The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 24, 1940, Page 1, Image 1

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    :'A Growing' Newspaper1 j
- The Oregon Stntesmaa la i
ft steadily growing newipj:
per. Its readers know tho .
' rMOBs: It's tellable, com j;
plete, lively aad always In- f
teres ting. , j ?
7
, Weather
' Rain and slightly cooler
today; partly cloudy Friday.
Max. temp. Wednesday 61
inia. 53. South wind. Rain
inch. River -Ja feet.
tnXUTILTil YEAH
Coleta. Oregon, ThurafiUry l!crzi!ng, October 24, 1843
r.Ice Cc; XTaTOsioad 5e
No. ICO
mm o Riw ! r i
French NavwBu
' - r-; r : :.- ' e '
Br Nazis
FrencK Would Be
Bases, but Would riot Actively
War Against Britain :
Adolf Hitler and Franco Talk in Spain
as Indications GroHvv Warfare
; ; ; to Turn to South
, .' -'" By The Associated Press - :
- Word trickled into Switzerland today that Germany un
able to get France to go to war
compromise whereby France
GeTman-ccupied territory and gain freedom for all her war
prisoners in return for air and naval bases to be1 given, the
axis powers in-south J? ranee,
. The French navy would be
bases against Britain, but France would not fiht the nation
which -was her ally until Germany conquered France last
Jane. ' . .'
Ep (o)bg liar . ;
-aid Uauser$ Column
fialem la a Town:
Where there are 81,000 people.
SOJ)0i) of whom believe ana state
f reqnenuy that
Salem-Is-a -nice
place to lire In
except when the
fumes from the
paper mill blow
their way.
Where there are
more 1 a w y rs
than the law al
lows and hardly
10 per cent of
them are Inter
ested In politics.
Where rou can
tell the real na- L
SI
n
v ' i
Jl
tires by t h o 1 r fra h. eiu. v
sublime unconcern when it rains
and where some of the gutters are
big - enough to hold : cloudbursts
they never get.".;- -
Which bears la dignified fash
ion the majesty ct bslng itato cap
ital and vhkh Is fur better known
. tav the remote- hl&tcrlaads sf the,
Estate as-the" home of the nuts. -Which
boasts of the foresight
of 1U pioneers In laying out wide
ttreats and -which Us the tourh
ost trafflo In the state. -, K
Where the state bmlldlaga
nightly - disgorge hnndreds r f
pretty airla who immediately disappear,-
no V- ono knows where.
Where the governor of the state
can walk down the street without
anybody turning v a head ; and
where Jnoet state officials are less
well known that the dogeaUher.
Where anybody who has lived
aero 10 years Is pioneer: and
anybody who has lived here 10
Sears aid amassed and kept more
ban 1000 dollars la a prominent
; pioneer. " - ' K ' -
Where the old Methodlit thurch
ts still th nost dlr&UUd build
ing in town and where it's tall
aplre against the evening sky Is
one of the elty most beautiful
Sights. ' v '
Where everybody complains
- about the city government and no
body over attends a city council
meeting unless he wants a street
light put la his alley. . ..v
Where the beautiful ! Willam
ette river rolls by every day and
Is only known by a handful of
boating faas, a - few exploring
hoys, a tew -dogs, a few hoboes
and the men who repair the city
: .sewera.tr .--,.;- '--'-; ?:
. Where, thiro are more 'good 11
brariea In a. radius of. four city
-. blocks than there are In any other
city In the state and not a well
' stocked boolitore la Uta; . '
-Where nearly every week there
la a meeting ct hop 'growers,
farmers or dairymen trying to get
together and hardly ever doing it.
Where the penitentiary and the
hospital for the Insane are prime
points 'of Interest -tor outsiders,
' but which only one' out of It res-
- ldents has ever visited. - - : .
Where most Of ua -were horn.
' where most of us will die and
where most of us will act just
about the same after November I
. as we did before.; . ; ,j
; 4 Jl l" I - - ISJI T -1 : ' hr ' .
One Man-Is Dead C
St. IJ0UI8. Oct. tt-C-Wlth
oae man already dead aa a result
of a labor riot. St. Louis county
. authorities were faced tonight
with a threat of further trouble
between union - and- non-union
wcrkers at Velda TUlage HUls,.a
real estite gubdlvlilon. - - ' 4
Upton Hammond, ft.' an Ameri
... eaa .federatiea of labor picket,
died at the county hospital today
a few hours after amff triag. a
fractured skull - and shotgun
wounds of ihe head aad hefy4ln
a fight between AFL pickets and
jion-nalcn mjm. - I
- Four ether picks ta were. wouud
el and about SO participants in
t the 'tittle were Injured. Police,
A tlzilzs 11 - shotgun -Shells aad
buileU aftr tae fight, estimated
- at least SO shots vere- firedl
Xlocks were thrown, clubs used
fmly and 1 5 automobiles ; were
bitten . '
- 7iCi tie declaration, "we woa't
1st our raea be shot Cow,"' John
J. Church, secretary et the- baOd
ltg trs-ts couceiT, - anncunced
I.fr-.'.l t:trrcT.
irnorisMsked
'fmeti
6-' O
1
Required to Defend
against Britain, is offering a
will get back a large" chunk of
Africa ana byna.
obligated-to help defend these
' . " ' . : .". :
This new arrangement, wnicn
would restore at T least .part of
Paris to French rule by morlnc
the present demarcation Una more
than 100 miles north from Tours
to the Seine , rlrer, was described
by adrlcea from-Vichy to Bern
dipt omits as a proposed . make
shift similar to that already in ef
fect. It wonld last nnul the war
with Britain ended. W'
France's -Vice Premier Pierre
Laral was portrayed la the Vichy
reports aa extremel anxious to
arrange a permanent -peace lmme-
aiateiy. - . . - . ..
j Marshal Philippe Petatn. the 14-
year-old chief of the French state.
and . his cabinet were describe!.
howeyerr as area store insistent
that M n d e r no circumstances
would they join the Rome-Berlin-
Tokyo -axis.- -Laval
Held Ready
t4 Join Nazis
i Earlier . reports from Swltser-
land Indicated a terrific tag. be
tween these two factions, with La
Tit) likely to succeed Petain as
chief of state and ready to use the
French nary against Britain. . .
j Thla latest moderate-sound Ina
compromise report Indicated' that
tie Petain faction had won out. .
! Eiaee Germany already has, the
eatlre-Atlantle-aoast "of51 Franee
flat posible frontal - assault n
Britain, the reported ' deal for
aledltarraneaa, African and near
utera bases vis taken to lndi
eite a likely broadening f the
Mediterranean warfare.
This would tie ta with Relche-
futhrer Adolf Hitler's personal
Tisit yesterday to the fpanUh
(Torn to pago i, col )
Blexico Considers
0
MBXICO CITT, Oit. tt-JPt-
An' eihbargo- on exportation -of
eaientlal war material and food
stuffs to the totalitarian powers
was reported reliably today to be
under discussion - by rreeiaeat
Cardenas' administration. . -i.
The embargo would Jlmlt such
exports to the western hemis
phere, - it waa understood, but
would In effect be aimed at Ger
many, Italy and Japan.
Informed Quarters emphasised.
however, that ao decision 'has
been made..: . -'--7 v
Oovernmeht ; and . . diplomatic
sources ' said shipments - or mer
cury,":, scrap Iron and : flour to
Japan already had " been , halted
and that sales of at let-mer
cury and. scrap Iron ouuide tne
continent, have: been prohibited.
at least temporarily. -?
i These were reported to be pre
liminary steps to formulate a gen
eral export policy that would ac
tively -align Mexico . .with the
United States and -". the " 'other
American republics In the defense
of democracy. In this hemisphere.!
j, 1 , i . ; -
I ' JacIde Cooaa Sijns -
1 SEATTLE. Oct. 11-CPWackie
Coogan, once famed la movt eland
as "the kid, registered here to
day for the army's selective ser
vice can. lie waa on a Canadian
tear on registration day last week
Cocgaa u SC.
IlTr.tiitftr Roharcr
Army Orders Reinforcsrizantl
Of ' Philippine
WASHINGTON, Oct. IS-CfV.
The army today ordered subetaa-
till reinforcement of the Header
aerial defenses of the FhUlrrlsex,
while Eecretary ef the l'avy 2Inox
declared, tn response to reporters
questions, that the far - eastern
ward; ct the United States -would
bo defended against any attack.
Two pursuit squad res coa-
prlals SO- or. morr . tUhting
planes and aome S10 officer and
men will sail saoruy for naaua
from'Eisv Fri.EeL-co,' the war fie-
partcisst axa cuac?d. ' ' - v 1
The array, jnt'e to rejmace to
the tehslon with Japan, t..t Ljioap
told 'jt press eoafereace" tiat-the
United States was "not la differ
ent toward any territory .under
the American flag.The esnJ-au-
tcnofaous - "Phlllrxlae - .comaoni
woallh la not to- be e smplnUly In-
deoendeat amtli li!4.
t We defnd. aaytSnt,!
ITr ox laid eriirly tbfu he vrai
rem;
ed Lit scso t-l..U:.y ut2.
McNary Avers
flds Grabbed
A.
New Deal Money Kaisers
Exact Kickback Froml-.
. f i Benefit Checks
Candidate Says New Dea'
Farm 'Policy Making
. Farmers Peasants
By WILLIAM J. J.' CONWAY
BLOOMLNOTON, 111 Oct. 1S-
(T)-Senator : Charles L, McNary
charged today that new deal cam
paign tuna raisers sought to rex-
act a kickback from farm bene
fit checks and contended the ad
ministration's policies may reduce
the American ; farmer to "the
status of a peasant. :
The republican vice preslden
tial nominee also declared there
was a 'studied effort to "sway
the farm vote' by ; speeding the
delivery of AAA checks before the
November S election. .
McNary told a crowd, estimated
at 40 00 by Chief of Police Clyde
8. Hlbbens: ; j
"l view with the most serious
apprehension the result of eon
tinning new deal policies on agri
culture. I foresee the destruction
of the farmer as an Independent
producing unit and his gradual
sinking to the status of a peas
ant, dependent on an overlord
In thla ease the federal govern
ment for Instruction,- guidance,
protection,' support and even, fi
nally a dole.
It's Shakedown
ta tbe Cttlea : '
"We learn of townships where
stipulated . political assessments
hare been demanded of agricul
tural adjustment administration
eooperators for the benefit of the
(Turn to Page a, cou T)
Son of President
Is to Stop Here
Franklin D Jr., Jlay Talk
Briefly From t Demo
Headquarters
TrankSir Delano ltooetelt, Jr..
third son of Presldenr'and IXrs.
B.ooeevelt, win pay Salem a brier
call tomorrow afternoon, J. F,
Ulrich, Marion county democratic
chairman, announced yesterday.'
: The president's son, on a mo
tor tour of the Willamette valley.
will make a lS-mlaate atop at
democratic headquarters, '. 107
South Commercial street, and.
Ulrich hopes,' make : a brief talk
over a public address system. He
Is expected to arrive at about S
P-m. . ' " - " ' : '
Young Roosevelt's visit win be
the first of three calls on Oregon
being made within the next week
by democrats or supporters of the
democratic presidential nominee.
Senator .George W, Norris, who
with Mayor. LaQuardia of Kew
York City heads the a&uoaal com
mittee ef Independent voters for
Roomt elt and Wallaee. will speak
at ' the Benson auditorium - ta
Portland at I o'clock Saturday
nlgbt, r according to : the state
branch of - the committee. : A
northwest radio network ' will
carry his speech, dealing with
northwest power and the Bonne
ville and. . Grand. Coulee dams,
from t to t:S0 p.m. "
The third democratic campaign
(Turn to page S. ceL S)
FreisfitScatt
SARATOGA JiPBINQS, NY, Oct.
S t-OPV-Two young women died
tonight and two others were In
ured when a freight train. plow
ed Into a crowd gathered, to .bid
farewell to a national guard com
pany, departing for- federal train
ing -In Annlston,' Ala. - 1 'V
The . dead -were Miss . Lois . S.
Mother. IS. and Miss Helen M.
McNeil. If, both ef Saratoga
8prlnga. " ' --.'..;.
Witnesses said a band waa play
ing when ' the : eagiae whistle
sounded. Police and American le
glonnairea triad vainly , to dear
Ua'tratkav : v.--- ?:'
Air Defences
had aipi eased doubt that the
lalaada. T00O mile distant, eemld
bo held against a. full dress tava-
To a tueatlen. whether the. Isl
ands weald be defended If attacked,-
he said: Tee. as long aa
they are- under our xlag. - v
-.ThcPhlUpplso ' re tnf arcement.
tsllowtsx. Closely atcre to .bolster
Hawaii's dtTenaes." wi-1. b Uzitoed
for .the tisia belag to army - war
planes, tt vaa ladieated.- XIsox re
iterated that th navy had a l.a
tthUon atpratrt ci t:rti tr.lz.5
the aiiiUe Ceet of acne two arcra
war vessel, bow coneentrat&d at
-Manila. '. ..-..;. ...
The war .'department said the
17th pursuit sisadron of the
first punait gTCcp, now stationed
at' EeirrUre FlelJ,-Mich--would
Lall 7 from -Ean yrandsco 1 next
moata, and the- S4th pursuit
r-uadrca cfti" Slth pvrivH
to SiCL S)
WUIMe&eiL -Off
':0Mom(Bik" 6CFor'Peue;E Shall
Prcerous US
Greatest Hope
eroiis
For AUGroiips
Repnolicari Choice Tells
i&,uuu ueprpfsion
Brings Bigotry : ,
M)lic " Bribery Charged
Against Agencies
of New Deal
- .-. ; v. ., .
By WILLIAM B. ARDERY
NEW YORK, Oct." SS-ff)-Wen-
deU L. WUlkie returned tonignt
to the heart, of tbe homo terri
tory of Democratic National
Chairman Edward J. Flynn and
told' a cheering c r o w d ; In; the
Bronx coliseum that the best way
to prevent the proscription of any
croup 'la America Is to take the
country "off - the road to Infla
tion and financial chaos.'
Before a crowd estimated hy
nollee at 11.000. WUlkie declared
that "a great majority or junen-
eana have decided again to oe
free free from the domination
and the control ef a cynical gov
ernment that seeks to get Ameri
can citizens to rote the way it
wants." -
Thousands of persons lined tbe
streets, jamming the sidewalks
and slowing his motorcade from
the Mott -Haven station to the
coliseum. - "
WUlkie said that In New York
where 7S per cent of u are of
foreign descent," people knew
that the greatest hope for all
groups "Is to make a prosperous
America.
He said that oppression against
alaasee always has - grown from
economic .depression, and argued
that bigotry always has arisen In
nations wnlen -nave gone down
the road to. bankruptcy or of In
flation or depression.- -y- - -
WUlkie came Into the popaioot
east fcr-a launstvt focn-days r ukc -. 4lirinoachl,:.Tetlring Japa
of .campaigning Jbefore making at aese ambassador, as saying a
final awing Into the midwest. '
In an address prepared ior tne
annual forum of the New York
nerald-Tribune. WUlkie asserted
that ."by public bribery and the
asnrpauoa ox raaetipae xormeriy
aeteaaiea v
Roosevelt administration ha et- j
tempted to rnake the rariousl
sute and local governments suh-
servient, to waaningion. -
?n7ny SSand In .Ut.
aU. attVTIt AfflMelTel PirlVaal
Um. v af vaee-w-f ayeaw . ---'-- -
campaigned oa the record of their
ability to -obtain for their- eon-
(Turn to peige I, eoL i
Nnnbera in Draft
May Dc out To
Serial - numbora of Salem men
who registered last week under
the selective aerrvlce law may ne
posted at local , draft headquar
ters la the armory thla afternoon.
Chief Clerk' W..-H. Moran of the
Salem board" saitd last nirht.
Selective senice rules make it
each rexlstraafir TesnonslMllty te
ascertain -for hloiselX his ideatlfl-
eatlou, or scris-h ncmber. .
The f local LUrd had : reached
i lilf nut.r'l ui the
tk 'aaalrnliis-' serlal-nismbeTS I
..m iw.i.f.' UA,im Mlii.-Thel
serial number 'do nor determine I
the order In which, ntrll trail ts will l
be called up far military training. J occupied parts of French; Indo
That will be determined by the 1 China made another raid on Ynn-
order ef numbers drawn in the I
national draft lottery next Tues-ltmt
dayvV- . . I
8
I n ItTntT V.UPfl 111
XU IJltUU AJV4-U1 I
NXW ORLEANS, Oct. SX-6TV-1
Michael John Cafr.e. XP, chargea i
with fa&ttg to register under the j
selective service act on Octoher I
If .waa sentenced today by Fed -
era! Judge Adrian J. Caiuouet ta
serve three years ta prison.
Cafflee waa believed ta be the
first man sentenced under the act.
He was technically charnea
with violating the act by failing
te register. -.At the time or aia
arrest Caxfle,told United States
Commissioner R. II. Carer, er
tiit -there was notLlzg ta Ameri-I
ca worth flshtlag for." . . ,
Tedar la enea court Catfie de
clared. ! don't think, that eaaer
the: preamble to the constitution
the government ha the right to;
tff. tprtve- a -: of iay ii rixht at:.free j
r- tyjf- r ? '- i.
-' .- --;t' -':'
yiyA U'sl-crRcbls Uervis
. . - , ' .-. , -:
SAN CISC O. Calif.. Oct- i-l
V-Georga- T.mzle. Jr.. Il-year
rvs .rr" t rfra !:h!r -
-.j i,.f .......... - -.
ccrpu ta tzl'-T ti2 .,taa tU
un wteVi rf -(,.- e- t -ili-1
ter preparatory to rcrmiatat a-l trealQjr effectiveness of adverUs
slinmenfto" t i a tin traisch. lag raethod. the farm buying jiit
Tf,r"iT?T"U""' I tv. r .-.r'.r.c? ua'Jca, fiir trads" practic: and
recfcstly-i: L.
AFTER
Wendell I wnikle, OOP pveeddential candidate, te ebowa jae after
lext tempie as no was aooat ta ooara a tnua ut toe Obicaso railway statlom. Cnarlea llalrmla, S3,, ad
mitted la police court that he bought two egss, bat eoaldn't recall throwtnar them, (Photer copyright
1940 by CTaicago Dally Times) t .
Japanese Envoy
Says Peace Near
Final Action Held Needed
-
in Pact BetHeen Wang .
r- and Chiann;
I iAN RANClSCO. Oct. S4-0P)
-Tbe Chronicle today Quoted Eon-
I peace agreement - which - lacked
i "final ; official acUon" had been
I reached between Chiang Kai-
IShek. Chinese generalissimo; and
Wang Chlng-WeL the Japanebe-
i Installed ruler at Nanking.
Horinouchi. the newspaper
ute1 the agreement was
tv bo that he
BOt kBOW when Uo terms
mm h AmrnmA:
-J bJl
awiuiamwae war e-r
he was Quoted.
(It that time,' Japan demand
; that China join the" antl-com-
m intern pact aad allow stationing
of ft Japanese army In north Chi
na. - - - -:. ' 5 Vt ; ;
XfTorts to reach the embassa
dor directly : at ale - hoUI early
tdday were aasaeceaafal. He ar
rived here last night en t route
to Japan, for which he win sail
Friday. . - . . -
Horinouchi, the newspaper
said, made his statement , when
he was asked whether peace nego-
(Turn to page z, eoL t) :
JcpH PKneS Raid
r,HONCKONO--Oct,-S-(Thur-
dart-JP-The Chinese l . Central
pews . agency reported,, today that
planes from bases in Japanese-
ui nrovince In China yesterday
did not visit the recently-
onened Burma road.
The' raiders bombed . Kokia.
where tin mines are located, and
Mengtae, both Important Yunnan
railway towns. A single Japanese
along the railway. Into Kunming.
Chinese terminus of the Burma
road.
. Chinese reporU said traffic on
that' road has not bee interrupt-
d by Japanese air attaeka, which
were- said t have , caused Utile
(carnage.
A rl ftrrtl
! Ezm in Business
wnrrs sulphur springs.
WT Oct. 1JH)-Pnl B. West,
pre Id eat ef the Association : of
National Advertisers, aald today
the: . aatlona - businessmen , were
plaxalag larger advertlaing bud
gets to keep step' with anticipated
trad -fslns----' -1 r
A survey ' of - ANA members:'' In-
erudlng masy: et the largest ad
vertisers la - the eoantry,- W e e t
said, 'trowed at least 84 per cent
saii, eaowea at icait a a per cent
jrcrcsci ta rptsJL r-cr rsc-ey ca
aiTcrtux tavisn dm. ttii
xs&r. Elx per c-sat Indicated small
er tadjrts. sr.! Cie remainder
(were waittos for deTelcpmtJ,
- The -national defer? program
..... . , o
icta ,y . vtev auia
i-j Quesiic.naire 'risa.
In
clLaa t.'cs.wcrs V.:i:ti
y. ITT) ,77
W1LLKIE VAS HIT
Mrs. -WieS
Husband Is Aiigry
: Wheri She Is Hit
KEW-YORK, Oct. S3ff
Pointing to a newspaper picture
which showed Wendell jl Win
kle betes; restrained aad obvi
aasly aagry after fae waa hit by
aa egg la Cbicaro, frs, WIU
kto toaight -explained her hos
kxaad's reaction: like this t
: MHe doeaa't salad ao pnachw
wh Uey Jiil him, hat beeta
furloas whea they splatter me."
! MraC WUlkie made the state
ment la answer to .questions, by
friends aa she sat fa a reception
rooaa at the BraeUya aadltor
laaa from which Alfred
Suaftla made hi tint rampalga
speech for her Juuoaad. : '
Limber Barge Is
1 SriiiiiGooa
MARSHFHELD, Ore., Oct.: SS-UPV-A
waterlogged lamber barge.
the former sailing ship , North
Bend... foundered oa -North spit
In-lower Ceor- Bay - tonight after
two towing; vessels cat loose.
- - PTve men were taken from the
disabled craft by? the Coos Bay
coast ' guard and the purse seiner
Umpqua, which, was towing ; the
barge, earlier In the day after It
opened, a seam and went out X
controlL , " ' , -
'The Capqua and a . Port of
Bandoa tug maneuTered. the
barge, w h 1 e h- waa;: completely
swamped and kept afloat only by
1,250, 00a boards-feet-of lumber,
acros the bar and Into the bay,
only .to hare it swing onto! the
spit- .Tugs gave uP trying to free
Jt after three houm f vf r .
- The- barge was en route from
Gardiner, . Ore.,', to .San : Francisco.
Coaitguardtmen predicted It
would break, up ; tonight under
the pounding of a renewed storm.
- - Law Scholar Diet
t' - ; v . .... . . ".-
' NEW HAVEN,' Conn Oct. it
-?l Profeasor-emerttu . William
Reynolds Vance ef the Yale-ant?
rertity law school, nationally
known : authority - on insurance
ttw, died her tonight after a
week's Illness. H was TO years
old.
Al Smith Saya Egg Assaults
Arc cn "AppzaVto'B
lOrW YORK. Oct. -VAl-
fred E. Emith. former democratic
governor of New . York,, aald to
night that recent erg assaults en
Wendell WUlkie and bis wife con
stJLiiited aa -appeal to tlrotry
and ha charged that President
Roosevelt waa the greatest. Of
fender.' " .. , - -
:Z, Tell me, Smith demanded of
a l a r g e isrooaim au&ience 01
deocrats-fcr-Wilikl, tell me
whit'a tij;eaed : to' the" ctrcatry
that a lovel American lidy Uke
ifrs.' T."lllily and fcer husbaad,
on a crasa.2e to rare, this country.
are tTatteredwlth' cmf.'x;.
I'U tell yau-wlit it la.tt tt
srrc-'J ta t-rctry r tsiung up
diss t .: : !.: rt class aad tt rblef
c- -5 . . . ti. maa la tLa white
-rse ti Uzuelf the greatest cf-
:.':t.". - : -. . .
L f'.h, v?:3 t!rr:'.J rocil-
mii I i:r t t preEiaeney la 13ZS
by tie tzxn he now la cppgising
for a tird term, was given a tre-
rtldoti oi.Uia as he wtliel cn
tli" tt-Z ct tie prccklya Aca
i'-'.'-TT' 77
BY EGG
he had beea hit by aa eajgr aear the
j Fur Seal Treaty
Action -Is Taken Without
: Notice Although Year'
4 WASHINGTON, Oct. ; JS-ff-Japan's
treaty TeUtlons with the
United-fitatea -wr altered fur
ther today ly ? Tokyo's notice of
abnogatlQa ef a. lSll four-power
convention for the protection of
fur seals la certain areas of the
Pacific , -? ;
-Officials long have known of
Japan's dlssatlafactloa with - the
agreement bat the sudden notice
of termination- without prior dis
cussion was regarded a another
sign of. tension between the two
oountries.
- Like the commercial treaty of
the same year which the Catted
States abrogated after japaa's at
tack on China, the fur sealing con
vention requites on year's notice
for termination. ' "
; The Tokyo announcement said
proposals for r revision: would be
submitted. -
.Sec ret try. II all said the notice
had not yet been received here
aad that, there had beea ao ofiCI
v (Turn to page S. col. 4)
HMer
airi Parley
BERLIN. . Oct. jlitfPV-Adolf
Hitler ended, his French-Spanish
frontier, conference with 'General
issimo " Francisco F r a n e o r last
hlghtrpNB; .German official pews
agency; reported today from "in
Franee.-Eariler It had :heen be
lieved the tajks. would continue!
tooayvt ' t- ? f - ,-Vi ? r .
J . . . - ..
ROME. Oct. r 1 4.PV-Fasclst
uarter forecast today that lm-
port&nt decisions designed to .re
store to Spain a position' of power
in the Mediterranean would result
from Adolf Hitler -meeting yes
terday with- Generalissimo Fran-
Cisco Franco. - '? : 1 -:
In the absence of more speclfld
Information; foreign observers In
terpreted this as meaning Spain'
early entrance Into the European
war preliminary te, an axis attack
on the British stronghold of Cib-
raltar. f ci . " .. ,
demy- of Music to deliver his first
campaign address for the republic
an candidate. ; . : , ' ." .
EarUer .after a eoaf ereace with
Wlllkle aboard - the r train . which
sped the. republican nominee- to
KawYcrk ea a four-dty eixtera
campaign trip. Smith tcid report
ers that twar la the Important Is
sue - tn. -the presidential- eam
paign; H said he shared a gen
eral Belief -among sec;l 4hat the
hew deal la-trylng to. fpet -' into
war. . v - - -
I i The Ae ademy - atdTOTluo - ti"
which .Smith spoke, was Jammed
to IU aeaCa capic!tyxf.ir:3 al
there wer several hundred gtaad
Ing.:Tte'ad5iesr vfaa'cifrled 1
tiaaillr y ithe. Columbia t broad-r!
eaatnig iyktenwi- 3'.c:.-it'C;
; The - crowd called ton a speech:
froa Uri. TrSlkU whea ah took
a seat ca.ti pUtfonafw mlz
uies 'berore iGmith Waa' to et eak.
ller-'hfesband wa ampalrulag ;
elaewhereMn: NeTT TbrV. - - ; '
. --Ti."! -tsimaa- exrliiiied oh
! (Xira to ytf a" h tol i); ;
n0 99
JBahor".
FDR Asserts
Propaganda Is
Aimed at Hio
Says Foregn ' Vays Used i
in Ginvincing People .
- He Wants War
. - L .- - " " .
' ' i . '-(-:.- .- . a
Holds Charge That Nona
1 Employed Is Made by
Failures of '32
By MAX BOYD .
PHILADELPHIA. .Oct. 3l-P-President
Roosevelt, accusing his
opposition of importing propagan-
da methods of the "dictator coum- .
tries' to convince tbe public that
he wished te lead the country Into .
war, said tonight that "It is for
peace I shall labor all tbe days of
my life.". , ,
' In a political speech broadcast ,
from Philadelphia's Convention
hall where he was renominated In '
IS 3 (.and where Wendell L. WW-,
kle waa named t h e republican
standard bearer thla summer, Mr.
Rooeevelt said: '
, ; I consider it a public duty to -;
answer falsifications' with facts.
X will not pretend that I find thla
an unpleasant duty. X am an old
campaigner, and 1 love a good
fight." - - " .. V
The first of fiye political ad
dreaeea wtih which.' the president
la winding up his second to else V
tion campaign, the speech came -at .
the end of a day in; which ten
of thousands of people in Phila- 1
delphia and neighboring Camden.
NJ, had turned out', to . see the
chief executive oa his way to de
fense manufacturing plants.
Mr. .Roosevelt accused the op
position of making numerous de- -liberate
falsifications" against hint
In . the campaign. ; and - said that
one "outrageously also charge .
had been1 made rf'lo strike - terror
into the hearts of our cltizena.".
.''It is a charge Jt offends ev- -ery
political and religious conn
victlon that I hold dear., It la the
charge that this ' adminlstratlaa
wishes to lead this country into
war.'. - : . v. .
Says Every Act
as lev - Peace r
Tale charge Is contrary to ev
ery fact, every.' purpose ef the
past eight r years. Througkeot
these years my every act n
thought has beea directed to the
end of preserving the' peace of
the'World, and' more, particularly,
the peace of the United States
the peace of the western hemi
sphere. v
"As I aaw-th war coming, Y
used every ouaee ef the prestige "
of the office ot president ef tae
United States to prevent it anaet. .
: "When war came, I med. every
ounce of the prestige of the vt-f;
oee to. prevent it spread to ether -
nations. When that, effort railed.
1 called upon the congress, -and -I
ealled.'upea the aafJon, to bulla .
the strong defenses that would he
ear best, guarantee of peace aad
security in thl hemisphere.
.To republicans and demecrata.
to every man, woman and child
In the nation 1 ay your presi
dent and .'your great . secretary f
state are following the road t
peace.--; - r..J'itv-5 -
Dechtring-th nation was not
arming itself for any. foreign war, .
MrA Roosevelt denied w a a t h
called -4the s. fantastic misstate- -
ment ' by republican leader that -the
government had entered ase- -,
retly into agreements with foreign
aatlona. - . -
i "I give , you .this most solemn
assurance: rhere ,1s nO
treaty, no secret obligation.
secret commitment, no secret ua-.
derstanding la any-shape or f ana.
direct, or. indirect, with any eth
er government, er any other na
tion in any part of the world. 4e
lavorre-this natloa la any rar aw
(Turn , to page 11 CoLS .
Chief Broadcasts
On Campaign
LiGted V
- KEW TORS. Oct.-23--IXaJer
radio broadcasts oa. eaan '
pai-a lseacs schedjUcd far ta
naerrow aret - -
(An tis Tacta staaiard
time.) .'. . . ..- ,
- OtOO te :S9 pv
Cah Jchnsoa, colamaist.
Cterclaad, Slatsjil fcroc
ctttlss eystJ-m asIioa)wl
inetwok. EALX-.) " V' -' "
. '. 0:00 te :a P. an.- Paal TJV
j UeXatt, federal aerarity aJ.
t jrJalstratcrr. from PhilacV'Tia, .
: KEO Xno network. (HEX)
; C:4S to liZH. p. ta- IIeitrt -iHoover,
t orater prealdeat, fraa
CUdnOtas, Ou KBO Else a ,
iwerk. -
' : 1:43 tv cw--dYeal3cat Iloese ,
1 vcJ'on Kcw Yck KeraldJM- '
1 tsae .forunt; three 'major net-
wite..(iasri HOIX,KALS.
8AX pHAHCISCOi Oct, 3-
( TWrhe - rseerh , ef :-rreldst
; rJot-ni! toc's fr-m.riJi.
l d. -;.! rill. It -re roa-Scaj -ti-tnurow
froa 12iiJ t& 1 pvan
' Vwctne tiaCfZre l-ricas ;
' he rrt-Zs ottt t"a I :-al l-rc-a '
. ; tl . ..... : . . -
afvw Ar.