Churchill's Latest War Reno Sets Stage f or Talk Slated By FDR, Says War Analyst By KIRKE I SpecUl to The ! Whatever else can be read first war progress report to Parliament in more than a month and . 11 was aeiimieiy cneering . ui . onusu- sutura j.w . kyhu reasons it helped set the stage lor President Roosevelt's forth coming . pronouncement, deferred because of his mother's death. ' The mounting number of "shoot' in incidents at sea betweei . . I sea between 1 AmericanvVessels and nazi or Ital lan U-boats and aircraft had al- J tp exnectation high on tn Atlanta a to what the president planned to say Churchill strongly Implied, however, that la these Incidents In the Atlantic and In the Ked sea he saw a definite change In policy by Hitler.) and did net consider them mere Isolated acts of axis aggression. He implied I - that mounting Had desperation ; may be forcing Hitler to risk open If undeclared hostilities with the United States. i If. President Roosevelt takes a similar view of the clash between MDa . j. : . .. September 18 I Strength of Reserves, j Speed in Emergency to Be Demonstrated (Continued from Page 1) in defense preparations, council members declared. M&sier Oi ceremonies pr mm Sweetland field program Is to t be State Senator Douglas Mc Kay, chairman of the county defense council; E. C. Charlton. ! head of the city police reserves, 1 has been named to head police i arrangements; Tom Hill and I Wayne Perdue, parade; Doug- I las Jaouith, music; Don Black, . j speakers; Lee Eyerly and Theo- i dore Roake, demonstrations; ! Malcolm Mitchell, place ar- : rangements; Dr. Anthony Moore I and Joe Felton, lights and loud I speakers; Chandler Brown, uttl- ! lty units; L. F. LeGarie, city coordination; : Elmer Church, : rifle corps, and Floyd Emmons, t service club cooperation. Resignation Of OSC Head Is Accepted --(- - -. - 'v. (Continued from Page 1) ' OSC before election to the presi dency.. - -. A six-month leave of absence . was granted W. A. Jensen, ex- t ecutive secretary of OSC for 14 years, to recuperate from an Illness. His place will be filled : by T. P. Cramer, OSC business manager. Numerous resignations were re ported to the board, resulting from higher salary offers else where. Some oi the vacancies were filled by appointments and others by shifting duties. Purchase of the George McMor ran residence in Eugene for the University of Oregon president's home was approved. It j to be financed, by rental of the present house id the center of the campus to the Faculty club and income from rental of the present quar ters of the Faculty club. - The board's next meeting will be .held at Ashland late in Oc tober. - .Plan Contract For Corvallis .: Gamp Award . (Continued from Page 1) camp was canceled. The fee to be paid was not disclosed. Corvallis cantonment contract referred to in Tuesday's story from Washington C represents f or 1 mal revision of an earlier award given the same engineers for work on a cantonment originally described as to be located "in the ; vicinity - of Eugene, Fred S. 'AHyn, member of .Lawrence and " Allyn, advised The Statesman by telephone from Albany Tuesday night.:i": T i':";;:: -."y;" (.' v ' This 4s the same Identical ; Job we have been werklng en ' here," : Allyn said, speaking from i the . army Quartermaster : 1 corps' entineering headquarters In the old Albany college ad- ministration building. , - Allyn said that plans for the big Polk-Benton county canton ment were "almost finished." Today, September 10, is the dead line originally set for sending the : plans to the war department in Washington. ' ,-, IIcscow Raiders Flee I.ICSCOW, Sept, 10 -(Wednes-!ay) HP)- German bombers twice ; tried to attack the capital Tuesday night and early today but weri dispersed . by Russian night -hters . and anti-aircraft fire, it was announced officially. Slated rt L - SIMPSON Statesman into Prime Minister Churchill s the American destroyer Greer and a German submarine and the sub- iMuent sinldnz of the American ' . o . a sa. Churchill's wistfully expressed desire for greater .help by the American navy In the Atlantic may prove significant. xie was very careiui, uvwcva, not to forecast In any way what Mr. Roosevelt might gay. He mere ly held out a hope to Britons of active Anglo-American air and naval collaboration if Hitler's acts should turn the whole Atlantic into a war zone. Aside from references to In creasing German-American ten sion, however, the Churchill war resume drew a sharply contrast ing picture of the war scene since the launching last Septem ber of the nas air Blits against England. It- rave British and American readers word of the situation on three far-separated fronts. Details of the changed status of the most critical struggle, the bat tie of the Atlantic, still are lack ing, yet Churchill lifted toe cen sorship curtain far enough to re veal that July and August, were banner months for Britain at sea. He placed losses of Britain and British-used shipping in those months of maximum possible nazi U-boat and air activities at sub stantially one-third of the similar sea losses inflicted on the axis al lies. Churchill coupled with that a warning against "any talk that the battle of the Atlantic has been won." Unquestionably, how ever, the trend of the war at sea has shifted heavily in British favor since the German attack on Russia began. And of that Russian-German struggle, unequal ed In history In size and bloodshed, the British war captain said that the "mag nificent resistance" of . the Rus sians already had doomed Hitler to maintain his armies in Russia all winter "from the Arctic to the Black Bea." There is virtual ad mission of that even in Berlin war news and it is probably the ele ment of the vast struggle most cheering to the British at this mo ment Wasliington's Smaller Grid Teams Open SPOKANE, Wash, Sept. M)- Bouncing his players from post to post like chessmen, Coach Fug gy Hunton put his Gonzaga uni versity grid squad through an other "daylight to dark" practice Tuesday to build up a team for the season's opener here Septem ber 19 against Arizona State. As he did Monday, Hunton called the: boys out this morning, again in the afternoon and yet again under the lights Tuesday night One of: the shifts Tuesday put Nick Loncario, 190 - pound end from Boystown, in the left half back spot vacated by the grad uation of Tony Canadeo, star back for the last three years. ' Hunton said he believed Lon cario might be an answer to his prayers for a-passing back, some thing - badly needed on Bulldog squad. TACOMA, Sept M-Football returns to the Washington State Inter-Collegiate conference Wed nesday with opening turnouts scheduledd at Pacific Lutheran college at Parkland and St Mar tin's college at Lacey. . While ? September JO is the starting deadline in the confer ence, turnouts at Western, Cen tral and Eastern Washington Col leges of Education were not scheduled, until next Monday. The state teachers' colleges open late this month." - , Pacific Lutheran will be out to defend its twice-won Winko grid title. The Flying Scandinavians have a new practice field and new goal posts donated by the Spo kane Athletic Round Table and 33 brand new gold uniforms. The Lutes lost eight of their 1940 starters by graduation, but Coach Cliff Olson said he would rebuild around Marvin Tommy gun" TOmmervik, 1940 Associated Press little all America halfback, and Capt Marvel Harshman, ver satile fullback, j ? . , Coach Homer Hem, former WSC star, begins his' second year at St Martin's with; ten letter men instead of the two . who greeted him last year. - - Frankt Sinclair, flashy sopho more halfback, leads the veterans. US Inflation Is Seen ; BOSTON, Sept 1 9-)-Declar-Ing ' that the nation - faces infla tion now and "must deal with it at once, Secretary of the Treas ury Morgenthau Tuesday night called upon laborers, farmers and business; men to curb their de sires for higher wagesVand pro fits in the interest of the na tion's welfare. First of Four New US Cruisers : X s - v 1 , i r 1 Completed under navy supervision after the United States had taken over the Kearny, N. shipyard, which was strike-bound for sev eral weeks, the U. & 8. Atlanta, one of four new 6,000-ton cruisers for tha United States, Is being prepared for launching at the Kearny yards, The vessel carries a main battery of 12 dual-purpose five inch guns. Mortuary to Add Parking, Service Alterations and repairs to modations and additional service facilities at Clough-Barrick mortuary are to be undertaken shortly, Dr. L. H. Barrick said Tuesday night following receipt from the city of a building permit for expenditure of $19,425. Not included in the .costs filed with the city building office are those involved in a fill now n ear ing completion on two sides of the present structure at 205 South Church street, Barrick said. Plans contemplated call for extension of the building to the south and the west, with covered porticos for family parking spaces and ad ditional "private rooms. Other building' permits is sued Tuesday Include one to Mae E. Lamkln to reroof dwelling at 1695 North Fifth at a cost of S15S. Cora Scott has taken out a permit to re roof dwellings at 441 South High street and 1945 Fair grounds road at $29 and $119, respectively. Pioneer Trust company was is sued a permit to reroof its office building at 101 North Commer cial street at a cost of $200; Rob ert Savage, reroof dwelling at 1244 D street; $156; Fred Broer, reroof dwelling at 905 North Firth, $48; Ronald Glover, reroof dwelling at 605 Spruce street. $84; G. A. Hoover, repair private garage, 1060 Erixon, $15; Sadie I. Turpen, alter and .repair dwell ing, 475 South 25th, $1000; Mrs. Theo .Woelk, build private ga rage, 955 Jefferson, $25; Nick Sweigert, erect one story dwell ing and garage, 1525 Jefferson, $3600. Bomber Gets Draft Change To! Class I A CHICAGO; Sept 9-i-Draft officials moved World Heavy weight Champion Joe Louis clos er to the army Tuesday. Local selective service board No. 84 announced that the -title holder had been reclassified ten tatively in Class 1A, available for immediate military service. A spokesman for the Ceok county j(Chlcace) draft head quarters reported that Louis now training for a boat with Lon Nova In New York on Sep tember 19 would not be in ducted before October under any circumstances. Moreover, he would not have to don a uniform then if he de cided to contest the listing and convinced his draft board that he should not have been placed in the 1A bracket Louis, who reached the age of 27 last May 13, was not consult ed about his reclassification. He has ten days tn which to .request a hearing on the new order and, if a decision Is returned against him, he has ... an additional ten days to file an appeal. ; Last January the champion was put In Class SA, the group of men deferred because of de pendents. At that time he listed ' as dependents his wife, his mother, a niece, a sister, and his father-in-law. Notice of his new class was sent to the champion's Chicago ad dress Thursday. The next step in f the procedure Is a physical ex amination. No time was set bu it was explained that he could be examined here or In the east GREENWOOD. LAKE,. -NY, Sept S-vTHeavyweight Cham pion Joe Louis, notified Tuesday that his draft ' classification had been changed to ' 1A,- said he would hot ask the Chicago board for reconsideration. v - . " " Joe Interrupted Us ' training for his September 29 fight with Lev "Neva to say that he always" had, been willlns to Join the army and would de anything at anytime he was asked. said Joe. Tho 022XSOI! STATESMAN. Salem. .A sr? - $20,000 in Facilities provide enlarged parking accom FDR's Mother Laid to Rest Simple Ceremony at Country Church Is Attended Iy Family (Continued from Page 1) foot of the grave, while Mr. Wil son read the solemn words: I "Unto Almlfhty God we com mend the soul of our sister departed, and we commit her body to the ground, earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust : .- The President stood with one hand on the open door of the White House sedan In which he rode to the cemetery, along with his wife and his son, James, and his mother's surviving brother and Sister, Frederick A. Delano and Mrs. Price Collier. Tension was so great that when Mrs. Collier coughed, Mr. Roose velt started. He lapsed into im moouity unui ne was roused again by a sudden commotion In the ranks of the estate people, who were standing on the west side of the burial plot, facing the family. A young man had fainted. Some one revived him with swelling Salts. In spite of the family's no j flowers request the side of the grave was banked with them and they overflowed into the ! rest of the plot On top of the casket was a single spray of ! bright tladiola, lavendar, pink : and yellow asters and red roses. A hage wreath of red roses, white lilies and baby breath : bore the only identification. It was from the Democratic na tional committee, i Mrs. Roosevelt's grave was to the left of that of the president's father, James Roosevelt who died in 1900.: Nearby were the graves of Rebecca, first wife of James, and of the president's son and first namesake, who died in in fancy. i In keeping with a family tradi tion, the pallbearers who low ered the casket into the grave were eight men from the Roose velt estate Mrs. Roosevelt's hus band, James, requested that work men from the ancestral acres be his pallbearers. Body Brought to Aurora for Rites AURORA Harry Rice, retired northern pacific - railroad em ploye died In St Paul, Minn, and his body was forwarded to Yak ima where funeral services were held Tuesday. . s The body was sent from .Yak ima to Ransom-Miller Funeral home, Aurora. Graveside services win be held at Butteville ceme tery today at 4 pjn. Survivors include his wife! Mrs. Harry Rice, St PauL Minn, and grandmother, Mrs. Adolph Cone, iJunaia. ; RaUway Strike Set WASHINGTON, Sept 9-ft-E. F. Whitney, president of the Brotherhood of Railway Train men, announced Tuesday night that e am, on Sept IS had been set as the time and date for the strike of the five operating rail road brotherhoods. - ' ""c ( Iran Accedes to Allies TEHERAN, Iran, Sent opw The Iranian parliament acceded tn lull today to. the demands of victorious Britain and Russia after hearing sick and aged Premier Ali FuranghL express ."the grief ; of our - people over the events that have befallen us. Oregon. Wednesday Morning. September 10, 1811 Details Told ' i , r - . - ; 1 . . . ':'- ! ;- Of Sinkings Mate on Red Sea Ship Relates Vivid Story; Sessa Is Torpedoed " (Continued from Page 1) moon was luu ana we were steaming- peacefully northward. Suddenly I heard a very heavy explosion to starboard and the ship rocked like we had struck s reef. '- ! "At the same time I heard an airplane engine roar and saw a brown streak flash overhead-. ! "The plane must have cut .off its engines, dh i and . then turned them on again as the bombs were dropped." : f s Ralph S. Pratt of. New York Cjty, the tall, grey-haired lirst mate, said the Seafarer was sunk by a bomb or aerial torpedo-Which bit' beneath' the waterline. ! She sank within 20 minutes, Pratt said. All crewmen vwere able to get off In boats before the ship went down. - WASHINGTON, Sept The SS Sessa, an American-owned freighter flying the Flag of Pan ama, was sunk by a torpedo on August 17 about 300 miles south west of Iceland, the state depart ment announced Tuesday, and all but three of her crew of 27 were presumed lost The crew included one Ameri can. ' The announcement followed by one day receipts of word in Wash' ington that another : American freighter the SS Steel Seafarer had been sent to the bottom of the Red sea by an airplane of un known nationality on Sept 5. All were saved. The state department an nouncement did not say what ship had fired the torpedo Into the Sessa, but Secretary Hull Told his press conference that there was no doubt of Its 'na tionality. The Sessa was sunk, presumably, In the general area of the Skirmish last Thursday between a German submarine and the American destroyer Greer. The Sessa was a. former Dan ish ship taken over by the United States under recent legislation authorizing requisitioning of idle foreign vessels. It was chartered by the maritime . commission the Marine Operating company of New York, and later was trans f erred to Panamanian registry. Transfer to foreign registry Is a procedure frequently adopted to permit vessels to enter combat zones barred under the neutrality act to vessels manned by Ameri can crews. The water around Ice land is not recognized as a combat area by the United States govern ment, therefore, officials said, it was legal for the crew to include an American. Three members of the Sessa's crew were picked up Sept. f , at a point some 309 miles south west of Iceland, the state de partment said. ..The ship was said to be carrying- to Iceland supplies of a general character destined for and owned by the Icelandic government General Raps 9th Corps in ; ' 'j, ' JL War Games 1 (Continued fronPage I) resistance, remained on the road. Those tn the rear should Immediately flow i around the resistance.'' Speaking of motor vehicle movements, General Joyce said "some units-failed to comply with orders, creating an inexcusable road jam. Too much stress: can not be placed on the necessity of keeping adequate distance be tween vehicles when there is dan ger of air!attack.M ' The commanding general, also criticized the practice of Includ ing slow-moving engineer vehic les, such as cement mixere, In a column of combat attack "trucks. thereby hampering all traffic. Of the use of air observation, General Joyce said "the results of aerial missions were vry dis appointing. Not one hostile ar tillery battery was reported." " Other observations in the gen eral's critique included: ' The organic antitank warning system used was not satisfactory. Necessary communication equip ment was lacking. All provisional units showed lack of training. Although signal communication was Improved,: wire communica tions to field outfits failed when the normal talking distance ; over field wire was exceeded and soak ing rain allowed normal electric ity to leak from the wires Into the ground. i ; The present type field wire, while satisfactory when new,' fails after three or four months service in training exercises. Wilson Bodyguard Dies ASBURY PARK, NJ, Sept 9- (ff)- Frank L. Sullivan, 63, Unit ed States secret service agent who was President - Wilson's body guard on ' the chief executive's two trips to Paris afater' the World war died Tuesday. Tree!: d Tteu!:r' yaraitnre Mortar - rod Oil . Pally Trips to PortUad . . Paona 49SS " 285 S. Cottace Funeral Directors Appoint Delegates At a meeting of the Oregon Funeral - Directors association In the . Argo hotel Tuesday night, Leston W. Howell, Salem, and J. Hollingsworth, Corvallis, .pres- dent of jthe organization, were elected delegates to the annual convention of the National Fune ral Directors association in St Louis, October 14-17. School Board Orders Books Parochials Will Get Texts ; Funds Voted at Directors Meet (Continued from Page 1) Should the current court proceed' ings result in referendum and eventual defeat of jthe new law, the books would come back to the Salem district for use in the public schools and would not be totally-lost expenditure, he said. ' ' . Resignation of Hiss Rachael Yoeom as Salem hlfh school physical education Instructor to accept a ' position ' as head of the department of women's phy sical education at College of Idaho was accepted by the board. Replacing; Miss Yoeom at the senior hlch school. BDss Esther Arnold will be moved up from Leslie junior high, directors de elded on recommendation of Bennett George Sargent, ' Parrish social science teacher called to army service, was granted an addition al year's leave of absence upon a wired report from; him that he would not be released before February, 194ft. Additional college work report ed for Mrs. Cecile; Gregory, Eh glewood teacher, and Raymond Foster, Parrish, was accepted to give them three and five-year ratings, respectively, in the sal ary scale. Lease arrangements for use of Maclean Transportation service's school buses in transporting bean pickers were approved. Ralph Campbell, vice chair man of the committee handling lease details In connection with the state unemployment eom mission's use of rooms tn the old high school buildlnff, re ported on progress of the deal. The current lease : expires this fall and the district Is asking a slight increase, he said, since the commission's investment In fixtures for the offices should be considered amortized by this time. Approval was granted for change in .the school boundary line placing in the Highland area one block which was put there tentatively last year. It will not require any children to change schools and will prove conven ient in leveling the school popu ation, according to Bennett In the absence of Mrs. David Wright out of the city on vaca tion, Roy Harland served chairman of the session. as Ickes, Oil Line Hit WASHINGTON, Sept, 6 -P- A proposal of Secretary Ickes to construct by next spring an $80, 000,000 oil pipeline from the East Texas oil fields to the east coast was rejected Tuesday by the sup ply priorities and allocations board of which Ickes is a mem- ber. (333(3"oo A DAD Good weather and a bumper . crop I Even then one finds a poor stalk once in : a while. : -i- x - imM r- ' The retailing of beer is sfmrthtng like tlLlJtot beer rctailen operas , able law-abiding establishments. Occa- " sionally one finds an exception a man who tres to beat the la w or who permits and-eodal conditions. " '"'- " The beer indusrats to vrje of : undesirable retailer stamped but. Your cooperation will help us in our clean-' up efforts. The beer industry. brings important D5Eu...a ssslL-. Decision Seen' In War Course Churchill Hints In War Report of More ' US Naval Assistance ' (Continued from Page 1) Red sea under an aerial bomb.. The Sessa was acquired by the United States some time ago from Denmark; and when she sank was flying the flag pt Panama. 2. The Germans did not dis avow an axis attack on the Seafarer, plainly Implying to the contrary that the Job was done either by an Italian or German 'plane .although saying through a ' Berlin spokesman that "it Is beyond discussion that there should be any gen eral order to attack American ships. , r -" Nevertheless, he added, the Red sea had . long been; considered a war zone by the axis and there should be no surprise that the Seafarer had been sunk there. In sum, Berlin warned again -that all ships in zones deemed by the axis to be zones of war were sub ject to assault "regardless of na tionality." 1 X. Winston Churchill, address ing the house of commons for the first time since his Atlantic meeting with President Roose velt, expressed a wish for even "greater help" from the Ameri can urr than Is now be ins given through its patrol of the Atlantic approaches to the wes tern hemisphere, and at the same time declared without so mg Into detail that "adequate naval power will be at hand to held the allied Atlantic and In dian ocean supply lines against axis attack. Picturing Britain's position In the battle of the Atlantic as enor mously Improved he said, for example, that British and allied shipping losses for July and Aug' ust were hardly more than one third those of the axis despite the vast preponderance of British vessels Churchill suggested nevertheless that Hitler might at any time engage American sea power in a desperate effort to halt the flow of aid to England and Russia. 4. US Secretary of State Hull declared that; there was no doubt of the nationality of the ship that fired on the Sessa, al though he did not mention 'that nationality, and there was in Washington clear evidence of growing strain m American axis relations.' 8ome there ob served that President Roosevelt was getting new material for hur speech of Thursday night and predicted that he would declare the determination of the United States to meet force with force on the seas. 3. Myron C Taylor, Presi dent Roosevelt's personal repre sentative to the Vatican, arriv ed on a flying visit to Rome to convoy a " personal message from the president to the pope on inursaay. since he was making the trip for this "pur pose alone, the manner of de livery would indicate a mess age of great significance. He said he would return to the United States next -week. Accompanying all this was coordinated British naval and air offensive extending from the Arctic region to Bengasi in Ital ian Libya in which, London said, five axis ships were sunk, three others probably destroyed and still others damaged. inese were ; among the an Facts That Concern You ONE DOES IN A WHILE! beverage of moderation nounced results by areas: In the Arctic on the Murmansk front a destroyer, an unidentified vessel and an armed trawler all German sunk by light British warships operating to relieve the Russians In the far north and spe cifically against German convoys supplying the invading nazis. In the English - channel: A 4,000-ton German supply ship torpedoed and sunk in n strongly escorted convex. - v " In the central ; Mediterranean: A big Italian schooner sunk by submarine. : In the Mediterraneon off Libya: . Two Italian lighters hit near Bengasi harbor; one believed sunk. The principal objective of the British offensive In the air over Monday : night wag Kasse! In Germany ; with its locomotive workshops, which were de scribed as particularly vital now because of Germany's ur gent need for more railway . transportation for the Russian campaign. Nearly 101 British planes were said to have beaten at the town. As to the Arctic, there were signs that more and more action could be expected in those chilly waters, for there were unofficial British prediction that the land ing of British-Canadian-Norwegian expeditionary, force on the Spitsbergen archipelago above nazi -occupied Norway was only the shadow of ; things to come. Moreover, Churchill himself spoke Tuesday of the archipelago as the northern section of an expanded allied front, rw. arching to the western desert 4a Africa. As to the Russian front this was the detailed picture offered byt he belligerents last night: Germans: ;! Leningrad sur rounded and .'isolated, under at tack of ; every weapon In the German armory and should be taken within a reasonable time." Odessa In the far south still held under German and allied siege despite what were termed localised Red counter-attacks. More than 4,001 Russians cap tured and 228 tanks and 101 guns destroyed or captured in fighting on the central front northeast of the town of Ros lavL ; . . I Russians: One hundred fifty square miles of Soviet territory and SO Soviet villages retaken in the Soviet counter-offensive be fore which the survivors of a de feated German force of 100,000 men, were declared still In flight toward Smolensk, 40 miles back of the farthest point of the nazi central advance. More, than 20,000 nazi-allied Rumanians slain in the last 10 days of fighting in the far south about Odessa. The official Soviet spokesman asserted that all thjs foreshadowed "the impending route of the Ger man armies.' j . v ' Army Bomber, Grew of Six Are Missing (Continued from Page 1) a mountain ridge. The particu lar ridge cited, he said, was 4330 feet high. The bomber was on a routine night training flight. It left Mo Chord field near Taeoma, around midnight, went to Walla Walla,- EUensburg and as far east as Spokane, before turning back for its home base. He said this area was the log ical spot for the ship to have landed. No word has come out of the area, from either farmers or others, about the plane's whereabouts . 30 mfm Serb TURN UP benefits to the community. Here In Oregon, beer provides employment for 13,233 persons, supports an annual payroll of $11,541,550 arid contributed $617,020.86 last year in state taxes. Oregon, too, has an miportant stake in the beet industry's purchases for rmterials,equipment,and services from over 100 other industries.. : You can help us protect these benefits , in two ways. Fim patronize only the reputable places whore beer s sold. Seo-J; codreport to the proper authorities any law violation you may observe, ! v.