Vim ii a iLuih. Sunday Want Ads Many kuy paopla derate Sua. day cheeking ap an tlx u)Trtlwninu thoy rod la the Sunday morning edition, rrepere tout Want Ad now and ratea the hut? people whoa they hae apara time. Weather t,pon Forecast: Partly don fly ta Ight and Saturday. Not much ehange In terjiperatare. Temperature HlfhMt yesterday n Lowest thLi morning S3 freclplUtloa put 14 bwi XI Tribune Medford United Press Full Associated Prese MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1941 Thirty-sixth Year No. 84. fo) HElBEftT BEHR ? News Behind The News By Paui Mallon 'MAIN DECISION' 1 El I Washington, , June 27. The navy has slipped some of the fleet around into the Atlantic. The slight decrease in the west ern defense strength has been made up by substantial air re inforcements. The bombers can 4 cover more scouting territory anyway. Further details might furnish military information and, there-; lore, cannot be published, but round percentage figures of the shift have leaked far outside government circles and Inspired , much speculation. I Likeliest of the surmise-re- ports is that Mr. Roosevelt con-1 templates stronger Atlantic pro-1 tection for American ships as , a result of the Robin Moor in- cldent. r WELL founded or not, an im- " pression also has gained j lofty credence here that Japan , v,.. fallen off the axis. Far east ern authorities noted several! inconclusive signs even before the invasion of Russia, and have been Impressed by frequent naii impatience with Tokyo. The Impression does not amount to a full fledged conviction yet, but all are watching. ... ARMY air bases In Alaska have been established much faster than planned. Army is well pleased in view of the Russian involvement and its possible backwash in the far east. Contract time limits were j advanced several times. Over " time was paid - out ' liberally. Both the national guard unit and officers In charge are Justi fiably patting themselves on the back for establishing this one needed defense base just In time. . HTHE weak OPM reorganlza- tlon represented Just about all Mr. Knudsen could do alone without orders from the presi dent hut there will be more. Now dealers report F.D.R. Is concerned, and will take up the Reds' Western Buffer Zone Penetrated to Depth of 120 Miles in One Sector Flames of War on Russo-Nazi Front Reds Found Ready Berlin, June 27 UP) The German high command de clared today that the first five days of the struggle proved "that Soviet Russian armies had been ready to at tack central Europe." This, it said, was apparent from the disposition of red army forces on frontier lines "unsuitable for defensive purposes" at the outset of the eastern battle. .The communique asserted that the Germans encoun tered "masses of Russian troops ready for attack" when the drive into Russia beean. I J ff ' 1 ft L 1 Zf r 1) Record Army Supply Bill Receives Senate Approval (Continued on Pago Twelve) W METIS AFTER SHORT ILL A. H. Miller of 348 South Holly street, long a prominent citizen here, died at 7:30 this morning in a local hospital. He had been ill only a short time. . Funeral arrangements were to be made by Perl's tomorrow after the arrival of out-of-town relatives. It was expected that the services would probably be held Monday. DRIVER'S SKULL Grants Pass, Ore., June 27. (-Elmer Hubbell, 24, Cottage Grove Pacific highway con. truction truck driver, -was in stantly killed Thursday night at ML Sexton when the bed of his rlumo truck crushed his head, Coroner Virgil Hull said the dump bed had been raised in a garage for inspection. Hubbell apparently released the oil pres sure, he said, and the steel box fell on him. By the Associated Press Loss of panzer-battered posi tions on the roads to Riga and Minsk, permitting in one sector a 120-mile German penetration of Russia's western frontier buf fer zone, was indicated in to night's Kremlin communique. The retirement in the Siau- lial and Vilna sectors of Lith uania and the Baranowicze sec tor of Poland was carried out last night under the few prec ious hours of darkness and then the Red forces 'reformed for new military operations." Three Sectors Abandoned It appeared that the three see- tors had been abandoned siau lial on the Baltic route to Riga, capital of Sovietized Latvia; and Vilna and Baranowicze, barriers to a pincers movement aimed at Minsk, capital of White Kussia about 400 miles southwest of Moscow. Baranowicze, deepest of the three within the occupied buffer zone, is 120 miles from the near est German frontier. It Is about 30 miles from the border of old Russia where the Red army has older and stronger fortifi cations from which to fight Informed German quarters, displaying optimism not borne out by any officially published ; details from the high command, : declared that the main decision over Soviet Russia already had , been won in victories all along . the 1,000-mile active front. ! DNB. German official news agency. In the closest approach thus far to a factual report on the German position, said two major battles were -raging in the regions of Lwow and Bialy stok, Poland, where the high command said massed Red forces were encountered at the outset of the campaign. Fierce Air Battle The German radio said that 28 Russian planes were shot down yesterday in a fierce air battle when the Red airmen at tacked a dive-bomber squadron over the Ruthenian sector of the front. The Russian air force struck heavily at Finland from which German forces threatened her northern flank. Finnish observ- a a. Fl L if T mm. " ROOSEVELTA V E R S Executive Says Rifles May Be Sent Irish But No Am munition Can Be Spared LACK I baseball liTOTAL INCREASED 1500,000,000 FOR American New York Philadelphia , 10 13 Brcuer, Stanceau, Branch and Rosar, Dickey; Dean, i'errlck and Hayes. St. Louis , Detroit Harris and Thomas and Tebbetts. H. E. 13 1 4 1 Ferrellj Trout, R. . 9 . 0 German troops reported capturing the Russian prisoners (top) In an unnamed Soviet town .. .0 ha new German-Russian warfront. Smoke and flames rise from burning buildings (balow) in an unidentified Russian town In the path of German troops, radio from Berlin to New York.) (Pictures by Early Edition July 4 ' Because' of Intense interest In fast-moving world war events the Mail Tribune will depart from usual custom of not publishing a paper on Independence day and will issue an early edition Friday, July 4th, The edition will be ready for delivery to Med ford and Rogue River valley homes at 1 p ttv Flying Boats and Corvettes Gaining Edge Over U-Boats By Drew Mlddleton London, June 27. UP) With the aid of Increasing num bers of mass-produced Corvette patrol boats and American made Catalina flying boats, Britain slowly Is winning "one of i the war's most decisive battles in the Atlantic ocean," it was declared here today. , Extended American naval pa- Hvde Park. N. Y., June 27, -Ljjpi President Roosevelt dls closed today that a shortage In ammunition confronted the na tion in its defense efforts. Mr. Roosevelt said at a press conference he was looking into the Question of sending some rifles to the Irish but that no ammunition could be sent be cause the country is way behind on ammunition even for itself. Although he once had said arms could not be spared for Ireland, Mr. Roosevelt men tioned the possibility of send ing over rifles because, he said, the ' actual processing of them is getting along pretty well. Assurances Needed He made It plain, moreover, that armament aid for Ireland would have to follow assurances that the Irish would defend themselves afealnst German at tack. He said no such assurance had been received. As for helping Russia In the battle .against the nazis, the chief executive said he expect ed to confer on that topic by telephone today with Acting Secretary of State Sumner Welles. He expects to receive a report on what Russian Am bassador Uomansky had to say to Welles yesterday. Informed that the communist cress in New York was saying that aid to Russia was half hearted, Mr. Roosevelt prefer red not to comment. To a question how long It would take before America was turning out defense material In tremendous volume, the presi dent replied that a question so general could not be answered categorically. It depends on the article, he said, and for some things a peak already has been reached. For other things top production may not come for six or eight months or a year. OUAR :t of the thunder of Hitler's light ning war technique and that the nazl master of most of Eu rope was preparing for long siege of the world citadel of communism. In Spain it was reported that Adolf Hitler had demanded a token anti-communist force from each nation of the nazi planned new Europe. Spain leaped quickly into the van guard of the crusade with re cruiting of a Spanish legion. Italy already had stepped In Una wlh announcement of a SICE GLANCES By TRIBUNE REPORTERS had r that wh,'c'h "rnarkeTthe prized divton to help Ger- Russian invasion of 1939-40. ny Thousands were believed . to Volunteer forces were report have again been made home- ed in formation In Norway, ,. Denmark, Sweden and occupied ' Britain, worried over the role France. Croatia was reaoy cast for Finland and her neigh-; march, Slovakia had marched, bor, Sweden, in the European Denmark broke relations with anti-communist crusade shaping I the U.S.S.R.. and G e r m an up under the swastika banner, spokesmen looked benevolently nrntMtM trwi.V affainst hWM- l Sign Ul " protested toaay against a sw ! ' , j r fierce fight ana are sam to ish decision to permit a division ! In The Netherlands, Belgium dMth on Germ,n rjornler trols have aided the British, but a source here said the real credit for reducing British ton nage losses goes to the Catalina planes and sturdy Corvettes be cause they now are scouting sea areas the Germans formerly considered safe for submarine operations. One result of what were call ed "unspectacular but emphatic triumphs" has been to force the Germans to forego their tactics of submarine ' rendezvous In mid-Atlantic with supply ships, it was asserted. "Scouting flights have driven the U-boats below the surface," this source said. "They no longer are able to hunt in packs and lie in wait on the surface for convoys." Another function of the Cata Unas has been to keep German long-range Focke-Wulfe bomb ers away from convoys because these Catalina boats give them fierce fight and are said to Warjorie Bates reminiscing with friends over the "good old days" In Ashland high school. A Valley Fuel company Ice truck plowing through town with a load of wood, the weath er being what it is. of German troops to cross from Norway to Finland, according to informed sources at London. The German high command broadcast a communique re porting further "great uc- and even Portugal, Another salient development of the war was an authoritative report from a high Ankara source that Turkey had granted transit to Vichy forces from cesses" and "development of Syria provided they traveled as strategic plans" but the German public, with a growing eager ness for details on a campaign presented to them as an Ideolog ical war, and the rest of the world were left without specific official data from Adolf Hitler's headquarters. Long Siege Hinted It looked more and more as Bill Coy riotfooting It out of wlfey Babe's restaurant when indd him she hsd left a chicken dinner at borne for him. if the Red army had stolen tome Martin Heitkamp, Barcett Road. unarmed civilians. Only a fraction of the French forces, however, were likely to get out because of transport limitations. Visits Sister Mrs. Otto Merly and son of Palo Alto. Cal, ar rvled by train today for a visit with Mrs. Merly't sister. Mrs. "flying pencils. The ugly and menacing Cor vettes have borne the main blows In the Atlantic battle. These craft look like a whaler but carry guns enough to down a destroyer and depth charges sufficient to destroy a flotil.a of submarines. They have been turned out steadily since July, 1940. Portland. June 27 (P) Man uel W. Freitas. 37, Portland mill worker, was killed today by a timber which was hurled Into the air when a saw at the Kings ley lumber mill buckled. NAVY'S REQUEST 10 CATO MY DEFEATED AS BEAVER GOVERNOR ON BALLOT RECOUNT Corvallls, June 27 ) A recount upset the first announce ment of the winner of the gov ernorship race yesterday at the Beaver Boys state camp and a write-in candidate ousted the two regular nominees. Tom Spindle of Portland de feated Cato Wray of Medford by one vote in the recount. Niel C. Allen, Grants Pass, was third. Other officers elected at the Amerlcan-Legion-sponsored citi zenship training camp Included: Secretary of state. Bill Black mer, Ashland: state treasurer. Bob Holmes, Medford; represen tatives. Bob Baum, Union; Lee Wimberly, Roseburg; Delbert Yantis, Klamath Falls: Bob Duke, Eugene; state senate, Joe Yada and Charles Beardsley, Salem; Bob Shier, Grants Pass; Supreme court justices, Ned Niebman, Earl Higglns and Cam den E. Wheaton, Medford, and Fred Wall, Jr., Toledo. IS LOST IN COMMITTEE Portland, June 27 (IP) Frank Coffinberry, 74, one-time city purchasing agent and veteran Portland theater manager, died last night. He became manager of the old Orpheum theatre here in 1913 Washington, June 27. (JPh- The senate naval affairs com mittee rejected today a navy re quest for authority to hold vol unteers now with the fleet in service after their enlistment period ends. The navy proposed that it be given the right to exercise such authority It congress declared the national Interests were im- periled but Chairman Walsh (D- Mass) said committee rr.emDers felt this would Involve a breach of contracts. The committee reported, how ever, a revised bill which would make future volunteers subject to such a provision. There had been speculation that the army might follow the navy's lead In seeking the pow ers to retain In service men whose enlistments had expired Thanks to the selective service reservoir of manpower, the army has not been affected by the recent recruiting slump which has hit the navy. Under the selective service law, selectees may be kept In service longer than the usual rear's training without congres sional action, since they auto matically -become members of the arm reserve when their training period ends and can- be called Into service as reserves on the tame day. U necessary, MUNITIONSPLANTS Measure Is Largest Single Appropriation in History; Waits House Approval San Francisco. June 27. W) Surveys for a possible $22,800, 000 army camp In the Rogue River valley near Medford, Ore- are underway, the 9th zone constructing quartermaster an nounced today. The contemplated camp would house 30,000 men and would be the general camp of new stream lined triangular divisions. This would mean another big army post in the west coast defenses midway Between rort uewis. Wash., and Fort Ord. Calif., the two largest army developments on the Pacific slope. A cost-plus contract for In vestigation and surveys of the general camp was awarded May 21, and $153,000 earmarked to finance this preliminary work. Investigators will design a gen eral camp - layout, investigate problems of engineer, water sup ply, transportation, utilities, sew age disposal, roads and other basic necessity. The survey must be completed by August 21. Whether and when the camp will actually be built awaits completion of this survey and preliminary plans and the war department I decision. San Francisco, June 27, P) The 9th corps area army head quarters said today it knew nothing of any recommendation to locate a proposed army can tonment near Corvallis, Ore., Instead of Eugene. Officers said the proposed Eugene site was In precisely the same situation as that at Medford where a preliminary survey has been started at a location In the Rogue River val ley. They pointed out that no definite selections at either lo cality had been made yet and that selections were contingent upon expansion of the army and appropriation of money by con gress. Eugene, June 27 UP) Although the army has indicated prefer ence for site near Corvallis rather than near Eugene, If a cantonment expansion plan la adopted, farmers In the Lane- Llnn district around Coburg, Harrlsburg, Halsey and Browns ville have voiced their objection to a camp in their district. About 330 attended protest meeting this week. Washington. June 27 f4k The senate approved on a voice vote today the record-breaking $10,384,821,824 army supply bill and sent it back to the house lor consideration of increases totaling $338,312,132. The senate increase waa ao counted for largely In an amend ment providing $300,000,000 for the construction of new muni tions plants. The army measure, which clerks said was the largest sin gle appropriation in history, waa approved after an hour and 20 minutes of dilatory debate. Only a score of senators were on the) floor. 13.8S Plane. Provided The bill Includes $2.790.890.. 000 for the procurement of 1 838 planes and accessory equip ment for the air corps. The senate - also completed congressional action on legisla tion extending the life of the federal housing administration and Increasing its limit on morW gage Insurance from $4,000,000 000 to $3,000,000,000. - In accepting a compromise en the measure, the senate agreed to drop a proposal for govern ment insurance of $330,000,000 of farm purchase mortgages. In other action, the senate ap. proved and sent to the Whit House legislation authorizing $130,000,000 program for com munlty facilities in defense) areas. Supplementing $300,000,000 defense housing program, the measure is known aa the Lan ham bUl. Working at a fast dip In ordet to pass vital approprlationa measures the fiscal year ends June 30, the senate took up last minute legislation after the family of the late Senator An drew Jackson Houston (D-TexJ had requested that no recess be taken out of respect to his mem ory. The army measure and several other vital appropriations meas ures must be enacted by the end of the fiscal year if various gov ernment departments are not to be left without funds. Also pending on the senate) calendar was argument-provoking legislation to continue Presi dent Roosevelt's emergency mon etary powers, now scheduled to expire at midnight Monday. SENATE CONFIRMS Washington, June 26 W The senate confirmed today the nomination of Associate Justice Harlan F. Stone to be chief Jus tice of the United States. Oldett Senator Taken By Death Washington. June 27. UP Senator Andrew Jackson Hous ton, 87-year-old Texas Democrat, died last night. Just 36 hours before a special election to name hit successor. Death followed an operation in Baltimore. The Texan, son of the famous General Sam Houston, hero of San Jacinto, was the oldest man ever to enter the United States senate. LUMBER PRICE CEILING BEING FORMULATED ON UPPER GRADE PRODUCT Washington, June 17, VPh Price Administrator Leon Hen derson said today that a price ceiling waa being formulated for "the upper grades and special ties of west coast lumber" be cause ratea had reached "unreas onable levels." Henderson said that the move ment of upper grade lumber prices on the coast had been under scrutiny for some time and "while It U recognized that heavy buying of specialties may have been stimulated by unusu al conditions, such conditions do not warrant the price advance that have occurred." He aald that there had been price increases of from $8 to $19 per 1,000 board feet on specialty Items such as i hip-deck In g, floor ing and box car materials. There is no Justification for any Increases In the price of any other grade of west coast lum ber," Henderson added.