That boy (Russell) is
making a marvelous presenta
tion. We now are getting what
the state department should
have been giving us all along,
It's perfectly ridiculous that the
senate had to send its own mem
bers out trooping around the
world to get this kind of infor
mation.
51
ES
T
Allied Headquarters, Algiers.
Oct. 7. (U.R) The Allied Fifth
army neared Capua, 17 miles
north of Naples, on Hannibal's
ancient road to Rome today as
the Eighth army, reinforced
with tanks and aided by a naval
bombardment, smashed tha
heaviest German counter-attack
yet launched on the Adriatio
coast.
American Flying Fortresses
carried the war to the Venica
area of northern Italy for tha
first time yesterday, flying 1,200
miles round trip from North.
African bases to pound railway
targets at Mestre, 10 miles to
the west,' an important relay
point for German military sup.
plies moving between Italy,
Jugoslavia, Hungary and Aus
tria. (Reliable reports reaching
Madrid from France said that
the Allies were believed to have
landed 20 divisions possibly
300,000 men in Italy while
many more remained in Sicily
and Africa in reserve. Three
German divisions were believed
holding heights in the Volturno
river sector, and two others
were fighting rear guard actions
In the center and along the east
coast.)
U. S. Newspapers Helping Hitler
Is Charge Of Russian Magazine
Moscow, Oct. 7 (U.R) The
Trade Union magazine, war and
the working class, charged to
day that a large section of the
American Press was carrying on
an anti-Soviet campaign "which
fully corresponds to the inter
ests of Adolf Hitler's agents."
It specifically named the
Hearst, Scripps Howard, and
Patterson .- McCormick newspa
pers. In an article apparently timed
to appear on the eve of the
forthcoming British - American
Soviet conference of foreign
ministers, the magazine said the
New York Herald-Tribune and
the newspaper PM were among
those "trying to offset the poison
generated by the anti-Soviet
camralsn."
The newspapers boast com
bined circulation of more than
10,000,000. But "they are at
sharp variance with the views
of the masses of the American
people and contradict the gen
eral line of American foreign
policy which stands for strength
ening of collaboration with the
Soviet union," the magazine
said.
It named the New York World
Telegram, Chicago Tribune, New
York Dally News, and New
York Journal-American "rep
resenting reactionary, defeatist
and isolationist circles whose
anti-Soviet campaign it designed
to throw suspicion on Soviet
foreign policy" as the leaders
of the anti-Soviet press in America.
stay longer. -