Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1932)
ri6iW'?ATEs!i ANrSkleia," Orestm. Sni&air firfo July 3. ISST in ii i miiii ii m nMi-i I,, , HUMAN SIDE OF DEMOCRATIC I101MY DOERS DEPRESSION DEPOSES MONARCHY" l IS DD FI IHER START EARLYHERE new Showers Today, Then Clear Independence day; big Celebration Faced ( Continued from ease 1) - celebration program even more comprehensive than the one it sponsored last year. .j ' City, county and state offices will be closed tomorrow. Like wise will business houses. With postal employes working on boll' day schedule, no residential or business mail deliveries will be made, other tbaa special deliv ery. All activity will center at the fairgrounds, other than special where in the meaning the boys and girls will be feted with all sorts of contests, At XI o clock James W. Mott, state corporation commissioner, will address the crowd gathered for the patriotic exercises. ; j .The double race program will begin at 1:10 o'clock. The mo torcycle i rsees and stunts will take place first. Next in order, at 2:30. the automobile races will start Speedy exhibitions are promised by the celebration com m it tee for both types of racing on Lone Oak track. Title Wrestling Match Big Feature During the day the American Legion junior band here and the official legion band from Albany will play. Capital Post drum corps will make one appearance. Crowning the day for sports fans will be the wrestling match between Robin Reed and Henry Jones for the world champion welterweight belt held by Reed. The match is scheduled to start in front of the grandstand. After the match, fireworks in froat of the grandstand and the dance id the automobile pavilion will begin. - i v. i .. - -" ' ' ""?" - ;rmv,-v ,.,-mm m- j, 1 . ' f - - t w -i" -( . .s s ,.; ' i : - ' i ! . ; ' - S - - f . , - J -v.- ? Hmmbkoh Ivlr- it:,-;- -L, ' - (Continued Cross pac t) Belhl ot Lacomb la 10 J 1. Neither ' of her parents are now Irving. She is survived by five brothers. Wara. Raymond. Orvflle, Alfred 'sad Maries: two sisters, Mrs. H&rvey Wright sad Mrs. C. Ed wards or Lacomo; an aunt, Mrs. Clans Tbetssen of . Janerso. - Taneral arransrements are la charge of the risher-Braden fas- eral parlor in Albany. PORTLAND, Ore., July 1 (AP) Rxeta Bride, 17. of Sa lem. Buffered .face lacerations today in an automobile collision south ef Oswece on the West Side Pacific highway. Frank Stennick, Rainier, Ore., In whose var she was riding,) and Robert Strope. Wallace, Ida.. driver of the other ear, were not inftred. Miss Bride was treated at the police emergency hospital here. - As A. Summcs dx DoASiO Hrs xact Whem Governor Fr&nklia D. RoeMvelt of New York, whom tke Deaaooratle Party kas tiowa le bear he bauer im tb comumg Pi tii.lilil battl, waa'five years old bis f atW took kna to the White Hovse to visit kie eld frteiuL Preaideat Grevw CUvlnd. It U Mud tht o that tcuioi, Pridt CUvaUad, bMl with prob lems similar to tkoae of today, placed bis band ma little Frankfia's kead and Said! Tat going to ateka a Strang next November cam tell whether that wiab is to be realised. Bat ha tk eveat ef Reoeevelfteloctloaj k W.21 I alittV uiup Ik. Willi. Haua ritk m uruk amount of rearet. for am now effic wM not aBord aim tno em am I ' waaU to davote to bis beloved sports. Since be was a email boy, Roosevelt kas bad a passion for SILVERTON, July 1 (Spe cial) The small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Walcott was , ma over by an automobile driven by Oscar Johnson here tonight. She was walking across bridge and. becoming frightened when the car approached, sig-sagged across the road so that the driver was un able to avoid hitting her. She was taken to the hospital. Extent ol her Injuries was not . .. - . - ' , , . '. " ' - . , , . . ' . ' ' . -. t - . .- - '. -. ' - - v. . I ; : : -uV. fSIA -- - J, -y iji K -fA vi; - ; , r ' -7 - V fp VAAm: e folks pretty bard," Mr. and Mrs. James Uennum. recently sent notes to all their delinquent easterners, caaeermf rwiarin that this depression has Dee hitting soso these proprietors of a general store at Sloan, Iowa, all outstanding debts. The wording ef the not reads: We take liberty in canceling' your aeDt to us. we nope n wui xaen wna; ypvr appreyai, After careful considerauon we xeei taat a aigner wiu is guaing. saay God bless and prosper you." The Hennums declined to say just bow much they lose by the general cancellation. and swimming. At n u sauea a any noes rrom niw t er m nmm. I r . j g-, . sailor. He swims daily in the pool at Ike Execative Mansion fas Albany end bis komo in Warm Springs, Ga, YOUulS StZTtlllg is close to the mineral nools in order that ke can take a plan wkon ke feels kke it. Roosevelt never wont to pnblic school. He bad a private tutor who prepare aim tor entrance a naryero, wnonoo no wne araanam i 1 OAK H. im mlmm. m nulnlta af Clmhi Law &ChasL tlO OIUS III SOW KB POUOCS HB IS IV. WOOn BO WOO elected to Now York State Senate, from which ke retired in 1913 to become Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Ho was -1 tH Cover nor ef Now York in 1928 and bis success in that capacity contributed largely to bis victory in tea recant convention. With Dime, Plan To Circle Globe QUANTITY DF BEER IS I 1 local police and Officers Han nan. Keaaedy, Powell and ' Con stable Pitney. ' CHARLOTTE. N. CL. July (AP)- Senator Cameron Morris on, -advocate of prohibition, was decisively-defeated by Robert R- Beynolds. Asaevuie wet, in to day's democratic primary far the United States seestorial nomina tion. . . , i . ' - . -Sweeping the state from bor der to border. Reynolds took aa early lead In tbe unofficial tabu lation of the ballots, and retained a majority of aim est two te one throughout the night. Returns front 1,4 it ef the state's 1,819 p reelects gave Rey nolds It 0.7 70 votes agalast 91.- 309 for Morrison. , ' v J. C. B. Chringhaua, ef Eliza beth City, had what appeared to be a ssfe lead over Lieut. Gov. R. T. Fonntafn la their contest for the governorship nomination. With 1,4 4 j precincts reported, the rote stood: Fountain 117, T; Ehringhaus 110,50$. IIEFBHS TO BACK ROOSEVELT RACE TO WII UP Society Nevs PORTLAND, Ore., July I SILVERTON. July 2 (Spe cial) Four men were arrested Miss Margaret Wagner, has as her house guests Miss Betty Ma- loney of Santa Anna. Calif., and Miss Margaret Compton ot Me Minnrille. Motor trips to Port land and the weekend at Eu gene are some of the diversions (Continued from paes l) i being enjoyed by the maiaa wno personnel of the board of higher are Kappa Kappa Gamma soror- educatlon." "7 sir. Zorn also scouted a rumor that MERGER PETIT1S haslbeen going the rounds at the statehonse to the effect that he ia at oiuta with the Portland wing of the imerger movement. "It's all propaganda" he replied when and Mrs nenry Marsh, formerly asutta u no uia qurre?a wnu oI Salem. Mr. Carl and Airs. . Portland backer when they sup- Marsh r brother and sister. posOdly issued statements under They arw making the trip by mo- Mr. and Mrs. August Carl are leavinjr for a month's vacation in cluding numerous side trips and a visit at Long Beach, Cal., with Mr, his came and without his knowl edge. "We are united in our po sition." ' Throughout the state Zorn said he had heard many heart-rending tales ot financial difficulties throiugh which farmers are going. "Many of them haven't much left but ia mortgage on their proper ty, I he commented. "Constantly tor and are going south over the coast route. A' group of riders from the Sa lem Riding Academy will enjoy a Jolly cross country ride this morn ing. They will leave the stables at 8:45 o clock. Another group of riders will ride again Monday morning, taking thU way of start- Additional Society News on Page 6 University of Oregon people in Salem will be interested in tSe announcement of the marriage Tuesday of Miss Janet Thacher, daughter of Prof., and Mrs. w. jr. G. Thacher and Vinton Hall. see Miss Helen Rose who Is a mem ber of the high school system ot Spokane, Wash., is home with her mother, Mrs. George M. Rose. Miss Edith Carter Kuney of Oregon State college staff, has been the house guest of Miss Dor othea Steusloff. Sunday Miss Knney, Miss Steusloff, and Miss Workinger of Oregon State col lege will be luncheon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Oilbert. Miss Kuney and Miss Workinger will return to Corrallis Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Chsrles K. Spaulding will be among those to attend a picnls celebration of the Fourth. (AP)-Raymoni Daniel Van La- aU S55r!Jt wS2i-0Q?tU P Police raided a house at !.r.rHef.,vP2ftIa,i todV. UlO McClaina street here tonight. start ot a biking' tour which they hope win take them around the world in about five years, William Robins and Ed H. Roth, said to be tenants in the They plan to go to Seattle, I souse; mimer uicx ana a jouiq across country to New Tork, I 7 . V .V 7, I work their way to Liverpool. I mh were auowea England, then go to' Germany b 0 recog and Trance and proceed from n,zanc there as their fortunes dictate. Two cases and two additional They are stsrjiag with only 19 I gallons of alleged beer were tak- cents between them. They are I en by tne orncers together tun carrying blankets and emergency (a bottle capper. rations. I It was the second liquor raid within a few days here, the Joe McAllister home having been HAY PATS WAGES raided nreviouslv f ollowins: Mr. MEDFORD. Ore.; July 2 (AP) and Mrs. McAllister's arrest in Hay has been introduced as a Washington on a Portland charge medium of exchange in the Sams I of fraud. valley and Beagle- farming die- I State Officers Lansing. Clayton trlcts. Hay hands, working for 1 and Houston participated in to ll a day, are being paid in hay, I night's raid along with Mayor priced at 6 a ton in the shock. 'Eastman and Chief Dahl of the 1-1 Junior Band ot i Legion Parades, Advertises 4th Proudly in uniform, the Amer ican Legion Junior band sponsor ed list night gave a boost to Its sponsor. Capital Post No. 9, by parading downtown streets for nearly an hour, attracting large aadiences and advertising with banners the July 4 celebration the post will put on tomorrow Twenty-seven boys participated. While Director W. J. McLaugh lin was in charge of the parading. R. J. Baldwin, member of Capital post drum corps, acted as drum major. WRITERS TO GATHER PORTLAND. Ore.. July (AP) Two hundred Oregon wri ters will be invited to attend state-wide meeting of authors and writers at Champoeg. August 7, WASHINGTON. July 2. (AP) Republican Independents in the senate, led. by George W. Norris ot Nebraska, " swung today toward the democratic camp of Franklin D. Roosevelt, as third party talk dissolved into thin air. Nebraska's veteran leader of the independent group definitely announced in a formal statement that he would bolt hi party and support the democratic nominee. while several of his colleagues took guarded steps in. the same direction. v Senator Borah (R.. Idaho), who has said he will not support Presi dent Hoover on the party plat form, refused to comment public ly on Roosevelt's victory, but bis friends re.f.rded it as likely be would follow Norris in supporting the democratic nominee. Outfitters will Play at Albany Only one State league base ball game will be played this weekend. Pacific Outfitting play ing at Albany Monday, the game that was postponed at Albany's request the first Sunday of the the Oregon branch, of the League j season. The West Side Babes are or western Writers decided a: a playing a KIngs-ex" game, at meeting here tonight. 1 Albany today. MICKEY MOUSE W-boops, My Dear I By WALT DISNEY UTERIS HERE TO JOIN BONUS MARCH the jcomplamt is that this condi- J ing the Fourth of July celebration iioui comes lurougn no lauu ox I with - hrisl- ranter. iite owner; ne is simpiy iacing a condition he cannot meet" iconise Klumn eave a surnrise party for Dorothy Gibson on the occasion of her 14th birthday Wednesday afternoon. A happy afternoon of informal games pre ceded the tea hour. A lovely birthday cake and bowls of sweet peas and roses made a very pret ty tea table. iLfra . A Pn.ara loN TNi u. (Contlnaed from page t) - ' V. ' C1 . matsd that the trip by automobile he will visit for two months, would require 100 gallons of gas- on her return she will come by oline and six to eight quarts of way ot Los Angeles, and will Oil. . .1 -ton in Ran Franeiseo where she wo raiin in receiving mfcen sup- wui -pisit her mother. port; locally In their trip was ex-1 pressed by a veteran last night. I , The younger students of Prof. He said he scarcely expected they Frank Churchill were entertained would receive more than the 7Bhy Prof. Churchill and Mrs. promised by the three men. I Churchill with a picnic lawn party They are determined, however, at the Churchill home Friday af- to add their backing to the pres- ternoon. About 25 students and ent thousands of veterans now at a few parents enjoyed the pleas Washington In the hope of influ- ant afternoon encing congress to vote immedi ate payment of the adjusted serv ice certificates due in 1945, Mar tin says CREW AJMO A GOrULLA, FIGHT FOR. POSSlSStOwOF ISHIP, ANO NO MAJTEH WHO wMS.rriooKS IKE POOR I MiCKEY AND NnDUl, AKB OUITOIOSS fMS9li'Wi r 1 "Vl l0ftli'Biin I, LOOK OUT, Ta hoops l lQ ZOk rOADe Ch tH 8 THIMBLE THEATRE--StarTing Popeyc Now Showing "Expensire Meal" By SEGAR 1 David Stover is here visiting his parents and has with him Ro ger Sturdevant of San Francisco. Mr. Sturdevant is a noted photo grapher of San Francisco Mr. and Mrs. Meryl Smith, Miss Eugenia Whorton, and Theron rflTIIin rinmirHI Hoover are motoring to Newport H.ll !iU r-IKrlU hly h8 they will spend the holi- LUIII1U I IIILI1ILI1 days. Miss Darctthv f onmlui of "Rnd. SJCAl 1L.1S, July Z lAf; AC-IArMt,. ia th honso rvtL of uom oy a majority oi me memoers i jynss Alice Speck. oi me cuy ure oeparuneni, voi-i a ing not 10 sigs, voiuniary pay I j- j cuts circulated at the request of XtSOuV Ot W OITian . . Tl n . 1 I . r teuly today. He ordered Chief if OUnCL W vlVCl" C itaM,4a nrr tAMs a r a l ' 00 III FIB ES I, men! for 30 days, beginning next Tuesday. "I realaa that these firemen belong to .a firemen's union and there is some talk of a strike," be wrote. "I, would welcome one. Anyone that ! goes on one will never work In the fire department again. There will be no strike against public service while I am mayor." -: A total of 418 of the Til mem bers of the department voted yes terday not to sign the voluntary pay cuts. r Molalla Opens Ninth Bucket oo MOLALLA. Ore., July I (AP) The ninth- annual buek- eroo opened here today r with bareback steer riding, a war dance by Umatilla Indians, bull- dogging, calf-roping and broneo ousting. .The buckaroo Is scheduled to continue through the fourth of uy. PirnrE va rTTrvci?v CHICAGO. July 2 rAPl f New members of the new demo- r I cratic national committee in- 1 1 cludef Oregon, Walter 'Pierce, 'Suspect Murder ASTORIA. Ore.. July 2. (AP). PolIce here today expressed fear that an. unidentified woman whose body. was found In the Columbia river near Altoona, Wash., yester day.' morning, had. met. with, fool play. Doctors examining the body said it had been in Vip water only a few hours, and expressed belief the woman was dead before reaching the river. She was about 65, dressed la a blue velvet suit with a llgbt col ored blouse, on which were three large glass buttons and a belt with a glass buckle. SHOTGUN KILLS YOUTH ROSEBURO, Ore., July S (AP) Mark Dempsey. 21, of; De when a shotgun he was carrying was accidentally discharged. fleber : Alfred Fleber, 17, died at Shaw July 2. Survived by parents. drew and Anna Fieber; four brothers, William, Raymond and Herman of Toledo, Ore., and An ton ef Shaw; two Bisters, Mrj. UV lie Bigler of ML nAgel and Sister Jean ot Portland. Remains in care ot Salem Mortuary, tii ; North. Capitol street. Funeral announce WOO FONfc 5AID fO 6ET TlAF PARI? IT TMl WPFK rr 31 YOOR BUPvCR V-i Cm h OlDtVT THINK, WOO fOrACs WOOLU TR05R ANYBODY WCM HIM s-s-s-s- s- SU5H ' SCCRCT rVaeT UPG IS IM COriTArtTy 5 FIVE THOOSIMO OOLLfRS VyATXTX III tor? weu-PicK Me. for lQ&JdJ 1 LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY 1 rl 1- w u II tv 1 jjyjLj GEE, ITS THE FDURm OF OUV-AKPV1 y IS THE. BHZTMDsy OF FT2EEDOM - AW HERB IAMIM ACA6EUUSr JKE IF 1 MAS A CAMAKV 1-1 TOOTS AND CASPER V f I GUESS FOLKS HAS TO 1 BE LOCKED UP BEFORE J A9EU.THIM- UBEeTViS a i jo I sac A Year From Today By DARRELL McCLURE 7-4. IGUE6S FEELMslS 60CF2V FOte MYSELF A1MT" GONMA HELP :60 I1.L CLOSE MY EYES AW PRETEND ,115 NEXT rOvfcXnOFlJurANr TM OLTT PLAYlkT VJTTH THE KJOS AN HAVING A GOOD TIME. Blissful Ignorance COLONEL. HOOFET? CERTAINLY IS TVS GREATEST IMPOSTOR OF MOD ERH TIMES, TDOTSl rC PUT OVER HIS LITTLE HOAX SO THOROUGHLY THAT THE WHOLE WORLD THINKS HES THS DUi SPJFFELSH'.Sr ANO THE 84 IS THAT HIS WIFE THINKS SHE'S A OUCKZSSBUTWArri UNTIL SHE FINOS 5K2 ATU Tl sfsjX' n THINKS WttT5 A M&7&J 1 f 3? UNTIL SHE FINOS )TfVA - Hi 1 DID IT BECALrF I tCWE "l SOPHIE! I JUST PRETENDED I HAD FALLEN HEIR TO A TITLE TO STOP HER FROM DIVORGN& ; MET I DlDMT INTEND TH3 WHOLE THlNcr TO CrO SO FARt OH, I DREAD TO TTU. SOPHS THAT fM twf A DUKE. AND SHSS BurrvEfiOT TO TELL HER TVaTKUTH f SOONER OR LATER! I II 11 W x kim hear bells """SiP blSdJ I i a GOIKTBAMCIBAMG!! l an . i i y i I -TL. TT I ' A r i . t I By JIMMY MURPHY a' 9. I haven't THE NERVES TO TELL THIS TO SOPHIE, M WRITTEN HER ANOTEI I HOPS SHEU- ioAtit2opfu2.: 3 yuZ pUUmfiUitWX rl 7 f ? . SOPHS (SHE CALLS HERSELF "t DUCHESS. SOPHIANNA NOW) BASKS tN X ACUOZSS! THE 5P0TU4HT OF FAME! HOW SHE LOVES tT1 SHES HAVING A RAND TIME 1 SMUBSNi, HER OLD fTJlENW,BUTOUST WATT UNTIL SHE READS HERi BUT WHEN I THINK OP THETEPE I USED TO ASSOCIATE WTTH" . IA. . " a All amm 1 I ,j MUi Manche I. Langley. . ments later. -I