Anybody's Guess Who'll Fill the Latest U. S. Supreme Court Vacancy. There's a Bare Possibility the Job May Go to a Competent Jurist or Lawyer. THE WEATHER Humidity 4:3d p. m. yesterday 9n'4 Highest temperature yesieiday 41 lowest temperature lust night :tT Precipitation for 2i hours T Precip. situ-? first of month ,:tl Precip. from Sept. 1. !!::? .... 17.fi" .Excess since Sept. 2, 1M7 2.71 Cloudy with Considerable Fog. LOST? Sfiiri'h ia (in for a 1.'. S. nnvy bnmliiiiK plain inissiuK in ilto 1-a-I'llir oi:tnn. it curried it crew of wven. Will it bt fouiul? Follow XKWS-KKVIKW wire reinrl. THE DOUGLAS COUNTY DAILY ROSEBURG, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 1 938. VOL. XLII NO. 214 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW VOL XXVI NO. 134 OF THE EVENING NEWS BOMBER II : fl Editorials on the Day's News Ry FRANK JENKINS A BOLT nil that can be said with certainty of the President's message to congress, delivered on Monday, is that it is mother an olive branch to business nor a new declaration of war on business. IT contains hopeful admissions. For example, lie says: "A gov ernment can punish specific acts of spoliation, but no government can CON SCRIPT CO-OPERA-TION." In Roosevelt's mind, when be wrote that, must have been the thought that five yeans of un limiled experimenting liave proved that in America at least govern ment can't successfully RUN EVERYTHING. If that thought WAS in mind, it is a hopeful sign. H-; calls upon capital and labor t. n.itiui-!.tf with government IE calls upon capital and labor to co-operate with government in working out the welfare of ihe nation, Both groups, he says, should realize that "power ami RESPONSIBILITY go band in iiand." The Wagner act, forced through by the New Deal, gives to labor f.l.soluttt power with NO RESPON SIBILITY. Experience is proving pretty definitely' that such an ' ar- ( Continued on page 4) Edward SALEM, Jan. (i AP)- A. Miller. Salem grade school prm-:will be diverted and the cargoes cipal, attacked validity of the Ore-(will be handled by rail and truck gon teachers' retirement law under j into Seattle." liingenberg said. Ihe stale and federal constitutions j "The longshoremen will not re in a suit filed here to restrain the taliate by refusing to handle Se school board from retiring him I at lie cargoes in other ports." Mee February 1. han said. "The employers want The complaint alleges application j to make this a coastwide strike oT the act would vioiate a contract! but we will do everything possible held bv Miller with the school dis- j to keep it from spreading. Our trict under the teachers' tenure j men will handle cargoes in other act, nnd also violate the due pro-, ports." cess clause of the 14th amendment j Union Feud at Issue tn the federal constitution. Meeban said no eiiort would be Miller is one of six employes of the Salem district who would be re tired February 1 under the act. hav ing reached the age of Go. He is serving his 31st year in local schools. The act applies to the Salem and Portland districts only. PORTLAND. J...1. fi. ' A P) The Port land school board vot ed last night to oppose efforts to have j the teachers' retirement law de clared unconstitutional. ! Twenty-five Portland instructors would be eligible for retirement j Fchrnnrv 1. f llfii-i-v M t-Tunin n nmnihor tnld ' i the hoard a suit similar to that ' filed in Salem by Edward A. Miller mj,.a Wl,flt nf Vreka. near the Ore to Invalidate the law, would be fil-. Ron boundarv. A searching partv ed against the Portland board to-started today to hunt for tin. hmU- day. Oddities Flashed Ry the Associated Belated NEW BRITAIN. Conn. A resi lient asked Town Clerk Harry E. ! Scheuy to refund $1 which he paid for a .marriage Hoense- iv 12 years ago. Explaining he could use t'ae money, the claimant said tint wed ding failed to materialize because "my girl ran out on me." Scheuy said he could not return the fee. Shortage IH'FFAI.O. N. Y Mrs. Chase Going Woodhouse. Connecticut col lege economics professor, told n wmuoifg club audience the least crowded occupation fnr women to day Is that of "the intelligent wire of tbp well-to-do-man." "We need a lot of her," she said. Recession Note CKLAHOMA CITY 9- Delivery Hoy Mm tin Ilyrd reported to Kdi e two men robbed him of threo foot- Jtnck Leeps Closed; DIVERSION OF CARGOES NOT PREVENTED Dispute Starts When Boat Tries to Unload Cargo to Another Without Longshore Aid. SEATTLE, Jan. 6. ( AP) Se attle's port was closed tndnv. with his j employers und longshoremen dead ; locked and with waierborne traf- tic being diverted to other Puget mnnirl m.rlc i,w.. ........ (Juv 1 . . ,i,ia ;,u, i,; the Viking Star, arrived but no gang was avuilnble io work car go. Three ships sailed, the .Mexi can, headed for Host on via ports, the Point San Pedro for Tacoma, and the Point San Pablo for Los Angeles via San Francisco. M. i. Rigeuberg, manager of the i Seattle Waterfront Employers' as- soclaliou, said the first joint meet- ; ing of International Longshore- men's amd Warehousemen's- union I representatives and employes to settle the cargo-handling dispute broke up in "complete deadlock" with no provision for a second con- i ference. "We made absolutely no pro gress at our first session." he said. "We didn't get anywhere. That tells the whole story." Moth liingenberg and Matt Mee han, coast secretary of the 1. L. I W. I'., commented on diversion of (Seattle shipping to either Taroma ; or Everett. ; "Vessels now on the way her'1 (Continued on page 6) BLIZZARD VICTIM'S COMPANION SOUGHT YREKA. Calif.. Jan. fi.- (AIM -Sheritf's deputies said today that 'be hlizrard which swept the Sis kiyou mou mains Christmas day brought deatli to Benjamin John son, 21, and probably to his com panion, Rudolf Schaper, Ii". Moth were amateur gold prospectors from San Frniudsco. Frozen to death, a body Sheriff W. (!. Chandler said was that of Johnson, was found yesterday in n snow duif I at Hstnnv Ciitnn. K!) From Press Wire t of bei fled c r. cigarettes and SH.fil. t n of all things a biey-( atifl cle. Rprnverv Nnt ; . J :who:n police have dubbed "Sororitv iSam" is finding things picking up. i Hin series of burglaries from . Kanpa Alpha Theta sorority nt. the jl'niversliy of California at Los An j pole has netted him: On Novem- ber 1!(. r,u cents; December 7, $1; last nlubt, f:!2. Check Signals! FVANSTON. Ill Polic e Chief jWillifim O. Freeman called tralfic stpiads into his otfice for a pep ,tulk on how to arrest motorists v. bo ' have not purchased city licenses (for lKv I "I have given them two dayV t grace." he said. "That is enough. ;(io out and arrest them. 1 Hut Fieeman called off the drive (within five minutes "until we get I ll':is licenses for the squad cars." War DeadlockMimm Seattle's Port 7 Ships Idle NLR Board Asks Court Aid to Make Ford Firm Obey WASHINGTON, Jan. 6. ( AP) The labor relations board asked the federal court of ap peals today for an order to en force the board's decision against lb Ford Motor com pany. T.ie board yesterday denied the company's petition for a re hearing of the case. The com pany tnen announced ii would not comply wilh the board's de cision and would light the case in court. The board, along with Its Hud tug that the company had violated "unfair labor practice" sections of the Wa'ner act. or dered the company to reiifstate 2!i employes the board decided had been discharged- for union activity. Tile board also ordered tiie company to post notices in its Iieai l.orn and River Rouge plants that it would comply with the board's decision and "cease and desist" from speci fied "unfair labor practices." Buying Halted Because of Job Uncertainty, GMC Head Tells Senators. WSHIXOTON. Jan. tAP)- President William S. Knudsen of I General Motors, appearing before ; the senate's special unemployment ! committee, said today his "one hope" for immediate stabilization oi v.orK was inai ine people gen erally will feel a little more eon tident of the future." "Wg need more assurance all the way down the line abcut this year and the year alter, said the pr 'iddent of Ihe i orpiiration which laid off :iu,onn nieii January 1 lie- ; cause of a stiles decline during November and December. Knudsen declared (he decline j was the severe-,! in bis company's ! W.uory. I le blamed it not on car prices but on a vi w by the "aver age man" that "work t.s goin to; 1 be slack." I "Even if he has the means," tbej I motor magnate, 'continue:!, "the ! average man won't permit himself ' a car under such circumstances." j Forecast Idea Deprecated , Knudsen det lined in approve, as1 far as its fffect on the automo i live industry was concerned, Mr. i itoos -volt's current suggestion for 'planned industrial production as a ! .ay of keeping the level of employ ment reasonable sleady. 1 The General Motors chief said I he knew no way to ion-cast a sud- den sales drop such as that of November and December. Citing the president's informally i discussed propn ; l for gearing pro I Uuetion to consumption estimates made six mnntc.s, nr a year in ad vance. Committee Cbairti::n Ityrne aked whether it w.uild he possible for fit; motor induct ry to co ope, ale wiih government officials in estimating p.i-chaMug power for fcrecasting car sales. "1 don't think there is a it' God's world l-j lor cast a I per i fc nt drop in business in thtee EUGENE MAY LINK j WITH BONNEVILLE ; El f; ENE. Jan. i!. (AP) Form al npplb'atiou to become a custnim r of Bonneville power may be mad by Eugene, it was announced tc day when J. W. McArlhur. super intendent nf Eugene's public utili ties, said he would place the mai ler before the board at its meet ing Monday. Following an interview with Ad-niini-ti utor .1. I). Ross. Superinten dent McArthtir explessed the foe . liet thai the Bonneville adminis trator wished to put a line down the UlllamellP valley Hllft Ilia' KU gene probably would mske formal application for the po.-r in case the rates "were right." No indication of rates hi as yet been given. MeAtthur said. O NO COERCION IN MILL VOTE DISCOVERED C'jiarge Against NLR Body in Portland Election Not Substantiated, Martin Says. I SALEM, Jan.. fi. (AP) Gover nor Martin said today his investi gation of charges by the AI L that the national labor relations board influenced employes of the Ionian Poulsen mill at Portland to vote CIO failed to substantiate (Tic charges. "Through I n v e s I I g a Hon nf charges that the national labor re lations board exerted undue Influ ence and pressure upon the elec tion of employes of the tumuli Poulsen Lumber company mill has .failed to reveal evidence sufficient to justify me In taking any fur ther action," the governor said. The I'nited Ifrotherhood of Gar betters and Joiners of America, an bXFl, ftrfllinrn,- c harged DeconlfW 2.'i hi a letter to the governor thai the NLKR promised (he mill work ers four months back pay if they would vote CIO. The buck pay would have amounted to $22a.mni. The workers voted CIO by a two-lnone margin. The N LRU had designated the CIO as bar gaining agency before last months election, sponsored by the gover nor. Bait Said Dangled Th. lott..r II.,. I.N'LRU of "delivering the AFL into jthe bands of the CIO." and said 'Charles W. Hope, regional NLIIH 1 director, refused to deny the AFL I charges. The AFL also said "hack pay and state aid through the iinemplny meiil compensation fund ate being held before bile workers (by the NLRI1) to remain away from their Jobs. The si nte unemployment com pensaliou commission has not rul ed on whether the sawmill work- (CoiitiniKMl on p;ij;o fi) BED FILMS. CflPITIlffl SEEN CHICAGO. Jan. i) IAPI Gen. IIul'Ii S. Jounsnn said in address last ingjit the nation would experience a greai hoo'ii ii business were given "half a chance." The former N'RA chieftain, who spoke 1o ihe National Retail Fur niture association, contended t he policy of the Roosevelt Hdmillislra 1 ion is to "distribute po ert v, not we-illh." "The American standard of liv ing has dropped more in the lni tour months than in any other liic in recent history," he said. "This depression is no Joke. I lie forces coiiveriiin'-' lowaid battle in tie present session e.f congress an the most threatening we have mjknnvn since the civil war. Theie is being proposed now an assault on the whole capitali ijc (iyitfiii. We are facing a p:o posal Inr the ledisiribiition of e. idling wealth . . . and that Is tn less ill.-! ii the prin ipie of com nuinisni." KLAMATH INDIAN SOUGHT IN KILLING i KLAMATH FALLS. Jan fi (APi A shotgun blasi in tie- (abdomen, suflered In a rnysterj lsrii:ibble near Realty, ea. t of ll edlH sdav fvenitm. the lite of Bill Trua lodav ti , atio:l Bealty cowboy. Tmi.'iti ilt d at a lo'-al hit-pit i this morning alter Idon l traie I' tlotiK proved t nut le.-s. Me hal tin ping . on n d nearlv a loot v. id - ;,,, l,U mrnn:w h and bin ; sheriff Low s;iid lrpl m ottbei With seeking I'OIiaid (indowa. K Lunar h Indian, whom 'In. an. white man. bad named as his v . l Li lit . E Chinese Blow at Wuhu Base Answered; Chiang Begins Mobilizing Immense Man Power. HANKOW. Jan. fi. ( AP) Cuinse noncomimtauts wert -Fiftyj killed I or w ouiuied todav v. hen :h! Japa nese bombing pl::nes healb bomb ed the airtields at Ilankn-. and Wi.vhaii;;. across the Yangtze. Chinese officers suggested t Ju ra k" was in reprisal for yesterday's foray .-y Chinese bombing planes on the Japauoe airbrse at Wuhu, w here six Japanese planes were reported destr.iyod. Today's was t'v second Japanese raid on this proviucl; 1 capital of China thiu week. Tlr. JaiKine.:o airmen attenipteil lo destroy the v.iio st.ition at Hankow, but failed to bit it. Sev eral women and children were kill ed or wounded in that vicinity. Man-Power Mobilizing The man po' er of this n;iion of Hiii.iuiO.ouo persons v a being re cruited today on a national mo- bi';,;ation basis for an unrelenting war against Jap-.'n. All i ities nin' tow s outside .lap inese- )ecupied areas swarmed with troops, n some cities re-ciuit-i outnumbered civilians. l!v spring China expects to have mi full divisions in tne fidd. Guiding t'e iiKduii.aliou of (Continued on page to Court Here Denies Leniency to rormer Law Breaker of Two States. Pleading guilty to the theft of ."''in pounds of corn from the Pres ehern dairy barn near Jtosehurg. Aubrey Sla'igs, 2!t, was sentenced by Circuit Judge Carl E. Wimberly today to three year.i in the state peidti ntiai y. Staggs, lUstrlt I A1 torney J. V. Long lohl the court, has a previous record of ten mouths lu an lGaboma reforma tory for car thefi and two years in M issout I state penitent hi ry for bootlegging. Staggs was accu.ied of forcing enlrance Inio the dairy barn and loading a Irucli wilh corn, which was sold to a s lid hand goods dealer at lUain, ihe court was told, tor In view of the defendant's past record, the coiiit declared that no leniency could he shown. Leniency, however, was given In the case o Lawrence Giant Jen sen. L'l!. ;-i li'i'il oi pissing worlli- les.'i checlis. Jensen w as senli-nieil to one year in the couiily jail, with an onpori unit v lor probation alier ,-ix months, prinhliiis: be repavs 22 .")ii whii-h he a'imifed to ihe OU1 1 he j ecui ed oil tour ctieel passed in Rosefouru. Judge Wim berly :aid lie would impo.-e a Jail si ntenc.e rather than sending the nung man to Ihe penitentiary be cause ot his youth aim tin- iaci that he hail no pieviois criminal cord. . o- . . -- - BOYS SLUG STATE SCHOOL HEAD, FLEE W'OOIiBI'RN. Jan. fi. f AP) Officers nought three lios who s-! ped (inni the Oregon state tta:n- in-; school Wednesday afieinoon. after slngL'ing P. I . I'ai iuig. col lage manager, on ihe head wilh a hoe while grubbing flumps on the slate fat in Superintendent Mclaughlin said Arnold Hansen. 1'.. of Portland, siiuck Darling and ran inio adja cent t i m her accompanied by bis brother, Kejiii-ili, and Louis Ran dall. A trio answering the rb-sciiptioii of the fugiilves and driving an old car was repniied to have purchas ed : cents worth of gasoline at Canby later. FIRE RAZES HOME OF FRANCIS DRAKE PLYM'H TII England. Jan. '. i A Pi Bin kland Afobe . oim e ihe residencf of sir I-'iium in l'inl;e. was ds' nii-dby lire toda.v finlv a few of iis valuable ail te-;tMii'- ami Etiatethan I'dbs were ,te. The buibling. which was a tieu asiery hi Hip UMi century, had i foneii owned by Brake's descind ants for many year.-. JAPAMES STRUCTURE DP CORPORATION TAX ALTERED Plan of House Committee on Surplus Profit Levy Aids All but About Thousand Firms. WASHINGTON, Jan. (AP) A bouse tax sufo-c onimiltee com pleted today its plan for modifying the undistributed profits levy by agreeiu:; to retain substantially the present lax rates for some boo lo l.iHiti closely held corporations used. Chairman Vinson said, lor avoiding hiyh Individual income These firms. Vinson said, will get very small reduction in taxes, but the effective rates will be al most as high as the combined cor porate income and undistributed profits tax ihey now pay. lie said about Uon,imo corpora llons have taxable incomes, and approximately l!t!).0iiu of them would get Hie benefits id' a re modeling of the undistributed prof its tax neei ion. These would pay a normal In come nix of Lii to Bi per cent it I heir income did not eM-eed 2a, HMi and a Hi lo u per cent tax. graduated actording to ihe propor tion of income dislribuied, whesi 1 heir income felt in higher brackets. Another group of intermediate corpora tion.i v. ould pay interme diate rales more than those pro posed for ice mm firms hut less than those lor the large companies. Roosevelt Consulted Vlnron announced the suhcom lpjltai1.. had .fcuiupWted tho - corpor ate iirx plan alter conferring with President Roosevelt. Chairman Houghton of the house ways and means committee and Secretary Morgent ban also were preM nt. The decision to effect little re duction In the rates on a small group of firms, Vinson explained, lested on ti belief they were "us ing tne corpoi-aie device for the ex press purpose of avoiding the pay ment of taxes that I;, to protect (Continued o:; O'ige Ii) BLOODY BATTLE AT HENHAYE, Franco - Spanish From ler, Jan. ti. -- ( A P) -Spanish govern in cut and insurgent troops extended theii' lines lo the north of Teniel today in what military dis patches predicted would foe "deci sive" battle before the bates of she" battle belore the gates of Fresh brigades moved into the front lines on both side to re lieve lorces tired by heavy fight ing in the severe cold and lo fill ranks depleted by constant attacks and weather casualties. .MA OR IH. government, Jan. fi. (API The declared today Hie still undecided battle of Teruel bad cimI Hie insurgents more than in.oiio casualties and heavy losses of war materials. A com in unique nald about ItJHiO insurgents were killed, about (i.U'io wounded and several thousand tak en prisoner during the three-weeks bailie In frigid w ember At uiaineiils reported c aptured by the government included t.Pun rifles, I'll machine guns, !7 mor tars. :to field guns, :pin trucks and t housaiids of boxes of nnifiinl tion. TWO HELD HERE IN MORALS CASE QUIZ Carl Itilleii'iniise. ITi. and James Km kendall. L'"i. both ot Roseburg. w ere in cusiody today w hile ccniu 1 v oil leers invest igated Klateinents of it i:i-en-.dd Fon-sl Grove girl, held as a w ai d ot the juvenile court. Shcnll pere W'( 'ib report ed today. Oistrict AHoruey J. V. Long said com plain is charging mo - a Is otl eases u ould be filed acalnsl Ihe two men bile today. ALLEGED PASSER OF BAD CHECKS HELD E h i y V I Imil. cbai ged w iih thiamin:? money by Jal-e preleM lltio'igh issuance ot w ot ble.- ed preiiiiii (i v evimi- nation hi and w i pity. Bad vine w he ihe ju-Iice com t todav d held tor t he gi am! w a- HX"d In ihe Mini ol ll he was Uliable to lur nub Hunt, v bo save hi , address s miIi-iii. Oregon, was arrested ie cut ! m i UM-d of passing bad -hecks at a loi al hotel. Speaks Tonight at Roseburg Meeting Chief speaker at the annual meeting of the Roseburg cham ber of commerce tonight will be Earl Snell, above, secretary of state. The meeting, to be pre ceded by a banquet, starting at C:30, will be held in the lobby of the Umpqua hotel. . ..... . .'.In ¬ justice Sutherland to Be Succeeded by Western 'Liberal,' Forecast. WASHINGTON, Jan. l (API- President Roosevelt, In aektiowl- dging today the letter of retire ment of Associate Justice George Sut herland of the supreme court. lebciiated the justice on his many years of public service." Senators comment ing on the re tirement nf Justice Sutherland em phasized two points today:. 1. I hat President Roosevelt's nominee to till tin; vacancy will he subjected to careful senatorial .scrutiny. That Ihe prospect of a defin ite "liberal" majority on 1 he court she veil far Into the back ground any possibility of reviving 1 he president's judiciary reorgani zation bill. Senator Bridges already has proposed 1 hat senate hearings be required on supreme court nomina tion .4, and was exoecied lo seek approval of such a rule before a nnmfnaiinii is submitted. Speculation over a successor found most senators In agreement that a "liberal" would he proposed. Four present Just Ices Brandeis. Stone. Cardno and Black - hae (Continued on page fi) OREGON ELECTRIC TRAIN KILLS MAN ALBANY, Ore., Jan. Ii. (APi Frank Rowland, Ml, Cleveland, , fell under an Oregon Electric freight 1 rain last night and was killed. J. E. Mason, riding wilh him. said Ihey had I n hanging lo a car but were knocked off by a poie near the track. Mason was thrown clear and bruised. Economy Budget Eliminates 412 CCC Camps and 65,000 Enrollees WASHINGTON. Jan. fi. (APi The bouse appropriat ions commit tee bewail an economy diive today by recommending appt nprla! ton of $1.11 1.MK.Mfi to finance mine than : iiulenpedeni goveinmeiiial agencies lor the coming Meenl year a saving of f 1 lv.f.iix.snu nwr the current year. The measure, fhst of the regu lar annual supply bills, slashed JP.T.'ili.'i'Mi off the budgei bureau's est i mates, most of the cut being borne bv the Tennessee valley au thority. The bulk ot ihe saving nw-r ihU year's e pendi I u i reunited Hoin a LN:,f;fi!MMHi cut In hinds for the civilian conserMilioii coi ps and i -dm turns or $:;7 1 1. ."ion lor the vet ei ans' admin ist ration, and M", H77 lor the lailioad retirement board. Inci rji'-es. of to.iy.,:22 for the Mir -ul ecurity board; $1 ,u:!fi.."ioo tor ihe interstate romnierre com mission ; JLVi-.onil for the civil uervice retirement fund, ami ?'!v". ouu for the national labor relations PUUIE Radio Contact Lost by San Diego Since Wednesday at 5 p. m. ; Night Hunt Futile. SAN HI EGO, Calif., Jan. 6 (A P) Captain Alva I. Heruhard, chief of staff lo Rear Admiral Er nest J. King, commander of air craft, scouting force, announced ibis morning that a navy bombing plane wilh seven men aboard had been missiiiK since yesterday. No details were available ml inc ut el y. Captain Bernard said the big pa trol bomber had been missing since 5 p. ni. yesterday, "when we lost radio contact with ft. "The plane was on a rotitlnn flight," he added. "1 am not nt liberiy lo say where it was bound or where it was believed to foe when we lost contact. "We believe the plane will be found.. It Is one of the flying boats capable of landing in any kind of a sea." Captuuf llernhard said ho could not release the names of those aboard ai this time, "as they are ironi different parts of the I'nited Slates and it would cause needless worry." Search Pressed. Planes and surface vessels of the fleet searched all night for the missing plane, it was learned. The search w as being pressed with vigor today. , I he plane Is believed to have disappeared at sea about 20 mllos noviliwest of ' here. Search was concentrated in that area. It was one of the new twin-motorv ed patrol pianos built for the navy by Consolidated Aircraft corpora tion here. These planes made five long massed flights n-nm here last year, two to Honolulu, two to Coco Solo, C. '.., and one to Seattle. The first disaster to the new ar mada nf patrol plaimb occurred Hie night of August 2i last, when one crashed in San Diego hay with a loss nf Fix lives. The plane, swooping down for a landing, struck the half-submerged bulk or the abandoned whaling ship Narwahl. LOS ANGELES, Jan. (i. (AP) The coninmnder In chief of the Culled Stales fleet. Admiral A. J. (Continued on page (!) The slate highway commission will not build a sidewalk on Win chester bridge, it was announced today. The commission, meeting in Portland, adopted the engineer's adverse report on the sidewalk proje -t. and announced I In" simi lar pi ojects w ill be curtailed to conserve hinds. 'Ihe sidewalk had been urged by t he Roseburg chaniHier of roin meree as a means of penult ting 1 h hiug from t he bridge without danger lo the fishermen from pass ing trallic. A. F. Wallace, lio-selm rg con tractor, was awarded the rock pro diiciiou contract on ihe Mt. Hood ami Wapiuila high w ays on a low bid of 2,f2U. board, ofl'sfj the economics. In reporting the bill to the house Hie committee included a sharply worded critii ism of govern menial publicity expenditures, the pri mary purpose cf which. It said, "is to build up a public demand for the services nf the agency- issuing the puhiiciiy." The drasiie cut In (he CCC funds con formed direct I y to the budget, bureau's recommendations a n d would give the agency SG.ttiLtitiO for ihe next fiscal year In contrast to the ?::5o,nim,tiiin for the current year. The committee said the slash wiuld mean elimination nf -111! ('('(' camps and reduction of eu rollees Horn :!L"..iioo lo ir.n.Ohft. Fi nal decision has not been made, the report said, as lo what camps will be abandoned. An outlay of ?!;!. nor. WW for thft veterans' administration won com mittee approval. It includes $4, r.uu.iHiii for construct Inn of addi tional hospital facilities but no spe cifiGpiojects were listed.