1-1 (Cite M (Sis-.Vlf SI If fa) t !. ' Today Daily Rationing Reminder, .Calendar '(Turn to Page 8) . li Fri. sunset 7j41 Sat. sunrise - 6 x47 ; ' Weather on Page 6) pbuNtinD 1651 . i-. J 5 ...--.-.... Salem, Oregon. Fridtfy Morning, April 2, 1943 imjETY third yeah Price 5c No. 5 !U r HD lames Jatee iimnisia Hp mww V..., --. f-il f 1 I I I lilt II r ' a .l j ; m ; r r1 . ,s jpr m .ar V . . . : - ' I i TOO T K Ji4 igM 1 1 1 : : Mickle, Finsley , Retiring Coos Judge Appointed - Agriculture Chief; . Silver Promoted , By STEPHEN C. MERGLER ' Changes in two appointive state offices,' director of agri culture and director of parole and probation, were announced at the capitol Monday, first of several that may be anticipated within the next few weeks. r The new director of agricul ture will be Ervin L. Peterson, 33 ;: year-old county Judge of Coos county, Gov, Earl Snell revealed .Thursday afternoon. J. D. Mickle, .whom he succeeds, was known : f fr some time to have been con sidciing asking to be released from- the $5000 a year position, which is held at the pleasure of the governor. He was a holdover from the Martin administration, a campaigner for Gov. Sprague in the 1942 primaries. The state parole board an . noanced its selection of a new parole and probation director, Joseph R. Silver, 34 who had been serving; as a field assist ant. Fred Finsley, first man to of May 1 to reenter law prac hold this office,! has resigned as tice at Fossil, where he once served as Wheeler county's dis trict attorney, the board said. " Appointment of Silver was not directly dictated by Gov. Snell, but it was understood that he had not approved of a desire on the part of the parole board to ele vate the chief deputy director, IrJ C McSherry, to Finsley's posi tion. No immediate changes in the parole organization are contem plated, the director-elect said Thursday night. ; In returning to Wheeler county, Finsley has in mind running for circuit judge next year for the Wheeler-Sherman -Gilliam coun ties circuit long presided over by . the late Judge Carl Hendricks. Judge Peterson's appointment as director of agriculture gave rise to speculation over the filling of another berth on the state high Way commission, the position now field by Huron Clough, Canyon vine , who wishes to retire. The Peterson appointment could be Gov. Snell's answer to southwest Oregon demands for representa lion , on X h e commission. Ben Chandler, Marshfield banker, has Deen proposed as Clough 's succes or, it is known. The governor's field for desig nation i a third member of the (Turn to Page 2 Story C) Spies Combing US for Nazis; Talk Warned NEW YORK, April l.-p)-Rear Adm, Harold C. Train, chief of naval intelligence, said Thursday nignt the axis is gearing for a desperate last-ditch fight' and lias its spies in this country "combing the bars, restaurants, and shipping centers for every tray bit of information that might fit into the nazi or Japan ese espionage pattern." .. In, an address prepared for de livery over the Columbia Broad- easting system. Admiral Train said he had definite information that axis spies "are still operat ing in this, country." It is no secret, he declared, that : before Hitler marched into Po- land he boasted that he knew more about , that country's mili tary strength than most members f the Polish' "high command. , '"Hitler, he continued, "Has .made similar boasts about Amer : Sea, and about the army of sab oteurs his henchmen had built up here - while we ostensibly were aleeping." Since America entered the war, Admiral Train saidtmost of these boasts have been proved empty words," but the state ment itself was a "revelation that - he' is depending an nazi- hirelings in this country to relay useful in formation back to where it can be used against us." He warned .Americans to be ex tremely cautious, especially in discussing letters - received from their relatives in the service, lest the enemy obtain information to use "against your sons and bro thers and , husbands who daily ere risking heir lives to preserve our country and the freedom bought at such a price by our fa thers before us." Released iv. ' mm 4 ' , I 11 ALBERT Ej ROSSER Rosser Freed After 4 Years ;. I Union Leaders Sent To Prison! for Factory Fire The Oregon parole board Thursday ordered the release from state prison next July 6. of Albert Earl Rosser,! central figure in a wave of labor -terrorism -that swept' the state hi 1937-3.- Rosser, former secretary of the AFL teamster's union Portland local, was conviqted of arson in connection with the destruction by fire of the Salem box factory. Sentenced to i 12-year ;term, he will be released after serving four years because of good beha vior, the board said. ! His conviction ! was uphetd by the Oregon supreme court in 1939 and the US supreme court re fused to review the case. . Rosser is the (last of 12 men sentenced to state prison for par ticipation in the terrorism to be released. if April FpqVs Tricks Fete April fool's past land yon; wrong, for the first day of April found few pranksters in down town Salem. ( j City fireaoen and police, us ually besieged With fake calls, thought perhaps the war sitaa Uon had something to do with the appreciated consideration of haroorisls. : j Only April foolishness which vcame to the ears of Statesman reporters was staged for bene fit of a member of their pro fession, employed on another newspaper. I Nazis Can't Halt Danish Sabotage NEW YORK, April l-aj-A German broadcast heard Thursday night by CBS said that "British parachutists' and Danish citizens have been committing acts of sab otage in industrial iplants in Co penhagen, capital of j Nazi-occupied Denmark. , ' "Things have I got ' to such a pitch,' the broadcast said, "that armed British parachutists can force their way into Danish indus trial plants, and persuade - the guards to keep quiet while they plant bombs. , j " State Hospital Aides Get! Raise The? wage scale for attendants at the state hospitals at Salem and Pendleton and the Fairyiew home was boosted by the board of con trol Thursday to $72.50 a month for men and $70 for women. The wages are in addition to full main tenance. . j 1 The board approved a $5 month ly raise for the Pendleton institu tion, and $7.50 for those at Salem. The increases were allowed to relieve the serious shortage of at tendants. The increases are effect ive as of today Deir Split On Tax Skip McCormack Asks Some Abatement; Doughton Tries Balk By FRANCIS LeMAY WASHINGTON, April 1-(JP) The democratic leadership in the house split apart Thursday night on the issue of tax abate ment, with Majority 'Leader McCormack (P-Mass) ca for quick action to skjtppart of 1 9 4 2's income Idxes, and Chairman DoughJfT (D-NC) of j . in ine ways anmeans committee sharply brusfang aside the sug- gesuon. y . Doughton refused to call the copamittee for immediate consid- Leration :oi pay-as-you-go legisia tic tion, indicating that the subject would not come up again until late spring or. summer. During the day McCormack had issued a statement calling for a quick pay-as-you-go compromise abating part, but not all, of 1942 taxes. He said a pay-as-you-go measure, with a withholding levy on wages and salaries, should be come effective July 1. The democratic leader's action directly conflicted with the : stand of a majority of his party's ways and means members who : opposed any tax abatement, and i he drew a sound rebuff from the 79-year-old committee chairman. i "I did not have any advance in formation about Mr. McCormack's statement regarding tax matters," Doughton , said in a formal state ment. "He did not consult me as chairman of the committee on ways and means. Neither, so as I know, did he consult majority member of theowmmittee before issuing Ms-'ftatement. These deprirJpments came short ly after-nine republican ways and ns members issued a statement demanding immediate reconsider ation of pay-as-you-go legislation and gave notice they would con is (Turn to Page 2 Story A) Most Riyers Evade Flood; Santiam Drops PORTLAND, April l-(vP)-Wil-lamette valley flood conditions, improving by the hour,, will per mit the Willamette and Colum bia rivers to carry their crests without going over flood stages, the weather, bureau reported Thursday night. i The Santiam, Luckiamute and Yamhill rivers, all "Willamette tributaries, are receding, ' said Weatherman E. L. Wells, revising Thursday morning's predictions, j The Columbia swelled to flood stage at IS feet at Vancouver Thursday but Thursday night's forecast said no further rise was expected. I The Willamette measured 11.8 feet late Thursday at Oregon City and Wells said the crest would pass there Thursday night with out going over the 12-foot flood mark. The same was true of Port land, he said, where the river was 16.5 compared to flood level of 18 feet. The Santiam at Jefferson was still ever flood stage by more than three feet but ft dropped a half-foot since morning to 16.3 late Thursday. Portland's rainfall totaled 6.51 inches in the week ending Wed nesday night, the weather bureau reported. Roads in the Portland area blocked by slides were reopened Thursday. Harriett Monroe Named WU Queen Harriett Monroe, senior from Parkdale, was elected Wednesday by Willamette "university students as 1943 .May queen. Princesses "Will be Dorothy Tate of Sublimity and Olivia Olson of North Bend, other nominees., from the senior class. May weekend is slated for May 7 and 8. , Miss Monroe, a blueeyed bru nette M an independent and is past president of Lausanne hall and of the Willamette Methodist Student council. Both princesses are members of Alpha Ph Alpha sorority. xaea Allied Strip Feels Lufticaffe's Sting -1 jr mmmmm mmm a 1 1 m immmmmmm i aMMmaMii , j 1 1 1 n nmai a, in 1,11 H -I .. -Jmwv. .wwwf' .:s.j..S' ' ' - - ' - . . i jt ' , - - , i , " -s . , , . t i . - 2 , r ' - . , J k ' ,' : I , w,,' ' . v , ; .' Vji".. ' - ' V-,. - - '. v . '.. " E .-y- , , ( . . -i . ! ' ,. V,-' ,,, . - ' '- ' ' v.".'- - s - - s - v, - " . , i j . .- s. . . s " - " , Z. ' t - J . ' ' iv- '(u - - An allied convoy ship which has reached an Algerian port with supplies is struck by bombs and left bornlng fiercely daring a Germ air raid en the port German bombers strike hard at convoys off north Africa and In Algerian prts In an effort to eat off allied supplies for Tunisia Associated Press Telemat. I'll Planes Pound Germany, Guinea Jap Positions Strafed; Town Hit, Tanimbar ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, Friday, April 2-(JPy-Gcn. Douglas MacArthur an nounced Friday that allied planet have made new raids on Mibo" Finschhafen and 'Saunuaki. . h Medium bombers attacked the Jannneo-nrrunied town of Saum- UaJd, which is on Tanimbar is land, 300 miles north of Darwin, Australia. ' ; Finschhafen, New. Guinea, where earlier in the week fires started on the waterfront by al lied planes flamed more than eight hours, was visited by a sin gle four-motored bomber which dropped its bombs in the same harbor area. 1 Attack planes bombed and stra fed Japanese troop positions in the Kitchek area around Mubo, which is 15 miles south of Sala- maua, New Guinea. In northwestern (Dutch) New Guinea, a medium allied j bomber was intercepted by two Japanese fighter planes and shot them both out of the sky. Churchill Gets RAF Wings LONDON, April l.-;p)-Prime Minister Churchill, who has fre quently taken over the controls on long flights and first ) learned to fly in 1913, was given the hon orary wings of the RAF S Thurs day on its 25th anniversary,-be coming the first commoner to wear them without passing mod ern pilot tests. In a letter to the premier an-: nouncing the distinction. Air Marshal Sir Bertine Sutton re called that since the outset of the war Churchill has undertaken more htan 30,000 flying miles on duty. . ; Churchill replied "I am hon ored to be accorded a place, al beit out of kindness," In that com radeship of the air which guards the life of our island and carries doom to tyrants. Lane M. Weinberg, Scio, Killed at Sea; SCIO, April 1 Lane M.l Wein berg, 25, was reported here as illed in action while in the navy at sea in south Pacific convoy serv ice as a gunner's mate. He attend ed. Scio high school ' while resi dent of the Riverview community near Scio. He was outstanding in school athletic and other i activi ties. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weinberg, are on a .farm on,Sc1ooutethTee,His sister Eva also attended the local high school and worked at the Scio telephone office. The young man enlisted" in the US navy less than six months ago. i-,,- - j, The sister now is. Mrs. Lee Mc- Intyre, Albany. Two other mar ried sisters, one at Lebanon and the other in. California, together with four brothers at the Scio farm home, survive, . Soviets Drive In Caucasus Several Localities Captured ; Donets DefensesHold - By .The Associated Press LONDON, Friday, April . I. Russian, troops have captured sev eral localities in the continuing drive to wipe out the nazi Cau casian bridgehead at Novoros sisk, have reduced another stronghold on the Smolensk front, and held firmly on their Donets river defense line, Moscow an nounced early Friday. The midnight communique also reported that German troops had penetrated to the western out skirts of one populated place in the Sevsk area, 170 miles north west of nazi-held Kharkov, but said a Russian counter - attack threw back the enemy and killed 200 Germans. The Germans announced the capture of Sevsk, 80 miles below Bryansk, some time ago. The resnmed Russian Cauca sian drive presamably was In the area of eaptared Anasta sevskaya, 33 miles north of Novorossisk. Other Russian units operat ing in the Abinskaya area are only 20 miles northeast of the former soviet Black sea fleet base. - South of Bely on the central front, the Russians said, one of their units forced a German gar rison Into a hasty retreat after threatening to encircle It. Soviet artillery also supported an infantry operation which top pled another stronghold on the same front, and the communique said German officers taken pris oner reported that many forma tions of the 367th nazi infantry division had lost 70 or 80 per cent of their men in recent fighting on the exhausting front where heavy rain and mud has hampered the red" army advance. In the sector east of axis-held Kharkov the Russians continued to hold their defense line along the upper Donets river. Air fighting picked up ; in the south, where 11 raiding nazi planes' were destroyed and six were damaged. V Furloughs for All--Remember the Day COLOSADO SPRINGS, Colo April 1-JP)-A banner headline in the Camp Carson newspaper, The Mountaineer, startled sol diers. "90-day furlough for all Car son men soldiers overtrained, discipline must be relaxed, say camp officials, It read. Then the soldiers remembered It was AprU Fool's day. 76Aen'Goiolbayton . PORTLAND, April l--A contingent of 381 farm and dairy workers from , Mississippi and Oklahoma were moved to the Day ton farm labor camp Thursday. There they will receive short-term instruction before being assigned to labor-shortage areas of western Oregon. - -i - Mosquitos Surprise Nazi City LONDON, AprU 1 HJP) The RAF celebrated its 25th anniver sary by attacking two towns in western Germany where startled Germans stood gaping in the streets at- swift- British Mosquito bombers which dipped as low as 50 feet to plant their delayed- action explosives on industrial ob jectives, i . Squadrons of fighters also at tacked railways and other axis held transportation in France and Belgium by daylight, the air min is try reported . The Mosquitos, the RAFs fastest bombers, which twice have attacked Berlin by day light, blasted .a power station and Important railway work shops at Trier and Chrang near the German-Luxembourg fron tier. With bombs fused to explode a few seconds after the Mosquitos were safely away, the airmen at tacked at altitudes from 50 to 200 feet At Ehrang the crews re ported their bombs caused a "ter rific explosion," - and it was be lieved a gasoline dump was hit. Nazi anti-aircraft gunners ap parently also were caught flat- footed because none of the planes was lost and only two German fighters were sighted. Four British planes were miss ing from the sweeps over France and Belguim and a fifth plane failed to return from a daylight reconnaissance over northwest Germany.! Eden Declares Peace Bases OTTAWA, April l.-(p)-Three basic principles for an enduring peace were laid down by Anthony Eden, British foreign secretary, in an address Thursday to a joint meeting of the house of commons and senate. , They are: I. Total disarmament of Ger many, Italy and Japan; 2. Maintenance by the United Nations of sufficient force to en sure that none of the axis power can ever again plunge the world into war; 3. Close understanding among the British commonwealth of na tions, the United States, Russia and China, with full cooperation of all United Nations. Eden recalled he had been ' a soldier in one war which he had hoped was a war to end war and now his son was preparing to take part in a second. "It is our duty to see that mis cruel and inhuman lot Is not also Jho. -heritage '"of our: children's children,' he said. . Flight Strip Awarded 4 The state hignway commission awarded a extract Thursday to Vernie Jarl, Greaham, for clearing the approaches and side clearances to the Marion county flight strip project. Jarl submitted a low bid of $5850. xfis-Flies Fresh - ' 3 n n m mce to x&tricm i Possible Use of Sardinia Port for Evacuation Base Ruined; Americans Gain j . By DANIEL DeLUCE AtLIEU IIEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 1 (ff-Thje axis s desperately flying fresh troops into Tunisia, it was disclosed! Thursday, and the allies have thrown a mighty, overpowering perial fleet into a campaign, to forestall such re inforcement, to wipe the enemy from Africa and to destroy his potential meas of escape. The presence of air-borne reinforcements for Marshal Erwin & - v Axis Attacks North Troops Af ter Flight Mafiy Prjsoner8 and Much Material Fall To, Allied Advance j i " B WILLIAM B. KING , s f ' ON THE NORTHERN . TUNIS-f IAN F$ONT 10:55 A. M., April 1 (AVA&s troops attacked British positions a fewmiles east of Sed jenane early .Thursday after be ing thrown into precipitate flight Wednesday and losing huge quan tities of equipment. The scale "o' fighting was not immediately reported. It appear ed to be an attempt by the Ger man and Italian troops to retrieve big stores of material they had abandoned' in af little mining town near Sedjenan. After being harled out of Sedjenane the; axis troops had been observed moving Wednes day toward, pre v loss positions 10 miles eastf of Sedjenane. so rapidly that Contact with , them was lolt temporarily by their British and French pursuers. Sedjenane itself is about 40 miles 8quthwe$t of Bizerte, big axis-held naval base, and Mateur is an intervening point on the road to that pbrt In an apparent effort to- create a diversion to fpermit more "time for the : flight along the main roads, some German forces at tacked the allJfrd flank Wednes day. But the attack made no pro gress, and the force broke off the engagement to join in -the retreat of othef units. . Meanwhile allied troops mop (Turn to Page 2 Story B) Nevi Standard Decreed for - Women's Hose . i . j WASHINGTON, April l-P) The war production board Thurs day decreed niw standards for women's hosieay which, it said; would improve ethe wearing qual ities of most stockings. Not that, the real sheer ones are out they be made 1 if comparatively long-wearing yrns are used. . WPB Issued, (effective May 15, a yarn conservation order cover ing aU types of hosiery and de signed to save about 15,000,000 pounds of wool rayon and cotton! yarns annually; - In the care . of. women's hosiery, however, slight ly morsJ rayom than previously! will be Required. But this will be a lonf'vterm saving, ..WPB said, because, the stockings-will be gen erally f more .durable and wear longer." ;j ' " All gauges of women's hosiery now produced inay be made, but the order prohifets manufacture of 50-denierjn fulf-fashioned hosiery of ordinary quality the sheer est and also th poorest wearing type.- Stockings 'xt equal sheerness may be made, however of" semi- high tenacity yarns, which have greater itrengtljL -. The following types are not af fected: , ... v '9 --' .J TTTun-proof rayon mesh hosiery, lace and tnesh hosiery, and com binations of cotton, wool, continu ous filament,' and spun rayon yarn stockings. ; 3 . ' Each manufacturer may make only seven colors, but these may be any colors te chooses. A tresses Hit Rommel's hard-pressed troops was revealed with the capture of more than 700 Italians' and German grenadiers' during a renewed American push east of El Guetar toward the coast. Some of the prisoners said they had been in . Africa fewer than 10 days. i Nearly 100 Flying Fortresses, the greatest force of the big four motored bombers ever massed for a war operation, bashed the im portant axis supply base at Gag liari on Sardinia Wednesday, ser iously crippling its usefulness to the enemy, while swarms of other American and British planes turn ed Rommel's retreat up the east ern Tunisian coast into a night mare of destruction. Telling of the great blow at Cagliari, an American pilot saidi "If there was anything we did not hit then it must have been buried.! "I saw thousands of bombs burst ing, said another. "They seemed to be exploding on every bit oi the harbor. t - Any hopes the axis might -have entertained of using Cag- -liar! as the base for i a "Du kerque" evacuation of divisions now enclosed in a great allied trap apparently were wiped oat by the concentrated assault of the Fortresses, which hit five merchant ships and 21 smaller craft, damaged or destroyed 71 enemy planes agroand and in the air, and spread acres of fire . across the city's port area. Not a Fortress or an escorting Lightning fighter was lost. The bulk of Rommel's forces trying to beat their way north foa a junction with Col. Gen. Jurgen Von Arnim's troops were reported Thursday continuing their tortur ed retreat under a rain of bombs and bullets while a rear guard . dug in about 24 miles' north of Gabes in an effort to fend oft the pursuing British Eighth army. Although slowed down by thou sands of mines strewn by the re--treating enemy, armored Ameri can units, of Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, jr., were reported pushing steadily eastward from El Gue- taria Pass for an imminent junc tion with Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's Eighth army forces. After having been held up for more than a week by rock-ridged ' enemy positions on hills com manding the roads to the coast eastward from Maknassy 1 and southeast from El Guetaria Pass, Patton directed a series of attacks Thursday. , American spearheads of tanks : and infantry plunged fiercely . into wavering enemy defenses and' rounded ap German and Italian prisoners less than 50 mlles to the west of the British. The American attack was pre ceded by an artillery- barrage ' 'which one - observer said was -"one of the most terrible and v wonderful sights I ever saw. . It was officially announced that 31 enemy planes were shot dowm in combat over north Africa Wed- ' nesday, while 12 allied planes failed to return. American P-40 warhawks destroyed 10 axis planes against a single loss . of. their own while supporting Pat- ton's . ground , troops in the EI Guetaria Pass area. . ; r In an attack almost as des- . tractive. as that by the 100 Fort tresses, two waves of American Billy Mitchell medium bombers escorted by Lightnings twice ? truck at an axis convoy in the Sicilian Narrows, sinking at least three large merchant ships and leaving others burning furiously and settling. Six German fighters t which attempted to intercept were shot down and others damaged. ,3r - 1 3