WE 7rfrn i I- ' ' i !! HHP PfarafTTO Premier HJlDIIDCB Suspected Ex-Japan One July day in 1944 a man light of build sat -backstage at the Chicaso coliseum munching a hot dog sandwich and drinking from a bottle of Coca Cola Then tome men rushed up and told Mm he .was ; wanted downstage, Hirohitofs Riglrt Hand Man on List, 7 Otlied Named TOKYO. Dec. 6 General j MacArthur today ordered "the ar rest of Prince Furnimaro Konoye; that he had been nominated vice three . times ' premier ' of Japan; president of the United States. on Marquis Koichi Kjido, who was th democratic ticket .Thus did lEmDeror Hironitb's right nana Harry Truman learn that he was put in line of succession to the presidency. . One April .day in 1945 news was flashed to the senate cham ber .that Franklin D. Roosevelt had died suddenly .at Warm 'Springs and Harry S. Truman realized, that the presidency which man throughout tne war. ana seven others as war criminal sus pects. ' Reaching into we highest cir cles, the supreme auUed comman der named as the other aeven wanted: Vice Adm. Takiio Godo, who was unofficial envcjy to Germany he had not sought and from I to present Japan's, side ox tne whose duties he shrank had been China incident,-also former cam thrust upon him. Now in the midst of world con fusion and domestic contention Harry Truman must wonder why he ever let himself be induced to leave the comfortable, clubby atmosphere of the United States senate to endure the turmoil -of the White House. A feeling of bafflement - must - have gripped Mm when Philip Murray, presi dent .of the steelworkers' union; CIO, accused the administration Of "completely Ignoring human rights In his proposal for a fact finding body in industrial dis putes, and asserted that the de sign of the president's recommen dation is "to i weaken and ulti mately destroy labor union or ganization.". Only a few weeks ago the employer! group had gnarled (Continued on editorial !!! - -'ii--!: V Sir 1 ' V - i - VV ' i-i V "."V r;" U 1 - , . . V POUDESD NTNETY-FIFTH YEAH 12 PAGES ! 1 5 i Solenu Orecjon, Thursday Morning. December 8. 1945 Price -5c No. 118 Reuther Tola! W ar on GlOjl GM. to Resume Shouts Of G.-MI i I- s net member. Shigeo Odate, lohg.time polit ico-economist, f Taketora Ogata, !vice president of the Tokyo newspaper Asahi and a foremost Japanese Journalist. Viscount Masatoshi Okochi, in dustrialist " . Lt Gen. Hiroshl Oshima who had been Japanese ambassador to Berlin since 193j and arrived In Japan only today. 1 Count Tadamasu Sakal, mem ber of the house of peers. Yarichiro Suma, long time -dip- lnmfit: formerly councillor of the Japanese embassy in Washington. Konoye, who was premier at the time of the China Incident and held the post ithe last time lust before Pearl Harbor, when he was succeeded by Hideki Tojo, has teen one of the most talked about men in poat-war Japan. Recently he had been reported J BUTFALd, N. Ded. ! K-The United Automobile Work ers (CIO) "is deterrxiined to fight a total war" in. its struggle with Geheral Motors Corp.' over a 30 per cent wage increase, Walter V. Reuther, vice: president of the UAW-CIQ, declared tonight. ' jM . J'J - . - I . . ' 'r I i I Thej struggle between "the! corporation and. the UAW-CIO "is just fundamental as the things for .which we fought on the battlefields of the war," Reuther told a mass meeting of Buffalo area General Motors strikers.' "We pelieve Jn the four free doms, we subscribe to the prin ciples' ot the Atlantic charter, but let's take the slogan out of . the guilded Iframes and make them live in Buffalo and Detroit where the people Jive," he asserted, v 1 Before entering the meeting, Reuther! told a reporter "General y0 s0 dmim COPD duppi Party is riTirl . rrPrtllPrP active in revision o the constitu-- Draws Pleas to Buy Scries E '. tion and had asserted he was do ing the work at the request of MacArthur, although MacArthur denied this. He is la member of the Japanese royal ifamily, Kido, who held the recently it - Arrfcl nt Ttuttr'm Tavern aboUshed post .of keeper of "the ,-r. -if miffffotism sheer Privy seal, was Emperor Hiro- . k. --ii. Virtnt-r hito's closest adviser and had ' ' - - - J . . . ,.H TXT-- bond,1tiTfr-a gtyxl many series 2 , T E Durchasei may be anticipated miers as iojo. In Salem during the remainder of the week. That the magnetic nu cleus Is here was proved by bond owners who filled the Elsinore theatre at a Victory loan premiere last night to hear Archie misuse .the English language, listen to and watch Bing Crosby, Dorothy. la rnour and many other stars strut -their stuff. The picture itself may not cause any Salem' resident to put aside In bonds for a few years the money earmarked to "redese crate" the house. But there will be those who will want to cast vote for one of the lovely young cueen candidates Introduced by Sidney Stevens from the stage of the theatre. Some will buy be cause of the eloquent plea of Gene Vandeneynde, merchant who ureed Salem to Join the parade f other Marion county cities over the top in E bond purchases, sug gesting the choice of security rath' r than foolish expenditure. Storm Damage to Highways Light Tuesday afternoon's wind and rain storm resulted in little dam age to Oregon highways, R. H Baldock. state highway -engineer, reported here Wednesday. A few roads were closed temporarily be cause of fallen trees; These roads were cleared within a few "hours Seven Inches of snow fell in some of tne mountain cusiricis Tuesday night and at Santiam Junction Jt was still snowing Wed nesday morning. Two inches of new snow was reported at govern ment camp on the Wapanitia cut off.; It was snowing hard at Odell lake with four inches of new snow. Klamath Falls aL reported some n,ur mutf Light rains were general over western Oregon Wednesday. raws ement to 1 i i k Ballots To Iiist Party Backing 4 S " Platform i Farrell Rules' on Entries Label as Field Grows j" 1 Motors officials have agreed there I ! 4T ! i WARHtwriTrw rvv. s us will belno strings ! attached this . Party endorsement for first dis- U MMSoaru. time" when neeotiatiOns between trict: congressional candidates be- I - . .. 1 nnn - -..-V tne comnany ana tne u aw -wiu i uui-suugm vwiu -vj-aj are resumed in Detroit tomorrow.' with announcement by Secretary Negotiations Start Today I candidates holding such approval DETROIT, Dec. I 6.-(y?)-Hdpes can havei their party designated for an early peace in the auto on the January 11 special election industry! increased tenight as Gen- ballot. eral Motors corporation and ither Others on the ballot can run United Auto Workers agreed to f only as Independents, and all will ByD. Harold Oliver day approved a mid-term declara tion "of party principles calling for "open diplomacy at home, and abroad" and for fulfilling United Nations pledges to .small nations. The 1000 word statement of aims and purposes" designed to supplement the party platfortn of 1944 in preparation for the ; 1948 rSr idM reopen negotiations hile a union be so regarded, legally despite the congressional elections, ! rejected X-ZZZL-JlJT Uair-TaK! fm Wa. f them "great power domination of the world. On the? subject of labor J it as serted collective bargaining con tracts should be binding on both sides. spokesman for Chrysler corpora tion workers ruled i out possibili ties of an early strike there, r ! -The surprise resumption of GM- UAW negotiations was announced at Pittsburgh by Philip Murray, nn. wa. : mari-i president of the CIO, after a sec- by; the hbuse. party members in the policy declaration - as drifted by a seven man subcommittee. This was: .to eliminate a clause which said: , " n I I 1 "No organization of, capita) or labor should be permitted, direct ly or Indirectly, to use itsfunds for any political party or candi date;" A member of the drafting group asserted that "Us elimina tion -was' "not-a bid for support of the CIO-PAC." U S In addition to foreign relations and labor planks, the statement urged a $trong national defense supported by. science, industry, re serves and equipment tatives and officials Of the striking UAW union. party label for two- ot them. . At' least 'our republicans: . and two democrats appeared definite ly in the. race today. The former include Eugene Marsh, speaker of the Oregon house of representatives, McMinn- ville; Walter Norblad, former state, representative and Astoria attorney;! pan Harmon, Newberg Chelan's Shore i Sees Saddened Birthday Party CHELAN; Wash; -Dec. 5.-&n On the. cold shore of Lake Che lan tonight as darkness fell Roger Hale and his wife knelt beside a gaily decorated birth day cake and Mrs. Hale slowly touched a match to each of its seven candles. ! ! ' -'' - .The few Who had lingered. after memorial services for the 16 persons drowned when a school bus plunged into the lake saw, decorating 'the cake's ic- l.ing, the message "Stewart 7." The -Hale's two sons were among the victims. Douglas was 8. Stewart would have been. 7 today. ; ; " Mr. and Mrs. Hale, as the last candle was lighted, began to sing "Happy Birthday to You." Their voices could get only part way through the song and when they could not con tinue they rose and - slowly walked from the tiny circle of light ! - - . V. mm IS ir d ft S s Ih ( 4d ' Kepay ' - - ? -- i i Queen Entries a fi,Ev.nn, iat,r iNnrman Mak. automobile dealer who lost to the thews, 'director of i the UAW ite Rept James W. Mott -in the Chrysler; division, said after ' w vow, ana inme wnn, m- meeting pf -450 Chrysler local pres- "Ulurai &mTr. idents and stewards that Chrysler "u -:u wnrkon wftrt without a rati. I Speed Drive As End N tract foi three months if neces sary." - I . - -. ; . U ' ine aemocrais . mciuae ; jaruce vi I tttv"v - Jack Bain, state representative, thi 100 ono totals. . . . U ears The Marlon County queen con test in the Victory: Loan drive be- NEW YORK, Thursday, '. DecV. 6P-Tht New jYork Herald Tribune, in a dispatch front Washington, said today that the United States and. Great Britain had agreed on the terms of a $3,750,000,000 credit 'to' the United Kingdom for reconstruction purposes, and an additional $650,000,000 for surplus property and lend-lease settlements. - ; - The paper said forma) signature by representatives of the two governments was jjexpeeted today. - ' ' " - L7) N D O N, Thursdiy, Dec! 6w-(P-London morning newspapers said today that pe United States and Great Britain had concluded negotiations fo a loan of $4,400,000,000 to England. The Laborite Daily Herald,! in reporting that, an agreement Ijad been reached in Washington ion the loan, said repayment of the loan will be over a 50-year period starting from 1948, but no inter est will be payable for the first five years. j' ' During the remaining period, the Herald said, the rate of in terest will be two per cent, or about $$8,000,000 for the first 7eTh Dauy Sketch, the Daily Mail and the News Chronicle also published, special dispatches from Washington and New York stating that the loan, agreement had been reached and that formal an- 1 State Tblice Off iccrj j To Return From Army Col. Harold G. (Fod) ; Maison, 315 Belleyue st, who resigned his position as assistant superintend ent of state police five years! ago to enlist in the army ground forces, will revert to inactive status Feb. 23, 1945, it was announced ; Wed nesday at Ft Lewis. ! I Maison swill return to the state police in a capacity not yet made public, Supt Charles P. Pray said. Hitler Raving Madman in Final Hours. Eyewitness Reports OBERURSHs Germany, Dec. 5 (ff)-, A graphic eye-witness ac count of Adolf Hitler's last hours today pictured the fuehrer as a raving madman, alternately re hearsing suicide and "directing" a phantom rescue army which bad Jbeen wiped out days before. , The dramatic description, often bordering on comic opera, was given to U. S. army investigators by Capt Hanna Reitsch, German avlatrix who flew the last nazi clane out of Berlin, and was re leased with the comment that it was "probably as accurate" an account, as will be obtained. Her Animal Cradtcrs By WARREN GOODRICH - dUo$ stop lamp- i-.-crouni-you'r making McVay's Orderly! Would Testify on Officer's Behalf U ASTOftlA, Ore., Dec. 5.-JPy-k marine who survived the Indian apolis sinking said today orders directing abandonment of the cruiser were given by word of mouth because the first blast on the doomed ship severed communi cation lines. :1 I Capt Charles B. McVay 3d, now on trial by court martial, was said by PFC Max M. Hughes, 31, Weather Salua Eufien i Portland Max. 4S 4S J4S ', 90 58 i i1 I I Min. Rain 1:42 i I M I 41-1 ! J n.48 ! i M ... f Clackamas, county. Other Possibles Other InameS also are : being mentioned. Meetings thus far scheduled in elude; j - Saturday, December 8, Salem: Republican, first congressional district committeemen, basement Marion hotel, 1:30 p.m. Monday,' December 10, Lake Grove school: Assembly to nomi nate Conn, 8 p.m. Friday, December 14, McMinn ville: 1 Assembly to nominate Marsh, evening. jumped past the $100,000 totals, and a new leader was listed to start out today. Faye Larkins, Salem lions club 1 candidate, holds first place this morning, $127,150; in E bonds to Victory Loan bond sales In Marlon eeonty to date: Total, all Issues, $2,192, 193.75 out of a quota of $2, 690,000. Series E, $823,695.25 of a quota of 11,150,000. places The Sketch said the loan "will ease Britain's winter" and termed the money a "Magna Carta for world trade." - The Daily Mail said 'go has been given to world trade by the great deal. ; j The Mail said the long and de tailed document listing the terms of the loan, included a provision that Britain work towards a re duction of the sterling debt and dissolution of the dollar pool. An other provision, the Mail said, was that Britain join with the United States in a long-range Grants Pass, to be without blame DemocJftic c?f, chairmen. Jt... Uirh wWiiiak MoV'.!nr!priv h would Forplaces on the ballot, candi like to testify in the captain's be- dates mu eith endorsed at half, declaring that he was on an assembiyof 250 rmi the bridge when McVay ave the fOM 0T, rable abandon hip order. her credit She replabes Betty Lou Kavser. Salem Kiwanis club can- Saturday, December 15, Salem: didate, for the time being, Miss plan to reduce tariffs and elinji- Kayser having held first place I nate quotas and restrictions on through Wednesday. I world trade. Joan WoleotL snonsnred hv Mil rfr . In vrnnri nlflrft thl FOLIO LAStS KJUTUKAUJ morning,' $112,150 in bonds being PORTLAND, Dec. 5 To hr crnro ' U new cases OI mianuie puiujaw In third place ! is Miss Kayser and two or cipmnena were re- story was told today through an American Interrogator. The blonde 33-year-old. pilot said Hitler and Martin Bormann, his missing deputy, had joined In a suicide pact a few hours before the 'fall of Berlin, but said she had left upon the fuehrer's orders before the suicides were carried out S Tracing Hitler's actions as he and a little group of associates huddled in a bunker under the reichschancellery while the . Rus sians closed it she said the fueh rer,; raving and ranting, repeat edly berated Hermann Goering, Heinrich Himmler and other nazi leaders as traitors who deserted him in an attempt to save their necks. - j ,' As the intensity of the Russian artillery barrage increased, Capt Reitsch said; the shaking fuehrer, on the Verge of. collapse, called repeated 'suicide rehearsals while special SS (elite guagd) men, charged with destroying the bod ies, stood by. Until the last however, she said. Hitler pinned his hopes on the arrival of an army, . com- mahed by a General ' Wenck, which he; believed was driving up from the south to rescue him. The army, she learned later, had al ready been destroyed by the Rus sians. " S " 1 "He was the picture of a man running almost blindly from wall to wall m his last retreat waving papers that fluttered like leaves in his nervous twitching hands, or sitting stooped 'and crumpled before his table to represent his non-existent armies like a child playing at war."-. ScatUe San Franeiseo vrnismttc river 5 9 ft. FORECAST (from U.S. weather bu reau. McNary field. Salem): Mostly cloudy today wna occasional rain tti4j Matinn organization, hewers. Highest temperature near S3 uruiea riauons organization. URGE UNO SITE IN U.S. LONDON, Dec. 5--The La-f tin American delegates to the United Nations preparatory com4 mission agreed unanimously ; to day to vote for the United States! as a - permanent site for the tions signed by 3600 or more. Deadline for filing by both meth ods is December 31. 4 i i The republicans. Saturday 'are expected to provide party en dorsement j f o r one candidate. Democrats the following weekend may endorse a candidate or call a district assembly for such pur pose. '!"'...' i , ! I- with $110,250; followed closely by Ported In the past week, the state FUth Greenlee, ttatehouse condi- DOara OI neaiur saia waay. date, who holds fourth place with $107,500; Leona Tingelstad, Holly wood Lions club candidate, in fifth place with $100,800 in bonds. Beulah Lott Salon Junior cham ber of commerce J candidate, is in sixth place with $25,450 in bonds. Hurlev Names 'Disloyal' Men Ih! State Dept. WASHINGTON. Dec." 5 -Uft Showy-haired Patrick JL Hurley, his voice flaring with anger, 'as serted today that two .career dip lomats who favored "collapse' of. the present government of (China -bad been given Vital assignments with j. Gen. 1 Douglas MacArthur after jHurley sent them irom the embassy at Chungking." - v j . r. ' Also, in the course of two and a .half hours of impassioned tes timony before the senate foreign relations committee, Hurley j made these! other major assertions: . That Britain was opposing United States policy for the uni fication of China at the very mo ment that Maj. Gen. Hurley, then ambassador at Chungking,: was trying hardest to negotiate an agreement between the Chinese communists ' and Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek. . j That some of the career, men in : China supported an Imperial istic bloc of nations. j He named five men as having been 'disloyal" to him. They in cluded the two now serving with. MacArthur.' These two are George Atcheson, jr, who was counselor of embassy in Chungking and is now diplomatic advisor to Mac Arthur, and John S. Service who was second secretary in Chung- I king and is now with Aacheson on MacArthur's staff. ; ' Gerow Takes Responsibility For Tiey Bote Tffftite Hirohito Addresses Them in House of Peers nnni ' v-:$ a-: i 1 r ----- , 't 1 ? " 1 t ! r, . i . i. - " : ii v; 1. -:- -; -4 1 By William T. Peacock ! WASHINGTON. Nov. 5. WV-Lt Gen. Leonard T. Gerow, brushing aside a suggestion that "higher ups" might share it assumed full responsibility today for any war department failure to send addi tional warnings) to Pearl Harbor before the Japanese attack. . j I In a dramatic moment of the Pearl Harbor Inquiry, the tanned Officer solemnly told the senate house committee: : .. ' - j X "If there is any war department responsibility for failure to send additional warnings to General Short, it must fall on the wax plans division and as chief of the division at the time, I accept the responsibility. ' I S William D. Mitchell, committee counsel, suggested that the reply of Lt Gen. Walter C Short, com mander at Hawaii, to a warning from Washington "went higher! but Gerow Interposed. j 4 It was his job, Gerow said, to check operations messages from overseas station and he had 4$ officers to help him. He woul4 take the responsibility. I ; These other major points wer developed from GeroVs testimonj or documents introduced while he was in the witness chair: ? I L The army and navy had been at odds since February, 1941, ovet proposals for attaining more unity of command at frontier positions; such as Hawaii. After Pearl Harl bor, it was decided that the navy should have the top post in Hal waiL . .'-v-,; - r : - .i - - tavta rU Kirt,n. 41. i..mm tmi In Out ITanM Af Peers. The Slcure Is one or tne .very I x. oerow saia ne aeieiea xrooi . their heads se they aren't looking at his royal higbiiess). Emperor few of its kind ever V reaca una eewiry. vat ntrrynm . m ta a haoeriai reneriot at the eBeninc aeion at the I Statesman! i " -'1' ' a reference to precautions against Lack of Added Warnings sabotage because he wanted the message "interpreted as warning only of an attack from without Separate warnings against sabo tage were sent by Miles and the air corps. . . i A- brisk-spoken witness, ' Gerow related that months before; the Japanese attack of Dee. 7, 1941, military conversations, were held with the British here in Washing ton,! with the British and Dutch in Singapore, and with the Ca nadians here. ' ' J 1 The purpose' was to determine what would be the. best disposi tion and use of each nation's arm ed forces in event the United . States should become involved in war, Gerow said, but "no political commitment' was implied. - j " ' i J BES PACOON SlRy BUT MY ! MFE'TCXD ME TO ASK YOU; PI COULD HAVE MY SALARY M AtVAWCE-SHEOMLYAS TlJ SH0PPIN6 1 I 1 1 T DAYS UMTtL UW CHRISTMAS