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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1933)
Tne OKEGCfN STATESMAN, Satan, Oregon, Sunday Morning, Jane 25, 1933 PAGE TWO 106 at Miami. Oklahoma City had . ' " n niinrii irn nrnr m V FOR ff It Agreement Under Recovery Act Will be: Drafted, - Delegates Agree (Continued from pas 1) suggested!!' canners should employ two shifts- -of six boars each. The agreement was also reached that at least 66 per cent of the workers paid, on a piece- basis should be able to earn the mlni- tnam wage paid those - working on a hour basis. California Not Yet J Definitely In Ltqe . . ' i . V The provisions agreed to today were definitely accepted for the Industry In Oregon and Washing- : ton. Belief was' expressed that California wilt approve . as soon, i as Mabel E. Kinney of San Fran Cisco, chief of the division of In-! dustrial welfare in that state, has made her. report. A - The proposals were opposed by a delegation of cannery repre sentatives, who declared that the minimum was too high and al- leged that California was not en forcing its minimum wage, allow ing Its canners, instead, to pay 2t cents an hour or less. The - cannera said they feared the minimum wage would' subject ethical cannerymen to unfavor able - odds at the hands of, "cut throat' competition. ; ' A proposal to the federal gov ernment incorporating a, regional minimum wage for cannery work ers under the natioral Industrial recovery act will be drafted by representatives of the three com- missions at a later meeting, the time and place for which will be determined after Mrs. Kinney has reported today's findings to the California commission. .. DER FILED Id TFIUGK BILL CASE (Continued from pare 1) using their own vehicles in the transportation of their own pro duce from farm, orchard or dairy to market, or transporting food stuffs or other commodities con tained on the farm or Orchard, are exempt from - the fee re quirements. - - ; Exemption also is provided for those farmers who infrequently transport in their own - vehicles . not 10 exceed x. tons for a no-j .tnlnal consideration -for another farmer or orchardist In the Im mediate neighborhood, providing mat sucn tonnage is coaiined to products of the farm, orchard or dairy. These exemptions- apply onjy. 10 inose xarmers wno are . aet operating for hire. - :- : in foul mi iinsiBY the workers right to organise and Draui cuuwuTBi, ua jiruv laeu for minimum wages and maxi mum hours to '-be set by districts. : Wages paid girls in candy fac tories were to be set the- same way. Coopers left these matters to be decided- in the various dis tricts of the barrel trade. Cement manufattvers from the snlddlewest planned to ' recom mend a minimum : wage to the trustees of the American cement . Institute, which, they said, could agree next week on wages by dis trict. t nniiTin iffft-r" 1 1 in rn W WWHIIIIIbWI. IllhlW ITIDER MORE HEAT . KANSAS CITT, June 24 (AP) . Tho scorched and wilted south west saw , temperatures mount again today to sweltering heights. Tho deaths of two Hugo, Okla men were attributed to the heat. ,G. P. Stokes. 44, a metal works employe - fell dead la his front yard and Ray N. Wright, XI. also .of Hugo, was overcome and died at a Paris. Tex., hospital. It was . 162 today at Hugo, Oklahoma and SPECIAL 'Leo Davis andhis ORCHESTRA 10 Colored Musicians and Entertainers.: N. - B. C and Colombia Artists. Don't Bliss Hearing This : Band, They are Sure, . ; lied Hot! : Adm. 35c and 40c ' P. N. Woodry, Blir. 4 TABOD MONDAY June 26th. Mow Moon A reading of 110 was reported at-Vernon, Tex. , : P - Wellington. Kans.. .had a high of 108 degrees and It was 104 at Port Scott, Kans. U . -i - Last night was the second hot test night In the history of the Kansas City weather bureau, the .minimum temperature being 82.1 degrees. The mercury flirted with the century, mark: this afternoon. I Investor to Be Guarded Xtt TVTrTT T caVir JsV?iltJW AiJlrfV . y. - ; ; . V v r WASHINGTON, Juno U (AP) In spite of the federal se curities act. the gullible investor aim may buy postholes bat the government Is going to let him. find out ; before hand it's just a pesthole he's -buying. 1. i : t ' That in brief, is the way Chair man Charles March of the federal trade commission describes' the manner in which the sweeping new law governing securities sales will seek to, protect the aTverage citizen with a few hard earned dollars to invest. . rThere will still be wildcat stocks but the investors will have full opportunity to know they're wildcat,'! f- March explained. IThere won't be anything: to stop anybody from buying a hole In the ground it he wants to but everybody is going to be able to know first that it Is just a hole In the ground. . i There will be two ways to find this out under" regulations now being completed by commission experts.' An exhaustive - compila tion of financial tacts will be filed with the commission of every' is suer of new securities. A conden sation of the same information must be printed conspicuously on prospectuses used to sell securi ties. These prospectuses will be shown to the prospective purch aser and they will contain what facts the 'commission shall - pre scribe for inclusion. The buyers assurance that he Is getting all needed financial Information Is th seller's knowledge that if he omits a "material fact" he Is civ illy: and criminally liable. T E ARRESTED VIENNA, June 24. (AP) Alfred Fraunfeld, leader of the Hitlerite faction in Austria,. was arrested today as the government moved to carry out suppression of the outlawed national socialist party. He was taken at Villach, Carin thia, where officials said he was planning to cross the border into Italy. Measures of. preparedness were discussed with army, police and gendarmerie officials by Minister of Security Emil Fey. Anti - governmental pamphlets dropped by an unidentified alr plaine over Lint yesterday excit ed tho Vienna press. The pamph lets called for a "new fight 'on dollfuss, to "assume whatever form and employ whatever weap ons deemed necessary to achieve the goal. Advisory Board m -m . - av i oeecnon Made PORTLAND. June 24 (AP) The names of Colonel R. A. Ha good of Portland, E. E. Wilson of Corvallis, and Robert W. Saw yer of Bend, have been recom mended to Postmaster , General Farley by Representative Martin as the advisory board for the state administrator for Oregon under the public works act. it was stat ed in a special dispatch received by tho- Oregonlaa tonight from Washington, D. C. LastSnowGone mm LEAD r7--. TlA T td proposed seir-nquiaating ouua P rOW. tlOOQ. LOOD linr projects to be submitted to HOOD RIVER, Ore., June 24 (AP) Road crews today finished tho last stretch of snow removal from the Mount Hood Loop high way, and automobiles were driv ing over the scenic route this af ternoon. Mountain hostelrles were expecting heavy traffic Sunday. - The Coopers' spur lateral is still closed but crews were blasting tho deep drifts and it Is expected tho road will be open July 1. 4-ff Club School EndS. COrVaUlS CORVALLIS. Ore., June 24 (AP) - Oregon's ' Four-H club members concluded their two- weeks Junior, session on the Ore? gon State college campus today aad departed for their homes. Nearly every county in tho state was represented at the meeting, with " total attendance reaching ROOSEVELT ON WAY SOUTHWEST HARBOR, Me- J u n o 24. (AP) President I Roosevelt leisurely cruising along the coast to New Brunswick, ar- rived here lato tonight aboard the Amber jack It, after a ; run from Pulpit harbor. , . BATES, CAR STOLEN . . John Bates, 2034 McCoy ave nue, reported to police last night that his car had been stolen from 14th and D streets, entrance to the circus grounds. Tho ear was a. light, coupe' and bore Oregon license 115455. ' '. BIBLJE MEETING, RAIDED .. Bibles, were " eonsolcnans bv their absence at a 'bible study i meeting In Melnberg. Germanr. when police raided It recentlv. A search ot people aad place reveal- ea a quanuty of revolutionary lit erature. It has been revealed tht tho "bible meetlnz" waa ta&ii-v a "gatherlna of Llppo communists. I Many arrests were made, r - -4 CYTH .ACQUltted : UpOn Same ohoi-no. lMtH ; Draws" to CIose: (Continued from page 1) A May t, by a. man who had tele phoned the school saying he, was the child's father, Nell C. MeMath. a Detroit engineer who Is now employed as a boat-builder Harwlchport, and was sending a car for his daughter. - The kidnaper was blacked to look like a negro, and after lead ing the child into tbe automobile he bound, gagged and blindfold ed "Peggy" and hid her In a cran berry shack until midnight. He then took her to a vacant house almost opposite the home of the Buck brothers and held her there until after midnight the mornjng of May JS when sh was turned over to her father on board a boat In Wychmere harbor in Harwich port upon the payment of $60, 000. The arrests of the Buck . broth ers came late that day and the money was recovered, police said. In Kenneth's home. .PHILADELPHIA. June f 5. - (Sunday) (AP) A nine- year-old boy was found brutally slain in Cobbs Creek park. Just over the city line in Delewaro county, early last night and, with in five hours, a 16 - year - old youth had been arrested today. and reputedly confessed. The dead boy was William H. Rellley, Jr., of West Philadelphia, The one under arrest is Richard RagOne, a neighbor. Little William had been slain In a most vicious manner. His head had been crushed 'with a rock, and an ice pick used to in flict innumerable puneture wounds on the chest and body. The arrest of the suspect was the result of an overheard conver sation. Police said Ragone told a story of "unparalleled brutality; of how he had taken the victim, stifled his cries,, dragged him In to some bushes, beaten and stab bed him to death and then calmly carried the body to the spot where it was found, meanwhile throwing the ice "pick down a sewer." . F. C. JOB; BACKS UK WASHINGTON, June 24. (AP) The Reconstruction cor poration today ended Its handling of . self-liquidating loans by ap- l proving, eight totaling f 4,121,206 which are designed to give em- nloyment to more than 2060 men. The corporation loses iu seii- lionidation loan division Monday to the newly organised pueuc works section of the government. Because of this the -corporation inea aanitr me wmm. w Uocket. of air sew - liquidating loans tnat couia do compieiva. ai a result 26 loans totaling approxi mately 16,000,000 were made for projects which, it was estimated, will supply work for nearly 4000 men. I Education Board MiiUUai.lUU To Taik tsuiming Projects Monday PORTLAND. Juno 24 (AP) Consideration of the report of the building committee with referc ee I . . .. . . m tne reconstruction aavisory uoru, will be one of tho major pieces of business to be brought before the soeeial meeting of tho state board i of higher education at its meeting here Monday. Tho matter was referred to the committee at the regular meeting earlier In tho month, with the provision for final action before end of Juno. - OPEN PASS WEDNESDAY BEND. Ore.. Juno 24 (AP) Tho McKenxlo highway blocked In tho summit country . by snow since late last fall, will bo open to at travel by next Wodneaday, It engineers. ELSINORE Today r Maurice Chevalier ,in "A (Bedroom IStory, . e ; Bobby f swing.' Jones In ""Down- Wednesday - Robert Mont gomery and Sally Ellers - in "Made on Broadway. Friday Marlon . Davies in -Peg O My Heart. - GRAND - Today Ronald Colman and - Kay Francis in "Cynara. , ' Thursday - Douglas Fair- banks in' "Mr. Robinson Crusoe. - ' ; HOLLYWOOD TodayWilliam Powell and Kay Francis In "One Way , Passage." Wednesday William Powell in "Lawyer Man." Friday Buck Jones in "For- Mill OF 16 II IrJ RRIITfll 1 . --' AV blliAHA , in wuwiiihwuiiiiiwi r . I , - - --.. ..jr CO CLE The Call Board v ; -By OLIVE U. DOAE m ma - & .mmi a .m. w - Vt , . 1 . I v i : hmKiinif The Capitol theatre will open nite time for the pleasure .-V- v Joan BlondeQ in a shot from featured at the Hollywood JJ It 14 V Ronald Colman is back again his foil In the picture "Cynara" now showing: at the Grand. Cgte 1933 tor July 1 A new type of film drama has been created by Director Mervyn LeRoy in tho Warner Bros, pro duction, "Gold Diggers of 1122,' which, opens at the Capital the-, atre July 1. This type of picture had its forerunner in M42nd Street but -Gold Diggers' is said to entirely eclipse It in the sheer force ot its drama. In com edy situations, . Its catchy sons hits and tho novelty and beauty of its gigantic and spectacular daneo ensembles. - - s ; Tho . most ' difficult problem that confronted ' Director XeRoy T -i July 1 with the brilliant rern of Salem fans. It is epeninj w 1L Hi; M "Lawyer Man'-' which: will be Wednesday. If and this time Kay Francis is the proper balance of music aad drama so that each would bo a distinct show in itself aad yet blend together In such a way as to form an intrinsic part ot aa Integral whole. He solved tho difficulty by putting on tho screen tho entire theatrical pro duction with its songs and danc es and glnantlc choruses, which tho play .could oaly hint at. DENTISTS ELECT PORTLAND, Ore Juno 24! (AP) Dr. P. T. Meaney of Port land was elected president of the Oregon State Dental association at tho close of tho annual conven tion hero today. Dr. H. W. Titus' ot. Eugene- was elected delegate to tho American Dental associa tion. ;-. III! Could Yon Call Her , A Bad Woman? : (She knew ho waa mar ried, yet she urged hlsa on.) -.f OR Could You Call His Wife a Good Woman? (She knew ho needed her; yet sho left him ... alone.) . . WITH KAV PnAWClS o -The Gold Diszers of 1933" Itn roruana s presentation ox '' I f I'" i -.. .-. - j . . , t . . . I n alauriee Chevalier and his picture infant as he appears in a scene from "Bedtime Story" Brooks-Aurora Road Contract Let Wednesday Allocation of Oregon's 26,166,- 896 share of federal highway founds provided under tho public works bHl probably will not bo an- nounced until tho state highway commission has received informa tion regardlajr the rules and regu lations under which the money shall be oxpended. A telegram was sent to Washington Saturday ask ing tor this information. Tho regular meeting of the com Pre-Fourlh Permanent Wave Special Croqulgnolo Ringlet - end push-wave by expert operators. Senator Beautjr Salon r.i ToL Itlt S III N. High n n AitoOvTlria-rv I Sunday. Blonday and Tuesday CottiawoeM Perfe Sunday, U 11 tJitus r' i which wffl run for an Indefl- ine same snow now at the Elsinore. mission to award a number ot eon- tracts. Including widening and resurfacing of tho Pacific highway between Brooks aad Aurora, will bo held Wednesday. Tho meeting to consider highway construction under tho public "works Mil prob ably will not bo held until later. 1 1' gkQyiR" TODAY - MONDAY -TUESDAY Ill .A I Ul . 7 . ' . I maaaco . nil n u i i . - - 1 II ff i HOT BABE-E-ES Ytll ! COLD BABE-E-ES I SWEET BABE-E-ES JKAji NAUGHTY BABE-E-ES I ,7 1 1 tA ho gives Chesa aB Cho air fa ik ss WW ViVfc - adsunMoTsetnll mM""Ml Extra! B03BY J01IES ,iD0TSVGt, TOM HOWARD COMEDY NEWS EVENTS Elsinore Film . Also Bnngs Baby Leroy; Romance, Comedy Combined The charming Maurtco Is back onee more with his pouting Che valier Up; his witty banter, melo dious songs, and the gayest col lection of alluring sweethearts that Hollywood was able to fur nish. Th picture is Paramount! A, Bedtime Story." opening to day at the Elsinore theatre with featured cast including Helen Twelve rees, - Edward Everett Horton, Adrienne Ames and Baby Leroy. Norm an Taurog directed. Little Baby Leroy "Monsieur Bab-ee' to jon who was selected- from thousands of competing infanta la California to play this role in' the picture, is background tor the title, the story and Its most delightful comedy aad ro mance. He does things that no year-old infant has ever done on the screen before, and' youll ap plaud him as the screen's latest star." Chevalier, too, la charming In his- usual "naughty manner, singing four. song hits that the radio has played for months, but which you really haven't heard unto you listen to Chevalier sing them. . COLMIN P1CTUFIE IT GRiD "Cynara," from .the Interna tional stage auecees. is a perfect vehicle for the inimitable talents of Ronald Colman. as will be at tested at the opening of this lat est picture at the Grand theatre today. Indeed, even the suave, urbane Colman has made few pictures more artistic and entertaining than this one. Advance reports from Hollywood and from dis interested observers, too place 'Cynara far up In the list of the season's best efforts. The story, of course, is made to . order for Ronald Colm-n and. framed with the Samuel Goldwyn standard. It makes a great human document. It is crammed full of situations that arise to rare reality and touch deep polgnaney. The word "so phisticated with regard to mo tion pictures has been very much abused, but here is one instance In which It must be used. For so phistication fairly sticks out of 'Cynara. but, contrary to the usual ' story, it exerts a strong appeal for the so-called masses. MICROPHONES IN PIANO Eighteen microphones take the place ot tho sounding box in a new piano which has Just been in troduced In Berlini Germany. 87 Miles on 1 Gallon? GasSaver Engineers. CS252 st.. Wheaton, HL. have brought out a 1122 World's Fair Auto Gas Saver and Inside Engine Oiler that saves gaa and oils valves in side engine at same time. Fits all cars. Easy put on with wrench. Users and Agents wanted every where. 227 profits. One sent free to introduce quick. Send Ad dress and Car Name today. adv. ca eyzitt i::rrci V CRY VCfil TTTAT . onJ AUQUAZUl OADY LEHOY """"" " IB! . ". . V v