$ TIT sift J .: " . ' 1111 ill .j .., , . . I n All I 1 1 1 is)' (Story in Column 2) Weather, ttex. Mia. SUlm lu FrudK Easeae , talm ' - - . d Mj SS X tr SA PrtUa4 SS . as '. M Seattle- : M II , JH WlUaaette river It ft. to. M FORECAST: (rMi V. t. 'Weather kareie, MeNary fteM -CleaSy t4y with UsM rata BMt f tfc ay, crwute sMicwkat tewr : Tiais. sV NINETY-FOURTH YEAR. 22 PAGES Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, March 25,: 1945 Price 5c No. 317 MB ' i 1 Liu jug) ana S ' PouNonb 1651 ..-., ;,":. L, "I note that representatives of Alcoholic Anonymous are coming to Salem next Friday night when they offer to meet with local per sons who may 4 be Interested in their plan of personal rehabilita tion of victims of the drink ha bit They will be at the YMCA at 8 o'clock to hold private confer ence with alcoholics or with their relatives and friends. This organization, Alcoholics Anonymous, is .a recent and very Interesting development It is a very loosely organized group of Tersons who. after losing their self-control through indulgence in intoxicating beverages, have de veloped a -plan for their own res toration -to physical and moral health and now are devoting part f their time to helping other victims to escape from degrada tion. Its work- is quiet and con fidential. It aims at permanent Individual reformation. It charges no fees and collects no dues. In the space of few years it has grown to include some ; 16,000 members. The Portland group was formed a little over a year ago and is now undertaking to ex tend the benefits of A. A. to com munities over the state. Previ ously conferences have been held with individuals at the state penitentiary. The conference Fri day night is the first in down town Salem. " : ( - The purpose behind Alcoholics Anonymous is to reach, those whose lives are being wrecked by use of alcoholic liquor. It is not to launch a general reform or to propagandize for universal absti nence. It (Continued on Editorial Page) Allied Bombers Blast Formosa, Gebu Islands V MANILA, Sunday, March 25 p)-Heavy bombers dropped 145 tons of bombs on airdromes and a naval air base on Formosa Fri day, raided Cebu island in the central Philippines with 116 tons, and destroyed or damaged nine freighters and tankers in the China and Sulu seas. i i Gen. Douglas MacArthur said the liberators, "Continuing the destruction of the enemy! air force on Formosa,? hit the Tainan air drome and thelOkayama naval air base. : s Many places were put out of ac - lion, gun emplacements were si- tnrH and , exnlosions were ob served in hangars, warehouses and .': rail yards, -f lOn Cebu, the big bombers flew with attack planes and fighter- bombers to attack installations around Cebu city, midway along the east coast. MacArthur said ' fires and explosions indicated the destruction of stores and ammu nition." . ; ij ; 24 Graves of Japs, Germans Desecrated ' FRESNOCalif.; March 24 (IP) Twenty four graves of persons " -with JaDanese or German names have beert desecrated in the 'lTmintain .View cemetery here within the last two weeks and ef- " forts have been made to force the lotk of a mausoleum contain ing the ashes of nearly 300 Japan- ra Sheriff Gearge J. Overholt - said today.: For Service And Accuracy - On page 11 of today's States man are listed the names of de ceased war heroes from areas within a radius . of 25 to 35 miles, of Salem. It is" published as an aid to organizations preparing plaques of the honored -aead, and par ticularly at this time for the federation - of Patriotic Socie ties now ready to erect such a memorial for Marion-county. f If there Is noted an omission, or any kind of ; an error in Spelling, addresses, etc. j it is re quested" that such be detailed in a letter to The Statesman Immediately. ' i The margin of possible error is considerable, despite exhaus tive checking, because no sto gie official source has such a jist and because of many -factors of residence, removals and possible oversights.' .' ?: i - . 5 Whole-hearted cooperation of all - communities, ; therefore; : is tolidted to the end of accuracy and service. . f .i-- " , hfozJ&ottifM Your Door Each Morning' ' I m , .1, ...... . ,,.!. ; . ...! . ? . , . . . . ... ' ., " -1 v ,;!- Offensive Aims For 76,000 Germans Killed-Captured In New Assault By Richard Kasischke . LONDON, Sunday, March 25 (P)-Russian tanks nd infantry, smashing within 40 miles of Aus tria and 81 miles southeast of Vi enna, have surged 43 miles across western Hungary along a 6-mile front in a great new onensive timed with the allied assault in the west, Premier Stalin disclosed last night. Moscow said 76,000 Germans had been killed or captured re cently in Hungary. The massive breakthrough in Hungary, thrusting toward south ern Gernanys mountain re doubt," where the nazis are ex pected to make their last-ditch stand, came as Berlin reported a savage, swaying battle raging in the nazi capital's outer defenses 31 miles east of the city. The Vienna-bound offensive ex ploded as the enemy said the red army had built up a 17-mile-long, six-mile-deep bridgehead across the Oder river before Berlin and had hurled new powerful forces into the assault. , At the same time, Moscow an nounced that soviet forces in up per Silesia had captured the In dustrial cities of Neisse and Loeb- schuetz and were probing"the Su deten mountain defenses leading from Silesia to Brno, Prague, and Hitler's Czechoslovak ; arsenal. Far to the north, the battle for the. twin isolated Baltic ports of Danzig and Gdynia was drawing to a close as Russian forces ground to within three miles of Danzig and less than two miles from Gdynia. Japs Trying To Break Gut From Burma CALCUTTA, March 24 H7P)- Pitched battles between hard-driv ing British armor and Japanese troops caught in the Myingyan- Meiktila-Mandalay triangle were reported today as ; the enemy fought to escape from central Bur ma. The enemy force was originally estimated at 30,000. Allied occupation of Meiktila has cut the Japanese escape routes to the south and unless the enemy can break through there, only nar row trails eastward to Thailand still remain open. ' i In the last 48 hours, field dis patches said, more than 100 Jap anese troops have been killed in the Meiktila area, with 200 slain at a road block midway between Thazi and Meiktila Thazi is 15 miles east of Meiktila. Lyons Soldier Dies in Action LYONS, March 24 PFC Lau rence Kirsch, 21,' was killed in action March 4 in Germany. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Kirsch of Mehama were notified Friday night by the war department I He was born July 12, 1924, and enlisted after his 18th birthday and following his graduation from Stayton high school. He was home on furlough in July,' 1944, and was sent overseas ionowtngTiis return After four days in England he was sent to France and hadTre cently been. In Germany, Beside his parents; survivpr&J are three sisters: ArletaShirley and-Elzetta and ' two brothers: Gordon and Dale, all younger and living , at . home. Agnes Kirsch . of Salem is an aunt. U.S. ft Retain Xontrol Of Mandated Islands WASHINGTON.! March 24-Gip) s&d Navy Juuinat-aaid on doubts" that the United States will retain unilater al control of the mandated islands captured from Japan despite any proposals for international trus teeship. - i Vienna 11.000 Allied Planes Join 1 Assault I Across Rhine in 'if ' ------- j ; - -- ; - Support of Ground Troops By Henry. B. Jameson . LONDON, Sunday,-March' 25-(iP)Mosquitos lashed Berlin last night for the 33rd consecutive night,: continuing unchecked the mightiest aerial offensive in history, which yesterday saw 11,000 planes join the assault across the Rhine in support of troops charging toward the heart of the reich. The huge armada j which converged on the Rhine crossing Ducks Come Back;' Beat Utah, 69-66, to Snatch Third S ! 5 I The University of Oregon bas ketball team, eliminated in the Western division, NCAA cham pionship layoffs FSiday night at Kansas City "by Arkansas, 79-76, came back Saturday I night to snatch third place in. the meet with a 69-66 victory Over Uni versity of Utah. The Ducks came from behind in the final half for victory, ft . . : f Oklahoma A & M emerged with titie western title by defeating Ar kansas, 68-43, in Saturday night's fjnale. The Aggies play Eastern winner New York university in Madison Square Garden - Tuesday night for the national champion ship. (Full details oh I today's sports pages, 14-15.) 200 Big Forts found Nagoya Plane Factory S 21st VJS. BOMBER COMMAND HEADQUARTERS, Guam, Sun day, March 25-P)-More than 200 Superfortresses swung In daringly ow over the mammoth Mitsubishi aircraft engine factory! near Na goya in darkness early ! today and Set at least 15 fires in the great est demolition raid yet to hit Ja pan. j i 1 Giving Nippon no pause, the sky behemoths from the; Marianas touched off flames and explosions in one of Japan's most important plants the day after a big Amer ican carrier task force Shelled and bombed the Ryukyu islands, 300 miles Southwest of the enemy homeland. . !' I .v.-! : The B-29s, which in five recent incendiary raids have j dropped more than 11,000 tons tons of fire bombs on Tapanese cities,; switched to demolition bombs in an effort jto knock out a factory; whose en gines are used by virtually every type of enemy, plane. I - ARC Will Still Receive Gifts i That every person in this area may haVe an opportunity to con tribute during the Red Cross war fund campaign, county headquar ters for the drive at Valley Motor Co. offices in Salem and a booth on Liberty street between State and Court are prepared to receive money jgifts H. G. Leserer, coun ty war fund chairman, Baid Sat urday. H . .---;-..! .:-f'1 - Checks or money orders may be mailed -to the county war fund office, or cash may be taken either to the ' office of the j booth this week. H? : ; j All war fund workers have been asked to make reports i early in the week so that division, com munity and 'total contributions may be tallied.. .?t i Bill Increasing Senate Signed by Governor ! Senate Brrf-913 of, the recent Cenate membership from SQ to 31 andmai!lne Klamath county a senatorial district was signed.lnto law Saturday, by Gov4 Earl ShelL .Among the five billssigned1 by the governor was also senatbill7 providing a means -f or revocation of-lectlon:td corne l under i the newiiepeuleil'vwimunr law oi : iyt3.i -,-'-T.I Half of Iwo Casualties ; Reported to JVcxtof Kin - WASGTON, March 24-ff) Lt Ge. A. A. Vandergrift, com mandant of the marine corps, said today more than half of the Iwo Jima casualties already have been reported to the next of kin, area from England and continent- based airdromes, laid a protective wall of fire in front of the Allied troops. ! . Incomplete returns from yester day's ! castigation of the reich showed at least 53 German planes were 1 shot down by American fighters exclusive of the bag for last night's Berlin raid which was not yet tabulated. The harried luftwaf fe offered only i spotty opposition. Almost half of the kills were scored as the Nazis were run down like rab bits by American fighters. Twenty enemy planes were blasted out of the sky over one field from which they were trying to escape. With Nazi defenses thrown into turmoil by this tremendous attack from the west, American heavy bombers from Italy leaped the Alps and smashed a tank factory in Berlin in a 1600-mile round trip, the longest escorted mission ever flown over Europe. From dawn to dusk one great procession of bombers and fighters swept- across the channel to be Joined over the continent by thou sands of other warplanes stream ing up from advanced bases in Belgium, 1 Germany. Holland and France, s Each phase of the mammoth op eration Was run off with split-second timing, with as many as five layers of planes roaring toward their objectives at the same time or criss-crossing at different alti tudes; romise Agreed Upon Iri Work Bill WASHINGTON, March 24 -(X) A compromise which would let the War - mobilization director fix employment ceilings for Individ' ual plants and freeze workers to essential Jobs was approved today by 'a senate-house conference committee. ' j ! - , Employers and employes con victed ' of wilfully violating the,! hiring and employment regulations issued by the mobilization director, James F. Byrnes, would be sub ject to a year in Jail or a $10,000 fine, or both. ' -r Notable absent, however, was the regulatory core of the bill passed by the house February 1 power for local draft boards to tell thieii registrants to take war jobs oifj go to jail for five years. , Howard Damon, jr. Killed in Action - a ' i i ... Lt. Howard Gage Damon,' Jr., son pf Mn and Mrs." H. G. Damon of 901 North Commercial st, was killed . in action over Cebu on March 4, his parents have been notified. A A graduate of Salem high school he attended University of Oregon and North Pacific College of Op tometry . prior to f entering the service He ws commissioned in the air corps last summer at Luke Field, California. i. . Picture on Page 2 Conip Nazi Civil Authorities in Allied Held'Land Cease Functioning i. By Dwlght I Pitkin LONDON,1 March 24 - (ff) - The German radio" told the home press today that Heinrich Himmler had ordered ; all civil .'authorities in evacuated 'r allied-occupied ter-r ritory, tot !eease. functioning tot hi" time being,".: another sign of the riiT-nrTrr',7Ti,,"jt i " Front dispatches ,have told of thtnisandr ot Germans fleeing the invided areas " akng -the Rhine, and this latest German broadcast said Himmfer had established "in terim offices' to help the heads of rural districts, mayors and oth er local officials to "administer, or if necessary to liquidate existing institutions.! .", . tlJL Nayy Ham i ers Kyukyiis Blow Is Oosest Surface Action To Nip Mainland ' By Morrie Lands berr - : U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD- QUARTERS, Guam. Sunday, March 25 -(JP)- The 16-inch guns of United States battleships bom barded the Ryukyu . islands Fri- day land Saturday in the closest surface action of the war to the Japanese mainland, while carrier olanes of Vice Adm. Marc A. Mitschers task force 68 struck coordinating blows. The navy disclosed in a com munique today the latest phase of the most extensive carrier task; force action of the war.. Mitscher's two-way strike at the ;Rikyus, destroying enemy shipping and smashing airdromes within 300 miles of Japan, was delivered with only a day's inter- val likely for refuelling. Mitscher's force braved bad weather to hit four islands in the Ryukyu area, chief of which w4 the naval and air base of Okln- awa Sunday and Monday his planes had pounded : southern Japan, then took on the enemy home-based air fleet in sky bat ties raging on through Tuesday and. Wednesday. , ,i f Today .'. communique said fiekyy toll, as yet not completely assessed, was taken during the sky fights of Mitscher's carrier air arm Tuesday and Wednesday with enemy planes based on Kyu shu, Shikoku and Honshu islands of Japan. During the attacks a destroyer of. the task force was. seriously damaged and a heavier warship suffered some damage, i 1 Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, who previously had disclosed that 17 enemy warships were crippled and more than 700 enemy planes de stroyed or damaged in the raid on southern Japan, said the March 21 action was so intense that in one phase alone 50 enemy air craft were downed at a cost of three American fighters. House WASHINGTON, March 2-P) House passage sent to the senate without change today Jan $833, 810,932 appropriation bill for the agricultural department for the twelve jnonths starting; July 1. Passage came on a roll call vote of 256 to 18, after a. republican backed? drive to lap several hun dred million dollars from the big measure bogged down." : Led by Representative Taber of New York, ranking minority ap propriations committee - member. republicans tried to eliminate $$0,000,000 school lunch fund and at $90,000,000 allotment for rural rehabilitation loans and grants, j Funds to Investigate Meat Shortage Okehed j i WASHINGTON, March 24-0f) Price Administrator C h e t e r Bowles in a last-miniite appear ance before the senate appropria tions committee today won ap proval of a special $565,000 fund to investigate the meat shortage; Their files and other official property will be brought to safe ty the broadcast said. German radio commentators meanwhile conceded frankly that allied' troops had a -sizable foot hold across the -lower -Rhine; said the "bulk'' of the FirsW-fl.- rmy was dxikin.f eastward rom the TCemafen "bridgehead, t a nd. es pressed anxiety over the "surprise establishment" by LL Gen. George S. Patton, Jr of a UJS. Third army bridgehead in the south. The German command endeav ors to delay a decision until the moment when the employment pt additional German . material and tactical means is advisable" said one broadcast. ' ... - Ag Fund Bill if Confident Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower Break German Crust and Win Says Churchill TiNDON. March 24-(JV-Prime Minister ChurchilL at Field Mar shal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's . . . i . . . il. n i ii neaquarters toia iroops ox u army group today that the "deci sive victory . in Europe will ; be near" once the Rhine river line is pierced and the crust of German resistance broken. A similar message of confidence in speedy victory was issued by Montgomery while Gen, Eisen hower warned German officers, soldiers and civilians that the Al lies would hold them to strictest account and punish them accord ing to their deserts If they became involved in the execution of Al lied airborne troops. Prince Bernhard of the Nether lands, speaking under the author ity of the supreme Allied com mander,.! warned Dutch patriot trooDs to take no action without orders but altered them to be pre pared to coordinate their efforts with the new . Allied offensive which has carried across the Rhine." - - . .v ' VonRichthoferi Under Arrest MADRID. March 24-WVField Marshal Baron Wolfram von Rich thofen, luftwaffe production chief and cousin of the German first World war ace, has been arrested on Hitler's personal order despite Goering's protection because of the failure of a rocket-propelled tighter type, according to a Ger man military source, ' Seven members of von Richtho fen's staff also were reported ar rested. The arrests are reported to have caused a rift between Goering and Hitler. The German source here said nearlr 5000 of the new planes were assembled after a. test of models proved satisfactory. Many were sent to air command areas before it was found that the planes not only lacked speed but -come disintegrated In the air. 7- . ' Yanks Barge Jn With Ice Cream NEW YORK UP) Pacific fight ers now can enjoy ice cream and fresh fruit and meat a few hours after, invasion landings. :; i The Army's -new all-con refrigerated bargar flllv of its 1rJBdvdQe-CKSuick. " . ,ItJS towed behind an invasion flotilla and moored off the beach head.. It can send ashore 1,000 tons of ice cream, fruits and choice beef cuts. Wilsonville FenC!ose& The .Wilsonville ferry has been closed by high water, state high way department offices announced here Saturday. roruinrn LrvxLnJ ULixJ niro eoirapiete TCnire Eisenhower's Forces Charge 5 pies Into Ruhr; U. S., British Navies Aided in Crossing River By Austin i pAris, , Sunday, March 25-(AP)-Four allied armies crossed and broke Germany's vaunted . Rhine line on a 30-mile xivc uincs into we xiaming iiunr ana tne norln German plain and today General Eisenhower's force stood at the threshhold of final victory. Backed by 1200 guns and 11,000 planes, with British and U.S. navies manning fleets of landing barges, the long-awaited end-the-war of fensive swept across the Rhine in the most massive operation since D-day last June 6, ripping the his toric Rhine barrier wide open. The British second army and parts of the Ca- j nadian first army struck in concert with the allied first airborne army, spilling out on the north Ger man plain within 290 miles of Berlin, and goug ing opt a bridgehead of more than 15 miles stretching east to Wesel, northwestern gateway to the Ruhr, j -r - 'W . The ' U. S. ninth army, with General Eisen- hower watching, charged five miles into the Ruhr just south of Wesel, welded four crossings into a solid 12-mile wide bridgehead, swept up 12 towns and thrust southward within four miles of Duis burg, Europe's greatest inland port. j Thus General Eisenhower had committed possibly 1,250,000 men to the offensive of the west, and at least six of his nine armies were across the Rhine, which never before had been stormed in batle. ; ' . j. , . Furthermore, one of these, the UJS. Third army, was only 263 miles ttom Berlin and had tank forces beyond "the Rhine on the mid German valley route to the capital. : " The Swiss said yet another army, the French First, had crossed the Rhine north of Strasbourg, and the U.S. First was less than' U " miles from the Ruhr beyond the river on the south and might lunga northward at any hour. The UJS. Seventh army was moving into position on the Rhine after splitting the last German forces left west of the river near Karls ruhe, and Allied strategists have warned the enemy to expect to meet the new UJS. 15th army at any time. - f Ninth Seven Highway In Smashing into Dinslaken, a Ruhr city of 25,000 population, the Ninth levered the Wesel-Duisburg highway. It captured. Spellem, three miles south of Wesel, nearby Friederichsfeld Torde, farther south, and Stockum. 1 j J Allj ilong the front, from the Wesel area down through the UJ5. First army's burgeoning bridgehead and on southward to where the UJS. Third army was beginning to tear at the heart of Germany with tanks and troops, the feeling grew that the end of war )n Europe was not far; away. - "' ; ' ; . Naval landing craft of the type used in the Normandy invasion -brazenly plied the Rhine long a symbol of Teutonic patriotism feed ing tanks, guns, troops and supplies into the four Allied bridgeheads scattered along some 200 miles "of the river." .-'.S..'-" v.'TCjv First reports from the front said Montgomery's northern forces had captured 1500 prisoners and the Ninth had taken 1700 more. 1 j Enemy ;Gathering Forces ." - ' ' " l Field dispatches said the Gerjmans were gathering tanks for an expected counterblow, but the feeling persisted that with the terrific . losses suffered west of the Rhine, this time the enemy could not stop the Allfed 'drive. . " It - Moxe than 10,000 Allied planes ruled inner Germany's skies, fer- rying parachute troops, scattering the ground defenders with bombs bullets fand rockets, or heaping fresh destruction on already battered enemy communication lines to the flaming front. I " ' . ;- ' I ! Fisehhower had committed possibly 1,250,000 men Ul the battle of the west with- this latest offensive," and to the south LL Gen. George S. Patton, Jr, crossed the" Rhine personallyJLo direct the TJiiid army's offensiie into middle Germany, now powered" by tanksT ; i i The Rhine had been bridged by pontoons both in the Ruhr andjhe Third army's middle Rhine crossing aftd the big amTHnaJ push waf on to knock Germany quickly from the war. " More Air Treops Land - . " x ' ; 'Alarmed German broadcasts said ftat jnore AH fed troops .of,, the--air were descending, .tonight" of er a broaXront nnftfc'bTthe Ruhr, wipsaioss WfiTTotheemjf ptwer to resist -:L- rGeraaair-foTces, stunned, by -the massed! on the Rhine's .west . bank,- began surrendering by the hun dreds as the first waves plunged out on the east bank from naval land- -tag craft like those used on Normandy's beaches, ' . I " r . Smashing into open country 290 miles from' Berlin the troops of Field Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery .were told by the 2 1st army group commander that "the enemy is driven into a corner J i "It will be Interesting to. see how much longer the enemy can stand it; the complete and decisive defeat of the Germans is certain," declared Montgomery. . - - , ' ' 1 ; , T . . ' i ' The long-rested British Second army, out of action since last Sep tember opened the attack by crossing on the north flank at S pro. last night ' An hour later waves began moving across on the south flank. . , - .- -. 1 . - " " ' . . ' uDdDudl s Woctoiry Bealmear front yesterday, plowing .terrible drum fire of 1200, guns. k'VV.1 4 IT?