Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948, March 27, 1937, Page 1, Image 1

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    "He is Risen," but Brotherly Love Necessary to "Peace on Earth" Remains in Its ;tortib, While Greed, War and Intolerance Stalk Among Errant Mankind.
THE WEATHER
Highest tf-nipprnlure yesterday &S
Iiwi'Bl temperature Inst niKhi ii
)'ruliltnflim for 24 hoi-rs .... 0.1 it
I'recip. since rirsi of month 3. H
fTeelp. from Sept. 1. 195 18.1 1
Deficiency since, Sept. , 19rtB S.IO
8undyl mostly Mir.
STRIKES
Congress linn been urgrd to
chock the- alt-down wttvo, and
tho pioaidoiit Ih "conferring."
Whiuuvor ilia ,nwnli, Ii will ue
nutlnnu) In Importance. Follow
NKWfl-RBVIF.W wire mparts. . ;
jillJSOwr
OL. XL
NO. 284 OF ROSEBURQ REVIEW
ROSEBURG. OREGON. SATURDAY, MARCH 27. 1937.
VOL. XXVI NO. 204 OP THE EVENING NEWS
THE DOUGLAS COUNTY DAILY
mm
II
m
S. P. Engineer f Conductors
Stay Out of Vote on Strike;
Lumber Unions Set Deadline
Trainmen and Firemen
Told Their Fellow
Workers To Stay
With Jobs.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 27.
(AP) Two unions representing
8,000 employes of Pacific lines of
the Southern Pacific voted on
strike proposals today in the face
of wnrnlngB from two other pow
erful unions that ,they would re
main "on the Job protecting con
tracts." .'
The strike, .vote was called by
the Brotherhood of Locomotive
Firemen and Englnomen, and the
Brotherhood of Rullway Trainmen.
They charged the company refus-
n.l .a n,.u n,nttu nu-nwto.l hv the
national railroad adjustment hoard
and refused to rchognize the nu
lon's rights to represent members
In grievances.
The Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers and the Order of Rail
way Conductors declared i neces
sary steps would be taken to re
main at jobs if a . strike was
called.
Company officials declared the
Vote was the result of a jurisdic
tional dispute among the workers.
ReBultB of the strike vote, af
fecting lines from Portland, Ore.,
to Dawson, N, M., and including
the Northwestern Pacific railroad
In California and the former El
Paso and Southwestern syBtem,
will bo available In 10 days or two
..weeks, -officials at .voting brother:
hoods said.
' C. V: McLaughlin of the firemen,
euld a strike could be called 30
flays after the hoard's fndings are
announced If they arc unsatisfac
tory. r: , .-
Vote Held Untimely
J. II. Dyer, Southern Pacific
lice-president in charge of opera
tion, declared thore is "no dis
pute involved between the railroad
and the brotherhoods with respect
to the fairness to' the existing
(Continued on page S)
PORTLAND, March 27. (AP)
A check of tho first 5,000 names
on referendun petitions against
tho city's anti-gambling ordinance
indicates the referendum has been
invoked and tho measure held up
until the election May 20, 1938.
County and city officials doing the
th checking reported names on the
petitions are running 75 per cent
valid. Only 65 per cent of the 22,
500 names secured were needed.
Six alleged plnball operators
asked through their attorneys for
trials whon the cases were called
in municipal court.
The first case was set for Tues
day, tho charge being possession
of a gambling dovlce. All defend'
nnts nre represented by Attorneys
Lou Wngner and Walter L. Toozo.
Operators Intend to test the city
regulations in the courts, Tooze
told the city council Thursday.
Editorials on the Day's News
Ily FRANK JENKINS
IN A WORLD ridden by Intolcr
ance, and ob a result heading to
ward goodness knows what, it is
comforting to turn on Easter to
the thought that Jesus or Nazareth,
who preached the doctrine of tol
erance, of forgiveness of our ene
mies, of good will toward men.
exercised upon the world a great
er Influence than any othrr man
who over lived.
1UO FINER rule for human con
duct has ever been given
than this:
"Do ye unto others as yo would
thnt others should do unto you."
If that rule could be followed
by EVERYONE, the troubles that
are plaguing this earth and tilling
tho front pages with tlaok head
lines would vunlsti ns early morn
ing mist vanishes before a hot
sun.
IESUS, whose blameless llfo has
inspired the admiration of
Calls on U. S. To
Halt Sit-Downers
Urging Immediate federal ac
tion to halt sit-down strikes, A..
L. Lowell, above, president-erne-ritis
of Harvard university, and
six other Bostonians sent a tele
gram to Vice-President Garner
declaring that the supremacy of
government itself Is being chal
lenged. "Armed , insurrection
.defiance of law, order and duly
elected authority is spreading
like"wildfire," the telegram as
serted. CHRYSLER STRIKE
LANSING, Mich., March 27
(AP) Governor Frank Mur
phy's conference seeking a settle
ment of the 20-dny Chrysler auto
mobile strike continued here today
as the governor said he was "sure"
an agreement would be signed and
that he was "hopeful" a settle
ment would be effocted "in the
near future."
From reliable sources it -waf
learned that Walter P. Chrysler
and the chieftains of the United
Automobile Workers, John L.
Lewis and Homer Mnrtin, still
were nt loggerheads on the issue
of solo recognition although the
governor said they were "getting
closer together."
Lewis and Chrysler plan to re
turn to New York tonight. It was
indicated that, should they fail to
reach an accord by 6 p. in. the
conferences .would be recessed un
til possibly Wednesdny or Thurs
day of next week.
.The governor used the overnight
recess to confer with James F.
Dewey, federal labor conciliator,
on further strategy In the strug
gle Tor an agreement. The goal was
the return to jobs of more than
60,000 Chrysler VnVployes, 20,000)
Brlggs Body plant workers depen
dent on tho Chrysler demand, and
nn undetermined number of other
(Continued on page 8)
countless millions through all the
generations slnco HIb time, was
falsely accused and was crucified.
Yet, in the midst of false accusa
tion. Tie was able to look upward
to heaven and say:
"Father, forgive them, frr. they
know not what they do."
A sufficient measure of (hat su
preme tolerance would Iron out
all the difficulties that face man
kind today and their number Is
legion.-
"PHE teachings of Jesus sank so
deeply Into men's minds as to
have produced this homely Jingle,
which preaches a simple E-ermon
that all of us In these disturbed
days would do w-.ll to heed:
There's so much good Ir. the
v.orst of us
And so much bnd in tho best
of us
That It 111 becomes any of us
To speak evil of the rest of us.
What a pltjl that kindly phllos-
(Continued on page 4)
Tie-Up Threat Facing
Plywood Industry
as 8,000 Demand
Pay Increase.
PORTLAND, March 27. (AP)
The storm center of the northwest
lumber industry's labor troubles
shifted to the plywood, veneer and
shook division todny with the
threat of a strike by 8,000 workers
in Oregon and Woshlngton plants.
Executives of the plywood, ven
eer and shook workers'' council,
meeting yesterday in Vancouver,
authorized a vote to empower the
executive board to "take any ac
tion it deems necessary" to back
up demands -fora ten cents nn
hour wage increase, Henry Morris,
president of the council, said.
A motion that tno council sttp
nort the wage increase demands of
approximately 30,000 loggers and
sawmill workers . In the Columbia
river and Grays-WIUapa harbor dis
tricts was also adopted.
Norrls. sneaking for the council
as a whole, set no lime limit for
agreement by employers. A. A.
Wood, representing the shook
workers, said his division nf the
council had agreed "by 96 per
cent" to walk out on Tuesday,
April 1. if demnndB nre not mot.
1 Coob Plants Affected
: Wood said shook plant employes
have already voted their commit
tee authority to take any notion it
believes necessary and "April 1
has been Bet as tho tieadllne."
A shook workers' Strike' would
affect 1200 men In plants at Port
land, Hoqulnm, Puynllup, Raymond
and Tacomn.
Plywood and veneer plants aro
located nt Portland Marshfield end
Coqulllo in Oregon, and nt Van
couver, Aberdeen, Olympln, Ever
ett. .Seattle, Lonevlew. Raymond
and Hoauiam in Washington.
Representatives of tho Porllnnd
local of the sawmill and timber
vui-kers uil'Oll met witil all one-n-
tors' committee of Portland mill.-
for the first time Friday to discuss
working agreements.
Eleven local mills raised wafes
75 cents nn hour, after the union
hod demanded a 10 cent increase..
Results of the conference, which
(Continued on naee 8)
T
CORVALLIS, March 27 (AP)
"The little nude figure," a price
less etching by Whistler, was back
in a traveling art exhibit on the
Oregon State college today while
police sought to put a thief be
hind jail bars..
Apparently frightened ny his
act. the thief, aftor cutting the
etching from a frame while on ex
hibition in Kidder hall, abandoned
it at a spot on the cnmpUB where
it was readily seen and recovered
without injury.
John D. Wells, campus police
man who found the etching, said
he had a "good idea" of the iden
tity of the thief.
The etching was brought here
as part of a traveling exhibit of
100 lithogranhs and etchings bo
longing to Lcsslng J. Rosenwald,'
an English collector. J. Leo Fair
banks, head of the college art de
partment, said the work of the
great artist wns priceless.
Presumably tho thief realized
the difficulty lo bo encountered In
attempting to dispose of tho etch
ing nnd decided to abandon it.
How he succeeded in cutting It
from its frame without being de
tected police hod not decided.
The theft followed upon the dis
appearance Severn! weeks ago of
a number of valuable Japanese
prints but unlike the Whistler they
have not been recovered.
ORPHANED LAMBS
ADOPTED BY COW
BANDON. March 27. (AP)
Tlandon citizens contended the
Jersey cow that adopted two or
phaned lambs on a fam near here
was onlv living up to the spirit of
cooperation shown by this com
munity since tho disastrous forest
fires which dasti'byed the town last
fall.
The lnmbs. on : the C. M. Hxrt-
well farm at Rlverton, were fed
nn a bottle .at first, and later
turned Into a, pasture with the
cow.. Both- lnmbs and cow seemed
contented with tho new family ar
rangement. i -
EASIER FINDS
ml
BY CONFLICTS
Armed, Civil and Religious
Strife Besets Nations
Amid Glorifying of
Risen Christ. .
By THOMAS F. HAWKINS .;,
(Associated Press Staff Writer)
Church hells throughout the
Christian world will peal tidings of
the risen Christ tomorrow but to
a world torn by war, the thought of
war, and by religious conflict.
Christ himself, knowingly on tno
way to his death on the cross,
spoke to his disciples of "wars nnd
'umors of wnrs, of nrotner mat
"shall betray the 'brother," of cen
sure for the church.
And today:
Nations everywhere spneded tho
pace of armaments. "
Civil conflict gripped Spain,
brother against brother. , -
Catholic and Protestant alike
wore engaged in controversy with
nazl Germany over the question of
religious freedom.
Pope Pius XI planned an ency
clical to the Catholics of Mexico,
beseeching them to hold fast to
the faith in the face of conflict
dating back to the conquistadorcs
of the Kith century.
The Jew, in Poland, in Gormnny,
nnd elsewhere trod nn uneasy pnth.
in tne Holy land of Palestine there
was unrest.
In Spain, those who follow the
causo of fascism or monorchism
gathered in insurgent confers to
worship. : In Mndrid territory and
In the Basque country of the
north,- '-Christians--who- support tho
republican regime gathered also to
give thanks for the resurrection,,?
Church Is War Issue
Tho church has become an Issue
Ih the war the InsurgentB protosB
ing to bo her protoctori tho gov
ernment conscripting certain
church property and charging that
Catholic priests are fighting
against Mndrid.
'ope Pius has inferred his favor
for the insurgents, fearing the gov
ernment would spread communism.
He attacked tho nazl govorn-
(Contlnued on page 8)
ALTURAS, Calif., Mnrch 27.
(AP) Miss Donna Conwell, 27-
year-old co-publisher of tho Mo
doc Daily, swore out a first degree
murder charge against Harry
French, 30, in what the sheriff s of
fice called a "newspaper feud"
slaying.
Claude L. McCrackon, -IG, busi
ness partner of Miss Conwell, was
fatally shot Thursday us ha ate
dinner in his home.
A nlne-mau coroner's Jury, at an
Inquest yesterday agreed French
killed McCrncken with a pistol
ho borrowed "tor targot practice
with a friend."
French, a state employe, Is the
son of Bard French, pioneer pub
lisher and editor of the Alturas
Weekly Plain Dealer.
Miss Conwell testified she was
having dinner with McCrackon In
company with a friend, Evelyn
unn, iu, wnen no wns snot.
McCracken died four hours later
with five bullet wounds. .
Sheriff's Deputy George Kelly
told the Jury Fronch ndmltlod he
shot McCrncken.
TURKEY TAXATION
PRESENTS PROBLEM
I1END, Mnrch 27. (AP) Do-
cnusn turkeys are unhatched on
Mnrch 1, when assessing Is done,
nnd have decorated the Thanks
giving board berore tho dnto rolls
around again, one of Deschutes
county's prlnclpr.l cropB has escap
ed taxation.
County officials nre 'considering
ways and means of legally levying
on the gobbler crop, tho value of
which runs Into thousands of dot
Inrs annunlly.
Letter Nearly Five
Years in Delivery
A letter mailed In Rosnburg
Juno 1, 1932, wns delivered to
day to George Kohlhagon, local
meat market proprietor, almost
five years after the date of post
ing. The letter, unopened, was
found yesterday In the Perkins
building and was returned to
the postofflce and taken out by
a carrier today.
rauer tor
By Helen Welshimer
TSHE crosses of Golgotha
No longer wound the sky
With skeleton reminders
Of three who had to die
One afternoon in 1 spring
time . . . i
Long years have wiped away
The marks of blackened an-
guish ; i - i
Upon a hill one day.
FOR there was no retaining
The Christ within a tomb.
He broke the weary fetters,
And now the lilies bloom
Triumnhant on each altar.
To show death leads to life . . .
Uh, we who walk the tired
ways
Of sacrifice and strife.
VUVj ask Thee. God, this'
' Easter,
To break the binding clothes'
That hold our hearts impris
oned.
And as the Christ arose,
May we stand on Golgotha,
And find the crosses gone,
While lilies spread white car
pets To greet a fresh, sweet dawn.
T
Schwellenbach Resolution
Asks Rulings on Bills
Before Adoption,'
WASHINGTON. Marc h 27.
(AP) A proposal that tho su
premo lourt give advisory opin
ions on the constitutionality or
pending legislation evolved todny
out of debute over tho Roosevelt
Judiciary bill.
Senator Schwellenbach (D
Wash.), drafted a resolution ask
Ine the nine justices to agree- to
express their views on the legality
of major bills hefore congress or
just adopted..
Schwellenbach contended a pre
cedent was established by Chief
justice Jtiugues letter to sonator
Wheeler (D., Mont.), doubt In? the
constitutionality of dividing tho
court's work between two or more
groups of justices.
" This Is clearly nn advisory opin
ion," he snid, "on a matter which
has never been presented to t-on-
gress.
The Idea, he added, was advnnc
od when the constitution was draft
ed. President Washington Inter
RHked the court, he snld, n series
of questions on treaties with
France but ncted before getting a
reply.
Senator Connally (D., Tox.), n
foe of tho president's proposal,
suggested a constitutional amend
ment fixing tho size of the su
preme court at nine, authorizing
voluntary retirement of justices at
70 and reaulrlng them to lcavo the
bench at 75.
He explained It "just so Imp-
pens" the amendment would be lu
lino with Mr. Roosevelt's objec
tives Inasmuch as It would bring.
(Continued on pago S)
SAYS PEACE RESTS
ON U. S., ENGLAND
NF.W YORK, Mnrch 27 (AP)
Ird Ellon, prominent Drillsh
socialist who Is visiting this coun
try, says that tho prosport for
neace depends lnreely upon tho
United Stnles and rirltnln, "whose
Industrial, flnnnclnl nnd maritime
power ennhles them, If they will,
lo put a girdle of order around
the world."
"Thoueh there seems to lip no
nnsslhility nf nn nlllnnre hetween
America and England. I found the
feeling In official quarlers In
Washington thnt the two countries
always will Btnnd together on nny
major issue affecting them. Neitn-
er would allow tho other to suffer
dlsnster; there Is no rivalry he-
tween Ihem that goes hoyond solid
friendship," Lord lOllon said.
R. L. RUSSELL GETS
ASSOCIATION POST
U18 ANOEI.ES. March 27
(AP) Pacific Woodmen Life
association, in convention here,
elected L. D. McFadden, Seattle,
head consul. Othor now officers
Include Ralph h. Russoll, iJtosn
hurg. Ore., watchman, and J. P.
Pomoroy, Hood Itlvor, Ore, aud
Hon - -
Chaster KlRJ
Survey for Plan of Basic
Operations, Sustained
Yields Advised.
Rocommondntlons that the Doug
las county court proceed slowly iu
disposition of county-owned tliuhor
lands, nnd thnt a thorough survey
ho nindo with a view to setting up
proper und logical units for opera
tion to prccedo a program of con
solidation of existing isolated and
scattered units, resulted from a
mooting of the county planning
hoard hero Friday.
Tho board recommended to tho
county court that application ho
made to the reclassification divis
ion of tho resettlement administra
tion for a survey of nil tlmhcr
lands of the county, together with
a general soli survey. Such pFiiJ
ect, It was pointed out, would in-,
volvo tho county in no expense.
hut would provide a basis for fu-
tiiro planning.
Tho county, it was decided at
the meeting, should sell no lands
nt less than uctiial value, merely
to return them to tax rolls, ns In
dications, it wns stated, point to
nn increasing desirability of the
holdings for logging purposes In
future years.
'llio genernl decision was. til lit
efforts should bo mndo, after care
ful study, lo block out suitublo
tracts of merchantable limber in
to units, by consolidating holdings
ot private owners, county, stnt6
and fedcrnl agenclos, and placo
tnom under udequato protection
and sustained yield-cutting prac
tices. ......
NAZIS WOULD GAG
PRESS OF EUROPE
IUCTILIN, March 27 (AP)
A campaign to abolish European
newspaper freedom ns a check to
"the International press terror"
wns launched today by Germany's
controlled press, without mention
ing the La Gunrdla Incident, un
der the direction or Wllholm
Weiss, president of the' National
Journalists' association.
"Nazi Germany tins made It Im
possible for the Gorman press to
Hlnnder foreign nations or Inclto
their lenders," declared onw news
paper, with mentioning specific in
cidents. (Germany twlro protested re-
mnrks of New York's mayor, Flo
roiio l..a Gunrdla, widely quoted
In newspapers deemed derogatory
by the nnzls to Helchsiuehrer Hit
ler. La Ouardla' urged .a chnmber
of horrors nt the New York world's
fair to Include a figure of the
"hrown-shirled fnnatln who Is men
acing the pence of Europe.")
TILLAMOOK ELKS
LODGE WILL BUILD
TILLAMOOK, March 27 (AP)
Klks hero wlll-.oroct; a 120,000
building, club leaders announced
today. An archttocf hns been en
gaged to prepare plans-land 'an
option has been taken on property
at Third avenuo and Second stroot,
Government Joins Private
Firm in Putting Issue
Up to High Court.
WASHINGTON, March 27.
(AiJ) A supreme court ruling be
fore. Juno on the constitutionality
of the fedorul social security . act
becumo possible today when tho
government joined nn Alabama cor
poration lu asking for a quick rul
ing on tho vnlldlty of the law.
Solicitor General Stanley Heed
speaking for tho government, ask
ed tho court to nasB on lit gntlon
rued by the chas. o. steward Ma
chlno conmany. an Alabama cor
poration, In an effort to rcqpver
from tho Alabama collector of In
ternal revenue $40 paid ns a tax
under tho social security.
lioth tno northern Alabama fed
eral district court and the fifth cir
cuit court of upponls ruled against
llio company.
Tho supremo court already has
agreed to pass on a challenge of
tne constitutionality ot the Ala
bama unemployment Insurance act,
which supplements federal leglsla
latlon.. "Tho Issiio," Deed snld In his
brief, "directly effoctn many thou
sands of taxpayers throughout tho
country. A prompt decision Is al
so Important to the government.
"Largo sums of money have al
ready boon expended, and more
will bo expended In the future in
tho administration or tho act. Do
lay In tho determination of this
question ot outstanding Importance
may rosult in a multitude of suits
clogging tho dockets of the courts,
harrasslng the government, and
greatly overtaxing lis facilities for
the orderly handling of such liti
gation."
0
DAMAGES AWARDED
ON FALL IN CULVERT
LA GRANDH, Ore., Mnrch 27
(AP) Albert Dine, who claimed
ho was permnnenlly Injured lis a
result of a full from nis pony inst
September, will recnlvo iri,ai)7.m
in damages from tho clly of Union
unless the enso concluded In
circuit court hero last night is
appealed.
Illue claimed tho rlty of Union
was negligent In falling to repair
a culvert through which his pony's
feet plunged, causing Ditto to- be
thrown lo the ground. Tho Jury
nwnrded Illuo less than hnlt of the
tl2.OI7.8-i he sued lor.
40 STATES TO HAVE
JOBLESS INSURANCE
SALEM. March 27 (AP)
T. MorrlB Dunn, chairman of the
Oregon unemployment compensa
tion Insiirnncn commission, return
ing hero from a Washington con
ference of which ho was olocted
chairman, snld today that 40
slates will havo unemployment In
surance laws bv Juno 1. More than
12,000,000 already has been paid
Into tho Oregon fund, In operation
since January-1, iiwtf.
REBELS REPLY
TOSER
ES OF
Government Continues Its
Offensive, However, and -"
Capital Thinks War
Tide Has Turned.
MADRID, March 27 -r-. (AP) "
Shell Bhrapnel burst among crowds
in Madrid's Gran Via and insur
gent air bombs showered on im
portant Alcaln, do HennreB today
In reply to smashing Spanish gov
ernment drives on three sides ot
the capital. '
Several persona wero reported.
wounded when the Insurgent can
nonade sent showers of debris in
to the main thoroughfare. :
rne attack was staged aa. gov
ernment guns wero reported blast
ing at Navaiperai de Plnares in
a drive on the important Insurgent
stronghold at Avlla, 60 miles west
of Madrid and slightly north,
rne bombs struck an ofr-chom.
for Madrid's songs of victory bas
ed on recent successes in Guadal
ajara province nnd near Posohlnn-
co on the southern front. '
The nonulnce felt that the tide
of war had been turned.
ltolstering "inllllcinnos." their
nondescript- uniforms BtlU smenr
ed with trench mud, anng nnd
snouted u. joyous 'Terrain la the
city's bnrB and enfos on Easter
leave while their enmrnilnn nn
tho western front ' wero reported
to have established advanced out
postB m the drive toward Avlla.-"
Rebel Base Neared )
The government; foroo reached it
point near Navulperal. de Plnares
mii.iii - - iq - wii i j- -ii,- -JIllltT-vu!l(,-, ut .
Gen. Francisco Franco's strategic
base at Avlla. Avlla Itself la about
60 miles wost of Madrid.
' Nowspapers blazoned claims that
Franco's -long weeks ot pressure on
the govdrnmenthstronghold at Po-,
zoblance, 150 njtyjfl south ' bt Ma
drid, had been cracked In a mass
rout of his troops. ;rv
These rooent developments, to
gethor with Gcnorul Mluja's crush
ing countor-drlvo against Franco's
Guudalajaru army, . turned tho
shell-scarred capital's Easter week
end Into a season of gaiety. c -.
Tho press reports said govern
ment artillery wns battering In
surgent concentrations .at Navai
perai do Plnares in the drive to
ward Avlla,
The sliolls were planted ahem!
of the government outposts near
tho fringe of tho town.
In tho Pozoblanco drive op tno
southern front the Insurgont'nrmy
won said to havo beon hammered
back almost- to Alcaracejos, about
eight miles west of Pniiobhinco, In
Cordoba province - v
Madrid Heartened '
The atmosphore In Madrid con
trasted Bharply with tho tenseness
of a 1 1 1 tits over a fortnight ago
when Franco's legions tho gov
ernment called thorn an Italian
(Continued on page S)
EASTER PROMISED
Milady will htive nn opportunity
to wear her now Easter bonnet nnd
other finery without fear of spoil
nRo by weather. D. V. Min ting of
tho local office- of tho U. 8. weath
er bureau, said todny. Today's In
dications, be reported, point to
fair weather Sunday.
Tho news was received with,
pleasurable anticipation by mem
bers of tho Hosebut'K Klwanls
club, who worked dlllKentiyl today
in preparation for tomorrow's an
nual faster cm hunt at I.nureN
wood park.
Tho event Is for all hoys nnd
Kirls up to 13 yearn or ago and
will start nt 2:30 o'clock. Prizes
will be nwnrded thnso finding tho
largest number of hidden eggs, as
well ne special prizes for the find
ers of eggs autographed with
minion of Kiwanlnns. Tho children
will bo divided Into threo groups,
according to age, and each group
will ho assigned Its own section,
Parents nro Invited to occupy seats
in the grandstand nt Khiluy field
und watch the hunt.
WILL FIX LOWER
UMPQUA HIGHWAY
PORTLAND, March 27. (AP)
At a meeting of the Btato highway
commission here today, a delega
tion from Itoedsport wns told that
the commission did not have avail
able funds to reconstruct thfl
Roedsport-Scoltsburg section of
the Umpqua highway this year hut
would Improve tho roadbed by re
moving potholoa aud oiling,
HARD BLOWS