' !.!''.. ! I ' I: . 4 , " . . - n 1 nnnn n n?Mn nro) jyulo) UJ (Story in Column 5) Kind of Foe We Are Fighting! MM tti"?! ..W.'.JffJr'.- v.-. i .... ' , r ; f r x i i - - a: - r . .......... ..... i . I POUNDBD 1651 : . j NINETY-FIFTH YEAR SMDQB ,You know how it is: you can't be a member of an organization and escape all of its chores. The time comes when you have to entertain the ladies aid, or take a dish (meat balls?) to the club's covered dish supper,! or chivvy up four bits for a wedding present or funeral wreath for a member. Now I have been a member of the Salem Chemeketans since the year I came to Salem, which is nearly as long a time as the or ganization has been1 in existence But in later years I have been mostly ;an indoors member of an outdoors club. My annual "local walk" was to the banquet where it is ojuite easy to shoulder youf alDenstock and tell how snow peaks were won. paving - some time or other recommended the climb of House mountain above Mehama as a convenient jaunt in these days when gasoline restric tions limit the range of travel, the local walks committee hung the wether bell around my neck and made me leader for such a climb; So, like the lady who hadn't entertained her club for two years, I felt I had to perform. : House mountain is really just a rocking chair assignment. It is, : as mountains go, just a pimple on a relief map of the Cascades. But it has other compensations than accessibility and loW altitude. Its face is a sheer escarpment sev eral hundred feet high, making it a familiar spot on the mountain scape. From its summit one gets I a 'wonderful view of the moun tains of the North San tiam region, especially of the line: of the "old'! Cascades which. lie ; westerly of the snow peaks like Jefferson and Hood. Below lies the; FJkhorn flat and the valley of the Little North Fork rising to the sharp ridge of Battle-axe mountain, i The hike was set! for May 13. I had gotten it deferred ; to be sure of better weather in late spring, but the guess was wrong. The - J ' - ! - - (Continued on editorial page) France Will Be 5 - ! ; Given Role of Great Power I SAN FRANCISCO,; May 14.-vP) France was virtually assured to night of a. place as a great power within the United Nations. : ; ! A .United Nations conference committee voted to make that war-ravaged cation a permanent member of the inner security council of the world peace-keep-inf organization being charted here. ' i i It did this by eliminating the phrase "in due course" which previously had qualified France's admission to the select group as apcmanent member along with the United States, Russia, China and Britain. ; M i The action is still subject to approval of & conference commis sion and the full conference itself. f Howover, officials said there ap peared no possibility that could fail to come. (Additional details on page 2). Sub Gives Up To Americans i AT SEA OFF CAPE MAY, K. J. May 14-OF)-Tbe German tubma xine U-858 today became the first to surrender to American forces in the Atlantic since the capitula tion of Germany. Escorted to a rendezvous - ap proximately 45 miles off Cape May br two destroyers, 'the 240-foot submarine which claimed 16 Al lied vessels was quickly boarded by marines, naval submarine ex pert and an anti-sabogate detail. ; Speaking through an interpreter, the 27-year-old commander, Capt Lt. Thilo Bode, surrendered to Comdr. . J. P. HorOeet of Bertie county. North Carolina, command- in officer. Delaware group, east ern sea frontier. i i Weather San franclsce Knea . Satera . , ... portl&nd Max. MIB. : Bh . tl ; M JK M ; , .it M 49 J3 jj: t ; jtl . M : tract ScitU ttillaaaetu river 4 It. t la. f rnnEf AST: . (trom V. . weather v..r..n McNitt field. Slen) .h..n. - condition tndinc to 4m- T.rnva Ut thli afternoa. Maximum it near 1 aecreea' expected. 12 PAGES Mm Okinawa Advance Stored 46 Jap Planes Downed in Blow On Fleet Groups I By Al Dopking GUAM, Tuesday, May 15-Jfy-Infantrymen of Maj. Gen. James L. Bradley's 96th division captured the Yonabaru airdrome in a 2400 ward surge down the east coast of Okinawa yesterday and overran a key Ihill nearby to form the jaw of a pincers on the fortress city of Shuri. On the west flank, Maj. Gen. Lemuel Shepherd, jr's Sixth ma rine division still was held on the north bank of the Asato river in the northern section of Naha, but patrols presumably were operat ing well within the shattered ruins of the Okinawa capital. . The Japanese were resisting bit terly all along the line with artil lery, mortar and small-arms fire. 46 Planes Downed Adm. Chester W. Nimitz an nounced this progress today in a communique which reported 46 Japanese planes shot down in at tacks on American fleet groups. One major fleet vessel and two light; units were damaged. Japanese aircraft again pounced on the American invasion fleet off Okinawa Sunday evening, causing some damage, to Jtwo light surface units. Twenty-five enemy planes were shot down, eight of them by destroyers' guns.- Enemy aircraft bombed installa tions ashore on Okinawa on Mon day but failed to cause material damage. One Ship Damaged U.$. carrier task forces were at tacked by Japanese planes on Mon day, and one ship was reported damaged. Twenty-one Japanese planes were shot down in this raid. - Yonabaru airfield was the third major 'drome on the Okinawa mainland seized by the Yank3. They took the Katena and Yontan fields shortly after the April 1 in vasion. Later a large airdrome on Ie island nearby was secured. A prime objective of the south ward push is the Naha airdrome, about two miles south of Naha. This is the largest airdrome in'- the enure Ryukyu chain. Navy May Be Reduced 30 After V j Day - - - WASHINGTON, May 14-(ff) The navy contemplates a cut of at least 30 per cent" in the size of the fleet, once Japan is de feated. The senate appropriations com mittee disclosed today that it re ceived this estimate from Fleet Adm. Ernest J. King during closed hearings on a $23,603,775,000 na val supply bill. V This recommended appropria tion I represented an increase of $203,273,735 above the amount ap proved by the house.- Most of the increase was $180,000,000 for ord nance to be spent before July 1. No details were given on this par ticular item, but it is known the navy has greatly stepped up ' pro duction of rockets. German Civilians Tortured Killed LONDON, May 14-(3)-Gennan civilians tortured and killed some ; American airmen forced down in Germany, one of a large group of liberated American prisoners - of war said today upon returning by air from a German camp at Barth on the Baltic. Included among the 9200 pris oners freed from the camp, Stalag Luft No. 1, north of Berlin, were several famed UJS. flying aces, in cluding Lt CoL Francis S. Gabres ki of OU City, Pa and CoL Hubert Zemke of Missoula, Mont Gabreskl, as a Thunderbolt pilot, set the present; eighth air force record of 28 enemy planes shot down in the air and also destroy ed three on the ground. Zemke, a 'Mustang group commander, is Salem, Orerv Tuesday Morning, May l, 1945 ri 1 n M ft I Eisenhower Craclts Down On Officers for Friendly Treatment r ;!: (By uie Associatea ;ess) , ; LONDON, May 14-(55)-3eneral Eisenhower cracked down sharply on senior American "officers lor their reported friendly treatment of high German war prisoners today after the British press, had expressed hot indignation at the "sheer impertinJ nce" of Nazi leaders and German officers pince Germany's surrender. "We have to watch these Germans," the London Evening Blood Volunteers ; Are Needed Now , To Meet Quota J - i , . i ; The Red Cross blood bank was 90 registrants short today and vol unteers by the scores were need ed to assure the maximum of 200 pints for the mabuVunit which will be at the First Methodist church fat 11 a.' m. Registrants were asked to telephone 9277 this morning. Leaders in blood bank are stressing that a tremendous Increase in demand for plasma jb anticipated with the acceleration of the Pacific war and that V-E day in Salem means a re-dedication to the unfinished Usk. t ' 50 Per Cent Increase of Tires Okehed WASHINGTON, May 14.-P)-A 50 per cent increase in rations of passenger tires for civilians Ithis month was authorized today, but a slackening in the pace of re- i: t ?; conversion became apparent The war production board re leased 500,000 more tires for ra tioning y OPA in May, bringing total distribution to 1500,000. Spokesmen for both agencies in dicated another increase about as large may be 'expected for June. -' However, even the June1 in crease, if it is approved, would be insufficient to provide new tires for A card motorists officials said, in view of the big back log of un satisfied demand from more es sential users. HI 5 , The action; was accompanied by the lifting of production restraints on alarm clocks and galvanized ware, but WPB said no substantial increase in supplies of those house increase in supplies of those household items l ean occur until the, military reduced its demand upon factories and material sup plies. ... i :- II Nazis Tried ! To Bomb U. S. ! t- - E - I " i ' ' s T" Says Paper ; I LONDON, May 14-WP)-The ar my newspaper Stars and Stripes, quoting what it : called "sources considered reliable," said tonight the Germans; had attempted to bomb New York last election day, November 7. -T!f;:'.i: i,': i The bomb, presumably a Jet or rocket propelled i projectile, Swas reported! to have ; been launched from the deck of a German sub marine lying off the Atlantic coast. The attempted ; bombing failed when the V-bomb either fell short of New York or was shot down by fighter pilots alerted to watch for such projectiles." i - S T A rican Airmen credited With 19 i in the air and 11 on the ground, j -1 A Evacuation of; the prisoners from Barth was completed today by heavy bombers of the Eighth air force. One of those returned. Lt. John C (Red) Morgan of Am- arillo, Texas, holder of the con gressional medal of honor, told of the torture of American fliers by GerrAancivilian&:l 'iAAA':' ' j ' A Morgan, whose parents now live in ; New fYork City, was captured when his; Flying Fortress exploded after being struck by flak in an attack' on Berlin March 8, 1944.' "I was lucky to be picked up by German flak gunners as soon as I parachuted down,! he said. "Some of the other fellows who were captured by civilians were ' tor tured and killed. "; , t t A si of Higli Nazis News warned, "unless w are very! careful, they are going o get away with it again. Eisenhower said: "My attention has been called to press reports of instances o sen ior United States officers treating captured Nazi and high German officials on a 'friendly enemy ba sis. Any such incident has been in direct violation of my express and long standing orders. J "Drastic measures have been set in motion to assure termination of these errors forthwith. "Moreover, Eisenhower contin ued, j "any past instances' a this nature are by now means indica tive of the attitude of this army, but are results of faulty judgment of individuals concerned, wh wfll be personally acquainted with ex pressions of my definite disap proval. , : MTn th nanit rt this ffrast atm and on my own, I regret thee oc currences. i While Eisenhower did not single out any officer for public censure, it was recalled that when Raichs marshal Herman Goering surren dered to the UJS. Seventh larniy last week at Kitzbuehl in Aus- a ; i. a a. . tit ' ma. uc was ireaiea wun consiaer able deference. ; ! An Associated Press field dis patch said the former head of th luztwaue was given a lunch of chicken and peas in a hotel parlor after; "brief greetings and a hand shake' and later posed for pictures With Maj. Gen. John E. Dahlquist, commander of the 36th division. and With Brig. Gen. Robert - J. Stack, assistant division com mander, ill Doolittle Ends i . si European Job Eyes Pacific LONDON, May 14-(P)-Lt jGen. James H. Doolittle, who led the war's; first bombing blow at Tokyo and then directed the U. S. Eighth air force in its victorious blasting of Germany, turned over his Eu ropean command to a colleague today amid immediate specul tion that he would return to the Pacific conflict ; An j official announcement jfrbm the TJ.'S. strategic air force in Europe . said only that Doolittle would return i to Washington headquarters of the U. S. irmy air forces "for a new assignment but in his final press conference here i Friday the famous . speed flier showed his thought jwere centered now on the Japanese, i "So far as Japan is concerned, our basic strategy will be weak ening the enemy from the air. to enable occupation of the land by ground forces, he explained, add ing that the burden of bombing Nippon would be carried by the B-29 Superforts with B-17 fort resses and a-2 Liberators ployed as medium bombers. em- ar Fault ofCCC WASHINGTON, May 14-Hh Federal ; agencies must prevent a sugar shortage in 1946 and 1947 or congress must step into protect the public, a republican commit tee asserted today. . ; The group, composed of house members making a food study' de dared the current sugar crisis is the fault of the commodity credit corporation for "failure to encour age production in Puerto Ricq and Cuba,!. Where 60 per cent of our supply Js grown." - It charged the OPA handling of rationing' had "accentuated . tne shortage.' -i i Month of 3Iourning 1) j. f For lFDR Ends Monda WASHINGTON, May U-(j$-M sundown today the month's period of mourning for .the late Presi dent Franklin D. Roosevelt came to aniend. " " . ' - i ' i Flags on government buildings and at military and naval estab lishments and elsewhere I will A. JL.1V i-SM .k-MMLM! i- HgUIl iJ Vk 1UU jtuui lUUlUllUWt Ir , Mr., Roosevelt died April 12. The month of mourning was pro claimed by President Truman. ' ; i Price Sc. No. 42 Two B-29s Lost ; In . ill - Big Raid Superforts Hurl Heaviest Attack On Nip Islands ! ,'' ' - By James Lindsley ! - GUAM, Tuesday, May l5.-JPyr The fury of America s aerial , as sault on Japan mounted tola new pinnacle of violence Monday as a record pack of 500 mighty Su perfortresses , dumped , 7,000,000 pounds of fire bombs on the great industrial city of Nagoya. "Contrast with the , enemy s claim of shooting down eight Su perfortresses, 20th air force head quarters at Washington reported that only "two-ol our planes were lost to enemy action This was a minute, percentage of the number engaged in the attack). The devastating attack, directed against some of Japan's most im portant war industries, was of ficially reported! by 9-29 head quarters only a few hours 'before Tokyo said waves of allied car rier planes were; hammering Nip pon's southern airdromes for the second day in a row. j . ' Some of the 5500 Yank airmen who took part in the Nagoya mis sions, hardest aerial blow ever thrown against Japan, said on their return to ! ! Marianas j bases they believed the 3500 tons of fire bombs dropped destroyed the sec tions of the city not devastated in previous raids They; agree(l that Japanese interceptors were not anxious to challenge and that ack ack fire was weak and inaccurate. Smoke columns shot up some 17,000 feet over; the target: areas and could be seen by returning fliers when 80 miles at seaj . Nagoya, 150 miles west by south of Tokyo on Japan's main Honshu island, is the third city of the em pire. The B-29's, j carrying some 1,165,000 new type six - pound jelly gasoline fire bombs, came pretty close to unloading a bomb for every one of the city's Sj.SOO, 000 inhabitants. f Ed Kennedy! DisaccreditecL Ordered Home PARIS, May 14 -(ff)- Supreme headquarters disaccredited Ed ward Kennedy of j the Associated Press today on a charge of breach of confidence in breaking prema turely the story of Germany sign ing terms of unconditional sur render and ordered him tof leave May 17 for the United States. " Morton P. Gudebrod of the As sociated Press also; was disaccred ited for taking "an active part in the premature release of a: news story and ordered to return to the United States, but was grant ed an. extension beyond May 17 by Brig. Gen. Frank Allen, jr, chief, of' public relations. - f j . ..Gudebrod is HI. with pneumonia and is not expected to be dis charged from a hospital for two weeks... f, -;; -y.r Robert Bunnelle, managing exe cutive for the United Kingdom for the Associated Press, was re instated. Lend-Lease 4 Criterion Set , WASHINGTON, i May 14-(V- The state department said today that the test for future lend-lease of Russia is "adequate Information regarding the essential nature of Soviet military supply require ments" and .their importance as compared with i competing, de mands. - i: , r v A statement by Acting Secretary Joseph C. Grew predicted Insub stantial reductions in current de liveries, but made' it clear that de liveries meeting the test will con tinue to go forward. j ; The criterion, he emphasizes, ,1s the same as for other lend-lease countries.' 1 , - f , MOLOTOV BACK IV MOSCOW LONDON, Tuesday, May l5-(ff) Soviet foreign commissar Molotov has arrived in Moscow from the San Francisco , conference . the Moscow '- radio announced in - a broadcast heard here early today. -; v ' 'f ' 1 ' v ' ' - - . v - -. - . - i i f i ' J A f r . I -yV' M 1 - . i V 4, if ;. r This snapshot, taken by a Japanese onlooker, shows a. Japanese flier with his Samurai sword. Note the grinning Japanese soldiers looking on In the background. The picture was made somewhere In Japanese-occupied territory. There is no elue te the nationality 1 ta victim. This picture is a shockinr warning- of what allied fixrhtinr men asay expect at the hands f their foe in the Pacific (International news photo from Life Magazine)- ' i Chinese Close On Paochin Nip Stronghold CHUNGKING, May 14 - MP) Two Chinese columns closed today on Faoching, Hunan province stronghold from which the enemy marched last month on the road to defeat and disaster in the battle for Chlhkiang air base.' On the eastern seaboard, Chi nese troops fought on through the streets of Foochow after entering the old treaty port opposite For mosa Friday. In the Hunan counteroff ensive, the Chinese high command said one column Sunday reached a point 15 Vx miles northwest of Pat ching, while another was pounding down the main highway 19 miles west of the city. ; Trieste Will Be Controlled LONDON, Tuesday, May 15-UP) A British spokesman said today the United States and Britain had informed Marshal Tito of Yugo slavia that Trieste would remain under allied control until its sta tus was settled by the peace Con ference, i , . This view has been communi cated to the! Yugoslav government in Belgrade in an atmosphere of frankness and '' friendship, - this source said,: adding that the soviet government had been kept in formed. : . 1 . ''. Reports published in- London concerning peremptory orders' to Tito and . hints . of force are ex aggerated 'and; the .discussions with the Yugoslav leader are on a friendly ' plane, . the spokesman said. ; - 7ih War Loan to Be Tough But Vitall Task. Summons Declares If Oregon uses but one out of every 12. dollars in bank depos- ists to buy a bond in the Seventh War Loan campaign, the state, will top its quota. This was the state ment of Edward C Sammons, state Seventh War Loan chairman, In an impressive opening- of the bond sale In Sa lem Monday at the chamber of commerce luncheon. Oregon has the best record of any state in the union for E T tMrBHsMBsBMMBMrMBsl ( bond sales i and has been : given the largest quota" ever for a war bond - campaign, . Sammons said. The Seventh bond sale probably will be the! toughest yet because of the let-down among "the people following the victory in. Europe, he addeLW:, . , ". s" " Oregon in addition faces the sale with a reduced payroll be cause of more than 16,000 "volun tary Quits" among defense workers since the first of the year, he add ed. a. , 'lAAPi-1 A - The . money to buy bonds must 4 - i i Mm J. i A OA X j 1 v IckesCiirsGoverhment Offldc .'. Production WASHINGTON, May 14-P-Interior SeUry Ickes charg- ed today that JEovernment officials bungled aluminum producing early in the waj and that one result is a Canadian plant built "with UJS. funds competing with UJS. industry. 1 . ." I. ; " Testifying to the senate small business committee, Ickcs urged:. . j . -.j' -''-' ... .-.v-j-. . ,r s ! '- President of Mormons Dies In SaltLakd SALT LAKE CITY, May U.-JP) President Heber J. Grant, 88-year old president of the . Latter-Day Saints (Mormon church) died to night - . 'I - Death came at 6:33 p. m. MWT) at the family home where the white-haired church leader had been under treatment j several weeks. That he was seriously ill was disclosed by church authori ties only today, j 't Death was attributed to? causes incident to age. i Grant, a native of Salt Lake City, was elevated to the Mormon presidency in 1918, the first Utah born man to be chosen leader of the church which was organized in 1830 in New York state. ! v Puppet Czech President Is Captured by Allies j LONDON. Tuesday, Mayj 15-(ff) The allied controlled Luxembourg radio said Jtoday that ; Dr. s. Emll Hacha, puppet president of Czechoslovakia, and other officials who collaborated with me Ger mans, had been captured There was no official allied confirma tion. - - ' - - - t - . I come from the savings accounts which are unusually, high, the speaker said quoting figures from the national treasury. j - n Sammons, president of the U.S. National bank In Portland, was in troduced by Gov. Earl SneU; Doug las . Yeater, Marion - county war bond chairman, was In general charge of the program and intro duced members of the committee. The program was presented to a large crowd and. was broadcast over KSLM and the Mutual . net work. Music was provided, by the band from Leonards Supper club. J Theme rof Sammon's talk was based on his, assertion that We, the people," must form k solid financial front for winning the war. which "is ourwar x Marion county quota is $4,320, 000, Including $270,000 in; Indi vidual JE bonds. Polk countys to tal is $785,000, including: $450,000 in E bonds; Linn's total is $1,881, 000, including $1,163,000 f in - E bonds; Benton's total is $1,$17,CC0, induding $836,000; YamhillV total is 11,(532,000, including $942,000 in E bonds. . L . I , (Additional details on page 1) If X officer abont te behead an allied 1. That independent operators be encouraged to acquire and ope rate government-owned alumi num plants in competition with the Aluminum Corporation of America. . i -, 2. The contract with Aluminum' Corporation of Canada be can celled or negotiated to termina tion. This was for ; 250,000,000 pounds of aluminum at the Ship saw, Can power plant. Ickes said the Shipsaw plant was built with a $68,000,000 loan, interest free. Its existence was a ; "surprise" to him and to Presi dent Roosevelt until 1943, he said. Northwest Ignored Ickes contended it never should have been built while the -great power , developments of the Pa cific northwest and the bauxite producing areas of Arkansas were available. j Dr. Paul Raver, Bonneville power administrator; declared that war agencies never gave him a chance to know the power needs and always looked on Bonneville and Grand Coulee as more or less "incidental' . Ickes said the Shipsaw contract was made by Metals Reserve Cor poration, : a subsidiary; of Recon- struction Finance . Corporation, when Jesse Jones was 'chairman. OTPM Draws Blame ' He said "bungling" of the early aluminum requirements came from the OPM (office" of produc tion management), and its suc cessor,! the war production board. Dollar-a-year men, Ickes said, de clared there was enough - alumi num to go around in on breath, and in another would call it : critically short -r- j . "Senator Morse (R-Ore) praised ' Ickes summary of the aluminum power situation and said that the handling . of the job through the critical war years "just stinks.. ,r l Dragnet Out For Himmler i FLENSBURG, Germany, May l4-(ff)-A dragnet is out for Ges tapo Chief Heinrich Himmler in this area, wKh British security, police and . mtelligence officers ' leading the search. ; j ... -. Danish underground orginztrs who have submitted important in formation : to the Allies through out the war insist that the arch Nazi is in this territory. Germans as well as Allies have been alert . ed to watch for him as well. - -l There is considerable talk that Himmler .recently got in touch with vGrand Adm. Karl , Doenitz and asked his protection, but was told that if the Germans found him he would be turned over to the Allies. , ' . - It i