PAGE tWO The OREGON STATESMAN. Solon, Oregon. Friday Morning. November 21. 1941 Hubbard Men Crash Train Two Hospitalized in Wallace Road Wreck; Locomotive Stalled (Continued from page 1) aged by the Impact of the car, told Officer Wayne Parker of the West Salem police that the auto mobile, approaching the crossing from the south, appeared to slow down as if for the train which was already on the crossing and then to speed ahead as if the dri ver thought it had passed. A new two-way radio. In stalled In the West Salem police ear earlier the same day and In test use Thursday night, found its first service In a call to Salem police to dispatch the city's first aid ear, in which the two young men were re moved to the hospltaL Indiana Launched Today nil n Hilks rrepare Annual Show At Christmas "Meet the Wife" will be a fa miliar expression around the Elks' temple for the next several weeks, even at "stag" events. The answer is that "Meet the Wife" is the title of the Elks' annual Christmas season show, which will be presented December 9, 10, nd 11 in the Elks' auditorium. "Meet the Wife" will be the sixth successive Elks' show pro duced by the Salem Civic Play ers under direction of Miss Beu lah Graham. Rehearsals have been under way for several weeks. In the cast are Mr. and Mrs. William C Dyer, Ruth Versteeg and Waldo Miller, who have been In previous Salem Civic Players productions Maxlne Klinge, Robert Monroe, Ralph Curtis and Allan Richard son. i i.L.u.m.t i n in . t iJ;.v;...,..i. r w - ? . 'DC' ti v'i j. - . zZ 5 " r ' ? s ' ajMMasj British Near Tobruk Sector Axis Units Falling Back Under Drive Of Desert Army (Continued from page 1) Ingham, was easting oat suc cessively widening arcs with his tank columns, Ids brother of the Royal nary, Admiral Sir Andrew Browne Cannlngham, was loosing- a terrible and sub stantially unchallenged fire upon the axis coastal positions from his Mediterranean fleet to the Mediterranean fleet his majesty's confidence, that they will do their dmty with ex emplary devotion In the su preme Important battle which lies, before them. For the first time British and empire troops will meet the Germans with ample equipment in modern weapons of all kinds. The battle Itself will affect the whole courser' of the war. Now Is the time to strike the hardest blow yet struck for final victory, home and freedom. The desert army may add a page to the history which will rank with Blenheim and Water la. "The eyes of all nations are upon yon. All our hearts are with yon. May God uphold the of the day's curious de- IT -.V 1 ' i i This striking view of the new 35,000-ton battleship Indiana shows It poised on the ways of the Newport News, Vs., Shipbuilding and Drydock company as workmen rush the huge ship to completion for its launching Friday. Made from a scaffolding, this picture shows the knife-like prow and graceful lines of the new dreadnaoght She was ready for the launching six months before schedule. Last Times Tonite o-kUrt'Mouuoa !col8.i COMPANION FEATURE JESSE JAMES 2 AT BAY ; 20c SL8 - Pl,us Tax iJJJJJVT"2c5 STARTS SATURDAY A Triple-Hit All New First Run Show! ! ! VIVA! THl KANSAS KlOV i-.lodlfl of A9 French Break Hinted by US Government Halts Aid To African Colonies; Japs Talk With Hull (Continued from page 1) ready held with President Roose velt and Hull. After an hour's talk Kurusu , smilingly asserted that "we were making a Thanksgiving call." Asked whether there was anything for which he might be thankful the special envoy skipped Into the state depart ment elevator without a reply. State department officials said that today's meeting was at the request of the Japanese for the purpose of elaborating further on said Panama had rejected de mands for payment of indemnity for business property Japanese subjects lost under the law and showed an unwillingness to reach any amicable settlement US Weather Hot, Chilly (Continued from Page 1) ton 73. the United States wea ther bureau la Chicago report, ed. Charleston reported SI while Florida figures ranged between 80 and 82. ine midwest, nowever, was chilly, with snow flurries in Min nesota and North and South Da kota. For a time it was below zero at Butte, Mont., but this was described as a purely local condi tion due to cold air from Rocky some phases of the international mountain peaks dropping Into situation. The conversations, they Montana valleys. Later It warmed added, continue to be exploratory UD with mercury reaching 10 and no decisions were undertaken. I aoove. Minnesota TOKYO, Nov. 20-j!p)-The Jap anese foreign office charged Pan- i ama Thursday with an unfriendly attitude and presented firmly- worded diplomatic demands for better treatment of Japanese nationals there. Specifically the foreign office renewed strong protests against the recent action of the govern ment of Panama preventing Japanese residents from con tinuing In or engaging in busi ness there. (Japan's original protest was re jected November 7 by the Panama government which termed it Ll 1 9 1 A. mt coucnea m strong, even insure- TTO T . ing terms." Panama said at that Uo IllSpeCtOr wuii vises b utc iavv was nut aiuicu directly at the Japanese, but "re- Ifers to a class of individuals of prohibited immigration.") ine Japanese saia tney were protesting not only for their sub jects but for all Asiatic races. and North and South Dakota temperatures ranged from 16 to 25, and the forecast for the midwest today was continued cold, with snow flurries In Minnesota, Wiscon sin and Michigan. Forecaster G. L. Canaday of the Chicago bureau predicted an end to the mild temperatures enjoyed in parts of the east, temperature drops in the east, bringing an end to the summer-like weather, Meanwhile southern California also had mild temperatures for the holiday. It was 62 in Los Angeles and 61 in San Diego. The powerful British air arm at the same time appeared to be in command of the main road on Sir Alan's right flank running from Salu, on the Egyptian bor der, to the axis position of Fort Capuzzo to the west. Axis tank and transport columns falling back westward into Libya were declared undeV heavy running bombing attack, but British in formants nevertheless cautioned against accepting this as proof of a major retreat Neither .the British field force, fleet nor RAF, it appeared, was trying to drive the Germans and Italians back so much as to pen them up and force them to make a general stand. On Sir Alan's centerat the southern end of his 140-mile front the available Information Indicated that the British ad vance was continuing roughly parallel to Tobruk, the long-besieged British position on the Mediterranean coast to the northwest, and in this maneuver the British hoped to get behind Rommel while the right wing was beating forward along the difficult terrain in the vicinity of Fort Capuizo and Halfaya (Hellfire) pass. German claims during the day to have thrown back strong Brit ish forces west of Sidi Omar on Sir Alan's left were waved away in London as of no consequence oven If true. For, they said, the British advance In that area had started from south of that point. Aside from these claims, and from jeering that this was not the second front that the Russians had wanted because it was not in Eu rope, Berlin showed a disposition during the day to deprecate the Libyan action. The Italians for their part did not deny the 50-mile penetra tion claimed by the British on the first day of their opera tions, but insisted that it was not really an advance but only forward march to make eon ' tact with the axis forces. Like the Germans, Mussolini's high command claimed that cer tain British forces had been forced to fall back. At the same time the Italians reported that "overwhelming British forces were assaulting their last surviving positions of consequence in Mussolini's now tattered African empire those in the Gondar region of Ethiopia. Before the house of commons in London, Prime Minister Churchill made it plain that the British were striking for the utter de struction of Rommel's forces, not Troops Ready In Coal Row ' New Shootings Told As Strikes Spread; Congress May Act (Continued from page 1) were said to feel that legislation should be restricted solely to the coal crisis and should pot give blanket authority for similar ac tion against other industry. It probably will not be presented until after the CIO convention in Detroit, which closes Saturday, and until congressmen return to Washington from Thanksgiving i War Summary velopments was a disclosure in holiday weekends at home delayed dispatches that the so viet press had published the full text of a German communique, sent in from Switzerland by the soviet news agency, which de clared that the British air force had done no important damage to German war industry and that between Jan. 1 and Oct 31 the RAF had lost 2051 planes to 602 for the Germans. This far from friendly publi cation apparently was motivat ed by the accusations made In the house of commons that some members of the British government were not really sympathetic to the soviet union. Whether or not the soviet was satisfied with the Libyan front had not been mentioned by any official Russian quarter, but a de velopment in Vichy, France, made clear one of the reasons for Brit- Meanwhlle annflre rattled la Fayette county, Fa where three men fell slightly wounded In a picket-line affary, raking the toll of the week's strike casual ties to five. DETROIT, Nov. 20-(flVrhe CIO denounced the OPM "and Its re sponsible officials- Thursday on grounds that they denied a de fense housing contract to a firm employing CIO workers. A resolution to that effect was adopted at the CIO's annual con vention, but it made no specific mention of Associate OPM DI rector Sidney Hillman despite the demands of A. D. Lewis and his adherents for a statement con demning Hillman for the part they attributed to him in the Detroit housing controversy, ain's urgent efforts to break the head e th United Mine axis m normern Auritit. Workers union, who long has As had been expected, General been at Hillman, presi- Maxime Weygand, who had been dent-on-leave of the Amalgamated regarded as not too enthusiastic about cooperating with the nazls, was ousted as Vichy's military commander In North Africa and his place had been given to the bitterly anti-British vice-premier Jean Darlan. Clothing Workers union. AtFortLewis Is Transferred Vichy Retires Gen. Weygand US Blames Hitler for African Leader Shift; Darlan Takes Over (Continued from Page 1) Lieut.-Gen. Alfonso Juin, 53, re leased by the Germans from a prison camp June 16, was sent to North Africa to command the troops there amid indications of increased French - German com mitments. The state department In Washington dispatch said this was an ominous development in growing Franco-German col laboration which might be seri ously detrimental to American interests. The entire relation ship with France now Is being reviewed, the state department said. Informed London quarters also took the view that Weygand was removed because ho was an ob stacle to German ambitions in Africa. They said Darlan long had wanted to oust the general for fear of Weygand's reaction should the British succeed in sweeping west across Libya and for terrain, and declared that the Tripoli to make a Junction with action to come was "like a clash French Tunisia. of fleets and flotillas, and as in a sea battle all may be settled one way or another in the course of a few hours." In the now overshadowed war on the Russian front the Ger man high command claimed in general terms that operations "continue successfully.'' Other . wise there was little from Ber lin daring the day save reports of routine actions on the Mos cow and Leningrad fronts and claim that the Russians were attempting to evacuate their troops from Leningrad in trans port planes. Six such craft were declared shot down. Russian information of Thurs day night, however, was that the red line some 65 miles above Mos cow about Volokolamsk was fall ing back under one of a series of fierce new German offensives. Having told the house that Bri- troops already had won PITTSBURGH, Nov. 2tHJPfA. coal operator at one of the com mercial mines still open in west era Pennsylvania said that i United Mine Workers official tele phoned him Thursday and asked this one question: "Say, can you sell me a couple of tons of coal." By Tue Associated Press British Libyan offensive; smashes tl miles Into axis ter ritory at center. Imperial com mand declares, to within tea miles of Tobruk's enter de fenses; Germans and Italians axe threatened with encircle ment; nazls el a 1 m to have brown the British hack U one sector, but try to focus attem- to- An Knuixn front: Chur chill says the decision bo long- delayed." "cannot Nazis claim Knasiaa opera tions "continue successfully"; Russians report heavy action above Moscow, where the red line Is sllxhtly bent back, below the capital and before Kostov on the Don; soviet says three German transports and a tank er axe sunk by red naval action tn the Arctic north of Mur mansk and Archangel. UNIONTOWN, Pa., Nov. 2H) -A grinning negro picket at a "Captive" coal mine at nearby Grindstone persuaded one miner from entering the mine Thursday with his argument that "President Roosevelt is behind the strikers." "Tub see," he explained to a British Sea Action Told (Continued from page 1) munitions dumps and that their helling had disrupted axis troop deployment ashore. The battle fleet took plenty of time in cruising back and forth before their shore objectives. lobbing shells with little or no opposition In the same manner tn which they aided the suc cessful land offensive last win ter when more than 101,006 Italians were captured. The situation ashore, aside from the Initial announcement that the land forces had penetrated 50 miles into Libya, was obscure, but the British were not overlook ing the fact that this time the Italians, supported by German armored divisions, may fall back to their strongest positions before offering any determined resistance. .Oldster Joins Young GOPs Honorary Membert 96, Staunch Republican, To Address Group (Continued from page 1) member " the captain of the aes'i team added. Simnson has been voting the re publican ticket since he cast his first ballot shortly after the close of the civil war, but ho Is not member rt that party because his father was, he declares. It was an anti-democrat feeling, engendered. according to the elderly Salem resident, "when the democrats m the south trampled the stars and family to loin the ranks of the stripes underfoot" that caused his GOP. Today he listens avidly to pol itical speakers, studies questions of current Interest and discusses them Intelligently, according to Lanke. He has been tnvtted not only to hold the red. white and blue membership card of the Young Republicans' organisa tion, but to address the group at one of its meetings shortly. Just as he chose his party, Simp son chose the home where ho ex pects to spend his declining years (when they come to him.) He had visited every state In the union, but he head up eo the subject bo fore he and Mrs. Simpson moved to Salem In 1033 from their Kan sas farm, he said. Three daughters make their homes in California. Ohio and To pers, Ksns., and all, he believes, vote the republican ticket miner In a ear, "Mr. Roosevelt he done believes In majority rule. Well, we IS the majority, so you ail just must stay out." I PLUS DEFENSE TAX 1 MICKEY ROONEY JUDY GARLAND "Life Begins for Andy Hardy" TUm: 10-4:l-TO-l2 ZND HIT Margaret Ralph Lindsay Bellamy ELLERY QUEEN'S PENTHOUSE BIYSTERY" Tim: .-- :l-t JS Companion Feature IN THE DEVIL'S PAY! Men who barter their souls In the service' of false idol I. . a dramatic thunderbolt that teems with deep mystery and tense excitement. lit mgfllt with J. EDWARD BROMBERG , OSA MASSEN nXS TnXTLUNO SESIAL 10c Usllstt ?luj Tax DEAD LIID aUOU FORT LEWIS, Wash., Nov. 20 -iW-The army announced Thurs- Announcement of the protest day that Lieut. Col. James S. Gay. tain's jr., for 16 years posted at Fort nositiona of "marked dvnntr Lewis, currently as inspector gen- and then having warned that the erai oi me st division, has been result of the real battle was still ordered to Baltimore for duty with to come, Prime Minister Churchill me inspector general's department I dispatched to the British com oi me lnira corps area. manders. on land, afloat and in the A Portland attorney, Col. Gav air. a message reminiscent of i servea inrougn the Mexican cam- Nelson at Trafalgar paign ana me wona war and or ganized the first national guard artillery unit In the northwest- Battery A, 148th field artillery. 20c 27c Matinee Nlrhts Continuous Dally from IP. H. Tlmt: Havana z:25. S:tS: T:4S: 11:23 I JfcVi V BMBasBSBnBSBBSsMBBBBB It'iattrrif, 7s " k . i tir)s.,sd yVa.csl JT9LV 1 " -Vav t-d j y 2nd ran i rmE STORK PATS OFF!" ;With Maxie Rosenbloom .: and Rochelle Hudson Call Board STATE Today Mickey Rooney. Judy Gar land, Lewis Stone In "Life B(lm I for Andy Hardy' Ralph Bellamy. Margaret Lindsay la "EOery Queers rentnouso Mystery. CAPITOL Today Judith Aji d r o n. Dennis O'Keefe in Lady Scarface." Boy Rogers, Gabby Hayes in "Jess James at Bay. Saturday "The Kid From Kansas" with Dick Foran, Leo Carrillo and Andy Devine. Plus "The Devil Pays Off with J. Edward Bromberg. HOLLYWOOD Today Gene Autry. Smiley Bur- nette in "Under Fiesta Stars. Ona Munson. John Wayne in "Lady From aAuioiaiioi, LIBERTY Today Range Busters In "Wrangler's Roost." Pat O'Brien, Constance Ben nett in "Escape to Glory." ELSINORE Today Fredrie Mar.n, Martha Scott In "One Foot In Heaven." James Glea son. Elyse Knox in "Tanks a Million." UKANU Today Alice Faye. John Payne, Car men Miranda In "Weekend in H. vanna." Victor Jory. Rochelle Hud son. Maxie Rosenbloom in "The storx ays un. 0 - 1 ,gass?,i,w-x ITWflTCTni I fer JOHNNY MIZI V osd MORTON COOPER a OV" Cordinds' first bote- i moo ond pitcher. Thoy ploy boll . f together, hunt together, and together enjoy Chesterfield J the dgorette that Soh'ifiet. A ' i- L T have If In command from the king to express to all ranks f the army and the royal air force in the western desert and Today and Saturday Continuous Today Always 1 Big nits Today and Saturday Hurtling into memorable iltjfllj! -p; adventure I fT imissf" r Mat IS: Ere. Plus Tax Chap.. 11 Serial The Spider Cartoon - News ilssi mmmmmmmmsm tonite and Sat, 2 Hits Everybody lored the book . . . everyone's com ing to the picture! II 7.CrjIiCCl 13 Companion Feature 1 Mi MM tOACM hmmh - I a . mss auM aui men, a wura amass Plus Defense Tax - 1 to 11 P. M. Join the Grand Parade of Sours sad Thrills!! Gene and Smiley are back to Thrill Ten Aims! And Second Feature V Cciiatil 3 1o ,. rrwsi id OHAMUHSOH JOHH WAYNE Also News, Colored Cartoon v and Serial -0portsmen pass tie word alone- 11 r n Jtiestertiek Smokers take to Chesterfield like a duck takes to water. . bocousa thoy'ro definitely t.Wdzr Cooler-Smoking . . . Ccrfcr-Tcjf in j ; " - ; . "i GhcttcrfieWi can't-be-copied blend. : the right combination of the-best cigarette I tobaccos that grow both here and abroad ; gives a man what .he Wants . ciga-r rette thatU definitely MIlOEa and that com-- ' pletely SAT1SRES. -. k r :? ; , : . to r-' SCHISTE!rWJb Fdk A .ilOB? COOWt SAtO .... - . . - - - 1. 4 H ' Continuous Daily from 1:00 A bvoo.'lAt Sift 1AI