V " t! Pictures? Yes . Statesman reader see the ewi of the world ma well as read about It. They see ft n plot urea taken In Salem and in news mats supplied by two world wide service! , XY 7ealher . Generally fair today and Friday; little change in temperature and humidity; overcast with drizzles on coast. Mar. temp. Wedneftt day 84, min. 53. IUvcr -3.0 ft. West wind. . - j 1V CA vv pcuwoao 1651 NINETIETH YEAR Ecdairu Orton. Thursday Mcrniag, July 11, 1910 Price 3ci Newsstands 5c No. 63 f i (l;r Yr.O'vftYrS I f M il III 1411 lit J Ilk Nrr -y7 II It A IJ fill II I II - -sss.x, , y i V-l W l,V..V , I Li M i ' : ; . 1 1 .. ,:,'-".. .,.-.'::- Mane State's Case Is Rested in Deputy Trial Marsh Concludes Showing Evidence; Defense :.' tl to Open Bowers , S t a t e Auditor, s Identifies Checks -During Day .Special Prosecutor Francis E. Marsh rested the state's case, early In- the afternoon yesterday in the trial of William York Richardson, charged with larceny of "523,520 . of Marion county funds. Marsh's action, which occurred in the third ifay of the trial and after only two days of testimony by prosecution witnesses,- con trasted strongly with the ten days required to present state's evi dence In the trial of David G Drager, Richardson's one - time chief in the Marion county treas urer's office, held last February, It was not known whether the prosecutor would Introduce more evidence during: the rebuttal perK od allowed, or would depend on that already introduced in the tes timony of Bernard C. Davis and Floyd Bowers, state auditors whose investigations of Marion county bocks in 1935 revealed al leged discrepancies In the treas urer s office. - ; Bowers, who was In charge of the 193 8 audit, held the stand during the morning; session. His testimony consisted In identifying -hecHs issued on Marion county funds which were allegedly in set tlement of personal obligations of urager ana Richardson. Conflicts Shown . J ' by Aaditor . t -j " The auditor also told of con flicting accounts, which Richard? son gave f shortages . on-the treasurer's books after, these were shown to him in NovenrtrerH938. He reported Richardson as say ing that he would "go to work on it and try to check It out" when the question of the shortage was first presented, to him and told that afterwards the defendant said that the shortage extended (Tnrn to page 9, col. 7) I Paul Hauler's : Column We were wishing yesterday that our desk: were larger. If It were larger, about as large as the news room." in fact, then we wouldn't have needed to bother cleaning it out. j It was getting to a point Where ' t strangers needed 1 1 a guide with..: a ' miner's lamp to get by it end an- i w e r coming around . taring if they could dig under it for skeletons. Paul H. Har, Jr. j So we . cleaned it ; out and found: - ' .: L. 'if:J A letter frora - V. A. -Balle- t y n e , jr., proteatiag that the Wheatland' Ferry is:, really, the HS Daniel Matheny not OUR Wheatland Ferry) , . . A let ter from Mra. Roland West of tiie West M nab room company ... an old pipe and no tobacco ... A note from our good friend Marion Averill written -on the stationery of the Hotel ' Edmnnd Meany in Seattle, built in : such - a ' peculiar way that every room is on the cor- . er. : . , t . k , , Bob ; Taplinger, .the , Warner Bros. ' press , agent. , thanking us tor a column and advising . ns tbey can't let ns have Ann Sheri dan this summer , . Calling card of Bert Iladdow Creighton, Lieu tenant Commander, United States Kaval Reserve . . . Long letter from Graee Elizabeth - Savage - of Topanga Canyon, "Calif., and pic ture inclosed of her and Betty Lou Lacy . . ' 4 Spurious . missile which was really from Dorothy Keeton of Kankakee, Illinois . . . clipping telling about a fellow who h e a r d a package making funny noises, dunked it in a tab of water, and theh beard the package, still noisy, gurgle, "This is radio station KTSM, El Paso." . . . Two forgotten letters, war back from January, ! and one a special delivery, from 15. D. Mc Donald of Portland who was wor ried about wild horses (Our horse authority assures as, "Mr. McDon ald, that wild horses are good tor naught and that only one in s thousand would make a rideable critter.) . . ' Found a f 1 o e k of old - bank statements jind cancelled vouch ; (Turn to page 8, col. 5) Our Senators Mayor's Proclamation I by the power rested in me as Mayor of the Gty of Salem, Oregon, do. hereby proclaim that Monday, July 15, 1940, will be the official date upon which the general wearing of Centennial costumes by the male residents of Salem shall begin. 1 :- ' '! i! , I farther proclaim that beginning Monday, July 22, 1940, all female residents of Salem shall don Centennial garb and wear it from that date until the end of the Centennial, August 4, 1940. - - -'' - . . Let it further be proclaimed that the Chamber of Commerce, the Salem Whisk erino Club, the Salem Police Reserve and others connected with the : celebration of Salem's Centennial, shall be duly constituted as agencies to enforce the wearing of costumes.' " ? W. W. CHADCK, 5 ' : . Mayor of. Salem City's Aii thority In Costuming Decrees Kangaroo Court Trial, for Those Who Do not Ahide hy Rules for Centennial Garb The 'authority" of the cityi government was placed yes terday behind Salem Centennial commission's plans to "en courage j every citizen to don bration of the capital s 100th birthday. Menj proclaimed Mayor W. W. Chadwick, must "go 1840" beginning next Monday, and women, he decreed, are expected tq appear in the styles ofO 1840 to I860 by July 22. Enforcement oi the mayor's costume decree will be undertak en by special committees from the chamber : of commerce, the Whis kerinos and the city police re serve, E. H. Bingenheimer, chair man of the costume committee, announced.' , s. Whether! or not men of the city wear old-fashioned coats Is op tional but they are urged at least to put on a pioneer type of hat and brightlcolored shirts, Bingen heimer said.' Styles for women call for long. full skirts and the frills of "1840- Threat of trial by kangaroo court and i; penalties of fines or confinement in a stockade to be erected by the Whiakerinos face non-conformists, according to a release from " Centennial head quarters. The release goes so far as to say that "in very extreme eases kangaroo court defendants may be dipped in an old-fashioned horse trough. Jap anese Demand -Insult" Apology SHANGHAI,' July 10-flV-AntI- Ameriean agitation based on the recent arrest of Japanese gen darmes by United States marines culminated, tonight in a mass- meeting at which Japanese resi dents demanded an official apolo gy for the ."Insult." . It was a sober gathering, how ever, devoid or extravagant speeches, and some,, observers gathered the impression that Jap anese officials were beginning to soft-pedal the excitement. Domei, ' the Japanese news agency, did not mention the meet ing. - $ -; - J--: " " r ' The newspaper Tairika Shimpo, however, printed a fresh diatribe against' the US marines for their. senseless.: cruelty'. " and. said -rll gendarmes ? had -been injured through rongh- handling during their five-hour 'detention.-.'--- '&rt Colonel : Dewitt: Peck, United States' marines commander, said only 4 three jot Mho IS, Larrested while armed and in civilian cloth ing In the United States defense area. Lot the International settle ment, were bruised badly enough to require ."iodine treatment." ' Blaze Destroys Home A small four-room house at 2384 Adams street owned by Mr. and Mrs. Larry - Wrlgnt - was mined and all furnishings oe- stroyed by a fire which broke out there; Ute yesterday after noon. The ! Wrights were away at the time. . Hot Words Hurled as Fran ce Is Voted Totalitarian- Rule vtp HY.r France. July 1 0H?V Bltter accusations or responsibili ty for Fr4mee's defeat by nasi legions threw the national assem bly Into aft uproar tonight as it formally voted approval for Pre Marshal Henri Philippe Pe- tain to form an authoritarian re gime for vrhat s ie t. filial Joint! vote of both houses wis announced as 569 to SO with 15 abstentions. Franca ! thus wm sfloruy wir totalitarian constitution -rnAtAA f ter those of the very axis powej-s which, conquered and ended thti thira repuonc. Fetain Was absent loaay. Pierre i Laval, f orm er foreign minister ind proponent la years past of c:,oeo Franco-ItR'.iaa rela tions, represented the 8 4-year-old marshal-premier. ' Laval sail the new constitu tion would be presented to the people for approval la a national referenda".?, but he did, not say tow tLe v:te would ce conaoctea Stockade Punishment Set garb appropriate to the cele . tity to tall in $33,000 in Bonds Street Assessment Take Provides Funds for Retirement i The Salem city treasury has ac cumulated enough cash in Its im provement bond sinking fund to make possible calling in another I Ti.H0 0. worth of Bancroft bonds. City Treasurer 1 Paul H. i Haaser announced yesterday. - Hauser said a resolution would be presented to the city council next Monday night authorizing the calling of this sum in bonds which would otherwise mature In 1941, 1942, 1943 and 1944. They are bearing 34 per cent Interest.. The city's street Improvement bond debt, if the latest operation is carried oat, will be cot from $400,107.30 to $312,107.30 by the close of 1940, the treasurer said. The city has paid off 841, 000 regularly maturing this year and already -has called in a S14,- 000 block of these bonds in ad' vance of their normal retirement date. The rapid bond retirement pro gram has been made possible In part by heavy receipts of street assessment : receipts. The city has collected $37,147.79 from this source in the first six months of the year, or an average of 86191 29, Hauser pointed out. Jungles Geared l By, Salem Police Salem police officers cleared out the . city's' "Jungles," hobo camps .in the Southern f Pacific yards and along Minto slough as Chief Frank A. - Minto declared war on the. squatters who- inhabit them. ; -! " . . -"It 'always gets bad this; time ot year . and these fellows cause lots ot trouble," Minto explained. "I've told my boys to make them move on and to tear down their shacks.. : . ; ; Thieve Collect $71.59 From Highway Mart Till Thieves who got into the High way Food "store oa the j Pacific highway a quartet mile north of Salem sometime Tuesday night took 8 7 1. 6 9 in coins and currency from the till and- from a hidden money sack, according to a re port received by city police from state troopers. j in divided, impoverished, tihoccu pled France. . ' - - . Germans now occupy, half the country, France's soldlera are In concentration camis or ton the march to them, and the French navy mainly has been seized or sunk by Britain. ; ? i - ' j f Today members la both parlia mentary groups sought to place the blame for France's heavy de feat, and. the Toots' ot bitterness were deep. X -;-:v- Aged Edonard Herrlot, presi dent of the chamber of. deputies, leaped to his feet soon after the session began to shout a violent defense of Edouard Daladier, for mer premier, and other promin ent absentees, when their names were hissed in a roll calL Paul Heynaud, the premier who succeeded Daladier and who was pushed . out of office . wUea he wanted to continue the war a gainst Germany from 1 French north Africa, eat Impassively, his . .Turn to page . coVl) FDR declares Overseas War Isn't for US ; i President Asks Congress for Billions More for Defense States "We Will Repel Aggression Against the US..." WASHINGTON,; July 10-UFV- Fresident Roosevelt, declaring the country must prepare for ''total defense," asked congress for $4,- S4S.171.957i additional for - the! army ,and navy today,, and pro- ciaimea tms two-iom policy: We win not sena our men to take part la! European wars. "But. we will renel aggression against the -United States or the I western hemisphere." The huge outlay, which would i brnig the session's appropriations and contract authorizations for the armed forces to 810,100, 078,270; is designed to sive the nation a start on its "two-ocean' navy, a combined army-navy air tnrrtk tt ihnnt 3ft AAA nlanen and modern veapons and equipment!11 brief ceremony to President Roosevelt's oval office Henry Stimson, republican and secretary of for a land force of 2,000,000 men. I state in President Hoover's cabinet, was sworn m yesterday as the new secretary of war succeed A measure authorizing t h e two-ocean" Inavy was approved by the senate late today, after one hour's debate! and without a sin gle audible fno." This measure, which passed the house some time ago, carries no funds but permits the navy to lay its plans In anticipation of later approprla tions. Senator Connallv (D. Tex.1. during debate on the bill, said two-ocean navy was needed so that If we want to make faces at Europe we can, or If we want to tell the Japs where to get off we can do it." ! Measure Provides : w - Themeasare, authorizlig a seven-year building program to -aa tnn ...vi.. i.. now goes back to the house forV"a""' .i i. j . i aav mornxag. " 1 In a special message wariiing of grare danger to democratic rr TTA rZ.l " . tbrnnti VJrmT.na worv f through sacrifice and work a&df The pledge that so men would v., be sent to European wars brought immediate, . approving" J response iromfOM.Hiwatuw , - . . . . who have expressed fear. that. the nation was heeding .toward war. a great victory for the (Turn to page 12, col. 1) Finger Pressure - Tells1 of Suicide fadPi?reS; Ifl fading press are of a dying man si. fingers "confessed" suicide today. nr. Jo-enh eTnari Bf th state crime laboratory said John Len-J non, 35, GOale farmer, slashed his wrist and fractured his -jaw chewing a dynamite cap until by it exploded. The man, unable to speak his denial of an attack, in dica ted replies to questions by squeezing the doctor's-hand. Sheriff M.f (R.,; Calhoun r st Helens first bought Lennoa -was beaten la -ir attack-but . could find no evidence of; a .scuffle v Six Mcmtlisr In Traffic High .. i Itfiffc 1 ft A mnaiu UllAii In traf- fic 1940. Oregon set a new high of record since 1137 , i jr - I Twenty nine more persons were 1 m.,,,- .!.- .. 1 1540 than during the first .six months of -19 1 9, Secretary, of State Earl Snell reported . Wed nesday, , i The June total of 35 was a new record; for the month and was an Increase tt 10 over June, If 39. f Eight of those killed In June this year were! pedestrians. Late Sports LOS l ANGELES, July 10-ffV- Nlght game: : -- Portland - f ' I 10 1 Hollywood i . r,.7, ,.7 at 1 I Fallin. Irwin! ( 6 ) . Hfleher ( S ) and Annunzior Tost, .Moncriefl (71 and Monzo SAN FRANCISCO. July. IQ-UP) -Night game: 1 Seattle 11- 1 Ban fTancisco u x D. BarHtt; Webber M51 ahd Karse; Epperly, Guay (3), Bal- ou iiy ana sprins, uotemo. SACKAMENTO, July 10-- NJ,cht game: Oakland Sacramento .4 9 .3 12 1 3 CantwelL Buxton (9) and w. Ralmondi; FreStas and Ogrodow- sk:U - IZu aimSX-' i BAN DIEGO CallLj July 10- (P)-Night SBti ' i Los Angeles ; w San Diego I. i : 5 12 0 , Weiland and ! Hernandez; Tho- znts and Detore, STIMSON TAKES OVER AS WAR CHIEF ing narry n ooarrng, resign Kelson (right), administrative Telemat). ; Convict Has Fast Trip to Bull Pen I He Has 30 Minutes Time Between Escape and , Punishment j from state k prison annex peif la S r miaatei waa tie pace set. the last step an unwilling tone, oy jjo.tu. ouuimiwi, - L,. Z I lu f.. fere 10 o'clock, made his way to wby Fairvlew home, took physician's automobile and headed toward Salem and, he T'Z, ir "m I thought, freedom. But police radio interrupted 1 OlWUniU JWW.M-V " " - pjjj George Edwards heard broadcast concerning hi cape. Edwards, cruising on South 12th street, spotted the stolen automobile and gave chase. Si monsen abandoned the car i In an alley - near Leslie and University streets. Edwards used hi two- way radio to notify headquarters he was leaving his patrol car, ana caught his man on 12 th between Mission and Leslie, at 10:07. mainpVnenUy. on . h-,,iMl11 nn'or Simonsen. 13 minutes later was t.MnHV.i otTa rters hole' disciplinary quarters. i ,,: , f. ; s , 1 i Says Wct Roads Okeh for Defense ORTIJLNDi' " J tt I y KT.-iVrV Greatmotor tmcki?" loaded ; with flmmehse logs have tested the mil- itary -value ;of -three major trans- state highways;--'-1-" Henry -FCabelI- of -Portland, chatrinan ; of the i state' highway commission; told the; Reed college Institute of northwest affairs th Oregon coast, Pacif ic and . The Dalles-Calif ornia routes could meet any stress likely to be Im- I. r?4.-5l?A"UL!; "i?!w:;Z r4 s " T" ' in uidb oi . war, w tunBH "Under present conditions. though, military necessity should come before civilian necessity in future road building. That is good investment because out of every Ln.r in hniiiiinr mads for defense. 95 cents would-be snent toP roaa,; that would be serviee- able also in peace time.' Given Ride, Bed JAbuI Meal, Then fRolbs Benefactor ROSEBURG, July 1 MaVAe- cused of rob bing his : benefactor. Lawrence Levi Lewis, 21, of Can- yonville, . was under arrest here today. State Police Sergeant Paul Morgan said Lewis admitted he stole 328 from' John D. Burt, Newberg, niter the latter had gir- n him a rida from Portland to creswell, bought him a meal and fiaa provided a bed for the night. ; J.forran m&lA fewis ia on tiarola from a burglary sentence In Lane county. He probably will be rs turnesl to Eugene. - r Drowns ill Surf . 20UIIKAHNIB, Ore., July 10-(JVy-A strong undertow swept Ar thur Churchill, Jr., If, Portland, to his death' In the Pacific ocean hers today. He was surf bathing Kith 'his brother. Jack, 12, who atttnpted a rescue, and Gordon Scott. ea. ouinsan .cimi.eri is snown laamg ine oatn or on ice irom rwty sj. secretary in the' executive ofice, in the presence of the presidentAP She Went Places Wrong Places On Her 1st Ride KANSAS CITY, July 10-(JF-Mrs. Met Anstin went places today the first time she took the wheel of a. car but they , were the wrong places. ' , With her 23-year-old daugh ' ter. Christine,, beside her to -lv 4Tfce, ; fir JatendeJUi:: ; hack odt of the family drive way. Instead she went forward Took off a corner ot the Au stin ?arage.-. . ' ,- Tore off a corner of another neighbor's home, j Sped acroae Jackson avenue "Nothing was coming, praise the Lord,? said Mrs. Austin jumped the curb and halted. . Daughter Christine could neither help nor give advice ; she fainted early in the s wild jaunt after her head j bumped the top. f ' ''" With neighbors crowded about, a small, excited ma a shouldered bis way through. It ' was Mrs. Austin's husband. ' ' "Wht was the accident, ma ma 7" he asked anxiously. Tm the accident, Ed," was -the reply.' ' Paraguay to Get I New Constitution ASCUNCION. Paraguay. - July 10-(iP)-Pree. -Joe Felix BsUgar- rlbia tonight promulgated a new constitution for , Paraguay. - v j The "constitution, according to a statement issued by the minister of government andTtahor; Alejan: dro Marino' IngBesias widens con siderably : t h e administration; powers In the social and economic- ' ipheres - ahd ? centralises fall chirge'of the country's affairs in th hands of the government. " To collaborate rith the admin istration,' the constitution creates' a state council representing gov ernment, rural industries, finance, commerce,, education, religion and the army and nary. . ! - It prescribes five-year- terms for the president and members of both chambers of the congress, and establishes a universal com pulsory Secret ballot. " ;j v.; ':' ;.. The constitution; will be sub mitted for the approval of a pop ular plebiscite August 4.'- Bfitish'Medite MayMidveW ' By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Europe's war has flamed Into action in the Mediterranean the ater on British initiative.' That Is the most salient fact of the car- rent war news. : "' . It outweighs in significance the disputed results of the first brush between British and Italian sea power, the. German-Italian moves to avert a war in the Balkan store house of the axis allies, or the in tensifying German air and tub marine attack on England's sea life lines. ";-- ? ;;--. H: ;-;. . A striking British naval' suc cess over Italy at this juncture might well shift the whole scene of the eastern war stage. It could powerfully Influence; the attitude of Turkey, of Greece, even of Rus sia. It could defeat the purposes ot the axis-Hungarian conferen ces In Munich' and confront Hit ler and Mussolini with increased, not lessened, economic menace at their Balkan back door, jj : Whatever else it means, the It- alo-British sea; and air clash in the Mediterranean is a stirring j new notice that Britain means to1 mm .1 r' if State Buys Lots On Court Street Miles, Spauldinir Areas Added to Property for Capitol Purchase of the two remain ing nnnrt itrut nrnTWrtl., In til tblocX fating-the'new state library building was announced t by the state board of control1 here' yes- terday. Sought for inclusion In the ex panding capitol group site, the state obtained the Charles K. i Spaulding property, 915 Court street, for 325,507.50 and the B. C. Miles property at the north west corner of Court and Cap itol, for 327.382.50. the board disclosed. The large houses on the : two nrooerties eventually will be moved away or razed to The British said "a few per make way for construction of I sons' were Jellied by high explos- tsothr Htat offlea bnildnlr. The two purchases will be paid for from a $100,000 fund appro- nHntM - h fh iPtHttiatnrA for addition a to the capitol .,n. tb,- win ho hA tnitfai ..noiiinD frnm th tnnA .. Atn rMnf frnm so tor .Rufus C. Holman, the board AtilA tn tel7fiinh nrernn'i del-I egauon in congress urging it. support of establishment of a national ceme tery adjoining the Lincoln : Me morial cemetery in Portland. Deschutes Packer Returns to Camp BEND, July -10-JP)-Descbutes national forest - officials recalled ground 'parties and anrt airplane today Because Bruno ;Heopfner, -veteran packer : missing for - '0 hours, f arrived safely - -at ".Horse Lake.".-: ' iHeppfner, ' object ; of a wide I hunt, did- not 'explain' his diffi culties but foresters believed he had trouble with pack horses. He turned up 10 miles from where he wr last sighted on a trip from Blow Lake to Williamson moun tain fire camp. ; - yKT--,i r?:A rTa, ' ' 1 Wrens ind Home. LAKE HOPATCONG NJ ; July 10-5J)-Paul GroTer . will have to J buy a new pair of gym "trunks A pair of wrens built a nest in the red ones he nung on a clothesline in the backyard. 1 a r i.state encampment. by Prime Minister Churchill that Rritaln doea not rotosa to r flrht only on the defensive,; V With that engagement, Britain t.i- mttrr.A i,wv. .f. MdJtrrTin sratat.Un.' tha lfiO. mile span of sea between Sicily and Tntitdi. RHtl.h mlr itid wi power is on the move from Gib-1 raltar at the western entrance of the Mediterraneans and from Al exandria In the eastern end. The "objectives of these British and naval forays cannot be deter- .fnnii,.'t!.th .. ti.i. lan aeconnU of the sea-and-alr ac- tiona. Romoheld that thev were aimed at bombardment of Italian ha in Kioliv or lMhor. Tha I T j-rs A v et A wi 4 wet If w 1n t)n,f,l that I they, were designed to feel out It- .it.-.w t jiI..i,i. I a h. tv, mah inriM! t innllM that atetvs ar being taken to hHnr n9i,. rnwi- to decisive (Turn to pare 8, col. ZJ '. 14NaziSIiips Brdught Down Fights 150 Planes Take Shares ? in Biggest Air Row ' of the War 1;;4 Fighter P lane s Escort ;; Bombers First Time j ". Since Start ' '. (By the Associated Press). ' LONDON, July 11-tThursday) England, on guard and ready, watched through the dawn today without any indication along the coastal no-man's-land of nazi in vasion ,w h i c h commons .was warned last night might come at daybreak. '. . i Britons speculated whether thin warning, by Sir , Edward Grigg, undersecretary of state for war, was tbe authorized first word that the zero hour is near. Most members of parliament. however, took the statement as only an indication that Britain's defenses are ready and the next German move Is awaited. . Sir Edward said: "Tonight thousands of dur sol diers will be on the alert, wait ing for an attack which may come In several places at dawn." He spoke while the thunder of, bombs and the rattle of machine- gun fire still signalled the great est air fight of the war over Eng land an attack which Sir Ed ward said might be only a pre lude to" the worst.' I S7 Raiders Are Disabled, v . British battle planes and coast al guns drove the Germans off late in the day. after, shooting down or disabling 37 of the raid ers. '!- : i. '- Acknowledging the loss of two British planes, the air ministry "rttv th8i" J???' fights throughout the day 14 Ger man bombers and their guardian fighter craft,' sprung at .England from close-range basea in Franc and the low countries', were , shot out of the sky. Another 23 were reported "'so severely damaged that theyjjwere unlikely to reach home:". , . ; The 1 raiders concentrated oa breaking down coast defenses and I smashing shipping out of the nar- f row Straits of Dover. lives inland. At times at least 150 planes battled simultaneously along the coast the Germans trying for hits on ship and attempting to I break through British defenses 1 for inland attacks. . Unlike raids of weeks ago when the bombers came a few at a time wimoui. usuicr jcoiciu.j - "l, J ff ward oft the British Spitfires and Hurricanes. SO Planes Aid Bomb Squadron ' One squadron of nine big bomb ers was guarded by 60 lighter warplanea. The bombers were guarded within two full circles et Messerschmldts. British pilots called the fight the same old story-4-British air jTictory against odds Some - of ', the British fighters planes literally dived J through ,y4 (Turn - topage S, col. 6) ield to Head Foreign War Vets 1 CORVALLIS, Ore., July 10 - (JPylrm D. Canfield, Medford. sen r vice-commander, was elected deoartment commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars today at the concluding session of the 1 Oregon encampment. Other .officers included Louia Starr, Portland, senior vice-com mander; William Baer, Bend, jun ior Tice-commander; Walter Ake, Portland, judge advocate: Dr. J. W. Ingram, The Dalles, surgeon and Harry - W Indus, Portland, chaplain." W. E. McGufflo, Port land, was re-elected quartermas ter. Bend was awarded the ,1941 . v...r military training for the youth of nfrVVi; expanB1on ot ia vCl- iB" iu ."'"".r' .1. nBi forces including extended training for organized reserves. r"erTe "lcer ,ra,nl11 .'TP IBa i TiilB military iraixim r"' Medfordj Jacksonville Will Have Dial Phone MEDFOnD. July lOHTWack- ville will get dial telephone, HT 25, and 'Medford will jg t them August 3, the i'acsric ieie- phone &. Telegrarh company sail tOdSVj . The switchover w-l reira Hill, a mlnuta ia both conr:i an- ijoal muster, la eacn ij rural areas -vi.i - - service, which cost crprcx. '7 sww,vv . LiDog