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Show I , . , '' -' ' . - ' , I- - .,,,,r - 1 - - . ''' b ':- -; , . . - Temperatum v l'4ATITER . I 6 i 54 I , - Monday's Maximum Sun seta Tuesday. 5:21; I iTPrA 10 521 1 't-- 53 61; 12 Ii .' 2 1I 57 1' 55 I MiniM11111'41;-------,--- 1 7:041 . . - . . . 7 , , I , -- -- :- - - . , - - ...' - - -- 1 , oI at9- ''' ' .. - . .. . . ar fir a - , , ... t go, ear7:-..rm,4,17-- N. 4 -- ,Te Al ' , as . - 11. - ir , , . 1 -- - ) . - , . ,. It , 1 1, i ' ' azs Attack rri Naval 1 Near Iceland .1' .v ,....; at ..... . , ' 1'1, , '' . 1, . I ,e , - t -s P - - .:, .. . ' , , .11 9 - m ILES ' - in ta ' ' ' ' '"" . ",, s,.." , - ,, . - , . , , , , . r.,.. - , , ,,.,,. - i WASHINGTON, I vo, 4(AP)The Seriously , Sàlt Laker May- Be Dead ,... - Searchers Hunt Fc Pilot's Cabin Of - -- Destroyed Plant at- Calif, GEORGETOWN, n , I , missif Accepting that theory after 24 hours of fruitless .search for the Salt, Lake airman, ground parties lerattention today centered On finding the pilote compartment of the wrecked homnber., Wreckage of the huge craft waS strewn over more than 50 acres in the Tells Peak area of northeastern CalifOrnia where Walker's eight companions para. chuted to earth in a snowstorm, , Sunday noon. All four motors, a wing and mach of the fuselage were found yesterday by searchers' looking for the missing pilot. But the cabin itself has not been discov ered, and there was growing fear that it may t contain Walker's -- ocean warfare were navy men killed in - 12 L - ill abig - at sea. BUILT IN 1920 s The Salinas-IcomManded Commander Harley F Cope of Navy.Abandpns Hope n' For Missing m-e- - , - COUNTER CHARGES Defense Expenditures Cause Huge Rises , .The 4..(AP) treasury announced day its debt has gone over$540. - 000,000,000. The The Greer counter attacked with 'depth &ekes but there was no evidence the was hit. On October 17 the destroyer Kearny was torpedoed by a sub marine which the navy said was .unquestionably German.--Badl- y smashed, the Kearny suffered logges-o- f II men, now givenup as lost, two men badly wounded and eight slightly- - injured. The was on convoy duty at the time of the torpedoing. about 350 miles south and west of Ice-O-n -- treasury's z obligations jumped overnight by $509,047,- 881 to a record,. tothrof $54,093,- 095,752 because. of the issuance the night of October of new treasury note g to refund the Reuben Jame& like the Kearhalf spproximately on ny convoy duty. was torpeJars of Reconstruction, Finance doed and apparently went down rapidly. the first American warSod, Corporation Commodity ship actually to be sunk in 'this --Cr- edit Corporation : Formerly, debts of the - treas;,,, iw See SEAWAR On rage 3 ury and various federal- coffmr,a,. tiona were kept entirely sepa.,.. rate, but this conversion inaugu , L f rated a new policy Of ultimate.. ly converting all corporation AlWord-Odebts 'into direct treasury obli. I gationc about the "fatted lamb"' - Thus, while the overall debt of , 'Pak ' lealtilseady at the home of Mr. I the government did-- not change, ot the treasury 'debt rose a half and.MrSIiermanABridgea Magna todayTheir son. Brent billion andtbaAggregatedebtx, -- Neat radiomenfirst of government corporations de- - class. on the torpedoed destroy. dined about the same amount, er, Ttueben Tames, 14 safe. leaving about S8.41400)0,000- of received a telegratitAate' - Other corporation :deb ta - to -- be ''They fast night from the Navy If pe refunded some time In the next partment after many houia- - of 4, five years, anxiety telling them that their The treasury debt however, son was safe and uninjured. The has been rising rapidly on act mother and father nhave been -- -, TheRi-tibeeotifttnt experralttn &-7 "kiiifiTilif James end now' is nearly $10,QQ0,0DO.Offro as torpedoed and sunk was a of son. their Now it higher,than year ago. . . , they know ba's , safe. 30-3- 1 ROSTOV . Son ' , , -- - -- - - ,- ., , ) , ,,. , massencEneerittr ''-- '''' , -- 401 , ' , I till. - , -- wmit el! Army ', lit" tor-word- -- -- .. te - k$3 5, 4, ,, .:.,..,,..,,,... ' I(E ' sr' , ,. I , "NC,4111J-s- , TN, IP V, 0,......,, .,,1. lic ei al Illt 1...:- ,.4 - .0i !I , t , ' , -. ' , , - ' II Ikeda &A Isdi ,' , ,f- , - - -' ' :. - 'T, - ' - ank anti 1 go , , Black ea , . : ,: 4 . , , , oa - k an early hour this afternoon had --taken advantage ot their op-portunities to choose two city commissioners and a city auditor. A Deseret News survey of polling placeaslisclosed that voting was "very light" with "little Interest?' Veteran judges reported the, today's election was one of the -l- ightest--In their experience, though most indicated that they expected an evening rush to-t- he ballot boxes, which might make up considerably for the early morning indifferenm Light rains, low ranging clouds and the general feeling of lassin tude which has characterized , this year's campaign kipridosf early morning voters from the booths.- Some observerS attribut- ed the light voting to the of phelsatit clos-ing-- turned many franchise ' bearers attention to bullets rather- - than ballots. - Clearing weather' during the early afternoon was expected to speed up the vote castIng tempo, but with the city election machine running smoothly in all districts,, it was anticipated that returns would be in early tltis 'evening, according to Miss Xthel Macdonald V city recorder. Candidates for the two vacant posts as city commissioner are: P. H. (Pat) Coggin, incumbent John B. Matheson, incumbent, Richard A. Reid. s Fred Tedesco. Nominated ion iff . - 6 ; sailors have Intercepted LONDON, Nov. and boarded five Vichy French' merchantmen and prevented the scuttling of three of them in an action which "is still proceedine off the South African coast, the admiralty announced to day. It charged the French with - to L convoy attempting band supplies for the Germans from the east, presumably the Indian Ocean or the Orient. At the same time a night battle inthe English. Channel was announced in which the admir84 Otlkirs Arrested alty said patrol vessels engaged In 'Unitary Clash warships strongly protecting a large Aim supply ship. In the latter battle, the BritZAGREB. Croatia. Nov. 4. ish said they shot two torpedoes of - 169 Serbs into the supply vessel,' probably sinking it or causing it to be before a firing squad Oct. 24 in beached, probably damaged the Province of Sumadia, near some of the Axis escorts. and in return suffered slight damage Belgrade, was reported in be. ' to one of their own lated dispatches received here patrol ships. Crews of three of the five today. The executions and arrest of Frencti ships intgrved South Africa attempted to scut-ti- e g4other Serbs were Said to have been the result of a clash n in compliance instructions," the admiralty said. tween the-- military and said the during of Oct. 22. 'Vichy government have .recent- (Executions Iy been attempting torun conhave been retraband for Germans from the East to France in escorted conported in the past few days, but ..because of the indefinite nature voys." of the reports It Is possible Itoontinued: "Our patrols sighted one such some of the executions have been reported more than once.) convoy escorted by a French sloop and the necessary forces were then sent to intercept the Plane Crashes off South Africa," the Army of convoy Into House In Test admiralty said. - "On arrival of his majesty's ships the escorting sloop', was GLENDALE, ,Calif, Nov 4 requested to direct the convoy into a house - See ADMIRALTY on Page from an altitude of 1,800 feet, a Ltickheed P38 Interceptor Reds Office B6'S-ieburst into flames 'today plane BeRLIN. Nov. 4.(AP)--Th- e and killed its pilot, Ralph Vin. central. offices of the Communist den. 43, a Lockheed test pilot. International in Moscow were ,Virden. who lives in north -Alt by a German bomb in a day Hollywood. formerly- - was a pi29 Oct.t and burned attack lot for United Air Lines. He Is' married and has a many hourso; DNB declared toson, Ralph Jr. day. on , with-Germa- alleged-Communist- s -- , , . S4.0.)''.T'4,0.......r-1.-,.Witli-....U- Nov. 4.(AP)The Reich hadrbeen attacked by the United States awaited official re. editorial campaign In Japanese newspapers girew ;ports. The declaration has attracted more bitter today with Illyllako considerable attention for posaible bearing on the aeclaring, "the time has come alliance under which Ger. for-thfinal showaown.- "-many, Italy arid Japan agreed tof aidone-another1n , o e talksinitiat ed by a letter Iast August to Pits. Vent- Roosevelt: from the thenOemier, Prince Funamaro Kon oye. Must be bssumed unless the United States changed, its present attitude-- . a govern-- , -- one-- were attacked by a power not involved in tne European war or the Chinese-Japanes- e conflict. Ishii repeated today what had been said before, that "the 'tripartite pact, will be interpreted by the Japanese government tcith...,thrlepenilent-Ittdamta- Admiral Itie ntspok esman.sa tion of Japan's ,attitude on the German declaration. that the them--- of -- 0E-di Basegawai, this afternoon. t his departure tom Befot - . , Kai-She- k Fornksai-anrived - hoku, Fomosa, he declared Japan should fortify all Formosa for defense against what the Japanese call ABCD Dutch) encircle , e ment. - newspaper Nichl Nicht that stthe --United States-w- agcharged 'preparing--"aSirLighting line against Japan'4 In the interior of China. The pa. -per said the Chungking govern-- merit of Generalissimo Chiang was "a puppet of the United States"-whi- ch continued resistance to Japan..eitly be. t. Illyoshi , , - - Tel- FiUM marica since last The-- year . 11.1nited- been constructing air. and munitions factories in ofDetroiL WASHINGTON;N; acknowledged s ' , he-w- on-iag- Nazis Move Upon Rostov - -- -- ve d to-ba- - - :ii: , :: j' enator -- - - Bilbo 4,(AP) - 7 kinall-oireWar."-:- - 1 proposal--to- ' : shipti but his opposition to lift. ing the combat zone ban after Senator Lucas (11411) had urg. ed speedy approval of both Z, , .' amenmen U. - , , president Declaring - that Roosevelt would not have asked for the revision of the ,act it the destroye d American ships In the Atlantic, Lucas 'told his colleagues that his country-- must tau- Its de. enses on the' theory. that "die. tators- - some day may control the resources of Europe,-As- ia and Nt -- But Bilbo said it was his -- - --- -- - Alrie-a- - Book-Cadilla- t - broke -admin. from the of support twisty Astration, foreign program tO. daYr asserting in -- the- Senate', -eighth day of debate on neutral. act amendments that a Vote to permit American met'. Chant, ships' to enter' the , war zones was it moit lci plunge this country into announced his 'support OI my-newspaper- casualties the Germane had lost 10, planes and 250- guns la bitter fighting. "During the last few days." Red Star said."the enemy bas pushed troops Into the Crimea and 18 developing the offensixe across the Crimean plain. The enemy already has captured some towns and is now mustering all forces to strike at the central districts of the peninsula." FML OP OBJECTIVE. , The-w- riter said the Cirmans had captured part of the Crimea but ,"did not achieve their main aim; namely to destroy the Soviet' troops in the Crimea." Our position is very difficult," Red Star-said- ,' but the Crimea has not been conquered. Fighting is going on and will go on.' German bombardments - were reported to have immobilized Sevastopol as a main base of operations for the Soviet Black Sea - - lissisaltrolan-:--'---- -S- a The ambassador, making two-dade tour of Detroit's industries. was struck by several eggs before police broke up the demonstration. Charles Detective Inspector E. Searle, who was accompanying Lord Halifax, said the women were apparently the same who picketed the entrance of c the Hotel Monday, during Halifax's visit, carrying with placards reading "Down England",.and.."Halifax ix a war - A fortified city of 801100 popu monger.", lation. Sevastopol is a major obHalifax, his aplomb unshaken of the intensified - Gerjective as by the barrage. said after man drive into the" Crifilea:-inside the safely building: The invaders have reached a I came in this way and --"Well, e I intend-t- o go out this Way." Police said the demonstration was ,staged by a group which calls itself . "The Mothers - of . --- America.". Besides meeting with Arch. bishop Mooney, Halifax had arranged to talk here today with Frank W. Creighton, Bishop Protestant Epsicopal bishop - of Michigan, and other church digRussian's Admit Break nitaries. A private meeting with In Defending Line Henry Ford also was scheduled. as well as an appearance before the convention of the National KYLIBYSHEV, Russia, Nov. Association of Real Estate . 4. (AP)--T- he Boards. Germans, have opened a heavy offensive toward Sub Crews the strategic Caucasus gateway Captured - LONDON, Nov. 4,.(AP)Tbe city of Rostov under the (Bret ddmiraity announced today that tion of --the veteran- tank a total of 1,276 officers a d men Commander Field Marshal Ewald had been rescued from an undisclosed von Kleist, dispatches from the of sunken number : Axis submarines. front disclosed today, Von Kleist's forces are smash- trig 'Irtseveral, directions In the southern - regions of the ,Ción Beet, the dispatches said, and In tbe vicinity of e place identi- the Interior of China...This Unithave fled only, as "Village K ed States attitude toward Japan, a in , succeeded with hammering hi negocoupled Insincerity tiation. ,naturally has compelled, wedge into 'the Red 'Army's po. the Japanese people to make sitions acknowledged to' be "sew deterMination." eral miles long." , -- - Withdrawak of, rriattfor After - smashing this -- wedge, Orient from -th Japanese the Germans were- de- liner, however, Minna Marti-- Isti re th,e- vessel-saile- clared- been halted.-The16th German, Tank Division, Sundayek rq San Iran)ideco led a Japanese spokesman which carried out the attack, day--tdescribe the attitude of was said to have lost more than the United States Treasury De400 men killed, along with )15 tanks and 20 field guns. ' partment as unfriendly. 'If they had wished to censor Fighting all along the souththemalls they should have given ern front was reported 4im48i44he-opoltesmanr4o- l4 w hated teroatty, with the Germans' stubborn 1hil of the rabinet information -. break bureau. . through toward' - He said Japan was considering the Caucasus meeting fierce rethe possibility Of a protest, sistance on every sector. y ; Removal Of Port-ItanMeans Step To War - said In a dispatch broadcast by the Moscow radio that in addition to the 90,000 , 4 s - 1atk Soviet - " , ' Red Star, Lord Halifax, British ambassador, to the United States, today as he entered the chancery build. ing on Washington Boulevard in downtown Detroit for a meeting with Archbishoil Edward Moon. ey un War' danger,- but declared that GermanTvances,,thero had cost the Nazis00,000 men killed and wounded in' the- past le days and '.asserted that they would continue to fight Crimear-wa- Sea peninsula. Nov. DETROIT. Women peace demonstrator. showered eggs and tomatoes on 169 Serbs Are Executed contra- - 4 terly---fer-the-strstegic Peace Demonstrators Toes Eggs, Tomatoes In Detroit ' - Russians the : , 4- - ' tralifai 1 Board Vessels Oft Coast, - Of Africa;-SeuttlinHalted City had an elec.-tion todaybut few voters at See EILECTIONI,on Page Vichy The --- - With Leader's' 7ACENOWLEDGE-DANCEIV-7- that- , Billio Breaks' .-- MissilesAt Illetc-hatztine- 1 - - ,, pti - -- -- Sailors 'Lake n , Wthilen Pelt Fil)e lt, - Bullet Instead Of Ballots Attract Attention , Japinese-America- I - 4 ' - About 200,000 of these soldiers, who have been .training with airplanes and mechanized equipment for the past six months already have arrived at Moscow, it was said, and another 200,000 were dedared to be on their way ,"to help out where they are Most needed. In sending these winter troops as far south is Rostov., the Rue. elan commend would be bulwark. ing one of their main danger PALThis Inland Port it, 2 way to the Caucasus, now threat. ened by possible short cut across the Crimea.. Drive Two-Wa- y A skind ' :$ Nov4.--(AP)--- - - - Otitish -- - - TOKYO, I ve City' Lieetiorts day 1 Ai, 11, IntPrestd -- Oa .. , 1) narn-presse- 7 , Agn& 7 , , , I - '.. Russian "winter army", of .arti LONDON,T, proximately 750,000 men especially trained in Arctic ,Siberia is Soviet moving up to the front to reinforce the Moscow to Rostov defense line, a usually reliable source witri ' close Russian Contacts said tonight: 1 , --API- , , .,. -- -- NUVUKtibblbIC. , .; . , ' rl , ,: Few Voters Salt r-- - s - ,,,. - ,... l , , B1,.!S,!7;!,C11.,!4...11, , : SoMiers Vrom-AretiSibe'ria , To Go As Far, SouthAs 11.6slov ' ,.. e ', tour:. - sT Ev , 4 - - - -- , M FE R- , -- -- , -arm -- SCOW: . , I ' ;, ,, ea es . - - 11:) - :7. .4...,...w,..r ,,,,w , , fan-ion- Parents Happy ' Vol. 364 ., No; 30; 92nd Year ' 1 Sp eciallv Train,. e ,,. , Nazi field guns today are reported shelling Sevastopol, Um ed Black Sea port, as the drive eastward into the Crimea throuththii-Pereke-p-Tsfhiiiuuiiiii .have eut through 1 he- - Russiaa7,delendirs,- forcing them hackward through s town the and though Kerch,i Earlier Ger man claims included- capture of Simferopol in seaport aimed at Bakhchisarai, 20 miles north of Sevastopol.--(A- P Wirephoto.) , i A - . German Sweep -Into Crimea Splits Into WAS Debt Is 54 Billions . ,,s,..,:v...i.,..,..,,,,, ' 01 more INGTox, NOv. 4.(11e) The Navy Department an. --Bounced today- - it -- had -- 11bandolt.ed hope for finding the seven officers and 88 enlisted men lost in the torpedo sinking of the destroyer i Reuben Jame. Intensive aearch has been made in the area west of Ice. land where the ship went down last Thursday night, the department rtported,T but, search,. ing vessels, as previously an. body. At first 'there was belief that 'flounced, found only One snan'a Walker, like the other eight, had body In the water arid rescued 46 other enlisted men, One of Jumped safely before the bomber crashedto the ground. A para- whom died two days after being chute which none of his fellow rescued. fliers identified was found wrap(4706 Palmyra St.) New Orleans, ped around a fence post. Later; however, the vieW" svas-taken that one tof the rescued The tanker wag built by the airmen, dazed in landing, Imight have left his parachute on the Newport News Shipbuilding and-- fence and not remembered doing Dry Dock Co., for the U. S. SO. ' The search is beinbag sed n-the Shipping Board in 1920. The navy described the vessel Georgetown Ranger Station, on a high divide "25 Miles east as being of 16,800 tons displaceof this mountain settlement and of 107 a approximately ten miles west of ment with complement the rocky Tells , Peak sector, men. where the eight' fliers 'landed It is 463 feet long with a beam ' of 60 feet. The ship is armeri, among trees and rugged boulders carrying two Two of the were guns,a,nc)a battery , to the rangereightstation brought Sunday The vessel waif States United warship to he on- - Page Volved in it torpedoing incident in a period of two month- s-SThe shooting started SeptemU-ber 4 when the destroyer Greer encountered a submarine south- west of Iceland and the sub fired two torpedoes at the- destroyer but both went wide. WASHINGTO1s4 NOV, '" -of ' 0 . ' '' , ,. PEREKOZAI-Vt- , I ' A ., .. -- it'', Counted also as victims of the -- disintegrating,i)lane, until it struckthe grouna,--- --- : - . , ' . I said. thc,onlY flier still nine army men who rode a four. motored 7 bomber to destruc tion In mid-air- , may have.stayell ' I - Nov. 4. ,, "' öUTce1and . This was pne day before, and in the same general area where the Reuben James, first Amer'- canwarship to be lost In the Btie of the Atlantic. went down. The 16,800-toSalinas was in a convoy when attacked, the navy. '..,,.. , :. :'t, I night-Southwest with,lhe -- - - " N ov ' ,, , . , , . , - " . - . It navy announced - today another torpedoing in.NortlyAtiantic watersthat of the United States naval tanker Salinasbut said that happily is there was no further lo-- of life to add to the 97 men preeumed lost on the sunken destroyer ReubenJ Salinas was The "torpedoed I s without, warning," aterse navy t. Army-Teardamag- , ed, she made her way to port. "No details of the damage will be released as it will beof 110 value except to the Nazis." the navy said in disclosing that the tanker was hit last Wednesday '7:5 - , 4i ' ,, , 41....".-.- t , - - P ,,, ...a, '-' Details Held - Secret - - ,- . , 're h - - : 1 , 1 : 3 . le . - . "' ' . ilf ost,e4 ? a .; , p iI , e '" 1 . 9 - 1y 1 , 4 7 8 5 : -- , , ' , , ' , , I a, 2 , . 7 sea p $ S0 3 8 5 4 - ro , brr. 1 - 4,4 4' - Differenca in time zones Oriiiteiate news from Work; - News , , capitals for . . , , ' t 'C oi K ''- - ".v.--,- ' E.W S '''" 0 D AY t - - - - e'( --- ,, - , 00 . ''' - - " 7- - -- ' ''''.. - 4 , - - . h , , - 9 - Art ,,,, - -- , T 1 '' 41 '''''-r-t 19,41 - - , ' ' . 1 -- U D AY'S . -,- a int - mos.. s. . II -- ,.. . .(k--,- , ' , , - - --- -. 4 ' ,ft. -- - It Aitagitilt 4, --- - : Salt Lake City, titth- -l TuesdayI November 4 f ' --- --,,, IP I) , - : -- .: ,. , , A - , - -- 1 ' - T1iT in! r , : , , acttlir ' - ., M , z- riset Wednesday, Five Cents - ' 3 1 ", . . ,- -- . - 3- -1 . , 2' FORECAST: Parteloudy this afternoon, tonight and Wnesday.somehat cooler tonight,: . , , ' THE '' 2 Hlit. r.iii escapable .clmvktion" that peal 'I of the safeguarding provl. - - - Mons of the neutrality act "would he nothing short of a long, swift ,stride toward ' wara war tor which we are yet woefully un. prepared." t Citing his support of preit . ous administration foreign poll. , cy moves, the - Mississippian aid it was that the United States might serve more of the arsenal usefully as --democracy if it remained out of the war. He said Great Britain 30,000 would have received American aircraft by July, 1943, adding that if this country be. came involved in the fighting, It might be impossible to com . tinue to furnish the British 709 planes a month. , There was a great deal of die. cussion,-Bilb- o wAnt on, about the failure of the British to create a western fighting front tn aid Russia. He cited - statements by -British officials that they did not k ham sufficient equipment for such a move. ! 'If after: five or six years -our friends across the waters cannot regard, their rearmament sufficient to make 'a serious ' - - - - ' - -- -- - quate. indeed, are we in the very our rearmament Infancy of course program to, :take any to lead us, as propoSet destined repeal most surely wilr lead tle, Into active combative wart" that President Roosevelt would- riot have asked authority to arm merchant ships and send them into belligerent ports if Hitier'had not destroyed Americ tn ships in the Atlantil. Lucas urged speedy approval of pending legislation. The tall Illinois senator to'r)le the ,floor after Seri. George titi d Norris (Ind..Neb.), against UnitedStates entry into the last war, expressed belief AG reporters before the session open-- -, country "has no ---choice except to arm our ships and permit them to sail to the ports of our friends.' Lutes told his colleagues that it was possible that the Mediter. Soon- Tait inter Hit. - - - - ' , who-Note- -r- anea-tr-tnig-ht Iefs handszi , "The probabilities are " Lucas - See NEUTRALITT ent ' fop 0,, 4 |