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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 3, 1933)
.'r: . t -. . -i :' ' , - .. .... . - . ..- - .. . " .. .T""-"-- -"--l-M--'1 1 1 I .nr . - - - -, , - - - , ; - - -" - . y , - 4 r t " , ' ' - , . v . -- . 1 - " " t ' , , - r .i U- - 4 " - -f , fffTllASf H iViTWi n SJ na T IS . THE LEATHER' "TX- I . w. t i ' f f "1. : SERVICE We Karaat our carrier VI err Ice. If your paper" does not arrive by 6:15, call 9101 and a copy will be delivered at dace. -r ' ' " '4. 4 -i J V EIGHTY-THIRD YEAR Salem, Oregon, Sunday Blorning, December, 3, 1933 "i:,v No. 216 ... . Rdosevelt or Ruitil is Slogan Prphi Protest ' CropiobeCiit " Voiced by Motiey Plan Defenders jr r m r. fi 't- a - t 1 -. T- AGROSSQGEAN Colonel's Third Crossing Won't Be So tonely as . - '. Firsts indicated x : 14 Hours Estimated Time To Natal Brazil; to - End Long Travels : : LVOXDON, lec. S. (J5) . Colonel mad Mrs. Charies A, - Lindbergh, at Batbarst, Brit ish "colonial tow on the west coast of . Africa whence they ,nrill fly to Braril, were ready to - leare "at any moment" at 7:15 a. rau; C.M. T. (2: 13 AM. E. S. T.) said reporta from the town . received bjereoday. - ' : NEW YORK, Dec. 2. (fly Colonel and lit Charles .'A. Lindbergh, who hare Xlown from '. the arctic to the equator in fire ; months, aerial . survey, were poised tonight for an 1,875 mile flight across the south Atlantic. The airport at Jfatal, Bratil on the easternmost tip of South America was preparing to re ceive the famous- aviators, who hare been at T3at.hu rst, Gambia, since Thursday. It was estimated the low wing ed monoplane, equipped with spe cial ppntoons for the strenuous voyage started July 9, "would re Quire 14 hours to span the ocean. Lindbergh expected to take off at midnight eastern standard time. The voyage would, not be bo lonely as Lindbergh's solo flight across the north Atlantic in 1927, for one-third of the way across the south Atlantic is the German steamer Westfalen, - anchored as a guide for German mail planes .which make: regular trips across the span. St. .Paul ; island Is half way across and the Fan American Air Ways "operates five, wireless sta tions on the coast of Brazil. Lindbergh ' ship is equipped with a wireless set. ' For the curly haired Lindbergh, the : flight would . be his third across the Atlantic. His wife, re lief ; pilot and wireless operator, was with him on his second trip, made by easy stages from New foundland to Denmark. t Pan American Airways, for which ..Lindbergh Is technical ad viser, has been officially out o f touch with the couple since they reached Europe and continued leisurely to Africa. . The. north Atlantic flight, which Included stops in Labora dor, Greenland and the Faroe and Shetland Islands, was made In the company's behalf to determine the (Turn to Page 10, Col. 1) . PARIS, Dec 2. (JPh-A'' power ful fighting navy to back ap her cement Rhineland defenses is be ing built by France in reply to German rearmament, v. A second "man of war of 26,-000-tons, 32tt MM guns and 2? knots of speed Is sought by naval authorities f or s&xt year's con . struction program. -1 This proposed battle cruiser would berths blgT sister of the proud Dunkerqoe which "-.was jrushed to the stocks after Ger many brought but her. 10,000-ton "pocket battleships" of the Dentschland type. ; The 1922 naval program which laid the basis for an entire new fleet sod which has been under construction ever since, is being pushed by the ministry of marine. After completion of this schedule, an additional one, naval authori ses say, ? will sprifig from ; the nary , department, ; i v' : While . the army and navy are - being, put in shape for any event uality, an attempt has. been made by diplomacy to strengthen the admittedly weak air force, ' Uniform Policy As to Warrants : : Sought by Banks ; ' Pending adoption of a common policy In handling of elty war rants all Salem banks discontinu ed accepting warrants Saturday. An early meeting of bank execu tives . wUV be held this week . In hopes of .' formulating a definite policy with reference to the war- rants. .. j.v i.;' -M : . The matter was brought ' to a crisis . Friday 'when' .one bank ae- - cepted the warrants only as cal lateral for a 9 0 per cent loan."Ah cther bank had ' previously shut down on cashing at par. The third bank was in 'lloubt just which course to adopt. At the meeting this week; Portland representa tives of the home offices of 'the .' two local branches will attend. The effort will be made to adopt uniform practice. ., .. FRANCE WILL BUILD UP POWERFUL FUVY ' ' f:-X ' - - i , flf V I PT"PfcWiasWBftitc MasMtl66jsaieaiBeBBMeiMi " i 1 Three ot the principal speakers at the gigantic rally held in New. York la support of President Roosevelt's monetary policies. At left, Fa ther Charles E. Coughlln, famous radio speaker, who made an im passioned defense of the administration's program with the fiery slogan, "Roosevelt or Ruin." Top right. Senator Robert Owen, of Oklahoma, co-author of the federal reserve act, and tower; Henry Morgenthan, Sr., father of the acting secretary of the treasury. CELEBF1ITIES TURN Ethel Barrymore Informs Philadelphia Women v They're Ignorant PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 2. (JP) The shocked lecture audience Which heard Ethel Barrymore say its members 'don't k n o w any thing," found voice today 'and in no uncertain terms turned on the queen of America's "royal fam ily" of drama. "Disgraceful,- "rude," "insult ing," "discourteous," and "atro cious" were a few of the adjec tives employed to describe Miss Barrymore's scathing remarks of yesterday. . ' She had attacked the assembly for criticising Eva Le Gallienne, actress, because the latter had failed to appear to deliver an ad dress a week ago. "Tou have no appreciation," Miss Barrymore told the assem bly yesterday. "Tou don't -know anything; you never have known anything; you never will know anything. Miss Le Gallienne and I do you great honor to be here. I don't see why we bother to speak to you at all." Miss Le Gallienne also address ed the assembly in similar vein, and she, too, came in for a share of the attack by members today. "It Is the most atrociously Im polite thing I ever heard," said Mrs. Houston Decoursey, a prom inent member of the assembly. "Miss Le Gallienne declared she wanted to make amends and then she proceeds to Insuli everybody (Torn to Page 10, CoL 1) 'w PORTLAND REGULATES PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 2. (JP) An emergency ordinance to reg ulate the handling of liquor in this city, when the Eighteenth amendment is repealed Tuesday was passed by the city council to day. , The council took cognizance of the probability that the city's au thority in liquor control may be changed by state regulations now being shaped by the Oregon legis lature in. special session, but an ticipated at the same time the pos sibility that legal action may be taken to contest the state's right to engage in a monopoly; ' Under the city ordinance passed today, restaurants would be per mitted to serve any liquor with meals, and grocery stores and sim ilar establishments would be al lowed to sell liquor in unbroken packages for consumption away from the premises - WISCONSIN MAN VICTM BAKER, Ore., Dec. 2. (JPl- Herbert .Webb of West Bloom field, Wis., was killed and Jack Wright of Colorado Springs, Colo.", was seriously injured when their automobile overturned on the Old Oregon Trail highway four miles west of Durkee; near Baker," to day. Wright Was brought to a hos pital here. . - , Webb was' driving Wright's car when it left the road, crashed into an ' embankment," then bounded back" to the highway and' over turned." Webb, Wright ; and Fred Long of Minneapolis, the third membef of the party, were thrown fiBfigSR 7 - iS." f v I. j IMiEDJUT HEBE 640 Men Get $9121 Wage For Week; Staff Here Has Busy Payday Unemployment relief In the shape of construction Jobs yester day brought nearly 640 "Marion county men 9,121.98 wages for tneir first week's work on CWA projects, Administrator Glenn C. Niles annonnced last night. Al though they were so rushed with arranging details of CWA's first payday here that they worked un til 3 a. m. yesterday, members of Niles' staff were on the Job the rest of the, day, which closed for them with the satisfaction of knowing that all but six of the 640 men had received their pay checks. The checks averaged $14.25 each. The majority of them went to men employed as common la borers, who, if they worked the full 30-hour week, received 215 each. Rain has kept some of the CWA workmen off the job because they have not had proper clothing, -- Between registering men hop ing to get on the list of 620 scheduled to go to work! on new CWA projects by December 16 and making out registrations for oth ers needed "on present projects, the federal re-employment agency here closed its busiest week yes terday afternoon. Manager E. -T. Barnes Indicated. "He estimated that around S 7 00 Marion county men were registered for work, an increase or approximately 800 for the week. . ; " In order that Mr. ' Barnes and (Turn to Page 10, CoL 3) paxi j 3iy S3)bq dnpunoa from the machine as it turned over. ; ' -. ' Webb's head and body were crushed. Wright's head was bad ly cut, his shoulder and rib badly cut, and he suffered a fractured shoulder and ribs. Long escaped with minor injuries. The three had been working in apple orchards at Payette, Idaho, and were on their way to Port land;. -'; 1 ITS SILVER JUBILEE PENDLETON, Ore., Dec. 2. (JP) Dates for the silver Jubilee Pen dleton Round-Up next year were set for September 13, 14, and IS at a .meeting of the, stockholders here last night. ' . W. D. McNary was re-elected president of the Round-Up asso ciation. Other officers, all re-elected, are Judge Calvin Sweek, vice president; Roy Bltner,- secretary, and Mark Barthel, treasurer, r j NICHOLS IS LEADER t t PORTLAND, OrelV Dee. 2. r-E. R. Nichols of the University of Redlands, at Redlands, Calif., was elected president of the West ern Association of Teachers . of Speech at the closing; of the or ganization's fifth annual conven tion here today. Grace Bridges of Portland : was elected "vice - presi dent . --?-' :-:.:.:x-y. Salt Lake City was chosen as tie site for the 1934 convention. Mora than ,200 delegates' from colleges ' and universities of 11 western states . were here for the convention..: jpm IWaMaMlaMW Ml WjiC-jCJW maWiaUB t rtVafciat f It . I -4? if FIFIST CM ECKS Uncle Sam Responsible for Protecting Dry States And Various Codes - Control of Supply Pressing . But Taxation is Major Task of Congress WASHINGTON, Dec. 2. (JP) Legalized liquor will return Tues day but it will be months per haps, years before the govern ment and the states decide the questions growing out of prohibi tion's unexpectedly sudden death. The Webb-Ken yon act of 1913 which remains on the statute books after the passing of the Volstead act puts on Uncle Sam the responsibility of protecting dry states from liquor shipments. Even more pressing from the federal standpoint Is the adminis tration of the codes and market ing agreements written to enable supervision at the source of the business. Interlaced with this is the prop er federal tax to yield substan tial revenues to a treasury which needs it badly and at the same time keep the levies low enough to discourage the home manufac ture of gin and the illicit distilling of corn and rye. Moving swiftly after the verdict at the November 6 elections,-the government has. taken control of the domestic distilling Industry, imports and the breweries. Plans to hare similar authority over whisky rectifiers and wholesale dealers are near completion. A federal alcohol control ad ministration, headed by Joseph H. Choate, Jr., New York attorney, was set up to function until con gress passes legislation for con trol and the regulations already drawn may form the basis for the laws to come. ; Congress, however, will be con cerned with one important matter over which the control adminis tration has no ' Juridictlon taxes. The federal , tax on whisky un til changed by congress will be 51.10 a 100 proof gallon with a 25 tax on imported spirits. The senate finance committee and the house ways and means committee will begin a joint study of taxation December 11. Many of the members are reported to favor a $2.20 levy on whisky and other distilled spirits. A part of the president's liqu or program includes levies low enough to encourage the consump tion of beer and wines. OF SHIP STAGES RIOT HOUSTON, Tex., Dec. 2. (P) Houston ponce made a riot can to the German freighter S. A. Nedenfels today to quiet an out break in the crew after Captain Getmanns, the master, declined to authorize a Nazi parade in down town Houston. - - Captain Getmanns counter manded the plan on the ground It was likely to cause trouble. He said he fired a mate, the most aggressive advocate of the pa rade, when the seamen's demon stration reached mutilous propor tions. ' : -'. The situation attracted Mar ine Detective C. Hancock, who ar rived aboard ship with drawn pis tol and drove the crew from the captain's cabine door. A few min utes later he was .reinforced by fire officers, all armed with tear gas bombs, sawed-off shotguns and pjstols. The mate, whose name was not disclosed, acceded to the captain's order firing him and strode jaun tily down the gangplank while the crew lined the rail and gave blm the Nazi salute. Then tbejr.sang "Deutsch Uber Alles." 0,1 SITE PLEASES eraLiiwiui PORTLAND, Dec 2 (ff) Belief that the $31,000,000 power and navigation dam across the Colum bia "river at Bonneville will come up to the full expectations of those who. sought it was expressed here today by Major-General Edward M. Markham, chief of the United States army engineers, after a per sonal, inspection of the project, f. a ."I was surprised and pleased, eneral . Markham - said ' in com menting on the dam. "I came here expecting to inspect a site and found a Job in swing. The progress is gratifying. I am confident the Bonneville dam will fill all your expectations, both in employment and speed.;' -1 f ...-,-; :: ?v - .The general arrived here today from Glasgow, Mont.; where be in spected the Fort Peck resenrolr. He left tonight for Washington, D. C , . : CREW GERMAN I 2 rfr V 'mi Vi Albert Preosser of Red Bluff, Cal., started raiding a crop t)f whis kers 13 years ago in protest against prohibition. He'll have them cut i Tuesday when prohi bition is no more. Arrested, re peatedly for violations of the dry laws, he proudly boasts he never has been incarcerated on any other charge Central Press photo. .. UP BEFORE COHE Resolution May Be Turned Down; CWA Matters to Be Decided Monday The city council is scheduled Monday night to have before It the resolution Introduced . at the last meeting by Alderman Hughes authorizing the city attorney to apply for a 195,000 PWA loan for construction of a municipal dock It spontaneous protests voiced at the last session are indicative, the resolution probably will be re jected. Other matters to come up at this meeting will include approval of further applications for CWA projects to be started here by De cember 16, third reading of the bill licensing dart' and similar games, and probably a proposal referred last meeting to the in cinerator committee that the city incinerator be operated by a pri vate company which also would have tho privilege of collecting garbage. CWA applications being prepar ed by the city include two sewer lines, cleaning out several ditches and creeks and grading several Dr. O. A. Olson's nine-lived fire streets. . prevention measure may come up again .Monday as by aid of. the mayor's vote It was admitted to reconsideration two weeks' ago. Hit-Run Driver Grabs Purse of Injured Victim LOS -ANGELES, Dec. 2. UPi A hit and run motorist added in sult to Injury here tonight. After he had knocked down and broken the right arm of Mrs. Oath eiine Christen, 53, he spied her purse which, had been thrown some distance from the collision, v Stopping his car. the motorist leaped out, seized the parse con taining iz and fled. World News at a Glance (By the Associated Press) Domestic. NEW YORK Colonel and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh poised in West Africa for 1875 mile trans- Atlantic flight to Brazil. WASHINGTON S e c r e t a r y Swanson urges developing Ameri can navy second to none. WASHINGTON Treasury com mlttee pushes tax recommenda tions, seeking balanced .budget. . SAN SIMEON, Cat Publisher Hearst says Roosevelt "striving to get country away from blood money of the shylocks." ; WASHINGTON The president seeks to amend securities act to loosen flow of capital into legiti mate business. TOPEKA, Kans.--Seven indict ed for alleged participation in mil lion dollar bond forgery case. WARM SPRINGS rn Roosevelt packs bags for return to capital. Foreign: ' C,v,-J:''-L TORONTO Martin J. Insull ordered to return to Chicago f of trial In utilities collapse. t sA' tr ? PARIS Premier Chautemps cabinet 'given two weeks of confi dence by deputies. r 'tr- HIWO, Hawaii - Sharp earth quakes shake island as instru ments record fresh lava flow be neath volcano." V ' BERLIN -Three moderate nasi German Christians nam e d to church cabinet in effort to com pose controversy. mf &l 1 k : DOCK M 1IG Unconstitutional W h e n it Invades Reserve Power : Of State, Ruling - May be Valid in Control of Interstate Commerce, Akerman Asserts TAMPA, Fla., Dec. 2 UP) The national . industrial recovery act was held . unconstitutional, inso far as it attempts to control local industry, in an opinion today by Federal Judge Alexander Aker man. In. the first ruling by a federal court on the question Judge Akerman held that the act itself might have valid standing in mat ters of Interstate commerce ' and perhaps as a restricted emergency measure, but the federal consti tution, he said, gives the nation al government no authority "to invade the reserve power of the states" in regulation of local in dustry even In an emergency. The decision was in a suit brought by cleaning and dyeing companies of St. Petersburg seek ing to force a competitor to charge prices agreed on for the Tampa trade area, which : In cludes St. . Petersburg in accord ance with provisions of the clean ing and dyeing code. WASHINGTON, Dec. 2 (JP) The decision of Federal Judge Alexander Akerman in Tampa, Fla., today that the NRA Is un constitutional insofar as it at tempts to regulate strictly local business bits at wnat the formers of the law always have consider-J ed its weakest part. No NRA officials were avail able here, tonight for comment on the situation, but It Is known they have7 contemplated the possi bility of such a decision and the government will use every effort to have It reversed. Should ' such a ruling be sus tained, officials have been repre sented as believing codification of industry as a whole would not be possible, and the bulk of trade and service establishments whose business is limited to sin gle communities and small areas (Turn to Page 10, Col. 6) DETROIT, Dee. 2. UP) A wed ding was solemnized today be tween a bride who eat before a telephone In Stockholm, Sweden, and a bridegroom who sat in a telephone office in Detroit. The principals were Miss Sig rid Sofia Margareta Carlzon and Bertil Hjalmar Clason, the latter of Flint, Mich. -- Across thousands of miles came the voice of the bride, . from Stockholm, to London to-Glasgow, to Main, to New "Trk' and to Detroit English operators: in Scotland and London wrote down the. words. ' The American con sul In Stockholm translated them. They were the witnesses to the strange ceremony. - ., Judge John D. Watts,' Detroit, sitting beside ' the - bridegroom, spoke the words: "I pronounce yon man and wife," as Clason's brother, Ragner, and his wife, of ficially noted the. words.- " With the finals do,". Mrs. Big- rid Carlzon Clason In Stockholm, probably sighed and began t o think of new clothes and a steam er ticket to America. Clason was presented with a bill for S 4 7.50, cost of the tele phone wedding. - "I'm sure it was worth it, he said. He expects his bride to start for American .within a month. BRIDE IN SIDED, GROOM III DETROIT Means to Relieve School Finances Still Uncertain The house committee on taxa tion was in the throes of inde cision ' yesterday on ways and means to relieve the plight of ele mentary education of the state. Three meetings were held: a morning conference with Govern or Meier, followed by an after lunch conference and the latter followed by a late afternoon meet ing following adjournment of the house.- t The committee was naable to agree on a tax program and ad journed until 10 a. m. tomor row, ; f " - r 'V.r- . --a 4 Two specific bills are before the committee 'neither of which has been introduced. . ) One: wonld levy a three per cent gross earnings tax on all utilities and financial Institutions. The second would levy a one per cent gross earnings tax on all retail businesses. Called a priv ilege tax, the proposal follows very closely the line of the sales tax proposed last spring. ' - Tax. authorities estimate -1 h t I first tax wonld produce f 12,250- Staggering Session's Bill to Prevent Private Control O f Liquor Filed The state of Oregon would pre vent any person or firm obtaining a proprietary interest in hard liquor during the transition per iod between prohibition and con trol, under the terms of a bill in troduced Saturday in the bouse by Representative1 John Johnson. The bill would permit the state to take all hard liquor for its owu sale, paying the owner his cos: price. The measure is considered a stop-gap until the Knox bill or its, substitute, is adopted. SPECIAL TAXES DIE 1ST FIF REPEAL Liquor Tax Looms; Federal Debt Meanwhile Rises To Post-War Peak WASHINGTON, Dec. 2. UP) Special taxes die with repeal, li quor taxes comes to life, and the treasury " is. earefully balancing revenues thus lost against those gained in deciding what tax rates shall be recommended for enact ment at the coming session of con gress. Today, officials noted also, an Increase in the public debt to the highest point since war-time bor rowing carried "it to its all time peak, closed their books on the offer to exchange fourth Liberty loan bonds for the October issue of 3H's and made ready tor the customary mid-December financ ing, involving the refunding of more than 2700,000,000 in ma turing obligations. They held the price of newly mined domestic gold stationary after three increases in as many business days, which carried the quotation 25 cents upward for the week to its highest level since the gold operations began. A special treasury committee headed by Assistant Secretary Hess 13 at work on the tax recom mendations. Indications have been that It is concerned principally with Income taxes with . the pri mary object of providing an indis putably balanced' budget for the fiscal year which ends July 1, 1935. A key piece in the Jig-saw puz zle of federal finances which the committee is attempting to fit to gether is the amount of revenue from the special taxes that will (Turn to Page 10, Col. 4) , Until the . city charter prohi bition amendment is repealed or the state home rule provision proved not now In force, Salem will be kept "dry, Mayor Doug las McKay declared in effect yes terday. "The city attorney holds that the city's prohibition amendment and ordinance are 'still in effect McKay stated. "There's some Question about it but until that's cleared np, I'll have' to take my city attorney's advice. . I have al ways figured we were 'dry. - The mayor pointed v out that City Attorney Chris J. Kowits had ruled that home rule was still in force, making Salem -therefore "dry" as far as legally lntoxlcat- I Ing liquors were concerned 000 annually and - the second tax 23,000,000. Committee members expressed informal .approval of the second plan but were doubtful if.it would not be subjected to referendum- Ray W. Gill, state grange master. and Ben Osborne, representing la bor, told the committee -they wonld fight ineh a bill. They proposed that CO per cent of the gasoline tax be set aside as a fund from which needy school districts could borrow. Meier said he favored tho one per cent tax as a two-year neces sity. ; He discounted the plan of Gill and Osborne. Subsequently In the committee meeting-mem bers of the lower house expressed disgust with the view that they were hamstrung by tho grange and labor from- proposing legislation they though imperative. ; - . ,? Representative r Dean --Walker proposed a temporary plan where by .needy school districts could discount their warrants with state funds and thus get cash to meet this winter's emergency. 1 STILL in Amount ol Final Some Measures to Be Railroaded While 4 Others Let Die Procrastination is Duek To Difficulties and ; iot Disregard By SHELDON F. SACKETT A state legislature reminds an' observer of college youths prepar ing a thesis or cramming for an ' exam. Every possible excuse is ex ercised to delay the chore. In the closing days or hours before (ha dreaded event, the work schedule is continuous, unending coffee or stronger tonic is utilized, all-nignt sessions are held and the deadline at last met. j When the special session recon venes here tomorrow at 11 a. in. a staggering amount of work, lies aneaa worr which has either been avoided or endlessly discus. ed in the past fortnight. Someway, somenow, adjournment will be made by Saturday night, princi pally by pell - melling scores of measures through each house and by letting some needy and nprti- nent legislation die by? the road side. Both Speaker Earl Snell and ' President Fred Kiddle are agreed the session shall end on schedule. Reinforcement for their view was Attorney-General Winkle's state ment Saturday that every day dur ing the 20-day legislative "period' counts. Most typical of legislative in ertia and unwillingness to come to grips with' reality has been the lower house's actions on the prob lem of elementary schools. The taxation committee agrees some funds must be raised to help struggling school districts. The governor proposed a gross utili ties tax the first dav. Abont Rrariv tn Aft. On School Problem After almost endless talk anil jockeying about, the committee was aDout ready; to begin to act Saturday. A moming conference was held with the governor. Ad journment was taken to a post- lunch conference with the execu tive. Finally a thlrH meeting wn held late Saturday afternoon. Two specilic bills to raise revenues were before the commute Rep resentative Frank Lonergan mov ed adjournment until Monday morning and the committee. iar to get home and eager to post- cone a hard decision, onirtlv quiesced. ; ' If. when, and aa th fur hill comes into the house Monday it will be totally new to members of that body, will have limited chance for examination and must be takeu or left, due to the dearth of time. i-V, X Not that lerlslators' are sloth. ful, dull or without conscience. The tedious, nrolonsrert rfiacii. sions, the variety of opinions ex pressed, the innate difficulties of toe problem confronted the factors confuse the legislator mate ior delay and obscure un deriving facts and principles. as the session starts its lat week, the status of (he major is- Buea oeiore u appears as follows: Liquor Control HB l.'the Knox Honor control measure, was delayed in going to the senate Saturday mornin? while being properly engrossed I and amended i in , committee, it reached -the senate by noon and was booked for public Considera tion Monday at 7:30 p. m. by the committee. Hotel and restaaranfc lobbyists. Joining , with the drug gist group, are expected there to make a last-minute stand for pri vate sale by licenes of hard llqti- N on." ". ; j .- . ; Membersvof the senate ommtt- tee on alcoholic control are -informally agreed that the senate . will have its ' committee report (Turn to Page 14, Col. 1J . f chiustmaI SEALS 4 U & SlPFIKQ BASTS' jijty TO CHIUSTA1AS I 1 i V i - i