PORT ORFORD. OREGON, POST
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Aviation Plant Closed by C. I. 0. Strike
By Edward C. Wayne
‘Terror* of Deep
Current War Front Shifts to Syria
With Oil Fields of Iraq as Prize;
‘Draft Everything’ Legislation Aims
To Break Strikes in Defense Plants
cheted, forms lovely large and
small accessories. It is fun to do.
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+ E IH T O K K N O T E — W h e n o p in io n s a r e e xp re s s e d in th e s e c o lu m n s , th e y
a re tnese of th e new s a n a ly s t a n d not n e c e s s a rily of th is n e w s p a p e r .)
. • R eleased bv W estern N ew sp ap er U nion.)
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Pattern 2772 contains directions for
making square; illustrations of it and of
stitches; materials required; photograph
of square. Send order to:
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(f J K ' /A U. S.
Citizens «/ Itear Mountain, N. Y.,
received a taste «/ what actual war
attack might mean when the coast ar
tillery and H'esi Point cadets put on
a dive-bombing attack and anti-aircraft
defense of a big bridge near thul
point. Guns and equipment used were
in same positions they would actually
occupy in an actual battlo-for defense
of the bridge.
Sewing Circle Needlecratt Dept.
117 Minna St. San Francisco, Calif.
Enclose 15 cents In coins (or Pat-
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Name .................................................
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fam ous all over America.
D E FE N S E:
WAR:
Production
On New Front
Returning foreign correspondents,
m aking a junket of the defense pro
duction industries as guests of the
w ar departm ent, found that airplane
m otors, considered one of the poten
tial bottlenecks, are being rushed
into production a t one plant in Con
necticut to the tune of 1,400,000
horsepower monthly.
One official of this concern, re
viewing what he knew of the po
tential production of this industry,
predicted that between 70,000 and
100,000 airplane engines will be
turned out during 1941-42.
The total airplane industry, from
a m otor standpoint, should eventual
ly be turning out 10,000,000 horse
power a month.
While these producers had no ac
curate figures on Axis production, it
was figured that it m ight be be
tween 3,000,000 and 5,000,000 a month
a t the present tim e, with future
capabilities unflgured.
In addition to the three great
Am erican aviation m otor concerns’
output, the autom otive industry has
been asked for some, and while not
in production yet, they will eventual
ly contribute a large percentage of
the total.
This turned the pages back to
World War I, when A m erica’s most
im portant fighting airplane m otor,
the Liberty, was turned out in quan
tity in a leading autom otive factory.
This factory also, by the way, was
m aking the recoil m echanism for the
75-millimeter gun—then a w ar bot
tleneck.
DRAFT:
"Everything'
A stiff fight against P resident
Roosevelt’s
“d ra ft
everything”
m easure sent to the congress closely
following his “ freedom speech” ap
peared likely, though the adm inis
tration forces seem ed willing enough
to modify the m easure from its first
draft.
The P resident softened the shock
of the m easure, which a t first sight
looked like an effort toward a com
plete economic dictatorship, by a
later announcem ent that its m ajor
purpose was to p erm it the adm in
istration to break strikes in defense
industries, which were still a knotty
problem all over the nation.
Both Senator Byrd of Virginia and
Senator Tydings of M aryland had
taken the floor to dem and that the
P resident him self take the leader
ship in halting strikes. Byrd saying:
“T here are 60 to 70 strikes in de
fense industries, and new ones are
occurring every day. I don’t as
sum e the governm ent would want to
take over and operate all these
plants.
“A prohibition against strikes and
com pulsory arbitration would be a
b e tte r m ethod.”
The bill, which in its original form
would give the President, under his
proclam ation of a state of unlim it
ed em ergency, power to seize and
sell anything in the nation's long list
of priv ate property, found its first
com prom ise offer coming from ad
m inistration leaders in the form of
a tim e lim it on the P resident’s pow
ers. together with a proviso that
congress m ust first itself declare a
national em ergency before they
could be used.
Labor-m inded m em bers of both
houses, wildly suspicious of the
m easu re, started th eir own investi
gation to try to determ ine its origin.
U -B O A TS :
Old Man River Jumps Traces
Drops Dead
The collapse of the Greco-British
defense of Crete was followed by a
good deal of backing and. filling as
the forces of G reat B ritain won- '
dered where the axe was going to
fall next.
The preponderance of B ritish be
lief was that it would be in Syria,
and two things happened a t once:
The
British
started
mobilizing
toward Syria and began a ir attacks
on Syrian points, and the F rench
started propaganda efforts to prove
that they needed G erm an aid to re
pel British attack.
The British countered by announc- I
ing, via their T urkish friends, that
G erm any already had landed 20,000
men in civilian dress, who would
doff their tourist garb and take up
arm s just as soon as sea-borne I
transports landed them.
Also the B ritish asserted th a t 400
G erm an planes were already at
Syrian airdrom es, ready for an at- ,
tack on Iraq ’s British arm y from |
R oaring w aters of the Youghioghenny riv er, sent fa r over its banks
bases supplied, in defiance of ' by a three-day continuous rain, w ashed out the trac k s of the P. & L. E.
Franco-B ritish friendship, by agree- | ra ilro ad and sent this freight tra in plunging into the riv er a t Dickerson
m ent with the P etain governm ent Run, about 30 m iles from P ittsburgh. The three-m an crew w as riding
headed by D arlan.
in the engine cab and narrow ly escaped death.
The observers in this country w ere j
not fooled by tliis sort of diplom atic
byplay, and were able to recognize
the sam e m aneuvers, with some
variations, that had preceded the
G erm an occupation of the Balkans
and the subsequent blitz attack upon
Greece.
B ritain’s plan was not only a de
laying action, but because of the
peculiar location of the immensely
valuable Mosul oil field, to try to get
into Syria first, while the G erm an
“tourists” w ere still unarm ed, and
to destroy the landing fields there
if possible.
Axis Seamen Arrive at Canal Zone
C hurchill’s governm ent, taking a
g reat deal of criticism because of
the C rete disaster, because m any
British people thought the C rete b at
tle m ight have been won if better
| handled, now found itself with an
intensely serious problem on its
hands.
T here were signs th at “ authorized
sources” in B ritain were preparing
the public as gently as m ight be
for a p ractical abandonm ent of the
M editerranean as a naval control
area since the loss of Crete, and one
announcem ent flatly said that Amer- ,
ican aid m ust hurry if it was to get
to the Red sea and Suez in tim e
to get to the B ritish forces in North
Africa.
The British w ere expecting air- j
borne attacks on M alta, Cyprus, :
Alexandria and Suez, but whether
' the G erm ans would attem pt para-
I chute troop operations after their
huge losses in C rete was doubtful.
Some of the 102 G erm an and Italian seam en who sabotaged and
In fact, the T urkish slant on the scuttled the vessels E iscnbach and Fella off the coast of C osta Rica,
a tte m p t to land in Syria was that pictured when they arriv ed a t the Canal Zone quarantine station p re p a ra
sea-borne invasion would be carried tory to deportation to E urope via the first Japanese vessel.
out. A dozen or m ore large ships
were to carry supplies to Syria via i
the Dodecanese islands, and from j
these it would be possible, T urkey |
said, to land in Syria by an over- ,
night sailing under cover of d a r k - ,
ness.
Five hundred m otorized troops '
had m ade such a trip, Turkey said, !
though F rance vigorously denied it. '
Harking back to the days when
W eygand’s N ear-E ast arm y was es
tim ated a t 750,000 men, figures were
now being given out in allied circles
that De G aullet had an a rm y of '
250,000 men at the present time.
For Better National Nutrition
KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN MUFFINS
2 tablespoons
% cup m ilk
TXT’ANT to win a prize? This
* * crochet design wins it re
peatedly wherever shown. The
six-inch square, so easily cro-
Jlsk Me Jlnother
A
A G eneral Quiz
T h e Q uestion s
Rep. M. E dclstcln (D.) of New
York city who dropped dead on floor
of house corridor a fte r leaping to his
feet to answ er sta te m en t m ade by
Rep. John R ankin of M ississippi that
"in tern a tio n a l Je w ry ” was creating
difficulties in the money m arket.
Wins Revere Award
1. A pundit is a man who is—
illiterate, comical or learned?
2. What American city outside
the United States has the largest
population?
3. How long is a tennis court?
4. Where is the world’s largest
i church building?
5. Which of the following had
faithless daughters—Othello, Mac
beth or King Lear?
6. The name of Elijah Lovejoy
is associated with what?
7. Over what country does the
House of Savoy reign?
8. What organization is the
largest user of office space in the
world?
9. What was the area of Ger
many before the present war as
I compared to that of the state of
| Iowa?
T h e A n s w e rs
sh o rten in g
1 cup flour
% cup sugar
% teaspoon sa lt
1 egg
2 ’/ 2 teaspoons
1 cup All-Bran
baking powder
Cream sh o rten in g a n d sugar; add egg
an d b eat well. S tir In A ll-Bran and
m ilk; le t soak u n til m o st of m o istu re
Is ta k e n up. S ift flour w ith sa lt an d
baking powder: add to first m ix tu re
and s tir only u n til flour disappears. Fill
greased m uffin nan s tw o -th lrd s fu ll an d
bake In m oderately h o t oven (400°F.)
ab o u t 30 m in u tes. Yield; 6 large m u f
fins, 3 Inches In diam eter, o r 12 sm all
muffins, 2’4 inches In diam eter.
Try th ese delicious m uffins for d in
n er to n ig h t o r for tom orrow m o rn in g ’«
breakfast. T hey’re n o t only good to eat;
th e y ’re m ig h ty good for you as well.
F or several of th ese m uffins will add
m aterially to yo u r dally supply of w h at
physicians call "b u lk ” in th e diet, an d
th u s help co m b at th e com m on k ind of
co n stip atio n th a t Is d u e to lack of th is
d ietary essential. E a t ALL-BRAN every
day (eith er as a cereal or in m uffins),
d rin k p len ty of w ater, and see If you
d o n ’t forget all a b o u t co n stip atio n due
to lack of "b u lk .” ALL-BRAN Is m ade
by Kellogg’s in B a ttle Creek.
Time for Greatness
Nothing great is produced sud
denly, since not even the grape
or fig is. If you say to me now
that you want a fig, I will answer
to you that it requires time; let it
flower first, then put forth fruit,
and then ripen.—Epictetus.
INDIGESTION
may affect the Heart
f lu trapped In the stomach or gullet nuty act like a
hair-trigger on the heart. At the lirst sign of distreaa
smart men and women depend on Bell-ana Tablets to
•et gaa free. No laxative but made of the faateet*
actlng medicines known for acid lndlgeitlon. If the
FIRST DOSE doesn’t prove R ell-ani better, return
bottle to ua and receive DOUBLE Money Back. 25e>
Economizing Time
Laziness grows on people; it
begins in cobwebs and ends in iron
chains. The more business a man
has to do, the more he is able to
accomplish; for he learns to econ
omize his time.—Hale.
1. Learned.
2. Mexico City.
3. Seventy-eight feet.
4. Rome (St. Peter’s cathedral).
5. King Lear.
6. Freedom of the press. He
was an Abolitionist editor who was
killed by a mob at Alton, 111., in
1837.
7. Italy.
8. Our federal government. It
owns or rents a total of 118,225,000
square feet in 19,117 buildings scat
tered throughout this country.
The 26,000,000 square feet in
Washington alone is double that of
j only nine years ago.
9. The area of Germany before
With Life, Woe
September, 1940, was 225,258
square miles, including Austria
To labour is the lot of man be
and the Sudetenland. The area low; and when Jove gave us life,
1 he gave us woe.—Homer.
of Iowa is 56,147 square miles.
Home Front
E ugene Phillips, 33, of F ort Worth,
T exas, who heads list of w inners in
the R evere aw ard for best contribu
tions m ade by w orkers at the bench
to A m erica’s defense plans. He was
aw arded first prize ($5,000) for his
creation of a system for the blind
landing of airplanes.
H,ou ba** at home/
ntisCHWftNHS
infSH VERSI
100% for Defense
Loyal to V ichy?
The stories about the first Nazis
landing in Syria, in fact, stated th at
Sinkings of eight B ritish ships by they w ere being sent in to "stra ig h t
torpedoes fired from U-boats re en out" the F rench forces in Syria.
vealed th a t the G erm an subm arine. whose loyalty to the Vichy govern-
In ste ad of being a sm a lle r vessel m ent was in question.
w ith a sh o rte r ra n g e operating in
T here had been m any reports of
g r e a te r q uantity, Is becom ing a big disaffected troops leaving Syria be
fore the G erm an infiltration to flee
g e r boat w ith a bigger range.
Some of these reported sinkings into Palestine, there to Join the F re e
took place within 700 miles of the French, but ju st how m uch of this
United States, well within the sup- ( had occurred was largely a m a tte r
of conjecture.
posed neutrality patrol area.
Rigger Range
Strikers and pickets outside the huge North A m erican aviation plant
In Inglewood, Calif., which was closed tight when C. I. O. w orkers called
walkout while dem and for higher w ages was being considered by N ational
Defense M ediation board in W ashington. The plant has $200,000,000 worth
of o rders for planes for the U. S. and G reat B ritain.
The U. S. S. T erro r, the navy’s
first vessel p a rticu la rly designed as
a m ine lay e r from the keel up, is
shown getting its final touches in
p rep aratio n for its launching a t Phil
adelphia navy y ard . It displaces
6,000 tons.
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MERCHANTS----------------------
Your A d v ertisin g D ollar
1
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j
Al the National Nutrition conference held In W ashington at the re
’
. quest of the President 400 physicians and health officers w ere told th at
"d iet sta n d ard s of 75 per re n t of our population need to be raised to
w ithstand the stra in of total defense.” (L rftl Paul V. McNutt, federal secu r
ity a d m in istrato r; M L. Wilson (center) and Russell Wilder of M ayo clinic.
P resident W illiam Green of the
A m erican F ederation of Labor, pre
sents the P resident with an original
oil painting bearing legend, "A. F.
of L. 100 P e r Cent for D efense.”
Fifty thousand large color p o ster,
w ere reproduced for local unions.
buys something more than space and circulation in
the columns of this newspaper. I t buys space and
circulation plus the favorable consideration of our
readers for this newspaper and its advertising patrons.
LET US TELL YOU MORE ABOUT IT