The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 21, 1945, Page 2, Image 2

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PAGE TWO
Ths STATOIA2L Salsa, Orn, Friday Marking. September 11. IMS
Records Reveal Top German
. Leaders Responsible in 1938
I Bloqd Jew-Baiting Program
By DANIEL DE LUCE
BERLIN, SepC 20.-C!P-Hidden records of the nari party
own highest secret tribunal T flatly assert-that th party's top
leadership n responsible for the bloody program of 1939.
' The Official documents recovered here disclosed, after seven
years, the black truth of the massacre of Jews.
v Reporting to Reichsmarshal Hermann Goering after the court
investigated the deaths of 100
Jews wantonly slain In a Novem
ber night of murder, rape, arson
and pillage. Judge Ludwig Schnei
dqr, who presided over most of the
program hearings,, wrote: 1 !
Public opinion to the last man
knows that political actions ! like
that of Nov. 9 are organized and
carried out by the party, whether
this is admitted or not" . ;
Oeebbela Speaks
He said Propaganda Minister
Paul Goebbels told a party leader
who telephoned him at 1 a.m. Nov.
10 about the killing of a Polish
Jew that there was "no cause for
excitement over the-death ef one
dead Jew since "in the next few
days there would be thousands.
."At this time, most of the deaths
could still have been- prevented
by an additional directive,"
Schneider said.
"Since this was not done, the
final result must nave been desir
ed" Ordered Desaonstratiana
The party leadership had Is-
r.
Eats Todayf (FrU
Bark Katieff
"Watktar DmUT i
Beb Creaky .
"Meet Miss Bebey Sex"
-Ct rreaj TSIL
Tcnorron!
ssasss "
V 1
it sw
niii-czacScsraVi
vrtiBt
Co - Featsre
A Kit That
Wni'Nerer
Get OI4!
DOUGLAS
FAIR
BANKS JR.
JaiMi Gayaor i
EiHie Bark
ftelnnd Young:
"Tto Yc23
la Heart"
otxns t:s rj.
NOW PLAYING f
M BSCS' Vi if 141
. 1 , I
'vmrjiiGGrj
Jlrewa
5:!';:.:.
sued orders for "spontaneous an
ti-Jewish demonstrations, using
the killing of a German diplomat
in Paris by a Jew as a pretext
Party members who committed
the excesses were carrying out
"the recognized will of the leader
ship," Schneider wrote, He add
ed: - .
"The responsibility for com
mand lies with those who com
mand, not with those who "carry
it out"
Records of the party court re
vealed that it investigated the
deaths of 104 Jews, of both sexes,
their ages ranging from 18, to 82.
Of the slayers, aU party mem
bers, 16 faced the court, sitting
behind closed doors at Munich.
Market Tops
8-Year Highs
NEW YORK, Sept 20. -(JP)-
Further strength of rails and se
lected industrial lifted the stock
market averages to another eight-
year peak today although many
leaders displayed cosidereble ris
ing antipathy.
A better than expected car load
ings summary revived the carriers
in the fourth house and heartened
steels, motors, rubbers, coppers,
air transports -and assarted blue
chips. Transfers totaled 1,500,000
shares compared with 1,690,000 the
day before.
Persistent hopes for wage settle
ments again aided bullish forces.
In addition, idle funds continued
to seek income payers and infla
tion psychology remained as an
anti-liquidating argument. !
The Associated Press 60-stock
composite was up .4 of a point
at 70.3, highest mark since April
22, 1937. The industrials attained
a top since Aug. 25, 1937.
31! Slated for f
Giroiiit Court i
Jury Service ;
Eighteen of the- SI persons
whose names were driwn- Thurs
day for Jury service Johiringf .the
October term of circuit court in
Marion county are homemakers.
Three are ; farmers. . - : ;
In the first category are: Lucy
M. Pel ley, Salem No. f ; Mary Mul
len, St Paul; Minta Boyer, Salem
No. 28; Leona A. Miller, Donald;
Helen B. Ficke, Saln Nov8; Hazel
M. Ktrk. Salem No. if; Alda Mur
phy, Salem No. 23; Goldie C Hart
ley, Englewood; Bertha, Loe, North
Silverton; Kathleen NiNer, West
WoodburnJ Daisy B. Tobin, Engle
wood; Maude E. Lipps, Salem No.
27; Katie Lind beck, Salem No "8;
Dorothy H. Wacken, iChemaWa;
Marguerite Berg, Salem No. 27;
Rose K. Bell. Staytoh; Lois E.
Koark, Wood burn; Mae L. Hill,
Salem No. 4. J
Farmers -on tte list are: Claude
C. Settlemier, East Woodburn;
Joseph A.Zielinski, Donald, and
Albert Lengren HayesVille.
Other names on the Jury list:
Charles AI: Epley, engineer, Sa
lem No. 26; Lee M. Unruh, print
er, Salem No. 9; Mildred Bynon,
stenographer, Salem No. 1; Edgar
Hamlin, cannery worker, Salem
No. 26; Cleto A. Talbett, order
clerk, Salem No. 20; William O.
Cooper, laborer, East Stayton;
David Korb. contractor,; Salem No.
I; Alfred D. Propp, clerk, Salem
No. 5; Leo N. Wagner, mill work
er, Mebema; William O. Hardy,
realtor, Salem No. 23. v
Occupation Troops
May Marry Germans
BERLIN, Sept. 20 -ijf)- Effec
tive Oct 1. allied occupation
troops including Americans may
marry Germans and be billeted
in German homes if their commanders-in-chief
approve, the al
lied control council announced to
day. - Whether Americans may marry
frauleins or live in German homes
will be up to Gen. Eisenhower.
He left for Frankfurt after the-j
meeting and it was not known
immediately whether be would
put a blanket rule on marriages
or whether he would decide upon
each Individual
MiUProduction
To Be Resume!d
KLAMATH FALLS, pre. Sept
flO -VTutt production at one
strike-bound mill and two logging
camps will be resumed Monday
while- negotiations between CIO
and management continue; union
officials said today. f ;
About 700 men will j return i to
the Pelican Bay Lumber company
mill, the Chikxjuin Lumber com
pany logging operation and the Big
Lakes Box; company camp. The
Chiloquin and Big Lakes mills and
two Pelican Bay . company camps
were not involved in the; strike.! f
Vernon Chase, CIO chief here,
reported an agreement reached , in
accordance V with a West - Coast
Lumber commission request that
work be- resumed while negotia
tions continue. Main onion de
mand has been for a closed shop.
is : U
Recruitment, Croup
In Session Today I
A meeting for the- nurse- re-1
cruitment committee of the Mar
ion county chapter, :: American i
Red Cross, has been called for to
day at 13:30 at the. Red Cross
rooms. Miss Selma Bilmer is
chairman of the committee.' -'
New home- nursing classes are
to be organized soon through the
Red Cross' chapter here; and.-all
Salem and Marion county women
planning - to take thia . work are
asked to; register! as soon' as pos
sible by. calling 0277, according
to Mrs. Louise Arneson, director
of nursing services for the Red
Cross. If sufficient number - of
women register, it is planned to
have morning, i afternoon, and
evening classes. - :- ". "
Silverton Man
Dies in Eugene
SILVERTON O. E. Sorensoni
81, longtime Silverton resident.
died Wednesday at the Sunset Lu
theran home in Eugene, where he)
had made his home since 1944.
Sorensoa was i born Aug. 18.
1664 at . Laurvik, -Norway, and
came to the United States in May,
1884, settling at Portland, ND. He
later moved to i Minnesota, and
then to Silverton in 1911, where
he married Julia Hansen on No
vember 23 of 'that year. Mrs. Sor
enson died in 1932. .
He lived on his Evans, Valley
farm until 1942, when hei moved
into-Silverton. In June 1044 he
went to Eugene. - . "fj "' '
Funeral services 'will ; be held
Sunday at 2 JO p. m. from the Im
manuel Lutheran church with the
Kev. S. L. Almlie ofQciating. In
terment will be in the Evans Val
ley cemetery under the direction
of the Ekman funeral home.
Scio Resident Dieal
From Heart Attack
, SCIO; Sept 20 Gamble Bryan
died here Thursday afternoon at
5:30 of a heart attack,' at the age
of 50 years. His death occurred
at the service station of Fred
Bryan, his brother, where he had
been employed for, ten years after
moving to Scio from Burns, Ore.
He is survived by his brother,
Fred Bryan, and by one sister,
Mrs. J. W. Hill of St Louis, Miss.
Funeral arrangements will be
made later, although services and
burial will be at Scio. ; .
Named for
Rose Society
Committees for the' new Salem
Reae society were I named by
President ,W. G. Krueger-at the
organization's meeting - Thursday
night".- j :iv:r:;n-'---
Harold Elbert .heads thJtpm-j
mittee on membership, with Mrs.
George Tlmm, R. A. Smith, "Mrs.
F. S. Huston and F. W. Lehman
aa committee members.. " A. L.
Lindbeck is chairman of the com
mittee on f publicity and ' promo
tion, working with ; "Mrs. John
Ramage, Knight Pearcy, - Mrs;
George W.'.Allmsf and Mrs A. M.
Fitzmaurice. - r
1 Program chairman is Mrs. C, A,1
KeUs, with Dr. Frank E. Brown,
Miss Nellie E. Schwa V Lee. Can
field and Margaret Hogg as com
mittee members. R. G. Warren
is chairman F of the i rose - show
committee,! of which Other mem
bers are Elizabeth Lord, George
W. Ailing, Edith Schryver and
Dr. K. H. Waters. 1 ,
Camp Adair. Officers
Tour Salem Industries
Fifty-one; Camp Adair army of
ficersfrom 41 states toured Sa
lem industrial establishments
Thursday under . auspices of the
chamber of commerce. MaJ. Ger
ald , Joines, director of', ground
forees training school, whose home
is in Ottumwa, la., and Lt Ed
ward Noe,j instructor,' from Val
entire. Neb, ! were In charge , of
the group.. jt -.- ' i-- r
Members; of the party brought
box luncheons, and the chamber
provided coffee and cake, and
set up tables in the organization
dining room to serve the group.
Now -- 2 Smash KM!
mitt
YVDNHEDeCABLD
CO-FEATURE
Salem High Students
Attend Assembly
All members of the associated
student body of Salem senior high
attende dthe first assembly of the
year Thursday forenoon conduct
ed by ASB president George Ad
ams. Adams pointed out the bene
fits of 100 per cent student par
ticipation and backing of school
sports and student activities.
Principal Harry Johnson ad
dressed the students concerning
their duties as citizens of Salem
high, while Dean of Girls Mabel
P. Robertson, . and Dean of Boys
Frank Neer, . welcomed the. new
and old students alike- in short
talks.'-, .
NiMrrz or hawahv
PEARL HARBOR, Sept' 20-(F)
Admiral Nimitz, accompanied by
members of his staff, arrived to
day from Guam to reestablish his
Pacific, fleet headQuarters. His
advanced headquarters at' Guam
was closed with his departure.
$46,727,100 in Bonds
Purchased in County I X
A toUl of $40,727,101 worth of
United States war bonds have
been sold in Marion county since
1941, E. C Sammons of Portland,
Oregon' war finance eommittee
chairman, announced Thursday,
Exclusive of those sold' in drives,
bond purchasers have bought
9,152JU worth of the E series
and $11,819,122 worth of aU issues.
In drives they have bought $11,
302.860 'worth of series E and $34,
907,970 j worth of all issues. jj
Biggest year in the non-drive
purchases was 1943, when $4,476,
300 worth, of bonds were sold to
the county. However, In drives
during 1944, more than $18,000,
000 worm were bought .here.
SINGArOKE RADIO OPEN' T
SAN v FRANCISCO, Sept 20-(iTV-Radio
Corporation of Ameri
ca resumed communications, be
tween here and Singapore at
noon today, District RCA Man
ager H. E- Austin, announced.
Austin said aU types of commer
cial and personal messages will
be accepted "provided they . are
written; in plain English onlyT
CHIMNEY TX PUT OUT -
Firemen were called to 245 Mar
ion st pt 8:43 Thursday evening
to extinguish a chimney J fire in a
two-story frame house. No ser
ious damage was-reported. , '
84ft - Ceatfsi
Dafly Freaa 1 r3t
IIou!
, O Jerees leaseea fer Taklag
A Doable Portion of
Hilarious Entertainment I
a " k - saaassssBSBk,
Ever Meet a : '-".'.O I
rtceoUed i I
Cheat? K) f
The Whole Family te a Shew.
- Meet the
Screen's L' . - I
Newest. f
Lever.
f p i t
Latest N ens I Atcsic .Bcab fcasagt f
Uow RrreaJcdr Geo. Wain wri-ht Iloiae! J .
Slarij Tcday!
Technioeler!
THAT BLONDE BOMBSHELL WHO SET THE
TERWnCTWENTIES ABLAZE
DARE- She outrode the boys from the rang ia the
DEVIL Wild West's wildest show. "
BEAUTY Am a Ziegfeld gixU she waa the toast of N.Y.
STAR e took over Hollywood hi the silent days
' as the glamour girl of the! pulse potmders.
QUEEN Of New Tort's night dub. ISha told off the'
- ' racketeers and made em like it.
- : ; . . . i " "- ' . -
SWEET- She loved with aU the- fierceness of her
HEART terrific personality a romanco that blazed
, '- across gangland.-! - Ix' . 7 -
. i -.it
f l ?
.'- -
w I - "
V-C-f'x .
g2sfl t" I The' Meat KxHting Xlll
Q I ; Herse Kaee Ever ; ' V t
.,' I TVtmtii ! V," X I
I .TWahbreds, - : U J
Pearl Harbor Ambassador
Claims 'Clear Conscience
TOKYO. Sept 20.-V-Tokyo's last .-ambassador .4o WashingtonJ
declared today military "fire eaters" struck Pearl Harbor without his
knowledge end he was unaware the Dembs already had fallen-when
he delivered Japan's note to Secretary of State JfOll on that fateful
Sunday; . n ; ;- . , .. ,- - T ''.".r
i "When X returned to the embassy I was informed of developments
oj siau memoers wno got 11 zrom
the American radio," Adm. Mick'
English; Joined .the ranks oCpronv
ists for the country's downfall: and
absolved' Emperor1, Hirbhitnr from
all tlt".rxvr-:.C
2 Menlnj
In Car Wreck
lired
isaburo Nomura sa?d in an i
view v , cupatan, have blamed 4he milHa
"I was" very embarrassed and
worried, but it was beyond my
powef to' prevent it War is de
plorable, but my conscience, may
I say, ielear .-j . 4
Worked te Aveid War 2 4 '
. The man who presented Japan's
reply to the American note for'
continued peace in the orient on
that pec 7, 1941, asserted he had
urged . his nation's leaders to. be
cautious and had worked to avoid
war. - ' ' ": 1 ' .
(Hull angrily told Nomura and
Japan's special envoy Saburo Kip
rusu that morning: In all of my
SO years of public service I' have
never seen at document that was
more crowded with infamous false
hoods and distortions on a scale
so huge that I never imagined until
today that any government on this
planet war capable of uttering
them.") '
No Deble May
"I didn't play any double play
in dealing , with Secretary Hull
said the gray-haired, tall retired
Nomura in an exclusive interview
at his bomb-refuge home near En
zan. 50 miles southwest of Tokyo.
"The. war waa against my wishes;
I knew America's great industrial
capacity and ability to produce,
but it was decided in Tokyo." ' .
The 87-year old retired admiral,
who often had. served his country
in the United States and. speaks
Brailey Brown. 2770 SW Mont-;
gomery drive, and Gilbert Plum,
233 SW 16th st, both of Portland,
were in the Salem General hos
pital Thursday night recovering
from head injuries received ear
lier in the morning, in an auto
mobile accident . s: ... -The
youths, both recently dis
charged from the service and en
route to Portland from their
California separation center, were
injured when their light conver
tible skidded, -struck a pole and
aonarently' turned over; twice.
Plum is said to be m - veteran ef
50 missions, oyer Germany.
Horoital attendants said their
condition waa good.
p. .. - , t
LINEN CONTKOL IJTTED,
WASHINGTON, Sept. 20JfV
Hotels, restaurants, linen rental
services . and similar establish
ments now may purchase fabric
for uniforms, table covers and
napkins, without obtaining pri
orities, WPB announced today.
Late Rally in
Wheat Boosts
rram
et
ririCAGO.' Sent 20-MVWheat
futures gained on late rallies -to--
day after prom-taking nad cut.
priees around e cent a bushel in
nrir dealings. 1 Rye and oats ad-
yansftefr jrariy aetbackr i to
close mixea.- t&cxl. w nec-
uonauy. iowec. "
Main factors in the early wheat
AOS5C yiyuirmiin,, ua
other' selling-' ipfluenced- by.- the
announcement; that iCanada. waa
Offering wheat. vfor export ;at
prices below'domestlc-levels. ;v
Jtate bullish influences; , bow
ever, included . report; that Ar
gentina ' had " temporarily sus
pended 'exports of flOOOO bu
shels of wheat to England and
Brazil - due to transportation
khortaeesl and that 'i. China was
-asking the UNRRA for allocation
of $943,000,000 - for relief. ; J t
: Wheat closed unchanged to 14
higher than the previous finish,
September $1.70s-; corn was
down H to Ya Decemberl-f.ieM-,
oaU were higher to H
lower, September rye was
down to H'up, September
-1354. and barley waa un
changed to Ya lower September
V S TO CITE SUITS TO CHINA
CHUNGKING, SepU s 20-(P)-A
gift of eight U. S. warships to the
Chinese navy is expected to ar
rive in Chinese waters within six
weeks. Rear Admiral Tong Shih
Hai said today. The. gift consuts
of four destroyers and four sub
marine chasers. All will be man
ned by Chinese crews trained la
the United States. - -
TUO IIGIIEY-SAVHIG UK
1 6a real tl fit Criip
TJEST SflLEI
H XSa Corft al Cte Uaaareaa '
SfllEII
0p:n Till 7:33P. II. Every Day Exccpl Tuesday
' Prices Qtzi Friday, Salcrday nsd Snrday
No LimiU!
No Points
i : Limit, one ease - - No points - j
Country Kiat. Packedby Greca Giant
24 No. 2 Cans "
Canned - - No Point
'i -i
m
(UP
Rancho Tomato - No Limit
4. Cans .
I Canned - - No Poiatsj '
'- v. ,
SUto Fair -1 Yellow CUna; j '
No, 2Yt Cast ' ' ' . '.
Canned - - No Points
Tokaj
1
OS
Fireciilcf
.uVBox
Carton
Saving Center's Grand X'
3X2XXX-C '
WHOLE OR CUT-UP '-;X:;:- .i . : i -X. -.-."V::- '.' . - ' v
zrl'. r Touajr Fryers : Yl J 0 I; -, i-J
i. ; sr. roasters . - rif,-S
;r v ' L 'U libDo . , - .
. .