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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1930)
PAGE; TWELVE The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Tfcraday Morning, June 19, 1S30 1 - UNCLE'S N1E IH IN CASE I WELCOMING NEWEST SCOUT! ; : : i C Gun Toter Says He Worked For "Jake" But His Veracity Doubted Continued from Pa J.) Cross piamintd by the defense he eaid he had not Investigated the reference to employment by Llnsie because he saw no signifi cance at the time. Detective John Howe, Drury's partner, was asked regarding Kissane's reputation for veracity. He replied it as bad His opin ion was founded, he eaid, on his observation of Kiane's associa tions and on coiiverbations about aim with other policemen. "Would you call Lingle a gangster?" Howe was asked. "No, I wouldn't because 1 nev er knew him," the detective Baid. Alderman Albert, urging his resolution for an investigation of the police, asserted city council must accept rspoHibilit y for the situation and "do the work the state's attorney loes not or can not do." He lrfw attention to the cleanup ot Philadelphia by Brigadier General Smedley But ler. "Is there any one." be asked, "who eays these crimes could be committed without the conniv ance of police and gangsters?" "Chicago is governed by police captains for the benefit of police captains. The remedy Is not to transfer a captain from one sta tion to another, but to send the guilty ones to the penitentiary. "Let us find out wby police captains iide in Lincoln automo biles and live like Rockefeller while men are being shot down In the street." Former Kaiser's Boat Excursion Meets Disaster AMSTERDAM. June 18. (AP) A boat on which part of an ex cursion party organized by former Kaiser Wilhelm was crossing Lake Kaag near Leyden. blew up this afternoon. Five were Fer lously injured. The ex-kaiser was sailing on another boat. The victims were four of the guests and a mechanic. The ex kaiser and the Princess Hermine were uninjured, but greatly per turbed by the accident, which has 3not been explained. They were guests of a Dutch family and the party had divided into two boats for the lake trip. In one boat went the ex-kaiser and the princess and in the other part f their suite. ...ywyv..4 - j ysftsss:?sjfyrt:'s v. isw .. A 7 -its ? v" IV-si vi BYRD RETURNS FRORfl EXPLOITS : - . I Triumphal Marine Parade Today Will Welcome Explorer Home (Continued from Prge 1) Three thousand troops'will pre cede the admiral and his fellow ex plorers up Broadway tnrougn one of the paper snowstorms wun which the financial district de lights to hail its heroes, and at citv hall the formal city. welcome will take place, with loud speak ers carrying tne aaaresses to me crowds in the piaia outeide. And then begins for Admiral Myrd a round of receptions, din ners, and welcoming ceremonies that will last, almost -without cease, until July 11, when he will be received by the people of Chi cago. A luncheon by the. advertising club follows the welcome at city hall, the press will be met by the admiral in his hotel suite in mid afternoon, there will be a dinner by the Merchant's association in the evening, and a special train leaves with the antarctic party lor Washington at midnight. And Mrs. Ada Stang Death Reported From Portland Mrs. Ada A. Stang, 75, a resi dent of Salem since 1918. passed away at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Flossie Hall, in Portland on Wednesday, according to word reaching here. The remains will arrive this morning in care of the Terwilliger Funeral Irome and services will be held Friday after noon at 2 o'clock with interment in the I. O. O. F. cemetery. Mrs. Stang is survived by her husband, H. J. Stang. 445 South 17th street, and three children, Mrs. H. J. Lane, Farmington, Washington; Mrs. Flossie Hall, Portland; and C. J. Stang, Salem. Undaunted by his 90 years, John D. Rockefeller enrolls limself as a boy scout and is luly welcomed by a picked con ir.gent of his fellow-scouts from Mommouth and Ocean Counties, Jcw Jersey, as be emerges from church at Lakewood, N. J. The new "lendertoot scout" was asked to help raise about $160, 000 for scout camps and prom ised to "get some more of the older boys to join boys that will help contribute.' The Call Board By OLIVE M. DOAK Kletzing Going To Ad Meeting Ralph Kletzing, advertising manager of The Statesman, will leave here Saturday night for Spokane, where he will attend the Pacific coast ad club association annual meeting, which will be in session from June 22 ta 21. Ed win Thomas, advertising man on the Capital Journal, will leave here Saturday morning for the meeting, and will join a delega tion from California here. Kletr Ing will join the California's spe cial train in Portland. Two Girl Scouts Lost in Forest . YAKIMA. Wash., June 18. (AP) Searching parties under the direction of Arnold Arneson, Currant Flat forest ranger, were combing the hills in the vicinity of Fife's peak, near here, in an effort- to locate two Yakima girl scouts, Evelyn Krautkremer and Marian Converse, each 17 years eld, who were lost yesterday. ELSIXORE Today "All Quiet on the Western Front." HOLLYWOOD Today "Dance of Life.' Friday "The Return of Sherlock Holmes." THE GRAND Today "T h e Vagabond Lover," with Rudy Vallee. Friday "Beau Bandit," i with Rod LaRocque. BLIGH'S CAPITOL Today "Under a Texas loon." In the presence of great art, overpowering human emotion, or a perfect truth one's reaction is silence. Why spoil a complete thing with words? Some such situation is true concerning one's reaction to "All Quiet on the Western Front," bow showing at Fox Elsinore. Words are hardly capable of doing anything worthy of that pieture. However, you who have not seen it want to know whether to see it, or not to Lee it. You will want to know it it is so much a war picture that you will not want to see it. Oth- en will want to know if it is real ly true enough of war to make it worth while seeing. It is a superb picture. In fact it is more than a picture, it is an accurately, realistically interpret ed life which only the few, thank heaven, know abont by actual ex perience. It is a picture whose subject matter strips bare for the public a phase ot life, which to the lay man is wrapped about with gla mour, glory, and explosive en thusiasm. When you are done with view ing the picture you will spend the next few days wondering. You will realize why you could not un derstand so many who came' from "over there". Your own son, or your brother, or your best friend no longer seemed to stir to the idealism which had been his once. After seeing "All Quiet on the Western Front" it is safe to wa ger you will understand. You will wonder if your hatred for the "Hun" was rightly placed; you will wonder if after, all we have any intelligent excuse for calling ourselves civilized when one of our fundamental ideas, pa triotism and loyalty, taught in school, fostered by the church and developed in the home is nur- O tured in support of protecting our rights by killing our enemy. The picture is stupendous, and almost overpowering. The truth is so blunt at times that it hurts terrifically, but in a flash a bit of humor lightens the tension so that one is still able to think. A powerful production, having more of interest and value In it than words can begin to express. Only in seeing it will you under stand what 1 have tried to put into words. Gas Company to Erect Building On Court Stfeet Building permits totaling $12,- 034, the most Salem has seen in many a day, were issued from the building inspector's office Wednes day. The Portland Gas and Coke company will spend 16,000 on construction of a concrete build ing, 60 by 4 feet in size, at 133 Court street, and permit for con struction of a service station cost ing $6,030 at 1010 S. Commercial street was issued to the Texaco company. The station will be slightly smaller than the one Bear ing completion at Court and Church streets. The other $4 completing the total was one to the Foster and Kleiser sign company for con struction of a sign at 721 S. 12th street. AMY LANDS I NAUSTRALIA I i gONORf POLAND'S DEAD -o ; " . m imp' i..--x- The newly appointed Am baa- t known Soldier at the Marshal sador to Poland, John Willys, thaldfis; hands with the honor guard alter placing a wreath on the tomb of Poland's Un- Pilsudaki Place, Warsaw. Mr. Willys is en of America's most prominent automobile manufacturers. - books of J. L. Toumala, justice so tne program wi go ior tneiof the p, covering the period next three weeks. tnm Tan t iim'i u m. , i vui w " 1 , - V ... ' 1930, reported today that appar ently $14, $89 was due the coun ty in unpaid fines imposed during that period. 11 UN mm NEWARK, N. J., June 18. (AP) Ambassador Dwlght W. Morrow's plurality in yesterday's republican state primary for nom ination as United States senator had reached 293,177 tonight with John Kittredge Ticket Selling Contest Winner Johnny Kittredge, with over ISO tickets )d to the Wednes day night showing of "All Quiet only S4 of the' state's 3304 pre-; on the Western Front" was an cincta unreported Only the pluralities received by Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoo ver in 1924 and 1928 : exceeded the landslide for Morrow. Latest Indications were that the final tabulation would boost bis lead to above 300,000. The vote, with the 64 scattered precincts missing, stood tonight: Morrow 408.432; Franklin W. Fort, 114,755: Joseph S. Fre linghuysen, 4 7,171. Mr. Morrow ran on a platform advocating repeal of the 18th amendment and reurn of liquor traffic control to the states. He swept every county in the state, including Somerset and Essex, the respective homes of Frelingfcuysen and Fort. easy winner of first place in tiie ticket selling campaign to raise funds for the permanent camp site at Oceanside, "Y" officials re ported late Wednesday. Over 1000 ticket? were fold by boys in the contest. David Thompson and Pavid Hos were running a close race for second place, while Billy Sehon. Robert Johnson and Bob Yarnell were among the leaders. Complete results will not be tabulated un til sometime today, when reports will be turned in. Unemployment Issue Is Taken Out of Politics LONDON, June 18 (AP) Prime Minister Ramsay MacDon ald today moved to take Eng land's serious unemployment problem out of politics by Inviting David-Lloyd George and Stanley Baldwin, leaders of the liberals and conservatives respectively, to a nonpartisan conference on measures for its relief. Lloyd George, after the premier had delivered a speech covering the matter In commons, announc ed he had accepted the invitation for the liberals and hoped a solu tion would be found for the near ly 2.000,000 jobless. Baldwin had not indicated what the attitude of the conservatives would be. Clara Bow Gets Into Limelight With Balm Fund LOS ANGELEife, June 18 (AP) Clara Bow, ' red-headed film flame, whose visit to Dallas, Texas, coupled with her announce ment thejrejthe was settling an old love score created a headline fu rore, added more fuel to the conflagration tonight, in a long distance telephone conversation with local writers. The actress declared she paid off a woman who had threatened her with a breach of promise suit, with $26,000 taken from a fund made up at the studio that held her under, contract by extracting $500 a week from her pay check. Miss Boy said the fund was in the nature of a guarantee for the pro ducer that Bhe would live up to her contract, including "moral ity clause." B, P. Schulberg, general mana ger of the studio, when reached late tonight, said such a fund ex isted, but for another purpose. Tossed Cigaret May Mean Death MISSOULA, Mont., June 18. (AP) One man was critically in jured and may die and thirty acres of choice camping spot near here were smouldering ruin today as a result of a carelessly tossed cigaret. Harry Colbert, the injured man, was struck by a limb which fell on him while be was fighting the blaze. GIRL BADLY HURT REEDSPORT. Ore., June 18 (AP) June GHsan, Marshfield, suffered painful injuries to her right leg today when the automo bile in which she was riding over turned near Seottsburg. She was dragged several feet by the car and the flesh was torn open from her knee to her foot. LIQUOR S UOMIC ASPECTS OUTLINED COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho, June 18. t AT) D. A. Sloan, dry agent, testified today in the Sho shone county liquor conspiracy trial that the mayor of Wallace told him the city was "wide open" because business men did not want -trade to go to other north Idaho towns. Sloan quoted former Mayor W. D. Herrick as saying he would be "glad to have the liquor places elosed, but the business men were raising a kick because Kellogg and Mullan were running wide open." The government charges 40 Wallace residents, including im portant officials, with conspiring for wholesale violation of the dry laws by winking at rum and vice and by collecting' revenue from sales of whiskey. "Herrick said the city needed money for bridges and viaducts and things like that," continued Sloan, "and that he felt no Jury would vote to convict when there was no personal graft or wrong doing." Questioning of other witnesses had repeatedly elicited statements that all tribute levied on liquor went into the city treasury, one half being used for support of the school system and half for the city. Other witnesses were men and women who admitted paying mon ey to the police judge in return for "protection" and described sale of liquor, operation of gamb ling places and similar illicit oper ations. A score or more estab lishments were named as placed where whiskey could easily be obtained. BROCK-SCHLEE SMASH RECORD Return Trip Cats4 Time But Stop Made Throwing Doubt on Claim Continued from Pare 1.) Somewhere near Tucson last right the fliers encountered a terrific storm, they said. Brock was at the controls and Sohlee at the radio. Schlee passed up a note to the pilot. "I think we are go'.ng to have a bail out," it read. Brock said he already had fast ened a flashlights to his para chute straps having had the same fear of their predicament. They were being bounced about the craft terribly, he saki, and as they tried to run from one storm, they ran into another. HMDS TO NEXT M At least 19 graduates of this year at Willamette university have received teaching positions in various high schools through out the state through the efforts of the appointment bureau of the university. It is possible that more than that figure have been placed as It is believed a few of them did not report to the reg istrar. The appointment bureau is an unofficial branch of the dean's i is a graduate -ef the class of 1929 Harold Shelihart ha received an appointment to the julpit ol the Methodist ' cbu?ch' at Fiiw City. PHM HOLDS E w sirs MIT MILWAUKEE, June 18. i : , ; ) The charge that official W.is.'. ington is the foundationhead -f the mot widespread proparam in the entire country, was iv.,.q by William L. Daley. Washingvn representative of the National Editorial association, in an dress today before the association convention. He declared that "propopairta holds Bay froni the White Houe to the most obscure clerk. It ;s noteworthy that many a suspi. i ous editor who frequently che-Vs 'free publicity seldom balks at printing 'news' manufactured by government officials for the pur ro'e of influencing public opinion. "It is true that much trust worthy information emanates from ths census bureau, the treasury department, and such sources, but the stamp et the government on a bulletin does not establish its news value." Logan9- Orders Taplet Will Be Dedicated Today A bronze tablet of General Lo gan's first memorial orders, whim is to be placed In the foyer at t) e state caplfol by ' the Oregon de partment. Women's Relief corp. will be dedicated today at 1: U) and registrar's office and has I . .. , , hoc inin9Mo l i lie oeaicauun ceieuionies v. a graduates who seek positions. PREPARE CAMP Bob Boardman and Ivan White, members of the staff of the Y. M. C. A. will go to Oceanside Friday to make preliminary preparations for the boy's eamp there. First camp is scheduled to begin July 16. Alcock Says He Will Clean 'Em CHICAGO. June 18. ( AP) Mayor William Hale Thompson today gave acting commissioner of police. John H. Alcock, a "free rein" And ordered him to rid the Wty of gangsters. Alcock announced "that's all I needed now 111 do the rest." Among the graduates of the class of 1930 who are to teach next year are .Marjorle Miller, Ketchikan, Alaska; Lydia Childs, Brownsville; Gaynelle Beckett, Haines; Fay Janice Irvine, Myrtle Point; Helen MePherson, Wood burn; Dorothy Whipple, Wood land, Wash. Helen Hughes, Molalla; Mar jory Nelson, Burns; Frances Mc Gilvra, Bellefountaine; Kather ine Everett, Stayton; Dorothy Hutchason, Merril; Harold Hauk, Parrieh Junior high; Margaret Pro. Salem; Myrtle Vannice. girls' industrial school; Marie Messer sniith, Singapore; Eugene Silke, Perrydale; Sarah Poor, Corhett: Margaret Bolt. 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Gentlemen: Toa are hereby authorized to enter my subscription to The Oregon States man for one year from date. It is understood that The Oregon Statesman la t be delivered to my address regalarlr each day by your antlwriaed carrier and I shall pay him for the same at the regular established rate. I am not bow a subscriber to The Oregon Statesman I am now a subscriber to The Oregon. Statesman ( Name ) ). Age. Address. City. Occupation . State. Phone. Beneficiary's - ftelaUonabip.:;.. Tr.vIiV,,L,,1I a S 00 Policy fee. 1 am to receive a SI 0,000.00 . IlSL V0 Pol lMMrd tb No American AccMeat Ia- snrance Company of Chicago, Illinois. 1 Mail ' pw iua ua nuvouvn J- : " I