France Explains Her Capitulation to Japan-zer Demands In Indo-China as a "Protective" Measure, or, to State it Factually, She "Made a Virtue of Necessity." SHOWDOWN THE WEATHER By U. 8. Weather Bureaa OFair tonight and Friday, with little change In temperature. See page 4 for statistics. It appears to be nearlng In the) Pacific as Japan launches a so called ''protective" , campaign, . threatening Singapore .and the Dutch East Indies. Involvement of the U. S. would be Inevitable) In ocean freedom were affected. Keep up with NEWS-REVIEW! news. v i VOL. XL VI NO. 92 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW ROSEBURG. OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1941. VOL. XXIX NO. 290 OF THE EVENING NEWS fMl mum ilJU fHt D0UGLAS"COUNTY QA1Y ' WE ?3 Former Coi f ressman Hawley Dies House Leader Under Three Presidents Early Day Educator of Douglas, Aided Roseburg , To Obtain Vers' Facility SALEM, July 24(AP) For mer U. S. Rep. Willis C. Hawley, 77, nationally noted as the co- ; author of the Smoot-Hawley tar iff, died at his home here today. Hawley, a republican, repre sented the first Oregon congres-' sional district from 1906 to 1934,- when he was defeated by Rep. James W. Mott. Hawley, chairman of the pow erful house appropriations com - mittee for many years, was one of the most influential congres sional leaders during the Hard ing, Coolidge and Hoover administrations.- He was born in Benton county, Oregon, May 5, 1864, attending public schools and was graduat ed from Willamette university, of which he later was president for several years. He also served several years on the faculty of the old Drain State Normal school. He was a member for 30 years of the executive hoard of the Woodmen o the World, repre- sentlng the Pacific states. Q .Two sons, Cecil and Kenneth, survive. Hawley's father, S. R. Hawley, came to Oregon in 1847 and his mother, Emma Noble Hawley, in 1848. He was born on a dona tion land claim at the old Belk nap settlement near Monroe. He received five degrees from Willamette university and was president of the school from 1893 to 1902, after serving as principal of the old Umpqua academy at Wilbur from 1884 to 1886 and president of the old state normal school at Drain from 1888 to 1891. Hawley married Miss Anna Martha Geisendorfer of Albany in 1885. Mrs. Hawley and their daughter, Mrs. Iras Alma Tour telott, died several years ago. Ex-Congressman Hawley had (Continued on page 3) In the Day's News uy FRANK JENKINS PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT asks congress today (Mon day) to authorize extension of the one-year period of active service in the army for selec tees, national guardsmen and re servists. . . "Unless the extension is grant ed," lie saids, "the nation will be taking a grave risk and disin tegration of the army will be un der way within two months." DY disintegration he means O that within two months the meyear period of training for the men first selected will expire and thereafter at regular Inter vals these one-year-trained men will be leaving the army to be replaced by raw draftees. As a result, we shall have an army composed chiefly of un trained recruits. IT would be little short of mur- der to send an army so inade quately trained into action against Hitler's veteran armies. Hence the grave national risk mentioned by the president. rPHIS situation ought to have been foreseen a year ago when we were enacting the selec tive service law. Doubtless it was foreseen by all army lead- W But we were then getting Into the chilly waters of war by the!terday at the home of her par Drocess of sticking in one toe and 'cnts, Mr. and Mrs. Howard telling ourselves it would never be necessary to get in all over. (Continued on page 4) Ex-Lawmak f Of OregonTasses W y Death came at 77 today to Hon. Willis C. Hawley, above, who represented Oregon In congress for 28 years and at tained national renown for his role in tariff legislation. Rose burg gratefully remembers him chiefly for his Influential work in securing for the city the na tional veterans facility. Heat Wave Perils Middlewest Crops By the Associated Press Summer arrived belatedly In the midwest and mountain re gions yesterday and shoved tem peratures above the 100-degree mark as far west at Utah where a 67-year-old heat record was equalled. More of the same kind of weather was forecast for much of the area with no relief fore cast before Saturday. One death and numerous heat prostrations resulted and searing winds threatened crops in the corn belt. The death of four-month-old Patricia Marie Thome was at tributed to the heat at Kansas City. The mercury rose to 103 degrees there, highest this year to date. Lowest temperature there in the 24 hours was 81. Four other Kansas Citlans were overcome and heat victims also were reported at Emporia, Kas., and Joplin, Mo. Huron, S. D., sweltered under a 108-degree blast. Topeka, Kas., had 106 and Green River, Utah, 105. Salt Lake City's 102 degrees was the warmest July 23 since 1874. Other high temperatures in cluded Omaha 101, Des Moines 103, Minneapolis 100, Tulsa 100, Sioux City 100 and Denver 96. Mandamus Writ Issued On Textbook Referendum SALEM, July 24. (API Sec retary of State Snell is required, on a writ of mandamus issued in circuit court yesterday, to show cause on August 5 why he should not file referendum petitions against the 1941 legislature's free textbook bill. The writ was obtained by Floyd D. Moore, Portland, secre tary of the organization which sought to institute the referen dum against the bill providing free textbooks for private and parochial schools. On the advice of Attorney General Van Winkle, Snell re cently refused to file the refer endum petitions. Van Winkle saM an insufficient number wore In proper lorni. Boy Playing With Pistol Kills His Sister LEBANON, July 24. (AP) An accidental pistol shot killed 9-year-old Ruth Miller here yes- Miller. The .22 caliber pistol was fir ed by her brother, Dale, 12, with whom she luJ been playing. BIGGEST HISTORY More Than VA Billion Asked For Defense Proposed New Schedules Will Make Corporations, Individuals Dig Deeper WASHINGTON, July 24 (AP) A $3,529,200,000 tax bill biggest in the (nation's history and de signed to make both individuals and corporations dig deeper than ever to help finance the defense consideration today after ap proval by the ways and means committee. Culminating three months of work, the committee stamped Its final approval on the measure last night after a number of last minute changes, among them incusion of unprecedented levies on radio broadcasts and bill boards, i New surtaxes on, Individual net incomes starting fit five per cent on the first dollar of taxable income and ranging up to the present maximum of 75 per cent on Incomes over $5,000,000 would virtually treble the payments of persons in the lower and middle brackets. For instance, a married man with two children and $3, 000 of net income who now pays no tax would pay $11 Under the proposed levies. A man with the same number of dependents and a $5,000 net Income who now pays $74.80 would pay $202.40 under the new schedule. Candy, Gum Excluded. The committee struck out pro posed excise taxes on candy and chewing gum, which would have yielded $18,200,000, and taxes on electric signs and cutlery. The latter would have produced about $6,000,000. Another change provided for a slight additional boost in estate (Continued on page 6) Sen. McNary Announces Candidacy for New Term PORTLAND, Ore., July 24. (AP) Senator Charles L. Mc Nary, minority leader and repub lican vice-presidential candidate in 1940, announced here today he would ask Oregon voters to re turn him to' the senate for an other term in 1942. . Speaking of the foreign situa tion, McNary said he still was op posed to sending American troops outside America and that he saw "nothing at present to indicate our participation in the world con flict ... a little calmness now Is worth a whole lot more than flam ing words." More than 90 per cent of the draftees would "relnlist in event of an outright emergency," he said. "I have great confidence in the patriotism of the boys . . . but we said they could go home at the end of their training period and I stand on that pledge." Rural, Star Route Carriers Will Collect Aluminum SALEM, July 24. (AP) The postoffice department agreed to day to a request by the Oregon civilian defense council that star and rural mail carriers be per mitted to pick up scrap aluminum on their mail routes. Jerrold Owen, state civilian de fense coordinator, said the car riers would collect the aluminum on designated days. , Owen said he had received sev eral reports that boys are collect ing aluminum scrap and are sell ing it to second-hand dealers. He warned these dealers, and said that the only boys authorized to collect scrap are boy scouts and members of 4-H clubs. TAX BILL It U.S. OFFERED TO HOUSE New Outlay Of 8 Billion Asked For Army, Navy WASHINGTON, J u ly 24. (AP) A new $8,063,238,478 out lay for the army, navy and marl time commission, including funds to step up merchant ship con struction to two vessels daily by early next year, was recommend ed to the house today by its ap propriations committee. Of the total, $4,760,203,813 would go to the army to provide equipment and maintenance for a land force of 1,727,000 men 309,000 more than present strength plus critical items for a 3,000,000-man army. The sum proposed for the army would swell to a record high of $15, 328,171,132 the funds made avail able to it in the present fiscal year which opened July 1. The committee recommended $1,698,650,000 in cash and con tractual authority for the mari time commission to permit con- stimction of 541 cargo vessels and acquisition of 350 others to meet a serious ship shortage created at least In part by the lend-lease program. Maritime commission officials told the committee that 100 American merchant ships have been or will shortly be with drawn from domestic service and chartered to Britain for the haz ardous Red sea service. Already 2,300,000 tons of ship ping .. have been transferred to the lend-lease traffic in the north Atlantic, they reported. An encouraging note in Ihe picture, the committee said, was testimony by the maritime com mission that deliveries on its new ship construction were being maue at the rate of two vessels a week and would be up to one a day by November and to two daily by January or February. I SAW By Paul ONE of Douglas county's fine diversified farms that owned by H. F. Wells In, Scott Valley, sev eral miles southeast of Yoncalla, and operated by him (and his wife) and their two sons, George and Lester. The farm consists of 360 acres, lying chiefly in the valley but rising at each side to the low ranges of hills forming its boun daries to the north and south. A series of seven springs gush from the hills forming the south line, irrigating and sub-irrigating much of the fine land below Its slope. In the picture accompanying this article, snanped from the site of the main farm house, may be seen, In the Immediate fore ground, a portion of a 20-acre planting of dill; Just beyond, grain hay In the shock; then to the right, part of a 30-acre field f -ifMiTilitrn m-t Wheeler Uses Post Cards In Peace Drive Troops Urged to Oppose War Entry; Stimson Sees "Treason" in Campaign WASHINGTON, July 24 (AP) Secretary of War Stimson said today that Senator Wheeler (D., Mont.) had mailed post cards to army officers and men urging them to oppose American entry into the European war. "I think this comes very near the line of subversive activities against the United States, If not treason," Stimson told a press conference. The cards went out postage free. Stimson said, under the frank of the western senator. A million of the cards had been printed in the government print ing' office, Stimson said, but were labeled "not printed at govern ment expense." Wheeler told reporters that he had sent out approximately 1,000,- 000 cards to "a cross section of, citizens" all over the country "In an effort to hold the president to his pledge to keep this country out of war." Some of the card "naturally reached officers and men in the army," the Montanan continued, "but they were not directed pri marily to that group. "I don't think that Is subver sive to quote the president of the United States or any of the other men quoted on the card," Wheeler added. Hits Back at Stimson. As to Stlmson's statement about (Continued on page 6) Jenkins NewB-rtoview rnoio and rcnftravlnff. of mint, 20 acres of which are on almost bottomless beaverdam land; the small building in the middle distance houses an arte sian flow of mineral water, which is bottled and sold commercial ly; beyond another field of dill are 60 acres of wheat, now being threshed, while surrounding these fields and others, are good pastures. The farmlands not only are partially Irrigated, but are ex ceedingly well ditched for drain age. Mr. Wells is a pioneer In the growing of mint, having, I be lieve, one of the first if not the first planting In Douglas county. He has stayed with it consistent ly, from the days some fifteen years ago when It was so valu able the distilled oil often was stored in bank vaults, to - the present time, when he finds it still a profitable crop. Invasion Of Russia Hits Slow Tempo Third "Finle" Air Raid Strikes Moscow; Clash of Japs, Russians Reported By the Associated Press Adolf Hitler's invasion of Rus sia is slowing down if it has not entirely halted, a u t h o r 1 1 a tlve London quarters said today, while at Russia's back door there were unconfirmed reports that Japanese and soviet troops had clashed on the Manchoukuo-Sl-beria frontier. DNB, the official German news agency asserted that a large Russian force encircled at Nevel, north of Vitebsk on the central front, had been smashed by r.azl troops "with extraordin arily heavy losses." The agency said 13,000 soviet prisoners were captured. Hitler's high command, once more acknowledging ','strong lo cal resistance" by soviet troops, declared: "The operations of the Ger man armed forces and of their allies are taking their planned course on the entire eastern front In spite of difficult roads." Moscow Bombed 3rd Time German bombers attacked Moscow for the third successive night, the nazi war bulletin said, pounding "vital military objec tives." The Russians said that the raiders, 150 strong, , Inflicted casualties- in another five- -and one-half hour assault, but that no military objectives were hit. Windows on two sides of the residence of United States Am bassador Laurence A. Stein hardt were blown in by a bomb. (Continued on page (I) Defense Plans In DangeM LOS ANGELES, July 24. (AP) "Washington is in confu sion . . . our defense program is in danger," Wendell L. Wlllkie told 19,000 persons at a meeting for national unity last night. "But the remedy is not to ob struct the defense program. The remedy is not to hang back, or . . . to oppose those larger alms which are Involved In such moves as that which we have under taken in Iceland. No. The remedy is just the opposite of that. "We must every one of us appropriate this defense program as our own. We must realize that In it lies our greatest hope of freedom. And we must get the kind of management we want, not through petty criticism, but through the application of the enormous pressure of American public opinion, Insisting that a good job be done. . . The cure for a bad defense program Is not more opposition, but more sup port." As Willkle was Introduced, the crowd revived his presidential campaign cry of last fall, "We want Willkle!" It gave him a three-minute ovation. Wlllkie criticized the adminis tration freely, but he declared: "Of late we have heard some men say that the president acts through Ignoble motives. No man ever tried so hard as I did to remove the president from office but I repudiate utterly any notion that In this most critical hour of the country's history that Franklin Roosevelt Is acting with anv sinister purpose "Franklin Roosevelt may he mistaken In some of his actions but no American citizen silting in his place would do other than pray and work for the preserv:i Hon of the freedom of America." In his prepared address, Wlllltie said: "The new deal, In my view, has long sought too much power, and behind the blind of national emer gency. Is continuing to do so to day. To this I am unalterably op posed. But this is not the time to deprive the commander In chief of our army and navy of his power to act or the president of the United States of the neces sary authority to make our for eign policy effective " Joseph K. Carson Chosen Oregon Legion's Chief Joseph K. Carson EUGENE, July 24. (API- Oregon Legionnaires at yester day's closing session of the state convention, elected Joseph K. Carson, Jr., Portland, comman der; Robert C .Sipe, Albany, vice- commander; E. U Knight, La- Grande, national committeeman; the Rev. G. M. Bailey, Pendleton, chaplain; Victor Mlcelli, Rose burg, district No. 4 commander. and George Richards, Enterprise, district No. 7 commander. The auxiliary elected Mrs. J. W. Mclnturff. Marshficld, president; Nota Francis, Ontario, vice-president, and re-elected Dorothy Tem plar, Klamath Falls, treasurer, and Edith Brown, Salem, finance officer.: ; - y Eugene was chosen again for the 1942 convention. The fact that the national Disabled Amerf can Veterans convention will be held here next year was report ed as a reason for the precedent- breaking choice of Eugene twice in succession. Sea-Air Victory Claimed by Rome ROME, July 24. -(AP) A fierce air-naval battle in the cen tral Mediterranean, lasting from dawn to darkness yesterday, has ended in an Italian victory with a British destroyer, two muni tlons-laden steamers and another "largo unspecified unit" sunk, the Italian high command declar ed today. A big British convoy, escorted by battleships, cruisers, torpedo bouts and air craft carriers was spotted by Italian aerial scouts at dawn, the communique said, and attacked by air until dark ness. Then, It said, light naval units of the Italian fleet took up the fight. (British naval sources in Lon don made no comment on the Italian report.) Italian planes, "defying Impos ing anti-aircraft reaction and numerous fighting planes," scor ed as follows, the communique said: Sank a 15,000-ton steamer and a 10,000-ton steamer, both carry ing explosives. Torpedoed a 10,000-lon cruiser of the Southampton class and an 8,000-ton cruiser. Bombed a battleship, a cruiser, a destroyer, another heavy steamer and "another unspeci fied unit." In the night attack by naval forces, the communique said a destroyer and another "large unspecified unit" were sunk by motor torpedo boats, and a large vessel in tile convoy was hit by torpedoes from a submarine. Consolidated Freight Line Strike Adjusted PORTLAND, Ore., July 24. (AP) Approval of a new con tract by a union negotiating com mittee halted a strike of AFL auto mechanics yesterday. For several hours the walkout tied up Consolidated Freightways, larg est Portland truck freight line. Details were not announced, The employers earlier had agreed to union demands for a 12J-cent-an hour pay increase to $1,121 but asked elimination of a 10 per cent premium for night work. Indo-China Move Start Of Conquests Peaceful Us of Pacific, : U. S. Territory Menaced, ; Sumner Welles Charges ! WASHINGTON, 1 July 24.-1 (AP) The United States govern ment strongly denounced Japan today as an aggressor In French Indo-China and . declared tha . move there menaced American security and endangered Ameri can territory and Interests in the) far east. . i . ) . , Sumner Welles, acting secre tary of state, Issued a , formal statement asserting thai Japan's action was primarily In prepara tlon for further ''movements o( conquest in adjacent areas." Welles said the substance of his statement was given last night to the Japanese ambassa dor during a conference. ; The statement contained nol hint of steps planned by the Unit ed States to counter the Japa nese move. Ocean Peace Menaced It did declare that occupation of French Indo-China or estab lishment of further military bases there "endanger the peace ful use by peaceful nations of tha Pacific."- These steps also, Welles said, jeopardize American sources of vital defense materials such as tin and rubber an allusion to the rich Netherlands East Indies. "The steps which the Japanese government has taken," Welles . declared, "also endanger the'safel ty of other areas of the Pacific, including the Philippine islands. French Yield To Fooe ' ! "The government anpeople of this country fully ! realize that such developments bear directly upon the vital problem of our na tional security." "Present developments relat ing to Indo-China provide clear Indication that further changes are now being affected under; duress. : - "The present unfortunate sit uation in which the French gov ernment of Vichy-and the French, (Continued on page 6) Sutherlin Man Gets U. S. Pay in Army Truck Crash WASHINGTON, July 24. - (AP) The senate passed and sent to the house a bill authoriz ing payment of $1,536 to William Corder of Sutherlin, Ore., for in juries sustained when a truck In which he was riding was struck by an army truck on the Pacific highway. The senate claims com mittee reported the army truck; traveling in convoy had hit a slight dip and got out of control, hitting the other truck headon. The soldier driving the army truck was found guilty by court martial ot, manslaughter but la ter tests proved that a drain pipe protruding from the road had caused the accident. His sen tence was remitted and he was restored to honorable duty. Another man, William Dala Witcher, riding on the civilian truck which had a trailer carry ing logs, was killed. One Killed, One Missing In Collision of Trains VANCOUVER, B. C, July 24.- (CP) One man was killed, ono Is missing and nine others are in a hospital, three in a critical con dition following the collision of a Canadian National railway pas senger train "Continental Limit ed" and an outbound Great Northern passenger train headed for Seattle. The collision occurred between here and New Westminster, 12 miles east, on the Great North ern line which is used by tha Canadian National. Victim of the wreck was Iden tified as: A. Tillinger of Seattle, fireman of the Great Northern locomo tive. Missing and believed killed Is H. Krlnks, Canadian . National railways baggageman. Critically injured in New West minster hospital Is J. Carey, Se attle, engineer of the Great Northern locomotive,