The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 29, 1930, Page 1, Image 1

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    CIRCULATION Z J
Dan avmfe4lstribttea far Ski'
math utiax Decwto M, l2
6,656
Imp tally at paid S.10
Member
Audit Bureau ot Circulation,
SEVENTY-NINTH YEAR
Speight Is
Local Butcher Found
Insane at Hearing
Yesterday
Manslaughter Charge
Not to Be Pushed
at Present
A committment to the state
asylum was ordered for -Edward
"Scotty" Speight following his ap
pearance before an examining
board at the court house Tuesday
Afternoon. The examination was
made by Dr. D. R. Ross of the Sa
lem clinic, Dr. John Evans of the
state hospital, and Dr. W. Carl
ton Smith, county physician.
The test of Speight's sanity
made yesterday Is ' Ifae second
which he has undergone during
the past few months. Following
bis arrest on a charge of man
slaughter in connection with the
death of little Lawrence Walker
In an automobile accident near
Gervals last summer. Before
Speis'it could be brought to trial,
he was given an insanity hearing
and was committed to the state
hospital.
A few weeks after being en
rolled at the asylum, Speight was
released upon the consideration
that he go to Canada to lire, it
being said that he was a British
subject. Unable to enter Canada.
Speight returned here to frequent
his old haunts on South Twelfth
street. In December he was ar
rested near Roseburg on the old
manslaughter charge and was in
carcerated In the county Jail
where he had been held until yes
terday. Jury Dismissed
Unable to Agree
j In.PerjiirfJCate
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 28.
(AP) The Jury which heard the
second trial of Garland Btffle,
Alhambra, Cal., lawbook sales
man, charged with giving per
jured testimony In defense of
Alexander Pantages was dismissed
at 9:4K p. m., tonight after fail
ing to reach a verdict in 30 hours
of deliberation. The jurors stood
10 to two for acquittal.
Again Fut
k Asylum
. Portland Hockey Team Climbs
WregOll to One Point Behind League
H -Po Leaders; Joe Marcus Kayoes
DrlClS Kid Carter of Los Angeles
Portland Wins 3-2
SEAVrLE. Jan. 28 (AP)
'After tossing awsy a two goal
lead when they lost their big de
fense man, Jack Pratt, for slug
ging an official, the Portland
(Buckaroos came back in an over
time period to defeat the Victoria
Cubs 3 to 2 here tonight and gain
ed a two point lead on the league
leading -Vancouver Lions. The
victory put Portland within one
point of Vancouver.
Marcus Whip Carter
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 28
(AP) -Joe Marcus, 131, Port
land, knocked out Bennie "Kid"
Carter, 183, Los Angeles, in the
first round of a scheduled ten
round main event at the Auditor
ium here tonight.
River Open Again
ASTORIA, Ore., Jan. 28 (AP)
The river steamer Effln will
leave here early tomorrow with
40 tons ot provisions for com
munities on the north bank ot the
Columbia river, one of which,
Brookfield, Wash., yesterday was
reported facing actual privation
because of food shortage.
Here's Real Fish Story
THE DALLES, Ore., Jan. 28
(AP) Three goldfish were pla
cidly swimming In their bowl at
the home ot Mrs. M. C. Painter
here today, apparently none the
worse for an arctic adventure
that resulted In their being frosen
for three days in a solid block of
Ice.
Mr. and Mrs. Painter were
called away during the recent ze
ro weather and forgot to provide
protection for the fish. When they
returned, water and goldfish were
frosen into a solid block ot Ice.
Paving Planned
ALBANY, Ore., Jan. 28 (AP)
Non skid paving will be laid on
the surface of the Pacific highway
south of this dty as far as H al
ley and the road will be widened
in dangerous places, L A. De
France,, resident maintenance en
gineer, told the Linn county court
yesterday. The surface is to be
covered with oil and tine rock
coating to minimize the skidding
en ; the black top pavement.
I I Schools Head Injured
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 28
(AP) Charles A. Rice, superin
tendent of schools here, suffered
a broken knee cap today when he
slipped on Ice in front of the
school administration building.
i lMGrcW Boosted
EUGENE, Or., Jan. 18(AP)
-Establishment here ot a "model
anter tor the ; entire TJalt4
i . i i t it
i i .i i i
Trolley Flashes
Appear Just Like
Sheet Lightning
Have jron noticed the
sheet lightning over fat the
wtr
' Where', the fire 7"
Queries like these were
coming in to The Statesman
office te great numbers
Tuesday night mm local folk
viewed with mystification
the unusual flashes of light
apparently In the western
aky.
Bat there wasn't any
sheet lightning, nor vm
there a fire. Home persons
who neeaMed, previous sil
ver thaws knew just what
was happening.
A switch engine was be
ing operated on the Oregon
Electric tracks on Front
street, and the ice on the
trolley wire created a gap
between trolley and wire,
thus causing the frekuesit
brilliant flashes, which be
came more pronounced
whenever the trolley slipped
off and had to be pat back
in place.
New System to Be Used By
2 Junior High Schools
Of This City
Pinal details of the revised
course of study and program to
be put in effect at the beginning
of the new semester at the two
junior high schools have been
worked dut, with exception ot the
time schedule which will be ready
before the last half of the school
year gets under way next week.
Ag. announced by R. W. Taven
ne'r, secondary school supervisor,
the revision Includes a six period
day, each period to be an hour in
length and based upon a super
vised study program in the sev
enth and eighth grades. In other
words, in these two grades, each
period will give time for study as
well as recitation under the same
teacher who teaches the subject.
In the ninth grade, one hour will
be spent away from the class
room.
The school subjects have been
divided into six groups under the
new plan: English; social science,
Including geography, history and
civics; mathematics; health, which
Includes gymnasium and hygiene;
home economics and manual train
ing, for which in the ninth grade
an elective may be substituted;
penmanship and art or music for
the seventh and eighth grades
and studyfor the ninth grade.
The program Includes the split
(Turn to Page 2, Please.)
States and a training center for
all Red Cross workers of the' Pa
cific northwest was announced to
day by Circuit Judge O. F. Skip-
worth, chairman of the board or
directors of the Lane County
chapter Red Cross.
Bills Re-Int reduced
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28
(AP) Permission for the state
of Oregon and drainage districts
involved in construction and op
erate dams to control the flow of
water In Beaver, Larson and
Stock sloughs at Coos Bay, Ore.,
would be provided under two bills
re-introduced today by Represen
tative Hawley. No construction
would be permitted until plans
for the work are approved by the
war department.
Cold Snap Over
EUGENE, Ore., Jan. 28 (AP)
Today was the wannest day in
this city since January C, a maxi
mum temperature of 41 degrees
above establishing one of the few
above freezing records since that
date. Sn6w, which has been on
the ground for three weeks. Is
melting rapidly.
Ad Men End Meet
PORTLAND, Ore.; Jan. 28
(AP) Officers and directors of
the Pacific Advertising Clubs' as
sociation ended the second day of
their conference here tonight ap
parently still on jbe best of terms
with the parent organisation, the
Advertising Federation of Ameri
ca.
tlmnaiAaim In Crash
COTTAGE GROVE, Ore., Jan.
28 (AP) Senator Ed Baliey of
lanttinn Cttv learned todav that
being a candidate for the demo
cratic nomination for governor Is
a dangerous pastime.
WMla Ttnrnlnr from the
southern part of the state, where
he did a bit of checking up, the
senator skidded his automobile
into a car driven by W. A.
Thomnson. Portland, a travellnz
salesman. Nobody was badly In
jured, although Thompson's car
was wrecked.
Ships Leave Portland
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 28
(AP) Riser steamers will start
operating between this city and
the mouth of the Columbia river
tomorrow tor the' first time In
two weeks. Officials of the Har
king Transportation company
here, operators of a passenger
and . freight service between this
city and Astoria, said the stern
wheeler. Bearer win oe sent
down stream tomorrow m ine
wake of the United States eoast
guard cutter Redwing, which will
clear a caannej in to Me.
DEVISED COURSE OF
STUDY COMPLETED
10,000 REDS
HOLD PARADE
IN NEW YORK
a m m m m n b b k n w
Immense Communist Dem
onstration Is Staged as
Part of Funeral
Steven K at ovi?" Casket Fol
lowed oy Sympathizers
For 20 Blocks
NEW YORK, Jan. 28 (AP)
Ten thousand persons marched
over three miles of wet, sloppy
pavements today to honor the
memory of an obscure dead man.
Steven Katovls' only claim to
fame was that he was shot down
In a clash between police and
striking market workers In the
Bronx, but today his body. In a
red draped casket, and flanked
by an escort of motorcycle police,
led a procession 20 blocks long.
The people In that cortege were
communists and communist sym
pathisers, poor people, some of
them a bit ragged, who Idealised
Katovls as a martyr to their
eause.
They were orderly enough.
though some 400 policemen had
been placed In readiness In the
event of trouble, occasionally
there would be a banner decry
ing Katovis' "murder" or condens
ing imperallsm, and now and then
the marchers would sing,
little Excitement
Found Among Crowds
"The union makes us strong"
they would shout and raise their
clenched right fists triumphant
ly. .The police who rode along
side and the throngs that watched
from the sidewalks and the win
dows of office buildings looked on
placidly. Many of the latter did
not even know what it was all
about; they thought it was a par
ade. The procession was to have
(Turn to Page 2, Please.)
TUUf'S SERVICE IS
E
Presbyterian Pastor Severs
Relations With Local
Church Today
At a congregational meeting of
the First Presbyterian church last
night, the membership agreed,
with regret, to Join Dr. Norman
Kendall Tully, pastor who recent
ly submitted his resignation, in
petitioning the Presbytery for
severance of the pastoral rela
tions. That this might be accom
plished as soon as possible, the
Presbytery has been called to
meet here this afternoon at 4
o'clock to hear the petition. C.
A. Kells, elder, will be the local
delegate to the Presbytery, which
Dr. Tully will also attend.
Dr. Tully opened the session
last night, after which J. P. Bates
presided. The congregation ex
pressed deep regret a tthe resig
nation of the pastor. Carl F.
Smith was clerk at the session.
.The congregation voted upon a
committee of five to pick the
most likely candidate for succes
sor to Dr. Tully, however these
names are not to be published un
til each member has accepted.
When this committee has reached
a ananlmous decision on a candi
date, the congregation will again
be called together to accept or re
ject the committee's recommenda
tion, this process to be repeated
until a new pastor is selected.
Although It was seven or eight
months before the pulpit was
filled after Rev. Willis Long, Tal
ly's predecessor, resigned, the
group expects a new pastor will
be selected within three or four
months this time.
Action was also taken request
ing a possible candidate for the
pastorate to supply the pulpit un
til the new pastor is chosen. The
congregation has in view the
name ot one pastor whom it hopes
to get as a regular supply pastor,
but the name Is being withheld
until the man has time to consid
er the proposition.
G PERSONS KILLED
FREDERICK, Colo., Jan. 18.
(AP A mother, her five chil
dren and a heroic miner who
sought to save them, perished In
a biasing two room dwelling on
the Slope mining property sear
here . early today. The small
frame building was burned to the
ground and the bodies of the two
adults and five children were
charred beyond recognition.
The dead are Mrs. Delia Marti
nez, 12; her children, Pauline,
12; Emma, "10; Rosle, 8; Erpesl,
6; Frances, 14 months and Ern
est Newlon, 25, caretaker of the
Slope mine. Wild county author
ities determined the . fire, was
caused by an overheated stove. . ;
Newlon and his wife, Lily, were
asleep In their home about 100
feet away front the Martines
house when the fire broke out
about 1 a. m. The miner rushed
to the blazing dwelling scantily
clad, after telling his wife to sum
mon aid. Bo made kin way into
the house by crashing through a
window, ana aau.
FISHED ED
FOUNDCO 1631
" twm .. II.. TIT. J V 1 V ' : 4Wk M
Cue Artist Hakes
' Northwest Hark
At Tide Tourney
PORTLAND, Ore, Jan,
M. (AP) Shattering
very existing northwest
record. If onrad C Wallgrea
of Everett, Waatu, Pacific
coast title holder and form
er world's champion billiard
1st, gained a firmer hold on
the Pacific northwest 18-2
balkline title here tonight
by defeating 6am Cooper
Seattle, 2BO to 87 In 13 in
nings. WaHgrea now has three
victories to his credit while
O. G. Olagner, Portland's
representative In the tourna
ment, although having a
clean slate, hast only tw
marks in the "win column.
Olagner staged the big up
set of the tournament tow
night by defeating; Cooper In
an earlier contest S50 to)
154 In 47 Innings.
I
Plan is Announced at Joint
Meet With Auxiliary
Here Last Night
In view of the success which Is
attending the membership cam
paign of Capital Post No. 9, mem
bers present at Tuesday night's
Joint meeting with the auxiliary
were enthusiastic over the pros
pect for a statewide membership
contest announced by Carl Moser,
department adjutant, who was a
guest in company with Eld S.
George, department commander.
The state contest will be by dis
tricts, and the efforts in this dis
rict are to be dedicated to the
memory of George Griffith, mem
ber of the local post who died
several months ago and who had
been department commander.
M. Clifford Moynlhan, chair
man of the local post's member
ship campaign, reported satisfac
tory progress, but in view of the
recent inclement weather, sug
gested that the time for contest
teams to enter be extended to the
next meeting night. This plan
was approved.
Teams already in the field have
brought In 150 members since
the previous meeting at which the
contest was launched. The post
now has about 460 members paid
up for 1930.
The business meeting was
brief, and was followed by enter
tainment arranged by William
Brazeau. The Auxiliary quartet
sang, and there were comedy
numbers by Frank Zlnn and Rufe
White, and accordion numbers by
Roberta Morton in addition to se
lections by Braieau's orchestra.
Dancing followed.
1ST
NOME, Alaska, Jan. 28.
(AP) While the search for the
bodies of Pilot Carl Ben Elelson
and Mechanic Earl Borland was
under way in the bleak Siberian
wastes 90 miles southeast of
North Cape, Alfred J. Lomen,
manager of relief operations, wir
ed Graham B. Grosrenor, presi
dent of the Aviation Corporation
in New York, suggesting that the
body of Colonel Elelson when
found be laid at rest In Arlington
national cemetery, providing Elel-
son's parents would onsent.
Elelson, who was lost Nor. t
while attempting to fly to the
fur trading ship Nanuk, lee-
bound at North Cape, was char
acterized by Governor George A.
Parks as the "father ot Alaskan
aviation." Governor Parks de
clared that "Elelson helped more
than any other man to develop
air travel In the territory over
routes formerly traveled slowly
by dog teams."
KANSAS "CITY, Kas., Jan. 28
(AP) While aviation officials
today sought the eause ot the
crash of a Central Air Lines pas
senger plane which cost five lives
here late yesterday. County Cor
oner Ben F. Coffin, late today or
deredan Inquest. He declared
that evidence which might have
supplied the answer had been
wiped out In hasty dismantling
and moving of the wreckage.
Officials ot the air line denied
there had been any attempt to de
stroy evidence and defended the
action of employes In having the
wreckage polled apart and taken
to a hangar shortly after the re
moval of the burned and crushed
bodies of the victims.
E. A. Watkins, president of the
Central Air Lines, " who arrived
from Wichita, ; Kas., to take
charge of the company's investi
gation, said "It Is going to be dif
ficult to determine the eause of
the crash. but promised a full
report "as soon as the facts can
be determined.
TREMORS FELT
: BAKERSFIELD, CaL, Jn. 28.
(AP) At least four distinct
earth shocks were felt In and
near Bakersf laid shortly after
IS :1ft. a. nv today and one other
sharp quake was felt shortly be-
Zore rniott last night, : - - '
ra
WELCOMES
Nil
CUES
EELSON
u
in
NOUEST
ORDERED
III PLANE SMHIP
vt cwncamny Morning, junary if, i-XKHI IMO, zea
STUDENT RIOTS
flEW DjGTATOR
Previously Indicated Change
Effected in Spanish
Government
General Berenguer Appointed
by King as Successor to
Primo de Rivera
MADRID, Jan. 29. (Wednes
day) (AP) Demonstrations
against the monarchy and church
occurred during the night but the
police were abla to break them
up without serious results.
About S00 persons, most of
them said to be students, assem
bled near the royal palace and en
gaged in a tussle with the guards
in which two students were said
to have been wounded by the
troops. They displayed banners
reading, "long live the republic."
Driven away from the palace
neighborhood, they reformed their
ranks and marched through the
principal downtown streets, con
tinuing to shout against the mon
archy. In Puerta del Sol and In
front of the ministry of the In
terior they again assembled, but
were dispersed by police without
casualties.
The police charged another
group with drawn sabers and
made numerous arrests. Some de
monstrators gathered in front of
the Catholic newspaper "El De
bate" and shouted "down with
El Debate! Down with the clergy!"
Dispatches to the Reuters News
agency in London added that per
sons in the streets had shouted
w won't have Berenruer " they
said they did not want any more
generals. The ponce were iorc
pd to draw their swords to restore
order and a number of persons
were arrested.
The disturbances, however,
were not retarded as a sign that
serious trouble was Impending.
MADRID, Jan. 28 (AP)
Premier Primo De Rivera, dicta
tor since 1923, resigned tonight
and General - Damaso Berenguer,
long his arch enemy, was charg
ed by King Alfonso to form a
new ministry.
The downfall of the brilliant
military officer and politician,
who had controlled Spain with an
iron hand for more than six
years, had appeared imminent all
day but it was not until after a
cabinet session in the evening
that the premier drove to the
royal palace and presented the
resignations of himself and cab
inet. Civilians Favored
In Most Appointments
General Berenguer, In an in
terview after his appointment by
the king, said he intended to ap
point civilian ministers to all
portfolios excepting those of war
and marine.
He announced his intention of
reestablishing the constitution of
1876, under which the country
was governed before the dictator
ship. He will convoke a general
election for deputies and sena
tors and reestablish the cortes or
parliament.
Since, until he can submit his
program for approval to a parlia
ment nroperly elected, the new
premier must work under special
authority granted by the king, the
dictatorship cannot be said as a
matter of fact to have yet been
dissolved. However the announc
ed program of Berenguer calls for
(Turn to Page 2, Please.)
MCE RIOTS RESULT
E
WATSONYILLE, Cal., Jan. 18.
(AP) Beecher S. Stone, state
counsel for the Filipino citizens
league, arrived here from Los An
geles today with the announce
ment he would file a damage suit
on behalf of the organisation
against Sheriff N. P. SInnott and
District Attorney Wilbur Gardner
of Santa Crux county.
Stowe said he would charge In
competency in office on the part
of the officials. He said had they
exercised proper vigilance there
would have been no an ti-Filipino
riots, recently.
8 AN FRANCISCO. Jan. 18
(AP) Anti-Filipino racial sen
timent reappeared today In San
Francisco with the beating of
three Filipino youths Amello
Bautlsta, Sandos Bautlsta, and
Leon Deasis before a police riot
squad could rescue -them..
Two other Filipinos, Jose Fran
cisco and Reseguno Peralta, were
attacked last night while walk
ing on a downtown street with
two white girls, who disappeared
during the melee. Francisco told
the police he recently- married
one ot the girls at Tijuana.
The three Filipinos beaten to
day said they were at work In
front of an apartment house when
two taxicabs drove up.
1 .
Pledge Is Sought
Of Prohi Officers
WASHINGTON, Jan.' 2 8 ( AP)
A bill to compel all employes
and others who receive any money
from" the United - States' treasury
to pledge themselves not to drink
liquor or nso nartotiei wan in
troduced today by Representative
' Sto&v rouWwaa, Oklahoma, vp
T
HIS
Cure For Cancer
Is Again Claimed
y. v
' i.
- '"v9P
Discovery of a serum that, is said
to be one ot the moat impor
tant steps in the battle against
cancer has been announced by
Dr. Walter Bernard Coffey
(upper) and Dr. John D. Hun
ber (lower) of Southern Paci
fic hospital and noted San
Francisco surgeons. This ser
um, obtained from the supra
renal glands of sheep will dis
solve malignant tissue, it is
said by the two scientists. They
do not claim that the serum
will be brought under control
through a stabiliser and this
serum acts in that manner.
E
Progress Made Slowly But
Surely; Reporters Will
Be Admitted Now
By FRANK HAVILAND KINO
Associated Press Staff Writer
LONDON, Jan. 28. (AP)
Moving slowly but surely the five
power naval conference tonight
appeared to be nearing the real
business of naval disarmament.
After the next plenary session
at St. James palace, on Thursday,
Secretary of State Stlmson hopes
to be able to call Into action
against the definite problems of
the conference the American del
egation's shock troops of experts
and advisers, who have been
marking time since the sessions
began last Tuesday.
Seventy eight newspapermen of
all nations, including 12 Ameri
cans, will file into Queene Anne's
drawing room for the meeting,
where the Franco-Italian differ
ences will be thoroughly aired in
the open. General summaries
and Interpretations of the work
the conference has done will be
furnished as' an indication of
progress to readers all over the
world.
Alphabetical Order
Of Presentation Rules
Three items will feature the
program, brought forward by
France, Great Britain and Italy.
By the adoption of the alpha
betical : order ot presentation,
which gives precedence to the
country proposing a subject ac
cording to the first letter of Its
name. France will lead the list
and will have an opportunity of
formally laying before the confer
ence her plan for limiting fleets
by the Global, or total tonnage
system.
Great Britain, who favors an
other means, will then outline
her theory ot limitations by cate-
(Turn to Page 2, Please.)
J i -f
a
mm
NTH
IT LONDON COH
Salem 's Zoning Ordinance
Upheld By Supreme Court
Salem's city planning and ton
ing ordinance is held applicable
to the case of Fred W. Berger and
J. O. Berger, which has been be
fore the courts tor nearly three
years. In an opinion handed down
by the state supreme court Tues
day. . ' v -
' The matter at issue was not
strictly the constitutionality ot
the soning ordinance, but 'Wheth
er It would apply to the particu
lar case. ' The plaintiffs had ob
tained an injunction against the
cityrestralnlng It from enforcing
this ordinance to -prevent con
struction of a service station at
Capitol and Center streets, on the
fxeasA jtha, they bad an applica
Threat Of Flood
Follows Salem's '
Record Cold Snap
Longest Freeze in History of City Comes
to Close With Warm Rain Tuesday; Melting
Snow Makes Situation Dangerous
SERIOUS floods created by the combined forces of rain and
melting snow were in prospect for Salem and vicinity to
day, and in some degree' were
Tuesday night as the 23-day
history, ended abruptly.
" Streets which had not been cleared of snow became lakes
through which traffic plowed like bo many boats, and even
the downtown streets, which had been cleared, bore some re
FILTRATION PUT
PLANS FILED HERE
0-W Company is Ready to
Go Ahead With Con
struction in Salem
Com nlot and final nlans for
the Oregon-Washington Water
Sat-vIca comnanv'a nronosed fil
tration plant here, were filed on
Tuesday afternoon with the pub
lic service commission by J. T.
Delaney, vice president or tne
company.
Another set will be filed with
the city council today and a third
with the state board of health,
hnth of which are nartles to the
hearing which will be resumed In
the public service commission's
office Thursday morning at 10:00
o'clock.
No Important changes have
been made in the plans since they
were originally presented for the
commission's Inspection, Mr. De
laney said Tuesday night.
Provided that the plans meet
th unnroTal of all narties inter
ested, the company will proceeto
let a contract ana proceea wua
construction of the filtration plant
with as little delay as possible,
the company s local neaa aaaea.
The plans filed with the public
service commission Tuesday in
clude specifications not only for
the filtration plant at Trade and
Liberty streets, but also for the
pumping plant which will be lo
cated on MInto island. The pipe
line across the island was com
pleted, except for the connection
with the proposed pumping plant,
last fall.
The filtration iyEtem will In
clude six units with a normal ca
pacity of six million gallons and
emergency capacity of nine mil
lions. The feeding system will
have a capacity of 16 million gal
lion. The feeding system will
the filtration plant for adding
units to bring it up to that size
whenever the growth of the city
warrants.
KOBEAIIS KILLED ID
STI
NEW YORK, Jsn 18 (AP)
Peong K. Toon, pastor of the Kor
ean church and institute here, to
day announced receipt of a cable
gram from Seoul, Korea, by way
of sh&nahal. resorting that 78
Koreans have been killed and 17,-
000 arrested to date in the stu
dent disorders in Korea.
The cablegram said the move
mentment. aimed against the Ja
panese government has ' been
spreading.
The series of demonstrations
began last November in a strike
of about 400 students in protest
against alleged racial discrimina
tion by Japanese. The strikers
spread and during December some
100 students were reported ar
rested, many of whom still are in
prison.
Japanse police authorities In
Seoul attributed the source of the
disorders to propaganda ot com
munist organizations, although
authoritative sources In Tokyo
believe to motive was a racial one.
CARDS WIN TILT
STANFORD UNIVERSITY. CaL
Jan. 28. (AP) Clinging tenac
iously to a small lead throughout
the second half, Stanford's var
sity basketball team nosed out the
Olympic club quintet of San Fran
cisco 84 to SO, here tonight.
tion In for a permit before the
present ordinance was adopted. !
The action ot Circuit Judge L.
H. McMahan in granting this In
junction is reversed by the su
preme': court's decision. The
Bergers contention, was that the
attempt to make K the ordinance
cover their case was In violation
of the 11th - amendment and In
addition, retroactive. , . .;- - f
The dty. was - represented
throughout the history ot th case
by. Fred Williams, who was city
attorney up to the first of this
year. Final briefs In the supreme
edurt were filed a few days be
fore Mr. ynitlMma want out of
WEI DISORDERS
WEATHER
Rain today and Thursday.
Rising temperature; aoa th
irty winds. Max tempera
tare Tuesday 87; min. 11;
cloudy; calm; river 4.
already beincr experienced
cold spell, the longest in local
semblance to rivers and snow r .
water and rain water sloshed
about.
Ordinary runoff was im
peded by the still froxen drains,
and If the rain continues today,
as the forecast indicates, flooding
such as has seldom been experi
enced here, will result.
Snow Disappears
Very Rapidly
The snow was rapidly disap
pearing Tuesday night, but the
Ice In the streets still clung ob
stinately and even though it
turns to slush, will be a nuisance
for several days. It was predicted.
The final break-up of the cold
spell was accompanied by several
varieties of weather, including a
silver thaw which began early
Tuesday and coated automobile
windshields with ice. Pedestrians
everywhere were in danger of
slipping and breaking their necks,
and automobiles which were
parked head-In to the curb in
many cases had to be shoved out
as their wheels spun on the glassy
Ice.
At times the rain ceased to
freeze as it fell, but early Tues
day night there was a coating ot
ice a quarter of an Inch thick on
al lexpo8ed surfaces, and a real
silver thaw was in progress.
Then, without warning, the sil
ver thaw turned to an ordinary
western Oregon rain and plenty
of it; the visions ot broken tele
phone and power wires and a gen
eral tie-up of communication
were transformed Into fears as
to what the rain In combination
with the snow water would do.
The break-up ot the cold spell -came
without warning, Tuesday
morning's minimum temperatur?
being 11 degrees above serosa
temperature similar to that whion
had been recorded on many of the
frigid nights.
Tuesday up to S o'clock :he
mercury had risen no higher than.
37 degrees, but it was warmer
than that at midnight. ,
Winter sports were at an end,
and the controversy as to whether
streets on Fairmount hill should
be cleared or kept as coasting
courses was settled automatical ly.
"Members of the city council ex
plained Tuesday that the streets
were cleared with a view to pro
tecting the same youths who re
sented it, as several near-accidents
had occurred because of
sleds crossing South Commercial
street with its heavy traffic.
-V
LOS ANGELES, Cal.. Jan. 28
(AP) A dramatic story. Inter
rupted frequently by tears, was
told on the superior court wit
ness stand today by Mrs. Mattie
Dean Hutchinson, Chicago socie
ty woman, of how she uncovered
the asserted double life of her
husband, Samuel S. Hutchinson,
wealth film distributor. Her tes
timony was given in her $300,000
damage suit against Mrs. C. P.
Taylor for alienation of her bus
band's affections.
Letters Jn her husband's mail.
Mrs. Hutchinson said, addressed
to "C. P. Taylor," Jed her to his
office building to Inquire for "Mr.
Taylor." The- quest took her to
an apartment house five blocks
from her Sheridan Road, Chicago
mansion.
"I rang the door bell of the
apartment, Mrs. Huchinson tes
tified, "and that woman (pointing
to the defendant) opened the
door. She said Mr. Taylor would '
be home about Si 30 o'clock.
With my son and his wife I waif
ed nearby. At about eight my
husband, Mr. Hutchinson, walked
into the apartment. Ho did -not
leave untU ten o'clock."
POUDISSUEPT
BY STQniUI OFSLEET
ITU
WOMAN DECLARES
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. t.
(AP) Fine cold rain and sleet
driven over the snow dad earth
by a bleak east wind, coated ex
posed surfaces in the higher sec
tions 6f this city tonight with a
glare flce. Wires sagged as they
grew In size and trees assumed .
grotesque shapes as they werst -flattened
and frosen by the wind -and
Ice.
Street ear lines to tho eastern
limits of the dty were experien
elng considerable difficulty with
Icy tracks and service wsi discon- v
tlnued on. one line. -
Transportation and communi
cation companied were prepared
to rush emergency crews Into iaar
field should the. silver frees be
come more generak