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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1945)
Jh OSEGON STATESMAIL Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning. April 13. 134S PAGE TWO MWUJ1 mm -rn "Y u fr i ; r. - - ... - Storm Leaves pManyHurt, i Without Homes it" OKLAOMA CITY, April It.-!(ff)-At least 59 Oklahoroans were jUuted as dead tonight in tornadoes .'which dipped into many commun 'iUes over the state, leaving hun ji'dreds injured and homeless. Red Cross Chairman Paul Qs j'bora at Antlers in Pushmatha county said -47 -bodies had been i .recovered there from wreckage If-over one third of the town of 3000 'J'and added he would-not be sar i prised if the final toll ran as high as "80 or 100." If-" Red Cross workers from over i the state were arriving te aid in ; '. caring for the hundreds of injured !.at Antlers and ambulances from ' nearby army posts were called ln- k to service. I - Nine were reported dead at ! " Muskogee and three at Oklahoma City in an afternoon of horror r during which the twisters struck -ln at least eight communities. Osborn said the situation at Antlers was desperate with light ; f. and power-services suspended and : -urgent need lor more amDuiances, ' doctors and nurses. The army sent 'eight ambulances from Camp i,;Maxie, Tex. 'l Approximately one-third of the i city, including business and resi ! dential districts, was destroyed by ::the storm, one of the worst ever to settle in Oklahoma, Osborn padded. British Eighth Hammers West In Italy Push . ROME, April 12-(-The British .Eighth army hammered Westward today from three bridgeheads a- ! , cross the Santemo river and Brit : ish armor locked in a heavy bat ; tie with Nazi Tiger tanks. ;; ; North of the new bridgeheads ; troops which had made amphib ious landings .from Lake Comac chio behind the enemy's lines cap . tured the villages of Menate and ; Longastrino and liked up with oth- er units advancing astride the Reno river. i - Polish troops of the Eighth ar ' my. smashing along the vital high ; way nine (via Emilia) which runs i from Bologna through Faenza i captured Castel Bolognese, an im i portant junction town five miles west of Faenza and 24 miles south east of Gologna. Their dawn at tack routed a strong enemy guard. RAF Mosquitos Pound Berlin LONDON, Friday, April l3-Jf) RAF Mosquitos, continuing their nightly raids on Berlin, made ; three separate attacks on the rubble - strewn German capital Jast night, the air ministry an-. enounced today. ; ;, These latest raids made a total of nine attacks on the capital in :-' the last three nights, and 59 in the Oast 49 days. At least 117 German' planes were destroyed on the ground yes ! terday by U. S. Ninth air force .; - continent-based planes, bringing the total of enemy planes de , stroyed in six days to 1032. .Roosevelt's Sons Hear Of Death in War Areas GUAM, Friday, April 13 -Up) Word of President Roosevelt's death reached his son. LL Cmdr Franklin Roosevelt, jrn off Oki nawa this morning after a suicidal ; .Japanese air attack on American : Jnvasion forces. Another Roosevelt son, Lt. John Roosevelt, is supply officer on an .aircraft carrier with the Pacific . fleet. His exact whereabouts was not known here. saaasn a Doors Open C:4S T. M. Ends Tonight Tokyo Bombed! "The rvrple Heart" Dana Andrews I Smiley Burnett ' Robert Lhrhigston In "PRIDE OF THE PLAINS" CARTOON - - HEWS Returning by Papular Demand STARTING MONDAY ITcek cl April 16 The Host Sensational Act Ever ta Appear in' salens Prcl. SFillcr AND ins . - " Ilzsical Scdr : The World's Greatest -Comedy Aquatic Stars; Children Under 12 Admitted Free - ' Accompanied by Gmardlan 1 -SuT?3;CLUD- 1 Clock North of Underpass " on the noad to. Portland America's 1 - i5tr v. its; ' -i&otL Aw "! -v f&&flX 6totcn.MnoN.jt. ocwnl sCI Venn? II I BCHtiltlW J v. ff I lli,'ti.i..fc J NEW J I WlfTMN ZEALAND 'r Jr fj.-.f.tj.runi with the nrarlr annoBneed 10th armv now in ooeration en Okinawa, fied armlea an tha fishtinjr fronts are stationed, and their field commanders. (AJr Mewsreatures) Livestock Men Ash Increase In Beef Price WASHINGTON, April 12 Livestock growers asked today for a cent a pound, price increase, saying it would pat beef on the nation's dinner tables. The state department mean while requested U. S. participa tion in an international food or ganization, asserting it would be a major factor in keeping the world fed and peaceful in the .fu ture. These current and long-time aspects of the food situation were presented concurrently to differ ent agencies of congress. The price plea was presnted by P. O. Wilson of Chicago, secre tary-manager f the National Livestock Producers association. to the senate agriculture commit tee, investigating food shortages Considerable committee sentiment for higher producer prices was in dicated by members' Comment ap plauding the war food adminis tration's boost in the hog support price from 12.50 to $13 a hundred pounds. Wilson advocated raising the ceiling on "AA" cattle from $17 to $18 a hundred, instead of drop ping it to sie.50 on July 1 as now planned. "It would not cost consumers any more than they are paying now when you figure what they're paying the black market," he as serted. 'There ' were 2,700,000 calves slaughtered last year which would have been fed to steer weight if the price structure had been fav orable," Wilson said. "The coun try lost the difference between their average weight of 350 to 400 pounds and the weight of a 1000 pound steer." mint plants for about four, years. Last Times Today It's a Gay Musical! KAY EYSER Ann Miller Victor Moor in "CAROLINA BLUES" - CO-FEATURE - i-SVIUUIIiJIMMi Starts Saturday A Strange and Dangerous Experiment in Lore! ;.tuic(i.r i Bed Byder Co-Feature ------ K f . Armies 'Round and twe at hante. This man shows wher the major U. 8. unite I Salem Meets Harry Truman Salem has met the 82nd presi dent of the United States. Harry S. Truman of Missouri was intro duced to Oregon's capital city in much the same way as was the man who was to become the 31st president standing , on the rear platform of a train delivering a campaign address. In Oregon last fall he expressed interest in western induslries and problems of reconversion to peace time operation. .Earlier as chair man of the powerful senate com mittee investigating war produc tion, Truman visited industrial sites throughout the northwest. Ship Repair Plan Signed PORTLAND, Ore., April 12-UP) AFL unions and representatives of six shipyards and three ship repair firms ? in this area today signed a new agreement on wages and conditions in ship repairing. The agreement, effective until hostilities end in all war theatres, provides for wage scales now in effect but; permits transfer of workers from new shipbuilding to repair work.' Wage scale for re pairmen here cads for an 11.8 per cent increase over new ship con struction because of shorter em ployment periods and more dan gerous conditions. - OPENS 6:45 P. M. - NOW PLAYING! Romance and Laughter! Cummings '"The Devil and . Hiss Jones' CO-FEATURE Packed With Thrills! Action! HEROISM i fttal ails! UC0O557 V, aoaes 0tS::.1 . rJSPHY . WYATT j NOW PLAYING I itUUtXai U1 1 rvj: i.i.t"T!!rrr ifti nn ; T . i - "n7 rfi.iwtwaik)bk4 ACTION-FILLED CO Till COLT Fi?LU IH5K Wide & Handsome In ; desert iiawt xrovia the World the United States has nine identi Parents Learn! Missing Son Nazi Prisoner i The best possible news came to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Crenshaw, 3000 Portland road. this week when they received; a letter from their son, Cpl. Ken neth (Buck) Crenshaw, missing since December 21 in Germany, He us now a prisoner of war in Germany and this was the first word his family -had received of him In almost four months. "Tell the folks not to worry too much as I am all right. With the food we get and the Red Cross packages; we get along pretty good. Kenneth was in the 106th in fantry division and was in the mid-December battle of the Bel gian bulge. He is 19 years old and has not been home in nearly a year. A"brother, Cpl. Robert W. Crenshaw, is now in India. The mastiff dog has altered In no important particular from sev eral centuries B.C. to the present time. r, JJLWJ Jl i H CONT. FROM 1 P. HL N0W SHOWING fll mm '.i-' turn - v j.yS, Co-HUr Melody 1 Mirth! - land Beautyl .. I I Attack oa OUnawar 'Wj Vnof nH I IT - OPENS :4S P. M. - I. - HITl t t mm There Isn't tlie Majss Yelling But basketball, football, base ball and other nrjanized sports will take a back seat tomorrow in favor of, the eternal sport fishing. 1 . i. ; By bus, car, horseback and afoot, Oregon anglers will take to the streams for the opening 01 tne. 1943 .trout . season - weather or no weather i and the tall-tale times are all but on. . , - , . - r A table of coastal tides has appeared in Tb Statesman all this week and will continue to be published as a service. And tomorrow, Sports Edit or AI Ugbtner' will have Ur aay. on fishing as wen as a bang-up photo on that topic.' Al says he went fishing once, Cot all wet, didn't get any fish, and prefers chess. But he has aa fine story about it, anyway. And ; The Statesman will be represented in the woods, Al or no AL So here's luck lots of it. i ' .- - i o&e Orefion0taiesnan - - - 1 - "The World at Your Door Each Morning" Truck Rams .1. 1 -j Coast Bridge One-ay traffic was ordered by the stale highway department Thursday on a steel bridge, located three-fourths of a mile east of Val ley Junction on the Salmon River cutoff, after the bridge was struck .fiTAe best-selling vr .nTnnn Dorothy MCUUlttB as Katie... Stardust .". , with j0!m BLONDBLL as Aunt Sissy J Pegg7Ann GARNER as RanciW ! : Ted D0NALDS0NZ M NOLANasMctae;.. :;:!; Brooklyn Was Ms whole world .-. . - J - An "ofiieex. and a man j.' ' " - 1 . P . . -! tJA!ES GLEASON RUTH KELSON JOHN ALEXANDER B. S. PUtiY ELI A KAZAN 'LOUIS D. UGHTON - r - i fcwrlBjltTat1niaiesariiatDtt Kiii tK SmWi . , STMTS TODhY, Life of FDR As Portrayed ByJvey Dates WASHINGTON, April 11-VPr- Important - dates In President Roosevelfi life: Born Jan. 30, 1883.' Was graduated: "from Harvard. Married, 1905. Admitted to New York state bar, 1907. Member of New York state sen ate, 1910-1913. Assistant secretary of the navy, 1913-20. Democratic nominee for vice president, 1920. Was stricken with paralysis, 1921. Governor of New York. 1929-33. Elected president of the United States, 1932, 1936. 1940, 1944. Became a wartime president. Dec. 7. 1941. Died April 12, 1945 i It was -on his first inaugural. March 4, 1933, that he uttered the words for which perhaps he was best known; The only thing we have to fear is fear itself."; I It was in his message to con gress asking a declaration of war against Japan, Dec. 8, 1941, that he again sounded an historic ex pression. He said then that the day of the -Pearl Harbor attack was one "which will live in In famy." ':-t , and damaged by a heavy lagging truck. . j I Officials said repairs would get under way as. soon as the required steel could be obtained but it probably would be two or three weeks before two-way traffic resumed. book in years... The best lovcd-picturo of a lictimot. a mop and a broom .. . i tlia'iiyt t 1 A F fc III 1 a. i . AW . - i .1 Thumbnail of War! ; By the Associated Press t ' Western front : . Lightning crossing of doe river carries U. 8. 9th within 57 . miles of, Berlin as other Tanks surge toward Leipzig. . ; .' r t . Kossla Red troops ? sever nazis' last Vienna' lifeline! with Bruenn, Czechoslovakia, as Ger mans retreat through narrow seven-mile gap. t Pacific Jap warplanea sink one American destroyer, damage other fleet units off Okinawa, but 111 enemy planes shot down. rhQiDplnes Yanks success fully invade Bohol island in Philippines, quickly seize con trol " '1 Italy British 8th storms to ward Bologna from three bridge heads across the Santemo river, Polish division taking important junction town. 1 i ' 1 4- Flag Should Fly Hall- Mast Through Sunday WASHINGTON, April n -0P) The proper manner to display the flag in memory of President Roosevelt is at half-mast, from sunrise to sunset. 1 5 . "Half masting, of flags should only be done when a nation is in mournlne." the library 01 1 con gress said tonight, "Quite obvious ly that applies now." . MacArthur Orders 1 Flags at Half-Mast ) MANILA, Friday, April lS-P) Gen. Douglas ' MacArthur today ordered all flags in the southwest Pacific theatre of war flown at half mast because of the death of President Roosevelt James UUlNrJ as Jolmijy. . . Haring nothing . . .he gvn himtelf . ' 1. a-. !.: -I ' - i . Produced by O IN O ff7' 4'' 100 Fofresters Gather Here ! One hundred foresters,. private, state and federal employes, gath ered : at the Quelle on Thursday night for the annual state forestry department banquet. , L W. Webster, Olympia, assist ant chief forester for the state of Washington, spoke on . reforesta tion activities in his state. Charles Henrys, Clatsop county forester, discussed the cooperation between state and county, Dean Paul. M. Dunn of the Oregon State college school of forestry, spoke on activi ties and trends of education in the school of forestry. George W. Peary, long dean of the school and former acting president of the college, cast aside his prepared speech, paid tribute to President Roosevelt ' and spoke of the future of j the nation and the responsibilities of its citizens. 1 1 1 nnnpjnn -7 SI CRYSTAL GiUlDEIJ Wednesday, Blodern Feat uring the Top Hatters ThBrsdayr Old Time : Featuring "Pap Edwards" Sdcrday j Old Time sad Modern Two Floors and i Two Bands J 1 tin -1 W 'JJr; i