I "Rally Hound the Flag" is Modernized by a Rally for Uncontrolled Judiciary, With the Battle Cry of Freedom Against One-Man Plans That "Shall Wot P&m." m THE WEATHER Highest temperature yesterday 53 lowest temperature Lint iiilit 4 1 Pit-Hjiitutlmi for 24 liourti .... O.U Prmip. sinco first of iiuiPlh 3,tH I'rccflj. from Snpt. 1, ltKit... IH.iil lK-fk-ieiu-y ahice Bt-pt. 1, lifti S.lu Unsettled, possibly showers. NEW STRIKE? .Southern Pacific employes hay) begun to volo on a walk out over alleged agreement vio lations. A strike might. Berious ly affect count trade conditions. Result of the vote will he la NKW-RBVIRW wire news. THE DOUGLAS COUNTY DAILY ITOL. XL NO. 283 OF HOSEBURG REVIEW ROSEBURG. OREGON, FRIDAY. MARCH 26, 1937. VOL. XXVI NO. 203 OF THE EVENING NEWS ' sSTr A!s',VM IT1VI fl II ITIT I ,V 1 I If k I 1 I I I I I VI 1 1 1 1 I flfMl MS) ,- v--' . j i " : ' : 'll f - ic Lray s news . , - - By FRANK JKNK1NS 1 'ERE is a bit of advice: Don't form your opinions of the President's plan to make the supreme court Jump when he cracks the whip by what OPPON ENTS of the Nov,' Deal are Bay lug about It. No matter how impartial you try to' be, you will find yourself thinking: "These men don't like Roosevelt, and are trying to DIS CREDIT, him.", Thus you will be misled by pre judice. , : 'T'HE proposal to destroy the lib dependence of the supreme court .by compelling It to rule as the President WANTS it to rule involves so many grave (lungers that It has aroused the opposition of large numbers of people who have been FRIENDLY to the Now Deal. ' You will find yourself joss sway ed by prejudice If you consider the court-packing plan in the light of what theso men think of it. pROFESSOR RAYMOND MOUOY can hardly bo regarded as an opponent of the New Deal. lie was a member of Ihe original bruin trust, and still favors the Roose velt objectives. Before the senate judiciary com '. nilltee on' 'Tuesday, be assort oil' iiulu, rresmeux iiooseveiis court bill would "inovitably weaken the authority and prestige of the su preme court." He added: "The ends which Mr. Roosevelt lias so courageously made his own can be achieved within the grand mosaic of the American constitu tional tradition. Rut to seek to (Continued on page 4) U. S WATIOniAL TO BUILD AT K-FALLS KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., March 2.r (AP) Purchuao of mlil lown property ami plana to erect a two-story ib'nnk building were revealed today by Godfrey C. Ulnhm, manager of the recently acquired Klamath Fulls branch of the United Slates National bank of Portland. Coat of neither the site nor the ' projected structure was disclosed. The new banking homo will bo built on the southwest corner of Main and Eighth streets, virtually the exact center of the city's busi ness district. It will occupy the full area of a lot BO by 106 feet and will be of concrete type with Hie facing, lllohm said. Construc tion will begin as soon as urehl lect's plans can be approved. Iurchase was made from the Standard Holding company of Ne vada, representing Joseph Mcllon nld, pioneer Klamath businessman. In moving to the new location tile V. S. National will abandon the structure at Sixth and Main which it and its forerunner, The Ameri can National bank, have occupied since liiai. Planes, Fishbones Kill Alaska's ANCHORAGE, Alaska, March 2(i (AP) Alaskans eyed with approval today two new methods of killing the predatory vnlf. Pilot Archie Ferguson, who io turned here from it flight in Ihe Kotzebue region north of here, said he saw a large srey wolf at tacking a reindeer. Swooping down from the sky. Ferguson encircled the animal and at just the right range with bis ship slightly tilled, let the wolf have a hroadside- from a shotgun loaded with buckshot. Pleased wllh tho hunting and his aim. be turned the flight Into an expedition nnd shot down three other wolves. Ferguson said he would go Into r the wolf-hunting business, seek aid from the game commission to buy a small plane for the hunt' lng. The territory allows a bounty on wolves. n kb i on t J rim ni nnnr i . i imn nmiir nrmmnn iiiu rfllHL rLUNbt C4i"lcc AU U3 n M: uLNA Una i Ai OCCURS NEAR ! PITTSBURGH Victims Mangled Almost Past Recognition; Drop Attributed to Ice On . Plane Wings. , PITTSBURGH, March 26. (AP) Officials of the Trans continental and -Western Air lines declared today that ice forming on the control ;equip- " ment caused the crash of its airliner near Pittsburgh, with he loss of 13 lives. By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, March -26.-The nose dive of a palatini .'.kyliner in to u hillside, carrying its l:i occu pants to instant death, furnished toduy another mystery of tho air ways. The giant Transcontinental and Western Airlines Silver Bird, Hear ing the $2,0(10,000 Alleghany coun ty airport for a stop on its jour ney from Newnrk to Chicago, drop ped like a plummet seven minutes after the sun had sot yesterday. Tho sjiy was clear for some 2, 400 feVW . there ..was,,,nQl ,,muub, 'wind"" and a sister ship was-cruis-ing a few hundred yards . above and behind the twin-motored Doug las, C-7, number 320. Captain. A. M. Wilklns, winging home the second ship, turned his head to avoid looking at the doom ed liner's final 50-foot drop. He es timated tho fatal plunge . begun about 1,700 feet up and that Phot F. Lawrence Bohnet, a veteran of 10 years' service, made two com plete left turns witli his pluno's nose pointed straight down. All the victims except the pret ty blonde hostess, Doris C, num inous of Elk City, Okln., were bat tered almost beyond recognition. They were catapulted to the front of the ship, whose nose plowed into n hillside on the fringe of Mt. Lebanon, fashionuble suburb. Llsf of Dead The dead: Edward .1. Fleming, Jr., '22, stu-' dent, Standard Oil Co.; or. ploy ee, Kansas City. C. R. (Dick) Lowers, 22. utudent, Standard Oil Co., employee,. Kan sas City. Hasan Haxhl, Albanian repre sentative of Diamond T Motor Car company. Argo, ill. John F. Hermann, 4B. ergineor und inventor. Lincoln, III. Frederick D. Lehman, 25, Metro politan Life Insurance Co., Harris : burg, Pn. Miss Pauline Trnsk, 37, school teneher, tiermnntown, Pa. Edgar E. Hnzelton, 30, stove tCnntlnued on page 31 EX-GOVERNOR MEIER HAS AN OPERATION PORTLAND, March 26. (API- Former Governor Julius L. Meier bad a satisfactory night at the Good Samaritan hospital following an appendectomy yesterday, at tendants reported today. The hospital dCBcribed the ex- state executive's condition as splendid. " and Skis Used to Predatory Wolves Natives, angered by the havoc wolves are playing with reindeer herdB, have resorted to a simple trick, he said. A whalebone with ends sharp ened Is frozen Into a half-circle, covered with tallow and thrown out as bait for wolves. After the wolf gulps Ihe bone down, body hent cnuses It to thaw, straighten out, piercing the stom ach walls, killing the wolf. Another resourceful pilot, exas perated when he and a game war den Tailed lo shoot a coyote from the air. killed the animal by swooping down anil breaking Its bark with one of the plane's skis. After their bullets missed their mark the pilot left the warden on Ihe Ice at the edge of the lake and took off again after his prey. Kill lng Ihe covoto. he nosed up Into the air and went back lo pick up the warden. Indignant, rising high, For all to see, , . ' A Cross against the sky, v For you for me! : We may not kilow tho pain The tragic plea He offered, there, for us ' In agony. We cannot hear the sob, "Forsaken Mo"!, . But, throughout tho years, The cry will be Haunting men, anew, Pleadingly ... : Helen M. Magers. . SE Ex-Senator ' Gets ' Control Of Big Grazing Area in Eastern Oregon. ONTARIO, Ore., March 26 (AP) ; Reports current here to day, said R. N.. Stanfield has ob tained control of almost oiie-hnlf of the state-owned range land, or about 2S3.000 acres, largely in Mal heur, Harney and Baker counties. Members of the advisory board of .district three and, representa tives of the federal grazing service said they, wero.tpUV. .ho had ,suc, coseliilly 'bid' for the land, .'paying. about 83.630. Officials of the grazing service expressed concern over what .er feet the lease will have . on admin istration of tlte Taylor grazing act, fearing legal action on grounds of trespassing. Stanfield, former United States senator, obtained the. land on lease at a letting by the . state land board in Salem. The price was re ported at 11 mills an- acre .and reports- here said six sections' had been sub-leased by Stanfield at 10 cents an acre. The land consists of school sec tions and foreclosed property and is scattered, thus complicating the problem of avoiding trespass and also providing Taylor grazing act ofricluls with a puzzle on how to enforce regulations on In-between property. Slunfleld conferred with district officials on the question of ex- chance and blocking of the large acreage, but no decision on what course would be pursued was forthcoming. -0- OREGON'S NEW CCC QUOTA SET AT 671 WASHINGTON. March 26. (AP) Oregon's quota of the 111, 090 men to be enrolled immediate ly by the civilian conservation corps will be 671, Robert Fechner, director of emergency conservation work, said. Junior enrollees, selected by the department of labor through state directors, will make up the bulk of the new personnel. Veterans will be recommended by the veterans' administration, and camp superin tendents will have the selection of n small number of local exper ienced men. Tiie enrollment period begins April 1. CALIFORNIA'S BAD WEATHER ABATES SAN FRANCISCO, March 2fi (AP) Slorm-hurnssed Califor nia, threatened by floods and suf fering from untold crop damage from unprecedented rains the past week, enjoyed normal weather to day, with a prediction from the weather bureau that It would con tinue until tomorrow night at least. Three thousand acres of farm land on Little Holland Island were flooded by cxress water from the Sacramento river. Shasta farmers reported livestock losses and or chard damage. San Jose area or cbardfsts reported jacket rot bat! damaged the apricot crop. NEBRASKA SRJRNS CHILD LABOR BAN LINCOLN, Neb.. March 2G (AP) The Nebrankn unicamer al leirUlalure killed today a hill to ratify the proposed federal child labor amendment. The action put .Nebraska in the ranks with five other states which have; rejected ihe proposal this year. Twenty-eight slates have ap proved the amendment. N BELIEVED T OF Governor Murphy Reports . "Progress" in Parley Between Chrysler and Unionists. LANSING, Mich., March 2C. (API conferences between the highest officials of the Chrysler Corp., and the United Automobile Workers, scheduled for adjourn ment at noon, continued long past that hour, giving rise to hopes that an agreement might, be reached today. Homer Martin, president, of the UAW, who left the conference room for lunch, replied "your guess Is as good as mine" to inquiries about the possibility of a. settle ment. When Walter P. Chrysler and John L. Lewis resumed their con ferences Ibis morning. It was Indi cated the negotiations would he re cessed at noon . for the Easter week-end, 'resuming probably on Tuesday. Governor Frank Murphy, who brought together the chieftain of the Chrysler . CJorp. . and the ..com niitleo' for - industrial' organization and arranged the momentous agreement for evacuation of the Chrysler plants, was optimistic. He said ' 'progress" was being made toward an agreement on the deadlocked issue of sole recogni tion which is keeping 60,000 work ers from their jobs. v A source close to the governor said Murphy preferred that the op ponents discuss the situation us long as they chose .rather than reach a hasty decision. :.i The evacuation of ' the eight (Contnhied on page 3.),; 3-WAR VET. 105. SAN FRANCISCO, ' March 26. (AP) Flames and smoke did what age could not do to Mother Min erva Ilartman, 105-year-oid volenti) of the three wars. Thoy killed her last night ns sho slept In her three room home on stilts. Day after day for years Mother Hartman has kept old glory flying from the flagpole at her home. She. was a nurse In three wars, the Civil war. North Front Indian war and the Spanish-American war. She was horn . In Canton. Ohio, June 26, 1832,' she bad said, but aside from thut little is known of her past. Mother Minerva once said: ' 1 "I have no radio. My Bible fur uisbes me with words for enter tainment and the birds atid wav ing trees are, my music." She often confided that Florence Nightingale had been her friend. WHISTLER PRINT STOLEN AT O. S. CORVALLIS. March 26 (AP) Oregon Slate college nnd city authorities investigated the theft of a priceless, original Whistler print from Kidder ball today. The famed artist's picture was the "little nude figure" from the collection of Leasing J. Rosen wald. an Englishman. It had been loaned to the scliool for an ex hibit. J. Leo Fairbanks, head of the art department, said it was Irre placeable as a part of the Whist ler collection. The thief cut tbp picture from the frame, A number of valuable JapaneHP prinlx were taken from the bull several weeks ago. TEXACO SERVICE STATION ROBBED The Texaco service station nt Monher and Stephens streets was robbed lust night by n burglar who forced entrance through a window, according to Chief of Po lice John . Duer. Forrest McKay, manager, said that the thief ob tained u lion t 810 tn money, a quan tity of oil nnd some nnto act on sorlcH, Uuor reported. A BLOCK JURIST T Judge Williams' Promise To Retire at 70 Draws Fire From Opponent of Court Plans. WASHINGTON, March 26. (AP) Tho possibility arose today that -opponents of tho Roosevelt court bill might attempt to block the elevation of Judgo Robert Luc Williams of Oklahoma to tho fed eral circuit court. Senator Burke (1)., Nub.), said Williams' letter to Attorney Oen ural Uumnilngs saying be would be willing to rotlro In less than two years when bo reaches 70, "raises tho question of his qualifications" for the post.- Williams, now ii district judge, was nominated by tho president yesterday to the tenth circuit court of appeals. The White House gave out this letter. "I disupprovo of tho letter en tirely," Uurke Bald. "Any judge who would write tho kind of letter Williams did raises the question ns lo his qualifications. "1 . would. v.gryl. strongly oppose putting a .man on the bench who would say he was going to serve only so long and then got off. "If Judgo Wllllums Is going te be elevated to a higher court, nnd a larger salary, he ought not start bv def In te v stating he IB going tn quit in two years. If he feels his nys of usefulness will lie over in two years, he bad better slay where he Is. . (Under the present law federal district judges draw $10,000 a vpu and circuit court Judges, S12.B00.) Uurke Is u leudlng opponent ot the president's request for author ity to name additional Justices to the auprenio court unless justices now over 70 rotlre. Uurke sn A Professor Irvlli (ills- wold of Harvard would . testify Tuesday when hearings aro resum ed. Later In the week Pean Henry M. Dates of the University of Mi chigan law school will appear. Foes' Forecasts Vary Opposition senators wero some what divided III their forecnts n" the court bill's fate todny. after a week of testimony by opponents. Hiii-Ico nrci cted. t in . the judici ary couiinltteo would reject tlio (Continued on page 6) ANDU.IAR, Spuln, Murch 20 (AP) Government troops, pro ceded by bombing planes, pene trated Insurgent southern lines In fresh attacks today, forcing Gen eral Franco's liallnn-relnforced le gions buck five- miles from posi tions outside Pozoblanco. Internal fighting among 30,000 Italian volunteers on the (luiiihil ajara front, official Spanish sour ces said today, has caused their removal from the ranks of the In surgents. Deserters coming across the hnltle lines confirmed government pilols' reports yesterday that the Italians had been withdrawn from Ihe front Hues In the Uuadalajiiia sector. Government sources said an "enormous number" of corpses had been found In "certain places. In dicating those In the front line hnd been shot by oilier behind I hem." 1'innsfer of Ihe Italians lo other fronts was expected here. Spain lards have moved Into Ihe pnsi linns vacated by I lie Italians, It wua said. FALL FROM AUTO SNAPS BOY'S NECK Ronnie Knnpp, Ibree-yeftr-old ion of Mrs. Miles Knnpp of liriilu, faces spending the coming sum mer In a cast, according tn word received from f'orvallls, where the child Is In Ihe hospital. Mrs. Knnpp was on Hie way to visit, her moth er, Mrs, C. II. .Monro, of Tllhnnook, when Ihe door of her car flew open nnd the child fell to Ihe pave ment. Ha suffered a broken nock, APPDINTMEN F E State and County Planners Seek Means of Utilizing 1 County Tracts Taken Off Tax Rolls. Plans for a thorough study of possible uses of county-owned lands, held- under foreclosure- of delinquent taxes, wero being con sidered here todny- at. .a meeting of the Douglas County Planning commission. . Suggestions included propoBuls for a complete survey nnd study with particular attention to pos sible future markets for timber on forested lands, nnd the possibility of burning nnd rescodlng cutovor lands to produce livestock range. Still Istlcs presented by Sinclair Wilson, of the II. S. forest service Wind River experiment station, showed that Douglas county now holds tltlo to 161,900 acres of land, us compared with 42,300 acres in 11132. Of the 151,900 acres held by tho county, 109,000 acres contain Umber ot size suitable for lumber, Wilson' Blild, this typo ot land held by the' county hnvlng Increased1 ' from 25,6,00 " acres ' In 1932. - .'.'v Aside from lands classed as timber of pile or tie slue, repro duction and cutover lands, the county's holdings of city, farm, and other property amounts to oulv 6.200 acres, a gain of 2,200 acres In 1932, he said, pointing out that the problem of returning timber land is the the mutter for most serious study. Tho same condition, he told the commission, holds true In nil oth er timbered counties of Oregon, while the ratio of return of cut ovor lands is still grimier In Wash ington. Speculation Blamed It was agreed 111 the discussion that the principal reason Tor tho lurge return or timber lands lies In the ract that private speculat ors a few years ago invested In small, Isolated tracts, but fulled to find markets for tho lands or timber, and have been forced to surrender their holdings because (Continued on pngo 6) SCIO, March 26. ( AP) All was quiet on the school strike front here toduy, with the students back 111 school and Conch Cecil Kldor buck on tho Job, More than a hundred scliool and uppcj' grade school pupils walked out of their classrooms Monday protesting the failure of the school board to ofror Hlilor u contract for next year. Wednesday, Elder submitted his resignation to the school bourd, effective Immediately, and litter withdrew It at Ihe request of pu pils. Meanwhile the board went on re cord opposing offering any more contracts to teachers until n pro posed school consolidation Issue Is settled. A portion of tho students, who continued on strike until Thursday, held the hope that Kldor will be retulned. STRIKE VOTE BEGUN BY S. P. EMPLOYES RAX FltANCIHOO, March 20. (AP) A strllto vole was started today anions the 8,000 union rail way member employes of the Southern Pacific railroad because union ftpnkcKmcn declared the company had violated pay HKi-ei" ments and failed to recognize the brotherhoods in labor dispute. The vote was begun nmoni; em phiys of the Southern IMirif! !' citic lines). Including the. former Kl Paso and Southwestern system, nnd the Northwestern Pacific rail road. The fcoiilbern Pacific; lines ( run from Portland. Ore., lo' PaWson. N. M., and the Northwestern Ta rifle. Roes from Sausulito to Eu reka, Calif, , ' ORECLOSED LAND PROBLEM TACKLED HER Strike Powers To President Favored - C, M. Chester, above, president of the National Association of Manufacturers, stepped into the labor situation when he offered congress the association's plan to permit presidential Interven-. tion in serious 'tabor disputes. The association offered a pro gram of action In the national strike situation. Chester Is presi dent of General Foods Corp. Officials and Operators of ...Machines Clash While v Arrests Continue!- n; PORTLAND, March 26 (AP) City, officials and plnbuU ope rators locked bends today In a showdown nn the city's recently enacted ordinance prohibiting ope ration of tlio games. Two men, Claud Dempsuy and A, K. Melln, wero clinrgod .with possession of gumbllng devices yesterdny and ordered to appear In municipal court and four mora nion wero arrested today as lead ers of a move to forco a referen dum defied the legality of the or dinance, . The machines reappeured In sev eral establishments after Commis sioner J. R. Ilennctt. author of the ordinance, attempted to block tho proposed referendum by inlrnduc lng an emergency ordinance which would hnve prohibited the gnmes pending an election In May, 193S. Koeently, pinball operators pre sented more Hum 22.000 unmns In petitions calling for a roferendum. If tlio petitions are found suffi cient, the gnniOH could continue without Interference until 1938 election but Dennett hoped to pre vent this by the emergency ordi nance, it was defented by n four-to-ono voto of tho clly council. Tlennetl was accused of attempt ing to "throttle the referendum" and the session was thrown Into an uproar us spectators boood and cheered in'opouniils anil opponents of the ordinance. Sliorlly iiftnrwiird plnbnll lead i'Ib h Id they would resume npern (tons and city ofricluls promptly servod notice Ihoy would prosecute anyone displaying tho games. FLASHES OF OREGON EVENTS Adjudged Suicide VAI.K. March 20 (A I') Coroner R. A. Tacke snld a self inflicted knife wound In the thrnnt caused the death here Wednesday of Don Con k II ll . HI. Conklln. brother of Ihe late K. II. Conklln. Malheur county edit- calor, wns found dying In n bunk nt a CCC camp where be wns employed. il Hh-Runster Says Guilty SAI.KM. March 211 Joe I.eroV Htiiffnid, 22. whose iiulnmnblle al legedly Injured Nndlne Conwny, IS, pleaded giilllv In police court to charges of driving while In toxicated and hit-run driving. The court deferred Imposing sentence until later 111 the week. New Building Deferred (OHTI.AND. March 2D Uck of funds will prevent early con struction of n state highway orrice building ni Siilein, the rand com mission decided at Its two day ses sion heie. Finance for the structure, nip thnrlted by the legislature, will not be available for nt least a year. COMPETITOR'S : SON USES GUN TO END FEUD Claude McCracken, Dying,' Dictates Terse Wire . on Shoting as His , Last Reporting. AI.TURAS, Cnllf.. March . 26.-f (Al) Killed In what Sheriff John Shnrp said today was the climax of u newspaper feud, Claude U Mc- iTnoKon, 1t-year-old editoiv report. ml the story of his own shooting iib his hiBl act. Harry French,; 30-year-old Btate employee and son of AHurus' rival newspaper publisher, surrendered voluntarily, after. McCracken was shot down in bis awn homo last night ns he. ate dinner with two young women. French was held on an open charge today. With five bullets In his body, McCrncken was carried to n hos pltul where bis wife wns the nurse assigned to earn for htm: There ho wrote "30" to his newspaper career by dictating a telegram currying the first report of tho gun play to tho Associated PresB bur : oiiu In Snn Francisco. It read: '"Tonight about slx-thlrt" Harry French shot Claude L. McCrncken, editor of the Modoc Mail, with an automatic plsol. Condition of Mc Cracken serious. "Signed McCracken." Two hours later he died. A good reporter to the last. McCrncken was the 'Associated Press correspondent at. Alturas and publisher of the mimeographed! Modoc Dally Malli - French Is tho son- of Bnrd French,-' pnbllslier 'btUho long es&" tnhllshed Alturas , Weekly Plain Dealer und a Modoc county pioneer. . . . : Papers Long In Feud "The papers have been battling back and forth on every Issuo that has come up," Sheriff 8hnrp said. "I think the shooting wns due to hard reelings aroused by this rlv ulry. Sharp said McCraoken was eat ing III his kitchen with Miss Donna Conwell, bis bnslnesB partner on. . tho Mull, and a family friend, MIbh (Continued on page 6) !F. i James V. (lorthy; 75, well known resident, or West Kosohurg, died late Thursday ut the home ot his son, Cllnlou, following a long per iod of Illness. Horn Dec. 15, 18111, In New York, he hail made Ills home In liosohurg since 11I2.'I, Ills wlfu died three yonrs ago. Surviving are six sons and' daughters: Clinton, Clarence und Robert Oorthy, Mary Fosson, Ktlyl' Andrless nnd Frances I.ong, ull of Roseburg. - Mr. Qorlby was u member of Ihe Hnptist church. Funeral services will bo held nt 2:30 p. in. Saturday at (he Rose burg Undertaking company chap el, with Rev. J. R. Turnbull offi ciating. Interment will bn In the Civil llend cemetery. Lung Rid of Toy PORTLAND, March 20 Clydo Rice, 9, enn pucker his lips uud whistle without concern today. Hu knows Its okay. Kver since a toy whistle lodg ed In his right lung n week ago tl made n sound when he cough ed. A doctor using n hronchoscopo removed it yesterdny. Prowl Car Robbed PORTLAND. March 2(1 It's always a good Joke for everyono but the victim when a thief puts one over on a police-officer. Pa trolman C. N. Anderson reported a reefer coal stolen from n prowl car. Bad Bridge Blown Up MARSIIKIF.LIl, Mnrch 2(1 Rnadmnstor Floyd Rohb used 40 sticks of dynamite to blow the superstructure of the condemned Cons city bridge Into Isthmus slough. Although condemned, snme mot orists continued to use the span, removing barriers erected by au thorities. - ,