Territorial Disputes '-.European vara hard their counterpart in territory 'disputes- oyer here when thi gridiron battle open this week. Get the aeorea tint la The Statesman. ' The Veatber ; v Fair I today and . Monday, -. xcept.on the coast no lm r : portapt i changes la temp. .and hunidlty. Max.' temp. 0, inla. 48. Rive -M ft. Northwest wind. EIGHTY-NINTH TEAR Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, September 17, 1930 Price 3c; Ntvsstands 5e No. 150 lis rooiD ! mmm .Reels to - 0: ;-y; tr roeuier TV rr Tl n WB Ksmg if 1KUXQL8LY News Behind By PACI BIAIXOX ; WASHINGTON, Sept. U.-VPh , Principles of a new war working irrangement between Industry . nd government hare been quiet ly reached during the past three Weeks. - . -. - : Conferences have been fre . quently held at the commerce department and elsewhere, at tended not only by the heads of the largest Industrial plants bat 1 by secondary government officials in charge of planning policies, . government e c o n o -mists and even some outside economists like Dr. Harold G. Moulton of Brookings institu tlon, pressed Into active im official government service. This work is all advisory. Con clusions have not been submitted fully to Mr. Roosevelt. No' one vet knows what he may decide ultimately to do with the recom mendations, but It Is expected he may change some, heartily approve the whole. The 1939 revision of the In dustrial: mobilization plan will serve as the skeleton formula. This seta up price, labor, finance, foreign trade, and other commis sions to operate under ' control of a top war Industries adminis trator and a top advisory council. The Statesman Presents No. 1 s News Columnist Paul Mallon Is recognized as the outstanding Washington, DC, ! news commentator. Be .deals in facts, Interesting facta : . that affect yon and your neigh i bor. His column. News Behind, Today's News, will be presented daily In The Oregon Statesman. Watch for It each day on the editorial page, its regular posi i tlon beginning Tuesday. . . i Ia '.. the mobilisation plan this was alt directly under the presi dent, but some changes are to be suggested which may relieve him of some detailed responsibility. Personnel of the various com missions has been discussed and dates will be submitted to the president as suggestions. (So many alternative names have been mentioned,; it is impossible to say-who might get what, but there is considerable support for the selection of Bernard Baruch or a man like joe Kennedy, Lon don ambassador, as war indus tries administrator. Strange as It Bounds Federal Security Ad ministrator McNutt has been mentioned to head the war labor administration, possibly on the assumption that his contacts with labor would thus enhance his fu ture political position In the ad ministrationmay be. Federal Loan Administrator Jones is, be ing mentioned for the finance post.) : . , This means government would move swiftly on the oat break of war to control pro duction, raw materials, prices, labor, foreign trade, railroad and track distribution, through - these boards of business men and government officials but In a moderate way at first. (Skeleton policy adopted: "The surrender of all Individual rights in war time is unde sirable. If It can be avoided.") For Instance, no arbitrary price fixing is mentioned in the revisad mobilization plan. It says: "Con trol of prices should be limited largely to reliance upon the vol untary cooperative pressure which an enlightened public opinion will bring to bear upon interests which fail to cooperate." It adds some anti-profiteering legislation may later be neces ary. " h Also on labor' the purpose is defined as One of trying to maintain equal distribution "by dose cooperative relations between labor, industry and the government." It contem plates that Industries will be divided into essential and non essential classifications. Labor requirements then will be de termined end distributed. Whole setup has the same guiding spirit of "cooperation" rather than "force, but latent power (not mentioned much) will lie in government hands for use as necessary. (Turn to page 4, coL 8) War Dissenters Jailed, Executed PARIS. Sept. 16HffV-A man and woman who criticised France's position In the war were ailed and fined today. ' r " Maria Rumbacb, . a chamber maid of Hungarian descent, was sentenced to eight months In .prison and fined 1,000 francs (about $21) for saying: r "We should have given Danzig to Hitler for the city should be long to him." , ,.. BERLIN, Sept.' ll-aVExecu-Uon of "Germany's first con scientious objector was reported today by authorities. - . August Dickman, of Dinslaken, was shot by a firing squad on charges of refusing 'to go to the from. ' Big Scai ' s 1 Decisive Stage Being Reached Nazis Retreat Reich Troopers Charge Shattered Against Withering Fire j i Germans Destroy Towns to Impede Poilnsf Daladier at Front PARIS, Sept 16P)-The European war's first real grand scale battle on the western front appeared tonight to be de veloping by the hour, with hun dreds of thousands of French and German troops engaged, j German troops were report ed retreating and methodically destroying small villages as they abandoned them. j - French observers reported back to the general staff that the Ger mans, as they doggedly gave ground, blasted entire villages out of existence in an effort to slow the French drive through the no man's land toward the Siegfried line. ,. - The general staff announced the Germans were , "constantly throwing reinforcements Into the battle, which was swinging Into its decisive stage tonight after two weeks of preliminary skirmishing. This "battle of the Saar" was being waged along a 40 mile front from the Moselle valley southeast ward to Saarbruecken. U Tonight's official general staff communique acknowledged for the first time that French and Ger man troops were In contact along the entire front. Daladier Visits Fighting Sector Premier Edouard Daladier, the "little dictator of France." who is his own minister of national defense and foreign affairs, left Fans suddenly today to make a surprise personal inspection of the Maginot fighting zone. He left for the front in1 a military automobile on what, so far as Is known, was his first inspection of the battlefront. The premier, who entered the last war as a private soldier and fought the entire four years, win ning promotion after . promotion and three citations for valor un der fire, ! started for the front without previous announcement He was accompanied only by General J. p. O. De Camp, head of his military cabinet, and their military aides. i Military dispatches said the French struck at " the German lines at three distinct points: Along the Moselle river valley in the north; at the Industrially rich city of Saarbruecken at the south, and about midway between the two down the Little Nied river which is a tributary to the Saar. French Take Valuable Ridges What was described ' as the most important French advance of the last 24 hours was reported to have brought them into the angle formed by the two rivers east of their injunction. From a high ridge and two heights which flank it French guns were said to be able to dominate the opposite bank of the Saar from the town of Merzig to Saarlouia, a distance of 10 miles. Military observers estimated that at least IS German divisions and about the same number, i If not more, of French divisions had been drawn Into the fighting. (French and German divisions consist of between 10,000 and 15,000 troops.) ! ' In the area of this battle be tween Saarbruecken and the Mo selle valley, are Germany's (Turn to page 16, col. 7) ! City Schools and College Open to Thousands Mond Over 5000 students will troop back to Salem schools Monday morning as the 1939-40 school year opena with a half-day pro gram. : v. :-:--- - -1"--"?- 4-.. Pre-reglstratlons indicate that enrollment will be approximately the same as last year when 5077 students enrolled the first day. 01 these 1543 were high school students. In 1937 the total first day enrollment wis-4743. - K " Registration and assemblies will take up the morning at most of the schools, but " short-class schedules' will be run through at some, illgh , school . will ' open at 8:40, -Leslie junior high school at 8:45 and Parrlah junior high at 8:50. All these will be dis missed at noon. , Grade schools will take up at CCura to page 18, coL 31 r w awn German Air Bombets Pave Way For Tank Thrusts in Poland Mr rV4 . ::T Kv. -Kls" .. HP 'Mb Small German tanks advancing "somewhere in Poland" after heavy artillery fire and bombardment from the air have paved the way. (UN Cablephoto.) Tamed Channel Patroh Seen Again off Isles By JOHN W. CULMER DOVER, England, Sept. 16 (AP) Britain's navy, tuned to fighting efficiency weeks before war started, has reestablished the famed Dover patrol that kept constant World war guard over the English channel. In peacetime little more station, Dover today watches island's "sea wall." From the turf clad white cliffs in the shadow of battle- : Omented Dover castle you get oc Germany Answers "Humanity Plea Note to France. States Determination" to Be Kind to Civilians BERLIN, Sept. lS-HVGer-many sent a note to France ' to night stating she was determined to abide by the rules of civilised warfare but warned she must be guided by what her opponents do. The note, transmitted through Sweden, was in reply to a British French declaration at the begin ning of the war setting forth me thods by which the western allies proposed to conduct the war. France asked a German answer, which was given in tonight's note. Germany called attention to the fact that Hitler on Sept. 1 told the reichstag that the reich was not warring against women and child ren. The note emphasized that thereafter Hitler ordered the Ger man airforce to attack only mili tary objectives. Germany said she welcomed and applauded the plea by President Roosevelt that the war be con ducted as humanely as possible and later told Britain she pro posed to abide by the Geneva agreement of 1025 against use of poison gases. . ay Willamette university fresh men will prepare for the annual entrance examinations ordeal and look forward to their introduc tion to campus social life as the institution opens its 1939-40 year. Freshman enrollment will -begin at the office of the new regis trar, Walter Erickson, at 8 a. m. Monday. The ; new students will assemble for the -first' time on the campus In the Waller hall chapel at, 10:30 to hear a wel coming address by Dr. Bruce R. Baxter, president of the univer sity. At 11:15 they will be form ally Introduced to the campus by Professor W. Herman Clark. .... . English department freshman placement examinations will be conducted In Eaton hall at 1:15 p. m. Monday. (Turn to page S. col. 3) West liiiplipl Y :: - than a handy naval coaling the British navy policing the casional glimpses of the navy at work. Three destroyers, steaming lei surely In line formation enter the harbor and drop anchor, their lead-grey hulls bright in the morning sun. Back from channel duty they have been relieved by other ships of the emergency "barrage squad ron." Three miles from shore, slim on the pale sea, . two patrol ships move almost Imperceptibly a half mile apart. Westward a third stands over the French coast, barely visible through white sea mist. Away to the east in a dim ir regular line a group of war craft stand as poised to strike. They fade as clouds screen the sun, reappear as vague! shapes in, the distance. Beyond them, invis ible, you know where are other ships of the "king's navy." An occasional naval seaplane drones overhead, wheeling above the sea like the gulls that still, oblivious to war, cry across the red-pebbled beach. Who leads the 1939 version of the world war Dover patrol is an admiralty secret. Whether he is using the same tactics that won medals and pro motion for retired Admiral Sir Roger JCeyes is the navy's busi ness. Ashore Dover folk say they are grimly confident that land de fenses vastly 'improved from .(Turn to page 9, col. 8) Western Fkhing For Trout Halted PORTLAND, Sept 18-CSVTbe state game eonynission barred to day trout fishing In coastal streams and lakes west of ' the coast range. f- Such streams will be closed from mouth toaource between Oc tober 15 and April 15. .The com mission asserted an emergency ex isted and anglers' were taking a heavy toll of brood trout - Before the new order. It was legal to take trout of 10 Inches or more from tidewater at any time of the year. The order will also affect the Columbia-river. ' Open seasons on does in'Oregon win not be abandoned , despite protests of Klamath e out y sportsmen, Frank B. Wire, state supervisor, said. - "The doe season In Grant county never- was questioned," Wire said. "That was provided by the legislature. 40,000 Troops Join Warsaw Defense Lines Shattered Captial Has Hopes of Thwarting Germans Buoyed Radio Relates Horrors as Nazis Open np After Ultimatum BERLIN, Sept 17.-(Sunday) -W-The German army high command issued the following communique at 7:22 a. m (10:22 p. m. PST) : "In at Deblin, which was captured by attack. One hun dred undestroyed enemy planes fell into German hands. "Fighting around Warsaw continues. "Kutao was captnred by German troops. "Near Siedlze, 12,000 pris oners were taken besides 86 cannon, six armored cars and 11 planes." BUDAPEST. Sspt. 1 7. -(Sun day WflA-Bet ween 40,000 and 50,000 Polisft troops under Gen eral BartnowBkl have joined the defenders of the besieged Polish capital of Warsaw, it was stated in Polish circles here early today. General Bartnowski led three divisions .to the relief of the capital despite a terrific all-day air and land bombardment by the surrounding German forces, It was said. The news buoyed Polish hopes here that the capital might yet be saved. UoS? being informed that the German army had given the War saw populace 11 hours in which tqfeave 4he city, under threaM of rdestroying" it. FOies nor saidt that Warsaw would hold out to rthe last man, woman aao child." Entire City Is Now Objective (The Germans have maintained they were bombing military ob jectives only. The ultimatum meant that the entire capital would be subject to attack if the order were not complied with). Many Polish towns were bombed heavily Saturday, Polish advices received here said. These includ ed Wilno, in northwest Poland. The army of General Kutreie- bas at Kutno, 75 miles west of Warsaw, on Saturday repulsed 17 attacks which were aimed at unit ing German forces trying to close in on Warsaw from the north and south, the legation announced. 200 Heavy Guns Shelling City The all-day attack on Warsaw was described late Saturday night by a Polish government radio an nouncer who said the attack was the "beginning of an' apparent German attempt to take Warsaw at all costs." He said 200 heavy nasi guns were pouring shells into the cap ital's streets. ' Through the scream of air raid sirens, the speaker's voice could be heard here, saying there was constant bombing by large nail squadrons. The Warsaw announcer, broad casting at 8:50 p. m. (11:50 p. m. PST) said nearly all civilians in the capital were hiding as best they could in cellars, although buildings were collapsing on them. (Still in Warsaw and cut off from outside communication were six United States consular offi cers, beaded by John K. Davis, a veteran of 30 years in the foreign service). The battered capital was Bald to be lacking adequate water and food supplies In the ninth day of the German aiege. The announcer said streets were piled with wreckage created by bombs and shells dropping Into "nearly every block of the city. "All day Warsaw has been un der heavy fire said the announ cer. "Air raids destroyed the Pro testant church while service was being held and the roof collapsed, killing 100 persons. . "German planes flying low over buildings tossed incendiary bombs. The capital now is almost a flaming torch. ' "The fire department la racing helplessly all over town for there have been more than 400 separate fires today. "Women and children and old men-i-all the rest are fighting the invaders are trying to extinguish the blazes with sand and the little water than can be spared from the drinking supply. Their faces are blackened by soot and pitifully lined by fatigue." - The announcer said new postr ers signed : "Smigly-Ryds" (Mar shal Edward Smigly-Ryds, com mander-in-chief of . the Polish army) had. been plastered on "those walls still left standing. He Quoted the posters as calk lng upon men, women and child ren to "defend Warsaw to the last drop of blood, for the honor of Poland demands It We must fight the barbarian Invaders In every field in every manner with every weapon." . . Ukraine Needs Pole A Nazis Give Time Expires On Ultimatum, Polish Silent Army Wants Surrender or City Will Feel Terrific Attack Capital's ' Citizens Told None to Be Spared if Note Rejected BERLIN, Sept 17.-(Snnday) ) A German army ultima tum to Warsaw to surrender without resistance expired some time after 8 a. m. today (9 p. m. EST Saturday) but them waa no immediate report to Berlin as to what happened at the Polish capitaL The German high comntand re ported at 4:30 a. m. this morning, one and one-half hours after ex piration of the ultimatum, that Its army in the field still had had no word from Polish authorities. Government officials here said they were without information. The ultimatum said Warsaw would be regarded as a war area if the German terms were not ac cepted, meaning that the city would be bombarded by artillery and the air force. German filers - during the aft ernoon dropped leaflets warning the civilian population of the Po lish capital to get out 24 Honrs Notice Believed Meaning The German terms specified that the military command of Warsaw had 12 hours to give up. and then rather ambiguously stated that civilians would have 11 hours to escape in the event the .Polish military stood pat A propaganda ministry spokes man said a smashing bombard ment and air attack on the Polish capital were not expected before S p. m. (6 a. m. PST). " . As he interpreted the ultima tum, "the first 12 hours was giv en the army after which, in the event of its rejection, the civilians have another 12 hours to flee." US Consular Head - Still At Warsaw , VANCOUVER, B. C, Sept 1. -(CP)-John K. Davis, United States consular official reported to be still in Warsaw, served as United States consul here from 1934 until early this year. He left Voncouver last Jan. 9 to take up a position in Warsaw, reported to be In ruins after count less German attacks. Americans Missing LONDON, Sept. 17 - Iff) - Two Americans were reported at Flushing, The Netherlands, today as among 17 persons missing from a Danisn steamer wnicn neuters. British news agency, said had struck a mine near Terschelling, The Netherlands, Sept 13. Late Sports PORTLAND. Ore.. Sent 15-UP) The San Francisco Seals and the Portland Bearers split a Pacific Coast Baseball league double header here tonight ' San Francisco grabbed the opener, 11 to 4, and Portland came back behind the four-hit pitching, of Clarence Pickrel in the second to win, 11 to 0. The Seals sewed up the first game in the eighth inning when they scored six runs, four of them on a home run by Salkeld with the bases full. San Francisco 11 14 0 Portland 4 13 1 Jorgens, Ballon and Salkeld; Thomas, Radonits and Monto. San Francisco . 0 4 1 Portland 11 15 0 Gay, O'Doul and Woodall; Pick rel and Monzo. " SEATTLE, Sept l-(ff)-LoS Angeles ruined Jack Lelivelt's "night" at the Seattle baseball stadium tonight by defeating Leli velt's league champions, 7-4 and 11-3 in a "who cares" double- header that came too late to have any effect on league leadership. Los Angeles 7 13 1 8eatUe . 4 8 3 : Prim, Berry and Sueme; Bar rett Van Fleet and Hancken. Second game (7 innings) : Los Angeles- 11 1 0 Seattle . - 7 1 Thomas, Kush and Sueme; Gregory, Van Fleet and CampbeU. Protection mbassador Warsaw Russia's Note Declares Poland Exists as Nation no More; Government Whereabouts Unknown Polish Ambassador Refuses to Accept Note Formally; Expects toBe Withdrawn From Moscow MOSCOW, Sept. 17 (Sunday) t-(AP) Soviet Russia has decided to send her army across the Polish frontier to day and tooccirpythe Polish Ukraine and white Russia. The time when the Russians would march was not spe cified but unofficial reports widely circulated in Moscow said the frontier would be crossed today, i The Polish embassy disclosed it had received a note from the soviet government announcing that Russian troops would occupy the Polish Ukraine and white Russia regions of Po land that once belonged to Russia. Polish Ambassador Waclaw Grzybowski formally re fused to accept it. At the same time, however, he referred the matter to his government asking for instructions. He had conferred yesterday-with Ivan Potemkin, soviet vice commissar of foreign affairs. The subject of the discussion was not dis closed. ! - . . ' . 111 O Russia's note was said unoffi French Cruiser Explosion Told At Least Hundred Sailors Dead, Reports Say of - Tuesday Disaster " PARIS. Sept. i-(tfVAt( least 100 french sailors tonight were reported to have been killed in an explosion and fire which" Swept the cruiser Pluton, a main unit in France's minelaying fleet. It was believed possible that the final toll might be twice that number. The explosion, was understood to have occurred off Casa Blanca, French Morocco, last Tuesday. Two hundred would be half the Pluton's normal crew of 400 offi cers and men. The 4773-ton cruiser, although smaller than other vessels of the minelaying fleet, carries" a normal cargo of 450 mines, which is twice that of some or the larger ships. The first advices which nene- trated official secrecy surround ing tne disaster railed to specify the port out of which the Pluton was operating and gave the im pression it stUl was in port when a mine exploded accidentally. Later Information indicated. however, that the minelayer was out on an expedition in Moroccan waters. The explosion was followed by fire which swept over the 10-year- old warship. 2 Seaside Youths Die in Car Wreck ASTORIA. Ore.. Sent. 16 -zpw Two 18-year-old Seaside youths were killed today when a car overturned on the Nehalem sec ondary highway near Astoria. They were Robert Babcock and Frank Thomas." ' Charles Irvin, owner , of the car, escaped injury. Japanese Launch New Drive On China Following Truce SHANGHAI, Sept lMfly-Jap-anese troops were reported, to night to have opened a general offensive on one central China front and observers .predicted possible development of major campaigns to crush Chinese 're sistance. " S' The report of the central China activity was from- Dome!, Japa nese news agency. Coming after a year of only desultory opera tions, the attack was regarded as a possible prelude to major offensives by the Japanese, now relieved of their preoccupation of the Manchoukuo border by the new Tokyo-Moscow . truce. Domel said Japanese troops- in northwestern : Kiangsl province were driving westward south of Nanchang. Four Chinese army corps were said to - have been hurled back by the advance. Foreign observers expected the Japanese to strike in south China In an attempt to crush Kwangsl Is Told: i 1 24Hours cially to have declared the red army would .cross the border at 6 a.m. today (7 p.m., PST last night) on a line from Polotzk to Kamanetz-Podolsk. Copies of this note were said also toj have been sent simultan eously to all diplomatic repre sentatives here saying the action was taken because Poland no longer sexists. It was said to have declared there no longer is a Pol ish government because its where abouts are unknorn. ujsSR Keeps Neutrality The note was said to have de clared that "the soviet union wil retain Neutrality but feels It ne cessaryi to"protect white Russlar and Ukrainian minorities in Po land and will do everything tc keep peace and order. (Poland is bound with Brita. and France In mutual assistance treaties, by which the British anrt French are pledged to aid Polan In defense of her Independence against any aggression. (Polish Invocation of this trea ty brought Great Britain and France into war against Germany September 3, two days after a German army invaded western Poland.) The scene of the Russian action would extend across the whole of Russia's Polish frontier. It would increase considerably Russia's frontier with Ru muni. Rumania holds Bessarabia, wrest- ea irom Kussia after the world (Turn to page 13. col. 4) Up tp Minute European Map In This Issue Those European names! And old maps! They perplex a news hungry reader,! no end in his attempt to keep np with fearful events on the; continent. The ' Oregon Statesman to day, therefore, , Is presenting 'or Jts readers three large maps as np to date as can be had, depicting Europe as m whole its boundaries, fortifi cations, air and water routes and other strategic . points and showing vital spots of London and Paris, capitals of the allies. Turn to page 3. These maps are worth saving. and Yunnan province forces and cut 'major communication, and supply lines of Chungking, tem porary Chinese capitaL - Heretofore, it was said, Japa nese had. delayed further advance into the interior because of fear of a soviet attack in the north. With conclusion of a truce they apparently have a free hand to attempt to smash the armies of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek. V TOKYO, Sept. l-ff)-Japanese today, hailed . the Tokyo-Moscow armistice generally as an Impor tant step which would permit Ja pan to ; devotexgreater attention to her China campaign. J Some officials warned, ' how ever, that the. agreement which ended fighting' on the. Manchou-kuo-Outer Mongolia border did not mean necessarily the settle ment of all the numerous Jape nese-soviet problems ' - ! ' , " i ' !" "-r - ; 5