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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1929)
PRESTIGE Salem's prestige la . WEATHEIl. . r CaseUIed ; today, , wjtn probable 2 rains; ? Southerly,. - winds. V Mx. temperature i Tuesday JM; Mia. 44;, Rain , OS; River 0; Wind south. - illy enhanced by thm show ing of Its legion post; 22nd place among the post of 48 states is remarkable. " r.M cM rr.. riM ci-n j ft tt nm state. aaaa, March SIT 1SSL SEVENTY-EIGHTH YEAR, NO. 322 Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, March 27, 1929 PRICE FIVE CENTS LEGION AFTER beBEt Convention Plans Mingled With Silent Tribute to Marsha! Foch Pnst Here Ranks as 22nd in Size in America; Says McKenzie Plans for a sUte convention, best ever to be held in Oregon, were mingled with an expression of deep regard and reverent sym; pathy over Marshal Foeh's death when Capitol Post No. 9 of the American legion met Tuesday Bight in the post's meeting hall over Miller's. "There is not a man here who was not affected by the life of Marshal Foch," said Adjutant General George A. White, speak ing in memory of the fallen com mander. "His was the greatest post ever held by a military com mander and the fate of the allied forces was swayed by his com mand." Standing quietly, with heads bowed, 12 5 legion members stood for a minute of silent tribute to their superior commander, follow ing General White's talk. Earlier tn the meeting tentative plans for the convention were out lined by "Fod" Mason, of the com mission of ten which is planning for the convention. Contracts are soon to be made with concession aries coming to Salem for the three days of August 8, 9 and 10 while other contracts pending in clude one for" a large fireworks display which will be a feature of the second night of the conclave. This exhibit will be a replica of scenes in "No Man's Land." Competition Between . Corps To Be Large The largest competition between drum poms Yet tO be Staffed Will be a feature of the second night ef the convention. Mason an (Turn to. Page 2, Column 1.) PRATUM GETS HEW Chairman Breaks 30-30 Tie; Desire, to Cut Taxes Causes Fight PRATUM. Mar. 28. (Special) Patrons of the Pratum school urera evenlv divided on the que tion of erecting a new school building, it developed at the meet lne tonight to decide this issue The vote was 30 to 30, and the chairman of the school board, William de Vries, found it neces sary to cast the deciding vote. He voted for the new building. Those in favor of construction were convinced that it was need ed while the opposition was prin cipally motivated by a desire to Veep down taxes, the discussion indicated. No definite plans have been made either as to the type of building or as to the financial plan. Another meeting will be held to decide the latter problem. The members of the board, Mr. de Vries. Otto Buetler and John Roth, constitute a committee to decide details of construction. Reserve Corps At Meeting in CiiyThisEve The association of reserve of ficers meets .tonight at the Spa for a banquet according to an nouncement to Floyd Siegmund, secretary of the organization. Dr. Laban -Steeves, . president,, will preside. .- - ." f i - , The main address will be given by First Lieutenant Mars who will discuss , the sanitary corps. Major James H. Tierney of En gene will speak on military law. Twenty-five men are expected to attend the gathering. Scenes Shifted 1VTI , -w-k. . . m . -mm mr m "m-m ' w ith Kebels Moving tj Mazatlan; Fight Promised By The Associated Press Action in the Mexican revolu tion switched sharply Tuesday from the west 'coast to the north central Mexico:, where the insur gents concentrated heavily as the federals drove northward. The town of Jimines In Chihua hua, on the road to the American border, was heavily bombed by four federal lanes, four insur gents being .killed and 17 wound ed. General Escobar, rebel com mander In chief, left Juares for Jimines to take personal - com mand of the main rebel army there. Meanwhile the Insurgents ap parently were preparing for a counter offenselve In the air. One pursuit plane piloted by an Amer ican reached Jimines and others were said to be on-the way. A rebel attack on Xaco along Reconciled 'WIN I 15"- . Queen Marie of Romania, shown above. Is reported at Bucharest to have reached a complete reconcil iation with Prince Carol, her son, below. Press reports from Buch arest, apparently censored, allude to the reconciliation as "purely of a family nature." It Is considered highly Improbable, according to thece reports, that Carol ever will become king. He renounced ' his rights some years ago and has been estranged from his family ever since. " , He's Violent So Four Cops Subdue Him It took four policemen to sab due John G. Lial of Las Vegas. Nev., when they sought to take him to the city jail Tuesday night after he had been found exhorting o n State street in a manner which led to suspicions that he was insane. Three of the officers finally held Lial while the fourth adjusted the handcuffs. Then, af ter being placed in a prowler car, Lial kicked out the side curtains, but was finally placed behind the bars at the jail. Lial is being held pending word from officials at the city which he claims is his home. The police sus pected that he had recently been an Inmate of a state institution somewhere, as he had on his per son a comb similar to those us ually Issued at those institutions, Although his exhortations be fore being arrested were of a re ligious trend, Lial claimed after ward that he had been persecuted by prohibition officers. He also said someone had been trying for a long time to -kill him. Site Chosen For N ew Buiding On Champoeg Ground State officials and Daughters of the American Revolution went to Champoeg. -Tuesday where they selected a site for the new memor ial bonding to be erected by mem bers of the latter organisation. The structure will cost approxi mately 1 1 0 0 0. Actual construc tion work will start within the next few weeks. in Revolt om the border seemed Imminent after many days of delay. The Insur gents were reported only ten miles from the town which, has been heavily entrenched- by the " loyal troops stationed there. Squads of United States cavalry and infantry were deployed In the streets-of Naco, across the border in Arizona, for police duty in the event of fighting. Matatlan, after several days of heavy fighting, was stiU In federal possession. The defendants re ported that the attackers had fled northward, but the Insurgents claimed that the siege had not been lifted. - - In central .Mexico the govern ment forces tinder General dalles were continuing preparations for a northward drive, to force the in lng. Will Pettyjohn,' Lyle Bathole, federals hope to bottle them up. 1ST SERIOUS CREDIT CRISIS IfJ YEARS SEEN Money Shortage Held Wors in Decader Prices Drop and Then Rebound Greatest Turnover in Stock Exchange History Takes Place Tuesday V By STANLEY W PEXOSIL Associated Press Financial Editor ' NEW YORK, Mar. 2. (AP) The worst credit crisis in nine years, in which the official rate on call loans was jacked up from 18 to 20 per cent and as high as 25 per cent was demanded in the "outside market," today brought about one of the most tur bulent sessions In the history of the New York stock exchange when prices crashed $5 to nearly $35 a share, and then rebounded tn almost as spectacular fashion. on a record-breaking turnover of 8,246,740 shares. The previous record was 8,- 942,500 shares on Nor. 23 last. The credit stringency was the indirect result of the federal re serve board's policy in seeking the cooperation of member banks in curtailing the volume of eredlt on speculative collateral. This has resulted in the heavy withdrawal of funds from New York by out of-town banks during the past week, and the disinclination of New York bankers to meet the de ficiency. Call Money Reachee 20 Per Cent Rate Call money renewed today at 12 per cent jumped to 15, then 17 and finally 20 with only a nominal amount of loans called. New York bankers are reported to have supplied some funds at the 20 per cent level to keep the rate from going higher although they (Turn to Pag- 1. Column t.) nationalists lose TIT BATTLE Report - Indicates Governor of Canton May be Dead After Bitter Fight LONDON. Mar. 27 (Wednesday) -fAP) An exchahsre telerranh dispatch from Hong Kong today re layed a circumstantial report that General LI Chal-Sum, governor of Canton, had been shot. The gen eral was arrested by the nation alist government when he arrived in Nanking on March 13 for the Kuomistang conference. CHEFOO, Shantung, China, Mar, 27. (Wednesday) (AP) The streets today suddenly filled with retreating soldiers and wounded, indicating that the na tionalists have met with severe defeat west of here at the hands of Marshal Tsung-Chang. An Ameri can naval guard was requested for thq cable office here. The first hint that the Nation alist forces had been defeated In the hostilities which opened two days ago came early today when their commander telephoned the city that he was retreating east wards. A little later, officials, sol dlers and baggage suddenly ap peared and .filled the streets, go ing helter-skelter to the east in precipitant retreat. The superintendent, Mortensen, a Dane, of the cable office here. asked that a guard be detailed to protect ,the station and one was expected shortly from the U. S. S. Trenton, now lying In the harbor. The cable station belongs to the Chinese government but is worked Jointly, by the Eastern and Great Northern Telegraph companies. Its traffic controller is an English man. 11 IS niFIlT NEW YORK, March 2. (AP) John D. Rockefeller, Jr., return ing today from a three months trip abroad, characterized the re moral of Colonel Robert W. Stew art from the chairmanship of the board of the Standard Oil com pany of Indiana as "significant because it emphasizes the convic tion that the highest ethical stan dards are as vital in business as they are In other relations of life." "I heard the results and, expect ing yon would ask the question, I have prepared this brief state ment," Mr. Rockefeller said when reporters asked It he would com ment npon the result of his proxy tight to remove Colonel Stewart from the chairmanship of the In diana company.". - - MINERS KILLED r .TlAKlcnsiriiCL.rj. Cal - Mar. 11. -(AP) Two brothers met death in the gas filled mate -working liaft if thm Monarch Rand mine at Randsburg, it was reported here today. They were Ed Colton Mar shall 33 and John A. Marshall. 32. M S LumberFalls On Workmen Death Feared Walter Shattnck, 45, and Gerald Harty, 21, suffered serf- vbi injnnen xnesuay ncrnwn when they were crashed be neath a pile of timber on which they were working at the plant of the Spauldlng Logging com pany. Both men are at the Willamette Sanitarium. Mr. Shattuck sustained a fractured skull and was said to be in a critical condition. Mr. Hatty suffered concussion of the brain. Physicians said that Mr. Shattuck has an even chance for recovery and word from the hospital late last night said there was no change in his con dition. Mr. Shattuck and Mr. Harty have been employed by the Spauldlng Logging company for several months. Both men are single. HUE S1S.O0O HOME Building Committee Head by Governor; Watson Active Chairman Construction of a new $15,000 home for the Salvation Army was decided upon Tuesday noon by the advisory council of the Salvation Army, the new building to be be gun just as soon as cash or pledges in that amount can be secured. A building committee with Gov ernor Patterson as honorary chair man was selected, Roy Watson be ing named as active chairman tor the cmpaign. Other members to be associated with him In the work Include Mayor T. A. LiVesley, Har old Eakin, Judge O. P. Coshow, Douglas McKay. Herbert Hauser was named chairman of a com mittee which will handle publicity for the drive. The local needs of the Salvation Army were explained by Captain Williams. He said the work of the army was being seriously ham pered by the Inadequate building facilities now available. Attending the meeting Tuesday were members of the advisory council including Dr. B. F. Pound, chairman, D. C. Bortzmeyer, Brig adier Bayrton, Judge O. P. Co- show, Lieutenant Eberhard, E.'B. Millard, Harold Eakin, Mrs. N. D. oiuoit, jars, cnaries k.. Bpauia ing. Will Pettijohn, Lyle Bathole- mew, Herbert J. Hauser.. Joker Puts Entire City In Turmoil LEWISTON, Idaho. Mar. 2 (AP) Official Lewiston tonight was busy wondering what It was all about, while a major portion of this town's citizenry was up in arms just because someone had to have his little joke. A Early this morning much of the town, as If by a signal, assumed unusual activity. Newspaper re porters scurried from one end of the town to the other seeking an lomooiie wrecks tnat never oc curred, murders that were never committed and fires that never started. Police officers went hur rying to the scenes of crimes that were never committed. Taxi cab drivers dashed madly to answer urgent calls to addresses that nev er existed, and grocery clerks sent arge orders to vacant houses. All of this hnbub came In re sponse to telephone calls, placed In most cases, a checkup tonight disclosed, by a woman, n - As a final offering late this af ternoon the jokester called a news paper office and told of a ghastly automobile wreck on a downtown street corner. When a sqaad of reporters arrived to "cover" It they found a policeman standing against a post watching the usual five o'clock traffic roU by. Police had been unable to trace the funster tonight. Officers, Crew Of Sunken Ship Are All Rescued TOKYO. MarT27. (Wednes day) (AP) AU officers and crew of the Italian destroyer Mug- gia, which sank during a storm Monday nlgh 150 miles northeast of Shanghai, were rescued by the Nippon Yusen Kaisha freighter Matsumoto Mara The destroyer sent out an S O S which . brought the freighter hur- m. ' M . .a A rymg to tne scene oi aiaasier. Some of the crew were drifting o nthe rough sea and some were standing on the rocks of a small Island..,' The entire crew, said to number 71, were picked up and the freighter was scheduled to land them at Shanghai at about noon today. - Zeppelin Passes Over Jerusalem JERUSALEM. Mar. tt (AP) The giant dirigible G rat-Zep pelin, now on a 5000 mile cruise over central : Europe and - ajong Mediterranean countries, passed over Jerusalem at; 7:15 o'clock this evening. It has been In the air more than 21 hours.- - SALVATION M TO mlSl Request by Principal Nelson Turned Down; Motion to Back Rules Passes Enforcement of All Presen Regulations Preferable, Directors Decide Recommendation by Principal J. C. Nelson that the Salem school board" make a , rule prohibiting students from smoking within block from the school premises In all directions was turned down by the board Tuesday, night after, a favorable motion was entertained and then recalled. Instead, the board stated Its desire and will ingness to back up any reasonable rule the principal wishes to make relative to school discipline.. Nelson s recommendation was aimed primarily to prohibit high school boys from congregating in front of the stores at the east side of the buildings or just across the present dead line. While le gally school officials have juris diction over students both to and from school, the present rules just cover smoking - on the school grounds, which has come In for considerable censure recently from both townspeople and the faculty members. Hug Corrects Wrong Reports on Discipline in discussion or the lost mo tion, Superintendent George W. Hug took occasion to state that Intimations that he had overruled Mr. Nelson In a recent smoking disciplinary act were Incorrect, and that he had no intention of entering an affair that was the principal's. The motion to back the principal with action of the board was made by director Frank Neer. Chairman H. H. O linger ob jected on the grounds that such n rule would be merely another In effective Instrument. Last night s was the first ses sion of the school board since the now famous riot staged by Salem high students and while no offi cial cognizance was taken of the affair, individual members were heard to condemn the proceed ings and one director during the course of the "smoking" discus sion, remarked that he felt the real need of the high school was (Turn to Pag S. Column 1.) Possibility that the Smith. Hughes funds now matched by similar funds from the school dis trict to maintain the part-time continuation school and the ma chine shop at the Salem high school will eventually be with drawn was Seen by members of the school board, in session last night, whence letter was read telling of a readjustment of the vocational expenditures. The letter, from O. D. Adams, state director of "vocational educa tion, points out that the work is expanding so fast and at the same time state appropriations tending to lessen Instead of Increase, that it will be necessary for the fund to allow the local jjhool less than the usual 50 per cent next year. Smith-Hughes reimbursements will not go below 35 per cent this year, however, the letter said.; FOUR UEW PUKES Four new Travelair planes have been ordered for -local delivery, Lee Eyerly announced Tuesday. The first plane will arrive here In April and will be immediately as sembled, being used for airplane school purposes or else sold to the trade. - Eyerly said Tuesday that his company expected to start soon to sell airplanes at retail prices lo cally. The agency for seven coun ties fn the valley has been secured and prices, f.o.b. the factory at Wichita. Kansas, will range from 2950 to 313,000. Slightly more than $3000 will purchase a 90- horsepower, two-passenger and pilot monoplane. Thirty to 40 students are now enrolled In EyerlyV school here, the minimum course consisting of ground school training and 20 hours airplane flying. High School to Have Biggest - Senior Output Prospects that this year's grad uating class will outnumber any previous class are favorable. Prin cipal J. C Nelson reports. Mr. Nel son Is now making his preliminary check on the list of seniors eligible for graduation and although the check will nor be completed until this afternoon he believes the to tal will run above the record class of two years ago. - SMITH-HUGHES I ireEWITHDBH 'Ma' Sunday, Here Is the first picture to be and her children In recent years. It was snapped in ' Los Angeles when George Sunday and his wife sailed for an extensive vacation In Hawaii. In the picture, the temporarily united family group are Ma" Sunday (center In front) ; Jr., Mrs. George (left); Mrs. O. M. Andrus (Mm. George's steter) and Capt, A. A. Sawyer, of the boat on which they sailed. DEALERS SAY THEY 7 FIX PRICE Gas at 25c Caused by Ad vance in Wholesale Quotations Gasoline prices throughout the city were firmly fixed until fur ther notice this morning at 25 cents, the wholesale price of Tex aco gasoline having advanced Tuesday to the 18c mark of other companies, although dealers are known to have varying contracts ranging from 18 to 20e for the product at wholesale. The war which has ragea ror more than a week, came to an abrupt halt although the public was inquisitive for reasons for the advance of two cents above the mark obtaining before the gas war started. A meeting of the gas dealers held Tuesday afternoon failed to reveal any reasons for the ad vanced wholesale price but deal ers were emphatic in their state ment that the selling price was es tablished by the wholesalers of gasoline rather than by the deal ers. Profits were not larger now, than formerly the dealers averred Reasons for the advance of the price of gasoline at wholesale are not known locally. STATE WILL START CORVALLIS. Ore.. Mar. 26. (AP) Directly opposite pictures of Lanza Bryant, charged with the slaying of Lewis (Hip) Dickerson, former football star and assistant coach at the Oregon State college, were given today by the prosecu tion and defense In outlining their eases before the inry selected shortly after 4:30 o'clock this aft ernoon. The opening of court tomorrow will find the state presenting evi dence with , more than two dozen witnesses, who already have given testimony before the grand jury, being called. The prosecution is expected to consume two days in presenting Its ease. The case will he tried oeiore a jury composed of men. The last uror eliminated was Mrs. XAiin G. Gibson,, wife of the professor In vocational guidance at Oregon State college. This exhausted the defense's challenges. The Jury finally sworn in con sists of six active and retired farmers, two laborers, a contrac tor, a stockman, a sawmill man and a garage man. They are: J. Castle. Blodgett; J. M. Means Philomath: George, Mercer, Wil lamette; O. B. Kyle. Alpine; Mar cus C. Gragg, Bellfountam; wu liam M. Williams. Corvallls and P. C. Stewart, Corvallls. During the selection of the jury and the presenting of cases, Bry ant sat stolid. Seattle Woman, Injured in Car Returns to Home Mrs. J. W. Hughes. 701 North 22nd street, Seattle, left by train Tuesday afternoon for her home. following several days. spent in a local hospltaL Mrs. Hughes sus tained a broken leg in an automo bile accident Friday morning. when the car In which she and Mr. Hughes were driving left the road and landed In a dlteh as he slow ed 'down to pass wood wagon on the highway near woodbura. Hr. Hughes drove the ear back, to Se attle. leaving Tuesday morning. They were on their way to Calif or nid' when the accident occurred. BRYANT CASE TODAY Children Pose ! .-:. taken of Mrs. Billy (Ma) Sunday George Sunday (with cap) ; Billv. Officer Held Murderer by Victim's Son AURORA, 111.,' Mar. 2. (AP) The 12-year-old boy who wield ed a gun last night in defending his prostrate father and slain mo ther against county dry raiders, came to their defense again today before a coroner's Jury. The testimony of Gerald De King challenged the story of Dep uty Sheriff Roy Smith that he shot the boy's mother as she leveled a gun at him. He told the jury, im paneled late today, that Smith had shot his mother down as she stooped over the fallen body of her husband, Joseph De King, who had been felled by a blow tin the back of the head as he stood, two guns gripped, ready to repel the invasion of his home by the raid ers. State's Attorney George Carb ary said tenight he had heard Smith's version of the shooting from the hospital bed in' St. Charles were Smith lies, his leg broken by a bullet fired by the boy. Carbaiy's drive to suppress the liquor, vice and gambling traf fic In Kane county has brougt in 152.000 In fines in the last sixteen weeks. Smith told him. Carbary said, that Mrs. Lillian De King stooped to pick up her husband's gun, or dered the deputy out of the house and leveled the gun. He fired, aiming at the gun she held, and the bullet entered the woman's abdomen. Both Gerald and Peter De King, his uncle, told the cor oner's jury Mrs. De King did not lift the gun. Honeymoon Spent On Airplane Trip DALLAS. Texas, Mar. 2ff, (AP) A trl-motored ship of the Gold State Airways company In which Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Fla herty, Los Angeles, are on a hon eymoon tour, spent today at Love field here. The couple was mar ried Monday at Shreveport, La. They will leave tomorrow for points in Oklahoma, thence to Dearborn, Mich. Mr. Flaherty Is general manager of the Gold State company. Spanish Airplane Lands at City in Brazil, Failing to Complete Its Long Jaunt BAHIA. Brasil. MaT. 2C. (AP) Virtually unreported since leav ing the coast of Africa, the Span ish airplane "Jesus Del Gran Po der" with Captains Ignaclo Jimin es and Francisco Iglesias, ended a brilliant flight from Seville at 10:30 a. m. today on the Late coere field here wholly unenpec tedly. . - Only once since leaving the Af rican coast were they reported. That was by an operator of the National Telegraph' at Natal who said they had passed over that place at 2:55 a. mrf so closely to schedule was this that It seemed to aviation experts a feat of out standing brilliance. The low level of the gasoline made In Inadvisable to continue the flight which lasted 43 hours and 48 , minutes, covering a - dis tance 'Without a, stop of 4,100 miles..- e Fatigue and Perer Cause of Delay m - The extreme fatigue of the avi ators caused them to decide to rest at Bahla for two days before start ing on the 1 0 0-mlle hop to Bio Janlero which had been the goal of their flight, ' . (Dispatches from Bahla to La iSCOfKTIN OFFICE IS LAI TO STATE HEAD Nineteen Charges, Including Plot to Kill Member of Legislature, Listed povcrnor of Louisiana Faces Impeachment as Solons Approve Resolution BATON ROUGE. La.. Mar. 21 (AP) Nineteen charges, rang ing from a plot to murder a state representative to malfeasane in office, were filed against Governor Huey P. Long; 3 -year-old execu tive of Louisiana, in an Impeach ment resolution read late today in the state house of representa tives. The resolution was presented after efforts had been made by the governor's friends to forestall It with a motion to adjourn tine die. The motion was lost by a vote of 38 to 55, after three hours de bate, in which the rule holding an adjournment motion non-de-batbale was disregarded. The resolution was laid. on the table to come up at 11 o'clock to morrow. Boxer Says Governor Would Pay Murderer In addition to the formal im peachment resolution, another was ntroduced containing the sworn affidavit of Harry A. Bozeman, a former pugilist, who charted that Governor Long attempted to hire him to murder J. Y. Sanders, Jr., member of the house of represen tatives, because he opposed hie legislative program. Bozeman un til recently was a personal attend ant of Governor Long and recent ly was dismissed from the state (Turn to Page 2, Column 1.) Dean Jewell to Speak at Banquet; 150 Young Men Coming . Acquainting older boys of Ma rlon and Polk counties with' the conditions they will meet In the vocations they Intend to- follow will be the principal work of the Older Boys' conference at the Y. M. C. A. Friday and Saturday. Conferences with vocational guid ance leaders and talks with local business men will be the big fea tures of the program. Ode hun dred and fifty boys are expected to attend the conference. Speakers at the banquet Friday night will be J. R. Jewell, dean ef vocational education at Oregon State college; Mayor T. A. Lives ley of Salem, Angus Ware of Stay ton, president of the conference: Barney Cameron, president of the student body at Salem high school, Mathew Mochel of Woodburn, vice president: and. Ivan White, representing the Salem Y. M. C. A. Dean Jewell and "Jim" Palmer, leader of boys' work at the Port land "T", wilL be speakers at the Saturday morning session. The boys will stay Friday night fn Salem homes where they will have breakfast Saturday. Lunch eons with local business men have been arranged for Saturday noon, at which time It Is expected the boys will get a real touch of the conditions under which the men work. s .? Recreation will be found In the pep rally Friday, the two group . sings Saturday and the swimming and basketball Saturday after noon. Jim Palmer will have charg of the rally and sings while Bob Boardman will direct the swim ming and basketball. Nacion of Buenos Aires state that Captain Jimines suffered front fever due to the fatigue ef the trip.) V Shortly after landing at the Latecoere field, the aviators were greeted by the Spanish consul ef Bahla and other officials. Both expressed disappointment that they had been unable to break the record established by Artoro Fer rarin and. Carlo P. Delprette. the Italian fliers who flew from Rome to Brazil by way of the Cape Verde Islands covering about 4,400 mitee Iast: year.- . ' i' - - After greetings, the men had luncheon and went to bed to re cover from their fatigue. ROME, Mar. 2. (AP) Esti mates here tonight showed that the Spanish aviators Jimines and Iglesias with their flight t Ba sil had not broken the long die stance record, by either' miles -ar-hours, held by the Italian aviator Ferrarian and Delprete. - . ; - ' ' The Spaniards were' credited with covering 4,295 kilometers in 43 hours and 48 minutes. The Ital ians covered 7,181 .kilometers in 48 hours' and 14 minutes.. ' ' VOCATIONAL AID IS T CONFERENCE AIM