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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1932)
;? ! PAGE TWO The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning. 'November 3, 1932 4 f '-K"XX XX; DOVER STARTS C GfliiST TRIP M i - "ST 1ajAnnftncement.He,il'i Vote atPab AItq J: : (Contlnp4 from p 1)- ;..-.; elaima ot .'ear opponents. the however toadly voiced. that Cali fornia will contribute to tha re sponsibility of Intarniptla; that leadership lot th nation which California itself has prodded." Pleased at Prospect U Of Voting at Houm ? ?' fTho Improved sUnatioa In the country affords ma the deep eat iafactloa at eomlag home to rote, not t for the purpose of carrying on a political canitpljnt amoagst my neighbor, who are my friends, feat to satisfy that proper Instinct inherent in every American to east his rote amongst hla neighbors at hiS owa home. X trust I may not be prerented .from exercising this prollefe..; i'., The president spoke also of di rect aid given to the Pacific eoaajt ; by federal recona traction agencies. ;He recalled tbat tha Reconstrue ; tion Finance corporation had advanced- funds .for the San Fraa-clsco-Oakland bridge and for the brmglng ot. Colorado rirer water Into, aoatbern California. He add ed these "enterprises .will finally expend, upwarda of $t0,0M00 for the latigoratloaot the indus tries of California and the whole , nation. i . I He recalled also Ihat the Na tional Credit association and, the 'Reconstruction. corporation at oae time advanced orer 11.500,000 to 40 banks In California. 1 2 in Ore gon and 99; In Washington. Ia ad dition, he added, the government bad expended or let contracts for prejects daring the last four years totaling $100,000,000 In Califor nia. $45,000,000 in Oregon aad , 150.000,000 in Washington. la bia tariff attack, Mr. Hoover quoted statements by Franklin D. Roosevelt at Seattle and Sacra mento and asserted tbat "while . our opponent la Ignorant of the facta he reveals his hostility to the tariffs oaiPaelfic coast prod ; acta. . Mr. Hoover quoted nnmeroua figures to show that It tariff bar riere were jacking there would be a nood or goods outside our boaadarieS from the north, the south, across the Atlantic and the Pacific- i He aaid New Zealand batter coald be sold on the pacific coast at lesa than 14 cents a pound while domestic grades now bring Zl cents a paund. Willamette Valley . Industry Mentioned "Raisins and figs of Fresno and prunes of the Willamette and Santa Clara Taneya hessid. "would sell in the common mar kets of the east at rates tbat r 1 "Tswereasaai YivrvmmmmmmmmmmimmKi LAST TIMES TODAY! nn Ycur Eyes Sec II ..CanYcur Hsrvcs ..U a wiUieas le Ike sensa- f C!oeelcrin.eMlhecveHngT liller plant tKe silt oa an laaoceat maa..Utrn)s aed lavahler.. while the police eiebefrle.Wtyeoeftew WIO IS,. ii;'::- K ' I . ml ergs? i j i A - , . Dickie Moore ' ; r.' - ! ' "' ' I U Hardla Albright " I , -J -raniE pmNCBr zsf(r . HI) " : ' r Right- II '; 1 i j I Ha the T.Or.3En.;o2 OALEr.31 MOTHERS! SWEETTHEARTSl WIVES! , - Is there an invisible government rna by diplomatic Eold-dlssrers who handicap .'out Presidents and Con gress? See.,; "X , . r- - ,. - Tht Ptetcre ThetVWm f State AU Sclem! COMING , tiT The Call Board . By OLIVE M. t DOAK ! e wARjrcir. imna. KM5TNmi.ja Todays-Lew Ayreaaad Man. Teen rrSullrraa la -Okay : America, v?-r h : - Friday EdDaoal Low -Guilty aa HelL? la , ; THE ., GBAND .: '" . Today Barbara i Stanwyck fin rso Big.? :!. ) ! Friday James Cagney la "The Crowd Boare." w THE nOLLTWOOD J TnAuv Trim ttrtvmm lit Taut ' : Companions. f Friday Rex Bell la "Broad- would, despite the low lovel ot present prices, reduce returns to those producera by nearly SO per cent. I j TTie price of California wool la the Boston market lis 3ft cents today, whereas your I Australian competitors could aeit tne same kind ot wool there for less than 23 cents, aad the difference is due solely to the tariff." He aaid the Pacific coast fish industries bad been confronted "with the grayest peril" as a re sale of depreciation in Japanese currency, and that other Pacific coast iadustries, such as canned vegetables, dried traits, beans, palp, iron and eteel "may also bo threatened ; with a similar peril." ' Saying he bad asked the tariff commission to Investigate the sit uation, be added that "If the find- lags warrant. I shall at once ln crease the projection to these in dustries." Discussine- bis administration's efforts to alleviate the economic situation, the president said over I 30 .measures bad been initiated to sustain wages and employment aad hanger and cold. "Our opponents," he said, "at ne time nave proposed a single constructive measure to meet this emergency." Wolf Ending 46 Wears in Army VANCOUVER, Wash.. Nov. CAP) Brigadier-General Paul A. Wolf, 14, commanding officer of the 5th United States Infantry brigade and post commander at Vancouver barracks, was to leave bare tonight for his home in San Anto: io, Texas. - The geaeral ordered home to await automatic retirement sched uled for January 1, Is completing 41 years of active service in the army. It's Glorious Entertain ment Wtl 1EW AYRES MAUREEN CSULUYAN 0 C ' 11 TOMORROW j I :"rt: X ' " I TODAY ONLY I I: 'Jfi - (77)1 .ri i n h It f i I J It W f Arenz or remand low cn Bartow-Aurora Section, Pacific Highway (Contlaued tram' page 1) J mission today had to do mostly with, seeendaiT highway requests la order to supply work for n employed. Lealle Scott, chairmaa of the commission, spoke ta frank terms when he told them they would eoasldar the projects boV that the commission had so money at uua urn aor would undertake any project which could not ba completed with funds now avail able. Scott informed thorn ho did not want any reference to "Scott's romes' in; later yean. , The largest contract let wa om the Wolf Creek route la Clatsop county. The job called for grad ing ot S.S miles of tha Humbug mountain-ranger station section of the Wolf Creek highway. Tha La dee Logging company of Portland received the award at S1S8.2S0. The other Wolf Creek Job, calling for S.S 3 miles of grading on the Tillamook: county line - Sunaet camp section, was held pendinr approval by the bureau ot public roads. J. A. Lyons of Portland was low at 190.330. The wo"Vk will be In Washington county. Three Contract fa This Couatr Figure Tneoaoro Areas ot Portland was low bidder on; the Barlow- Aurora section of tha Pacifie high way, 3.4 miles tegradlag and re paving in Clackamas and Marion counties, at $76,452. The bid was held pending approval of the bu reau of public roads. Oscar Stor- aasli of SUverton will receive the Silver Creek Falls bridge award la Marion couaty at 33726 npon approval or tae Marion county court. Cobbs ft Mitchell combanv ot Salem was awarded the reroof ing of the highway department shops at Salem. l , Other bids awarded late today or to bo awarded within the next week include: Valley l Falls - Okerman ranch section of Lakeview-Burns high way in Harney and Lake counties. 33.3 miles gravel surfacing; Un ion Engineering comoanv of Sa lem at 134,331. Albany-Tangent section of the Pacific highway in Linn county. 4.s miles of grade widening: Lo gan Construction company or Ar lington, at 9808. Newberg-McMinnville section ot West Side Pacific highway in Yamhill county, T.37 miles of re grading; j. A. Lyons, Portland, at Odom A DuRette ot Salem were successful bidden on two bridge projects, oae calling tor two trea ties oa the Woodbara-Molalla sec ondary highway ia Clackamas couaty at $4730, aad on three eaU verts and trestles on the West Bid Pacific highway between Newbarg and McMinnville la Yamhill coun ty at 311,830. Ugly Passions in Compaign Scored By Newton Baker i Bostn. Nov. t fAPl NAwtA 1 D. Baker, war time secretary of war. tonight delivered hla eeeoad speech ot the day in behalf of the democratic national ticket before a rally s in Tremont temnla . few hoars before ho had made an appeal ror tne ticket berore a j meeting of the Harvard Univer sity Democratic club.- , Baker at the outset aaid he , wished to "disassociate myself from the bitterness of this cam paign. He said he beUernd that "Ditterneas and scolding and ag 1t nasstana tit All Vinda anwortny or us and I brush them , aaiae." Biuxa Tins' O0TJPO3I -", " . - ..: mmtmH " i rAL llt5bl - i 1 Admit One when i pre. I sented with one 25c paid I t admission i S - .I " lira. Franklin D. Boosevelt, wife of the Democratic nominee far the Presidency, is shown in Uie plana which carried her from Atlantai Ga., to Newark, N. J. Mrs. Roose relt whiled away the boors in tha air by knitting. Just as if she were at her awn i fireside. , She waa Eeted by a large Catherine of her band's backers on her arrival at Newark. . Comfort, Noted Writer, Dies oi Heart Trouble LOS ANGELES. Nov. 3. (AP) Two hours after he had been taken to a hospital. Will Loving- ton Comfort. 3, novelist and short story writer, died today of heart trouble. Comfort, former baseball play er. newspaperman and war corres pondent, was bora In Kalamasoo, Mich.. January 17, 1S78. Ho Is survived by his widow. Among tha better known of his novels wore "Rutledgo Rides Alone." "Fate Knocks at the Door." "Somewhere South ot Sorora" and "The Public Square." square. DEFICIT IS MOUNTING WASHINGTON. Nov. 3 (AP) October saw aa addition ot 1337,941,133 to the federal def icit, making the toUl for the first fonr montha of the preseat fiscal year 3629.883.033. The excess of expenditures for the correspond ing period last year waa 1647,' 578.961. EDUCATOR DIES BATON ROUGE. La., Nor. 8w (AP) Colonel Thomaa Duckett Boyd. 73, president emeritaa ot Louisiana State university, died tenigbt. f m m i -Nu w w -mi.u .i i ij. . u i ii. . i i im w.w i m mw.tmtnm.mw w mwiw .'.,.'. . t.ii. nwwwfn ' l iu ". .mj.wjwii.ijji iu," 'I utHff. M I ' ,v ' " ' V rr-r j, : hJJ I-'. "- - TUi I ' 'hx ' rHpo! Fall Hert In First 2 Days Of November Over Half Of October Total CCaattaued Cross pace I) - asses in tha Cascades. Five la- eaee of enow lay oa Snoqaalmie paaa, main highway route be tween western aad eastern Wash ington, and oa Blewett pass. Chi nook pass was considered closed for the season. - Heavy snow fall, which had reached blixxard proportions, was reported at Taboo City, Lake Ta hoe, in the Sierras. The storm, which raged from Monterey to tha Gulf of Alaska, waa moving Inland over Canada aad the northern states. Rainfall at Seattle for the 34 hoars -ending at f pjn. totalled 1.79 Inches, tha heaviest ot the season. Saa Francisco received 08 of an Inch, bringing tha to tal for the seasoa to .07. Normal to date la 1.69 Inches. The heaviest rainfall fax Cali fornia waa at Eureka which re ported .86 ot aa Inch. Farm Board Cloth Shipment Arrives For Unemployed The first shipment of Bed Cross farm board cotton' cloth was re ceived here yesterday. It con sists of 800 yards of attractively- patterned gingham.. The goods will be given needy families. Ia its work la cooperation with the county court, the local Red Cross yesterday also arranged transportation tor five indigent families who will be sent to rel atives er friends who have agreed to care tor them. One man was started on his way to Massachus stts. Slander Charged To Bruce Barton NEW YORK. Nor. 1 (AP) Salt tor I250.00D charging Bruce Barton with alander has been brought In supreme court by Mrs. Frances King, a former employe In Barton's advertising agency. , Mrs. King accused . Barton of telling prospective employes she had blackmailed aad worked a badger game" on hlna. HONORED ON BIRTHDAY BETHANY, Nov. 3 Mr. and Mrs. Silas Torrend were hosts at their heme Sunday afternoon hon oring their son. Palmer, on his ltta birthday. Preseat were Mr. aad Mrs. E. Overland, Edna, Lena aad Albert Overland. Thorvald Hansen, Ralph SJovangen, Merle but folks The truth is Tarry; Eunice TerrendV Olga Tor vend, Agsso Torrend aad the hon or guest and tha host aad hostess. Gets Job. Goes -1 To Carry News4 Home9is Killed BINbV Wis., Nov. 2 ( AP) George PahU 64. ot FranksvUIe, applied for a job at the Kraut fac tory ia Franksvllle tonight i aad was told to report, la tha morning. Ia his aageraasa ta tell his wife aad three children tha good news, Pshl chose , the shortest:, route home, along the Mflwaakee road tracks. He waa atruck aad killed by a train. -,; 1'-?. "It ' ; Bank afHeppher To Take Holiday PENDLETON, Ore. Nov.; 3. (AP) Word waa received to day that the Farmers and Stock- growers Bank of Heppner had de clared a 26-day moratorium to protect depositors during the per iod of low prives for commodities and forced grain selling. The First National bank of Heppner declared a holiday last week Both institutions are re ported la good financial condition. Threat to Hang Youth is Probed LOS ANGELES. Not. 2 Y API An accusation by Bobby Glbaoa, ii year oia wooa&lae, Texas, boy that his foster father threateaed to hang him after months ot tor ture was investigated today by Ju venile authorities who said the boy's foster parents had disap peared from a tourist camp near Burbank. PLAN POTL.UCK SUPPEH Tha ladles of the Medical aux iliary will meet for a ootlaelc sno- per at the home ot Mrs. O. C. Bel li agar at :39 tonight All wives of members ot the Tri-County Medical association are invited. Ninety - two per cent of the 3498 pupils enrolled ia Aberdeen, 8. D., public schools hsve bank eavtnga accounts, tha 1 average balance being 393.60. ; What'SCARFAC? tiioont to gang pictures tXUnTO moans to thrillers! RELEASED BY UNITED ARTISTS tobaccos Uiibitiie finest, Aey mellowing, are Vr tobaccos in all tie world- ben that does not explain everywhere regard Lucky Strike as the mildest cigarette. lact is, we never overlook that "Nature injthe eiaom xvuia" so these tobaccos, after proper aging aa tuns (Continued from page 1) ? since their arrival la the capital, they turned in the petition bundle at the .station,! Just as it it were a coat or bag., They received an or dinary receipt; in exchange for It, t The police discovered what had been dona aad obtained the peti tion after making a request to railway authorities. . - I The only' disturbance today In volving "hanger marc hers" was one in which they denied all re sponsibility. About 100 police were sent " to a London county alms house to quiet a demonstra tion by inmates who were aroused because of extra food given to "hunger marchers': stationed there. The, latter received the ex tra food from sympathizers. They denied any part la the demonstra tions aad said they had shared food with the regular inmates. Roosevelt Will Visit Jersey in Campaign Jaunt ALBANY, N. Y Nov. 3. (AP) Franklin D. Roosevelt tonight extended his plans for winding tip his campaign ; for the presidency in the New York City area to In clude aa automobile trip tomor row night Into New Jersey. Leaving his New York city home about f p. m. tomorrow, the democratic presides tal candi date will drive through Jersey City and Newark before going to the Metropolitan opera house to speak to the Roosevelt for Presi dent dab. Rural Districts Swing to Hoover A very definite swing to Presi dent Hoover is to be noticed in the rural districts ia the last few weeks, George FuTlenweider, pres ident ot the Oregon Dairymen's league, reported whea hero this week la the Interests of the oleo margarine tax. Fnlleawelder said Starts Sunday HOLLYWOOD I ; THE JUGGERNAUT OF THE JUNGLE "Nature in the Rau'os portrayed by the famous animal painter, Paul , Bransom inspired by the savast charge of the African rliinoceros crashingikroughlheuntamediun "Nature in theRaxvUSddomMiUr and raw tobaccos have no place in ,-. cigarette. , why j7ng processdesenbed -bjtheyx.; woras x-irs why folks in every dty, town and the ict say that Raw ;:x;agarettes.;; j;; ;v; hne U Irti k -ir . ux w , VsV Vir v, and Thr.t rcU?, farmers were thinking long and" hard on tho altoation and while , they admitted conditioha were dis tressing, the Roosevelt program,1 fully seen, was not appealing to them. .Fallen welder said ha had , talked- to many - men', who had ehaaged theic; opinions, on s the ' campaign since Hoover opened up , pnlySafeThing . CINCINNATI. O. Nor; t (AP) Declaring the "cealral arlsla of ' this campaign- Is "the waalng of" that! eonfidehce la politic and ; government now conspicuous osr every hand,., former Governor; James M. jCox of. Ohio aaid to night "the one safe way oat ot oar plight la to change to throw oat the management which : haa brought us to this pitiable pass. TONIGHT - 9:00 - Hear -Louis Lachmund Balexa Farmer DISCUSS of Prohibition Laws Under Auspices ot Women's Organization For National Prohibition Reform -Other Interesting Talks oa this subject each evening until and including No vember T over KEX. (FA air. w.o.w.rja, s Davis Hiurwi, Ckkirmaa OS ItmM Bldf, Ptrtlaaa, Qnm) lOLLYtfOQl Home of 23c,TaIklee ' , Lasa Tlnsee Today Packed with excitement fan yoa're thrilled wrery meat with this picture of tbe race track with TOM BROWN, JAMES G LEA SOX, MAUREEN O'SCLiJ T7AN, MICKEY BOON BY, ANDYDEYINB Coming Friday Satarday Rex Bell in 'Broadway to Cheyenne' and Harry Carey in THE LAST OF THE ; MOHICANS -F . " - -4-' -y -4-; X Reracafl .C-.y. .'.-. X-...-.-..-V-.v :voc-.'" ......v :.'v. -" ,.,f..T.,V..,Y..V...t,.-,V-.-,S.-.,,..r.-J..vA.-.-0.-N.-.-.r TT - v II JL1UL 1 -' mniil then given the toasted".' 1 hat's r. Luckics arc such rl of tr.T!d iXf?:?n J 1 v - 1 Good Tonight Only - Not. S 1 I I GRAND THEATRE . xVXX;w - . -,v;j ? . - . . . .r - - f 1 : - -- . . . . . . . .i - " " 1 7 " I, i " ' '"" ' ' ' " ' ' ' ' -t- " i- 4 '