Volcano Fortress Falls "T"l " ; - .! , v Iv;-l, : . ii?',.! - ... t . i I . 4 v-. - i 1. I ! - ' . U. S. Toll ounts To 5372 NmETY-FOUBTH YEAB 16 PAGES Salem, Oregon. Friday Morning; February 23. 1945 Pile 5c No. 231 ? 1. ; - 1 i .."! foundiid 1651 I : t 1 I: j' . ML Sorlbachi, an extinct volcano en Iwo Jlma, has been captured by American marines. The Japs had tamed the volcano into a fort rets and Tanks on that strategic island had a tooth time over coming-it. (AF wlrephoto from The influence of environment on animal life is well illustrated in the report of the state game commission that since the Tilla mook burn deer shot in that area -weigh as much as 200 pounds,and come 300 pounds, while the gen eral average for the coast is only 125 pounds. Since the great fires of 1933 and 1939 swept the area killing the coniferous trees the region has grown a cover of brush - which makes good forage for deer. The following is taken from the fame commission's report: . "In this connection it is of in terest to note the change in the size of the deer in the burned iover area of Tillamook county since the big fire that devastated some 300,000 acres in 1939. The area was then closed to all hunt ing until September,. . 1942, at which time about two-thirds of the burned-overland was opened to hunting. Since that time hunt ing has been permitted in the whole area during the open sea son. Prior to the fire, deer in this territory have averaged along with other deer in the coast range ' at about .124 pounds. Since the Tillamook burn was opened, many deer taken there have weighed as much as 200 pounds and a few have run as high as 300 pounds. "This . improved condition is shown by the research findings of the commission. An analysis of the forage growing in the open in the Tillamook burn compared With the same varieties in terri- tory not burned oyer, that is, in shaded areas, disclosed a marked difference in the protein content. For example, in vine maple, a favored browse of deer, there was found to be a decidedly increased mount of protein in favor of the (Continued on editorial page) 800 Yankees Killed When Nip Ship Sunk - WASHINGTON, Feb. 22. More than 800 Americans perished When U. S. bombers sank a jam tned Japanese prison ship off Lu on ' in December, a survivor - re vealed today. : , But he said the bombing ac- tually saved American lives, as-.-serting that without it even more of the 1600 men Jammed in the . suffocating holds would have smothered. A "great number," he said, already were dead when the -bombs fell. The survivor, Lieut. George Karl Petritz, USN, 27, of Rockford, 111., told newsmen the 1600 were pack ed in . three ; tiny, unventilated holds. He said he was In the af terhold with' 801 men, in space t not big -enough to accommodate snore than 40 normally. Two smaller holds held 400 each. Off ffiDCDXg f Freedom From F ear y Want For All Men Chief U.S. Aim CHAPULTEPEC CASTLE, Mex ico, Feb. 22. -A)- Secretary of State Edward R. Stettinius, Jr told the interamerican conference today , that an essential aim in a five-point American foreign policy program ; Is an Atlantic charter ; peace -of "freedom from "feat and want f or aH men. ' i; Stettinius, in the first review of American foreign, polky since the Yalta conference, asked the other 18 countries represented here to support the ideas of the Crimean declaration, and., alerted - them against any Nazi attempts to use ' the western hemisphere, as a base ; "for an ultimate comeback.". . Mexican foreign minister Eze quiel Padilla joined Stettiniss In calling on the American nations 6 U. S. navy) Greatest Air Blow Delivered 7000 WarplaneS Pound 100 Nazi Railway Centers By Charles Chamberlain LONDON, Friday, Feb. 23.-P) Allied air chiefs hurled an esti mated 7,000 bombers and fighters at approximately 100 nazi com munications hubs yesterday in the greatest simultaneous air assault in history - - a supreme coordin ated blow to knock out Germany's railway system and the attack continued Into the night. . The Berlin radio said 2000 Rus sian planes also had battered tar gets along the eastern front, prin cipally in East Prussia. Altogether nearly ,10,000 sorties were flown from the west and south before dark, but; the peak was reached at around noontime when through ; careful planning and timing explosives, cascaded down at an estimated average of 100 tons a minute. -.. I Some 30,000 airmen from sev en) allied air cdiwnlnds4 partici pated in the great obliteration raids. f The "buckshot blitz" - - an en tirely new idea which allied air chiefs had mapped and held in readiness for a break in the wea ther - - was spearheaded by more than 1400 Flying Fortresses and Liberators and 800 fighters of the US Eighth air force. Two divisions of this gigantic fleet poured into Germany from the north and a third attacked from the south. Over the reich they broke up into wolf packs of up to 100 bombers each and ham mered at least 24 freight yards and other rail targets in the heart of Germany during the noon hour. Eight bombers and 19 fighters were missing from this phase of the operation. Camp Adair Hospital Gets First Patients CORVALLIS, Feb. 22.-JP)-K hospital train brought the newly commissioned United States na val hospital its' first battle casual ties today. Capt. Paul W. Wilson, USN medical corps, said the group of more than 300 men came from the Pacific area. The hospital, formerly the sta tion hospital at Camp Adair and taken from the army in January, will be, used for naval, marine and coast guard personnel from this area and for sick and wound ed ' returning from war theaters. '" Many of the staff - - medical, dental and hospital corps officers, nurses and hospital corpsmen - -have just returned from long pe riods of overseas duty. The commanding officer said all types of cases, from wounds to tropical diseases, will be handled at the hospital. to unite for a securely peaceful and prosperous world. . Outlining the five cardinal prin ciples of United States policy, Stettinius declared that the new states would give active and full support to the principles of the Atlantic charter,- which,1 he said, were upheld by the big three at Other points in the U. & foreign policy program as disclosed : by Stettinius included the "earliest possible final defeat of the axis; measures - to prevent ' Japan ' and Germany from aggression again: guarantees i to the liberated peo ples of Europe of their own gov ernment and sovereign rights and creation of an international secur ity organization to preserve the peace of th world. - Fish Unit Voted State Aid Direct Appropri ation Favored by House 52 to 6 The proposal to place the fish commission on a direct appropria tion basis for support, rather than keep fit dependent . on poundage fees, Was passed by the house 52 to 6 Thursday. , 1 if Voting "no" were Hesse,: Jones, Kimberling, Lindberg,' Snyder, Staples.-' ! " - ' ' Most impassioned plea for the bill came from Rep. William Nis kanen of Bend who said he was supporting it with considerable misgiyings but that he also was anxious to see conservation meas ures supported, too. (Niskanen's bill to' prohibit commercial fishing in coastal streams and bays, ex cept the Columbia river, now is in the house fisheries committee.) Larre Income Cited Rep! John Hall of Portlapd, in urging passage, said, the bill was "necessary to' save the commer cial ffshing industry of Oregon." The industry, he said, supported 8000 people, had a taxable invest ment of $23,000,000, and brought in $30,000,000 a year. f ; Rep. Henry Semon of Klamath Falls, I asking regarding what ap propriation would be necessary, was told by Rep. Fred A. Hellberg of Astoria that the amount would be up to the budget director and the committee on ways and means. The; fish commission last year was allotted $20,000: in emergency funds to continue operation. The house Thursday also passed measures for the education of vet erans lof "Vorld war II; increasing from $4,500,000 to $7,500,000 the backlog of the state industrial accident fund; raising the salaries of Marion county (15 per cent) and Yamhill county officials; vali dating divorce decrees which oth erwise might ' be challenged be cause of residence, and allowing cities 1 to buy I surplus '- war ' goods without competitive bidding.; The senate passed buf ce bill creating a game refuge in Polk county. ; (Legislative news pages 8 and 16-) I I - I ! il . ' Stimson Hints At Big Allied Push in West WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.-iP) A broad hint; that a major allied offensive on the western front is impending came today from Sec retary of War Stimson. If;. . "I may say that the officers in the war department who have re cently been with Hour troops in that theater have been much im pressed with the confidence: of the entire command in their ability to carry! through an aggressive cam paign," Stimson told his news conference. '"'-'- I::;:;''.!v Among those recently I in , the European theater and now back in Washington Is Lt General Bre hon Somervell, chief of army service forces. In this connection, Stimson's next comment was in teresting: ; "There are' no serious difficul ties how regarding supplies id the forward dumps of the various ar- -. - v. s -'-"- n' : - 54-- I- 'Yank' Sets Up Special Press on Saipan Isle NEW YORK, Feb. 22 (ff) Yank, the army weekly, announc ed today it had sent a j six-ton printing press to Saipan, and now was printing a new edition of the magazine especially for troops on Islands newly-won from, the Jap arese. . -" , i ' It said soldiers on the; islands previously had to depend on cop ies of the magazine flown In from Pearl Harbor. Two Valley Soldiers Wounded in Europe WASHINGTON, Feb. 22. Among Oregon soldiers wounded In : Europe, the war department today listed:; ' Pfc. Melvin W. Brownell, brother-in-law of Mrs. Frances Brown- ell, route three, box 47, Silverton. T4 Andrew L," Penne, son of Peter Penne,? route two, box 158, Woodburn. . 7 ! ' . .... ( 1 sLbbimi American 4th division marines, invading Iwo Jlma, dig In and await orders after taking a Japanese pillbox-blockhouse which was con sidered almost impregnable until the leathernecks came along. Note man apparently dead In foreground. This picture was made by Joe 3rd ' I ii --. ' Triangle Conquest Co: Pattoii's Forces On Loose Again, Threaten Trier By Austin Bealmear PARIS, ; Feb. 22.(P)-The ram paging US Third army broke across the Saar river at two points 65 miles : from the ; Rhine today and completed a whirlwind con quest of i Germany's 80-square-mile Moselle-Saar triangle as 7000 allied, warplanes struck simultan eously at enemy rail life-lines. A field dispatch said Third army ; officers and men were in high spirits as they ripped across western Germany's ramparts with a speed reminiscent of their his toric dash in France, seizing the fortress city of Saarburg and 29 others reich towns on a 55-mile front; j l Saarburg, ones' a thriving city of 10,000,1 was deserted save for 100 aged civilians. ! H Trier In Sight This powerful thrust 18 miles deep into the reich, collapsed all enemy resistance In the triangle and rammed a steel spearhead to a point five miles from Trier, for tified, city 88,000 population on the mountainous j route to the Rhine. J v I r While Trier's battlements came under Lt Gen. George S. Patton's guns, artillery to the south tore at the fortified lulls into which the Germans had been; Chased east of the Saar river. The, attackers were confident the enemy soon would be driven from these new positions.!. ' " i . U To the fury of the allied air at tack - - ;a new technique under which swarms of battle planes un load their, cargoes of destruction on communications f centers - -was added the shock of two oth er allied j armies 'hammering at Germany's first line Of defense. Seventh prlving ;: ! . Forty miles southeast of the Third army, the US Seventh army captured two-thirds of the French gateway I city of i Dorbach, two miles' from the Saar basin's steel city of Saarbruecken. The Canadian First army on the north end of the! front captured Moyland and fought nearly to the edge of Calcar, bitterly-defended highway center two miles south east and 15 miles from Wesel In the Western Ruhr industrial ba- sin. . ) , , f i ... , German Oil Plant Severely Damaged LONDON, Feb. 22 The royal air force 'announced . .to night that reconnaissance of the huge Zeitz synthetic oil plant near Leipzig allowed exceptionally se vere damage was inflicted by an tnplete Leathernecks Take Iwo Pillbox '7 li-i'iti. -. This Gives Idea i Of Close Quarters Fighting in Manila . -' - ' . j si,', . ! I -. MANILA, j Feb. 22 (IP) (This gives an idea of the close quar ters fighting which rages in sec tions ox south Manila. In the postoff ice building, the Yanks hold all five floors but the Japanese are in the basement. In the Manila hotel, the Yanks are on the first .floor the Japa nese are on the second and above. It is a five-story building. ' The Yanks hold the city hall but the Japanese threw them out four times before they went in to stay. t 3-Car Crash Sends 2 Women i ' i To Hospital ) Collision of three automobiles on the Pacific highway approximate ly one mile north of the railroad underpass at Salem's north boun daries Thursday night sent two women to the hospital and two cars to the wreckers. - j Mrs. C . Harrison, Oswego, driver of one vehiele, was suffer ing from pains in a leg she said had earlier been ill-affected . by infantile paralysis. Mrs.' ;dith Kiecker, ' 533 Southeast Salmon street, Portland, riding with her. sustained injuries to both legs and a possible nose fracture, city first aid men said. The two women are at Salem Deaconess hospital. Vernon Clementson, 1945 South east Yamhill street, Portland, driv er of the car believed most dam aged in the ' accident, reconstruct ed it thus: ! ''4-:y-1r:--'-:.,.r'-l' Nath Frank NohV Salem, driv ing south toward Salem ahead of Clementson,!; seemed to . slow or stop his vehicle and Clementson's car nosed into Nolz's then skidded directly across the highway. Mrs. Harrison was ' driving north and her car struck the Clementson vehicle squarely In the middle of its right side, caving in the heavy body and breaking glass.' -1 . The hood and grill of MwAHafeJ rison's car were damaged; the rear bumper of ; the Nolz car , wit knocked loose and the rear of the body 'dented, but no one In it was injured. Clementson received a gash more . than an inch in length on the right temple. ; r Nolz denied that he had slowed down or stopped, told state police he was driving at an ;- even 30 miles an hour.' The accident oc curred at approximately 9 p. m. when traffic in that sector was heavy. f , ' . !M .lJ Partly Qoudy ' j with occasional light rain show ers. Temperatures about thf same in -i the mid-Willamette area, predict U.v S. weather bureau, McNary field, Salem, i ' 4 ...iiitiiiwl. Rosenthal, Associated Press . photographer on assignment with the wartime still picture pool, who went ashore with the marines on D-day. (AP wtrephoto) . Tiny Strip Of Land Captured Oppositibn Light; Move Will Clear j Shipping Route By C. Yates McDaniel MANILA, Friday, Feb. 23.-JPh Veteran Yanks of the Americal division invaded tiny Capul is land in the San Bernardino straits just off Luzon's long southern -tip on -Wednesday in a move to clear the Japanese from '.the main ship ping route from the United States to Manila. Opposition was light The small oval island, five miles long and two wide at the middle, commands the straight through which the Japanese sent a war fleet to harass the American in vasion of Leyte last October. - It lies directly between the ex tensive southeastern tip of Luzon and the northern lend of Samar island, which is I practically in American hands. It is 260 airline miles southeast .of Manila ' and about 325 by sea. ! In 'Manila, - meanwhile, point- blank shelling of the thick east wall of the Intramuros was in tensified as first cavalry Yanks made ready for a grand assault to clean up the Japanese garrison there. Howitzers and cannon were attempting to pound an entranch- way for tanks. J j Front reports said 37th division infantrymen seized the three-story city halL near the Intramuros, af ter a bitter hand-to-hand fight in which the Yanks withdrew from the building, four times in the face of ma chinegun fire before going in to stay. -.. ; : 1 r . ARC Official To Visit Here Edwin Carroll, assistant mana ger of the American Red Cross Pacific area office in San Fran Cisco, will be principal speaker at the annual - meeting of - Marion county chapter, ARC,, to be held at S ' pjn. next Monday In the Carrier room of the First Meth odist ' church. " f f ; CarroIL son of a former.. weU known Oregon newspaperman, re places on the program Raynfbnd Barrows, deputy manager of the San Francisco office, who is re ported seriously CI. A report Of the nominating committee and an nual reports will also feature the Monday night meeting. Weather Max. ,54 Mia. 41 U It 19 4 sum " .41 Saa Fraaeisc Eng cn ., , , i Salem Pwtlaaa . , .54 .85 M trar & -94 SatU WlUajaette river 4 ft S in. J Reports Say Middle . East to Declare War jCAIROJreb - 22 (Reports that could not be confirmed here said tonight that most of the Mid- Idle East would ' be at war with weekend. Usually reliable informants heard that Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, TransJordania, and Yemen would formally declare war on the two axis nations. Rejections for Army Service 41 Per Cent About 25,000 men or 41 per cent of all those ordered inducted into the armed services In Oregon have been rejected because of physical reasons, -Col. Elmer V. Wooton, state director of selective service, told a sub-committee of the legislature Thursday. Most of the men were between 18 and 29. The colonel was a witness at a joint: ways and means committee hearing on house bill 53 which provides for a program of physi cal fitness in all high schools of thestat. '. The hearing developed no ob jections to the bill but there was comment that the $28,000 speci fied perhaps wasn't enough. .Wooton said the Oregon rejec tion rate wasn't as large as the national average but he urged passage of the bill to raise the standards of. the state's youths.. . Others urging passage includ ed R. W. Layton, dean of the de partment of physical education at the . University of Oregon; Austin Landreth, Pendleton school prin cipal, and Rex Putnam, state su perintendent of public instruction. Senate Group Shifts Work-orA jail Penalties, to i ; By Francis J. Kelly WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 - (JP) The senate military committee, in approving a revamped manpower control bill today, shifted the pro posed fine-and-jail penalties from Industrial workers to their employers.- . , At the same time, the commit tee Voted for five years imprison ment and a $10,000 fine for de ferred farm workers who leave t h e farm without their ' draft boards permission. Almost immediately a move was started to substitute the house approved work-or-Jaa bill when the committee measure reaches the senate floor. Senator Bailey (D-NC) said that if he becomes convinced he can' obtain majority support for the action, he will move to dis place the : committee's bill with Capture of Peak Ends One Phase Of Bitter Fight By Elmont Walt 1 U. S. PACIFIC FLEET .HEAD QUARTERS, Guam, Friday, Feb. 23 fPi Hard-fighting United States marine, who have, paid the Pacific's highest price for 58TiourB of battle with 3372 casualties at Iwo, wrested 546-foot Mt. Suri bachl on the south tip of the isl and from the Japanese today, j ! The United States flag was rais ed on the crater's rim at 10:35: a. m. by the 28th regiment, signalling the end of one phase of the five-day-old struggle. . .. . . ) t From Suribachi, whose slopes -had been t blasted by battleships and dive bombed by carrier planes, the Japanese had raked marjoe positions throughout the southern sector with deadly mortar and ar tillery fire. : , .. Nimlts Telia Victory f I Adnt Chester W. Nimitx an- nounced " the victory in a brief communique soon after one which had reported only minor advances through Thursday against fierce opposition. j ' ; The earlier communique, cov ering marine casualties only" through 6 p. m. Wednesday, dis- . closed that 644 marines had been killed, 4168 wounded and 560 were missing. Since then severe bat-' ties have raged. - In the. same 58 hour period, total of 1222 enemy dead were counted. 1 1 . No invasion of the Pacific Vvar for a. comparative period hasVost so many American casualties. ; At Tarawa, previously considered the bloodiest fight of the war, marine casualties for its entire 72 hours slightly exceeded 3400,, -j Fighting Bitter j j : Today's communique repotted more of "the same type of bitter fighting which has built up the casualty totals. ir It reported gains Thursday,, af ternoon too slight to affect the Virtual stalemate which develop ed Wednesday. . -I i The three marine divisions, th third, fourth and fifth, Inched for ward silghtly on the north toward the enemy fighter base in the cen- i ter of the island and constricted their lines around volcanic ML Suribachi on the south tip. j t The Japanese launched two powerful ; counterattacks on jthe flanks of the forces attacking 'the airfield. Significantly, Nimitz -did not specifically claim either had been completely blunted. U. S. War t oil Past 800,000 i WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 Reported American casualties of World war II climbed past 800,- 000 today. j 1 'The compilations by the army and navy came out along with hints of impending big-scale ;ac- ! tion which indicated little if any diminution in the rate of losses. J i Representing a rise of approxi mately 100,000 in the past month, ' and up 18,982 for the week, th casualty figures were rising at a rate which would raise the total past 1,000,000 within two months, t Valley Men Liberated From Philippine Islea WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 The war department today an nounced additional names of civil ians liberated In the Philippines. They include (with next of kin): ' . Don C Crow, son of Mrs. Peter H. Crow, route four, Albany, Ore.' j' Kenneth L. Gripes, son-in-law of Mrs. A. N. Poole, P. O. box 148, Monmouth, Ore. Employer the house bill, written by himself and Chairman May (D-Ky.) of the house military committee. t The bill reported by the com- ' mittee Is not a total effort (and to that extent I am disappointed, he said. j . ' . The bill, nearly three weeks in committee,- emerged today by a, vote of IS to 4: with one member " refraining from voting. By! no , means all of those who voted af- firman vely actually favor! th legislation as a whole; their! ob ject was to get something out on the floor for a showdown, j j ; The senate measure would ap ply to all persons regardless of age or sex.. The house bill would affect ionly 'civilian men -18 through 45 who had not been spe- ' ctfically deferred from the draft by law, such as public officials or divinity students. -. . - v , j - - -i attack the night of January 16. ' - ' J t ; '