Doforo Six: V jf, V- .Before aon.". ' the Weather !.' watchword .." ef- SUtciuua carrier! beys, i typifies ; tb . freshness ef sews that leaps het from the printed page , not more than three . and V erne-half heart after the 3:3 am, press time. Partly eleviy with local Crests today sd Frl'ar " Max. Tempt. Weiacsiiy, II, Mia. XX. Southwest wind. River -.7 feet. Rata .23 Inch. Cloudy. : ; i PouNono KIKETY-nRST YEAH Salem. Oregon, Thursday Morning, April 17. 1841 Price) Zet Newsstcnda Mm IT. mm A. Main Objectives ! of Latest ISzi Thrusts Dead Utlt 9 1 IN WWW i W of W air Sjrtk Entire Axi Co less rr V- if View Air - V i ' ' s. y Shewn above (top) Is the Greek .v:iv:--vi-.-;iV.i5-ii ef which would complete the conquest of troops are pushing1 toward the reports indicate the British are Change of Name Needed Before US Will Name Warship Oregon , Secretary of State Earl Snell Wednesday was advised by navy department officials that the name of the ld "Battleship Oregon," now moored in Portland harbor, would have to be changed before st new US battleship could be named Oregon. Youth Killed " l - ! At Jefferson ALBANY; Ore., April 16.-(P)-Sammy Weeks, 9, was fatally in jured near Jefferson Wednesday night by an automobile which struck him as he attempted to cross the highway. Witnesses said the boy ran from behind a highway grader direct ly, into the path of the car. He died at the Albany hospital four hours later, - Another accident in Albany sent Mrs. D. W. Lashmut, Albany, to the hospital .with a double frac ture of the left thigh. Her auto mobile was involved in a collision at a street intersection. I Censorship Foreseen WASHINGTON, April Secretary Knox pictured censor Ship as a possibility, if necessary, in a new plea Wednesday for press secrecy concerning movements of damaged British warships to Am erican ports for repairs. Officer Back on Job E. W. "Happy" Hewett, night desk sergeant on the Salem police force, returned to duty Tuesday following a two weeks' vacation in eastern Oregon and Washington. .. ... -a -7T - i ' 1 V 5 ef the city ef Athens, Greek capital r2 t r 5w tlew - 'ef Tlraens, Me miles frn? Albene ;: 1 - ss '. -v . - ...... ........ ... - . , t. vt r , . f - ? ' l . C. xt. .;. . ... . .... '-V: a - - - ... f , . ? ' ' . "v.V ? . . 'r - ' - - . t - t -- - - ' i.--i,'i'.."'; r.y.i ...... . ... -. ",. . t'' i f r r- ' : t- .7'-: . i-, f i . ...... -... . , capital city, Athens, and Its main Greece by the German Sues canal (below) in an effort to resisting gallantly in both sectors. The 1841 legislature adopted a resolution urging that the name be changed to "Illustrious Ore gon" and that one of the new fighting ships now. under con struction be named "Battleship Oregon.'! The navy department informed Snell that the name'f the old ; vessel would have to be changed to something entirely different "The Old "Battleship Oregon," which became famous for her voyage around the Horn to join the American fleet at Cuba in 1898, still Is carried on the navy list. : ;. r; ' The navy : department advised that when funds are appropriated for new battleship's the name Oregon j i Would be considered along with a large number of others. Snell said his letter indicated that 17 new battleships have been authorized but four of them have not yet Ireceived appropriations ot been provided with names. The navy department letter will be referred to the battleship Ore gon commission. Freictiter Torpedoed NEW YORK, April 18-iP)-Ma-rine circles said Wednesday night the 4351-ton British freighter Sil verelm,! ,which has been trading between: New.. York and En gland, had been torpedoed and sunk in the north Atlantic As. , 1 4 elty ... . . Cj, , T sea pert Piraeus, (middle) capture army. In Africa the HiUer panzer eut the British supply lines. jMUcst Photos by; UN. n a m-a - J raun uauter ioutmn Hello, Joe! Whaddayuh know? vveii, i snow tnere aren't any circuses In town and it 4oesn't look like therell be any this year ana I keep hop ing I'm wrong. I know,! too, that this is; very seasonable weather; for April and Tm hoping that all the Mary, Marys quite - contrarys who peruse the garden inaga zines got all their bulbs and . seeds in triattlt . nivnew nil EL Ber. J. places. i . : ii I am also cognizant of the fact that Robert; Pohle Utter, th erst while golf !. champion ? of 1hese parts, will soon be Robert y Pohle Yardbird Utter and that you cant take divots! on a parade ground. I also know that .wheni one complained of the confjoslon which . sometimes exists In! the circles ef j city - government Dr. W. C Jones, the WU economist, Quipped, 'Would yen strike ; a blow at democracy? Would yen deprive us ef ear censtltujjional right te be'enfBseotT--H''4 sj ?! '1 'am' aware as well thit the promoters of ft Certain Lone Oak subdivision: learned too late that their Lone Oak was no Lon Oak, but a Lone! Horse Chestnut! i 1 - I further ken that when epury DUtrict Attorney .Talbot Bennett and his. wife went fishing te past weekend he caught 'ten ranging (Turn to Page 1, Col. f : . i 1 , 1 US Plans Steps Oil Defense1 Prograni .Mapped by FDR, Officials on Ships, Aid WASHINGTON, April New steps to -fortify I North American defenses and perhaps to-help "deliver the goods" to Great Britain appeared to be in the making Wednesday night. Contributing; to this conclusion among well-informed observers were these developments: An invitation "from President Roosevelt for Prime Minister W. L. MacKenzie Kin? of Canada to have tea with him tnis afternoon. A 'conference of Nevile Butler, British ' minister, ' and ' Sumner Welles,' undersecretary of state, on the shipping situation. Butler in dicated that one of the questions involved was :i that of American merchant ships replacing British vessels in. the Pacific to permit di version of the British ' ships for carrying supplies to Great Britain. An j Indication from Secretary Knox that- the navy would guard any American, land forces sent te the new United States bases In Greenland, and that s part ef the coast gnard might be transferred to the navy. Prime .Minister King's visit to the United States was described as primarily for a vacation. Offi cials were reticent about what subjects he. and Mr. , Roosevelt might d if cu s s, but momentous events nave emergea xrom mior mal chats' over tea cups. Since Canada and the United States are fast developing joint defenses under a program map ped out at the last meeting of the president and, the prime minister. the problem of getting American (Turn to Page 2, Col. 3) Group Hits lowering of Draft Age WASHINGTON, April 16-(JP)-Representatlve Faddis (D-Pa), acting as spokesman for the house miltary committee chairman, said Wednesday there would . be "the strongest opposition" within the committee to any lowering of the age limit for draftees, now 21 to 35. . : President Roosevelt at his press conference Tuesday indicated that the matter of changing the limit was under consideration. He said both ends of the age limit might be changed, but indicated the ad ministration would prefer not to go below 21. Faddis was designated by Chair man May (D-Ky) to inform news men of what both men described as an "mformal" committee dis cussion of the subject. . . "Practically every one present" expressed opposition to a change, Faddis said, adding that nearly the entire membership of the 27 man committee was present Faddis said placing the lower age limit at 18 was discussed last year during; consideration of the selective service act and was dis carded, ii '- " Mexico Quake Cities Looted MEXICO CITY, April le-tfV Gen. Armando Escobar Steger, troop commander at earthquake stricken Colima, asked the ' na tional defense ministry Wednes day for martial law to prevent looting in the city of 15,000, worst hit of a score or more southern Mexico cities wrecked Tuesday by a heavy earth shock. -v.; r. At least 38 persons, we re killed land 100 Injured there when . the tremor shook down half the city's buildings in five ; (Turn to Page 2, Col. 8) UP Rail Plans Told OMAHA, April 16-HP)-Plans to re-lay 53 miles of new steel rail this year on the main lines of the Union Pacific railroad at an esti mated cost of $10,710,000 were an nounced Wednesday, by ..W.M. Jeffers, president of the road. The program Includes 79 miles In Ore gon it cost el f 1330,000. Dismissed . v. t Mi HENRIK DE KAUFMANN COPENHAGEN, i Denmark (via Berlin), April II (.Denmark's minister to Washington, Henrlk de Kaufmann, was formally dis missed from the foreign office Wednesday on the grounds ef "misusing the king's name," the foreign office announced. The foreign office statement said he "increased the difficulties of his government, grossly . betrayed the state authorities, and con cluded an agreement which was against the country's security tnd Interest," Legal proceedings under the Danish penal cede will follow, it concluded. Jobs Promised Salem Youths By Lockheed J200 Sheet Metal Clags Trainees Take Tests for Aviation Work Employment in -the Lockheed aircraft fadbory" at "Burbank, Calif., was promised Wednesday by two company personnel of ficials to members of the Salem aviation sheet metal classes who pass Lockheed tests. . Donald McBain, Salem manager of the state employment service, and Frank G. Ferris, employment officer in charge of defense train ing, said 200 youths took the tests Wednesday and their papers were sent immediately to Burbank for grading. Highly trained workers is the great need now for the aircraft in dustry, McBain emphasized.. The Lockheed officials highly commended the Salem training, Ferris said, estimating that probably not more than two per cent ef the present group would be rejected for positions, as compared with the normal 40 per cent rejection. Physical ex aminations and recommenda tion of the Salem vocational de (Turn to Page 2, CoL 7) Farmer Hangs Self in Shed! Guy W. Taylor, 63-year old farmer of route six, apparently took his own life by hanging him. self in the woodshed on his farm east of Salem Wednesday, Deputy Sheriff L. L. Pittinger said Wed nesday night. Pittinger said Coroner ' L. E. Barrick placed the time of Tay lor's death at about 1 or 2 p. m. The body had been hanging about five hours before it was discov ered. .' .:.-!'.' . . " A note found In the farmhouse said despondency over illness was the reason for the suicide. - Taylor is survived by his wife. Bethel,' school teacher at Scotts Mills; a brother, C R. Taylor ef Vallejov CaL, and a sister, Mrs. D. V. Artie of Lancaster, CaL The body is at Clough-Barrick mortuary. . Music Critic Dies YUBA CITY, Calif, April 18 (jP) Redfern Mason, widely known music critic and author, died here Wednesday night. Ma son served as music critic for the San Francisco Examiner for 22 years. In 1937 he retired. May Use Hemlock WASHINGTON, April 16HP Senator Wallgren (D-Wash) was notified by the procurement di vision of the treasury it had changed its" specifications for Ve netian blinds so that western hem lock can.be used in their manu facture. ' j :: , British fioldvline In Navy JlitsfAxis . Troops in Africa in Suez Defense LONDON April 17-(Thurs- day)rP)-An entire convoy of three axis destroyers and five cargo' ships : bound for Africa munitions and with troops, mechanized equipment has been blown up and Sunk between Sicily and Tripoli by a British Mediter ranean squadron at the cost of one British destroyer, the admiralty announced late Wednesday night. Disclosure of the annihilation- so described followed announce ment that the Mediterranean fleet is continually bombarding the German and Italian troops, airports and forts along the Libyan shore in support of the hard-fighting im perial desert armies. x .. Thus the British Mediterranean fleet, with units freed at length from convoy service to Greece, re turned to the job of blocking axis supply lanes to Africa. It has been suggested that the Italian fleet served as a Dure for the British warships late last month, when the Italians were Caught off Cape Ma- tapan and battered by both light and heavy .British units. Mean-' while, this theory suposes, Italian ships were carrying German Pan zer forces to Tripoli. , Heavy fighting raged Wed . nesday night In several sectors of the' allied j line m Greece and the Brltish, hard pressed as they were in the Balkans, gave explosive notice at the same time that the Mediterranean fleet had gone back into major -offensive action te choke off re inforcements for the axis Afri can drive toward the Sues can-. .i. -V .( The sunk . ships totaled 20,000 tons. The losS of a single .British (Turn to Page 2, CoL 1) Film Magnate Convicted on TaxE vasion NEW YORK, Thursday, April 17-(iiP)-Movie Magnate Joseph M. Schenck was convicted early' to day by a federal court jury on two of four founts of income tax evasion charges. He was acquitted of a charge of conspiracy. His co-defendant, Joseph Mos- kowitz, was found guilty on one count of tax evasion and acquit other counts. ted of three . . The . verdict was returned at 2:33 a. m. (EST) by the jury which took . the case at 4:25 p. m. Wednesday. Schenck 14 board chairman of the Twentieth Century-Fox" Film corporation. Under the conviction he is liable to possible imprison ment of ten) years and fines to taling $20,000. Turk Trade Deal on BEIRUT, Lebanon, ApriU 10- (AVNewspapers reported here Wednesday Germany and Turkey were on thej verge of concluding a new. trade! agreement whereby more Turkish tobacco would be shipped to Germany. ' ' Greece Witnesses Say Bridges Seen AtCIommiinist Meetings SAN lilANCKCO, April 1 G-W-Two government witnesses testified at Harry Bridges deportation hearing Wednesday that he attended; and reported to communist party meetings in 1934, the year that he became known to Americans as a militant labor leader.' : Sam Diner expelled communist, testified Bridges made a report on the San Francisco general strike at the California communist con vention to the party's trade union committee. Diner, chairman of the committee, said only commun ists were permitted at the conven tion. ' - i ' Thomas ! Laurence, former . - communist and new a doth est ter for the Bed Cross In Los An -geles, testified he saw Bridges at a top section committee meet-; . lag fct Laurence's ! apartment "daring the ! 1134 coastwise wa terfront stride. . Laurence was atUndizvg m co Buried Rage Over City Ehbkihg Smoke Pall Overhan &fter Savage Afore Than 400 Nazi Planes In Bombardment; Streets Littered With Debris ;. . . . w-. r: ;'.- ' .- - ; i ' LONDON, April 17-(Thursday)-(i,P)-Great tongues of flame and' smoke coiled over this' capital at dawn today and great sprawling areas of blackened masonry entombed uncounted vic tims of the German air force's most savage attack of the war. This was the worst ever, veterans said. The ancient capital was a stricken witness to what Berlin had promised that the RAF attack on the nazi capital April 9 would be ' repaid "hundred-fold." Wave upon wave of German bombers, some zooming low over 1 War News Briefs BERLIN. April H - (Thurs-dar)H2P-British bombers at tempting widespread raids en ! northern - Germany's o a s t a 1 areas succeeded . In reaching some objectives and dropped a few bombs. Informed - quarters said today. : ' -; .-v.. ..?--;';' " ' ItOMEr: April 'i 17-(lWlay) (iP) Italian forces operating from Albania, hare crossed the Yugoslav frontier near Scutari and T are driving- the Yugoslav army north ward, dispatches from the front said today. ATHENS, April 17 (Thurs day) OF) Twe German- col umns smashing through the heart of the central Greek-. British front threatened today to outflank the strong allied en trenchments thrown up on the slopes ef famed Mount Olympus en the eastern coast. VICHY, France, April 17 (Thursday) -() - Vichy, the temporary capital of unoccupied France, had an hour-long air 1 raid ahum Wednesday night for -. the first time since the French German armistice. (This dis patch said nothing about bombs being dropped.) BERLIN, April lMAVThe German high command aneunc ed Wednesday night that the en tire Serbian second army had, laid down Its arms in Saravejo, birthplace ef the first great war, bur semi-official sources ac knowledged at the same time .that the British army of north ern Greece is "showing more fight than heretofore.' WASHINGTON, April IS-KjP) Secretary of Navy Knox re ported Wednesday . that the United States was ready if need be ta delay construction ef the twe-eeeaa n a v y to assure, prompt repairs ef war-damaged British vessels in American shipyards. Forecasting the ar rival of "Targe numbers- of damaged ships such as the bat tleship Malaya, Knox said they, had . been given first priority "ever everything else in our yards." r ; munist rank and file meeting in another flat in the building, he said, but with another man crept downstairs and peeked through partially drawn window blinds Into his basement apartment. "We all wanted to take a look at Harry Bridges," he explained. At.. Bridges' first deportation hearing so-called communist meetings which government wit nesses said Bridges attended, were described by others as union meetings. The government is seek ing to deport the . California - CIO director to Australia on charges (Turn to Page 2, CoL t) as Fires Capital Attack the city, dropped tons of .heavy explosive and fire bombs to sur pass the great December 29 fire raid which gutted so much of Lon don. v -Observers estimated more than 400 raiders participated in the at tack. ' A choking smoke pall overhung the city, and London never really NEW, YOrJC '"AprO. .ItMjff James M. Mlnifie, . London cor respondent ef the New York Herald Tribune, was injured seriously In Wednesday night's air raid when a high explosive bomb- blasted a section of his hoteL The . newspaper announ ced it was Informed that Mln ifie was badly cut by flying glass about the head and eyes and that he had been taken te a hospital. r had a protecting darkness from the moment the first nazi ava lanche of fire and explosive hit the city. " The walling- sirens ef ambu lances carrying their broken loads ' te the hospitals and the hoarse shouts ef firemen and rescuers continued en into the , daylight long after the all clear sounded about S:3t ajn. (8:3 pan., PST.). . ' Thousands who sleeplessly hud dled beneath the crunch of bombs and the barking anti-aircraft bar rage throughout the night saw a grim spectacle upon, entering the streets again. I - Great gashes ripped the capital. Brick, timber and glass Uttered (Turn to Page 2, CoL 6) j Imperial War Council Seen LONDON, April 16-P)-Britaln was reported Wednesday night te be attempting to arrange an Im perial war conference attended ty the heads of the Canadian, Aus tralia, New Zealand and South Af rican dominions. ' It was this project, reliable sources said, which Is delaying iof at least, two weeks the departure of Prime Minister Robert G. Ilea ries of Australia for the United States and Canada. ' f (There - are strong indications; that the . conference is intended largely to increase .the dominions' output of manpower to fm the in Creasing British need for troops in the middle east particularly in defense of the Suez canal.) i Air Losses High j; In Greece Battle j BERLIN, April lOHSVA Ger man summary of Tuesday's sir. combat put enemy plane losses, mostly British, at 39, including 22 destroyed on the ground at Laxixa and Trikkala, Greece. Seventeen were said to have been shot dcrcO in dog fights, while DNB, German news agency, said German losses were only four,' . . : NEW YORII, Apr3 IS-i-C?-lurohia Broadcasting system listening post reported Wedrtsf :f hearing a London radio repcrt 11 " i one British royal air force ar-'i-ron had shot down 1C3 ax!J plascg during the bafJe ef Greece.