Pictures .... r - Two syndicated tews pie? 7 tare services and a - staff . photographer . serve . States nun readers. For first news ' in word and picture, read . -The Statesman, Weather - Partly cloudy today with scattered showers. Fair Sun .day. Max. temp. Friday, 8, Attn.' SO. Rainfall. .39 inch. River -8.3. Sonthwest wind. Cloudy. NINETY-FIRST YEAB I Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning, October 4, 1341 Price) 3ci Kewsstaada 5c .... . No. 164 Up! Up! Up! At Receptidri for Willam JPresident myw I'lfwr 1 1 1'i ini ' 1 1 .'n .11 1 111. ii. jui .1 111 1 . Euss TeliPesGnp:res pounds?. 1051 ". ' ' I '..'"';- ';'. FundsFor - ' . - ' v . J-TfpitaaFtVthe'l: -" ' vi 1 - fe-SQooa00 $40.00Q B-$3QO0O. E-2Q00Q &Qooa - Watch the Community Chest ret hotter and hotter. It . has now reached 63 percent. The dif ferently shaded "mercury" Indl 1 - cates amounts collected each .". day.- . " - Giest Total Still Rises Latest Reports Show $31,585 Pledged in Campaign Thus Far . , Community Chest solicitors got their second wind on Friday and brought in subscriptions amount ing to $5140 to swell the total to $31,585 or slightly more than 63 per cent of the $50,000 goal. The government and , education divi . sion again - led the parade with ' $2104 reported. The ; next report t luncheon , will be on , Monday,, aft ter workers have had opportun ity to. interview prospective don "ers over the weekend. Other division reports on Fri . day Included: ' . . . Automotive 4136, ' eontraet , ers $172,, general gifts $529, in dnstrial $721, mercantile $538, professional $277, women's dl- WASHINGTON, Oct President Roosevelt broadcast an appeal to every American Friday night to help build a "stronger and better" nation by . contributing- to Community. Chest and welfare funds. Starting the annual mobllixa 4 tion for human , needs, Mr. Roosevelt, said In an address ; prepared for the radio that the well-being of the civilian popu- ' latloa must be built up for the added reason this- year that - "adequate national defense def- , tnltely needs It" ftMeMnsnnnnnaMBMMMMsojiSMonnwHMnMM , vision $408. The total was also Increased by a correction In the (Turn to Page 2, CoL 6) ; 1 t 1 1 1 'i Marooned J i k A Y ' ' .... JL -.1 This b Devil's Tower, 1280-foot rock formation near Sundance, Wyo atop which George Hop- " kins of Rapid City, SD, was ma ; rooned after a parachute leap to win a beU Instructions for the perilous descent down the sheer walls of the basaltic obelisk were dropped to him from an ala planr AbDrovett . Emergency Ur amis rouce ? Defense (V r it Expenditure of of Oregon National guarw funds by the state civilian defense council and $30,000, in any one year, for expansion of. the state police department was author ized by the state emergency board in special session Friday. The funds were taken from a $248,000 appropria tion ap proved by the last legislature and earmarked for the guard, or for state police expansion should the emergency board so decree. Attorney General I. H. Van- Winkle had held that no part ofJ this money could be vised either by the state defense council or the state police without authority of the emergency board. Gov. Charles A. Sprague out lined the activities of the de fense council which he said had multiplied rapidly during the past few months. He declared that all of the 36 Oregon coun ties were now organized and functioning on a defense basis. A budget prepared by Jerrold Owen, state civilian coordinator, estimated that approximately $1100 would be required monthly to meet the financial demands of defense council activities. Bills already contracted by the council aggregate $3900. The $25,000 was voted to meet needs to June 30, 1943. Necessity for expanding polic ing activities in Oregon was stressed by- Charles P. Pray, sup erintendent of the state police de- (Tum to Page 2, CoL 5) n War Problem r .-. .1 i Revealed inf Salem Talk "I'm not for the war but the war is for us," Jay Allen, foreign correspondent and recent prisoner of the Germans in occupied France, told a Salem audience in the high school auditorium Fri day night Denying any intent to preach intervention, he said he could see only three alternatives for the United States; fight and win the war, fight and lose the war for failure to start soon enough, or do nothing and lose the war "and our souls as well.' If Hitler becomes convinced that he cannot win, before that fact Is too obvious he will move for peace on seemingly g-ener-ons terms and they probably will be accepted, In Allen's ex pressed opinion. For the most part he avoided "crystal-casing" and presented a factual though whimsical account of his experiences In prison and bis observations In Vichy and in occupied Franee. Frencn fascists, Petain among them, surrendered when it wasn't necessary, for what they thought was their own good and that of France, but they are bitter now because "Hitler betrayed every one, but especially his friends,' Allen observed. He said France lost because it was divided, one group swearing by Hitler and an other worshiping Stalin. US to Borrow Billion WASHINGTON, Oct. 3.-(P- I Secretary Morgenthau Friday an I nounced plans to borrow $1,000,- 000,000 ; or more nex week in what may f be the largest cash financing 01 ine treasury since the World war era. Mndy Asserts Fears : FORT WAYNES Ind., Oct Wi -Charles A. Lindbergh asserted Friday night before a capacity crowd in Gospel tabernacle that "the time has come when we must consider" whether there will be any elections next year. . ; "Such a condition may not be' many steps ahead on the road our president la taking us," he said. Earlier in' his address he ex- Dressed fear for - freedom of speech In this country and charg ed that President Roosevelt and his administration "have been treating our congress more -and more as the German reichstag has been treated under : the nari re gime". -.. "V:. "Congress, like the reichstag, is not consulted," said Lind bersh. The temple, with a seating ca- ' - f f tl - I'M ,.. . . .... . yl - ' ' i l . i r - i-.' - . ' i I ' r I -. v , I f I I t 1 f - ; , ' ,1 ! "f . s I . V- t " - : 1 - I - - ' - ' . ' i Yi: ' . ' L ' - " V 4 Dr. Carl Sumner Knopf (right), new senior coed, at the reception held Knopf. . Left to right, Paul B. Wallace, president of the board of trustees, Mrs. Wallace, Mrs. Charles A. Sprague and Mrs. Knopf. Sprague Speaks Says Courage Needed To Preserve Liberty .At Wire Conclave PORTLAND, Ore, Oct 3 A free press needs liberty and the courage to' use it, Gov. Charles A. Sprague said Friday night at the annual banquet of the North west Associated Press members' meeting. If the press lacks the, courage to make full use of, liberty, the governor said, it has no assur ance that it wUl retain it. A free press alone is not a complete safeguard against des potism, he warned. The danger of despotism rests en constant social dislocations with depres sions and. periods of prosperity 1 occurring within periods of a fews years, ' 1 --r'it-' 'VT The crisis of the present Can only be solved, - he asserted through removal of the underly-; ing causes of social maladjust-j ments. Democratic processes are in ac tive danger, Sprague said, from: the temperature and spirit of the age. The revolution sweepjng Eu-j rope couia not nave Deen aream ed 10 years ago, and it is folly Jo think the people of this coun try are so far different from Eu-j ropeans that it could not happen here. If Hitler succeeds and domi nates Europe and Africa, this country will be so Isolated that an American form of fascism wUl arise through Internal erup (Turn to Page 2, Col. 8) Army Bomber j Is Missing ALBUQUERQUE, NM, Oct 3 -iip)-With two officer passengers and a crew of four, a twin-mo tored B-18 army - bomber was missing Friday night over storm swept mountainous northern Ari zona or New Mexico. The bomber with an eight-hour fuel supply, was nearly 24 hours overdue at the ' Albuquerque air base on a flight from Sacramento, Calif. -Last radio reports from the pi lot were at 8:20 p. nt, Thursday when the plane was over Needles, Calif. Bad weather closed in earlier on the route normally fol lowed by planes over central Ari zona. The ship was due here at mid night Thursday. It left McClel land ' field . at Sacramento, Calit, about 5:30 p. m. pacity of 4000, was filled 43 min utes before the scheduled start of the program, sponsored by . the America First committee. Doors were closed as soon as the hall was filled,-and a special police detail stood, guard . It was the aviator's first speech since his September 11 Des Moines address, in which- he linked the British, the Jews and the Roose velt administration as forces pressing . the United ; States to ward war. -In tonight's prepared speech, he ' did: not mention the Jews. . : Pleading again for "a destiny for America that Is Independent f these everlasting European conflicts," Lindbergh asserted that the present generation's - American heritage has been de- stroyed by the false promises of the ' Interventionists and et On Free Press ,4 I president of Willamette university, In the university library Friday Hitler Declares Russians Dealt Knockout Blow Hints of New Campaign Fuehrer Leaves Front to Make First Speech Since May; Sneers at Efforts Of US; Reveals Huge Russian Losses BERLIN, Oct 3.-(P)-Adolf lence by saying that he had not been able to speak until The en emy had been hit so hard that he never again" will rise up," de clared Friday to the German people in his first speech since last May that the paralyzing blow In a 63-minute address to thousands in the Berlin sportspal ast he announced- that a "gigantic new development" had occurred on the eastern front in the last 48 hoursVbut beyond mis he offered little new. i- ? .-"yi'"; ''' His speech, for : whicllhe ame ; directly from the front to give a glowing review of German war successes, opened the reich's third war winter charity aid drive. But it appeared to have the wider ob jective of revitalizing the nation for the tasks still ahead. Everything in the Russian cam paign, he asserted, had gone ac cording to plan, but he added: "We were not mistaken about anything- except that we did not know how awfully big were the preparations ' against tn and how closely Earops escaped Bolshevism." , ; There was no direct mention whatever of the United States, but the fuehrer made an oblique and sarcastic reference by declaring that Germany did hot talk much about building armaments, and had no need to depend on capital ism to create national defense. He declared triumphantly that contrary " to the situation in the world war Germany now had un limited arms and supplies and said that the only present problem was one of transport Such vast stores had been accumulated, he added, that in the beginning of the " war "I was able to lay Idle the pro duction of many materials. . . . I know there is no longer any enemy which we eeuld net overpower with the munitions on hand. - Vrv ' And if you sometimes read In the newspapers about the gigantic (Turn to Page 2, CoL 3) ' La Grande Paper Sold LA GRANDE, Oct 3-6P)-Frank Schiro and Fred Weybret arrived this week from California 'to take over the La Grande Observer, purchased recently from Mrs. Eloise Finlay. of BS Bic our administration fat Waahing- They (the interventionists) dare not telLus that to crush Germany means to invade Europe," he said, "and that to invade Europe prob ably means the most devastating! war of all history. At another point he said: . t "We must face the fact that you and I and our. generation have' lost our American heritage. It is no longer simply a case of defending 'our American heritage It is no longer simply a case of defending it It is a case of re building it" ; . t -:i '1 Lindbergh said the address might be his last .because he feared for the rlxht of freedom of speech. He asserted that "an administration which can throw this country ; Into undeclared naval war. aralnst the will of our people, and without asking ; '? - - chats with Maxine Holt, Salem afternoon for president and Mrs. Hitler, explaining his long si had now been dealt the Russians.' a hoarsely cheering audience o ts Slashed Half County Budget Group -Approves Additional Help Funds at Meet : Requested pay increases were cut in half additional .-funds for extra help allowed and another $1000 ; was dropped Into . the emergency fund by Marion coun ty's budget committee before , it had placed its stamp of approval Friday ; on . a table of anticipated income and expenditures for the first six, months of 1942. Although general fund ex penditures mounted to, within 20 of the maximum allowed .under the C per cent legal limi tation, the $13,153.69 Increase In that rand will mean no In crease , fat lax millare. County Assessor R-JTad" Shelton said Friday night. . An increase of $590,000 In sessed valuation of property in (Turn to Page 2, CoL 7) Salem Meets WU Leader Several, hundred, students Salem persons greeted Pres. and and Mrs. Carl Sumner Knopf in a reception at the Willamette uni versity library Friday afternoon and night Many had their ' first view, of the new president, who has spoken over the radio twice this.weekv:-, ' - i : .-. Numerous bouquets of flowers decorated -- the spacious , rooms, where the new ffirst famfly was introduced to new friends. ". The reception, sponsored by the faculty : and ; board of trustees, was in general charge of Mrs. Roy S. Keene. the consent of congress, can by similar methods prevent free dom, of speech among us.".. WASHINGTON, Oct -VTi- Senator Pepper (D-Fla) said the address of Charles A. Lindbergh at Fort Wayne Friday night made clear that the flier proposes to be the "fuehrer of the United States.? - In a statement on Lindbergh's address. Pepper asserted: "He is following the same path. the same argument and the same policies Hitler followed In Ger many. His highway to power win be by arousing the people against their government - and -x making them believe he is their only sav ior; by denunciation and persecu tion of the Jews, by stirring up class and race prejudices, and by drawing to his side the ambit ious .and the misguided people and, deluded men of money.' Pay Rcoues Successes Of :-Drives Declare Nazis i Beaten: Back on North and South By Th Associated Press Tig Russians' declared Friday night that their counter-off en- rive in the northwest had biy- en the Germans back from one to two miles'on a broad front at Leningrad and. that a powerful series of new defensive posi tions had been established about, the city , Berlin stressed the progress of the southern nazi offensive against Kharkov in the Ukraine and the; Donets river basin gen erally acknowledging red counter attacks by tanks and even arm ored trains but describing them all as broken and reporting that German bombers were bringing chaos to Russian communications far to the rear. Soviet counter - attacks about Leningrad against two German divisions were also admitted, but it was stated that these, too, were beaten off. The capture of the palace of the old czars at Kras- noje1 Selo, 18 miles southeast of Leningrad, was claimed. Moscow's accounts of Friday were uniformly cheerful from the Russian viewpoint. Aside from tremendously im portant successes before Lenin-, grad, the red armies claimed victories extending- over, the central front and to the far south. a 1 1 -At u center, saia soviet uui - itary dispatches and other official attempting to break through somewhere about,. Gomel were routed by red 'tanks. Moreover, offensive land, aerial and gueril la action spread through .a great area of the central front extend ing 1Q0 miles northwest of Smol ensk and 300 miles southwest of thatjtbwn was declared to have L11M t. LUWU ii ! O.B 1 1 I 1 I KTVa. SU UB W B ' -Ttr ' ' columns. A German attempt to encir cle Russian infantry somewhere In the central theater was said to have been smashed. About Odessa In the south, as m Leningrad in the north, red counter-attacks were general, Moscow said. Such thrusts were pictured as bending : the German lines back (Turn to Page 2, CoL 1) Stock Show Opehs Today PORTLAND, Oct S-tfVThe 31st annual Pacific International Livestock exposition was ready Friday night for Saturdays open ing, from newly painted murals to the tinest well-brushed calf and the San Francisco sheriffs mount ed posse. One of the, main exhibits will f be . military the army's huge searchlights and sound detectors for aircraft defense shown against a succession of murals depicting the army from 1776 to the present War Exchange Halted NEWHAVEN, Eng., Oct 3-(AV sucU British authorities called a den .halt Friday night to exchange under the protection of a mercy truce of some 3000 German and British prisoners of war, although the crippled ; and blinded Ger mans already had been carried or led aboard two hospital ships in this strangely brilliant harbor. Nazis Picture Closeness to r . s. . : A view of Leningrad, Berlin sources call this picture and say that it was taken with a long-range camera. The planes are Identified as Russian bombers. - This photo was sent from Berlin to New York vio raiio, wired "to CLicaxo and airmailed t Tha KUtesmas. ' , . . ... : - I same saturated scissorbiU who narrassed our Seuators aU sum-" sner beran p e s e rl ft'g dem -bums and ; tbo bombers tn -Brooklyn Friday.- f - -Third game of the orld se ries was rained out there" and laU " Associated Press '.reports Friday night ' said It Would probably be rained but again today. . ; ; 'Z-j - -V . Probable starting r pitchers. should the, gamo.be played to-" day," have been announced . as : Khrby Higbe .for .. the Dodrers ' Hind Marius Russo foe the Tan .kees. Th series stands 1-1. UltlC6F':l CllS ' Airnort Needs Army May Base 2000 Men bri Maneuvers ; Airbase Is Hinted - Water supply for 2000 men who may be bivouacked there shortly during portended air maneuvers is the immediate requirement at the Salem municipal airport, an army officer representing tne commander of the second air corps declared in the capital city Friday. Coming on the heels of a delegation of United Airlines executives who suggested that the Civil aeronautics board may require completion of two more mnways and an administration building .before their company can bring planes here on regu lar service, the army man, who asked that he be allowed to re- (Turn to Page 2, CoL 2) Dallas Woman Named to Head 1 -- TT I LICICUSC Ulllt Appointment of Mrs. Harold D. Peterson, Dallas, past president of the state federation of women's clubs, to direct women's partici pation in the. state civilian de fense T)rogramt :wa$ . announced Friday bv Governor Charles A. SnrasKie, Mrs. Petersen, member B ' t JdefenseJ'iwas also pamed viei president of that body. Jerrold Owen was named to head men's activities, an ap pointment which does ; not change his official status as state civilian defense coordina tor, the rovernor said. Establishment of the new posts was made at request of F. H. La- Guardia, United States director of civilian defense. Telegraphed information from Charles & Page, San Francisco, regional civilian, defense director. indicates that the program now being undertaken will stress youth .movements, health and welfare. - food conservation and , related activities, Owen said Fri day. , In Oregon a statewide nutrition committee under Dean Ava B. Milam is operating, Owen has an nounced. Labor! Takes r - . - Anzac Reins : CANBERRA, Australia (Satur day), Oct 4-(ff)-Labor took over the government of Australia to- day combination govern- " ' T . signed on a parliamentary vote of non-confidence. The new regime! predged itself, to "carry on the war whole-heartedly. - The new premier, John Curtin, declared as he accepted the post: the Italian motorship Leme Fri "The war involves the interests of day after Judge James A. Fee had labor more than those of any other directed a verdict of acquittal for class." K -To Decide slum FDRWiUSeek " Revision of Act In Near Future ; WASHINGTON, Oct. 3.-(JPf- President Roosevelt reiterated Friday that congress would be asked to revise the neutrality act and said t&at a final deci sion on amendments to be re quested would be reached ata conference 'With senate leaders of both parties next Tuesday. At the same time, he said that American merchant ships could not-be armed against the at- tacks of axis submarines without the approval of congress. Congres sional policy on that question had been so clearly expressed, he said, that it would not be right for him to try to wiggle out of it The latter statement was made as part of his response to a re quest for comment on the propos al of Senator Pepper (D-Fla) that. Mr. Roosevelt simply revoke the proclamation issued under1 the neutrality act This would have the effect of lifting most of the restrictions of that law." v , The president said "he thad never heard of the Fepper plan . which was advanced by the Florida senator In a senate speech Thursday. Then, cautioning- the reporters against trying to construe his remarks, Mr. Roosevelt went on to dis cuss one aspect of it, the pos sibility of re-definhlg combat sones tn such a way that Ameri can ships could carry cargoes to England. He asked whether an area of the sea in which one ship out of 500 was sunk was to be consider ed a danger area. He next asked whether five sinkings out of 500 ships, or ten sinkings made the zone one of danger. : f r j ;He offered xnat replies vto these rhetorical questions, remark- ling only that the neutyality'la'ir- ' " b1armedeciaioii to hlnu Ad- I diuonauy, ne noted that tne crew of a ship struck last week demand- ing bonuses for a voyage to the (Turn to Page 2. CoL 4) Quake Hits . South Coast LOS ANGELES, Oct. S-KiT)-An earthquake that caused ceiling lighting fixtures to sway shook Los Anreles county beach regions Friday nlxht at t:S9 p. m. The shock was reported by residents of Falos Yerdes, Re dondo Beach, Hermosa Beach, 'Manhattan Beach and inland Inglewood. EUREKA, Califs Oct. 3 -(ff)-A strong earthquaka on the ocean floor off the California coast, shook Eureka Friday and was felt In coastal areas from the Orec en border to San Fran cisco, The north-south seismograph of the US coast and geodetic survey at Fern dale, south of Eureka, was wrecked by the .force of the quake, at 8:13 ajn. No damage was -reported here. Jury Has Crew's Fate PORTLAND. Ore- Oct S.-Uft U federal court Jury began con- sideration of the fate of 13 offi- jeers and members of the crew of 'six of the men. . Leningrad tns i. V"