-3n? - fill x, r1N For Women Turn to The Statesman women's pat dally If you're Interested In social and club news. There are tee ted recipes and food hints also. .Weather Kain today. Showers fol lowed by clearing Sunday min. 50. Eain .OS inches. Southwest ; wind. Partly k cloudy. Elver 1J feet. PCUNDZD ICZ1 XI!IE7YFC1ST YEAH Salem. Oregon, Saturday Morning, October II 1S41 Price Sci Newsstands So Mo. 173 XT n -'v f .(d). ILL1VUL. 1 S -ei - i i vn I i n aya -vv . :i 1! rr. star H rWo fnr?NTC at einmp ' - mULm Up! Up! Up! W5Q00O. .4Q00dn $3Q0Q0f. r2o.coa Q000.?: Chest Drive GosetoGoal I - Sum now $42,737.84 ' With $7262 to Go for . , Year's Campaign Short of, the $50,000 goal by 17262, Salem Community Chest .campaign workers held -their last daily report luncheon on Friday . but prepared i to continue solid tation over the weekend and up ', to next Wednesday when another v- rT ' luncheon will' be held. The total of : $42,737.84 was about per cent of the desired amount, and nearly - $600 ahead of the amount obtained at the same stage in the 1340 campaign. . . ; ,In view of the considerable - number of i persons not yet reached by solicitors, the cam palgn's progress Is encouraging. Chairman Irl S. McSherry said. A feature of this year's cam palgn has been that every di vision has obtained at least 15 per cent of its quota. No divi sion bas reached the 100 per cent mark hut the industrial di vision headed by Robert Shinn ' spurted on Friday to attain tl . ' per cent, moving Into second .. place behind A. C. Baag's automotive division. " The day's reports included: Automotive, $47, total $3553. - Contractors $122, total $1703. . General gifts, $110, total $710 ' Government and education $14; total $9263. . .. (Turn to Page 2, Col. 8) Odd Fellows BuyBoncfe v T i Chemeketa lodge No. 1, IOQT, purchased Friday a $5000 defense savings bond from Ladd and En branch of United States National ' hnnV for "investment and trt ? our part in the national defense program." ' . . f The lodge, "oldest Odd Fellows lodge west of the Mississippi now has over $11,000 invested in government savings, already h ing had nearly $6500 In postal savings, waiter 5. Ldunkin, irus- tee. said.. ; t US Air Corps Planning Use Of Uniformed; 7oinen Soon - - . . . . , - -. . NEW YORK, Oct 10 -?)- Tte army air corps disclosed Fri-cl-y that it .intended to summon if congress approved - a uniformed contingent of 25,000 to 40,CC3 American women volunteers to handle highly technical and se cret work in the corps air r:.:J interceptor command. - i Lieut Gen. Delos C Emns? .commanding general of t ' force combat command. Boll' field, Washington, said the department had already rro . posed . congressional author, tion of enlistments. He a. ' J he heped ccr;rt;s would . woisea in cr.:formw during t j ; current session. The idea of female contin;- lz as independent adjuncts tl V -army could easily spread from t - air corps to other branches cf V i service and ultimately trLn3 i ' ' , the nation r.'Iltnry acldit: 1 1 contir.ont3 US Okehs Pana la Eegi: Roosevelt Denies Reports Russia Capitulate WASHINGTON, Oct. 10-Ph President Roosevelt announced in effect today that the new coup d'etat government of Pana ma had received the recognition of . the United States and " that diplomatic relations with that county would .contmiie un- changed. At the same time; in response to press conference questions', he said he had received no reports which would indicate that Russia was about to capitulate before the nazi onslaught and seek an armis- tict.. . Neither, he said, had he any knowledge of how his letter to Joseph Stalin, pledging material assistance to, Russia, had , fallen into German hands, but, he added, he had a hunch. In addition, he announced ' plans for broadening the usual celebration . of Navy .-day, Oct. 27, Into an observance of total Defense day. lie said he would deliver an address thai evening'', before a dinner of tho Navy league. . " 'J While the president said, only that diplomatic relations with Panama would continue 'unchang ed, 'the general attitude here was one of satisfaction with the Pana manian change. . r J The former president of the re public, Arnulfo .Arias,- had been widely criticized as an opponent of democracy fed a sympathizer with , totalitarianism. ' -; Anas left ran am for a visit to Havana, and' In his absence the - Panama " cabinet elevated ' Kicar'tlo Adolf o de la Guardia -to the presidency, an 'action: which Sir. Roosevelt said Fri day was legally taken under the 1 Panamanian constitution. i One of de la Guardia's first acts was to issue a statement which I sajd that his government recog nized Panama's treaties, and tvould vigorously support - demo- frratic principles. These he said 1 xuro iu tracts , voi. v SalemGirlon Yearbook Staff VTTfirTMr Opt i fWZPk-Wilhur r ftichn Hitni- nf th tJnivrsitT of Oregon yearbook, Oreganar has faff Jnninff- Elsie Brownell, Grants Pass, as- sistant managing editor; Ruth Van H-cUrk. Rfltnv - JPAnnrtt- . Mc- Guire, Grants Pass; Jerry O'Cal laghan, Klamath Falls, and Jean Frideger, Ashland. Deer Hunters Alarooned LEWISTON, Idaho, Oct 10.-X) -Fifteen automobiles 'which car ried deer hunters into the Selway region are isolated by snow . 100 miles east of here but the hunt ers apparently are unconcerned, Pilot Bert Zimmerley said today. Churchill to Speak LONDON, Oct. 10-4P)-Prime Slinlster Churchill to expected to make a statement on the war sanation In Russia at the next s'tt'r of commons probably tn Tuesday - j cf 150,000 women, General Em- mons said. i Most of the air ' corps women, he said, would be "buck privates," but there would be women officers also. They 'would serve largely at information and filter centers for the aircraft warning service. j Women would not be enlisted, be said, unless war was declar tl or until "the emergency Is t ach that It will be desirable." ; "But I can safely say i that this war Is getting closer to us all the t!me, and our exposure' to air raids comes closer," he continued. General Emmons discussed the proposal while inspecting New York headquarters of the air raid v. arning system, now engaged v. ith ether. - interceptor centers throughout the eastern .aboard i,i the second day cf a week-long t of the system in 10 rxrth tern stales. " Streets Being "Striped" for Winter Safety iil ill Developed largely by the eity engineering' department is' spare time, this machinery speeds and eases ; the work of painting yellow Ihaes on Salem ,slreets. Only two men are required to operate the eqnip . ment as it rolls along the streets, and. wet paint signs rise behind it. This picture was taken as the lines' - were painted Friday. Statesman ,pLoto. " " " " " Survey Ordered by OPM Ony Industries in Salem Probe Seeks Chart on Machinery and Labor Situation With Possibility . Of Getting Defense Contracts ' By KAY MORROW , . ! What machinery is available here for defense work, how Sa?' lem industries have been affected labor situation is there are a asked in a survey to be conducted here lor the Office of Produc tion Management (OPM) through the local employment office Of the unemployment compensation CourtFixes Tax Multnomah Assessor to Tell Reason for not Obeying Board Order ine state supreme court an nounced late Friday afternoon that it had fixed next Wednesday, Oc tober 15, as the time for Tom Wat son, Multnomah county assessor, to appear before it and show cause why he should not comply with a state tax commission order involv ing his 1941 property assessments. Argument of the commission's I " atson s contenuons, now Uver, may be delayed by the fil M" of demurrer by the assessor w writ oi manaamus assuea py u .UIk "VU10 Ui officials. Watson is represented, by John.F' Portland attorney, and James R. Bain, Multnomah county district attorney. Original Jurisdiction in the mandamus proceedings was ac cepted - by the supreme court here Thursday afternoon follow ing arguments of attorneys. The order, of the tax commis sion directed Watson, to make his 1941 . property assessments under the uniform ratio system which would increase taxes on . homes from 8 to 11 per cent. " The Mult nomah county board of equaliza tion later ovef&Hed the. tax com mission order and Watson then is- ( Turn to page 2, CoL 6) Navy Officer . Confers Here ; iOn Vet Plan Lt G. F DeGrave, US navy, retired, conferred with local American Legion officials Friday in connection with the personnel procurement program being car ried out on the request of Secre tary of Navy Frank Knox. - DeGrave, who Is In charge of recruiting" for the Portland district, also paid his official Quarterly inspection to the Sa lem station, which he' declared Is one of the finest In the state as far as enlistments are con eerned. In charge here Is Chief (Turn to Page 2, Cot 7) Green Approves Deal. SEATTLE, Oct 10.H$VPresi dent William Green cf the Ameri can Federation of Labor said to night that he had approved an intra AFL union asreement which union leaders said should enable the Pennsylvania Salt company to open Its new Portland plait on - j Monday for national defense pro- iducuon- , "... Hearing by federal priorities, what the few of the, questions that will be commission. i. "By means , of . such question naires we hope to find "out "'Just' What effect defense Industry has had in this area and what equip-' ment and .labor is available, with the possibility-of getting additional government contracts or sub-con tracts," explained Silas Gaiser, ad ministrator of the UCC, Friday. Although " - plans , have not been completed, the survey will prODably be started within ai few days, E. H. Jones, Informal tional ,v representative ' for the ! UCC, announced .Friday after -i ' noon. When it is finished it wOl be sent to -the labor priorities section of the OPM and after, being weighed there will get the atten tion of the contracts distribution service," Jones pointed out- "We hope, the survey won't give the impression that every industry which has in any way suffered through priorities will mmediately ;be awarded a gov ernment contract L. C: Stoll, (Turn to Page 2, CoL' 5) Japs Demand Indo-CIiina RailControl MANILA, Oct 'lK(Saturday)- LTWapan has demanded control of French todo-enma s state ran ways, reliable reports from Sal gon said today. ; - This move followed demands that the Hanoi government hand over the collection of customs and postal censorship In the French Asiatic colony. Meanwhile, Japanese military maneuvers in Indo-China are In full swing, along the border wilh Thailand.. " Cooperating naval squadrons are reported in the Gulf of Siam. There Is general apprehension In Saigon that all this may signal the start of a Japanese advance into Thailand. 'WW Wtfit irAX ' FirKrcd yosr rzvr federal Income tax yet? The tax with the big surcharge feaUrre and reduced exemptions that will pour mon ey frera several r l-.ion new taxpayers Into Uncle Sam's treasury? How the tew taxes will affect your pocketbook, how they may" be computed ar 1 reported under the optional systems provided for the first time la the recently -enacted tax till, how you can e terrsLae yeur r-rUx and your normal tax, will be cutliscd la sa authoritative arti.-!e on The Statesman Sunday feature page to morrow by 3chi"a II. Short writer for The Eiatcsxaaa special news service. ' ' " - TLt a, t tt!.i yea forest tases, yoall fir 1 Vr.t same er.!rr-. tahiL-:? rage t:.a tlcry of t 3v an eas'lera ii:.!:-::xr tf r-:.r!:r.' ' his wile is a Fal"i woman bas put Ms teaching lnt4 rrzt-'-ct tt Kewportr Efhsn Grant's ecloran and IiUle L. riisca's tcly vice to firJj'rs, othfr features. . - Don't overly The t lilzszzzn feature paje." ITikh fcr lt each CwJay -. ' - -v - : Invasion Seen In British 'Reveal Corps Trained for Possible Fight on Continent -;; - LONDON Saturday, Oct 11 (iiP) Formation of a corps ; 'of shock' troops whose rigorous and highly specialized training im plies ; that 'they are 'primarily meant for an invasion of the con tinent, was announced by the war office todayi-' ' ; . -"- - - . The . corps," called command units is made up of picked men .from every "branch of the army - who are trained- both in ampht- -bious warfare and to operate lititnnAni1 oil land 9 aw 1aip periods . "without assistance -. of I batiotu. ' . . : . . : - Both officers and men are de scribed as having steady, sea legs for work on deep-water and as being . trained In handling small craft They have had practice in rapid embarkation and disembar kation by day and night In all sorts of. weather. " . . r. . Most of the small-craft train ing was carried out- with assault (Turn to Page 2, CoL 7) Worker Raps Striltes : NEW YORK, Oct 10-P)-In ' editorial entitled "Every Factory Part of Battlefront Against Hit ler," the Daily Worker Friday, In effect called for an end' to. strikes. The paper, former official or gan . of the American communist party , and still a mirror of4 offi cial party views, saio; "Labor sh o u 1 d find ways to deal with employers - who seek to exploit them to make -exorbitant profits and to refuse' labor its rights--but to deal" with these employers Hn such a manner as win 'not weaken" the defense ef fort"" . - - i Bidding Slow At Wool Sale - - - .... , ' . PORTLAND, Ore:, Oct lHPh Bidding was slow ' on 1,000,000 pounds of wool offered at the op ening of the annual two-day. Pa cific northwest wool sale Friday. Prices were several cents above the current wool market level, but only 25 lots, aggregating 303,750 pounds, were sold. - J New Troop Daily Jjgnd BI11 Get Okehi OfHouse Attempts to Cut, Block Russ Aid MeetDefeat ! WASHINGTON, , Oct. lHJPh President Roosevelt's request for $5,985,000,000 to continue the lend-lease program; of aid ing countries-fighting the a!i was passed 'overwhelmingly -.by the house IYi "aynd sent to the Senate. The vote on final pass age was 323 to 67. 1 With the democrats in full command, the members rejected every -attempt to reduce the amount of the 1 appropriation and easily defeated a republican sponsored proposal to deny to Rus sia any . benefits under the pro gram. .";.'. Voting in favor of the bill on the final rollcall were 230 democrats, 95 republicans, one American laborite and one farmer-laborite. Opposed were eight democrats, 56 republicans 1 and three progres sives. - ' i " . " : t -The bill: would' provide 'the money for virtually all types of war: materials $6S5,000,000 for : aircraft : 1383,000,000 for tanks and, other. armored equipment, 1350,600,000. for ships; $L190, 00,000 . for ordnance: and' sup plies, ; $175,000,000 for. agrl cultural and industrial products, and scores of .other' essentials. -: Sponsors: of. the appropriation asserted, that even though only i small part of the first $7,000,000, 000 lend-lease.' appropriation ac tually has been, spent it was vir tually all obligated and. conditions Tur to- Page ;2, CoL? ) - !TTt hlr a Tl 51 Tl f" Strike Seen : Union Row Threatens Production; Labor Secretary Speaks By Tho Associated Press An AFL-CIO dispute which Is threatening: 'to halt . virtually all production of army tanks was re ported Friday by war department officials. . Expressing grave concern, they said this was the situation: The Spicer Manufacturing com pany of Toledo makes about 70 cen o the transmissions for current tank output and for most of the- half-tractor and "jeep" combat ' vehicles. In turn, it de pends upon a subsidiary, the Hillsdale (Mich.) .Steel Products company, for parts. j ". Spicer, with 220 employes, has a contract with the CIO; United ' Automobile Workers. Among Hillsdale's 809 employes are some members of this union, but the AFL United Automobile Workers recently won a eolliee-J tive bargaining election there. 1 Last week, fighting between AFL and CIO factions at Hills dale led to dosing the plant, but it has since' reopened and is op erating with virtually a full force. CIO employes at Spicer, however, (Turn to Page 2, CoL 2) US to Fence Grand Coulee GRAND COULEE, Oct 10-P- The government will bufld a fence around part of Grand Coulee dam as a protection against -sabotage during the national emergency, the bureau of reclamation an nounced Friday. - In addition, the announcemen said, the 4,300-foot bridge being constructed atop the dam will be closed to the public until the end of the emergency. " Visitors, however, will not be turned away. The bureau said the grandstands and model rooms near the dam would remain open and lectures would continue. ! Plane Strike Averted SAN DICGO, Calif., Oct 10.- ITV-The threat of a strike at the j hua bomber plants of the Con- Ldatei. Aircran Corp. enced Fridisy 3 AFL machinists voted to accept a compromise wee pro posal rrcvi-ng tn esuuatea f::o.CC3 Li retroactive we-s ir.;s . . , Blitz Chief Field Marshal General Fedor von Bock (above) commands - the German armies ' reported by Berlin to have encircled several Russian 'armies In the Vyazma area, 125 miles west of Moscow. British Secret: MaU Sabotageidl FBI Agent Tells Spy Boast of Opening J Pouches' at Lisbon NEW- YORK,- Oct 10 -P)- A slender, scholarly. FBI- agent Fri day ojioted ;a suspected jGerman spy as having boasted that Brit ish diplomatic pouches wen open ed by a German agent In Lisbon, their contents photographed and the pictures town to Berlin. The agent,' William Friede- - man, ; linguist lawyer, statist!- elan and student of agirculture and criminology, said the boasts -were made by Erich Strunck, steward on the American liner l Sihoney and one of 15 defend- . ants charged with espionage conspiracy. Thousands of feet of silent film were made by an t m , camera placed, from four to six feet from Strunck and pothers who met about a dozen times between Jan uary 3, 1941, and June 28, when the ring was rounded up. , (Turn to Page 2, CoL 6) Ruhr- Valley Bombed . , LONDON, Saturday,- Oct 11.- (AV-British air raiders attacked targets in the Ruhr valley 4n Ger many during Friday night, au thoritative sources announced today.- . - y . . German Warships Hit STOCKHOLM, Oct VHP)- British planes hit several German warships in an hour-long attack off .Alesund, on the. southwest coast of Norway, Stockholm news paper reported Friday night in dispatches from Norway. v Where Great NOVGOROD 4 LL'mtn VELlKiE k v tuKi : ; SMOLENSK11 MINS a i)i In a great mechar!d tittle, Essia's central armies "tried desper to stem Ccrr.i3 tlxzzctn on JIdscow.' Soviet armies withdrew i the IsrcrtaEt railway tawn cf OreU Nazis-menaced-IIojc;;"' two iaaj;r sa!l?r.4., oe peratln.r from the vicinity of 'f3z other thre-u;! Cryassk and to OreL The Germans elaimei t sc.::i frcr.t til trsrrtl several rtd armies and nhorourhly C I ."scow's c-Ut Cerecsts. Previous reports have Indicated a t Ccr;i.:.3 tisve wLIi arrow) fror the Leningrad area. - Arm istice Offer Is Riiir Break-Througii Of Center Is German Claim By The Associated Press The G e r cfa n , (officially ' clai: 6red on a 310-mHe-wide sectlca of -the' central front, appeared . late Friday night to be trying to extend from belowMos- cow a directly northerly thrust to. bypass, the city to . the east and thus to surround it as Warsaw was surrounded. During , the day rumors of an impending German armis- - - tice offer to Russia were received . in New .York .from ,both "neutral . and belligerent European cgun- tries, along with one report that . ' Moscow was in fact considering such an offer. . i All this," however, was at once r denied, by "German, "Russian and , ; British spokesmen and in Wash- ; ,i ington President Roosevelt stated that he had heard nothing to. sug gest that the soviet might accept a truce. t German firing squads and mili- . tary courts slashed at the coriti-. i v i hent's' internal front of revolt S again Friday. Two Frenchpca were shot in Paris foK'p6ssessing T firearms wtthout permit . and. 25 C?echs;"'one of them s government farm official, were Condemned to die in, Prague and limo. . Th Paris executions raised -to 73 the total of llttcl viola tions' of the rules laii Cwn by ... the ' conquerors or la rr.- r'- .1 . (Turn to Page 2, V.. 1) -. V1- Up:".CoS-J: i To Camb Here1 j Approximately ' 225 army air corps officers and men will 'be---- stationed at the Salem municipal airport , during ' the- air corps . northwest maneuvers October 20 to November 4, officers from the Portland - airbas told Lee ' U. Eyerly, airport manager, Friday. The two officers, whose names were not learned, flew F-46 (Seversky pursuit) ships In fadm Portland to consult with , Eyerly on arrangements ; for quartering -the men here during maneuvers. The group, will bring full field1. equipment and encamp south of -the airport hangar. 1 Moscow Repulses Raid LONDON, Saturday, Oct 11, (JP)The Moscow radio said early today that five German planes had been shot down In the ap proaches to Moscow Friday. J Molalla Logger Killed : MOLALLA, Ore,-Oct iOHff) A log rolled off a truck at a lum ber camp near here Friday, fatal b crushing Clarence E. IMallat 38. MallaU, who moved here f cenuy irom tarn wiy, is turvr dx uie wiuow aim luur cvmu Battle Rc 13 MVCOSCOW I a. - - i .VYAZ." , 4 y I COMZt ; : o y- ioc 7- . MILES I m mm