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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1933)
V BEUP TO DATE! ; 'Contract bridge Is ' the" thing, socially. : to' play lt 1 .wells yom ahonM tiy It f at"' duplicate la Ihe Statesman toonjunent. ",- THE WEATHER floury t0lay and Wednes day. noroaT tenperatwe; ; Max. Temp. Monday 47, Min. 28, river id feet, west wind, clear. :. ; v.;' -... ; FOUNDED 1051 EIGHTY.THIRD YEAH Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning:, November 7, 1933 Bfo. 193 Sonal Prohibition Thirty Thousand Legio Join Fight oh Crime in Indiana iifi&feM& 7-r. a -e -t m: x . vv - F'w k - . (3 BR TO BU m UiHTFn: j. mum 6 r 6 States; pyITiree Needed to : Complete Repeal; Held Wet WeU Admit Doubts in Utah;N.Y; Mayor;, Race Watched 1 (By the Associated Press) ' Fringed by a multitude of lo- eal questions, prohibition . repeal . today comes before the Toters of . six states in .what promises to be the decisive test of whether the ' constitution shall retain its anti ' liquor provisions. r More than a fifth of the "na tion's population lives in the six states that are voting on repeal ; Pennsylvania, Ohio, South Caroli na, North Carolina, Kentucky and Utah. ; ' Of the local Issues, chief atten tion centers upon the three cor nered mayoral contest in New York city In whieb is Involved . whether Tammany Hall shall continue its domination. Administration leaders who ;have been urging removal of the eighteenth amendment from the constitution, chief among them Postmaster General Farley, ex pressed confidence that the day's voting would signal the end of , their campaign. They viewed Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Kentucky as virtually certain to - add their rotes to the- 33 states which al ready have voted for repeal and said there was little doubt Ohio and North. Carolina would do likewise. They were less certain , abont Utah but pointed to the fact that Senator A.-D. Thomas was elected on a -repeal plank, and that Senator King and form er .Governor Dernw. no secretary of war, were advocating-repeal. The votes of only three of the states which ballot today are needed to wipe out the eighteenth f amendment. In the 33 which have voted, the result has been 11, 329,190 for repeal and 3,735,657 against. The New York mayoral elec tion is -regarded as hating impli cations of importance to the ad ministration. The White House has consistently maintained an Altitude of "hands off but the democratic generalislmo. Post master General Parley, has an nounced his support of Joseph V. McKee, who said in a speech re cently "a vote for McKee Is a vote for Roosevelt, - Farley's interest Is said to be primarily not the Immediate out come of the election, but the en suing situation which would In volve control of the political ma chinery of New York city. Probe Variation In Milk Prices Holding that too great a differ ence exists between milk prices in Salem and Portland, the executive committee of the Salem Retail ' Grocers' association last night de cided to make an investigation . of the matter; In Portland, It was pointed out, grocers pay six cents a quart for milk and retail It at eight cents whereas in Salem they hare to pay eight and one-half cents, selling-retail at 11 cents. World News at a vjlance ; (By the Associated Press) .Domestic: '.'" . NEW YORK. Farley epeaks for McKee1 for mayor; confident I of prohibition repeal tomorrow. CHICAGO. Johnson says gov ernmentthaa no Intention of cen- soring of controlling press. - SlOtJX CITY National guards : men sought of governoras sheriff attributes railroad bridge burning to farm strikers. ' '- ST. PAUL. Governor Olson says midwest will so beyond - Roosevelt with direct farm plea to - congress. - - j - WILKESBARREj Pa. Thous ands In anthracite strike; other thousands return to soft coal pits. DETROIT. Ford puts "lay off" plan in operation. , I NEW YORK. General Motors declares first extra dividend In . three years. . Foreign: . i LONDON. Baldwin says Am ericans are "practically under ' dictatorship. m x ' HAVANA.- Police told student jleader wiped hands on American ROMB.-Four-power parley call by Mussollnl foreseen as he con fers with Goering. ' ; MOSCOW. Soviet authority tells Japan "hands off? In far east and voices hope of U. . recogn 4 tion. ' ROME. Mussolini takes army nd navy portfolios himself; sends Legion to Sell Beer on Armistice Day; Has Permit "-' A fraternal license permitting the American Legion to sell beer here Armistice day was granted by the city council Monday night. The license which costs $10 is good for six months. A downtown store building, now empty, will be used for headquarters for the sale of the beer. Mark Poulsen, recorder, told the council that he had taken in $1421 in cash from beer taxes in the last three months. inn Five Million List Includes Both Worth and South Santiam Routes PORTLAND, Nov! 6. Ten highway projects, constituting the first "installment" of a $15,000, OOOhlghway construction pro gram, were announced tonight by Leslie M. Scott, chairman of the state highway commission. The Initial 10 projects ar sq'tu mated to cost $5,000,000, and de tailed plans for them will be sub mitted by the state highway de-' yanmeni wnnin the next three weeks to the Oregon advisory board of the public works admini stration and an application will be maae ior public works money to finance the work: The projects are: . ,T7-iltdale " Bonneville highway, $1,500,000; F6urth street (Port land) improvement, $225,000; Linnton - Scappoose highway, $160,000; McMInnville - Newberg completion, $100,060; Ashland Siskiyou summit. Sl.ooo.ooo- rnM Springs. Pendleton-Wallula, $779 . uuw; jamatn rails-weed, $400, 000; Redmond - Bend,$270,000 North Santiam, $300,M); South Santiam, $300,000. Scott pointed out that these jects would be In addition to the $6,000,000 program already under way, and to the $5,000,000 bridge program ior the Oregon Coast highway. Municipal Dock Issue Here Will Be Decided Soon Decision will be made probably within a few days regarding whether or not the application for a $95,000 loan to finance a muni cipal dock here will be pushed or dropped, it was reported following an Informal meeting last night of a dozen local men Interested In the project. According to William P. Ellis, one of the sponsors of the move for the chamber of com merce, the application has not yet been acted upon by the PWA board. It is now In the hands of C. C. Hockley, state PWA en gineer. . CLOTHES CATCH FIRE EUGENE, Ore.. Nov. 6 yP) Severely b u f n e d when her clothes caught fire from a heat ing stove yesterday, Mrs. Laura Krewson, 70, of Drain, died at a Eugene hospital today. Funeral services will be held Tuesday. Mrs. Krewson was alone in her home at the time of the ac cident She was standing with her back to the stove when her clothes caught fire. She finally extinguished the flames and call ed to a neighbor for help, but was unable to recover from the shock and injuries, physicians said. She is survived by her wi dower. Thomas Krewson and one son, L. F. Jones, of Scio. gAY UNREPRESENTED ASTORIA. Ore., Nov. VP) A charge that brokers and retail dealers In canned salmon "con trolled the fisheries code hear ing which opened Oct. 19ln Washington, D. C., was made here today upon his return from Washinglon " by Arvld ' Mattson, secretary of the Columbia River Fishermen's Protective union, who with Charles Knapp, presi dent of the organization, attended the hearings. 1 Mattson said only two fisher men, one from Puget Sound, and a Mississippi fish trap "owner, were given plaees on the central code committee, WFTSCMKD INCENDIARY KLAMATH FALLS, Ore Nov. , rfn m. sUoh. hxoka out, at Din OK SCOTT Illinois Central Will Be Tied Up for Days; Line Becoming Tighter . Only 19 Head of Cattle Get To Sioux City by Truck; Troops are Asked MERIDEN, Iowa, Nov. 6. (ff) An Illinois Central railroad bridge was flaming tonight between here and Cleghorn, presumably fired by pickets, authorities said. Officials at the dispatcher's of fice of the railroad at Cherokee said the bridge was destroyed and that a repair train had already been sent out with equipment and men. They said that the structure was one of the main line spans and that regular Illinois Central traf; tie would be "tied up for several days. SIOUX CITY, Iowa, Nov. 6. (JP) The burning of a railway bridge and the shooting at a freight train in the midst of Iowa's farm strife brought an urgent appeal for na tional guard troops tonight. Only 19 bead of cattle, from farms Just outside the city lim its, reached the Sioux City mar-, ket today by truck. There were other arrivals by rail. Milo Reno, leader of the strike, urged his followers "to strike with all the power we possess." Pickets on the highways were In a threatening mood. A Sioux City newspaperman was warned away by brandishing clubs when he sought to drive through the lines. Sheriff Tice of Sioux City and Sheriff Ralph Rippey of Le Mars attributed the bridge burning to pickets. At Le Mars, Sheriff Rippey had the courthouse under guard. He was warned anonymously by tele phone that pickets would Invade the town to retrieve flares taken from them by the sheriff and would "take care of the court house at the same time." The bridge, on the Northwest ern railway six miles north of Sioux City, was fired shortly after pickets Bought to stop a freight train there. As the train passed en across the bridge, a bullet shat tered a window of the caboose. The bridge site is near James, scene of a dozen battles between strikers and truckers within the last year. The Le Mars courthouse, under guard, last April was the scene of the abduction of a dis trict court Judge, who was drag ged into the country and beaten by farmers after an argument over mortgage foreclosure actions. Mayor W. D. Hayes of Sioux City appealed for a "full regi ment" of troops today, after a conference with Sheriffs Tice and Rippey, a" federal department of Justice agent and a representative of the state bureau of criminal investigation. TO NOTIFY WINNERS Papers in the Merry-MIxup con test should be in the hands of The Statesman by noon today to be judged. Winners will be notified and will receive as prize a ticket for two at the Elsinore theatre good any Bhow this week. Woman Burned Fatally Fishermen Fight Code - Blaze Hits Fairground . Dallas Loses on Appeal the Klamath county fairgrounds today destroyed ttfe grandstand, five tractor operators and a milk separator, causing a total loss es timated at $30,006. Officers said the fire was ap parently of an Incendiary origin. - The grandstands were valued at $10,000; and the tractors and milk separator had an aggregate value of $20,000. TWO SHIFTS REFUSED WASHINGTON, Nov. 6 JPy NRA Administrator Johnson to day upheld the lumber code au thority In an appeal from its de cision not to permit the Willam ette alley Lumber Co., of Dal las, Ore., and the Westport Lumber-Co., of Westport, Ore., to operate their mills twer J 0-hour shifts weekly. This was the first formal ap peal, to the administrator from the decision of the code author ity, of an industry operating un der' the provisions of 'an approv ed code. , : v L. A. Self ridge, assistant depu ty administrator and lumber spe cialist, in making his report to Johnson in the appeal said In part: '-" "With plant; and facilities geared to producec 14 billion feet of lumber per year restricted -to produce at the rate of 5 or billion feet per year, the tremen dous sacrifices imposed upon la bor . and upon owners of such equipment and facilities, as well as the consequent dislocation and impairment, ar hvlonV,': Members of the American Legion, who Volunteered for police duty in Indiana In the state's fight against a mob of convicts that has ter rorized the countryside for several weeks, are shown searching an automobile near Indianapolis, a machine gun and rifle ready for i instant action. Thirty thousand Legionnaires are aiding the regular police. Below, State Safety Director Al Feeney and Captain Leach, who are directing the war on crime. IF IS Part of NRA Rules for Grant Of Highway Funds, Says Garden Club Group The Oregon highway commis sion in the near future will be urged to carry out an NRA fund rule requiring that federal aid road programs must include road side beautification projects, It was announced at the Salem Garden club meeting at the chamber of commerce last night. The club will ask other civic organizations here to join in the effort to have a portion of the state's PWA high way money diverted to this pur pose with especial reference to roads leading into Salem. The matter was brought up by W. C. Dibble who quoted from NRA fund rules for highway work. The Oregon Council for Roadside Beautification also will back the move, he said. . A crowd that filled available seating capacity enjoyed the eve ning's program which included songs by Miss Hoshie Watanabe, talks on "The Chrysanthemum in Japan" by Mrs. J. Vinton Scott, on "The Chrysanthemum Out of Doors" by F. J. Rogers and an other on "Horticulture at the Chi cago Exposition" by Miss Edith Schryver. The next Garden club meeting will be held December 4 with dis cussions of reforestation by Lynn Cronemiller, state forester, and Ernest Iufer, club president FueiTi is sum ' PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 6. (JP) Loser in a quick revolver duel with Policeman Nick Perslnger, Edgar McChriston, 32, negro, es caped slayer from Tennessee state penitentiary, was fatally wound ed here tonight He died in a hos pital an hour after the shooting. Perslnger questioned McChris ton and another negro whom he confronted on an Isolated down town street. When he told them he would take them to police headquarters for further investi gation, Perslnger said, McChriston suddenly produced a revolver and began firing. . ' . . ' The shots missed the officer, who drew his own Veapon and re turned the fire. A bullet struck the negro in the head behind the ear. The other negro fled as Per slnger fired his. remaining shots after him. Police said. the fugi tire who gare the name of Hubert Scott 33, of Denver, was later arrested in the railroad yards. Texas Guinan to Have Funeral in Gotham, Planned VANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. C (JP) The body of Texas Guinan, whose career as a' night club hostess In New York during the prohibition era splashed the head lines of the nation, wilt leave tomorrow morning for Broadway, 3000 miles' away, ;'-'. Funeral services will be held at St Malachl's church of which she was a member.' The date has not been set as the body will lie in state in Chicago' and New York en route east . .." ,, Hi REQUIRED Ifl mm DUEL 1 V " " "Buy Now" Insignia Will Be Distributed Soon With Drive Opening Near With two score more business firms agreeing yesterday to par tiIpateJn .an all-city Buy Now campaign,', members of the Buy Now committee agreed late In the day to solicit personally and by telephone the cooperation of re maining firms which have not pledged their support to the cam paign. It was hoped by Ralph Cooley, chairman of the commit tee, that by tonight virtually all firms in the city would have in dicated their support of the drive. Meanwhile preparations for in stalling Buy Now Insignia in all participating business locations were under way. An extensive series of newspaper advertise ments is planned. Thursday, No vember 9, has been set as the opening date of the Buy Now campaign. Individual merchants are cooperating in the drive in their own sales efforts. Firms which subscribed to the campaign Monday Included the following: Hogg Brothers. (Turn to Page $, Col. 2) E AT Bf ALDERMFJII The employment problem for one woman In Salem was on the way to solution last night when the city council reduced its $25 annual, license fee for a palm reading permit to $5 in order to allow Miss Hazel Barton to prac tice her profession, supporting thereby her motherland herself. The council asreed to the fcten provided 'Miss Barton would give each aldefrnas a free reading. She at once agreed on the condi tion that the facts -found be dis closed publicly. The councilmen withdrew their request. Continuing In their move to put people to work, the coun cil waived an ordinance prohib iting the use of curb space com mercially and allowed a popcorn stand operated on North Church street to use the curbing space. PORTLAND, Not. ; (flV-Tbor Jensen of Elkton, Ore., defeated Robin Reed of Reedsport, Ore., two falls out of three In the main event on tonight's wrestling card after Reed had refused to accept the match on a font ' Jensen weighed .162, six . pounds more than his opponent . . ' r Jensen won the opening fall In 13 minutes with an airplane spin. Reed evened the match IS "min utes later with a cradle hold. Al ter they had wrestled eight min utes, Reed was awarded the match on a foul, but refused to accept It and a minute later Jensen applied a bodx Press to win the deciding fall. r v- Logger Helbert 180, of fBt Helens,-won. the seml-windup'from Dorry Detton, 15$, Bait Late City, taking two faUs out of three.- ; Mickey McGuIre, iSC. West Sa lem, took; twb tails' out of three tn win taa nnoner from Hnen Afl- mi of Portland-' ' ! -'s. ' ? -.-sr . j . a ME FIRMS SIGN IIP FOR CMPH M READING Late Sports mm City's ? New Application to . PWA Will Seek Funds ; ' . ; For Purchasing 0.-W. Company Lobby Busy At Washington Avers AldermajiJD'Hara - . 1 :.. . Salem's city council unanimous ly declared Itself Monday .night in favor of Immediate application to the pWA or other federal bodies for a $950,000 loan with which to, buy the Oregon-Washington Water company's plant here. In event a favorable deal cannot be obtain ed, the city wishes the federal gov ernment to loan the money to build a competing plant In this city. The loan to "be applied for would be secured by the city's general obligation bonds. It would be in addition to the $1,500,000 allocation already made to Salem for the construction of an addi tion to the present water system. The latter advance would be 30 per cent grant and 70 per cent loan. Aldermen Hughes, Need ham and O'Hara all spoke strongly for the resolution. Chris J. Kowitz, city attorney, said he thought there was a chance PWA would make the ad vance since he had read a Wash ington dispatch which declared a Colorado city bad secured federal loan funds for a similar purpose. Alderman O'Hara declared rep resentatives of the water company had been busy at Washington. He inferred they had thus far tied up the city's chance to get federal funds to purchase the plant here. He also averred the Chase Na tional bank, interested in Btock of the local water company, was adverse to purchase of the plant by the city and thus was doing its part to block a loan to the city. O'Hara said he thought the fed eral government should trust Sa lem enough to advance the money for purchasing the water plant. He pointed out that the Coulee dam project and the Bonneville con struction had been authorized be fore the government secured any assurance whatever that the power there developed would be used. Both Aldermen Hughes and Needham urged that the new ap (Turn to Page 2, Col. 1) L There will be no general solici tation for purchase of tickets to the events of this year's Armistice day celebration. It was announced at the meeting of Capital post No. 9, American Legion, at Fraternal temple last night While Legion naires may obtain the pasteboards at Adjutant William Bllven's of fice now, the tickets will not be put on sale generally until Friday, and then at the Legion dugout to be set up in the State street va cant store room of the Oregon building. George Edwards with nine end O. E. Palmateer with five led the Legionnaires last night In reports of 1934 memberships obtained. Out of a quota of 704, 122 have been secured to date. King S. Bartlett, membership chairman, announced the following member ship committee to serve from No vember to December 4: M. C. Moynihan, C. V. Richard son. L. Wadsworth, Dr. V. E. Hockett, Herman Lafky, M. J. Melchior, Carl Pease, C. W. Bart lett, Glen Seeley, Arthur Johnson, Oliver Huston, Bert Victor, Hans Hofstetter, A. B. Bates, Earl Dane, Roy Nelson, Lett Bergavik, E. R. Austin, Donegan Wiggins, Fred Gahlsdorf, Clifford Parker, Tom Hill, Dr. C W. Davis, Byron Lieu- allen and Van WIeder. MADLEY CRITICALLY ILL Jim Madley. member of Capital post No. 9, American Legion, and local bootblack, lies critically 111 in the-veterans' hospital at Port land, It was reported at ' last night's post meeting. Madley ac companied the Salem drum corps to Chicago last. September as equipment caretaker. 1 I TICKET CHSS WD EGlurJ Expect Big Attendance at Br idge Tourney Tonight ; The largest attendance at any bridge tournament yet held In Sa lem was hoped for tonight as contract bridge players prepared for the sixth evening' playi In the tournament conducted by The Oregon Statesman. Mrs. William H, Qulnn, Culbertson associate, Is directing. The tournament is to start at 8 p.m. at the Marion ho tel. ' .-" i. , Tonight's play . will be set hands, arranged In advance by the tournament conductor. The majority, of last week's players Toted for this arrangement 1 Ml Unanimous Vote of University Professors is Accorded To Resolution Condemning Higher Board Chairman's r Talks on Two Campuses; Dean Gilbert in Statement Denies Objection is to Consolidation Selection of Kerr as Chancellor Also Deplored; Claim Made That Discontent Among Majority of Faculty is Inevitable Result of Placing at Head, Man Who Has Long Been Involved in Schools' Controversy EUGENE, Ore., Nov. 6 (AP) The resignation of Ros coe C. Nelson, Portland attorney, as president of the Oregon state board of higher education was demanded by the faculty and staff of the University of Oregon here today in a resolution unanimously adopted. The resolution declared that Nelson, in addresses deliv ered last Thursday at the University and at Oregon State college, had "by his violent language built up an all but tween the chancellor and the university, embarrassed be yond measure the efforts- of the two faculties to establish cordial relations, and destroyed all confidence in his sense oof NELSON DECLARES MOVE ANTICIPATED Next Higher Education Meet To Be in Eugene; Needs No Bodyguard, Avers PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 6. fP Informed that the University of Oregon faculty had adopted a reso lution demanding his resignation as president of the state board of higher education, Roscoe C. Nel son Portland attorney, replied that "he had expected something like that," intimated that he had no Immediate Intentions of resign ing, and announced that regard less of developments, the next meeting of the board of higher education will be held at Eugene as scheduled. Nelson said in a formal state ment issued after the university faculty's action that any action he might finally take would be what he considered in the public interest His statement: "No necessity exists for any ex tended statement I shall be guid ed solely by my conception of what the public Interest requires. The Importance of the cause of higher education far transcends that of any Individual or group of Individuals. If I yielded to my (Turn to Page 3, Col. 3) Purchase of the Gray Belle res taurant by Ray J. Stumbo, promi nent Salem theatre man, and Earl Sandif er, formerly -operator at the Elsinore theatre, was made known here yesterday. The restaurant, owned and operated for. the past few months by H. E. McGraw and Mrs. Lela Holtban, will be run under a new policy but will not be closed for the contemplated re modeling, the new owners said. Sandif er will manage the estab lishment while Stumbo will con tinue his work aq manager of his Hollywood theatre. A popular price policy featuring merchants' lunches and dinners will be the first and most noticeable change, while from , time to time new equipment will be Installed. The Silver Grill room will re main open under the new man agement with dinner dances sched uled to be held two or three nights a week. Stumbo and Sandlfer re fused to comment on the consid eration In the purchase. Any person - interested In con tract bridge la urged to. attend. Previous attendance Is -unnecessary. Eight first and eight section awards are made each night Ton the basis of that evening's play. In addition four door prizes are given. - ' . ; ; . . Mrs. Qulnn will give her be ginner's class promptly at 2 p.m. At 3:30 p.m. she will address an advanced class. , ; - v . v In both sections -the emphasis will, he on play of the hand. The advanced section will discuss the correct play - of a, no-trump de claration. : - . . ' GRAY BELLE BOUGHT BY 10 LOCAL MEN partisanship and intimidating impassable social barrier be justice and fair play." The action of the faculty fol lowed by two days the first an- ' swer to Nelson's speeches made Saturday by Wayne L. Morse, dean of the Oregon law school, who demanded the new presi dent's resignation in an address before the annual homecoming alumni luncheon Saturday. The resolution which condemn ed Nelsdn also deplored the darn ing or Dr. W. J. Kerr as chancel lor. One of the paragraphs was: "Whereas, in fact, discontent im- ! bues the majority of the faculty and not simply a small group, and is the inevitable and fore-:. told result of the selection for"' chancellor of a man who was in volved in controversy." 1 The resolution stated "in view of Nelson's partisan commitments and his revival of unnecessary antagonism, in the opinion of this faculty the best interests of the state of Oregon call for the re signation of Mr. Nelson from the board of higher education." The - resolution further stated that "we the faculty do hereby publicly protest and draw the attention of the board of higher education and of all citizens in the state of Oregon to the gross injustice done individuals and to a state Institution dedicated to the ends of public welfare by tie tactless, discourteous and un founded aspersions cast upon the University of Oregon, its stu dents, and the members of Ms faculty both collectively and ic idvidually." The resolution was presented by C. V. Boyer, dean et the col lege of literature and art, and was prepared by the advisory council. consisting of Dr. Boyer. Dr. Jamee H. Gilbert, Dr. H. G. Townsem. Dr. James S. Barnett and Dr. II. S. Sheldon. (Turn to Page S, Col. 1) Bu Bri3ht siness Spots I - CHICAGO, Nov. (Depart ment store trade, held steady here last week, the association of com merce reported . today. Wanner weather and lack of any particu lar stimulas were ascribed as reasons for absence of Increased figures, but sales still maintained higher , averages than those of last year. J MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. (JP) The Northwestern National Life Insurance company reported to day October sales set a new high for that month, with 2,238 appli cations amounting to $6,284,35. This constituted an increase of 18 per cent over October 1928, the highest previous figure for the month. DENVER, Col., Nov. VP) The Burlington railroad. Its. pre sident, , Ralph Budd, announced today, will spend nearly $2,000, 000 for raises soon. CHICAGO. Nov. (JP) W. T. Grant company reported today that October sales totalled $7, 112,547, -compared with $(,9C1 901 for October last year.; - ( , NEW YORK, Nov. t(JPy Freight loadings on the Chesa peak ft Ohio railroad last week totalled 29,512 cars, compared with $0, 8.72 the previous week and 29,242 a year ago. - CHICAGO. Nov. C (JP) R. U Polk ft company today reported new passenger automobile sales in October tor the Unite 1 States as 129,000 units, compared with 43,715 in October 1932. I