mimwTFnffann (nnn'Hrf'rm rnVmnnnnrr'n raFmw mm N Smashing Victory in Tunisia Assault Nets 6,000 Prisoners; : V 6 VOL. XLV1I NO.310 Of ROSEBURG REVIEW feln-.TKe:. ' v Day's o I News ' By FRANK JENKINS IMPORTANT war news is scarce again. The world is in another of those lulls between storms. H ERE on the Pacific coast, Ave noto-wilh stern pride that Mac- Arthur's deadly bombers have fin ished off the Jap naval concentra tion ut Kavieng harbor, in New Ireland. Score: Seven Jap warships and five cargo ships sunk or damag ed without the loss of a SINGLE ONE of our planes. MacArthur's headquarters communique says tersely: "The Japanese naval concentration at Kaviong has now been destroyed or dispersed." T HE job was done by three waves of Flying Fortresses, the first of ten planes and the last two of eight each, operating from a distance of 1100 miles, far be yond the usual bombing range. IN Tunisia, Patlon is battering hard at the German lines, try ing to establish a junction with Montgomery's northward-moving 8th army. His infantrymen take more German high ground, anil hold it successfully against hard counterattacks. A junction, however, hasn't yet been effected. N APLES, chief axis supply port nearly 100 American heavy bomb ers from North Africa. Twenty one larger axis ships and many smaller ones are reported hit ;md much damage done to docks and oilier shipping installations. Am ong other craft, three axis subs are smacked. From Naples, as from the South seas, we get the cheering word that ALL our planes re turned safely. The raid, of course, is primarily designed to break up axis (Ger man) communications with Tuni sia. THE Russians still hold the line of the Donets unhreacbed, and the dispatches say that in addi tion they are holding a number of bridgeheads on the ENEMY side of the river. That is important. These bridge heads will be immensely useful if and when the Russians launch a counter attack. Crossing a river in the face of strong enemy re sistance is much easier if you have a toehold on the other side. R ECENT dispatches report that the American China air task (Continued on page 21 Oregon Dairymen Demand Milk Price Ceiling Hoist, Urge Action By Special Investigating Group PORTLAND, April 7-(API A protest against OPA milk ceil-1 ings was voiced here yesterday! by Oregon dairymen in a mass j meeting. A resolution declared, "the fluid milk Industry .which is closely connected with the public health, is and for some time past has been operating at a loss in a period of rapidly increasing costs . . . Pro ducers have sought to maintain production at a loss out of a sense of obligation . . . but they cannot j Uon the slate department of under present conditions carry on agriculture, the Oregon milk con much longer." I trol board and the dairy division Snokesmen said 1000 dairvmen ! of Oregon State college for aid passed the resolution, which also investigating milk prices to at- tempt to get price increases. The committee, which commit- ed in session todav, attended the the "minimum demands necessary j affected nearly 2.000 miles of the meetine. ! to continue an adequate ptoduc- j 2.600-mlle Chilean coast and took The committee, of which Harry j tion of fluid milk in Oregon, in : at least 18 lives. Pinnlger of Roseburg is chair- order that OPA may act wisely 1 Fragmentary messages gave re man, is working on the drafting: and in fairness to both the fluid ports of widespread destruction of a cost formula for determining . milk industry and the general ; around Ovalle. about 180 miles the prices of fluid milk which it hopes will be accepteo cy tneUKA in adjusting fluid milk ceilings S sate Farm Bloc T Delay sure 1 Group Wants Bill Back In Committee Capital Sees Opening of Campaign to Raise New . War Loan of 13 Billion WASHINGTON, April 7--IAP) - Dilssonsion on capitol hill over farm and labor legsilalion con trasted today with the While House launching of a campaign of national unity- the raising of 513,000.000,000 in the country's greatest war loan drive. While the senate farm bloc rtrove to delay a test on the ve toed Bankhead bill and a CIO representative protested against a measure to forbid the unioniza tion of foremen, President Roose velt sold the first $25 bond of the campaign to help finance the country's fighters, and proclaim ed this as its slogan: "They give their lives. We lend our money." Bloc to Continue Fight. The farm argument continued over from yesterday when the administration displayed enough senate strength to sustain the veto of the Iiankhead bill to in crease price ceilings. Farm "leaders dropped broad Hints that, if they can get the hill referred to the agricultural committee, they hope to renew their drive against the veto after settlement of the current wage in crease demands of the United Mine workers. The related ef fects of farm price raises and wage increases were frequently discussed in debate on the hill. Bankhead Raps Byrnes. Senator Bankhead, author of the farm price hill rejected by the president with the declara tion that it might set off an In flationary tornado, charged yes terday during a warm debate that the measure had been mis represented by "anonymous com pilers of tables in the depart ments." He said the bill would (Continued on page 6.) Seed Spud Minimum Off For Victory Gardens WASHINGTON, April 7 ( API- Victory gardeners won't have to buy seed potatoes in 50 pound lots after all. To aid persons with small gar dens, the OPA today removed its 50-pound regulation, originally established to curb sales of seed potatoes for human consumption in order to escape price ceilings. Purchases for planting pur- poses now may qua ry My. be made in any and thus return Oregon's milk industry to what was called its "much-needed capacity." The OPA blanket order of the first of the year, fixing prices within counties of Ihe state, and separately for certain of the large cities, will expire April !). It is not yet known what renewal pro- j redure will be followed. Data To Be Sought The committee members at this first meeting, agreed to call and statistics in developing the j It was also resolved for the i committee that they prepare a statement of figures bearing on public In holding In check thej lorces 01 lniiatinn as expressea in living costs." ROSEBURG, OREGON, Test on to Boost Aloha to Japanese When more than 2600 Hawaian-Japanese soldiers in the U. S. army left for active service, they were presented with leis and best wishes by 50 young American women of Japanese ancestry at Honolulu. Here, Florence Shirotakei bids aloha to 2nd Lieut. Robert Kadowaki, right, a battalion officer. Missing 4 Fliers Thought Located In Idaho Region CASCADE. Idaho, April 7. (API- Tracks in the snow around a supposedly-unoccupied mountain cabin led Mercy Flier Penn Stohr today to believe he may have located four missing army airmen. Stohr, civilian pilot who twice this winter has rescued army fliers from central Idaho's wil derness areas, saw the tracks while searching for crewmen who parachuted from a four-motored bomber before it smacked into a mountainside near Challis, Idaho. Five of the crew members were brought here by Stohr yes terday after reaching a forest ranger's station on the middle fork of the Salmon river and telephoning for assistance. They said all nine occupants of the plane parachuted in the area, i Noting the tracks in the snow some seven miles up the middle fork from the rancher station, Stohr said he planned to fly low in an effort to attract the atten tion of anyone who might be in the cabin. Still missing were Second Lt. Joseph Brensinger, Fairfield, Ala., pilot; Second Lt. George W. Smith, Jr., Hawthorne, Calif., bombardier; Staff Sgt. H. C. Van Slager, South Bend, Ind., engi neer, and Staff Sgt. II. A. Pope, Athens, Ga., assistant engineer. Also missing was a searching plane from the army's hill field at Ogden, Utah. Piloting it was ("apt. Bill Kelly, accompanied by Lt. Arthur A. Croft and Forest Hanger ('. E. I.anger of Stanley, Idaho. Crewmen of the Walla Walla bomber were ordered to bail out when the ship became lost and j unan(. to pick up radio beam sig j nas I TnP nino m,,n hecame soparat ed in their descent feet. from 14,000 Chilean Earthquake i Deals Death, Destruction j SANTIAGO. Chile, April j (APi Throe of Chile's most pop- loud rities- Santiago. Valoaraiso j and Conception - and scores of j villages and towns were shaken yesterday ny an carinqudKe iruu north of Santiago .where seven 1 were reporieu neau ann 01 injur- ' ed. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7. 1 943. Strives Vetoed Prices in U. S. Army Chicago's Mayor Kelly Elected To His Third Term CHICAGO, April 7. (API Edward J. Kelly will begin his I lib year as mayor of Chicago Friday starling his third four year term to which be was elect ed yesterday, and heading Inward a new tenure record. The 66-yenr-old democrat, if he completes his newest term in 1!M7, will have served 11 years, longer than any oilier Chicago mayor and believed one of the longest tenures as chief executive of any of the nation's large cities. Kelly, a native Chicagoan who is rounding out a half-century of public life, won re-election by tie leating republican George B. Me Kihhin, former state finance di rector, attorney and civic leader The veteran democratic leader -he is Illinois' national committee man won by 116,15!) votes, poll ing 087.046 to 571,487 for Mc Kihhin. The mayor, who in 1891 started as a rodman with the Chicago sanitary district and advanced to chief engineer in 1!I20, was elect ed by the city council in 1 033 to serve out the unexpired term of Mayor Anton J. Cermak, who was assassinated in Florida w hile seated in an automobile with President Roosevelt. Four Killed in Crash Of Coast Guard Plane SEATTLE, April 7 -AP) All four occupants of a coast guard patrol plane lost their lives as result of the craft's crash on a hill near Discovery bay, northern Olympia peninsula, coast guard headquarters reported today. Lieut. (J. G.) Carl Ileussy, former Seattle attorney, and Earl H. Muyskens, aviation pilot first class, of Port Angeles, died during the night In a hospital of injuries suffered In the wreck. The two others aboard, Lieut. Comdr. F. L. Westbrook of Kan sas City. Mo., and Radioman First Class T. E. Kesncr of Port An geles, were killed outright. The crash occurred shortly be fore noon yesterday on a routine flight. i youfn Missiftq After Fleeing Home With Gun CORVALLIS. Ore., April 7. (API A sheriff's posse searched the coast range near Summit, 35 miles west of here today, for a 16-year-old boy missing since Monday. The parents told officers the bov seized a rifle and ran Into the j nius near nis nome uiu-r an iku ment. VOL. XXXI NO. Air Bombing Sets Fires to Nippon Base South Pacific Area Sees Hard Blows; Kiska, Attu ' Also Receive Pounding , ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA. April 7. (API-- Allied bombers hit Ihe Japanese base at Salamaua on the north east coast of New Guinea yester day in a concentrated mid day at tack which started a number of large fires and silenced anti aircraft positions, General Mac- Arthur's headquarters reported today. A Flying Fortress followed up later in the day with an attack on the jetty area which demol ished supply warehouses. The Fortress returned, as had Ihe earlier force, without meeting any enemy craft in the air. Wide-sweeping but relatively light bombing and strafing fo rays were made by bombers on the villages of Ke'nari and Wo kam In Ihe A roe islands, closest Japanese positions to the Austra lian mainland, and on Alllit, in the Tanlmhar islands, also to the northwest, as well as on enemy positions In New Rritain and New Guinea. , As allied fliers drove home these thrusts lo keep Ihe Japan ese off balance, an official an nouncement disclosed the return from Washington of the mission headed hv MacArthur's chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Richard K. Suth erland, and Lieut. Gen. George O. Kenney, allied air chief; In the southwest Pacific. Members of the mission said merely that they had pi'esenled details of the military situation (Continued on page C.) Private Johns of Azalea Missing in Action AZALEA, Ore., April (i. Pri vate Darwin Johns, son of Mr. and Mrs, T C. Johns, of Azalea, has been reported missing in ac tion, according lo official notifica tion received by h.'s parents from the war department. He was serv ing with the II. S. army in Noil 1 1 Africa. a saw By Paul Jenkins l i. 3 " ! I I 1 W I B Mil W'MHAWnli-ttr ,OAtuU. ex- Ct.ntivi- ni-Lii-lniy uf tin- Iiil,iI win rationing board. He has a job I wouldn't want, which you j wouldn't want - and w hich he j didn't want. Hut It was a Job I which had to be done- someone : had to do it - so, being a good ' average public spirited American j guy and conscientious citizen, Dick said, be d do it, and do his darndest. It's quite probable that the members of the rationing hoard, the executive secretary and the office personnel are the most I cussed individuals In Douglas ! county. This supposition is true j of each rationing board in each county, or like district, in the j Fnlted States. I Well, let's cuss 'em a little- it i don't hurt them, and It let's off la lot of steam for us. which other ' wise might blow our own lids off; R- L. (DICK) PRESTON 290 OF THE EVENING NEWS British Subs Hit Cruiser, Two Tankers Convoy Attacked Off Tip Of Italy; Nazi Sub Sunk By Brazilian Bomber LONDON, April 7 (API British submarines in the Medi terranean have attacked an Itali an cruiser of the Itegolo class and torpedoed two tankers and an enemy supply ship, Ihe admiralty announced today. II said the attack on the cruiser occurred In the straits of Messina, between Sicily and the Italian mainland, and a heavy explosion was heard hut results were not observed. "Other submarines operating against the axis supply lines In the Mcditerannean have torpedo ed two tankers and a supply ship of medium size," the admiralty's communique said. One of Ihe tankers was inter cepted under escort near Cape Sparllvonto, at the extreme southern tip of Italy, while the other was torpedoed while being towed off the north coast of Si cily, II said. The supply ship formed pari of a convoy ailacked near Marltll mo "Noisy bill Ineffective counter measures by enemy escorts made it Impossible to observe full re sults of the attacks," Ihe war bul letin said. "At least one of the tankers Is Ixdieveil lo have been sunk." The Regolo class Is composed of twelve 3,3(12 ton cruisers laid down In 10.'!!! and scheduled for completion In lfl-11. Jane's fighting ships said the armor was practically nil. As de- (Continued on page G.) Gas Coupons in Seized Car Good for 2,676 Gals. SEATTLE, April 7-(AP) Ra lion coupons good for 2,(!7G gal lons of gasoline were seized by police yesterday In the automobile of a lllyearold youth. Police Sgt. Arthur E. Dugglns said the youlli, booked as Stephen Carter 6'Urlen, had (ill) B cou pons and 21 C coupons which he told officers he had bought for $10. Ni-WM-ltcvl.-w l'Iitt an t kiiKi'.'ivliiK but. also. let s remember 1 hat none of them (or usi have ever had a chance lo lake a business course in rationing. Also and here's a rub it we took a course in business English, for instance, or iHiokkceping. Ihe rules would remain the same as they have been for a long, long lime; bin the unschooled rationing boards find that the rules, such rules as they have, are changed by the teacher at the hitter's every whim, and the whims aid fre quent. The rationing hoard Is local, and bears the brunt of the cuss ing, which is natural. Second and considered thought probably would Induce most of us not to cuss the local Ixiard, and Its em ployes, hut to concentrate on someone else whose inconsider ate inequalities of decision really are lo blame for our troubles. 1 Axis Forces Flee Toward Sea American Troops Advance to Within 40 Miles of Junction With British After Destroying German Tanks, Howitzers; Allied Planes Aid in Triumph (By the Associated Press) Gen. Montgomery's British 8th army marked up a smashing new victory over the German Africa corps in Tunisia today, capturing more than 6,000 prisoners and driving the enemy from the Wadi El Akarit defense lone after a bombardment by 500 big guns. British infantry, charging with bayonets, seized all key posi tions in the line in seven and one-half hours of assault, it was announced. Simultaneously, oijps'ches from allied headquarters said the American 2nd army corps had lashed out in a heavy attack from the El Guetar sector, on the road to the sea. ' ; i ' Accurate-firing U. S. 155 mm. guns earlier had destroyed three heavy German howitzers in that area with direct hits at 16,000 yards more than nine miles and allied planes had smashed a large concentration of axis tanks. News of the 8th army's spectacular triumph was disclosed to a cheering parliament in London by Prime Minister Churchill, who declared: "Rommel's army is now retreating northward and being hotly pursued. Oregon Salvage Head to Attend Roseburg Meet Rod Finney Plans for future collections and shipping of salvage materials will be considered at a meeting to be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the chamber of commerce of fice, it was announced today by Fred A. Guff, county salvage chairman. Rod Finney, executive sccrelary of Ihe stale salvage committee, will be in attendance, flthers requested by Mr. Goft to be present Include Marshall Pen gra, chairman for the city of Koseburg; Ross Hutchinson, coun ty commissioner, and City School Superintendent W. M. Campbell, who is directing Ihe collection of tin cans in Roseburg, In connec tion wllh Ernest Unrath and Al bert Mlcelli, beverage bottlers, who are assisting In collection and shipping; M. C. Peterson nnd J. W. Doyle, local shippers of scrap melal. II Is expected, Mr. Goff reports, that the meeting will result In the formation of new plans for col lection and shipment of all sal vage materials, and information will be given the public as soon as definite plans are made. PORTLAND, April 7. (API The state salvage committee saiil today Oregon shipped out 4K) tons of tin cans in the December March period, This is equal lo 824,500 pounds of copper and ItTiKI pounds of tin, Ihe committee said. Farm Training Classes In Oregon Increasing PORTLAND, April 7. (API Oregon will have 3!H) classes in nual war production training by July 1, the state advisory com mittee on war production pre dicts. The committee announced here that 302 classes have been ganlzed, 1(11 of them devoted lo larm machinery repair. In Feb luary tolal enrollment was 70S0. en increase of 433 over January. Ration Coupons Can't Be Transferred With Car PORTLAND, April 7.(AP) The office of defense transporta tion today warned that certifi cates of war necessity and "T" ration gasoline coupons cannot legally be transferred with titles to trucks or other commercial ve hicles. New operators must file an application for CWN on ac quiring the vehicle. Rommel's retreat from El Aka rit left the axis chieftain In prec arious strafts, with his next logi cal defense area lying at Sfax or even Sousse, the latter only 110 miles below the northern anchor at Bizerte. London quarters said the cap ture of 6,000 more prisoners, along with 8,000 seized In the Mareth line battle 10 days ago, meant that Rommel had lost about 17 per cent of his 80,000 man army, not counting dead and wounded. Rommel still had a force of perhaps 170,000 troops under Col. Gen. von Arnlm In the north, however, to bolster his hard-hit Africa corps. Churchill's announcement on the break through the El Akarit line, 20 miles north of Cubes and 40 miles north of the crumbled Mareth "little Maglnot" fortifica tions, followed an allied communi que late yesterday revealing that the 8th army had launched a major new push with developing success. Allied Junction Nearer ., "This successful frontal attack should enable the desert army to join hands wllh United States forces which have been pressing the enemy unceasingly from the west," Churchill said. Two U. S. armored columns, under the command of Lleut.-Gen. Patton, have been driving toward ' the coast from the El Guetar and Maknassy sectors nnd were last reported within 40 miles of a junction with the 8th army. Asked If Gen. Montgomery's feat had- been achieved against the main forces of Rommel, or merely against axis rearguards, (Continued on page 6.) Black Sea Port at Stake in Battle MOSCOW, April 7. (API Sharp fighting along the Donets river and in the Kuban delta, in the Caucasus, was reported by the Russians today as the long soviet-German battlefront ex perienced better weather. In the Kuban delta, where the red army had been said unoffi- -cially to be fighting in the sub urbs of Novorossisk, the Black sea port, dispatches said the Rus sians kept up their offensive and drove doggedly into the Germans against strong resistance. The fighting there extended over acres of glue-like mud and swollen streams, but the Russian.1: said their troops plunged on nevertheless, falling upon Ihe nazi flanks In some areas and in others surrounding the foe Sharper fighting flared on the Donets river Irom the south of Izyiun on north past Chuguev. Izyuni is 70 miles and Chuguev is 22 miles, respectively, south east of Kharkov. The Germans' newest attacks south of Izyum against a soviet bridgehead were announced to have cost them more thun 500 dead and one of their front lines. Russian dispatches said the German air force was operating in considerable strength up and down the Donets, but was losing heavily under attacks by Russian fighter planes and antiaircraft batteries. Ievity pact ftant By L. F. RetoiutelB Henry Kaiser continue to court federal indictments by trying to speed the war effort. He now plans to build a plana capable of traveling 17.000 miles without a stop, but It's a qood bet that It won't encble him to outrun the FBI.