PAGE TWO Caffrey Says Germany Must' Not Rise Again 1 PARIS, May 30-WVU.S. Am bassador Jefferson Caffrey, speak- . Ing at Memorial day services at the American military cemetery at Suresnes, near Paris said today that "no clear , thinking man in the civilized world will ever again advocate a policy which would permit Germany to threaten inter national tranquility." t.-, j Throughout Europe soldiers, ci vilians and diplomats ef the other United Nations Joined with those of the Unites States in honoring the memory of the American dead who fell on the battlefields of Eur ope in two world wars. General Eisenhower Hew from his head quarters at Frankfurt, Germany, to attend a service near Liege in Belgium. The ' America' ambassador de . dared that the American dead de served more than flowers, monu ments and speeches and ul believe ' the finest contribution each in dividual can make to av common memorial is to think clearly about the causes of the- two wars and bout what can be done to pre vent another." - 5 Earlier in the day Caffrey plac- j ed a wreath on the tomb of the Unknown Saldier in Paris and ac companied by diplomats and mil itary representatives ef th United Nations attended .a memorial serv ice at the American Protestant cathedral. A memorial mass also was held at the Catholic church of Saint Pierre de Chaillot. , , At American cemeteries in North Ireland, Britain, France, Belgium, Holland and in the Mediterranean theatre memorial services were held. Jin Germany the temporary graves of American dead were decorated. Soon the bodies of the 8000 Americans who fell in the reich will be removed to American cemeteries in liberated lands of Europe. Gen. Jacob L. Devers led troops of the Sixth army group in paying homage to their fallen comrades. He placed a wreath at the base of the flagpole at Heidelberg univer sity and declared: i"The warm red glow of their memory should and must every day of our lives be the eternal flame; that forever will kindle the bright! light of the cause for which they died." ! President of UAL to Visit Salem Today W. 1A. : Patterson, president of United Air Lines, on his first tour of the company's western terri tory in five years, arrives in Sa lem at 2:20 o'clock this afternoon. " A dinner in honor of Patterson and his party of air lines offi cials has been arranged at the Marion hotel tonight. ' Traveling with him are Harvey G. Hancock, assistant to the presi dent; C. F. McErlan of the lines' legal staff; R. F. Arhens, director of personnel; B. B. Gragg,' direc tor of sales; D. F. Magarreu, di rector jof passenger service; R. M. Rummel, assistant director of pub licity; O. C. Richerson, regional manager of western operations; S. R. Newman, western sales mana ger; Hi F. Barnes,; regional direc tor of passenger service; W. D. Williams, western regional super intendent of flight operations; J. w. Eberly, regional director) of personnel; William Groen, super intendent of flight operations, Portland area, and Jean Homolka, traveling secretary. - Suicidal Jap :es Slow Allied Advance CALCUTTA, kay 30-MVSui cldal Japanese charges slowed the advance of the 19th Indian divis ion today on the Toungo-Mawchi road north of Rangoon as the ene my fought desperately to keep open the escape route into Thai land.;! . v, .; i ' I Empire ; forces have advanced 12 miles east of Toungoo, along the road after several weeks of bitter fighting. . . In the intermediate area north west of Pegu trapped Japanese .concentrations were consolidating. : Pegu j is 43 miles northeast of Rangoon. ; - ."i.: . The Japanese still hold a bridgehead across the Irrawaddy river north of Prome and have made ' several futile attempts to break out and escape eastward but . each assault has been beaten back by the 7th Indian, division. .Egypt Protests Situation In Syria toT Big Powers . LONDON, Thursday, May 31 (JP)- The Egyptian government has protested to Britain, the Unit ed States, France and Russia against the situation in Syria, the Exchange Telegraph agency re- ' ported today in a Cairo dispatch. 1 The government announcement said that owing to the worsening of the situation-in Damascus the staff of the Egyptian legation had taken refuge in the Iraq legation. I HOPKINS. STALIN MEET' 1 MOSCOW, May 30.-i!p-IIarry r T Tonkins who came here on a per- : aonal mission for President Tru J man, met with Premier Stalin to- Chare " . day for the fourth tune wiuun Reading from left to right are Paacbita, Donald Duck and Joe Carteca, co-stars to U titfe role of The Throe Cabsllere, f eatere-IenrUi fantasy la technicolor which Walt Disney presents now playing at ' the Elsinere. Refusal to Support World League May Mean the Loss Of Voting Rights to Nations By Douglas SAN FRANCISCO, May 30. may be the price of refusal of any United Nation to support a new world league with its military resources. This possibility developed at the United Nations conference today when a committee reported to its .parent commission that this penalty is under consideration and may be adopted. . I The bulk of the committee the structure and procedure for a projected general assembly of all nations in the world organiza tion, was approved alnset auto matically at the second, public meeting of a conference commis sion. Russia, however, blocked accept ance of a formula for electing the top administrative officer of the world organization, explaining she had taken the matter up with the conference steering committee and wanted action deferred pending a reply. Committees Work As nine working committees ground ahead on the job of draft ing various portions of a charter for the world organization, it be came known that: 1. The American delegation is leaning toward the idea of includ ing in this charter terms of the Atlantic chater's promises of ac cess by all nations, "on equal terms, to the trade and to the raw materials of the world which are needed for their economic pros perity." 2. Denmark, apparently assured Jof a belated invitation to the con ference table, has three delegates scheduled to arrive here tomor row. ' They are Henrick Kauff mann, minister to Washington, and Hartvig Srisch and E. Husfeldt. 3. French desires to maintain (1) a Franco-Soviet pact aimed at Germany and (2) her independ ence of action in Europe have giv en added weight to an old issue of regional security. British, Reds Collide 4. Britain and Russia have col lided head on over a Soviet desire to eliminate from a plan for in ternational rule of dependent and strategic areas a declaration that trusteeships should not apply to existing mandates (from World War I) without the consent jof the nation holding the mandate; Brit ish" delegates also were reported ready to battle a Russian sugges tion that dependent people be specifically offered the hope of ultimate independence. The conference itself will have to decide the trusteeship question if the Russians and British; are un able to reconcile differences in big-five deliberations. Truman Frames Speech While on Yacht Cruise WASHINGTON, May 30 -(vP) President Truman spent the day cruising on the Potomac river and framing the speech with which he will ' close the San Francisco conference. George Alien of Mississippi, a former District of Columbia com missioner who traveled with Mr. Truman during his vice presiden tial campaign, went along on the yacht trip to assist with the speech. Commons to Get Full Statement on Syria LONDON, Thursday, May 31 (AVA full statement on: the sit uation in Syria and Lebanon will be made to the house of commons today by either Prime Minister Churchill or Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, London morning papers reported, j UNDERGOES OPERATION SILVERTON O. E. Lee, man ager of the Retail Lumber yard here, was reported in a satisfac tory condition at a Salem hospital following a major operation earlier this week. i The Grand Canyon is more than 300 miles long, 13 miles wide, and a mile in depth from the brink of the canyon to the river bed. i3 : " Tonight! : A .Laugh A Minute I Joel McCrea - Betty field The Great Moment" And AHyn Joslyn Evelyn Reyes Dangerous Blonde ' Cartoon - News Th - ? I B. Cornel! - iP - The loss of voting rights report, ; recommending some of Cotton, Clothes Leather Goods Get Scarcer ! WASHINGTON, May 30.-P)- Military demands for cotton tex tiles and leather products are greater now than they were for a two-front war,; the government said today in predicting a tighter pinch. ::i ii I ' Requirements for these materials are at a record high, said war production board chairman J. A. Krug, who also ; painted, a bleak outlook on supplies of wool tex tiles and knit goods. ; i Krug reported that in textiles the problem is I mainly , a . manpower- shortage,! complicated by the attraction of Workers to higher paying industries. j ! Military allocations for shoes and other leather items for the current and third quarters have been 30 per cen above the 1944 use rate, the production chief said. He added that since "the basic difficulty is a lack of Sufficient hide supplies,'! the increased mili tary allotments must be at the expense of civilian, industrial and export claims, j i The shift to a one-front war, Krug said, requires a substantial amount of ' clothing materials to "fill the pipelines to the Pacific" for "soldiers who must fight un der varying climatic conditions.' Lord Haw Haw on i LUENEBURG, Germany,; May 30-;p)-British surgeons, in a sim ple operation, : removed a I bullet from William j (Lord Haw i Haw) Joyce's Buttocks today and a re port from the British Second army hospital Said the (renegade British broadcaster would be "quite fit" in several days.- j M Joyce, who broadcast nazl prop aganda during the war, was un der heavy guard" in the hospital.' "Hawi Haw," captured! recently by two British officers who rec ognized his voice, had been shot when he made what appeared to be a threatening move. Czech Reserves Called NEW YORK, May 30.V-The Prague radio 'said tonight Presi dent Eduard Behes has j ordered mobilization of ail Czechoslovakia reserve forces for "special mili tary service ; for a period of ur gent necessity. The broadcast was heard by the FCC. i Bey Bond 7th War Bends NOW SHOWING : wry -?: '11. Operated w t vy.A wrmmrrM rm un i ' ' Ce Feature Today and Fxidar I : twL S4Uk4 imA tumtmJk I .; ....ill C nmtMmmr yXmrmmmm M "' tmmmfMif lwvi f Continuous from 1 MS. OREGON STATESMAN. Salon Nipporis Being Compressed Oh Mindanao i ; i '-: ; MANILA; Thursday, May 1- (XPr-Japanese forces in Mindanao, pushed put of their Sayre highway positions in; the center of the isl and and from Davao on the south west coast, were being gradually compressed ; today in largely-un explored mountain country. 1 TheflSstf division was driving them eastward along the Kibawe- Talomoj trail, I the 24th division forced i them westward. A spokesman at Gen. Douglas MacArthur's heaquarters said en emy resistance was slowly weak ening- in the pocket between the Talomo and Davao rivers, but the 24th division reported strong Nip- pones forces still in its area. How ever, the best; Japanese positions and weapons were gone, and fight ing was less intense, j; ; ii ii In northern Luzon, the 25th di vision killed 190 Japanese Monday and Tuesday in mopping up a round Santa Fe, on h the rugged southern mountain approach to the Cagayan valley. The 38th di vision,; consolidating its position around the captured Wawa dam east of Manila, killed more than 200 of the enemy. ? Fifth air force fighters con tin tied their near-record support of Luzon ground operations, drop ping 510 tons, of bombs in more than 800 sorties Monday and Tues day. Most of the explosives were dropped in the Cagayan valley, last major enemy stronghold in the archipelago. I On northern Borneo's ' Tarakan island, the Australians compress ed the : Japanese into an area east of the1 Djoeata oil field, where naval units shelled them. : Heavy bombers flying from Philippine bases returned to the Indo-China coast area Tuesday for the second successive day, the communique reported. They drop ped 103 tons1 of bombs on the coastal railroad between Saigon and Phan Rang, at times flying low to strafe freight cars and nearby buildings. Night patsels sank two cargo ships at the mouth of the Yangtze river and harassed air facilities near Hong Kong. Naval ; units; supported ground operations on Tarakan, off the eastern coast of Borneo, by shell ing Japanese defenses in ; the in terior, i Other; light naval units strafed shore installations on the northeast coast of Borneo and in the Halmaheras, to the southeast. Anti-Poll Tax Bill May Pass WASHINGTON, May 30 -JPf- Southern democrats all but gave up hope today of stopping anti poll tax legislation in the house. t Their plans for blocking a meas ure to outlaw the payment of poll taxes as a qualification for voting in any f election of candidates for national oinces evidently were built around the senate, which has stifled similar house-passed meas ures in the past. Foes of the legislation found lit tle encouragement in a study of the names of 218 representatives whose : signatures to a discharge petition tossed the issue squarely into the lap of the house. It wil come up for a decision on June 11 Fewer Federal Forest tands Will Be Closed PORTLAND May 30-(;p-Few- er federal forest lands will be closed to the public this fire sea son, a regional forester said to day, j i ; I John C Kuhn said only cer- tain areas wun neavy slash or other hazards would be closed.' Get the Jap! Buy Bonds! rrnn3 ; i Opens 6:45 p. Now Showing! Cory Grant Douglas Fcdrbcmka Jr. ''I Joan Fontodn ir&iWLi Victois JVIcLaglen "GUIIGA Dili" Co-Hiil Fun with Fibber McGee ! and MoUyi 1 Oregon, Thnrsdar Morning. May ONthe HOME FR01IT By ISABEL CHILDS The gaunt, sunbrowned woman smoothed the- print jersey jof her dress. Somehow It seemed a little short for her. Maybe because she was not so sum-hipped as the bright-eyed- young thing 'sitting beside the soldier; host ahead. That girl must have known about the burgundy and blue plush ; covers on the little stage's high-backed seats. The chalk : line blue of her hair ribbon just matched. j I ;-..rf---I Length of skirts always seem more noticeable when one's anm are empty, she . thoughts Beside her the woman whose hair was the color of the rippling silver heads of barley (or was' it bearded wheat?) beside the hill road crad led a parcel of heavy-headed roses and sword fern.il I : : ...- The rpineys" Weren't good this year, probably because of the late rains, the seat partners agreed Memorial day somehow j would seem like any other day in late May without "pineys? or snow balls or rose. Here I the j silver- haired woman looked m bit sharply at the- empty hands beside her. But the gaunt woman didn't no tice for her eye were on a field of crimson clover, just the shade of the dress little Jean had liked so well. The crimson had been lovely with ecru Uuje, but the dungarees of an army nurse's field garb apparently- held as much appeal and the gaunt wo man smiled. ii 1 , V- I ; "Wild pink roses,H she said to herself. "It sounds like poetry, but back in Iowa we'd have said pink wildroses 'tisn't near so pretty." The roses in Iowa, clam bering over railroad embankment and highway's edge, had given their name to the clipped green sward she would have visited to day had she not come! west when the children were smau. Now the road to the mountains lay between old houses and well kept lawns. All the passengers on the left side of the bus gasped ax a field of tangled scarlet poppies gone wild. They would never be anything but "Flanders poppies' to the sunbrowned woman who had not given up trying to imag ine under just which white cross planted "row on row" -kind hands had laid the shattered body . of her Iowa farm boy. Her brown, calloused ; hands smoothed the flowered fabric of her dress. Not a might too short! Perhaps the grey-haired Woman thought' her silly,' chuckling aloud, wearing short skirts and pink nail polish. Jeanie had teased her about "perpetual youth" but the farm boy wasn't really in Flan ders field. Beside her, still fresh from school and parental restric tions, he kept Jier young, too. V I I Now the roadsides were golden with broom; here wild columbine stood straight among the tall grasses and harsh blue bachelor buttons. Joey had loved bachelor buttons. Africa had many wild flowers, he had written, but she had never heard what the Philip pines might offer. I V- ' Ashamed not to - have heard what her seatmate was saying, the sunbrowned woman turned in time to catch the final sentence: "I suppose those of you who haven't graves to take; flowers to are fortunate in a "way there's nothing to make you Remember. Get the Japl Bur Bonds! tW hchjsc tmt trj i.wfT" LUHs?Tia - OPENS 6:45 P. M. - Now flaying! .. X M- Asp CO-FEATUREI Plus! First Chapter of New! Serial! "CAFTMI :2iEisnieii 7-1 fv MOSS j " rx 1 $fiy a iubilss or loyt '4v maru and ksxodyi . - . j, i i .. . : ' -- .... ' - . r 31, 1945 Americans at Home and iri: Far Flung Regions Pause To Mourn Military Dead , !' . h By the- Associated Press . ' i . . -American everywhere at home, in the now quiet European war areas land in the faraway Pacifier battle theatre paused yesterday 'to mourn the military , dead of this and past wart. - Parades, religious services and simple holiday ceremonies marked the observance of the 77th Memorial day throughout the nation ;while overseas thousands of fighting men and women 200 Pints of '"-I ' ' - ' " j ! " .- i ' , Blood Donated Here Tuesday Two hundred pints of blood, the maximum which can be taken here each Tuesday when the mo bile Red Cross blood bank ope rates here, ; left the Salem area this week for Pacific battlefronts. New- gallon club members are Alice White, 1336 Court st; Flor ence CloydV 985 South 12th st; Theodore. Basye, route six, boat 436, ' Salem; Elbert Baker, 715 South Winter st: i Edith Boyes, 1538 Saginaw st; ! Mrs. Marie Whealdon, - Turner, and Mr. and Mrs. Ranald E. Jones, Brooks. - Donating blood I for the ninth time were Lyle Leigh ton, 754 Mill st., and LaVern Dalkenberg, route onebox 107, Salem; tenth time donors were W. H. Barber, route five, box 36, Salem; Mrs. Earl Barham, 865 North Winter st and Luke M. Johnston, 1645 South Liberty st ! . s D. K. Gemunder, Ladd and Bush building and R. M. Griffin, route four, box 98, Salem, donated for the 11th time and O. . McCrary, 545 North 23rd st, was a 12th time donor. ' Farm Animals WiU Be Sent To Balkans WASHINGTON, May 30-(P)- About 50,000 dairy and draft ani mals will be shipped to five Bal kan countries during the next 18 months to help replace Europe's decimated livestock herds, the united nations relief and rehabili tation administration announced today. The, first shipment, 300 dairy heifers and 900 draft animals. will leave the United States for Greece within a few weeks. In addition, 300 bred heifers and 300 mares probably will be shipped shortly to Yugoslavia. UNRRA said its livestock pro gram was designed; to replace one per cent of the 5,000,000 animals destroyed during : the war in Greece, Albania Yugoslavia, Cze choslovakia and Poland. The first shipment was directed to Greece, it said, because oi her "extreme need." ! -The livestock! rehabilitation program is restricted by the lim ited availability of animals and of shipping space," E. R. Henson, UNRRA's agricultural rehabilita tion director said. AGED ALLIGATOR DDIS JACKSONVILLE, Fla., May 30 -(flVBig Joe, Jacksonville's vet eran alligator whose age was fig ured at more than 300 years, is dead. A fight last week with two other alligators was too much for the old boy. I; At Salem Leather Filled Shaving Kits Brown; black, and British tan-ii-iLL. Fishing Hah "polf Bags - i Dad Will like ; ; Uorld Globes : 3.95;-J5.95 ;;S.95 120 N. Commercial attended special services op visited cemeteries .where their fallen bud dies lie.; , : : Many, war' plants, their sights fixed on' victory over Japan, work ed as usual as. did most govern ment offices.' Only a handful of the 240 re maining Civil war veterans were able to loin in 'celebrating the day which, was inaugurated in honor of their dead comrades, i Wreaths were placed on the tomps of the unknown soldier of World War I in London, Paris and in Arlington national ceme tery. ':' Roosevelt Honored At Hyde Park, N. Y4 where two small children reverently laid a wreath of spring flowers on the grave of the late Franklin D. Roosevelt, Postmaster General Frank C. Walker, said ot the for mer commander-in-chief: 1 "Rarely in history feave whole peoples so taken from! one man's fire and flame of courage, from the depths of defeat this man led the nations of the world to vic tory." I ' Massed about the grave were many floral tributes, including one from President Truman. - Buglers sounded the ; solemn notes of taps over the graves of the dead throughout, the European battle zones as soldiers silently placed American flags and flow ers In military cemeteries. Asks Lasting Peace At Anzio beachhead, where 8,- 000 men were killed, Lt Gen. Lucien K. Truscott told U. , S. Fifth army men, "we; pray that when the soldiers' last! job is done the statesmen of the world will make sure that lasting peace" for which their soldier comrades died. Services were held at 62 Ameri can cemeteries in France, holding nearly 150,000 Americans who lost their lives in two wars. Observ ances also took place in Germany where more than 8000 Americans lie in temporary graves. 250,000 Left Homeless by B-29 Pounding SAN FRANCISCO, May 30.-P) Tokyo radio said yesterday's American incendiary raid on Yo kohama left 250,000 inhabitants of Japan's second largest port homeless with 60,000 houses des troyed, and said the count of dead and injured would take some time to complete. . ! The city's communications and transportation lines were knocked out, providing more war worries for Premier Kantaro Suzuki, who conferred today with six former premiers of the empire. While the broadcast, heard by the FCC, gave no details of subjects discussed by Suzuki and some of his ministers with ex-premiers, Domei news agency hinted at the agenda with the report that the nation was filled "with trepida tion" over raid damage to the imperial palace. j 4.80p Hardware L i i Tennis Rackets - Metal Fishing; Tackle Boxes . Ana uuxer sporting uoods ,i i Our Whisker Sets, Ash Trays, Smokinz Stands. Poker Sets and Fitted Card Sets ! v. c: TOusinEsuiiaii -ol? IVqtI . By the Associated Press i Okinawa Tenth army con tinues encirclement and reduc tion tion. of ShurL where nu rines raised VS. flag over Cas tle. .-" 7 J.,;. ' j v Philippines Sixth army on Luzon. attacks remnants of en emy in Wawa dam sector, j Barma Jap suicide charges slow 19th Indian ' division on Toungoo-Mawchl road north of Rangoon. . . : Ulster Ready to Car For Dutch Children t LONDON, May 3Q:-iBrTha Uls ter ministry of health announced today, in answer to British in quiry, that it Was prepared to care for several bundled xhitcn chil dren if they i should "be sent to northern Ireland lor recuperation from the effects of the German occupation of the Netherlands. 606 VIENNESE EVECUTED I MOSCOW, May 30 -(ff)- Tass Correspondent Eugene Ratner re-. ported from ! Vienna today that more than 600 Viennese had been executed by the gestapo in the Vi enna suburb of Floridsdorl Get the Jay! Bay Bends!. - Continuous from 1 P. M, NowjSbwing! Vt LtT ... v.- S - . 'V . . . . I- - ' V t PHILLIP TERRYV fSi AUDREY LONG ROBERT BENCHLEY EVE ARDEN ERNEST TRUEX MARC CRAMER ISABELITA hhe4 A DirtcteJ by Mm H. AUU torn mi kr lAwntMCf Mttf Thrill Co-Hit! Scarlet CluVj Sidney Toler Latest News! n : Gennino Leather BilUolds Black, brown, and tan. 1.50 I Ilelal Lnncli Kits 2 Cf Complete with aS4J Thermos 1 Thermos Dollies ' ; Qliitt' 2L.3S rial U.S. 5 J Phone 4906 ! week.,. . . -e.-w .aiio r.