nr 1- l it iQrl t - -- r v. -: -. Ml LI uvu UUJ Z-dUJLA PCUNDEID 1651 NlNETY-riFTH YEAR HP MTDS Once again the cutbacks in pro duction orders on munitions and "weapons. New plants under con struction that were ' to turn out additional quantities ot armored tanks will not be required. The aggregate of cancelled orders for ammunition is estimated at $200,- 000,000. The war department Tuesday issued & statement " as follows: "American production is now at level which assures American fighting men of a sufficient pro duction rate to complete the war against Germany and provide the output necessary to supply forces to be used against Japan." Yet some ten days ago the mili tary authorities were demanding enactment of national service legislation, the work-or-jail bill, claiming it was needed to insure adequate supplies for the fight ing forces in Europe and the Pa cific. What a quick and abrupt about-face! Senator Morse made his first full-length address in the senate on this work-or-jail bill. It was a very able address and evidently made a favorable impression on the senate and the country. One of his best points was to answer the argument that this bill was what the generals and admirals wanted. He said he was not at all impressed by that argument, and - went on to say that in his work on the war labor board he had found the attitude of military tninded men . ill-adapted to ' the task of settling labor disputes. Praising the military leaders for their abilities in their own field, he discounted their Judgment in matters relating to civilian life and work, saying: "Mr. President, let us be frank about the matterrBy training, by responsibility, by' point of view, on the whole those in charge of the military and the navy are men of action. They are men who want immediate (Continued on editorial page) . SchindlerWai Assist Wallace WASHINGTON, April ll-P)-Alfred ' Schindler, a 50-year-old St Louis businessman-, was nora " inated today by President Roose velt to be Secretary Henry Wal lace's right hand man at the de partment of commerce. Schindler issued a statement snent here saying he's ready to "devote my all to the task of helping business and industry. The new undersecretary -sub ject to approval of the senate was hand-picked by Wallace. He first met Wallace over 20 years ago when Schindler was a : feed sales executive and Wallace a farmer. Laurel Branch Will Be Design on Peace Stamp WASHINGTON, -April 1 1-A?)-A small laurel branch will be the unusually simple design of the United Nations commemorative $tamp to be issued at San Francis- i co April 25. Postmaster General Walker said the stamp, which will go on first- day sal simultaneously with the opening of the United Nations conference, will f be blue and of - five-cent denomination. ' Oregi on Dairy Referendum of Declaring three bills relating to pasteurization of milk and milk products and to fixing of fluid milk standards' by the state de-; ' partment of agriculture unsatis factory to a large number of producer-distributors and particular ly objectionable to raw milk op- era tors, Henry Fruitiger announc ed here Wednesday that fie hoped by May 1 to file preliminary pe titions for referendum, of the trio of measures. ' , , Fruitiger, Portland, is president of the Milk'Producers-Distributors ot Oregon. His announcement here yesterday followed a conference with Sen. W. E. Burke, Yamhill county, and Attorney General Neuner. - ; - Completed petitions, which the law reauires mustbe filed noU 12 PAGES Okinawa U. S. Dead At 2695 Bitter Fighting Raging on Both Ends of Island By Merlin Spencer GUAM, Thursday, April 12-P) -American casualties of 2695 432 dead, 2103 wounded and 160 missing in the first nine days of the Okinawa invasion were an nounced today by Fleet Adm. Chester, W. Nimitz as U. S. marines and infantrymen fought bitterly on both ends of that rain-swept island just 325 miles south of Ja pan. Doughboys of Maj. Gen. John R. Hodge's 24th army corps were stalemated in the southern sec tor for the seventh straight day amid a full-blown artillery duel, and for the firsjt time since the Easter Sunday invasion the ma rines in the north ran into organ ized resistance. Maj. Gen. Roy S Geiger's Third marine amphibious corps scorea some advances but their speed was slowed materially. The leather necks hold about two-thirds of the Notobu peninsula on Okinawa's west coast. , The Americans on the vital Ryukyu island were killing Jap anese at the rate of about 11 to 1, considerably less than the ratio on Iwo . Jima and Saipan. The American casualties were up to midnight Monday. By Sunday midnight the enemy had lost 5009 dead and 222 prisoners, but much heavy fighting has been under way since then. , Admiral Nimitz : 8gain. reported no " substantial changes in the lines" in the southern sector, where the strongly-entrenched Japanese were pouring in artilleryrr mortar and small arms fire in in creasing amounts. The action, fought along the "little Siegfried line" about four miles north of Naha, was undeniably the fiercest artillery engagement of the Pa cific war. Spain Severs All Relations With Nippon MADRID, April 11 -(JP)- Spain severed diplomatic, relations with Japan today in what apparently was the aftermath of the killing of Spanish nationals by Japanese soldiers at Manila. j . Japanese Minister. Yakichiro Suma earlier in the day started to arrange his departure for Portu gal but it was reported Spain would hold him and other Jap anese diplomats until Tokyo ar ranged the safe departure of Span ish diplomats now in the Japanese capital. Suma told neutral sources here yesterday that Japan had ac knowledged on April 7 receipt ot Spain's protest about the Manila killings. The protest was filed March 24. Details of the diplo matic exchange were not revealed. Chile Will Send Two Divisions to Pacific SANTIAGO, Chile, April 1H) The magazine "Vea" said today that Chile will send two divisions to the Pacific front as part of a quota of 1,000,000 soldiers from Latin-America agreed upon at the Mexico City "inter-American con ference. 'Official Seeks 3 Milk Bills later than June 15 of this yeaf and must contain signatures of 14,442 qualified voters, would stay operation of the three measures until referred to the voters at the 1946 general election. " Particular objection was voiced b Fruitiger against house bill 371 which authorizes the state di rector of agriculture to set stand Lards for fluid milk and cream. The law places too much author ity in one state agency, Fruitiger said. . -i - - - -. w-.. 'V y - The ! other bills under attack would forbid sale ot unpasteur ized dairy product from herds not free from Bang's disease or tuber culosis after a specified series of four tests and would remove from the existing law all reference to dairy product. Salem, Oregon. Thursday Morning. April 12, 1945 Mule Afraid of Dark Turns On Light ill Barn KANSAS CITY, April 11 -It) Tobe, a mule, is afraid of the dark. Guards at municipal farm care fully turn off lights at the barn every night. "Recently the bulb In Tobe's stall has been burning when employes make their morn ing rounds.:: - . Last nigh: Maurice Caenepeel snapped off a light and started out the door. Suddenly the bulb lit up again and Caenepeel saw Tobe release 'the swilchcord from his teeth. 2 B-29 Forces Blast Koriyama Tokyo Targets GUAM, Thursday, April 12-(P)-Two "large forces" of Superfort resses -today raided the Nakajima Musashino aircraft engine plant in Tokyo and the industrial and transportation center of Koriyama, 110 miles north of the Nipponese capital. ' The Tokyo raiding force was escorted by Iwo Jima-based long range Mustang fighters flying their second, war mission over Japan. Superforts striking Koriyama flew a round trip of 3800 miles the longest bombing flight ever made by 2 1st bomber command planes. Tokyo said the Shizuokadist- rict, south of Tokyo, also was a target of : "approximately 150" B-29s which raided the mainland from 10 a.m. until noon (9 p.m. to 1 1 p.m. Wednesday, eastern war time). - ' Rumors About Hitler Running Riot in Britain LONDON, April 11 The British press reported without confirmation today that Adolf Hitler, broken in health and per haps dying, has been forced by the nazis to yield control over the toppling s reich to Heinrich Himmler. Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden was asKed i in commons wnetner he could confirm a report that Hitler had been assassinated, but he brushed it aside in a manner indicating he gave it no credence. The U. S. 12th army group headquarters received information meanwhile that 102 members of the luftwaffe, including a General Baber, were executed by the Ger mans March 31 in an effort to quell a rebellion of army officers. Headquarters said the Informa tion was reliable. Fred E. Neely f Dies 'Suddenly Chief of Police Fred' E Neely, 56, of 156 Gerth ave., West Salem, died Wednesday at 4:12 p. m. in a Salem hospital following a stroke he suffered shortly after 11 a. m. Wednesday in his ; home. Ill for several years: Neely, although suf fering severely at times, expressed confidently to his many friends that he was constantly gaining in his fight for. health. -Wednesday; morning he appear ed as usual in the city hall and pitched into the multitudinous jobs over which he presided. Be sides actively; directing the .work of the poncel department he also supervised all street work, the water department and conducted the inspections of all building construction. ; 114 Inches of Snow at 1 Santiam Road Junction The state highway department received r word Wednesday- that there is 114 inches of snow at the junction of the North and South Santiam highways with prospects of additional ' snow within the next few hours. ?: ; Highway , department officials said two road clearing crews had been sent to the scene With snow plows and other equipment The snow depth .:. on . the Wapanitia cutoff was reported at 84 Inches. Friendship Pact Signed LONDON, Thursday, April 12 (A1)- The Moscow radio announced today -that ; a pact of . friendship and mutual assistance had been signed by tha soviet union and Yugoslavia. - Offense In It Goes Well Eighth Reaches Santerno River; 5th Also Gains By Lynn Heinzerling ROME, April ll.-ff)-The Brit ish Eighth army has burst out of its bridgehead across the Senio river against strong opposition and reached the Santerno river at many places, it was announced tonight. Other troops of the Eighth army haCe landed on the shore of Lake Comacchio four miles behind the German positions in an amphib ious leap-frog operation, a special communique disclosed. At the same time the American Fifth army was reported to have advanced-more than three miles north of Massa against heavy re sistance. The Americans also pushed nearer Carrara. The success of the Eighth army put British, New Zealand, Indian and Polish troops at least four miles beyond the Senio as allied headquarters announced the cap ture of three towns and said the enemy defenses on the Senio river had ' been "breached on a broad front" (The German radio said a "first class" battle has developed be tween Lake Comacchio and the Via Emilia where the British are attacking on9 20-mile front. The Nazi : transocean agency broadcast claimed the Germans wiped out the first line of the British and then withdrew to the Santerno sector.) u. Eighth army, troops who landed behind enemy lines at Lake Com acchio captured a bridge and more than 100 prisoners. Adm. Scheer Sunk at Kiel By RAF Fleet LONDON, April 11 -JFy- The German 10,000-ton pocket battle ship Admiral Scheer one of the two most formidable warships left in the German navy has been bombed and sunk at the Kiel naval base, the British air ministry announced tonight. It was another crippling blow to Germany's fast-waning might. The loss leaves Germany only one other pocket battleship, the Luet zow, ana was tne most serious disaster to the German navy since the sinking- of the big battleship Tirpitz last "November. British Lancaster sent the Ad miral Scheer to the bottom with their bombs last Monday night as it rode moored in the inner basin at Kiel naval base, the ministry said. aly Men of Nippon Riddled - - j . v , V Its decks covered with dead, dying, wounded and cringing crewmen, ; a Japanese frigate wallows in the sea -off the Inde-China coast ,. tmm IC uk Nr hinr attacked h American B-5s. It WU tiart af & Jan eenvsr of 1C sbrns. (AP wirephoto from Far Hast air. forces) " Price 5c TKe :Berlih Funnel rrtTjrrrrrjiui'.iy.ri: tit; t Much of the allied might on the western front is forming Into a funnel that opens onto Berlin. Today that might has progressed to Madge burf, only 57 miles from the capital iltj. Soviets Sever One of Last German Escape Routes from Vienna, Storm Across Canal By Romney LONDON, Thursday, April 12-0P)-Red army tanks cut one of the last remaining German escape routes from Vienna yester day while shock troops stormed across the Danube canal within the city and freed more than nine-tenths of that part of the Aus trian capital lying on the Danube's south bank. r ; Hurdling the canal, a former Nippiwir Relief Ship Believed Sunk by Sub j WASHINGTON, April 11.h() The state department announced tonight that an allied submarine sank what may have been the Japanese relief shjp Awa Maru, travelling under allied safe ton duct. I The announcement said the navy department had reported that a ship about 40 miles from the esti mated position of the Japanese vessel was sunk about midnight April 1 by submarine action. A survivor said it was the Awa Maru. ; f The announcement said that no lights or special illumination were visible at any time. f ; The Awa Maru was returning to Japan after having delivered relief supplies for allied internees and prisoners in Formosa, Hong kong, - Saigon, Singapore and Dutch Indies -ports. The supplies bad been sent to Vladivostok over a year ago and a long negotations preceded Japanese agreement to deliver; them. J ' Vs. -'" . a No. U y Wheeler branch of the Danube, Russian tommy-gunners captured half of the nine-mile-long island where fa natical Nazi troops were making a final stand between the canal and the Danube. The Russians won control of the southernmost of Vienna's five bridges across the Danube, but the Moscow radio said SS men were dynamiting the spans as part of a sytematic destruction of the last of the city in their hands. nortneast oi Vienna, a massive tank battle raged on the historic Napoleonic battleground of the Marchfeld plain. The Germahs battled toitave off Red army en circlement, but "the Russians slashed across a secondary escape railroad running north to Lund en burg and the Czechoslovak city if Bruenn (Brno). As the Moscow radio reported buildings crashing down and smoke spiralling high over Vienna, Berlin said that the Red army had driven 42 miles west of the Aus trian capital toward Linz and Mu nich in a sweep along the Danube valley, a classic invasion route to Bavaria, The enemy said that tanks of Marshal Feodor I. Tolbukhin's Third Ukrainian army had lanced westward to the Danube bend be tween Krems and Melk, 50 miles from Linz and 75 miles from Ba varia. If true, it meant the Rus sians were within 116 miles of Berchfeesgaden, Adolf Hitler's mountain top retreat. Jap General , Joins Cabinet SAN FRANCISCO, April 11. -(V Lt Gen. Fujiharu YasuL member of the powerful Japanese military faction known u the Kwantung army clique, has joined the new Nipponese cabinet as a minister without portfolio, Tokyo radio said today, t ! - . Premier Kantaro Suzuki's cabi net acquired another member when Natoa Kohiyarna, president of the south Manchuria railway, was installed as minister of trans portation .and - communications said another of the K Japanese broadcasts heard by the FCC. Yasui lifted the cabinet military membership, to six four navy and two army leaders. ' " ' 5 Finn Premier Directed To Form New Cabinet 4 ' (By the Associated Press) - Prsident CarlGustav. Manner heim of Finland "directed Premier Juho K. Paasikivi to form a new cabinet, the Finnish radio' report ed last (Wednesday) : night In a broadcast reported by the FCC. 5; Earlier 'the Finnish radio said a coalition government was expect ed to be formed under Paasikivi to replace the cabinet which resigned following the recent elections. v " By Austin Bealmear i PARIS, Thulredayj April 12-CAP) -Armored columns of the US Ninth miles: of Berlin and within 115 miles of the Kus iian front yesterday in a than 50 miles that carried to the Elbe river at Mag deburg. A crossing of this last water barrier before . the German capital was believed imminent. ; The sensational ; eastward drive, longest sin gle day's thrust yet made on German soil, was ac complished by the Second (hell on wheels) ar mored division, which by-passed the manufactur ing city of Brunswick and of the reich against practically non-existent oppo sition.. . 'i A late dispatch said within a few hours unless unexpected 'resistance developed. This would; set the stage for an early- junction with the red army. Correspondents said the linkup might be made within a few days, j ' Tit. Gen. William H. Simpson's Ninth army troops were 57 miles away from the southwestern limits of Greater Berlin, which includes Potsdam, and the Russians were 32 miles from the capital on the east with the city itself stretching some 25 miles between these two points. I Essen and Bochum, great armament cities In the Ruhr trap, fell to other Ninth army troops, and tonight the Paris radio said Dortmund also had been cleared in the crumbling pocket. First army forces to the south sped within 120 miles of a juncture with Russian troops while the Third army, springing to the attack PARIS. April lt-(JP)-Ninth air force pilots were aeted by Stan and Stripes today aa reporting U.S. Third army armor near. Ing Halle, 15 miles northwest of Lelpxig. Latest official reports, however, placed the Third army 48 miles from Lelpslg. ' :: again after five days of comparative inactivity, blazed ahead along a 60-mile front, capturing Coburg and encircling Erfurt " - Seventh Loses Some Ground ' On the southern end of the front the U.S.Seventh army lost some ground but at the same time stormed to a point only 29 miles north west of the big Nazi convention city of Nuernberg. ' British troops in the north punched to within 45 miles of .Ham burg, but were still held four miles outside the port of Bremen; to their west the Canadians crossed the Issel river deeper into Holland, where scores of thousands of Germans were trapped;" '; .1" :- In making its spectacular dash, to Magdeburg the Second (Hell on Wheels) armored division by-passed on the south: the big aircraft center of Brunswick and. plunged eastward on la solid ID-mile front, meeting only scattered opposition throughout 'the remarkable day. The Nazi Brunswick garrison still was fighting bitterly through the streets against doughboys of the 30th division. SSrd Keaehes Halberstadt . - j 1 ' , Farther south the 83rd division stormed ahead 20 miles and reach ed Halberstadt, 24 miles southwest of Magdeburg. A huge airplane factory at Alberstadt was overrun! The Germans lacked, the manpower even to slow General Simp son's wave of men and armor. As occasional pockets of resistance wer encountered the American avalanche simply built up before them and burst around boh sides, leaving the Nazi garrisons to be cleaned out at leisure. "South of Brunswick there were not even any pockets, and old 'Hell on Wheels was moving like it did through Sicily," said Associ ated Press War Correspondent Wes Gallagher. . Another front dispatch declared the Elbe could be bridged with in a few 'hours "unless the Germans decide to fight, something they haven't really done for two weeks." Reach River On Bothjsides The Ninth army troops apparently reached the Elbe on both sides of Magdeburg, and just to the north of, that big city Is a wide auto bahn, or super military highway, leading to Berlin. The swift First army drove across the Thuringian plain south of the Harz mountains, crushing the small opposition in its path and out running its communications with; headquarters. Already the headlong advance of Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' forces and the flanking Ninth and Third armies' threatened to bar German forces irf the north front their last-ditch fortress in the Alps south of Munich. Yank infantry was mopping up behind the fast moving armor. , , I Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's jThird armylashed out again after several days spent consolidating its positions and quickly fought into and encircled the city of Erfurt, between Gotha and Weimar some 130 miles southwest of Berlin. Twenty-three Nazi tanks and 18 planes were destroyed in capturing the Erfurt airport in the northern part of the city. Coburg, 50 miles south of Erfurt, surrendered to the 11th armored division. j . ;. Germans Accused of Killing 5,000,000 Jews By Thoburn Wiant .NEAR ERFURT, Germany, Apr. ll.-(P)-Dr. Bela Fabian, president of the dissolved Hungarian inde pendent democratic party, accused the Germans today of killing 5, 000,000 Jews at the Oswiecim (Au schwitz) extermination camp; in Polish Silesia from which he him self narrowly escaped. I (The Polish ministry of infor mation more than a year ago re ported ,500,000 Jews had been gassed and cremated at this camp and the . international church movement . Ecumenical refugee committee, in a subsequent, report on . Oswiecim -and its sister camp of Birkenau said 1,713,000 Jews had been killed at the two places. Ambassador Gets OK ! 4 :r : .: "T : ' 4 BUENOS AIRES, April 11-JP)4-The Argentine government said today that' Spruille Braden, pro posed as U3. ambassador to this country, would be acceptable here. Braden now is VS. ambassador to Cuba. : . I Hamburg Chief Heei ! ; " LONDON, April 11 The Luxembourg radio said today that the nazi gaukiter of Hamburg bad fled from the city as Field Marshal Sir Bernard L Montgom ery's troops drove toward the big German port. ' army swept within 57 startling advance of more roared through the heart the river could be bridged at One Camp (A spokesman fo rthe American Jewish committee library in New York said it had been estimated 4,000,000 to .5,000,000 Jews had been exterminated since the war . began in Europe, but the library had no figures to substantiate a report that 5,000,000 had been ex terminated in one camp.) Fabian declared, the executions t were carried out In a 10-month j period. . . " j1; ',. . He said all Jews over 50 were automatically condemned . to the gas chamber and crematory as were the weak , and sickly and young mothers who refused ' to leave their children. ?If the. cap tain did "not like ' the looks ' of anyone else they were 'gassed too,". .he said. ; . .: " V rr Business Activity Up , WASHINGTON,' April 1 Business activity as reflected by ' the value of checks caused in the ' first .three months of 1945 was seven per cent above the corre sponding period last year." - Weather Saa Fraaebee EnM Max.' Min. 41 . tear . Jl . Salem , , , , .SS. 5 Portuad . 4 SvaUla .S1 I WUlaaetta rrw f t, t I. . rOEECAST: Ifram V. 8. weaUier ' , reaa. MeNary field. Salem) Paru? J ciondr, ttk soaMwbat warmer tern pratrea. - .