The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 15, 1933, Page 1, Image 1

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    WRATH ER r
Partly t-loudy, orcaiot
ally anUld today sad
Monday; Max. Temp. Fri
day 68, Mia. 34, river a.,
feet, variable winds. '
CIRCULATION
Distribution -Average
Mar- 'S3
7001
Met paid, daily, Sanday,669
KEMBZK A B. C.
POUND CD lESS
EIGHTY-THIRD YEAR
Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning-, April 15, 1933
No, 17
I
:
' r
1
i
(
MAY
CLEAR UP
Blossoms Come Early at Capital;
First Lady is Pictured Amid Them
Philomath Bank Holdup one
Of Several Mentioned;
Seek to Identify
Travelers Checks Traced
As From That Source;
Tacoma Case Eyed
PORTLAND, April 14. (AP)
With tbe arrest of four men
here today police said tonight
they hope to clear up a number
of recent spectacular crimes in
Oregon and Washington and pos
sibly British Columbia, Four wo
men were arrested with them.
The four men, arrested through
the cooperation of Tacoma, Wash.,
authorities, were charged with be
ing members Of a gang of six who
held up J. S. O'Day, Tacoma mes
senger, and robbed him of $4500
payroll of the Tocoma Veterans'
hospital.
Police reported that $600 in
travelers' checks, found In one
of their rooms, were identified as
taken from the Philomath, Ore.,
bank, when that .institution 'was
held up January 4. The bank rob
bers escaped with about -xizoo. .
Three of those taken here ad
mitted, police said, participation
la the Tacoma robbery. They are:
Frank Butler, alias James Spen
cer. P. W. Jackson, alias Jackson
Wallace, and Carl Brehan. The
fourth man, Perry Reynolds, de
nied the charge. The arrested wo
men gave their names as Juanlta
Miller Thelma Travers, Ethel Ben
ton and Harriet Short. Miss Mil
ler was ordered held as a fugitive
from Tacoma, and Thelma Travers
and Ethel Benton were ordered
held for the district attorney's
office here. No charge had been
placed against Miss Short.
immediately after the arrests
Butler. Jackson. Brehan and Miss
Miller and Miss Short were rush
ed to Vancouver, Waslu, and
lodged in the Jail there, to avoid
extradition claims.
Police said that a pencil-
drawn map discovered in But
ler's room resembled a floor plan
of the Union State .bank. f Port
land, and that they would ques
tion the arrested men In con
nection with the daylight hold
up of that institution March
when two men escaped with
about $10,000
Warden James Lewis of the
Oregon state penitentiary went
to Vancouver today and identi
tied Butler as a convict who es
caped from the prison last Oct.
13. He Bald Butler still has six
years to serve for larceny
The three women held up in
the Philomath bank robbery to
night viewed Brehan In a police
lineup here and later looked at
Butler, Wallace and Reynolds in
the county Jail at Vancouver.
They were unable to Identify any
"'.'.- i
-
V :::::-.: ,.: x .:: ;
ill
:.:t,-':v-
Ml PORTION
OF BANKS ARE
IN OPERATION
Shoals Plan
Attacked by
Power Firms
I. April 14 "JO
and power in-1 lis
lned in a reiter- . I I
t miktmi taal I"
EXTENSIVE JOB
CREATION PLAN
SHAPING P
ESoore Guilty in First
WASHINGTON,
( AP) Fertiliser
terests today Joined
ated demand that congress take
out of the Roosevelt Tennessee
valler nlan all provisions Imply-
Three-Fourths of Federal ta po"1"? .tT'r?m,enL-m" Minimum Wage law may be
Reserve Institutions spokesmen for each toid the Added to Shortening
. n,.. . house military eommutee meir
MO l neSiriCiea I industries were expanded far be
yond present consumption' levels
n tv.i ..1. wltK tit aM if .
Over Half of State Banks subsidy from the treasury could Rail Reorganization Means
cfeoif. P Many More Idle; Seek
Don't scrap a private Indus
try," nrged Charles J. Brand, e-
cretary of the National Fertltf-
Degree; Lite Term and
No Pardon, Jurors say
Of Hours, Report
Running, Most Funds
Again Available
To Counteract it
Solons Ratifying
Appointments to
Education Board
There will be no formal meet
ing of members of the legislative
Interim committee to ratify the
eer association. - ii you are ao-i - - .-. - . r rhri t.
Press . ,. ,rvrnt Uto tArj An epocnai joo-creauon i . .v. "V n
NEW YORK, April 14 - Sur- Vmian wlih . buy existing crrying the administration -"T" m-
,, iprogram mio lis awauea secona . 7 . 7...
Pnt'- .v f I bers of the sUte board of high-
late today while congress strove edneatlon, the "tl" d
ta lerlslate mlrhtv nroleets al- partment announced Friday.
raidr before it. Letters have been sent to
Its backbone would be a feder- members of the interim commlt
al bond issue of several billions tee asking them to ratify the ap-
for public works. pointments individually, and two
hafiir wm net-1 rnHe have been received. In
ed turn out as the president both of these cases the appoint
hopes, it can now be said feder-1 tees were satisfactory
al protection for wage levels will
Recommendation Said
First of its Kind
Made in Oregon
Copyrighted, 133. the Associated Eer Ms0ciatlon. "If you are go- YASGJNC.,Ap-v
I vers or tne banking suuauon
throughout the nation tonight
showed far more than three-quar
ters of the federal reserve member
banks and well over half the state
banks are open and doing busi
ness on an unrestricted basis
Before the bank holiday there
were 6,736 federal reserve mem
ber institutions In operation n
the 12 districts
ILK HIKING IS
TOPIC SI MEETING
Today 5,443 were open without
restrictions. 680 were open with c,1-ft--,li Cnlntinn Cnnnrl be invoked
The smiling- "First Lady of the Land, Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, restrictions, and 543 had not yet wuww-w - fiut Defore tnl avenne Ufc.
Dictured mm aha mloved the frasraiife af the first cherrr bloe I been licensed.
Boms fat the famous grove that fringe the Tidal Basin in Wash- There were 11,435 state banks
ington. The cherry trees, a gift from Japan to the United States, doing business before the holiday
are now In full bloom, mf""g the Basin one of the prettiest spots in the 47 states for which figures
in the capital. re avauaDie.
Toaay, in mose tt buum, (,oi
At Seattle Outlined
By Co-op Leader
Successful manner In which the
OREGON MOI TO BE
BLOSSOM PLAN
en, Mr. Roosevelt Intends to sub
mit to congress early next week
still another special message.
proposing a federal coordinator
to ease the way to better days
for the railroads.
With extensive rail reorganl-
Dins
I10F
F
IIND IS PROTESTED
of these banks were open without new milk nroduclng and distribut
er ctons, 3.0 iz were open wun Ing t-up in Seattle ntloni envisioned in that, jobs fioVMTlOr WittS ROOSeVC
restrictions, and the remaining WM told by W. W. Henry, of I likely to be washed out Just I VernOi irc nuuawi
' -orunu, V. alt I ,a tb nne governmental ASKliig neSlUIUlluii ui
fiFNT irJTn FflRFRT Till 11 RY CnFRRIllNS -..- - stes-ussrw RZ::rC
UUll I III I u I I w . serve lf" night. g,Ten tH,tT thft pres,dent and his Governor Meier Friday took a
I were available which showed only vr u.nr nnntt from letter :.v.... ...., K. . .v. .i.in from
... . - . a small percentage of the deposits frn thft ce.tti carnation com- n. . kaa aaa from fed-
21 ,000 fOr U. S. LanOS anO WeeK 1-rOm I OmOrrOW een in bank, before the holiday are offlc- whicn declared Batl8. -"t ; VoioiiuonV. and al fundi T allotted to tn7 Ore- I the recommendatioa for
State Asks Death and
Defense Does not
. Urge Acquittal
HOOD RIVER. Ore., April 14
(AP) A circuit court Jury hera
tonight convicted William J.
Moore, 24, of first degree murder
for the death of Harold. F. O'Con
nor, young Brooklyn, N. Y., tour
1st. After deliberating exactly S
hours, the Jury returned its ver
diet with, the recommendation
that Moore be sentenced to iza
prisonment for life without par
don.
The state had aked that the
death penalty be Invoked. The
jury's recommendation for impri
sonment for life makes that sen
tence mandatory on the court. At
torneys said that the Jury was the
first in Oregon to make tbe fur
ther recommendation that Moore
be pardoned "under no circum
stances." They said such a recom
mendation is a bar under Oregon
law to Moore's freedom by thai
means.
Moore, pale and glancing at
floor as the signed verdict was
. handed to the judge, smiled slow-
More for Statetands
Allocated, Word
As Probable Date; Much ;,thoTre.tricuoI
factory adjustment of milk trou- I are equally
Publicity Arranged
In the New York federal reserve
PORTLAND, Ore., April 14
( AP) The first Quota of the 21.-
000 men to be employed in the
district, for example. 153 of the ' the 8ame basl8. and uniM 4n
s z s memoer oanas are euner un- a i t,a -it mar-
Blossom day. 1933. will occur der restriction, or closed, vet the I T ' 3 rXlZ 1, IZI I,, 7.
one week from tomorrow provided I 875 member banks open without OA-ttWn nroloneed milk strife
the weather is suitable, the Sa- restrictions had at the first of the l",1? VJ.VZ .r w.n
national forests of Oregon and lem Cherrians decided at their year about 97 per cent of the de- tnege two enj, wcr ttuined, and
Washington this summer ia ex- dinner meeting at the Marlon ho- posits in all member banks in the far a few attempta to start
pected to be called early next isi last nigni. unusuai prepara- aismct. trouble again have been effective-
week to the army camps wnere uons wi De maae, was an- m uregon, 7 or me state Jy (topped by cooperation from all
they will be conditioned before nounced, to attract thousands of banks which were open before the roups uniting to put the Seattle
taking to the woods, it was under- sightseers to Salem for this an- holiday ire operating without re- Di throuith successfully.
stood here today. nual event. stnction, zs wnn limits on wun- Mr Henrr pointed to two indi-
Tne total oi i,vvv men, w uv i x-icmrcB vi etui, mo i ui. nun m uao Buujeit cations of betterment in the milk
tent out m loft camps oi svv wo i nans, mna scene irum oioBsoia-ua- 110 uquiuaiiou or rBorfioiuuon. gttntlon to far as price goes,
each, will apply to the national decked Marlon and Polk eountyl 1 First, efforts of thf dairy associa
forests alone, it was reportea on orcnarat win do seni to newspa- nnftI.rB, nlll rnimn lon to get the Portland butterfat
good auinoruy. in saaiuoa, ure- pen mrouRuuui mo ouriuwm,
Dies COUia HOI comw m uiu I Pnynuainr fhem
laerai reserve ni0.. .u j-tHhntors hnv . r .r."
u tym. f wora wnere ut mosi neeueo. mm
, - i h a m n urn ft: ana unless aii i . ... . . .. i " .. . , An. .
as ids aay enaea, Mr. nuos-1 fresiaeni. kooictcu
set on more than g0n highway commission, to the imMra"nMlehVI1 "
:hem by spreading forest relief employment pro- r per. oat
if. most needed. Sam. The governor wired to mml Yll00. to Be"
(Turn to page 2, col. I)
ASSERTS SflBDTAGE
wis fob m USE
the state demand that Moore pay
with his life for slaying ts
verting federal aid and emergen- " T-f w" n oeineaa-
.r- . m. i.i-.n. ed him and to hear the defena
"The recent executive order dl-
M08COW, April 14 (AP) A
Russian witness charged tonight
(Turn to page 2, col. 3)
FALSE REPORT LED
BLIMP TO TRAGEDY
i the event will be announced over
radio stations, and made the sub
ject of a special edition of the
Oregon magazine, published by
Murray Wade.
As in the past, free automobile
tours of the Blossom day orchard
routes will be provided. Kenneth
HHH MAIL huUfiU
lV- , A. Ar4lnallT Allotftd
CJ - -;r. m, nr..- llr. I 4 .
for work on highways unuer m ,
of the. nnemnlovment relief "fe7 on the tht capiUl
rf .n.. ,or,trrtlBr 1S0O.00O punishment Is not an effects
,nA ron.trnctlon in Oregon deterrent to crime.
v.v. -i k. atartail wltbln SO -"""'o uuiuica vn ia wii-
v. .t.n4 .v.. V- -1.
The release of these funds d killed O'Connor last Aug.
would greatly assist us in the un- on the Columbia highway
' mhim and ia neJ" here, concealed the body
much desired by the people of the brush near the highway
this state. Please make mi. re-1 siaim
n
OF
that L. C. Thornton, British engi
. . . , ... a i kmc vl wi. kuuiu ub. -J i . , Am.An rnnfli iviu uuuuu. ucirua iiior-
"".e cm,.aA, ".V the large Moscow electric station Tl . mw ner. declared that .Moor. w.
cent condensery increase in milk 5!! fi1 'JZ , to this sUte and will throw it f t an overgrown monkey
..m. mA.th .n ro- ""ories and power wireless sta- .,r,ioTd mn out of whose mind hasn't kept pace
. ' " :t ' rr tions. i . "v ,,.. with bodv" h ti.
THtri ii mr mnniuer lucrKasa. i . . wnr r m. ii ti urni ii n i caavcu iiiud i - - - - "
. mm arcnflaiion was maae dt ia. i --- : . . i rAnsnt .
MattAr. nftrtinpnt to thA Salem . " . . . . . ' I trlA hm nPBSM Of Ifftae OQ i wiu khi
r i a Mirnrnrniin wnn win ma.n& i -w -- i -t
by the small crowd, with R. W. anm . th Rn8glan. f.elnc
.;:. Daniels, new ambassador to Mexi-
LAKBMUKai-, j., Jipni neighboring communities, Cherri- T hVvn r.u
(AP) Officers of the naval Tftted t. roonerate with the ntn4 covered a broken rail
air station told the court of In- management of the state fair by nolh VSt L v,7
quiry toaay tney were reaay w advertising it on these trips. Next
r4fl.& t Vi a hlimn J-S if neces- I tit-jj j a
They were unable to Identify any 40 survivors of r,lt Xi.L ', h VhV,nt. Tf ln temperature. It was replaced
of the latter three, but Mrs. Cora J . ' f5vJ5 m!bv heard? were 1 cTiIJLm il?nhM nt n. I while the train was held up 30
clinging to her floating hull at merce at a banquet and will take
Brehan was one of the two who sea:
SSSoi- Carmwni leave 'SS (AP) - A. half houV Wore' the arke. manager of the Salem of- ; s ttah .nln I on
-W!lLl!!Ie frm guarded train carrying Josephus th dlscu88,0n- charges of tabotage and es-
lag vuftiuirrr ui tuuiuirji
which they .re dependent. Connor dui ne wisoed to rol
"Ro.d bnlldinr offers the best utm w " aamu, dui in tb
H CONFESSES
committed the robbery. She made
the definite assertion, police
said, after asking that Brehan
speak.
the Salem band with them. Later
Today's session was devoted to they will visit Mt. Angel and on
an investigation of the blimp's June 2 will attend the Lebanon
loss with death of two men dur
ing the search the day after the
Akron's crash.
A false report as to the 40
survivors, the court heard, led j
to a decision to send out the
non-rigid ship In the face of
. . . . i.
f . m jT I weainer inai was uDiiru
lathering Here hut that did not make her opera-
(Turn to page 2, col. 3)
Heltzel Will be
Honored at Bar
OWE KILLED
minutes.
Mr. Daniela sent his greetings
and those of President Roosevelt
to the Mexican people from Mon
terey. The new ambassador will ar
rive here Saturday morning.
COLEMAN IS FREED
charges of tabotage
pionage.
Thornton promptly denied the
charge, declaring that never had
he so much as talked to Sukuro
cbkln. In his confession the Russian
plant manager asserted he had
sabotaged machinery and had con
cealed defects In equipment. He
did so, he declared, on orders
Thornton bad given him In De
means of quick turnover to la-
(Turn to page 2, col. S)
MURDER HINTED IN
MRS
E DEATH
.IT 1VTI - Inrll 11
.n dw V ' hn cember, 1932. and he assured the
(AZT-R-n.E;.C.0l!r.' court that he and Thornton had
planned to disable the station
IMPERILED IN FIRE
The Marion county bar asso
ciation will convene at the coun
ty courthouse at 11 o'clock this
morning to pay its respects to
the memory of James O. Heltxel,
Salem attorney who disappeared
September 3, 1932, while en
route to San Francisco by boat.
At this memorial meeting, the
George Bent is
Given New Post;
SACRAMENTO. April 14.
An aged Chinese was burned to
death and approximately 200
served four years on a chain gang
wis Vrt.d todS DrGoT7rno;i comely in the event of war,
Eugene Talmadge. I rn i yV
Coleman was convicted four i HlHIinune r 11111
VI. I
years ago xor me ijiug vi mo I r r . y-
bride and was sentenced to lire lGIUSeS ZO rSLW
un pruuumeuu
Jimm stark, npero serving a
Roads to State le foi lvtt-J
Three Counties
Turn Secondary
Tax on Revenue
LONG BEACH. April 14 (AP)
With a towel knotted about the
neck and bruises upon the head.
the body of Mrs. Caroline F.
Home 73. wealthy widow, was
found by her son, Walter J.
Home, prominent yachtsman, to
day in her apartments nere at a
fashionable hotel.
A Burgeon, Dr. C. R. Bishop,
wno was called Into the case, gave
preliminary opinion that Mrs.
wrestling over the gun he shot
him."
George Mowry, deputy district
attorney of Multnomah county,
assisting District Attorney Jnha
Kaker of Hood River county.
closed the state's argument with
a declaration that the defensa
attorney "has made a plea cf --guilty."
Denying that legal insanity
had been proved, Mowry stated
tnat Oregon laws are that if a
man In the commission of anoth
er crime, such as robbery, kill.
another, whether Intentionally or
inadvertently, he is guilty of first
degree murder.
GRANTS
(AP)-
ANTS PA?q AnHl 14 to deatn wUa.!:.?kr the nlgM (AP) The Portland of fice of the tory of California has
-More than 170 miles f ot "th , . A. Pacifle Telephone and Telegraph strangulation. Subsequ
AlOre man 1 i U miles OI rnloman', rnaction to news Of ..i.i. j .v. 1t- annnnnrA1 that nt
other, were endangered late to- "JJjJjnr J.,!; JSjffS' tn confession consisted prlnclp- Lounycll 'thlt lt' wlll not pay tBe s autopsy tomorrow they had
m m f TT7 inigm wnen names swept lurousa i ; T . . , any oi an exyresscu mn i cent tx on Its gross revenues, me aein uiui .
AlreadV On WaV the headquarters of the Chinese to be transferred from coun- nls Bonf Robert E.. Jr., now five due for tne flrBt quarter of thU tectlves admitted they had begun
InAnAvoiATif nKsnciation bnildintr. I ty to state control Monday mor- Vear old. whom he has not aeen L... in,n 9n an investigation.
CIIEMAWA. April Sm'rtLSitSSZ entlnl "
Home, widow of CoL Walter J.
PORTLAND. Ore.. April 14. Home, colorful figure in the hls-
aieu iruui
ently po-
company today notified the city lice announced mat Pn"C n
Later de-
wlth
Al mis memorial meeting, i v"4"' '""'::. II v.-. mcnto'i Chinatown
resolutions of condolence to the w. ueni. ior severai j - bnildlng which has play- er for southern Oregon
family and in honor to Heltxel'. advisor at the Chemawa Indian The t JWJB. nna" g. headquarter, here.
long .ervice here e read, "f" th.Ve will as- Ufe here for nearly 4 years, wa. Three secondary highways in
The two circuit court Judges. 8111, Oklahoma. " LWI16I, hT WMr ChoM. 71-vear- Jackson, two In Josephine and
hl '"Lb ,5 agency therT He is a native of old Chinese, who ha. been in Sac- on. In Dougla. countle. are in-
The company's decision, It was ine preliminary -
said, would leave lt to the federal veloped that although the P"t-
court to determine what are reas- menu were In scrupulous order,
onable conditions for a franchise two purse, belonging to the vic-
to be granted tbe company by the Urn were found open and empty
council. The company attacked of all contents. Afterward It was
.v. iittinn.iu. ti k nor learned that nollce. for some days
WALLA WALLA, Wash., April . u , Daied by the state past, had been conducting an in-
Late Sports
Children Killed
In Prairie Fire
DRTTMHELLER, AlU.. April 14
(AP) Two children lost their
lives and their mother suffered
severe burns when they were
trapped in a prairie tire which
swept 15 square miles of farm
and bush lands near here today.
The dead were Margaret Deva-
leriola, 1C, and her sister Ellen.
11. Mrs. Dick Devaleriola, the
mother, was rescued In a serious
condition.
eiung, win ue rtjyueoieu i uociki-- - Mn oeonte Jr . ramento more than 40 years. I voivea in me cnange, nromiej "auwi auua, ,,u., cent ux law passed by tne state pasi, na wutV.u
these document, in the Journals that state ij jon re Jr., t Wat taid, which 1. being made in ad- 14. (AP) w Coach R. V. 1 leglsiatlire at it. recent .esslon. vestlgatlon i of petty thefts com
of their respective department.. I!, "h& ' , insured. - vance of the date authorixed by "Nig" Borleske'. Whitman nine Qdep wn,cn tfld clty acted. mitted at the hoteh
Silver ton School System
r itti. . 1 Tha Awna o t Ana Cf trim
MO Men Hri tn aJilUSTt&tM of the building, an aged which will save Josephine county today to beat Rich Fox's team of
WW w J - ...
the Oregon legislature and showered hits into the outfield
H , Slrnath Tagency Oregon, will ar- Chinese, was In the habit of - alone 112.000 annually in main- Idaho veteran.. 9 to 4 and 4 to 2.
RoadS rive todaj tl Scceed Bent at the ing a candle for light, and that tenance expense without addi- in a doubleheader. opening the
KOaa Bwmng will come he might have dropped It and thus tional highway employet. :iVMSrU.n
Work on
Monday Morning
I set fire to the bulldng.
Approximately (50 men will be
sent out on road and land clear
ing crews Monday under the
Marion county relief program, lt
was announced yesterday. Clerks
t the U. S.-Y. M. C A. employ
ment office today will complete
the task of notifying the men of
their turn, to go to work
Youth is Found Insane
After Attack on Priest
537 Young Men
Apply Here for
ti EV.- Norman Franklin, speedy dodg- Terton elementary
JODS in t Or eSt ing ball carrier, and Arnold Hei- achool systems and
kenen, a driving fullback, emerg- of a number of teach!
Edward Patrick Smith, 24. son
of James E. Smith, Marlon county
Wl. it not tn h reiuf bta- I commissioner, was committed to
gram, unemployment would bo the Oregon tUte hospital here at
rife, record, at the Job office re- 8 o'clock last night after he had
veal. Yesterday only six men were seyerely beaten The ",n
placed at other type of work. Father George Chabot, about 71.
noUbly farming and common la- pastor of the Catholic ehurcn at
bor and but tlx on Thursday. ' St. Paul late yesterday afternoon.
Father Chabot, cut and bleeding
D 7 TJ-.i about the face and head, was tak-
fleaSant VieW en to St. Vincents bospital. Port-
yjr T3 land, for treatment.
Homf 7S KlirneO. whli beinr held in the county
, jail f ollowlng his arrest at St.
- PLEASANT VIEW, April 14 Paul on a charge tl assault, young
The lovely farm home belonging Smith slashed himself with a tin
to Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Hnnsaker, car. it was reported. rttiu.rl.
jumed yesterday afternoon. Their Smith, according WjJ
ton. Robert, lives on tbe placa tod from St. Paul, entered the chureh
as away at the timeJ.omost.il there following the Good Friday
lis household good, wat burned service, and tet i spon the priest,
tith the exception of a few pieces beating him with W. JHe
totten out by tome neighbor, who then accompanied Je'
iapponod to tee th fire. - to the prlert't residence, there
continuing to ttrfke him.
Lemmel. Whitman freshman
from Seattle, pitching the second
game, held the Idaho team to sev
en nilS. I 11 1 t Cnk.
I blLlliniVfli
CORVALLIS..AprIl 14,-(AP) .UnUal rrganlatlon in the j
elimination
teaching positions
a m m v ! siwinr nnra
n ji itm-. -.m. i ai -, nAaaihiv H.Tt TMri i in oruer iu ui auk vw
Bri7 B' n..v,:. H-wrr,7 Lt- for mlH far the year 133-1134
The attack was halted about 1 "'. .v- tt a n a r. n,n .u .ur. .i (hv hi. re announced by the .chool
o'clock when Marshal Ray Mane- I ,JlZ'' CmZ for TAhT Tn a VaeTVama thit end- board here today. The board Mid
gre. called by Ronald Schomux, f. ' r.i.nii .i ...v. .nrin- tr.ininr under teachers' salaries would not be
church Janitor, and Irrin Kirk, . . o--.it . .ceordinx the new roach Lon Stlner. determined until income from
took Smith into custody at tne D D Dotson. asalsUnt man- Wayne Harn'a team won from high school tuition for li33-lJ
priest . residence. Facing the mar- B cloml .- Te.terday. Hal Moe's aerreratlon. C to 0. in could be known. .
thai', revolver, tne young man fo .vi, work had . i.t minHt. iiri Rtiner used I Robert GoeU was reelected tor
submitted to arrest, though he de- I -.-1.4 .lthon-ii official 1 . i-k.v fnrm.iinn with I on year as achool .nperlnten-
" ,1V ' In.tructlon. had yet arrived at the unbalanced line and .hUt. dent, mu aaiary
can, it wa. reported. office I stead, of 300 heretofore re-
the correspondent stated. I w.n a nt of th annit. I cn-oxrir r to -n 11 ip MiTd cota In addition is to
. . . .y ' w w-w m - '-- vr.a w n s as as t r. m r l - ' - -
r A Wsician cauea irom ar. Bingio meB, and approxi- --Oregon State college won It. serve a. school clerk after June
bare found Father Chabot badly I ae ... w.un I Ji.v.i, 1 .w. I .,v. AAittona.l nav. and
XTaZZJX cJTtVy. f-36v; Y the age. of 15 and z years, ae- today from Monmouth Normal, 11 1 U to assume tne oiu-.
un' mim nr to Mr. uotaon. 1 1. . ln-.oi- i.wa4 - ir.ai of tne Eurene rieiu e -
- O - v 0 . A. o " , I
the Staters took an early six-run 1 mentary scnooi, mu
v.v v . .1.4, ,1-4 in tictie o tTiMn noaltiona from
ARlfcArtSAlS HAS 8SUW , Mr Innln- Cnmrnar-? I last Veara Outlay.
HAn aiiwa -v l.l 11 I .KM El TeaCnCr. eieciea wuum'
i apia nht .now bran falllne Monmouth 8 11 4 I will receive jobs proviaea .iu-
Reorganized tor Economy Up
The Day in
Washington
(By the Associated Press)
Mayor James M. Curicy ef
Bocton rejected amhassador-
to Poland.
have any grievance against Father
Chabot, The Statesman correspon
dent said, and he had not been In
trouble there before.
When Smith wa. received at
the state hospital be was "slightly
disturbed" bui used no tmuble'. here thi. afternoon the mer- Oregon 8UU ....... .11 1 Mf . Janlor and wmor
ardIngtoDr.R.E.LeeSteiner, cury went, to 37 degree.. The 'Gretsch, Todd and Harp; Ra high schools from aUId oM BU
ISriitfndent. - -' - ;- 1bow melted on the ground;. - v; I mussen, Woodard and Keema. Terton do not diminish In nnm-
Fertlllzer and power Interest
bar for the attendance average, demanded before house miliUrj
of th nast vear. I committee that provision, lm-
The board decided to drop art, piymg poanDie loiernmeni coin-
foreirn lanauate atudy. band peuuon ne iaen oui.oi nooee-
and orchestra from the high tcU Tennessee valley plan.
achool curriculum. Home econ
omics and chemistry will be
combined If feasible.
Erna Starr of the high school
faculty and Edna Spenker of the
Junior high achool resigned be
cause of other plans. H. Wall.
and M. Grant were dropped be
cause of curriculum eliminations
Agreement to prepare legU
latlon for restoring 2-eent lo
cal postage rate was reached
at White House conference
with boose leaders and poet
office official.
France praised President Roo-
In high achool and H. Campbell sevelfs prosperity recovery lead- -
because music waa dropped from 1 era nip in miormmg cnnea oiau
th. -.n.rai mr'hnnX nrrienlam. I of former Premier Herrlet'i
S. Dybevik. bookkeeper; O. coming for economic parley..
Fletcher, librarian; P. Tucker.
Janitor, were reelected at salaries
later to be determined.
- Teachers reelected or elected
conditionally, follow:
8enior high school: H. Kra
mer, principal; G. DeLay. social
science. R. Elliott, commercial.
M. MeDermott, English; W.
Crabtree, Smith Hughes agricul
ture; W. Gates, manual training,
(Turn to page 3 col.-1) - -
Seaate faced vote ea soae
tary expansioa la cosuieetiail
with farm relief bill with dews
ocratic leaders predlctlag de
feat of that questkm.
: Labor-aiding program Includ
ing public work, and setting up
of wag boards wat consider i
at White House conference wit
senate lead era, - - .