4' Thm OnTGCII Cslasa. Oregon, Tuaackry X-Xorolacj. Juna 5. 1843 Italy's Terms Are Accepted Frenchmen Outside j Land Rally to i Banner of Gen. DeGaulle i (Continued from pas 1) - It was only the beginning of the fight for the freedom of their homeland. -Many Leaders j -Answer Call ' "! The word went out ; from De Gaulle's fast-growing ranks that prominent JTeneh leaders , -were responding to the call to carry on from France's .empire. possibly with" the baching of the French fleet. v Orders to end hostilities went out In commands, from the French and. Italian army ; headquarters; and from Germany with a bugle call, rolling drums and a "cease fire!" order directed dramatically into a radio microphone for the whole world to hear." . The German "cease fire" was signaled -by the broadcasting of the "das game halt" bugle call. As the strains of the bugle end ed a German announcer came on the air with the brief announce ment that the nail forces had si lenced their guns at that moment. Ia somber contrast to. the 10 day victory celebration and the ringing of hells personally or dered by Adolf Hitler la Germany, the French proclaimed Tuesday a national day-of mourning. "Today France must be silent," Interior Minister Charles Poms ret broadcast" to his fallen nation from Bordeaux. "Her heart will bleed but she will forge a new hope." All Tricolors Hang Draped France ordered all flags on pub lic buildings draped throughout the day, troops were confined to barracks; stores, cafes and thea tres were closed. Through relay stations the Ger man bugle call, rolls of drums and the command that brought peace to broken France were heard In countless American homes. Immediately preceding the Ger man command to cease fire, the Berlin radio broadcast this an nouncement: "To the entire German people: With this signal, calling attention to the entire German nation, the armistice has gone into effect. "At this historic hour, all Ger man eyes in Germany and all over the world are turned toward our fuehrer, Adolf Hitler. "A victory; has been accom plished far greater than ourwild est and moat optimistic estima tion. ; . - "Eighty million Germans . are united In one shout of 'long live our f uehrer. ", Even as peace returned, to west ern Europe new trouble developed in the southeast with reports of numerous border, clashes between Rumanian and Russian troops. Red Planes Fir ,1 Over Rumania A swarm of more than 100 red army planes were reported. to have made reconnaissance flights over Bessarabia," territory , Rumania gained after the World war and to which Russia has never re nounced her claim. Three days after bowing to Ger- 1 rffESPlVTOF by JOHN CUNTON . Don't tell roe autos don't know what you're plan nine to do with -eml Right now my Hi s p an o -Plyroouth's out in the drive fairly itching to get going on a fishing trip. The ValM OB Statu mm the raw leaf tweveht It beck after m Step-Wear Lferletle Jau ft knows we're fUMnsl - i - - ; I it item as gently ai your son's red wagon, and it shifts like a Notre Dame backfield, and that little squeak that's almost driven me nuts, has become th little squeak that im't therer i Oa tee ef ell flats,, they If, Cteeeea art the fwxx In the bade seat, washed the glees aaf fretted the slatewells ef the tires. Wewt I can barely watt te get ewt ea the highway. r . i . If yon think Fm exaggerating, you try it. Try a Stop-Wear Lubrication Job. It costs no more than a hit-or-miss greasing, but you can really feel the difference in the way the car rides. They use factory check-charts, and the men who do the work are trained to do it. They even keep a card file to tell them when it s , time to call you up and have it done again. Se, If yeeve seep le ef week-ends en year sleeve. mr nete wltta treet, then what 1 aHJ end have the car ften-Weer-sdl It makes whale ef difference when yawVe wey h thel te knew that It's ha tee seadMen. UK:onc:icc;..rA!iY maa demands the French govern meat capitulated to Italian arm istice terms at 7:85 Pm. yesterday (9:35 a.m. PST) with the Vcease fire order following automatical ly six hours after the formal sign ing. ' 'i:- l ; '-!" : J j . Terms of the French-Italian armistice were not disclosed im mediately, but Germany's price for peace already has made France impotent for the duration of the war at least, t - 5 In contrast to the bleak, rail way ar setting in the Compiegne forest where -the French-German armistice was .signed ,, Saturday', the French and Italians reached their agreement In the splendor of the 17th century villa Inchesa,, IS miles from Rome. , -r-l ? . It took the Germans and French 2? hour i to put the pen to the armistice, With their Italian foes of 14 days it took, but four hears. ' ..French Alpine troops battled to the very end against German and Italian forces, closing in en them near; the Juncture of the Swiss, French and Italian frontiers. .Oth er weary potlus crossed into. Swit zerland and surrendered. - -- f In its last communique detail ing the, day's fighting, ihe French high command reported slight German -advances In the Rhone and futile Italian attacks la the Alps. - ( The British, carrying the fight to the enemy, sent new air attacks against nazi bases in Germany and The Netherlands and announzea the sinking of an IUlian subma rine "somewhere east of Sues." The British said it was the seventh Italian submarine sunk- to date. General Wladyslaw, prime min ister of the refugee Polish govern ment, announced in London that his armies their strength un stated would continue the fight at the side of Britain. Canadian Income Taxes Zoom High Taxes up to 80 Per Cent Pnt on Automobiles; Hits US Trade OTTAWA, June 24.-(V-Drastic Increases in income taxes reaching virtually every wage earner, taxes ranging up to 80 per cent on automobiles and sev eral new levies were disclosed to day in the war-time budget put before the house of -commons by Canadian Finance Minister J. L. Ralston. . Income rates were Increased so sharply that a married man with no dependents paying $3 on a salary of 13000 under present rates will now pay $195. The new tax on automobiles, starting at 10 per cent on the manufacturers' value up to $700 and Increasing to 80 per cent, in excess of $1200, was designed virtually to prohibit the purchase of high-priced cars and thus con serve foreign exchange. The budget, proposed for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1941, will be debated in parlia ment shortly. Ralston estimated receipts from the new taxes for the year would be $110,000,000. bringing the year's revenue to $760,000,000. Total expenditures, however, were estimated at $1,148,000,000. The minister said that in view of vari ous commitments for war pur poses, the overall deficit for the year might be about $600,000, 000. The over-all deficit for the fis cal year ending last March 31 was $118,000,000, the exact amount of war expenditures for the period. Total revenues were $562,000,000, an all-time Cana dian high. Guard Anti-Plane Units Work Well (Continued from Page 1.) ing a 40-yard radius. Most of the targets were shot full of holes. When the shells burst about 12 seconds after leaving the gun, they leave a trail 6f smoke-puffs serosa the sky. The two guns to gether got about 28 shots at the target on each course, many of these shots being sufficient to bring a plane .down. t The mechanical and electrical equipment used to fire the guns are a dark military secret. Only two civilians, a major's son and a reporter, were permitted to see the firing and they weren't al lowed to take a good look at the director and altitude finder. The regular army troops at Fort Stevens will begin practice this week with the three-inch guns. . Another potent weapon against airplanes are the four 800,000, 600 candlepower - searchlights manned by the Salem searchlight battery. Without 'any. previous training, these . boys spotted- their plane and kept the lights turned on it. - ' "When the lights were on me, I lost all my bearings and-was In danger of going into a spin." the . pilot said. ' "There is grave danger when those lights are turned on a plane. I had to drop deep down in my seat and fly on instruments." - - ! . . "Those boys fired like veter ans." an army major said. They learn the business about four times as fast as regular soldiers, because they have more of an in terest Jn it." , - ; Of course, these guns are far from being sufficient to protect the Columbia river area from planes. They are' mobile, however, and can be set up In less than an hour. Prospector Says He Set Big Fire i In South Oregon ' flXt AVTS PASS. Jnne fi John Braden. 27, prospector from Scran ton. Pa., confessed today that heeet the 200 0-acre Upper Chetco riven five, I Enforcement Officer Lee Blevlns said. He was held on a vagrancy charge. ; j . ; Supervisor Edward P. Cliff ef the Siskiyou national forest said the blare would be corraiea -tonight by 300 fighters battling it In trails and air Stassen Galls;; iwGOiMdve Declares GoTernment Is Aid " to j Enterprise, ' ; not Substitute ;i : " " 't'-S- ' 1 (Continued from page X) tlon of 4 8 states wOnake the program' and principles that we here set forth their program and principles next November' T ' - Governor Calls ::' i:y: for National Unity , , f ; The governor e a 1 1 e d f or na tional unity, and then swung. Into his first criticism of the new deal asking whether the; future lead ership ef the government should lie with "that group of men .who fori seven years have been in charge,, of the government, wear ing the democratic label. , - Cries of No-No--No,'.' loud and prolonged, .'were I heard from several Quarters of the hall. ; Stassen T. charged . the ' adminis tration: with an 'effort, to smooth over discrepancies In the na tional defense: and, warming to his 'address, accased President Roosevelt of making fan eleventh hour: confession cf failure" by his appointment of two republi cans Colonel Frank Knox and Henry I Stimson to be secreta ries of the navy and war depart ments respectively. "Dare this nation continue for the next f our years under this kind:! of leadership?'' he asked and the crowd shouted, back: "No." - ' I " j The earlier developments of the day had included the emerg ence of a 14-vc-te Willkie bloc in the big Pennsylvania delegation and reports of j leaders from New England, the south and scattered western states ; that Willkie was showing- gains, j The boom for the man who only a few weeks ago was given only j the slimmest of outside chances produced is counter drive; in the form of a. "stop Will kie" movement led by j eight mem ebrs of the national house of rep resentatives. These legislators said they wanted a man whose views would make possible a "clear-cut vote' on Issues in harmony "with the republican position in con gress The eight antl-Wlllkle house members were Woodruff (Mich), Knution (Minn). Keefe (Wis), Mundt (SD), Clevenger (Ohio), Bolles (Wis). Lewis (Ohio), and Gillie; (Ind). They met,' considered the question, and issued a signed statement and an accompanying "news release." . The! latter ex plained that . while the statement mentioned no names, I the discus sion at -the meeting "centered up on the unavailability of Willkie." Mercury Reaches 97, Misses Mark (Continued from page 1) stubborn but small ' blaze near Forest Grove as a humidity drop to 20 caused most logging opera tions In the vicinity to shut down. Near Grants Pass 300 fighters were slowly closing in on the big upperi Chetco river's 2000-acre in cendiary blaze. Officer Lee Blevins said M. J. , Braden, 27, signed a statement today that he set the fire. ' j For the second time in two weeks a blaze plagued the Cobbs Mitcheil company at j Valsetz In the coastal mountains. Although near the town the new fire was not believed serious, i camp and mill crews from Bend rushed to' a brush-grass fire at the edge of town ' late today and controlled it despite a heavy wind. The mercury reached 95 In Portland. Bend and Grants Pass reported 98 and Albany, in the mid-Willamette valley, 95. Loading to Start . PORTLAND, June 24-(ifV Wayne L. Morse, coast waterfront arbiter, tonight ordered CIO long shoremen to resume loading lum ber on the freighter Portland at the B. F. Johnson lumber docks not later than 9:30 a. m. Thurs day. : . Morse ruled that since June 21, fill t A ft le.llatlltA Shf A order ! against picketing at the mm, tnere nas been no legitimate picketj line In existence there. He found! no evidence," however, of collusion between : striking CIO mill workers, and the longshore men as charged by; the Portland waterfront employers. I Thirteen ' pickets were arrested on ' charges of violating : the re strainer. Longshoremen ' respect ed the line and refused to work the ship. - -1 1 Rifle Used in Suicide Of Portland Engineer MEDFORD. June 24.-)-Maric L. Hetriek, 63, Portland, mining engineer, killed himself yesterday with a rifle. Coroner Frank Perl reported. - - t- , : The body was found by a milk man on the back porch of a Rogue river residence. Hetriek had been visiting D. B. McClung. , ccause . is' GOOD Morse Rules Ship X -n . 1 nV XTliite BlaiiitaiiiB Already in War" PORTLAND, Jane iSl)-?0,i rTess and --peace" groups" were blamed by Major General George JL White yesterday for the na lion's unpreparedness. - . He told 2000 persona at a mass American Legion ' Initiation j that America "already la la thla war, iut that aoifait as manpower Is Concerned, there need be-no worry for a long time to come. - ' Biddle Is Ordered Out of Bordeaux No US &Toy; Remains in BordejBTixs " IJidtlle . Back to London" WASHINGTON. . June 24-(ffV f he United SUtes withdrew It Chief -diplomatic : representative from Bordeanx todav In a move which raised Questions as to both present and future relations with the Petain ministry in France. i Secretary Hull announced An thony J. Drexel Biddle had. been ordered to leave the temporary French capital and resume In Lon don his duties, as ambassador to the exiled Polish government, ! The secretary of state said BIddle's departure for Lyndon had nothing to do with the Ques tion of possible withdrawal of recognition of the petain govern ment in favor of the newly-formed French national committee in London which is seeking to or ganize continued French resist ance In, the war. I William C. Bullitt, Hull said; siill is the ambassador to France. However, Bullitt has been cut off from direct communication with the state department since the Germans occupied Paris. Com munication between this govern ment and the Petain ministry has been through Biddle. i The present uncertainty on the question of recognition was evi denced at the treasury where Sec retary Morgenthau said no deci sion could be made no possible release of over $1,000,000,000 of French assets In this country until the state department had advised on various aspects of the United States' attitude toward the present French government. i t7ar Goods Sale Opposed by VFW (Continued from Page 1) have an investment in the Ideals of democracy that none can ex ceied and few equal." The resolution recited rumors "that we believe to be reliable" that certain government officials had assumed authority to divert American war materials "includ ing our all-important aerial bomb sight, which equipment Is vital to the very safety of .the United States. Another resolution adopted by the post asked that veterans' em ployment preference in govern ment services be extended to hold ers of campaign medals for the Puerto. RIc&n occupation, China relief expedition, Haitian cam paign of 1915, Dominican cam paign of 1916, Haitian campaign of; 1919-20, second Nicaraguan campaign, 1926-33, Yangtze cam paign for service in China since 1926 and the new China cam paign. Knife Victim Succumbi; Assailant Is not Knotcn (PORTLAND, June 24.P) John Ott. 59. died today of knife wounds inflicted by- an unknown assailant June 18. Detective Chief John J. Keegan said Ott gave a description of the atta.cker but was , unable to ex plain the knifing. 1 IDS MR SM smobs ihe sldrz-tjuming cigarette I WANT. - All THE MILDNESS ; ; AND FLAVOR -I CAN GET. CAMELS BURN Gthrim And r 1- GIVE ME WHAT - I WANT, ALONG WITH CJTOA V sr.c::i::oToo! PETOt nCK-WerWa C&loa print Saimsser , ' ' IV I V Jfl AUE IW U tuf i JJN avmPccn.'! know what a diflerence - there is between a fast-burning smoke and a slow-burning one. I stick to . Camels." Yes, Camel's costlier tobaccos and slower burning give you xrr ia p", vvIni, and flavor and extra smoking,' too C tigbt) kw extha Liarriiss, - : LI JIU tnr fM"i IT1 fv Tf Britain Waits ; Nazi Attacks : i , fillgrant : Poliah . Army . Is " now in England to' :: Keep np Fight (Continued from Page 1) premier Revnaud of France would join the committee and added: ' vi have reason to - think ,that the French fleet will not sur render to the enemy." . ; De Gaulle said lie had re ceived - an "almost unbelievable response" to his broadcast appeal for Frenchmen to make a' last ditch fight, and prophesied that the first military reverse Inflicted on Hitler would make possible the organization of ''some kind of re sistance on French eoll. ' ! : De Gaulle said he did not know "exactly" where his former chief. Reynaud, was at the moment and was. "not certain -of the authen ticity of reports that he had gone to New York." - The Daily f Mail's diplomatic correspondent, Wilson Broad bent, wrote today that Reynaud hoped to reach London. - j .It was also reported thafYvon Debos, a former, foreign minister, Cesar CampinchI, former minister of the navy, Leon Blum, premier of the former popular front gov ernment, and Edouard Herrlott, resigned president of the French chamber of deputies, would also Join the De-Gaulle group. Chnrchill to Make Full Statement - Prime Minister Churchill prob ably will make a full statement tomorrow in commons on 1 the armistice. The air ministry reported raids on German munitions factories, marshalling yards and railway junctions in Mecklenburg, the Ruhr and the Rhineland, claim ing heavy damage. The admiralty declared another Italian submarine had been de stroyed east of Suez, bringing Italian submarine losses to seven. Loss of the . naval yacht Campeador was announced. Seven teen survivors of the torpedoed Wellington Star, 11,400-ton Brit ish liner, were landed at Oporto, Portugal. The British food minister, Lord Frederick James Woolton, said some of the most vital food stocks "are greater than they have bee at any time in the history of our country." The health - ministry ordered the removal Thursday and ' Fri day of 9,000 school children from Southampton, Gospdrt and Ports mouth, on the southern coast, to other and safer areas. Authoritative British sources predicted a "fundamentally weak" Germany would begin to break up next winter. "There - will be famine i in Europe and a desperate Germany with. Italy in tow will be spend ing her dwindling strength on holding down and holding togeth er a transient empire which will have begun to go to pieces," these sources said. Frencli Withdraw Line in Shanghai i SHANGHAI, June 25.-(ff)-French concession military de fense forces announced today withdrawal of their troops from a small segment of Chinese ter ritory, adjacent to the southwest ern corner of the concession, which they had occupied since the summer of 1937. The zone is adjacent "to Japanese-occupied areas around Shanghai and the Japanese mili tary moved Into it as the French withdrew. The French had taken over the tone when the ' Chinese-Japanese conflict struck Shanghai because of the location there of a large French Catholic mission and the concession's water supply. Then they said the situation de manded a "security zone" for the concession; today they stated the need for the zdne had ended.; V 1 O la recent laboratory ' CAMELS homed 23 slower thaa the average of the 15 other v of the largest-selling" brands . testedslower thaa tmy of them. : ; Tnac means, oa the sverage, , smoking ptt equal to K EXTRA SLIOKES , J) PER PACK! Pan-American Run To Auckland Set -SAN FRANCISCO, Jane tHft -Pan AniericaiiAirwaya r"h nounced today Its San Francisco New Zealand 'clipper' service would be launched! July. 11. " " Clipper planes will leave San Francisco on Saturday afternoon and will arrive In! Auckland on Wednesdays. " Flights will be on a fortnightly basis. : Cruiser to Stay WliUein Uruguay Quincyr Gets ' Orders . for .Stopover -Wliile. Nazi -Elements Probed MONTSV1DEO. June The US cruiser Qulncy, scheduled to leave ' Montevideo tomorrow after a "good will visit'-' at a time when - Uruguay la" investigating alleged - pro-nazi plots to occupy the country, received unexpected orders tonight from Washington to remain "for a few more days." - In addition, It was learned, the flagship Wichita of the seventh cruiser squadron has left Rio de Janeiro for Montevideo and is ex pected to arrive June 29. Observers here took the pres ence of a US warship In Monte video harbor as an Indication the United States would back up the Uruguay government: in its ac tions to Investigate and wipe-out any foreign-dictated plots. Word that the Quincy , would stay came only a few hours after the Uruguay chamber of deputies authorized . steps, to safeguard against subversive plots. : There was speculation that the arrival of the Wichita might mean that the entire seventh squadron would be assigned to this part of the South American coast. The chamber of deputies to night turned the report of a special commission named to In vestigate nazi activities over to the department of administration and justice with instructions to draw up measures to safeguard against subversive activities. Dose Isn't Fatal Charles . Harold. Lee, 848 East Turner road, swallowed strych nine sulphate last night. First Aid Captain, Charles Charlton said. Lee was treated by first aid men and taken to -the Salem Deacon ess hospital where his condition was reported as satisfactory. . mm U VV iln oinhiR , l 35 I A . -ll rl-in-. YT 1 ; 2t5 DUYS a good breakfast on the Bearer, luncheon is only 30c and dinner 35c You can't beat that anywhere! Prices for more elaborate meals and m U carte are proportionately low. LCUriCE car for tourist passengen is full-length, big and comfortable with easy chairs, refreshments, magazines and radio. Your tourist ticket includes free use of this car. C A- LARSON Phone 44C3. Front Leaders AreAcctotted JL '' VY Jury Acquits Nine Can't v Decide on Five in Sedition Trial ' NEW YORK. June zWflVThe federal government's first mass sedition case in many -years -an 11-week trial of 14 young men charged with conspiracy to over throw the government and to steal federal propertyended late to day with a Jury acquitting nine defendants - and "disagreeing on the other five. - . - -V . T h e Brooklyn federal - court Jury reached its ; decision - after deliberating' off and on for 125 hours since last Wednesday and waa thanked by Judge Marcus B. Campbell for its "long service and careful deliberation,. v r . . 8 e o r e s of anxious ' relatives crowded: Into 'the courtroom to congratulate -'- t h e - defendants, whom J. Edgar Hoover, FBI chief, had accused . when . they were ar rested In January of plotting to kill a dozen congressmen In a coup to set up an anti-Semitic dic tatorship in this country. All exeept Alfred ' J. Qulnlan were charged with both offenses; he waa accused only of conspiracy to steal government ammunition. .' One Hang Self Ten days after the trial began a 15th defendant, Clans Gunther E r n e c k e , 3 5, correspondence course salesman and Berlin-born German-American' bund member, hanged himself in a rented room. Early in the trial charges were dismissed against two other men, George M. Kelly, 24, hotel em loye, and Edward L. Walsh, 23, unemployed. ' Those acquitted were: . John F. Cassldy, lawyer and leader of the Brooklyn Christian front organization; John A. Graf, 23, clerk; John C. Cook, 19, un employed, marine corps reserve corporal; Laroy Keegan, 37, Ba ker, naval reserve, seaman; Michael VIII, 35. chauffeur, born in Germany, naturalized cit izen; Michael J. Beirne, 32, tele phone lineman, . national guard corporal,-born In Ireland, natural ized citizen; Andrew Muckley, 34, tailor, national guard sergeant and qualified gunner, born in Ire land, naturalized last year; Fran cis M. J. M alone, 25 department store employe, and Qulnlan, 27, national guardsman. ' - - The Jury disagreed A in the eases of three men charged with both . offensesrWllllam Gerald Bishop, 39, whom the prosecution said was a nail propagandist and ringleader of the - alleged con For chair tourist passengers Kext time you go to San Frandsco, try the Beaver, Southern Padfic'i new fast, air-cooled train for chair car and tourist passengeri exclusively. A v . good breakfast costs only 25c, luncheon 30c, din- V cer 35c Enjoy chair cars with big, comfortable T seats,' modern ourist Pttllmans, tourist lounge cars. Fast schedules : ; y. - : - : . :" : Leave SALEM ' r 7:22 PJM. Arrive SAN FRANCISCO 1:55 PJf. v spiracy; Macklln Bocttgcr, 12, ra tional guardsman, and John A. Vlebrock, 3(. elevator mechanic. John T. Prout, Jr. . national guard captain who admitted on the witness stand ee had supplied 2,000 rounds of government am munition to Bishop, was acquitted of conspiracy to overthrow the government. The Jury disagreed on whether he had stolen govern ment property. , .i .' The Jury acquitted William II, D. Bushnell, 18, student, of con spiracy -to steal government mu nitions and disagreed on the other charge. Child Mother Will Return to School 12-Year Old Leaves Babe . .With Grandma, Goes ', ( Back to 2nd Grade NEW ORLEANS, June 2 -JFl Twelve-year-old Mrs Rose BUlot Chassion went back! tonight to her home down winding Bayou Terre bonne, where she hopes to return tp school. while her grandmother takes care of her seven-pound son born ,11 days ago In Charity hospital.:- ' ' ! ; . I ' The shy. black-haired girl and' her baby left the hospital in an ambulance for home. She said she would, stay with her grandmother. ; During her three-week stay in the hospital the girl received no visits from her relatives or. her 16-year-old husband, Eddie Chas sion. who was out fishing in the gulf. f . - -She speaks the native French dialect of the Louisiana coast and understands little English. ' she did not know how to take care of a baby but explained "my grand-mamere '(grandmother) will show me and take care. of him.'', ' l " " I. , Rose said she was in the second grade at school when forced to leave . by - Charles' Impending ar rival, i . Union Chief Held Under Indictment CH I C A ofo , June Michael Cfrrazzo, boss of the street laborers union in Chicago," was indicted by a s federal grand Jury today on charges of con spiring to bar the use of ready mixed concrete here. The indictment charged that Chicago Is the- only Metropolitan area where ready mixed concrete cannot be nsed and cited "strikes and ' threats of strikes during 1938 and .1839 because of the attempted use of truck mixers. - A V o car (next uayj exclusively H i45 i One way 2Z I One vray zz.zi VJ'rZ -r- planes.; f