1- - . -, i h : " . " : ' v-" - -: . -.5-, , ' - i ..--I 4 . J ' v, t :f ? - " ' -. .;.T- - - ' ili? mum TealEcr Hub Ml. j Kl Lit U -. -47 V 4f ' 42 .n 41 Jf lu rraaclic rrtUad ", -, 1KBCDQC8 POUNDDD - 165! x NINETY-FOURTH YEAR 110 PAGES Salem, Oregon, Tudcry Morning, March 13. 13AS Pric 5c No. 303 ... r . J.. The interstate -cnmerce com mission has reported on the wrek Which occurred last Pecember on the Southern Pacific just west of Ogden wB en 50 were killed and 81 injured. A speeding mail train, its engineer dead from a heart at tack, crashed into a slow-moving passenger train on the causeway of Great Salt Lake. The commis- sion's report says that the wreck could have been averted if an ' adequate , automatic train-stop or train-control system had been in use in this territory. Under such a system the brakes of the second train would have been applied automatically when the engineer lailed to act." If there had been a cab-signal system in use the fireman would have known that the block signal ahead, hidden in fog, was set for "stop", and he could have applied the brakes when the engineer failed to do so. The pertinent point now is why the interstate commerce commis sion itself has been so slow in - forcing the installation of safety devices which it now admits might have prevented this - wreck, , the worst in the history of the west. The commission knows from ex perience that while some roads are progressive and constantly ex perimenting and putting in new equipment in the interest of safety as a rule the commission has to lay down orders with definite dates when proven devices must be installed to get general compli ance. That is true both for track safety and for rolling stock. And all too often the commission (Continued on editorial page) Iwo Campaii Fast Reaching Mop-Up Stage V. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD QUARTERS, Guam, Tuesday, Mar.' 13.-i"f')--Maj. Gen. Keller E. Rock ey's Fifth marine division reduced the area of the last sizable pocket held by the Japanese around Kit ano point on the northern end of I wo Monday but enemy resist ance there still continued stiff, headquarters isaid today! A smaller pocket on thj northeast coast con tinued to; hdld out against Maj. Gen. Graves! B, Erskine's Third marine division and Maj. Gen. Clifton B. Cates' Fourth division. The navy communique's word ing made it evident, however that lr a large sense the Iwo operation, 23 days old today, is in its mop-up Stage. : I ;. ; . , "V John jConnell h Dies in Action Withl7thArmy WCXJDBURN, i March 12.-S1 Sgt John W. Connell, jr was killed in action February 22 while serving with the 70th- division, Seventh army in France. His wife, the former Gelta Mae Hunt, 'was notified Sunday by the war department. - She had been noti . fled . March 6 that her husband . , was missing in action. He is a son of Sheriff John W. Connell of i. Washington county. . , -. rSergent Connell was salesman for Ray-Maling company at Hi 11s boro until inducted Aug. 10, 1943 and received his basic training at Camp Adair -with the 70th divi- - sion. Transferred to Ft. Leonard Wood he went overseas early last .December. Survivors are his wife and son, John Winton, 11 months old; of Woodburn; his father, John W. - Connell, Reedville; and a sister, . Mrs. Kenneth Patterson, Oswego. Capt. Qiarles Ayleswcyjh Dies in South Pacific AMITJf, March 12 Capt, Charles Aylesworth has been killed in action in the South Pa . cific, friends here have learned. He was a brother-in-law of W. M. Richter of Amity. Mrs. Ayles worth is the former Anette Sincox and spent her childhood, in Amity. Robert Borland McuiagerhyS - SILVERTON, March 12 Rob ert E. Borland, who succeeded H. C McCrea as c city manager of Elairsville, Pa, will succeed him also -at a similar post here. Bor land, who had been McCrea's as sistant for several years before McCrea . came to Silverton last year, was elected at a special council meeting here ' tonight The new manager will be avail able immediately, he had inform ed the council, and Mayor George Christensen has wired him asking that he come at once., Borland is 41 years old, married and the father of two children. - ' The question of whether the leer rarlor licenses held here last year by Leonard Goiit shall be ;;; . J 1 i : - .1 New Red Offensive Russians Smash Nazi Defenses . Around Danzig By Kmmey , Wheeler LONDON, Tuesday, March 13.- (-Kuestrin, the fortress city 38 miles northeast of Berlin on which the Nazis hinged their central Oder river line defenses, fell to the Red army yesterday and its capture was announced by Premier Stalin even as the German radio was reporting a new Russian offensive from bridgeheads west of the nv- er. ; - ' The new drive, unconfirmed by Moscow, merged thrusts from sev eral Soviet crossings of the. Oder " south of Kuestrin "into a Isingie'" attack on a board front,, the en- j emy broadcasts said. 'Nazi commentators claimed this offensive was not a drive on Ber lin itself, but was aimed at "ex tension' of the Russian -" bridge heads and at getting the - Oder crossings out of range of German artillery ' Stalin's order - of the day an nouncing the capture of" Kuestrin was preceded by another order which disclosed that Perman de- enses northwest of Danzig had been smashed by the second white Russian : army and that Soviet forces were closing, in rapidly on the great port city, itself. ; The regular communique broad cast from Moscow indicated that only small isolated pocks of Ger mans remain to be mopped up in northeastern' Pomerania on the approaches to Danzig. Kuestrin fell to Marshal G. K. Zhukov's first white Russian army after a week of bloody street fight ing. Much of the city, situated on the Oder's east bank at its confluence with the Warthe river, was destroyed as Soviet dive- bombers, artillery, mortars . and flame-throwers blasted out the Nazi defenders., . Mexicans Will Arrive Late This Month WASHINGTON, March 12.-(P-Ch airman ConnaUy (D-Tex) of the senate foreign relations com mittee today described the inter American agreements of Mexico City as' a beacon . to guide the United Nations at San Francisco next month.';, V-v . The Texan, a delegate to both Mexico City and San Francisco, reported to the senate on the ses sion in the southern republic just one day ahead of a preliminary meeting of the group which will represent this country in the Unit ed Nations , meeting beginning April 25. ;A v : Referring to the act of Chapul- tepec, Connally said: - ' - ;. "This is. a forerunner of , what we hope will happen at San Fran cisco. This Is. a beacon which shall enable the states at San Francisco to see the roadway to peace." Elected City i renewed was tossed , into the ; lap of the liquor commission by the council after both Gouge and his attorney, John Steelhammer, had been heard Monday night , 5, V On the matter of a favorable recommendation, city fathers cast a three-to-three tie secret ballot then proceeded to record a simi lar vote on the question of send ing any recommendation as to Gouge s licenses to the commis slon. A recommendation: had prov iously been denied 04 petition of some of the city's residents, ; but at a recent council session petU tions carrying a greater number of names asked, for reconsidera tion and declared Gouge's estab lishment well-operated. Reported JSew Fighting j- w o too -', Aparri - ; ' srATUTCMSls i ; . fisLUI0N I S PHILIPPINES China. & I 4 &XlSAMAR :- sh N?ctauyL7n,, l'Hr Kabaflan5VV. ff k 2mboirJ wjy MINDANAO yFa.. CthU$ i MOftOTAi - -tut. ia SOELA Large arrow indicates where Americans are fifhtina in the Zam boanaa, area or Mtnaanae roiiowinr ineir utest lanauc wmcn car' ried the Yanks within 655 miles other Americans are driving on Barnle and the southern part of the island. Black areas tare American entwlled-. Ar- wtrephoto' map) r B-29 Set Fires Burn Heart I Out of Nagoya; Singapore i " Also lasted by Big Forts J - By Elmont Waite i 21ST BOMBER COMMAND, Guam. March 13-tV(via Navy radio) -Fifteen fires still Jwere burning in Nagoya, chief aircraft production center of Japan, 12 hours .after a terror-spreading middle of the night incendiary raid by mora than 300 B-29 bombers. ;. '-'I . " Reconnaissance photographs Great Fleets 4 ! -t. Of Bombers? Ravage Reich LONDON, March 12-(-Great fleets of American heavy bombers and, the ? largest force of IBritish heavies - ever used in daylight formed a mighty armada of more than 2550 planes .which Ravaged Germany's communications and industries from the Ruhr; to the Baltic sea today partly id direct support of Russia's armiesf As the war's greatest sustained aerial assault raged through its 28th day, the RAF, in the develop ing campaign to obliterate the Ruhr's industrial cities, sent more than 1200 big Halifaxes ad Lan casters . to unload 5000 Hons of bombs on Dortmund. At the same time 650 American heavies blast ed! the ' German naval . base of Swinemuende, clogged . with sea borne reinforcements for Russian besieged Stettin. J ' The British air ministry said the force hurled against Dortmund was even larger larger than the 1200-plane attack unloosed Sunday on Esseii-which would make the Dortmund attack the bigest yet in dayught by the kajt. i. Mrs. II. L. Carl Critically 111, Woodburn Hospital WOODBURN, March li-Mrsr H. L. Carl is critically ill i a hos pltal here. At her bedside are her sons; Maj. Marion Carl, south Pa cific 'marine ace who came west by plana Monday from Maryland, and Man ton Carl, who after two and one-half years as a paratroop er came home to run the Carl dai ry! ranch at Hubbard this;: winter when his mother was first report ed HI, ahd her daughter, Virginia Carl, who left week left hr grad uate studies at Northwestern uni versity to return to Hubbard. - : " Mostly Cloudy ; today with brief periods ql sun shine in the late afternoon in the mid-Willamette valley area, predicts JJ. S. weather, biireau, lIcNary field, Salem, - J - -r l in Philippines of oil-rich Balikpapan. On Luton disclosed today the greatest sin gle item in the official ; list of flame-swept targets was the AichI Aircraft Works' Eitoku plant A total of 358,000 square feet (neatly 14 per cent of the roof area) was destroyed. This Included complete gutting of one of the main sub-assembly buildings. ' Smoke at the time the photo graphs were made at noon yester day still obscured a large portion of the city but the 21st bomber command does not expect to find "any extensive damage under the smoke,' said Maj. Gen. Curtis Le may, commander of the 21st after Viewing the pictures. . Major damage was done in five areas; - centered about two miles south! of Nagoya castle but the flames evidently were controlled just as they started to merge. Another force of approximately 40 Superfortresses,' flying from an India . base ' of the 20th bomber command, hit factories adjacent to the Japanese-held Singapore naval base yesterday. The raid follow ed by two days an attack on Kuala Lampur, Malay, 200 miles north of Singapore. These two strikes were announced in Washington. r1 Go Over Top In ARC Drive ; First " two Salem' city divisions to go, over the top in the 1845 Red Cross war fund campaign, the edu cational ' team headed by h i g h school principal Harry ' Johnson had Collected 140 per cent of its quota Monday, and the residential division with. an all-woman team directed by Mrs. Douglas McKay had 118 per cent of Its quota.; Marion county campaigners as a group had. raised approximately 68 per cent of the $80,500 quota. Utilities had 73 per cent; profes sional' 92; mercantile 78; indus trial SO; governmental 68; general gifts 69; contractors and builders 66;i automotive . 78; ' suburban 75 per cent, and communities outside Salem 17. .The 17: per eent figure Is : misleading, declare - General Chairman F. G. Lesserer and Di vision : Chairman Frank Doerfler since' communities are not report ing until they have collected their full Quotas, and a cumber ' are hearing their goals. -, ' ; - City Teams re 11 Japanese Positions Overrun "41sl Vets Take Zamboanga Civic Center, Airfield By C. Yates McDsnlel - MANILA. Tuesday, March .13 Oip)- Veteran Yanks of Maj. Gen. Jens A. Doe's 41st infantry divi sion overran strong Japanese po sitions on southwestern Mindanao Sunday as they captured the civic center of Zamboanga and a Stra tegic air field only 200 ailes northeast of Borneo. Gen. Douglas MacArthur said in his communique today the doughboys, who Invade4 the sec ond largest Island in the Philip Dines on Saturday. 24 hours later were 'overrunning strong (steel and concrete pillbox and arMlery positions with only minorloBes." t MacArthur said the Japanese at Zamboanga, caught off guar 1 by the amphibious landing, hac not yet been able to organize their defenses. . ." Air Field Captured 1 ; i The air field captured was near San Rogue, about four miles west of the Zamboanga governmental seaU-Th .village . of -San-Xoque was seized along with four ethers shortly after; the invasion. The Yanks previously overran a smaller ait strip, Wolfe iieja, in their lightning sweep'from the in vasion beaches. The San Roque airdrome, considerably larger, is one of the best in Mindana There was no mention of fight ing' for the San Roque I airdrome, which; has ai airstrip 4000 feet long, or enough to accommodate i zee ipdat L medium bombers. Klpa Use.Mertars t Associated Press Correspondent Russell Brines reported! the Japa nese were using mortars from hill positions with good effect, how ever. A headquarters spokesman said the Yanks faced moderate machine gun and mortar fije as they entered the city center. ' I On Luxon, troops of I the First cavalry division and Sixth infan try division continued to advance on the front east of Manila.' The dismounted : troopers t captured high ground: beyond the town of Antipolo. ; j House Votes New Lease on Life for GCC WASHINGTON, March A new lease on life for the com modity credit corporation was vot ed by the house today j after ad ministration assurance of vigorous dealings with, any employe found involved in speculation "scandals." The legislation, approved 359 to 8, boosts the borrowing power of the agency, which supports farm prices, from $3,000,000,000 to $5, 000,000,000, half a billion dollars above the amount set by the sen- ate. . - vryiX:f'S i -1 'f. -I ; Passage came without a fight, on consumer food subsidies an-issue on which many previous CCC bat tles have turned.: 1 LubinNamed Delegate for arations "WASHINGTON, liarch 12.-VP) --Dr. Isador Ibin, economist and statistician,- was appointed today as American membiT of the rep arations nnmissioa.- . t Created by the big three at Yal ta the commission' will meet in Moscow in about a-month, to de cide how Germany ihould pay for the- devastation caused ',1 by her armies . throughout .Xurope. - ' sy U The appointment t Immediately raised the question of what other countries would be itpresented on the commission, other than Brit ain, Russia and the; United States., To this question tht. state depart ment had no Immed iate answer. "CP UNJ Job Preference -Eor Vets Wins : Final Approval f The , senate . Monday ; passed measures taxing domestic insur ance companies, giving war vet erans job preference and asking the federal government to limit expenditures to budget-estimates, as the 43rd legislature waded into what may or may not be its last week. V- 'U.--VV-- The house approved bills in creasing the "cushion" for 'future property tax relief ; in a program which left doubt that there would be4 an income tax : discount next year if it wins final approval. The house also approved a ! $20,000 fund for a state tax study, and voted in favor of a less drastic form of compulsory military train ing than the senate favored. Appropriation bills passed the house with little argument: ' .. Today is the 65th of the session. (Legislature "news- page 7). "; Bataan Men Parade Through Cheering Crowds in Frisco SAN FRANCISCO, March 12-P)-Through cheering crowds, many of whom removed their hats and wept unashamed, the 272 liberated prisoners of Cabanatuan motored up Market street amid a shower o ticker tape and confetti today in an official civic welcome. - - l -, ; ; . . - Looking over the heads of the flag-waving throngs, Cpl. John Bailey of Pittsburgh, Pa., turned to a Japanese prison com panion and grinned: "Remember those 10 kilometers through Ma nila?" ; '- -if ; - "If this is a dream, what a dream!' boomed back Cpl. Al Jol ley of San Francisco. They had marched together in a humiliating parade of defeat through jeering, dancing Japanese in the Philip pine capital three years ago. That memory and today's form ed the keynote of the celebration that included ,sirprise promotion of three of their number to full colonel, presentation of gold wel come medallions, prayers for their deliverance by rangers and guer rillas and a hotel banquet that in cluded T-bone steak. j y-- The parade probably was the only military procession in history without a smgle soldier with the rank of private. : All 272 had been raised a rank. , ? Chinese Foil Jap Landing CHUNGKING, March 12-(JP)-A Japanese attempt to land a small force on the Fukien!eoast about 40 miles south of; enemy-held Foo chow has been frustrated by Chi nese forces, field dispatches said today. About 100 of the invaders were killed and' the others driven off. . Two Japanese warships covered the landing, which apparently was an attempt to extend the Japanese protective area : along' the coast against possible American land ings from the Pacific. j : Other .official Chinese, reports declared severe; fighting was rag ing inside Suichwan; former site of a US 14th air force base in Kwangsf province. The reports said Chinese troops had broken into the city in their current drive against Japanese forces in south west China. . . - Pvt. Corby Ray Dies ' In German Action . SILVERTON HILLS, March 11 Pvt. Corby Ray was killed in action In Germany, his wife has been notified by the war depart ment With their Infant daughter Mrs. Hay Is making her home with her parents, Mr.' and Mrs. Frank Gilpatricks on the P. A. Loar ranch., ? "'' t Mrs. - Ray had previously been notified her husband was missing in action.". " " New Department of Veterans' Affairs Becomei Oregon Law - The -house bill (HB 271) creat ing the department of veterans' affairs became a law Monday with the signature of ?Kv. Earl Snell who termed it an important step in Oregon! determination to pro- vide every possible service and assistance to our returning 'vet erans.' : -v y f ' : The biH carried an appropria tion of $30,009 and . provided for an advisory council of seven per sons. Including one from each' of the five established veterans or ganizations, one from World war II group, and one at large. The director, to be appointed by the governor, will be paid $ICC3 a year. i - .Tollowed by other enactr.tr. ts including education assistance and " '"T , l" :'m"" T First Across - y u Est. Alexander A. Drablck, above. 1 of Holland," Ohio, was praised I by his commanding general for 1 leading the charge across Bem i aren bridge ever the Rhine 1 which gave allies their . first I bridgehead. (AP wire photo) 2WLBCases Fail to Make Highest Court I WASHINGTON,' March - 12.-(JP) -Two cases springing from dispu ted orders -of the war labor board failed t? get tata supreme court today. -v-';-.- . j-'. "w ' "f7. Thrtwvoverlenirsa ure of Montgomery Ward & Co. properties was, in effect," handed over to the circuit court of appeals when the supreme court declined a review at this "time. This" meant the case cannot reach the .high court again before next fall. Both sides sought to appeal di rectly to the supreme court from a Chicago, federal district court decision that army seizure of plants in seven cities was illegal. In the second case, the United States Gypsum Co. asked an in junction and 'a broad judgment to define requirements- of a , WLB directive vof 1943 concerning its Warren, Ohio, 'plant --. PFCNaderman Said Missing '. , : PFC Gerald W. Naderman, son of Mr. and Mrs. George V. Nader man, 1024 Highland ave, has been missing in action in Germany since February 23, his parents have been notified by the war de partment A" graduate of Salem ..high school, he entered active service with the national guard when' it was called out in tha autumn of 1940, was stationed at first at Fort Stevens with a , medical detach ment and was later sent to Ford ham university as an army special ized training program . student When the ASTP was discontinued, he was assigned to the 329th engi neers of the 104th division, which had trained at Camp Adair but was at that time at Camp Carson, Colo., and went overseas late in the summer of 1944.- A sister, Mrs. R. I. Applegate also makes her home In Salem. Berlin Bombed . Again LONDON, Tuesday, March 13-(AV-RAF Mosquito bombers rock ed 'Berlin with two-ton blockbust ers last night for the 21st night in succession, the air ministry announced. today. - - real estate loan measures, Oregon will occupy a foremost position among all states of the union in discharging its obligation to the brave men and women who have served our country so gloriously during this terrible .conflicV Gov- ernor 2neu saia. - " ; -i , The governor also signed two bills to repeal the. 1943 laws pro viding for " certain - redactions of corporation and, personal Income taxes. These laws never became effective because they were con tingent on passage of the sales tax, which was defeated at the No vember general election. 1 ; Other measures signed included the plan . permitting the barber board to approve price scales. (Legislative news page .7 f actones ! Of Ruhr n M.M. -U. J i.-v. -f.,. if - ry,.f - ,. ' Americans Gain Up to!2JMiles; 23 Towns Taken By Austin Bealmear PARIS, March- 12-tip)-The US First army jumped off early today in the first big Allied assault east of the Rhine, scored gains up to two and a half miles, and expand ed its bridgehead to nearly five . miles deep nd 11 miles wide.! , At-least; twp more towns were seized, bringing to 23 the number captured on the east bank since the American! charged across the Ludendorff bridge from Remagen Wednesday. ; j , . The : Germans said Lt ' Gen. Courtney HHodges had thrown 40,000 troopsj including two ar mored and two infantry divisions, into the push which placed the Ruhr's factory cities in their grav est peril of the war. ' Drive Eastward ' The greatest American advance was eastwards More than" four miles almost due east of Remagen bridge,- .tanks and infantry seized Ginsterhahn and Hargarten, slash ed across a. German lateral supply line, and pressed to within three miles of a super highway to the Ruhf.. ' , -j 'I .'. Previously fthe Americans had driven five miles north in Honnef on dne main highway, to the Ruhr, and were less than 25 miles from the southern J region , of the 600 square mile Jbasin teeming with war factoriesi One counterattack was beaten back at Honnef today. Eleven miles south of Honnef iSorces driving south fought Into Hoenningen;'ix miles southeast of the, Ludendorff bridge. r, ' .Starts toDarkv- Associated Press Correspondent Don Whitehead said the attack rolled over the steepj wooded hills of the Westerwald in the black ness of 5 a.m ( ' ' . ; At first the? Americans were met by small arms, self-propelled guns and a lew tanks, but later the Ger mans threw units into the line and began striking back with small oounterthrusts. ' 1 The Germans .were hurled from heights ' east bf, the Rhine and to the south, . This robbed them of direct observation of their , artil lery fire, which was watering the ; bridgehead and had scored a num ber of ineffectual hits on the Lu dendorff bridge, the Remagen life-toe.vj-;-j - v r Boats shuttled men and supplies ! across the Rhine to lift some of the load from the' bridge, and the Germans said Hodges had estab! lished ."many Rhina crossings" north of the bridge. , t Power Massed - Whitehead said Hodges had so much, power! massed across the river that only a major counter assault could budge it German broadcasts said the Americans also . were attacking northeast of I Honnef, which lies i astride one of the main roads to the Ruhr, and said the furious fighting around Honnef was - so fluid that it Was not known which side now held the town. Honnef Is five miles north of Remaken, and , is the closest ap proach to the; southern end of the' Ruhr. 8 For. discharge , servicemen and women.' f .For readers with a friend ; or relative I in the service. ' -A new veterans' aer. ' lice column written ' ' in' m simplified 'and j ' ; interesting style . by j ' r Major Thomas UJ y Kial.lor this paper.' Starting TKursdcty, ' y ' Mcrch 15 Pom I VJL M.M. on Tim WAY2A