; ! : ' ' ' """ ' "' .. ii i , ,rl - . -'Ill in , . , f. ; ;. , . :;;! ' ;m - . . . ... ! ; .. ... .. . . . .:H6wcr. Cltefflj )) Ir OfmTni vcli) PH (tTfOTi Si till .- MORNING PAPER, with Its ! . ' ? V CJ V N0 VV UbV . U I UlvvlUfOvJ' I UL U I Si" !fmPf ratnr5 COM3! UN ITT NEWS. . . . y. ' t.. 1 . ' iJSLal. f:' WDCTETH YEAH i Solm, Oron WdnedoT Morning, April 24 1940 , ;) i - Pric 3c NwstanU Sc : Uo. 2i ; ... ... '- ' -.!!:- : -"! r . .' ., . .- Goetrol of Oslo "Gate" Prize- Over 100 Fpegroes Die' Guf fey Ahead; Write-in Vote Dance Ho JFlmnes Im Growing fiatltle in Norway Favors Dewey Forged 'ProtocoJ Basis for 4 Campaign, Revealed Former Leader of SUver Shirts Praises Him Folder Printer in Same Plant as Naclhrichten By TVAL.L.A.CE A. SPRAGUE v! Weltnchuung nntraosla UM word ty which the German fasclata dfsirlbe their unhappl neaa abont world conditions and Germany's place in the deep shade inraded the Ore ?on primaries a few weeks ago when Kenneth A. Brown, Gervals firmer and the ton of the perennial liberal leg lslator, Sam Brown, came out for VS representative ajtalnst the In cumbent, James V. Mott. Brown's particular brand of Weltanschauung lnrolTes a plea for non-participaton In war by the United States, and the asser tion that the Jewish race is the root ot all political and economic Til infhe world as well as thla nation: T His rampalgn, which to date has apparently ha exactly nq in fluence on the nncuestloned poli tical superiority of his opponent, baa nevertheless provided more custom for grapevine communlca tkn systems than any similar candidacy In recent years. One b as the Imp reeslon .that In stead of passing the biscuits In the fashion ot Texas's Governor W. Lee O'DanielJ or leading an orchestra like Vic Meyers, irre pressible lleu tenant governor ef Washington, the Gervafs aspirant has taken the role of fascism as an easy road to political fame for a day. One would believe, in fact, that Brown was a sort of comic-opera Hitler were he not so serious. Buys Five rages lit Voters' Pamphlet He proved his seriousness at the very outset of Ills campaign when he evoked numerous "oh'a" and "ah's" at the statehouse as he slapped down $500 on the counter in the secretary of state's office with which to buy five full pages in the voter's pamphlet. One, or even a half, is enough for less histrionic candidates. On his five pages he has re printed citations from and com ments on the so-called "Protocols of the Elders of Zion," discredited forgery which attributes ideas ot world political and economic domination to a mysterious and hlKhly anonymous coterie of Jews. The Protocols, which have had a turbulent and not especially re spectable history turing the 'last 40 years or so, have been judi cially determined In this country to have a forged origin, and have been the subject ot frequent and convincing denunciation by Jew and. Gentile alike. They make, however, as Brown will doubtless testify. Inflammatory propagan- da of the first and perhaps most poisonous -order. Formal Barking X Denied by Candidate ' Brown last week denied that his one-man movement, which has as lta slogan "Peace at any price," and which declares that "from the bloodsoaked battle fields ot France or Asia, there will accrue Democracy tor no people prosperity to none, aave JEWS, baa any formal backing, intellec tual or political. lie denied reading Alfred Ro aenbarg or any ot the Nazi race propagandists, and refused to re Teal any ether outside influence cn hia thinking which wonld tend . to make him anti-Semitic, or, as be prefers to have it said, "against the Jews." . OH the contrary, hia beliefs come from "personal observa tion, and experience, be reports. Political backing be also de nies. Registered and filing, as republican, he has meant only headaches for the state republican organisation in Portland. -S.' M. Labe, former Portland , (Turn to page 1, eolnmn 1) Our .Senators i Ei3n,t Play-Rdii Salem Senators . scheduled opening game la the Western International league at Spokane was postponed last night on ac count of mln. They'll try again tonight, if it doesn't rata again, and may play a double-header at Spokane Thursday night be fore heading for Wenatehee Friday. " OTHER TITI GAMES . At Yakima Yakima S. - Vancouver Jf( Other , Western 1 Xateraticnal fames postponed, rain. K. Browi Charges News . Is Suppressed r -v..' v V k-v l ' i. IT. -k News Suppressed BtfAl SE IT DARED TEI.t THT! 1 TRUTH i hVKVTl A ) MHVN . . .tm '.,l:e9jfVfr'Kai :': T m " - it ln mfinv ' WHO HKJtK yet HAVE Tttll it Facsimile of a portion of Kenneth .A. Brown's pamphlet acemsing newspapers . of "suppressing" his campaign statement. : The sword pictured beside bis photo is similar to the emblem ot tlie .Silver . Khirts, - anti-Semitic or ganization headed by William Dndley Feller. ' . I - 10:30 a.m.. Public norary Found Hugh Morrow, the librar ian, who knowa all abejut tEe ln- siaesoi ienerai lockups Leaven worth and, Mc Neill's island be cause he was a . . I librarian in both of them, worried because business men don't realize what the library v"- a can ao xor mem. He told us about A local grocer Fsol H- Bum. Jri who w s , sur prised to find the library bad an Encyclopedia of Foods, so sur prised such a book existed that he ordered one for the benefit of his clerks, s .-":" 11 a.m., Capitol ground s Walked on the grass and were re buked by Reginald Llndon, re tired gardener and amateur sleuth who Is as English as bloaters for breakfast. He remarked "that there were quite a few weeds in the capitol lawn and we told him the state's slow moving weeders probably hadn't reached this side yet. Mr. Llndon essayed that weeders should be paid by the Weed and not by the hour and then told us of a time when the adjoining counties of . Lancashire and Cheshire each paid a bounty tor rats, and rat hunting lmmedi- (Turn to page 3, column 2) , A i r t.i ! (! : "i I 0 En fflne.Ear" F Paul i Hauser9 Column Fulkerson Memorial to Be: Dedicated, School Play Day Dedication ceremonies for an agate bench, to be erected on the courthouse lawn in memory ot the late County School Superintendent Mary L Fulkerson will be held at 9 a.m. during the county school "Play Day" on May 3. according to program announcement mad yesterday ( by Mrs. Grace Sehon, chairman ot the dedication com mittee. ' Speakers at the dedication cere mony, at which children from all county schools will be present, will include Governor Charles A. S prague. Rex Putnam, state sup erintendent ot pubUo instruction. The bench, which has been pur chased with contributions made by publis j school pupils through out Marion county, will be erected on -the cast lawn ot the court house, and will bear a marker commemorating the services of Mrs. Falkersca, wha died in April, 1939, to the county schools and to the state school syitem. Preliminary announcement ot the exercises to be sefit out today to all schools uotos that ehould the county school "Play Dayt on May 3 be postponed! for reason cf Inclement weather, the dedication Toll May Ris To 150; Blaze Traps Throng Bodies Are Piled up Like : Cord wood ; Fire Starts in Moss on Walls Most of Victims Heaped Near Bandstand; 30 Hurt Escaping , NATCHEZ, Miss-, April 24-(Wednesday)Jv-Sherlff .- Hvde R. Jenkins said at least 100 ne groes were burned to death In a dance hall fire here last night, Others estimated the death toll at possibly as mmv an ISO. R. E. Smith, managing editor of the Natchez Democrat, said the bodies were "piled up like cord wood." .1 Smith said that shortly before 2 a. m. more than 100 bodies had been taken from the ruins and that the toll might reach a maximum of 150. He said 10 of the 12 members of the Walter ' Barnes orchestra, of Chicago, playing for the dance, perished. All doctors in the city were as sisted by firemen in giving first aid to those horned or injured. Almost all the negro popula (Turn to Page 3, Col. 3) Debaters Will Go East, Is Decision Fund Still $150 Shy but More Coming; . School Board to Assist 'On to Decatur is the cry ot the four members of the Salem high school debate team who de cided at a meeting yesterday that they will go to the national debate tournament in Decatur, ill., even if they mnst "go on sardines and crackers." Although the needed funds are not yet raised, the goal is now in sight, with contributions yester day leaving but about $150 lack ing toward the needed $500. The Salem school board last night voted to contribute to the campaign, the amount to depend on the further response of indi viduals and clubs. Board members voiced hearty support of trip and indicated their belief that resi dents of Salem would be interest ed enough in having the state rep resented in the tournament to make personal donations to cover the amount needed. Other donations yesterday In cluded $30 by members of the Ki wanis club, $10 by the high school home economics dub, $10 by The Oregon Statesman, $5 each from Valley Motor company. Dr. Kin ley Adams and Herman Lafky. Team members, Zeral Brown, Emogene Russell, Jack Hayes and Don Burton, with Mrs. H. A; Rus sell as chaperon, will leave to morrow by train. Highway Employe Killed by Shovel OlfeGON CITY. April 23-a)-A falling construction shovel fa tally crushed Claude E. Wright, 41, of Rex, Ore., late today. ; ' Wright, employe of the state highway department, was inspect ing the Water (street viaduct pro ject on the eastside Pacific .high way. Jack Taggert, operating the shovel for the Barham construc tion company ot Salem, said the gears in the boom slipped. . exercises will similarly be post poned. Each school attending the cere mony will bring a wreath of flow ers to be presented in the course of the dedication, and names of all pupils contributing to the me morial will be inscribed in a per manent record to be kept in the courthouse. . , ; Complete program beginning at 9 a.m. as announced by Mrs. Se hon Is as follows: Selection,' Sa lem high school band; invocation Father Alcuin; singing of "Ore gon. My Oregon" by school chil dren under the direction of Dr. Dan V. Poling addresses by Gov ernor Sprague, State Superinten dent Putnam, County Superinten dent Agnes C Booth, and by Dr. J. JL. Churchill, a co-worker and. friend; reading of newspaper ed itorial concerning Mrs. Fulkerson, by, Beulan Chapman, valley edi tor, Tho Oregon Statesman; "Go in' Heme,? sung by jRex Hartley; reveille. Stay ton band; presenta tion ot. the memorial, Cilvin Hil debrandt. Central Howell school; unveiling, Mt. Angel, school pu pils; acceptance address. County Judge' John C.. Siegmund; bene diction. Dr. Dan V.-JFollag;. and tar itayton band, -1 Cooke Leads Ladner for GOP Senator Choice in Pennsylvania Roosevelt Unopposed Is Given Endorsement; ; Some for Garner : PHILADELPHIA, . April 24-(WednesdayWjpw-Senator , . Jo seph F. Guf fey steadily widened his lead today in a Pennsylvania primary ; fight for democratic nomination for US senator despite opposition by other state lead er of his own -'.partz.. - Meanwhile, ;' the ' unofficial tabulation from more than a third of the state's districts showed an organization-backed . republican slate far; ahead in races for US senate, state treasurer and audit or general nominations. . . .Democrats in 2137 of 8105 dis tricts gave Franklin D. Roosevelt 184,127 rotes ' on a presidential preferential ; ballot on which his was the only name filed. .It was placed on the ballot by the demo cratic state committee, which en dorsed him for a third term. The president's consent was not neces sary. Write-ins on the democratic ballot gave Vice President John N. Garner 25 votes, James A. Farley 4 and Secretary of State Cordell Hull 4. Most of Write-in Vote I -for Dewey Thomas E. Dewey of New York was running far ahead in a write in on the republican presidential preference ballot. The republi cans filed no names but left spaces so names could be written in. ' Returns from 1215 districts gave: t - Dewey 1813. Governor Arthur H. Jones : 511, Senator Robert A. Taft 71, Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg 18, Frank Gannett 7. Roosevelt got 18 write-in votes on the republican ballot in the early returns. In the hard-fought democratic contest for senatorial nomination Guffey held an early lead over his chief rival, Walter A. Jones, fellow Plttsburgher. Unofficial tabulation - from 3801 of the sUte's 8105 districts gave: - ' -- flsffey 193,518. Jones 138,649. Republican organlxation-backed Jay Cooke, Philadelphia city chairman,' was even farther ahead of his chief rival, Albert H. Ladner, Jr.. Philadelphia attor ney, for republican senatorial nomination. Returns from 2935 districts gave: Cooke 281, 686. Ladner 83,053. Convict Recently Here Recaptured OAKLAND. Calif., April 23-6R -Jack Davis, 22, alias Jack Rog ers, who was recaptured several hours after he had beaten his guard , and escaped by Jumping through a train window, was ac cused '. of . robbery, felonious as sault and escape tonight. - . . W. E. Carlton, Los Angeles sheriff's deputy from ; whose custody Davis got away,' filed the complaints in Oakland. The prisoner, who . was being returned, to . Los Angeles . from Salem, Ore., leaped from the train last n -ght near - - Mount :. Eden, south of Oakland. He was found later, hiding in the brush not far from the railroad tracks. H had been sentenced to a road camp for . a Los Angeles burglary, fled . the camp - after serving 14 months, and was finally- picked up in Oregon tor burglary, - where he- served an eight-months sentence. He was being returned to Los Angeles to complete bis sentence. Deputy Carlton said be had accused the young , prisoner of robbery because Davis took his (Turn to Page 8, Col. 8) McSIuinville Man Is Electrocuted OREGON CITY, April ttWf A home made wiring project con tacted a 6900-volt Portland Elec tric Power company transmission circuit today and electrocuted Donald Phillips, 24, of McMinn Tille. -y' The youth was assisting bis brother-in-law, ' Frank Wtnkle xnan, Redland farmer, string a line across the road from the house to the barn. - . : It fell on the utility company's circuit, knocking Phillips and Er nest Keller, one of the helpers, to the ground. Heavy gloves In sulated Keller from the shock. Softbai: Strikes, ICilIs Boy Pitclier BOZEMAN, Mont,, AprU 23.-(5-Struck by a batted softball, nine-year-old Archie l.B. "Jimmie" Johnson died tonight while lelng carried to a hospital. . - He was a pitcher ta a neighbor hood Softball irame. After ha was 'struclt he ran about 60 -feet to ward bis nearby tomi, then col japBO;!;' .'' : ? ,"x"v":' ."..'-?' Mexico Crowd Bound for US Anti-American Prejutlice Voiced by Rioters at Hermosillo Station Almazan Partisans Aver It's Work of Camacho Political Faction I 1 NOGALES, Aris April 23.-CP) A yelling pistol-shooting crowd of Mexicans stormed a United States-bound Southern' Pacific train at Hermosillo, " Sonora, to day, frightened American tourists and threatened two air Jorce gen erals prominent in the Mexican presidential campaign. Gen. G.ustavo Leon and Gen. Alfredo Lezama charged upon ar rival here that .the disorderly demonstration at Hermosillo, the state capital, was Instigated , by 'supporters of Avila Camacho, pro- governmoat candidate for presi dent. The generals are leaders in the campaign of the anti-admin istration candidate, Juan Alma zan. General Lezama reported the train was surrounded by 300 men when -it pulled into the Hermosillo station. After firing pistols in the air and screaming insults,' some of the men invaded Ihe train, seized luggage and damaged prop erty, Lezama said. Luis Castellan es, Los Angeles attorney, said the demonstrators cried in Spanish: "Down with Ala- j Turn to page 8, column 7) Autoist Survives Dive of 350 Feet Cowden Car Comes to Rest in Tree, He Escapes Merely Bruised' .HOOD RIVER, April 23.-UPY- J. W. Cowden, 30, of Eugene, drove bis automobile over a 350- foot sheer cliff on the Columbia River highway early today and lived to tell about it. The car came to rest in a tree at the edge of the Union Pacific right-of-way. Horrified witnesses summoned help and Cowden, still conscious, was extricated and rushed, to a hospital here. He was released this morning with nothing more than a few bruises to show for his high dive. He explained car lights failed and the car was over the bluff before he could stop. LA GRANDE. Ore., April 23.- (-Truckdriver Robert Krause, 22, Elgin, leaped to safety from the .cab of his truck last night after it skidded through a guard rail. The vehicle plunged into the Minain canyon between Elgin and Minam. . . - JCrause escaped with minor in juries. Rotting Timbers Are new Mystery TILLAMOOK. April 2S-UPV- Rotting timbers and rusted bolts from the wreckage ot an unidenti fied ship poked out of the sand at Elmore park near Rockaway today. - j ... . . Veteran residents could not re call a disaster In the immediate vicinity and believed it might have occurred before white set ters came to the Tillamook coun try. A sailing schooner called the Antelope went ashore about a mile, from the park 40 years ago. WPA MEN NOT Tltls photograph allegedly showing WPA workers "bitched to a flow on a garden project irnsviHe, OklaM led to an investigation by the district WPA STiixnrl'or who later atJmitlcd - tUint was based ca fact ari rrtrali tii frctice woulj bo Ucv'-CaBci-IIS jLoio. Sweden and Rep orted Next Victims; British Steamer Mined Second Vessel Missing; f j f - ; Launched by England Undergoing Tests; n aii:.jt -ji I PARIS, April 23.(AP) The dangers of a spread of the European war jintoj two now-neutral spots Sweden and Yugoslavia were Reported to have been brought into sharp relief at the two-daiy, eighth meeting of the allied war coun cil ending today. J v ! I1 Sources close to the French foreign office said the po- Hollywood lions Qub 0rg anizes 33 Charter Members Are j Listed; Wednesday Meeting Day The Hollywood district of Sa lem and business section north of the city limits acquired a booster organization of their own last night when the Holly wood-Salem Lions club was formally organized and 33 charter members signed at a meeting at Shattue'a Chateau. The new club s membership ter rltory was tentatively! established as i the area south of Belmont street between 15th street and Broadway and extending north of the city limits. Membership was opened to men having either bus iness or residence addresses in this area. i i Wednesday n o o nj beginning next week, . was adopted as the club's regular meeting time. Earl H. Mootry was elected president of the new Iclub. Other officers are R. A. .'Dtck" Meyer, first tlce-presidentf Ray J. Stum- bo, second Tice-presidentj Rr.- S. Raynor mlthiHi secretary-treasur er: i ii. . Rohiand, Lion tamer; Lloyd L. Forrette, tall twister; Dan O. Hammond, W N. Jones. William Bilven and G. M. Slentx, directors, i , ! Other charter members are J. L. Batdorf, E. A. Bradfield. Fred Davis, Bill Davis, Glenn E. Dull, R. A. Forkner, D. C. Fulfer, C. A. Gies, Harold T. Gillespie, H Jacobsen. Roscoe Keller, Maurice Klinger. A. J. Crose.l Ben Lam bert, Albert W. Lindbeck, Milton Parker, Don B. Patton, Frank B. Patterson, Joe Sealey, V. L. Seamster, T. D. .Smith, W. H it (Turn to rage a, coi. i) Head G-Man Given Award in Science S WASHDMGTON, April 2Z.-UP- J. Edgar Hoover, director of the federal bureau of investigation, received the public welfare medal of the National Academy of Sciences tonight for the applica tion of scientific methods in the war on crime. j.., I On the same occasion the academy's annual dinner Dr. Frank: . R. Lillle of Woods Hole, Mass.; was presented! the acad emy's Agassis medal for outstand ing work In the study of the oceans. A Swedish., scientist, Dr. A. H. Westergaard, of Stockholm, was awarded the Charles D. Wal cott medal for geological studies of Sweden. 1 . in accepting the welfare medal Hoover declared that the use of scientific methods in crime detec tion has been a battle against "scorn and ridicule" and "annoy ing interruptions." Since estab lishment of the bureau's technical laboratory In 1932, he said, .the FBI agents often had been "ironi cally depicted as Impractical young . men pursuing criminals while clad in academic! gowns.! K MULES, USED TO PULL PLOW Yugoslavia Five new Battleships c.:r.n..:r:.:-'' ''4. Ollucal and military; leaders :of Great Britain and France, joined for the; first time by representa tives of . German-conquered Po land and German-occupied Nor way, considered the present state of the war and studied preliminary-plans for the future.; Earlier in the day French mil itary commentators reported there was evidence of Increasing German pressure on Sweden in German press and radio cam paigns. ' - - While the situation in Yugosla via was declared to be less tense at the moment, the foreign office source said the Balkan country continues to lie within the danger zone. He said, however, that slackening rf Italian press criticism- had dispelled part of the anxiety for the time being. - - LONDON, April 24-(Wednes-day)-(A)A- miner sank the 1969 ton British steamer Lolworth off the southeast coast of England late last night and the fate of another " ship, also, reported mined, was a mystery early today. The sinking - of' the Lolworth. with the loss of two crewmen and injuries to eight others, fol lowed a big aerial battle. Monday night off the English coast when mine-laying : German warplanes flew low over the Hames and Humer estuaries. v---i tA lifeboat went toUhe assist ance ot the Lol worth's crew but another -craft which put out in search of the - second vessel re- (Turn to page 3, column 8) Jones and Spouse Receive Sentences : I - ' ' . ' f 30 and 15 Years Decreed; Woman Moving Factor in Crime, Belief , PORTLAND, Ore., April 2 3-GP) A young. woman, condemned by the court as the "moving factor" in at least one crime, and her hus band reelered combined terms of 4 S years today for two Oregon bank robberiesv . Federal ' Judge James A. Fee sentenced William" Jones, 32, of Woodbnrn, who admitted holding up the Canby and St. Paul banks, to "30 years In a federal prison. Myrtle Jones, 2 8 , convicted of complicity in the Canby : invasion, must serve 15 years. Discussing the 11000 Canby robbery last November 9, Judge Fee- said:, : ' -i ' "I belleva the woman was the moving factor. I do not believe the other: defendant would have done It without her. She is more dangerous than her companion.' Jones, wounded and captured by the St, Paul bank cashier Feb ruary 21, dropped to a courtroom bench to comfort his tearful wife. "Goodbye, kid, he said, i . i , Mrs. Jones, who testified her husband forced her Into the crime, was convicted at the Pendleton court term.' A Portland jury fail ed to agree at her first trial. - "Although I do not think Jones was the moving factor, he was not man enough to control his own aft fairs," the judge said. , '' neer Col the com- Three Fronts Are Outlined In War News Land,1 Sea and Air -Fight Under way ; Trondheim - Is Second Front ; ' -Tv n Skagerrak Again Active Scene; British Budget Getting Attention (By The Associated Press) Nbrwegian allies battled Tuesday uigni tor me gate" to Oslo in the most significant nf Bi-i0. " grim and gory combats by land. w a air on which may binjre the future of invaded Norwar. , To Britons, the fitrhtin? in way was the most sensational manifestation of a war newly-designated by one unofficial unokon- man -as one against .the "whole German people" not merely the nasi regime of Adolf Hitler. -That struggle, the British were Informed officially, will cost them about 110,000,000,000 for the next fiscal year and will mean drastic Increases in taxes that al ready are immense. The British war i office said of the Norwegian fighting merely that the allies are resisting enemy (pressure" In the south of Norway, but Germany acknowl edged for the first time that Brit ish and German troops were fight ing in central Norway, and re Ports from Stockholm and vari ous unofficial sources filled out this gigantic Jig-saw of the Scandinavian battle scene: ' Major Battle Is to North f Oslo 'A major battle taking shape j some , 90 miles north of Oslo at and aronnd Llllehammer; An allied flanking movement in the vicinity of Hamar, 60 miles . from Oslo; ' A sharp engagement resulting from a German counter-attack north of the west-coast city of Trondheim; and A battle among planes and war ships iny the Skagerrak off Nor way's southern and Sweden's western coast. : In the south-central Norwegian land fighting,, Important despite indications that comparatively small numbers of men are engag ed, the Germans were portrayed as seeking to cut the railway to Britain's debarking points on the west coast while the British were striving, to fight clear of the rug ged hillJ country to pour onto tte plains - toward Oslo. Trondheim Region Objective In West I On 'the west coast, the British aparently were. trying to envelop th region of German-held Trond heim with troops landed to t h e north, 1 and the Germans '. striking back. - Further north, Swedish reports -said the Germans firrlsnn mt Vor' vik was ringed by British and Nor wegian troops and British war ships. -. (-.!? r. Heavy' unfire resonndett ntt the western coast of f Sweden la what was described as; two new battles In the Skagerrak, the most severe since Germany , invsfled Norway April 9. ' - Destroyers could be seen speed ing1 -past coastal lookont nnfnti with guns roaring while bombing km J . . A 1 - M - hiu . ucuude manes Hrimn : overhead. : ReoOrta reach in r Rcrmn.hlil Olkln mtrt fhat Vrtrwccrl a t i uuenammer sector were being threatened from both north ani south : by swift-wheeling German zorces. - .- Alfred Duff x Cooner. former British war secretary and former first lord of the admiralty, called in a St. George's day address for defeat of the whole German peo ple and warned that a defeated Germany need not expect sympa thy bT "Whininr and rranllnr."; as be described them at the Ver sailles, conference after the World war. .. j s - ... His expressions reflected an In creasing opinion among many Britons, veering from the declara tion at the start ot the war that Hltlerism" alone was the foe. But the big news for British subjects was the budget. Sir John Simon, chancellor ot the . exchequer, presented esti mates for expenditure of 2,867. 000,000 (nearly $10,000,000,000 in the fiscal year ending next March II. . . i : More than half must bo bor rowed, despite Increases in poet age, taxes on liquor, beer, match es, a proposed wholesale sales tar, and other levies. The in come tax, already basically 37 H per cent, will not be raised, be said, but surtax exemptions will be lowered. In Berlin, where the sicking of two more British transports and a destroyer and the burciti j of another transport were rer ported, Germans professpj to see the doom of the British -expeditionary effort in Norway and said "if the Eritish land" as riauy si 30,000 troops all tie tetter." The Norwegian' army was rided ss fcaTlng "secend-rats