PAGE SXVEI . Moosevelt ore Naltion; SimbMies- to MItaiini iveredl will Be De Bijplomatic Representatives of Atnericas and High Officials Of US Surround President Full Text of Speech Goes Directly to Berlin and Tokyo; FDR Secretary Says i Sea Patrols to Be Strengthened -. (Continued from Page 1) to give precedence to the products that the nation needs and "upon all our loyal workmen as well as employers to ' merge their lesser differences in the larger effort to Insure the survival of the only kind of government which recog nizes the rights of labor or of capital' ;f !.''." He referred to, the labor prob lem in his speech as well. - i This is no time," he said, "for capital to make, or be allowed to retain, excess profits. Articles of defense must have undisputed right of way in every industrial plant in the country. "A nation-wide machinery' for conciliation and mediation of in dustrial disputes has been set up That machinery must be -used promptly and without stoppage of work. Collective bargaining will be retained, : but the American people expect that impartial rec ommendations of our government services will be followed; both' by capital and by labor. Tbe overwhelming majority ef enr eltixens expect their gov erameat to see that the tools of defense are beflt; and for Che cry pvpese ef preserving the democrat! safeguards ef both labor and management this gov ernment Is determined te nse aU ef Its power te express the win. ef its people, and te pre rent Interference with the pro duction of materials essential te ear nation's security." His. pledge that whatever may be necessary to get the goods to Britain would be undertaken promptly construed in some quar ters as a possible forerunner of a convoy system was prefaced by a disclosure that the Germans were sinking merchant ships at a terrific pace more than twice as fast as British and American ship yards Can replace them. He asked whether, in view of the world situation, the nation should "hesitate to take every sin gle measure necessary to main tain our American liberty.'' Envisioning the sort of peace j terms which a triumphant Hitler weald dictate, he said the fuehr er would "hoist, the swastika It self ever vast territories and populations," accompanied by assurances te the western hem isphere that he coveted nose of Its territory. But, under such circumstances he thought it would be "incred ibly simple and forgetful to accept those honeyed words," for follow ing the past pattern of nazi aggres aion,; pressure would then be brought to bear upon us. The nazis would fasten "an eco nomic stanglehold" upon us, with those Americans who desired prof Its arguing for a p p e a s e m en t . "Quislings" would be planted In America and ; "the nazis would back up these fifth columns with. invasion, if necessary." Mean while, they would have construct ed a fleet that would make them Jjjw -iy9;' .a. FXESII STRAWBERRY the master of both the Atlantic and Pacific Ancient American rights womld erasable. Free fpeech, freedom ef worship, freedom ef trade all would vanish. America would be permanently pouring "ear resources Into armaments' and "standing a day and night watch against the destruction of our cities." j; " Later, he turned to the oppo nents of his foreign policy: There are some timid Ones among us," he said, "who say that we must preserve peace at any price lest we lose our liberties forever. To them I say: Never in the history of the world has a na tion lost its democracy by a sue cessful struggle to defend Its de mocracy. We must, not be defeat ed by the fear of the very danger which we are preparing, to resist Our Freedom has shown its ability to survive war, but it would never survive surrender. The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. "There Is ef course, a group ef sincere, patriotic men and women whose real passion for peace has shut their eyes te the vgiy realities ef internation al banditry and te the need te resist It at all costs. I ant sere they are embarrassed by the sin ister support they are receiving from the enemies of democracy in our midst the bondlsts, and fascists, and communists, 'and every group devoted te bigotry and racial and religions In tolerance. "It is no mere coincidence that all the arguments put forward by these enemies of democracy all their attempts to confuse and di vide our people and to destroy public confidence in our govern' ment all their defeatist forebod ings that Britain and democracy are already beaten all their self ish promises that we can 'do bus iness with Hitler all of these are but echoes of the words that have been poured out from the axis bu reaus of propaganda. "Those same words have been used before in other countries to scare them, to divide them, to soften them up.' Invaribly, those same words have formed the ad vance guard of physical attack." ."Your government has the righ to expect of all citizens that they take loyal part in the common work of our common defense- take loyal part from this momen forward." In speaking of the Hitlerian threat to the western hemisphere, he said: vour people and our govern ment will not hesitate to meet that challenge. "As the president of a united and determined people I say sol emnly . " 'We reassert the ancient American doctrine of freedom of the seas.' " We' reassert the solidarity of the 21 American republics and the Dominion of Canada in the preservation of the independence of the hemisphere. ' " 'We In the Americas will de cide whether and when and where bur American interests are at tacked or our security threatened. " 'We are placing our armed forces in -strategic miltary posi tions. ' . 'We will not hesitate to use our armed forces to' repel attack. "'We reassert our abiding faith in the vitality of our constitutional republic as a perpetual home of freedom, of tolerance, and of de votion to the word of God. "Heretofore, wlta profound eensdensnese el my responsibil ities to say eeentrymea and to my country's cause, I have to night issued a proclamation that an unlimited national emergen cy exists and requires the strengthening of our defense te the extreme limit ef enr nation al power and authority." I The president charged in so many words that It was the pur pose of Adolf Hitler and the nazis to dominate the world and 'strangle the United States of America and the Dominion of Canada." This he .said could not be accomplished until the axis powers gained control of the seas. Now, he said. Great Britain stood between the axis and such domi nation of the seas. But he said the "blunt truth" was that the Germans were sink ihg merchant ships at a rate more than double the combined . ability of British and American shipyards to replace them. Then noting that the American navy was doing patrol duty in the North Atlantic and saying that the ships in that area were being con siantly increased, he pledged "all additional measures necessary to deliver the goods." The deadly facts of war compel nations, lor simple self-Dreserva if on, to make stern choices, he said. i "It does not snake sense, for Instance, te say 1 believe in the .defense ef all the western heml sphere and la the next breath jte say, 1 wfll not fight for that defense antll the enemy has landed en our shores.' 1 "And If we believe in the inde pendence and integrity of the Am ericas, we must be willing to fight to defend tLem just as we would to fight for the safety of our homes.'" 8 Mr. Roosevelt enunciated two articles on national policy I "First, we shall actively resis wherever necessary, and with all our resources, every attempt by Hitler to extend his nazi domi' nation to the western hemisphere, or to threaten it We shall actively resist his every attempt to gain control of the seas. We insist upon the vital importance of keeping Hitlerism away from any point in the world which could be used and would be used as a base of attack against the Americas. - "Second, from the point of tview of strict naval and mili tary necessity, we shall give ev ery possible assistance to Brtt- and te all, who, with Britain are resisting nitlertsnr er its equivalent with force of arms. Our patrols art" helping new te Insure delivery"1 ef the needed supplies to Britain. All addi tional measures necessary te deliver the goods will be taken, i Any and all further methods ;or combinations of methods. which can or should be util ized, are being devised by our military and naval technicians, who, with me, will work eat and put into effect such new id additional safeguards as may be needed." In his proclamation, Mr. Roose velt said that the objectives of the axis powers included "over throw throughout the world of fxisting democratic order, and a rorld-wide ' domination of peo ples and economies through the destruction of all resistance on land and sea and in the air." I The chief executive made . an urgent appeal to workmen and mployers to put aside their minor differences in "the larger effort o insure the survival of the only kind of government which rec ognizes the right of; labor or of capital." "I call upon loyal state and local leaders and officials,' he said, "to cooperate with tne civilian defense agencies ef the United States to assure our In ternal security against foreign directed subversion land to put every community la order for maximum prod active effort Text of FDR Proclamation Puts Nation on War Basis ; j (Continued from Page.l) J NOW, therefore, I, Franklin D. Roosevelt, president of the United States of America, do proclaim that an un- . limited national emergency confronts this country, which requires that its military, naval, air and civilian defenses be put on the basis Jot readiness to repel any and all acts or threats of aggression directed toward any part of the west ern hemisphere, j I --. I CALL upon all the loyal citizens engaged in produc tion for defense to give precedence to- the needs of the na- . tion to the end that a system of government that makes private enterprise possible may survive. : i ' .--' ' '' ' i -: ' : -. ' I CALL upon our loyal workmen as well as employers to merge their lesser differences in the larger effort to insure the survival of the only kind of government which, recog nizes the rights of labor or of capital. V-': - . - ;1 ... ; .- " v - I CALL upon loyal state and local leaders and of fidals to cooperate with the civilian defense agencies of the United States to assure our internal security against foreign directed subversion and to put every community in order for maximum productive effort and minirnum of waste and unnecessary frictions. M : . I - : ' N : I CALL upon all loyal citizens' to place the nation's needs first in mind and in action to the end that we may mobilize and have ready, for instant defensive use all of the physical powers, all of the moral strength and all of the ma terial resources of this nation. I i ;. '' v f4 ; '''!;"' : - IN WITNESS whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States of America to be affixed. j Done at the city of Washington this twenty-seventh day Of, May, in the year of Our Lord Nineteen hundred and forty one, and of the independence of (Seal) the United SUtes of America the one hundred and sixty fifth. f FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT. By the president! Cordell Hull, 1 Secretary of State. and minimum of waste and on necessary frictions, i "I c?il upon all loyal citizens to place the nation's needs first in mind and action to the end that we -may mobilize and have ready for instant defensive use all of the physical powers, all of the moral strength and all of the ma terial resources of this nation." He summoned all loyal citizens engaged in defense production to give precedence to the needs of the' nation with the; objective of preserving a . system of govern ment .that makes private enter prise possible. ;i Indifference on the part of the United States to the increasing menace from the axis' would . be perilous, the president said. Com mon prudence, he added, requires the change over to a basis which will enable the country "to cope instantly an decisively with any attempt at hostile encirclement of this hemisphere, or the estab lishment of any base for aggres sion against it, as well as to repel the threat of predatory intrusion by foreign agents into our terri tory and society." !J : ! : r WASHINGTON, May t1-ij Wh He President! Eoosevelt Tuesday night was "chatting to the nation and te the world he was surrounded by a distin guished gathering of the diplo- ma tic representatives of all the American nations, jibe speech went by short wave to distant lands, in English ;and half a dozen translations, j It went directly, too, and in full text to both Berlin and Tokyo. Newspapermen representing the German and Japanese news agen cies were waiting in the White House lobby when, two hours be fore Its delivery ,th e text of the address was given to the press. The president, seated beneath an arc of the i flags of the 21 American republics, J spoke in his cutomary deliberate,! word-spaced manner. But his voice rose and his pace grew more rapid as he several times reached what ap peared to be the principal message of his address that it is Hitler's plan; and intent to "strangle the United SUtes off America," that the war "is coming very dose to home.; 1 " : ; Before him, under the glittering chandeliers of the east room, the diplomats sat in evening dress. following his, words closely and in tently, some of the mnodding with him as he himself bobbed bis head in his characteristic way of em phasixing a phrase. But: they withheld their ap plause until the speech was fin ished. Then they broke Into a loud and prolonged ovation. The solemnity ef the broken at w point by a lady who dropped her hand bag to the floor with a loud bang just aa Mr. KsoatviU reached bis cll matkal point fo announcing as unl untied national emergency. Secretary Hull, chin in hand, sat almost Immediately In front of the president with Mrs. Roosevelt across. an aisle from him. The chief executive, in a white dinner jacket, sat in aw red velvet chair before a small mahogany desk lit tered with microphones, a bottle of water and a glass, and the leather-bound loose-leaf notebook from which he always reads his prepared speeches. A glass, goose-necked table lamp that looked as if It could have been bought for a dollar at the corner drug store was at his elbow, but the glare of flood lights brought in by cameramen made it superfluous. Secretary Stephen Early, In exptaaaopa ' ;- et ateoseveit s words, that "all additional meas , nres" necessary to deliver war supplies to Britain would be taken, said they did net mean conveying "fat the old sense ef the word."! "It probably means," arly a stamgthentng, a better efficient patrol, with shins natrolllng.- Te told reeporters he had not discussed with his chief what powers might be exercised at once under the proclamation of a full national emergency, He said he did pot know; either, whether any executive orders might be issued immediately. - With emphasis, Mr. Roosevelt warned that Iceland, Greenland, Labrador, Newfoundland and Nova Scotia could, under nazi domination, become "stepping stones" for an attack upon the United SUtes itself. In the same way, he said, the Azores and Cape Verde islands could become . a "springboard" for. an attack on. South America. TestpUot ' ? Atoy McBommjgh knows what to look for in an airplane . and In a motor. ear ..thats why ho goes for the thrilling performance of fc4 m . - - j U1GZZST Q&AIXTY CAR IN ICS LOWEST PRICE FIELD "A TEST pilot learns to be xjL mighty sensitive to control and performance characteristics. So I was all set to be critical when they handed me the keys to a new Studebakcr Champion and said, Take it a war,' reports Andy McDooough, one of Amer ica's leading test pilots. "I gave that car a really terrific workout. I made it show me its stuff at loafing speeds and full out . . .on dirt roads and on con crete ... around sharp corners and swinging curves ... "My report? Say, I'll settle for a Scodcbaker Champion any day. It has the alive, responsive 'feel' CSiafm of a pursuit plane. All the pep --and performance you coald ask for. It's smooth-riding, steady and sure-footed." ' o o o Andy McDonough's report . checks true with the opinions of tens of thousands of Champion owners, ' ; Come in and go out for a thrilling 10-mile Champion trial drive. Low down pavmeat easy CJLT. terms. I i J ( ,, ) 620 MiilS AN HOUX ...STtArGHT DOWN! TImbTi fb AvtoVQ 9p6t4 AkWy Me bo datov4 hi ' oww h) M of mo'," svar w arm r f I mn tllSa tNSade FicmrjT.simiaie tfavau-o)Kt RUSSELL BONESTEELE e21, ( I ti ri - - . ' - . ' , ': i . . -f ; - i 1 RAY BONESTEELE Bonesteele Sales & S 370 N. Church St. Phone 4545, (EIHM n?T 135 N. Commercial Phones 5197-9723 ! ' Pays to Trade at Schaefer's Where Prices Are Always Low PRICES JEIUDAY, SATURDAY, THROUGH TUESDAY Tha Original Yellow Front Drug PrttcrlptloBs AccuraUlr FQlad Sole Agnbi Panslar Romaditi and CcaidT Spodcd Storo In Scdem 1839 '4 1941 In Marlon Coanrf Store Ilwn: Week Days 73t AM. - tHI TM. Sat T3S AJU. - : TM. Bun. 99 AJtL I 'j C TM. Holldars 9M AM. - 9:99 TJX. tttaoisK JQQlm HERE IS THE SOLUTION FOR TIRED, ACHING FEET Get a Can Today MEDICINE CHEST SUPPLIES 2 in. (Bandages yax5 yd. Tape 50c Ungnentine 50c Lysol 50c Laroris 50e Listerine 2 oz. Cotton I lb. Cotton 100 Aspirin .10c .10c .43c .43c ,39c 39c J5c 39c 2Sc try Oar Ffln Service . . . 25 C I - : ALL TYPES OF SUN GLASSES AND GOGGLES . Crakes, Polaroid, Noglair. OUR FOUNTAIN SERVICE , IS CLEAN See Oar Uinda for Gill llzzs lor its Grcdnale I Coty Sets - Compacts;! - Mail Polish Sets Billfolds - Traveling Cases - Perfumes and 1 Many Other Gift Items ! WATCH OUR CANDY VINDOW FOR THE HOTTEST SPECIALS IN TOWN WE HAVE A FRESl STOCK OF AGFA AND EASTMAN FILM IN ALL SIZES. WHEN YOUR HAIR jVONT LAY DOWN Come in and Try a. Bottle of M Tijr - Canpiisr Ice Lcil:a for the best pro-t tection from son barn and wind barn. ' j . '390 HOW IT DOES ITCH! BUT Deed's , ' ' Pcis:a Ouli Lelica will stop the pain of Poison Oak. Manufactured and sold by Schaefer's Drc Store. 50c urd Gl.CO ScHicfcr's Ccrn Bendy is the best for pain-1 fal corns only ! Save ihe Thriily Fred Ileyer Way On Tires for mm.M mi mi. mi.'iiwwK timwii mwmwmmmmmmmmimtmwwHmmmmmmmmmmrj 11 "p-S, rt A B j - i :- . . - - - . --ii x , . i ; j , - , ; -r t iinli isP? m i I i 6X3x16 Easy Terns With, Your Old Tires GUADAIITEE Without limit to months or miles any Dunlop tire sold by Fred Meyer is guaranteed to give sat isfactory service, not only as to material and workmanship, but also road hazards. Should a Dun lop fail, we will repair it FREE or i replace it with a new tire, charging only for , service ren- hah ORDERS Dial;? "Eissa" Siie : ' Price 4.75-19 $4.69 55-18 50 5i0-17 i 5.62 6.00-16 I T59 60-16 - 5.99 7.00-16 , 5.62 1 Dcnlc? "EdfalV T?3 Just send a check or money order for the total , amount of tire purchase to FRED MEYER, (33 S. W. 4th Ave, Portland, adding 25c per tire post ace charge, and 60c or your old tire.' . . TV?' I 1 1 - am mmmmm Dzzlcp "Scseca" Siie Price 4.75-19 87.13 . 5.0Q-19 - - l &Jmi t 7.79 ammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmml ! Size Prict v 50-17 $6.49 j 6.00-16 1 69 j 65-16 1 .49 j' 6.50-16 t 6.99 7.00-16 6.49 pbis? "S" sa j , Size Price V 4.75-19 -j $8.69: 55-18 9.TT j 5.50-17 9.66 j -6.00-16 - I 9.99 1 6546 h 9.39 ! 60-16 i 9.99 DRUG BUILDING CtlEGOII OUIIED! !