:. ' ". . V -.' M V 11 BiOOQS W 'CD OIEO V . rffmS- jtf 4!T " -'z.rit--,: - ' - -- ' ' ' ' i " i'm. i i : ' , i - , ; , , I ,,,;, ', Papers report tensions over the impending' invasion' o Europe. The Germans arc said to be ner vous as -they await the blow to fall.. Roy Roberts of .the Kansas City Star reports from Washing: ton that mere u tensiorrinere u the capital awaits the hour. It Is even ". asserted there is tension among the British, though that is i disputed as. not being in keeping 4 niUI 044 (1UUMIIV IM4U1C . - A I lt ! " A . - Even out here, far distant from we -coast 01 Europe, were is a noticeable apprehension among the people, an eagerness for hews. A few Sundays ago. when all ra dios, interrupted their programs for a n announcement, probably - me nrsi tnougni or listeners was -that. It would be for the opening of the second' front , May it not be that tke, allied command is Using all its materials in a war of nerves? That was a r favorite method of Hitler to wear; down his opposition by ir ritating their nerves. Perhaps the allies feel if they cause nervous f excitation and tensions among the German people that their ar mies may become a bit worn and t confused. At least tntrt is no : barm in trying, though there is no thought that the German armies : will go down in a faint or swoon under the excitement Mass psychology will have much to do with the result of the invasion operation. If we can only unseat the German confidence and start bewilderment and con fusion among the nazi armies. then the allies could (Continued , on Editorial Page) ' . i j Nazis Withdraw NineMilesBacl Unltalv front ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Naples, ilay 9-P)-Thei Germans, straightening 4 their lines, . have withdrawn approximately nine miles in the rugged j mountain area on the left flank of the Bri ; tish eighth army's Adriatic front ' and have been followed up by the j ellies. , ' headquarters . announced I, today,., :J :.,,. v, ' The , nazi retreat was south of Monte Maiella ,. In . the vicinity of Palena, 23 miles inland from the - Adriatic .'on the little i Aventino river and 11 miles' southeast of ; Sulmona, and near the village of Letto Palena, which is two miles northeast of Palena. s A f ; Before pulling back the enemy demolished bridges and houses and a tunnel. :- ' ' The Official report failed to give the specific depth of the with drawal, but the villages named are nine miles from the last an nounced line of the eighth army ' in that area. . '; ..' J1 . -; r Palena is 22 miles southeast of the Big Pescara river dam which was blasted apart by allied air men last Friday afternoon, flood ing the countryside along axis communications lines, but there - was nothing official to indicate that the withdrawal could be at tributed to the bursting of the ., dam. - ' ': i; -; On the . Anzid beachhead the Germans heavily shelled the rear area and poured a strong mortar fire against the left flank. In the lower Garigliano valley west of Hintumo enemy motor vehicle movements were shelled by American guns. It is in this - sector that the nazis were re i ported to have evacuated all civil- - ians for a depth of 20 miles. Judges Salem Band "Excellent" The performance of the Salem ''high .school 80-piece band rated ' "excellent1 at the concert played before 700 listeners at the school ; auditorium Tuesday night, by comparison with hypothetical i standards set up throughout ' the -. entire country in lieu of actual - competition. . Two years ago the band attained the same grading, which is second only to a rating seldom achieved by high school students. Franklin Combs, playing ' the French . horn, was judged No. : at the solo' contest in the after- " noon and was chosen to play at the evening performance. His se lection was Bloch'i "Chant d. Amour." " Dick Whiteley, also , on - the French horn, - was lik' rated No. 1 for , his playing of Wiedman's "Nocturne.', Dean All- port on the oboe was given the : rating of No. II plus for bis ren dition of Handell's "Sonata." The three national fudges lis . tened - to three selections of the orchestra and weighed them with (Turn to Page 2Story F) 7callier - iraxlmum temperatnre Tuesday 21 defrees; minimum 43; precip- lUiian .CS; river 1.1 feet. Tartly cloudy Wednesday and Thnriday with few scattered iVswtrs over mountains. Slightly IirriTY-TinnD YEU 10 PAGES v. ' ' 'ZcUm,.Ong9at Wfdaii.Mortlag, farlCt-WUr,v;; V'-' ! Wrt-n-Ta ,34! jX " RAF Follows Day Attacks By 4000 Allied Planes That Drop 6000 Tons of Bombs ,' r - ' By W. W. HERCHER ; LONDON, Wednesday, May lH-KAF bight raiders lobbed block-busters on the German-occupied coast across Dover strait last night causing explosions English side of the channel as a quick follow-up to extensive daylight attacks by more than 4000 allied planes. The violent blasts echoing across the water from the French coast roused residents from their O beds a. few minutes after a huge fleet of RAF bombers had passed eastward, 'darkening the starlit sky. : "- . .,v -:: The din lasted ten minutes without a pause and the eoa enssion was so rreai that the ground literally shook at Feke stone and neighboring towns. Dishes rattled in cupboards and furniture ; rocked as from an earthquake. The bombing appeared centered on Calais and Dunkerque a scant 20 miles across the channel but a light haze prevented observa tion. ' The daylight operationsspear headed by American heavy bomb ers, dropped possibly 8000 tons o! explosives on scattered enemy in stallations. ' The 25th consecutive day of the colossal aerial preparation ' for the invasion saw about 1000 ' American heavy bombers hurled against ..supremely ". important ' (Turn to Page 2 Story II) FDR Picks Up 70 More Votes Of Delesates j - By the Associated Press While Ohio and . West Virginia voters elected gubernatorial nom inees yesterday from among 17 candidates, Pres. Roosevelt picked up 70 more claimed -delegates in those states. That ran his total to 325, only 84 short of the 589 re quired for renomination. The chief executive added 52 to his. column from Ohio and 18 from the mountain state. Ohio's went to him indirectly through State Au ditor Joseph T. Ferguson, who filed for the preference vote unopposed with the understanding the dele gation would be for Roosevelt West Virginia's 18 were unpled ged but described as pro-fourth term if the president runs. The fourth term was given an other boost yesterday. CIO Pres ident Philip Murray told the United Steelworkers of America in Cleveland that an "overwhelm ing majority,, of the people de mand it -Ohio's 50 republican delegates elected in yesterday's primary are pledged to Gov. John W. Bricker, who ran unopposed in the prefer ence. This gives him 56, counting Mississippi's six claimed for him. and places him second in the GOP nomination race behind Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. The New York er leads with 264. 1 Pinball, Juke Box Tax Law Held Constitutional i The 1943 legislative act, impos ing a tax of 150 a year on pinball machines and $10 a year on juke boxes, is constitutional except for that provision authorizing confis cation -of machines on which tax es are not paid, the state supreme court held in a unanimous opinion here Tuesday. The circuit court for Multnomah county held the entire law uncon stitutional and the state tax com mission appealed to the supreme court.' Two suits attacking the law, one by S Fox and company and the other by S. A. Sedlock and company, were consolidated into one action. ;: , ' - -" ; The opinion, written by Chief Justice J. O. Bailey, reversed Cir cuit Judges Earl C. Latourette, Al fred P. Dobson - and Ashby C. DicksonT . - ; Th.- law provided that funds de rived from- the taxes should be used for old age assistance.: Another decision, also by Chief Justice Bailey, held that the 'law Merope which shattered windows on the ' ' ; - ; Hit Back Defenders Beat; Off .Two Invader Blows sat Loyang CHUNGKING, May 9 -Wh The Chinese said tonight they had beaten back two Japanese force trying to capture the an cient city of Loyang from the south,! but they announced that other invading forces had scored gains in a westward drive 30 miles below this battle-ground in Honan province. Fighting around Lnngmen, a town: 10 miles south of Loyang famed as a Buddhist eenter, the Chinese . "completely repulsed", a Japanese force which had crossed to the west bank of the f 8 river southeast of Lnngmen, and inflicted "heavy casualties" on invaders on. the east bank, tonight's Chinese communique . stated. The Japanese employed strong tank and armored car forces, and lost 10 tanks in the fighting, the Chinese ' said. A battalion com mander was listed among the ene my, casualties. (; . The Japanese alio employed tanks? in their , westward thrust which was engaged by the Chi nese as it smashed from captured Linju toward Iyang, 20 miles to the west, the bulletin said. . The C8 14th air force . con tinued its cooperation with the Chinese ground forces In He man, s communique reporting that the Chinese-Amerkaa wing attacked the Japanese la Honan on Sunday after bombers had raided Japanese installations at Hankow Saturday. The Chinese-American wing at tacked troops and motor concen trations behind enemy lines Sun day, fighter-bombers strafing roads and Japanese installations east of Linju, killing 150 Japa nese-and destroying much equip ment, a communique said. . South of Loyang other fighter bombers damaged Jrom 40 to 60 trucks, destroyed two tanks and caused many casualties, the bul letin said. ; became effective July 1, 1943, in stead of June 9, 1943, the date on which a large number of laws of the .1143 legislature became oper ativcf This suit was filed by the Northwest Amusement company against th tax commission." This decision affirmed Circuit Judge Walter Tooze, Multnomah county. Becords of the tax, commission show ; that1 255,000 was collected from pinball machine and . juke box operators before the commis sion, Was enjoined by the courts. This money has been held intact pending the supreme court dec! sion. ' . ' ' Tax commissioners estimated that these taxes would raise ap proximately 1200,000 annually and not In excess of $1,000,000 as indi cated at the time the bills were under legislative consideration. , Other decisions Tuesday: . In the matter of the estate of Florence Fuson Cook; Lawrence Chinese (Turn to Page 2 Story C Japs Threaten in China M O N G O L I A . wwm(jss. XVX MAtlCHURIA ? A7lA rwSs ,5AsxIH-- "j 1 - -' X7mijL 'rinotao . . .. y - qJx ; C H JN A sgiz !r; SHAMCHA Arrows indicate Japanese offensives reported mi oe uireaeBmg tarn city mi mjus ub mi htc suitwea to only a few miles the length of the Feipfag-Hankow rail route still held by the Chinese, Shaded areas art dominated by Japanese. (AF Wirephetej. Three Top Meet in WASHINGTON, May MVThree ton admirals met in San Franciscos last weekend in a portunity, for planning even heayier.tlows at Japan, the navy disclosed today. ';''!' "irl'M ; . ' i S- Tfteannoancejnrfroin hea"2quarter made disaosure xt flwf.nttafljiestUH meeting incidental to the awaVd of a neW decoration to Admiral 2 lSHt &&!Z& meeting Chester W. Nimitz, Pacific fleetO chief, but the. extraordinary op portunity for high strategy plan ning was evident. Participants were Nimits, Ad miral William L. Halsey,. South Pacific commander, and Admiral Ernest J. King, commander in " chief of the United States fleet. r What line this planning took was in no wise indicated by navy officials here. However, Admiral King is known .to feel that the Pacific fight must be pushed to the limit even while allied forces are massing finally for the assault on western Europe. rl ; : The main line ' of strategy of the forces under Nimits and -Halsey k likewise obvious. They : must either assault Truk in the Caroline island group directly ahead of American eonanered positions In the Marshall group or,- by-passing Trek, seek to es tablish one : or more bases In the Marianna island ehala rasv nlng north from the Carolines to Japan. v'V; The aim of these operations is ta open a central Pacific supply route to the Philippines for Gen eral Douglas MacArthur's am phibious legions advancing from the south and already in posses sion of a new Jumping off point at Hollandia,; New Guinea. . , (Turn to Page 2 Story C) New President Takes Office In Salvador SAN SALVADOR, FJ Salvador, May 9-(P)-Preident Maximfliano Hernandez Martinez turned over his presidential .powers today to Gen. Andres ; Ignado Menendez, minister of national defense. - Hernandez ! : Martinez submitted his resignation yesterday as a re sult of a general strike which was the outcome of a recent revolt The president told newspaper men; after the ceremony that he had given up power "satisfied with having done my duty, and I hold ill will against nobody." ! The general strike was begun by students in the National uni versity and spread quickly to bus iness houses; pharmacies, banks, railways an other. activities.' - Leaders said the strike was in protest to the execution of civil ians and military men who parti cipated m - ' revolutionary move ments April 2.: The government had announced 25 persona were executed for their share in a re volt in which 53 persons were killed, . . e' ' - The . strike still was in effect this morning before - Hernandez Martinez Quit the residency, but government' officials expressed hope that the char.ra would bring about ncmU conwUccs. - in northern China, which were I 1 Admirals erence ay JuniM fkniunivwui , - . conference that offered ' full op- Pension Fiind For Firemen Up for Vote Among proposed charter amendments to be submitted . . . . the voters of the city of Salem at the special municipal election Fri- day, May 19, is one in which the are department or tne city ts vt- tally interested and which per- tains to the retirement of mem- bers at a certain age and pro- vlding for -the payment of pen- sions after retirement - - - Tuesday, a committee of fire- men prepared plans for a cam- paign and this committee, it was announced, intends to inform the voters as clearly as possible of the various provisions 01 me amena- ment and the merits of the mea- sure from now on-untu election day. " - V This amendment provwes ior retirement of members of the Sa- lem fire department upon the at- tainment : of certain-1 ages - and compliance with , conditions men- boned in said amendment pro- viding for the payment, oj pen- sions to the members of said fire department when so retired, es - teblishing a budget item to be known and designated as the "pension fund," providing for the appointment of a pension board to administer said act, providing for the furnishing of funds from the city treasury for the adminis tration of said act and the pay ment of such pensions, and sub- ??sr3ch6ol Board Announces tting sa (Turn More Gvilian Goods Coming WASHINGTON. May; IMft- The war production board will soon permit an Increase in produc - tion of consumer goods, Chairman Donald M. Nelson revealed today. The increase, it was saidwill not be large but will "fill in the chinks" of the war economy- with civilian production. Small plants will be permitted to use surplus materials for certain foods. Large next fall. The duties of the new factories will be allowed to. par- registrar Will be-enlargedl ? over tldpate also in those cases where those formerly assumed by J. C the civilian production would not Nelson,' whose death last ' winter interfere with munitions output; resulted In the' vacancy,; i Farmers will be the first bene- To fill Tavenher's post of prin ficiary, Nelson said; at a press cipal of Leslief the? board voted conference. A program now is be- in favor of Joy Hills who. now ing drafted tonder which simpler teaches social science at the high items of farm equipment such as school, and has. also been! doing barn and hayloading i equipment part-time . work with ' the X state and supplies for beekeepers and department of education. Mary E. poultrymenr-could be made from Eyre, who has 'been teaching so idle and surplus materials without cial science at the high school, regard to WFB limitations , and quotas. , i -!:! i i Defeat ifih ;; .; Bring Election DUBLIN, Wednesday, May 10 UP) - It was officially announced early , today that; a general elec tion would be held in Eire prob ably May 30 asi the result of the defeat of Primej Minister jEamon De Valera's : government! on -.a transport bill by a vote of 64 to 63 in the daiL I - V ': . " i ; v'?- De Valera's government party took the minority spot last Juno after, the first (wartime general election . ended iwlta the Fianna Fall holding 7 seats to the op- position's 7 L This was a portent of rough going on issues such u that which resulted in the one vote defeat.. ; y , ,L ; Irish observers hastened to say that Oe Valera's! neutrality policy had nothing to do with the rebuff, since : leaders . of the opposition parties have indorsed his stand on that question. 1 :'. -f; -..V. )si- i ' The negative Iballoting on the transport bill wu the equivalent of a no-confidence vote. . , .. The reversal meant that not on ly De Valera but all other mem bers of the dail Would resign and stand for reelection. . The bill provide for amalga mation of Eire's two biggest trans- port companies. QO Wins Ward ion; n "4 CHICAGO,: May .-i?VA CIO union at UogtfMnm Warl " nnH company's Chicago plants tonight won a collective bargaining elec- Hon balloting which ended just control of the properties Ut had seized April 26. j -1 , ed a majority of, the employes an issue .which fled to government seizure of the properties showed the union receiving 2,340 yes votes and 1,565 no votes in the main unit and 100 yes votes and 28 no votes in the smaller unit. - 1 ; I :.: .These developments came' also on the eve of a scheduled court ruling on the legality of thi vov. eminent seizure t of the nlani - I 1 - M- - - , f, 1. m Washington jthat the election outcome would 'tend the case" but I Sewell Avery, board chairman of the big firm, said the president had Uude a misstatemenL', He said ward officials would bargain with any union chosen by the employes but would oppose any Contract providing for aniv form of "dosed shop." i . i 4 'Avery later said he would return to his office at the usual time to- morrow mornink. attributtng the government's action in returning the plant to "the Indignation of the public which has risen like a bal- Uoon and has made it too hot for toe administration." t 1 Secretary of Commerce Jesse Jones in Washington issued the order returning! the property: to company "officials. He said the government had taken oyer the property, pending the election and added that the j operation j of the business was continuing "in a nor- mal way. f . j Commented Sewell Avery. 1 chairman of the board of ; wards, I who -was carried from his office May 28 by two soldiers when the government, took possession: -I think it would be better if (Turn to Page 2 Story D) ?1 - meet Ta. -1 betsfla tUack Teaching Staff Changes New , appointments . to replace resigning staff members waa the chief business taken up ! at the brief meeting of the school board 1 Tuesday night One memDer 01 the . board was absent, Ralph Campbell. ; j j ; ; ; I 5 R. W. Tavenner, principal of Leslie . Junior high school, has j been selected for the post jof res istrar at the senior high SChOOl duties and will assume his newj I will be promoted to the position I now held by 12ss Hills, AtLeastlOO,000 AxisTroopg Believed ICilled or Captured In Month Long Offensive I . r Jly TOM YARBROUGn 4 I ; LONDON, Wednesday, May 10 (AP) Premier-Mar sha StaHn annoonced early ; today the capturt by storm of the Crimean fortress-port of in which thousands of axis troops died at their iruns or per- , ished In the Black sea trying to t At least 100,000 German lieTed killed or csptored in the OTerall Sl-day Crimean of fensive which began April and ended LOe yesterday just a few hours before Stalin's dramatic order of the day. : The tietory,1 riined after against ike exhausted axis garrison, freed two big Russian amies for the. major mainland offessire expected soon in apanese Mf3pulsed AlliecLOIfensive Progresses Well In All Sectors ; SOUTHEAST ASIA' HEAD QUARTERS, Kandy, Ceylond May 9 AP- A series of Jap anese counter attacks have been repulsed with heavy losses and the full-powered allied offen sive to destroy enemy, invasion forces ini eastern India is go ing forward successfully in ev ery sector, Adm. Lord . Louis Mountbatten's headquarters said today ; j - . Allied infantry, strongly sop- ported . by tanks, artillery and r planes mowed. dewis. at. least; around Kahuna alone over the past weekend, the bnlletln an- noonced, and baa inflicted simi larly heavy .casualties since. A British officer reported that an allied column had cut through rough hill country west of ; Ko hima, completey outflanking Ja panese forces in that area, and now was : driving . into. Kohima from the ! south, along the high way which leads to the sister al lied base; Of Imphal, j 60 airline miles away. The move threatened to trap all Japanese troops west of Kohima. j - The situation aroand Imphal was being similarly eased by the allied offensive. In severe fightiag near Palel, t miles soath of Imphal, British and Indian troops captured a Bom ber of bills and vlltaces and threw back a Japanese counter attack with heavy losses to the . enemy, Jncladias destruction of two :, mediam tanks iby tank-, boster planes of the RAT. , Heavy . and accurate aerial bombing preceded analliedat tack ' near ; Bishenpur,. 18 miles southwest of Imphal, m which in fantry and tanks'drove the Ja panese from, a' village. . ,- " Lt. Gen. Joseph W StflweU's Chinese troops were reported to have .made a ; small advance : near lnkancantawng In nerth ern Burma; which they cap ' tared last week. Inkangantawns is in the Mocaang- valley, about 30 miles north of Kaming. The Japanese were reported attack ing in the Fort Herts valley, north of Myltkyina. Upon recommendation of Frank B. Bennett, superintendent, the board authorized that he go ahead in his negotiations to secure the services of William McKinney of Portland i as Smith-Hughes agri cultural instructor at - the high school to replace Neil Craig who has resigned. McKinney did. his undergraduate work at Willamette university and was a graduate at Oregon State. . . . - Mrs. Gloria Magness will ' re place Ruth Y. Carkin as girls' physical f education instructor at Leslie. Muriel Wilson has request ed a leave , of absence from ber duties as instructor in commer cial ' subjects at the high schoo for the balance of the year be cause of 111 : health. No definite substitution has been announced to fill 'her position.''- lU-yJ'' In the grade schools, Hate! Sanden was elected as substitute for Elsie Waggoner at the fifth grade in Bush school. Elsie Col ,. (Turn to Page 2 Story A) Siege Serastopol after a 24-day siege escape fcy ship. ... ;! . and Romacian troops were bey. a fircl; three-dar assault conjunction with an allied inva sion, of. western Europe. The soviet Black sea fleet also gained a valuable port for amphi bious operations against Ro mania's coast, 200 miles to the west.' :': .. 4 .. In the dying hours of the axis struggle at Sevastopol swarms of soviet bombers and torpedo boats pounced on enemy ships trying to evacuate ' troops, sinking ' two transports totalling 7000 tons I in the open; sea and smashing ! other vessels t. in Kazachya, Stretlet skaya and Kamshevaya bays west of Sevastopol near Cape Kher sonnes. jt-Vi 'r..',)' b'" .t Russian -. infantrymen scramb ling over the' chalk face of the hill city also, blasted enemy, troops tin their cave-hideouts. ; :;' : .)" j Stalin isamed 5f commanders ' for dlstlaetioa . in - the drive , which completely , ejeared the - 1 last of the le,00fl-sajtaremile Crimean peninsula, j" Among; these was " Marshal Alexander ' M. Sasilevsky, chief of the red army general . staff who Is :a mastes oovlet operational plan-ner."-.,.Sj . v,r-:; .s :l)f':-rr' The order Of the day : was ad dressed jointly,' to Vasilevsky and ' Gexv'Feodo a,; TolbukhK-whoso fourth OJkraine army topped Se vastopol in a final overwhelming of three (deep; zones of steel and concrete fortifications . laced with barbed wire and mine; fields. Conspicuously absent la the final citation was Gen. Andrei , X, V Teremenko, eonunander of .- the independent maritime army which participated In the early phase of the Crimean offensive. (Turn to Pate 2 Story G) - Maj. Gen. Pelz New Nazi Air West in . - j ( -. t : LONDON. Wednesday, May 10 (ft-Adolf Hitler has appointed 29-year-old Maj. Gem. Oderst Pel as 'chief i of the western nazi air forces and charged him f with building; up a striking force to parry the allied Invasion, a re liable European, underground source said today. ' i , Pelz, youngest general In the German , army, is regarded as an air senius and is a prune favorite , of Hitler, the informant said. At the same time the nazi air force in the west was reported to have been reorganized into three corps two ; composed S-completely of fighters and one of bombers. The reorganization is part of a - Chief German effort to strengthen the air force in the face of great losses . in production through allied bombing. .:; , :; Top-ranking American airmen - said the Germans had adopted a ; "miser" policy of air warfare at the expense of both the civilian population and vital industry to -build up a strong, anti-invasion . air force. -:; . . Whatever the Germans do, even the most conservative American and British 'air leaders believe 1 ' that the allies, can win complete control of the air in from seven to ten days after start of the in- , vasion. r-'r ' -!..f ":i-t: !v-; Despite big losses in production through American bombings, Marshal Goering is building a large air force striking arm along the west wall by letting- the ci vilian population "take lt. Here is the air war picture at j seen through the eyes of the men who are running it: The allied aim at present ia -three-fold: ?-"-v:''v;:v-v..h :- -Hi iX: One To wipe out German air- " craft reserves by bomoing lac- . tories and air fields so that when the German .first line fighting 4 strength is destroyed , there will be nothing to replace it . Two To hamper and obstruct German a r my communications alons the west wall by continuous bombings.' " .; . r v; v 4' 'v - Three 'To soften -not com pletely smash the nazi fixed da fenscs by temtins, ' . ,