I! ! I ; 'I t ; s I - i T 1 Iwo Wounded Evacuated Tr,.-i VCVT V NINETY-FOURTH YEAH 12 PAGES Scrlcm, Orogon. Wsdnasdcrf ; Morning, Fcbmary 23, 1945 Prk Sh No. 235 "f p. i) I.,., ji ..iu. i,tii..iiwim .iminmnwii i. im " .''g?jr11.-1 W f .-t ; 1 - . - - - i tJ y .... . f '74 1 - : -ir '. : f- JKJZrnA'r n iUUXJ I 'iC ) I 'ir::: - - -p i I - (. j I 1:1 '' 1 t ' r i . i Devy weather did not keep hospital eorpsmen from .' evacuating Leathecnecks wonnded on the bloody beach at Iwo Jim. Here - the men are placed aboard a pontoon barge, partially awash. They were then transferred to an LST pital ships. This picture was taken by Joe Rosenthal. Associated Press photographer on assignment pool. (AP Wirephoto). FCP 03SHB Administration of the liquor control law is a stone aroundthe neck of any governor. The division of opinion on the old liquor ques tion is so sharp the interests of those in the liquor trade so con tentious, and the readiness of many citizens to violate the liquor laws so conspicuous, that any gov ernor has a hard tnne.if he wants toxgive an honest administration f the liquor laws. While it is true that he operates through a liquor commission, the irritations and problems play leap frog over the commission to land right in the governor's lap. Not -. only is the commission the oper ator of a large state business it is elscTcharged with responsibility for enforcing liquor control laws. In fact local police and sheriffs forces leave the task of liquor law " enforcement largely to the com mission, though their own respon sibilities are equal, i JL recall that in 1938 Governor -'Martin's liquor commission was the target of severe criticism which was taken out, quite unjust ly, on the governor. I had a com mission in which I 'reposed full confidence, and which now is pointed to as a very competent body; but. still the complaints, largely from persons whom the commission has disciplined, were vigorous. Now I note that Gover nor Snell is under pressure and his commission is under fire. Al 3 ready the liquor interests which supported him are openly criticis ing his liquor administration or Crumbling in their beards. The criticisms came to a head in the debates over some of the (Continued on Editorial page) Two Weeks9 Vacation Due Lumber Men PORTLAND, Feb. 27-tf')-A long-debated two weeks vacation was ordered granted today to employes of Willamette Valley Lumber Operators association and Oregon coast operators but only to workers of five years stand ing. v':'..V" 4 i ' The West Coast Lumber com mission gave its first such ruling Jn a case brought by the Inter rational Woodworkers of Ameri ca. CIO. ' . i . Men averaging a 22-hour week r more will be paid five days' .wages on each vacation week, ' with vacation pay varying accord ing to the number of hours work fed during the year. Employes newer than five years will still receive one week's vacation. Victory Ship Will Be 'Named for Willamette WASHINGTON, Feb. 27-AVA Victory : ship will be named for i .Willamette university, Salem, Ore., Senator Cordon (R-Ore.) aaid today. i - He reported the ship, now un tier construction at Oregon Ship building corporation, Portland, would be ready for launching about April 14. Tartly Cloudy today with occasional showers and little change in-temperature In the mid-Willamette, val ley area, predicts U. S. weath er bureau, McNary field, Sa standing by for removal to bos with the war time still picture v Churchill OK's Pole Changes Prime Minister Defends Good Faith of Stalin . By Alex Singleton LONDON, Feb, 27 (JP) Prime Minister ChurcJiIU, upheld the Cri mea conference Polish settlement today as embodying "just and right" Soviet territorial claims, disclosed the Big Three had agreed to give Poland Danzig and upper Silesia along with other territory at German expense and defended vigorously the good faith of Mar shal Stalin and the Soviet regime. Opening in the house vof com mons a three-day debate in which he is asking Britain to commit her self to the broad principles of the Crimea conference, Churchill de clared that the American on slaught against Japan had brought the war in the Pacific to its peak period. The conflicts in Europe and Asia taken together have now reached an "overall or double-peak per-' ioJ," he said, the war against Ger many having "been prolonged for a good many months beyond what was hoped for last autumn." Churchill said that the, Big Three had agreed to give Poland the great city of Danzig and the greater part of East Prussia west of Koenigsberg" as well as "a long wide sea front on the Baltic," the industrial province of upper Siles ia and such other territory east of the Oder river as the peace con ference might care to take away from Germany. Way Opened For Minimum Wage of 55c WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 -(JP)- The war labor board today open ed the way for the establishment of a minimum wage of 55 cents an hour in all American industries,' provided it won't push prices up. Thousands of workers would be affected by the new ruling, which increases from 50 to 95 cents the dividing line between what the board now considers substandard pay and "that providing a decent standard in war time. The increase does not go into effect automatically. But the board authorized its regional boards to approve hourly wage rates up to 55 cents where em ployers voluntarily seek the in crease or the union and employer join in the request House Amends, Passes J ax Bill; Senate Faces Bus Day The 43rd legislature, which has disposed of but 40 per cent of the bills passed by this date two years ago, faced the usual heavy 11th hour calendars today. Thirty-six bills, resolutions and memorial were up for final ac tion in the senate, including res taurant regulation, preferential employment fo? veterans, repeal of the Chinese property limitation act, and the granting of "GI rights to American seamen. The house had a lighter calen dar, which included action on the acquisition of North Pacific Dental college, but its committee sessions were myriad. Both the senate and house took actions Tuesday, which may, or may not speed up. work. The house voted to limit any single talk to U. S. Stalls Securitv a Pro ise i i Americas Mova To Insure Peace In Henilsplierei . '! ' " By Flort Lewfs ; f MEXICO CITY, Febl 27--(JP)-Thef United Stalls managed J to postpone for 24 burs today a isur prise move to commit all the Ame rican nations to! guarantee j the frontiers and political independ- . .I i i T. cues oi uie -counties in uus nenu sphere with theil armed might Senator Warreii Austin (RTVt), member of the lforeign relations committee, intervened ! just as a commission of tle inter-American conference here was about to pass the plan by acclamation, i' J Dramatically entitled "the dec laration of Chapltepej," the feso lution combines proposals put for ward by Uruguly, Coiombialand Brazil. Conferences sjessions are being held at Cjiapultpec castle. The surprise pme i the deter mination of th othej: countries here to forge links of steel among the j American republics immedi ately, without waiting for : estab- lishment of a forld security or- ganization at Sa The "Declara Franjcisco. j; ioflef Chaoulte- pec" goes beyoi the Dumbarton Oaks plan in onm important point: The signatory! nations would be obliged to use f free when aggres sion or a "sure threat? of aggres sion developed n this continent Marines Drive OnlwoUima US ACIFld FLEET HEAD QUARTERS, Guam, Wednesday, Feb. 28.-()-Two of the three marine division! battling side by side toward the high north part of Iwo gnawed out:small gains Tues day through the thickly-studded Japanese defenses buf enemy re sistance remains high and still in cludes tanks after nine days of f ceaselessfiiammering. I ; j a iie itippuntrse grinuy ciung 10 one, tip of the clntral airfield aft er , a week of flaming f action con centrated on an around that, two-! runway fighter 'base, j - j Adm. Chester W. Nimitz an nounced in a cbmmunique today mat ine marines resumed a power-packed pusbj from Ahe south half of Iwo Tuesday morning aft er, artillery broke upi a tank-led counterattack Monday night. En emy infiltration1 attempts were re pulsed. I . i ; . I ; The gains wele registered In the center by Majj Gen, Graves B. Erkine's Third division, which1 holds virtually Jjjall of, the central airfield, and oh' the east shore by! MaJ. Gen. Clifton B. Cates Fourth division. - No mention was made of any gain on the west by MaJ. Gen Keller E. Rockyi Fifth division The fiercely! resisted advance was supported by marine artillery carrier-based planes and warships of the Fifth fleet j; in Army Paper Gives Page i p riaz liaising jriciure PARIS, Wedtiesdayi Feb. 28-(JP) The US army Ijpaperj Stars? and Stripes pushed:! all hews off its front page today and devoted it to a full-page reproduction oil Asso ciated Press photographer Joseph Rosenthal's picture of US marines raising the Stars and Stripes on Mt Suribachi, Jwo Jima. 30 minutes, and! the senate refused by a vote of 15 to 14 to take from the table for argument house bill 306 providing por i Multnomah registrar. It was this bill which precipitated a filibuster in the house last week. j Principal affirmative action tak en Tuesday was house passage, with controversial amendments, of the senate joint resolution (SJR 2) providing for a general study of Oregon's tax structure. i Up to today! 172 Out of a total of 673 bills have passed both houses, compared with 275 out Of 688 at the last session. Of the 397 house bilk,1 the house has tak en final action Jon 239. Of the 276 senate bills, the senate has: taken Ahead lowly final action on 117. f I 4 (Legislative news page 9) JVaval Air Corps Holds 9 1 Margin Against Japanese WASHINGTON, FeU 27 -UP)- Naval aviation, with a ibetter than five to one record against the Jap anese since tfie start of the war, Stepped up its margin to nine to bne in operations since Decern ber 1. I I In a recapitulation of operations of carrier forces for the past three months, a naifal spokesman report ed today that 161Q Japanese planes had been destroyed against 178 America planes ost in com bat In addition, the carrier borne craft damaged 1078 planes, sank 1187 enemy vessels of all types, and damaged 402 j others. I ocks Burned Out in U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD QUARTERS, Guam, (Wednesday, Feb. 28-0!P)-f-The more than 200 Superfortresses raiding Tokyo Sunday burned out 240, blocks in the heart ofj the city, i an area in cluding factories and business dis tricts, the 21st bomber command disclosed today. The remarkable chieyement, during which bombs yere dropped through a thick cloud overcast by precision instruments! was borne ou t by reconnaissance photo graphs. The area: : devastated covered 29,740,000 square feetjor 667 acres. The B-Z9s; unloaded bombs in Tokyo's most congested industrial section. They crossed the city, from the northeast to the south west Maj. GenJ' Curtis tlron Pants" Lemay,1 commander of the 21st bomber command, said the photo graphs ahowed the Results were excellenfj l " Edwin Watson, FDR's Aide, Dies at Sea ! ABOARD PRESIDENTIAL CRUISER IN THE ! ATLANTIC, Feb. 20.-iiP)-(Delayed)-MaJ. Gen. Edwin M. Watson, the man who made President Roosevelt's offi cial appointments, died at sea to day on the way home from the Crimea conference,r1 General Watson was 61. A cer . i i . . j death of the presidential secretary OllU UUUUU diUC. i Expressing his great personal sorrow at the loss of a close friend and associate," Mr. Roose velt said it was Watson's "sense of duty and determination to see the war through that made him insist on taking this trip with me.1 The president had no immedi- ate plans for naming a successor but it is expected he will divide the job and appoint both a new aide and a new secretary. ! SueM Urges Fund Support "To fight the battle of loneli ness and anxiety, the Red Cross has stationed many thousand men and women with our fighting forces at home and 'abroad. They provide entertainment to those on leave, administer to sick and wounded, supply war prisoners and refugees. In a dark, war-torn world, one bright) emblem-the Red cross has emerged as a symbol of f mercy,? Gov. Earl Snell declared Tuesday as he urged participation j In the war fund drive which! opens over Oregon today. j "There Is no conceivable turn this war can take which will less- to any great degree the re sponsibilities of this -humanitarian agency," he said. Tuneful Japs Enter Iwo Jima Battle With Song on Their Lips - By the Associated Press " Tokyo radio said yesterday in hmnriact . that th JananeM fighting United States marines on Iwo island are roina to battle 240GtyBl Toky with a song on their; lips and have WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 flV become "one big ball of fire." Hope that the CPA's new cloth The broadcast recorded by the Ing program would bring down federal commuri cations commis P"ce or cioirang o to i per sion. said one favorite song of thelcent by next August was express- sarrison begins: i "If any YanTr. On the island comes, each blade ! of grass and every leaf on Iwo' Jima is -fully armed to dig a grave for the Yan- kee," : - ' c si! j ' i ;' : I Russians 44 Mi i 1 Swift Northward Push Perils Nazi Troops on Baltic By W. W. Hereher j LONDON, Wednesday, Feb. 28. -(-Smashing j 44 miles jnorth- ward through permanent German fortifications In Pomeranja, Ibe Russians yesterday drove! within 22 jmiles of cutting the last! enemy escape route from Danzig, the North Polish corridor and east Pomerania. north- This continuing offens: ve by the! second White ; Russian army group threatened quick entrap-; ment of the German forces re- ining in that great 5000-square- mile sac along the Baltic sea. e breakthrough, which began four days ago in forested lake country, was disclosed by Premier Stalin in an order of the day, The subsequent regular soviet communique broadcast from Mos cow credited Marshal K. K. Rok- ossovsky's troops with capturing more than 100 German commun ities in their swift northward sweep toward the sea. A later soviet bulletin stressed the -sanguinary nature of the fighting in a region favorable to the defense, stating that at the town of Schlochau alone 2000 Germans were killed and 22 tanks and 46 guns knocked out. Except for the capture of 12 ad ditional blocks Inside besieged Breslau in Silesia and the seizure of seven villages in Czechoslova kia, the brief Russian commun ique dealt entirely with Marshal Rokossovsky's significant offen sive, ; ARC War Fund Kickof f Lunch J J niS j OOll With Capt Douglas McKay, long. prominent Willamette valley civic leader, delivering the keynote ad dress, the men and women who are to solicit Marion county's $80, 500 Red Cross war fund will hold their kickof f luncheon this noon t the Marion hotel. Many of the rural war fund workecs will not be able to make connections to I attend this noon's session, which: is planned as an inspirational and informational get-together, but dtjr and rural so licitors alike are invited, F. G. Les erer, general chairman of the cam paign, said Tuesday. Additional supplies will be avail able following the luncheon for those who have riot obtained suf ficient Final instructions will al so be given at !the meeting to workers and chairmen and there will be opportunity for announce ments from chairmen. A feature of the luncheon meet ing will be a group of vocal solos Uy accompan- led by Ruth Bedford. French Foreign Chief Home From London PARIS, Feb. 27 )Foreign Minister Georges1 Bidault return ed from London tonight after con versations with Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Prime Minis ter Churchill which served to "re affirm the determination of France to work together in war as in peace," the foreign minister an nounced. Qothing Prices May Be Lower-by AugUSt it fed today by Price Administrator Chester Bowles. 1 r He also told the senate banking J committee that program are being prepared designed to check a rise 'in cost of household furnishings. Advance les PDoiioiig DSDDllg Drive for Big X1 i f it GERMANY Advanclng toward th kree German Daesseldorf and Cologne, American troops were reported to have captured Venrath, Kirchherten, Pntx, reached Elsdorf and, taken Blatzhem, Rath and Soller. Broken line is approximate battle front (AT Wirephoto map) Servicemen to Start Pouring Home When HitleriGives Uv WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 - (iT' a lot of their servicemen to start pouring home 200,000 to 250, 000 a month once Hitler is out of the way. ! About half of them are likely to be disabled, to small or large extent. This was the big news today turned over to the house by its appropriations committee. The money is to round out various agencies' expenses ' for the fiscal year ending June 30. Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, head of the veterans administration, is authority for the army-returnees estimates. He quoted the, war de partment 1 Hines also told the committee the present rate of discharges is around 90,000 s monthly. (That's 10,000 above current army draft calls.) The veterans administration is down for $246,775,00013 the. bill. Most of this item is for increasing pension cost. There is also' $5,567, 400 for the war manpower com mission, the bulk of it to finance work of finding jobs for veterans. Last September the war depart ment set up a point system to de cide which men will get home first when there is no one left to fight but Japan. 'j - Fire Damages Car j Firemen reported call to ex tiguish a car fire in front of the courthouse late Tuesday night Some damage was caused but the extent was not known. Architects Named to Draw Salem School Building Plans Salem school directors Tuesday night named Freeman & Hayslip, Portland architects, to prepare the preliminary plans for the district's half -million dollar postwar con struction program, accepted the resignation of a girls' physical education teacher at Parrish jun ior high school and expressed hope that state school support funds could originate' elsewhere than in a cigaret tax. First portion of the construction program to be undertaken, it was indicated,, probably will be that at the high school athletic field where lack of materials need not be a hindrance early in the job. No successor to Jennie M. Ellery, who has taught physical education and health at Parrish, has yet been named although the teacher's res ignation was to be effective im mediately. Eula Creech, head of IrflllOK German Cities Maenchen Gladbach, -'ask - American families can expect in a $2,453,177,125 supply bill RAF Hammers Berlin Twice During Night LONDON, Wednesday, FeoT28- Pi-Berlm was attacked from the air twice during the night after more than 3000 Allied bombers had hammered Germany's distin- tegrating rail network during the day in carrying the obliteration blitz against the reich into its third straight week. . Early in the night RAF Mosqui- tos dropped two-ton blockbuster bombs on the capital, under attack for the eighth .successive night and shortly; before 3 ajn. this morning the German radio said Berlin again was being bombed. Other bomber formations were reported over the reich and single planes roamed wide areas of Ger many, creating confusion for the enemy's "achtung" warning ser vice throughout the night . the home economics department of the city schools, was granted leave for the remainder of the year which she requested because of illness.- i, The board authorized Supt Frank B. Bennett to write to the governor and the proper commit tees of the legislature asking that the state school support fund. If possible, come from something be sides the cigaret tax and that it be made more permanent a n d stable than apparently now is con templated. -, . ; A . , ; Directors agreed if the city coun cil concurs In the plan, to grant the summer recreation committee's request that the $2000 unexpended balance from r last year's play ground fund be used to erect play ground. equipment The board voted- also to join the new Association of Oregon State Schoolboards !IM4$$CLfOR cities of All Ruhr In Great eer Cologne Only 8t Miles Off Erft r Barrier Reached By Austin Bealmear PARIS, Feb. 27 (Jp) America infantry and armor smashed across the flatland of western Germany today . In advances o 10 miles of more, piungmg an tne way to ine Erft-river and Within 8 miles or cologne in a great drive that threatened the Ruhr. whole industrial German prisoners were scooped up by the" hundreds and town af ter town fell t the waves of troops racing ibrward by truck and afoot. The spearhead on Gen. Eisen hower's mighty four-army offeri- sive was the U. S. Ninth army. which by-passeq the steel center of Muenchep-Gladbach on the west and drove to the Erft river at the village of Morken, 18 miles from Duesseldorf. I Resistance Feeble German resistance was so fee ble and apparently demoralized that a complete news blackout tpnight was'clamped on all opera tions of Ninth arny divisions which , have broken through in this area. It was thought ' he Germans them selves might not know the full ex tent of the American break through. With the Ninth army already at the Erft last natural barrier be fore the Rhine river, 13 miles away, the U. SL First army surg ed toward Cologne, capturing tha cross-roads village of Sinzdorf, miles southwest. At the same time the Canadian First array lashed out In an inten sified attack against, the Germahs northern flankl rolling back tjhe weakened Nazi defenses two jto four miles between the Maas and the Rhineand drivin within 30 miles of a wing; of the Ninth army probing northward beyond Muen- ' chen-Gladbach. U. S. Third Gains I U. S. Third army troops to the . south fought into the important road hub of Bitburg and streamed across the Bitburg-Trier highway s In several places in a general two- mile advance all along their sec tor of the sprawling battle front Gen. Eisenhower's whole mighty offensive sweptj irresistibly toward the Rhine through German forces officially described as being jln "extreme confusion. Several Ger- i man divisions) were counted las Completely "destroyed since- the First and Ninth armies slammed across the Roeir river last Friday. - Two Mt. Angel j Men Are Killed In War Combat MT, ANGEL, Feb. 27.-The th rd war casualty in two days was re ported to the community of Mt Angel tonight one from Germany and one from the Pacific. 4 Pf c. Jack Fennimore, second of the seven . fighting, Fennimores, was killed in action February ill in Germany. , His brother, Pfc. . James B. Fennimore, USMC, was killed in action last June in the Pacific. The parents are Mr. and Mrs. Sam Fennimore. ; Pfc. Joseph j Moulle was a Jap anese prisoner of war, was killed Sept 7, 944, when a ship was tor pedoed as the prisoners were be ing moved. Only 18 of the prison ers of war were saved. Moulle was declared dead by the war de partment s of February; 14, his mother, Mrs.! Mary Moulle has been notified.! . ' The third Mt Angel casualty in . the two day 'period was T. Cpl. Gerald 7 Worley, notification of , whose death ion Luzon was re ceived Monday. - , ' Weather San Francisco - Eugene ; Salem Portland - Max. Mia. 41 U 34 ' Zt .2 XI JS X 4f JO M I9CfcUV i i ma Willamette rives A ft. la. Seatuo SI 37 - Dan -A