Everyone has. his favorite: story 'on how he has been insulted by 'some of these wartime storeclerks 'prv waitresses. A bridge same is ' hardly complete without a tale of -how some snippy counter' girl told off one of the store's good customers with a "Donchakno theresa waron?" And now 'what a green light glitters in the eyes of these selfsame customers as they mentally roll up their . sleeves in anticipation of -telling off these smart young things "Donchakno the warsover?" Even the staid Oregonian let down its hair to vent its spleen on the "nitwits and nincompoops' behind the counter. ' ' ; . All of which prompts me to say ' that X think there is a mate to this shoe and that it should be worn by a lot. of customers themselves. Haven't you seen somewell-fed individual demanding an extra pat of butter from the waitress. or putting on a scene because he couldn't get an extra portion of . sugar for his coffee; And what about the hordes ot shoppers who swarmed the stores, pawed over the tnrlr. and ttwo4m1 rlrk in drawn down pre-war nylons or Vandyke cigars out of thin air? 'I have an Idea that if the clerks could get their side of the case be fore a jury they could match yarn . for yarn every tale of insult and 1 A - t 1 1 . uwumpcience oj service neip wiui one on the abuses they have suf fered from irritable, inconsiderate customers. I " ' I wonder if the shopping public realizes the faithfulness of Radio Strike Terminated; Talks Resumed NEW YORK, Sept 13Pr-The 28-hour wage strike of. approxi mately, 500 union engineers em ployed by the National and Amer ed tonight, with the first group of strikers returning to their taha in .- it. .... iillT 1 I II 1 1 111 L III Llin IIINIIir Ml ning programs. ... ! ! The strike ended, U.S. Labor Conciliator -J. .-R.'rvJMandelbaum said,' after officials of the radio ' organizations and the union, the National Association of Broadcast Engineers and Technicians (ind.), agreed to resume negotiations for a new wage contract tomorrow. It was the breakdown of these negotiations, A. T. Powley, pres ident of NABET said, that pre- ftfnftotAft 4Ka vtci1 Vsi j 4aio a4 o'clock (EWT). v While all. the engineers were i riot immediately available to re turn to their jobs, NABET said they were being informed of.de ' velopments and told to return to work promptly, j Gunboat to be Pleasure Craft WASHINGTON, Sept. 13-Ph A 245 foot gunboat, the Williams burg, will become the presidential yacht Ite in October or early No vember. I The White House disclosed to day that the old presidential ves sel, the Potomac, had been con demned as unseaworthy. Now undergoing general over haul at the Norfolk navy yard, the vviiuamsDurg, onginauy a yacox, was built in 1931 for U. J. Chis- hplm of New York City. The navy purchased it and converted it Into a gunboat in 1941. The Potomac was condemned .ior duty in open water, the navy said, because new construction ' made her top heavy. . i i . : . ' i i - .:" . !'; ,j .-ii;:isy';-; '; - V :. S ;' A- Vs I". ! V'!' A'iAA' Z I I ''I'- PoUNDnp: 1651! ; - !;- ' 1 1 Facl-of-thc-Day " Th Oregon Statesman is th fast-grQwing newspaper in 1h valley. A telephone call to . .... 9101 will start it coming; regl larly to yoiir homo, .1 NINETY-nrTH YEAR 16 PAGES Salem, Oregon. Friday Morning, September IC 1945 Prlc 5e No. 147 rn i r t i K i Cops (Sell: 2E)ay Speed-Slated Nip Up In Trials Japanese Cases To Follow Same Course as Nazis WASHINGTON, Sept U-J?h Big shot Japanese war criminals probably will be tried by a four power Allied military tribunal set up with headquarters at Tokyo early next year. - The revolutionary new princi ple of international law that the officials of a government may be tried for starting a war of aggres sion will be applied to Japanese criminals Just as it is being ap plied to tneir uerman counter parts. x It is not yet certain, but the probability is that an entirely new tribunal and prosecution staff will have to be set up at Tokyo rather than transferring the tribunal and staff created by the Allies for; the Nuernberg trials of nazi leaders starting in October. These facts were developed to day after a top flight ' American authority said this government ex pects that the principles and meth ods used with respect to Japanese war criminals will be consistent with those applied to the Ger mans. - , CIO Invited to Attend British Union Meeting BLACKPOOL, Eng . Sept - 13 ()- The 77th British Trades un ion congress moved toiday to i in vite the CIO, sharply assailed by an AFL delegate yesterday,- to be represented at future TUC meet ings..' " A resolution tho that end was introduced by Bryan Roberts, em ployes delegate, who said the CIO "did not refuse to meet the Russian trade unions nor malign them.- . This was apparently in , reply to George Meany, AFL secretary treasurer, who threw the congress into an uproar yesterday with his charge that the CIO sabotaged America's war effort up to the time Germany attacked Russia, and his description of Russian trade unions as a means of "vir tual enslavement" . MUNITIONS DUMP BLOWS ROME, Sept n.-i-fA muni tions dump near Genoa blew up today, killing at least two. persons and wounding more than a hun dred, the area news agency re ported. The cause has not been determined. &n!nis! Craclccrs I By WARREN GOODRICH- had a good close look cf a itt-propeUed plant today," Dorotliy Pullman's Condition Critical Mrs. Dorothy Pullman, 19, who was shot: in the head her home last Sunday, is still in a critical condition, ttendants at the Dea coness hospital said early today. Mrs. Pullman was shot during an alleged altercation with her husband, Robert Theodore Pull man. Pullman, who has been held in, the county jail, is to have a preliminary hearing In Justice court next Thursday on a charge of assault while armed with -a dangerous weapon. MacArthur Bans Sending Morse Code by Nippon SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 13-(ffJ-Tightening the grip on Ja pan's dissemination of news and propaganda,; , General MacAr thur has ordered: suspension by Friday afternoon; (Tokyo time) of shortwave Morse transmis sions by Japan's Domei agency.; Domei broadcast the new rule in I a FCC-recorded dispatch. . MacArthur previously had suspended all J apanese over seas Voice broadcasts and had placed Japanese newspapers under American occupational army censorship.' ; : .fc I.:;- - ;- V. m ' o LaDinet Minister Listed TOKYO, Friday, Sept 14-flV Eighth army headquarters an nounced today It had been inform ed that Chikahikoj Koizumi, min ister of welfare- in Hideki Tojo's cabinet at the war's outset, .has committed suicidei " I There were no further details. - Koizumi was on the list of the Japanese whom General MacAr thur ordered 'arrested. He was the second former cab inet member to take his own life this week and the, first since Jap anese officials, were granted their request to make theiown round up of the "wanted." 5 j Field Marshal pen. Sugiyama, not on the list but several times a former war minister, killed him self, with' a pistol Wednesday as the imperial headquarters was be ing dissolved an MacArthur's or ders. ' . " : VK"' r- ' " i?l : ' Koizumi, 01, had a lengthy med ical career Since graduating; from Tokyo Imperial university in 1909. He had been an army surgeon with the rank of lieutenant gen eral, had directed the medical af fairs bureau of the Japanese ar my department j and previously headed the ; medical surgeons school. ' i; ' S ' Oregon (Fire i Loss Tabulated WASHINGTON, Sept. VS.-yPf-Oregon lost about $300,000 worth of timber in 1648 forest fires in 1944, the forest service . revealed today. 1: ' "U I - I Fires covered 27,640 acres.: Main ly, they were caused by lightning, which started 933. Other causes were railroads, . 38; campers, 100; smokers, 1227; burning debris, 111; incendiary, 49; lumbering, 66, and miscellaneous, ,124. j 1 The damage amounts do not In clude a fVast amount" of lntang ible or indirect losses, the! forest service said, f- , , 1 NATION'S STRIKERS UP The nation's total of strike idled workers was raised to 132,700 last (Thursday) night boosted up ward primarily by a strike of 1Q, 000 New' York;; City painters and a spreading production shutdown of Westinghouse Electric corpora tion plants in six states, j ; Future of Turkey Business Probed at Breeders' Meeting By Xlllle I. Madsen Farm Editor, The Statesman , What, is going to happen to the turkey business in the rapidly ap proaching postwar era was para mount in conversation of some 200 turkey breeders as well as speak ers ! gathered Thursday for the fifth annual meeting of the Oregon Turkey Improvement association. The meeting opened, at 10 am. at the Salem chamber ! of commerce rooms and closed with the 6:30 banquet at Marion hotel. .Oregon's present turkey produc tion is 65 per cent over the 1937 1941 average, . L. Peterson, state director of . agriculture, told his listeners at the -banquet How ever, he referred to the turkey in dustry as "Oregon' golden, op portunity if correctly managed.1' '. W. L. Teutsch, assistant direc tor of extension, Oregon State col lege, also speaker at the banquet thought there might "have to be a little slackening-off in - produc tion." --. ....-.;-..,;:.,:..;--'., Noel L. Bennion, chairman, stat ed that an Increase in breeders kept over this year "hoay mean a shorter season or many more sur plus eggs," adding that "turkey industry Won't do justice to itself if the growers take a panicky at titude. There are 'enough buyers to market all we produce if we maintain our marketing in an or derly manner, ft ;fj ' j. Top among suggestions made was that there be one large Ore gon turkey show annually at Sa lem. The association passed a recommendation to this effect to be sent to the state department of agriculture. . ! Walter C. Leth, Polk county a gent was toastoaster for the! ban quet George Angel, Portland, di rected a losing accompanied by Alice Crary Brown. ij i Directors elected were K.R. Borovicka, SdoJ C. H. Coyle, St Paul; and Albert R. Potts, Col ton. Holdovers are C R. Dear. Inde pendence; Stephen Adelman, Yam hill; Free wlese, Corvallis, and W. H. McDanlel, Jr, Dallas. Later the directors met and re-elected Dear as. president and Adelman, secre tary. .. - ; . .j- ' f- i (Additional story, page 2.) Komoye CouiBdl IHIave By Russell Brines . : TOKYO, Sept ;13 -(ff)- Japa nese militarists cWe war in the Pacific as early as October 1941, turning down a Tokyo government proposal ; to meet President Roosevelt to forestall the conflict, . Prince Fumimaro Konoye, Nipponese vice minis ter, said, today. Konoye, in an interview, said he. was helpless as premier in 1941 to checkrein the jingoists, and that eventually his war minister. Gen. Hideki To Jo, be came premier of the government which started the war. To jo at first approved Kon oye's plan to meet . President Roosevelt in ; the summer of 1941, the prince said. ' But the war lords' changed their minds and oh Oct 16 Kon oye's cabinet fell land Tojo took over. Less than two months lat er Pearl Harbor was attacked. "I feel xxmfident that if I had been able to see Mr. Roosevelt I could have established a basis . for intervention of the imperial .house in the rising war tide within Japan af that time," Konyoe said. ! The prince, who also was premier of Japan when the -Nipponese attacked China in ' 1937, said that "as had happen ed several times before, the militarists in the field started the Peking Incident without knowledge of my government . and the' government had to chase after them.w - ; The Japanese government long has , had! a reputation abroad as liars, he said. "Be cause they were unable to con trol the Japanese militarists in the field , or rften didn't know what the militarists were do-, ing. ' HI VO ;.-: ; "It was that way when I' was K PRINCE KONOYE trying to see .Roosevelt The government was considered a liar, because no matter what we promised regarding China, final decision on the removal of our troops from ? China depended upon the, military. That was one reason jbvhy the meeting was never held. . . Congress Gives Big Boost to Full Employment Meapure, Longer Jobless Pa!y period T , . . I (By IX)UGLAS''Bl'.0)lLvi Z v ' WASHINGTON, SepC l3jJCongressgaVe;a big; push y to two main points in President Truman's program for peacetime' prosperity: jobs for everybody, and j longer jobless pay for the people out of work. ? h 7 ; II I . ' Both measures face a - long, tough fight before they get clear ; through' congress. Today's moves were the1 first steps in shocking them onto the senate , , ; .. floor for debate. , . The senate finance committee wrote okay on the unemployment pay measure. A banking subcom mittee the full committee now has to act approved a "full em ployment" bill.; j Until they voted, the day was long on talk, short on action. Congressmen also: 1. Made headway on a highway building measure, A house com mittee approved land started on its way a resolution to start a $1,000,000,800 federal-state pro gram going. ; 1 2. Dipped deeper into financial deals of Elliott. Roosevelt son of the late president But the house ways and means committee took no action.. I! 3. Learned that the house com mittee investigating un-American activities suspects Japan's Black dragon society of .operating In this country. The committee will see about Jthat J Modern 'Mayflower' - Sets Sail for States LONDON, Sept 13-(i!P)-Sixteen Estonian refugees, including five women and four children, set out today from the west coast of Scot land in a 37-foot sailing yacht on a modern-day Mayflower" voy age to America, i ! i : It is the fourth time the tiny craft - - which' has no auxiliary motor - started out on the long trip.; Three times it turned back before Atlantic storms. Restrictions On News Print May Go Dec. 31 WASHINGTON,' Sept. 13.-()-All government controls on news print will be abolished December 31, it appeared likely today, and paper allocations to U. S. publish ers will be increased for the fourth quarter. i f ' , Relaxation ; of newsprint usage restrictions one full degree in the sliding scale; formula of deduc tions beginning October 1 and re vocation of limitation order 240 at the end of the year were rec ommended by the;.newspaper In dustry advisory committee at a two-day session With WPB Offi cials, the agency announced. The ; industry committee also recommended that the newspaper industry plan voluntary coopers tion in - self-imposed buying re strictions, within the limitations of anti-trust ; laws, after govern ment restrictions are removed. MORE MILK' REFUSED i ' WTRTXIsr .Can 5 11 Ti SVMtM MI1 ftJ J W V" allied kommandantur for Berlin declined today a city adrninistra tion request to Increase milk al lowances so children could have a half pint daily. The city's total allotment is about; 140,000 quarts a day.-" v 1 -j - The Dead Come Back! The tortured minds and bodies of , the recently liberated Doo little flyers still bear the marks of their terrible months In Japanese prison camps. Together they make a saga of living death, a powerful indictment of the average Japanese soldier as well as his superiors to Nippon's so-called military caste.: . ' ,- i . f . - ; Now, for the first time, the full story of those months of punishment torture and degradation Is told 'by the three flyers themselves Capt C. Jay Nielsen of Hyrum, Utah; Capt Robert L. Hite, Earth, Tex; and Set Jacob Deshaxer, Salem. . j ..'. Only the indomitable will of the flyers kept' them alive.' Beaten so badly that they could not talk, they still grinned weakly at each other-and turned their thumbs up to prove they were unbroken, " . , ' i-. ''; I - ' This first-person, true story of what some Japanese axe like when they have the upper hand, makes drama-packed series that every Americad should read and remember. r . j, ; y'T ? -r Be sure to start this copyrighted 'Saga A living Death by the three DoolitOe flyers beginning next Sunday, Sept If in f ! i "The World at Your Door Each Morning Discharge Centers Planned 100,000 Men To Be Separated Byv Christmas ? WASHINGTON, Sept 1M- The army is setting up .145 tem porary separation centers to clear out a backlog of 258,000 men in this country who are eligible for discharge, senators were told -to-day. , J '. These men, "Maj. Gen. S. G. Henry told the senate military committee, were returned from Europe for deployment to the Pa cific. The sudden, surrender of Japan, he explained, left them without an assignment The air forces are establishing 32 temporary discharge bases to release 135,000 men and the serv ice forces are creating 113 centers to process 123,000 men. All of the centers will be in op eration by Sept 24, with the AAF scheduled to finish up its backlog within 42 days and the service forces In 35 days. After Jan. 1, discharges will be handled by the 26 regular centers. Between now and Christmas, Henry told the committee, the ar my 1 expects to release approxi mately 1,300,000 men with dis charges hitting a peak of 672,000 in January. GIO Returns to Lumber Mills At Klamath KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., Sept 13. HAV Striking CIO unionists agreed to end their strike in south ern Oregon lumber operations to day, leaving to a concilation agency settlement of grievances. The strike was called by the International Woodworkers . of America more than five weeks ago. About 2250 men left their jobs, demanding a union shop and improvecent of "intolerable condi tions.'? i After, AFL machinists refused to recognize the picket line yester day and today, the strikers voted willingness to end the strike, as requested by the west coast lum ber commission. They would re sume wprk under conditions exist ing when they walked out leaving to conciliation or "other means exclusive of economic force" set tlement of grievances. Radio-Active i 1 . 1 ' - - Land to be Held WASHINGTON Sept 13-CffV President Truman tightened gov ernment control today over pos sible sources of radio-active min eral substances which might be used in the production ot atomic energy. - ' He signed an executive order withdrawing from sale or other disposal all .public lands In the United States or Alaska which contain deposits of radio-active mineral substances. There ; are known deposits of uranium, primary source of ato mic energy. In Colorado and Utah, according to the bureau of mines, as well as In the Belgian Congo and Canada. ; M. -v Peorod to CKlaoud G-DIMOuSife" veir TO Japanese gov ernment today asked and was given the job of arrestinir its) own suspected war criminals but was expected to get results within two days. i. ,:- , .; 1 ' i- ; Otherwise, US. eighth army- headquarters Intimated, the Americans again will step in and corral the War-makers; Black Dragon jingos and prison camp tyrants who face court martial as war criminals. ; - The Japanese asked permission to act after Hideko Tojo,: the fallen war-time dictator, shot and seriously" wounded himself Tuesday when American troops came to arrest him at his home in a Tokyo su burb. . j ,;. !i - 1 I The request of the government obviously was made to 1 save "face," not only for those on the list ranging from highest ranking officials to prison camp guards but for the government itself. i There was also the possibility that the Japanese thought they -might be able to' head off a hara kiri epidemic among the accused. i The arrests will include chief cabinet Secretary Taketora Oga ta, accused of being a member of the Black Dragon society of superpatriots. The Japanese cabinet in spe rial session was wrestling with the problem of what to do with elements' within the government that may be unsavory to Mac Arthur. . - - Noise Parade To Herald WU Homecoming Willamette university's 1945 homecoming celebration will be touched off tonight with the for mal completion of all platoon signs' and a noise parade through downtown Salem. The noise pa rade is a renewal of traditional homecoming activity discontinued for the: duration of the war. Judging of the signs will offi cially start the celebration, and will take place tonight .at 8 o'clock. The celebration will con tinue all day Saturday with the weekly navy review at 11:30 ajn. on Winter st. in front of Lausanne halt This will be followed by a serpentine parade at 12:43 and an all-navy football game at 2 o'clock 1 on Sweetland field. ; The alumni reunion will take place in Chresto cottage oh the campus at f oCTp-followin g the football game. The festivities .will close-i the end of the costume ball to be held in the gymnasium at 9 o'clock Saturday night Masks and cos tume apparel will be made avail able to all alumni wishing to at tend the dance. All .buildings on the campus will be open. all day Saturday with exhibits arranged In various departments. The football game this year will be a regular game between two squads of navy men from the V-12 unit since inter-collegiate fqptball was not provided for this year at Willamette. Ad mission to the game will be free of charge, and all those interested In seeing a good football, game are enthusiastically invited. Canneries Ask i For Help Duiiiway New WestOPAHead WASHINGTON, Sept 1S-(AV Price j Administrator Chester Bowles today announced appoint ment of Ben Duniway as ad ministrator of OPA'a San lYan- dsco regional office. The OPA's San Francisco re gion covers California, Washing ton, Nevada, Arizona and north ern Idaho. Duniway, who for the past six months has served as an assist ant to ! Bowles, succeeds Charles R. Baird, who resigned to return to private industry. Before com ing to ! Washington he was re gional OPA attorney at San Fran cisco. He joined OPA in 1942. McMINNYILLE STOP ADDED McMINNVILIJE, Sept. 13 Transairways, a new airmail and express! company, has petitioned Washington, D. C, to add a stop here to its proposed Oregon ser vice, officials said today. ' Wake Commander Denws 'Send Us More Japs Request I By'Al Dopklng TOKYO, Sept 13.-vf)-Lt CoL James P. Devereux, commander of the heroic defense of Wake is land before It fell to an over whelming force of Japanese, re ported that American casualties in the fight were not great - .Members of an air evacuation group who visited him in a prison camp on Hokkaido island Tues day said Devereux told them:. ; , Of several groups of marines, we lost five officers and 41 men. Of five navy officers and 53 men, we lost three men, and as well as I recall, ot -approximately 1,200 civilian workers, we lost about 37" ; ;...;...-- The rescue party said Dever eux denied that a radio message - "send us more Japs' - - was sent from the island before it was overrun by. the enemy. There were recorts at the time that such a 'message had heen received at Pearl Harbor from the Wake gar rison: . . : ' .we did not send out such a message," he" wu quoted. " "We had all : and more Japs than we could handle right then. There were just too. many, ot them tor us to hold off any longer.1 One cf the rescue party, Sgt Al Martin , of Roanoke, Va, and Topeka, Kans, said Devereux told them, however, that he had to give the r cease fire" order three Ripens Crops Salem canneries issued i a clea for. more workers Thursdajafter two plants had turned dowg pro' duce earlier in the day 'due to lack of help to process it V, ;- Dr. Egbert S. Oliver, labor co ordinator for the Salem Canner's committee, said that the hot weath er has caused the fruit to ripen more rapidly and that both grow ers and canners will stand a loss unless more workers respond to the call for help. j j Women, especially housewives are vitally needed to process the boxes of prunes and peaches that are stacked on the loading docks of all the plants. No previous ex perience is necessary, Oliver said. Superintendent of schools Frank B. Bennett has stated that I high school students who wish .to help with the crops may work and will receive credit for that. time. He urged, however, that they register at the school if they anticipate working. : . 1 Carrier Docks With Vet Cargo SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 13-(ff) The United States navy's largest aircraft carrier, the veteran Sara toga, passed through the Golden Gate this, afternoon and docked at Alameda navy base -with the largest group of service men to arrive' on the west coast since the war ended. ' - '.!' It was the "Golden Gate to celebrate for 3710 navy, marine and army officers and men who have served many months in the Pacific. ' v - . h ' ' The men began cheering when they were still four miles out as the long Golden Gate bridge came into 'view through the' fog. j . 'Flip9 Cochran At AAF Station SANTA MONICA, Calif, Sept 13.-P)-CoL Philip G. Cochran, veteran of 80 combat missions; in North Africa and the Pacific and leader of the first air commando task force in Burma, is at the AAP .redistribution station here.' The army said there was no indication as to his next assign ment f '!.'..".! : : . ' Cot Cochran,' whose home Is tzt Erie, Pa, returned to the United States, in June after serving oa the plan staff of the first allied airborne army in Europe. - ' Weather San rrancisco Eucen Portland Seattle ... -j Max, 63 3 ; - T . 74 so 5T 81 A Min. Ralil 0 Willatnctte river IS ft rORCAST (from U. S. weather bu reau, McNarr - field, Salem): Some times before his men would mnt "Lni. nrna !- 1 S i