I - Silt m ' '"I i if If : 5 i i-M I ril rf j 1 ;.t S'ti T.F II t i ... .:. 3 PAGE TWO COfflTiPMS itC (Caattaaad -from pxa 1 " Nj doubt Jhe exquisite portray al of ,tM I beautiful number con jured other picture In, the minds s of the spell-bound audience. At any tale when Miss Eness paused, . the audience held, its breath, and : when- she continued It relaxed a ; little; but still felt; the pull of that " treat bond -between artist aadaa dTence -when the -two feel as one. ; Th final camber of; the group r ww as powerful ns the second" was delicate. "Vibrant chords and skill . ; tal octavef work, with both left . and right hands demonstrated the b strength and versatility of the . player, 'T. I - 1 : V As encores, the pianist played "En Route" y Godard and "P ".. Sharp, Major " Etude" i by Aren- ; . la the second; half of the pro 1 gram I were presented Mrs. Wil liam Fischer, soprano. Miss Marie ' Petton, mexxo-eoprano, : and Mrs. Sophua Starry soprano, as soloists , with jj ensembles. The! numbers were ;jThe Shepherd's Story" by Dickinson, :and "The S a 1 1 o r's Christmas, Opus 48," by Chamin ade. Both numbers were well-received.: ."I . t j' . : UThe mexso-soprano solo by Miss Margaret Slmms with violin obblt- a-ato by Miss Hortense Taylor, of -CanOque de NoelM displayed the rich fullness of Miss Slmms bean tif ol , roice. 'She declined an en thusiastic encore. " The i men's and women's chorus v es combined In the last four num bers, -with si particularly xharming rendition of "While By My Sheep,! 17th century hymn, ar rantred by Junget. An echo quar tette made up of Miss Bern Ice Rickman, Mrs. H. J. HJort, Earl Potter and Earl Neal responded from the wings to the joyous Toicea of the chorus. Miss ; Lena' Belle Tartar was . poised and masterful in her direc tion and should be proud of. the performance of the Mac Dowel 1 club last night. CHTMEHK n . r ICratUa from &r 1) ef the Portland Junior symphony orchestra, Repreaentaiiies Hannah Martin and Otto Paulas of the Marion county delegation spoke briefly npon work of the special session ef the legislature. Mrs. Martin said that while she did not Tote for the sales tax, it Is certainly true the common school system of the state is near collapse . .1. "and, whether yoa want the schools of the state to remain open" by passing the sales tax next May 18 depends upon your rote a that time. - Mr. Paulas expressed himself as greatly pleased with the work ef the 20 days, especially with regard to action on the three ma jor Issues, liquor, unemployment and bus and truck relief. "I think the legislature handled the liquor problem with rare sense," he de clared; after outlining reasons why he taougbttbe "new deal" through j state control should be adopted. Something new ia the way of Intercollegiate good will was on the slate last night on the Wil lamette campus when Linfield and Willariette debaters had it out anions! themselves lust for tice. Five teams from each insti tution! took the floor in separate contests in separate rooms be fore experienced critics. When they had argued for th full tim. allotted In a? regular debate they were tren the Judgment of the cniicsiana later the entire group .got together for a round table discussion of J each others? strong and weak nolnts. A similar Satunt is planned to. t rarriea out early next year In McMlnhTillw. The topic for dis cussion jwas: "Resolved that the poweri of the tresidenti nt th- United; States should be sutatan- iuy increased as a settled pol : Representing Linfield in ih. practice fray wre Moore and Cummins. Woodell anil Rdvint. K O k S ! and Wilson. TTnri rrnh and Wells and Sawyer and Mor gan. Kviamette speakers were Brow nd Knotta. Ron not MosheirJ Lucke and Barnett, Mor- y m tester ana Scott and William&i f HI IToday Onlyi-l BARBARA STANWYCK " 1 "THE BITTER TEA OF GENERAL !- - .1 ,.- YEN" I: 03TB OH THE -YEAR-ft fih2ST PICTURES 1 ; L. ' Tfie Gal! ara . . . KLSEVORE Today Cecil B. DeMUle's ThU Day and Age." GRAM) Today Doable bill. Back Jones In "The Thrill Hun- " ter" and Wallace Ford In "East or 5th Ave." CAPITOL Today Robert Young in "Saturday's Millions," football epic. STATE Today Barbara Stanwyck Jn "The Bitter Tea of Gen- eratrYen." Saturday Tom Tyler in "Partners of the Trail." HOULYWOOR Today - Buck Jon.es in "Treason. Saturday Midnight matinee, Preston Foster in "The Man Who Dared." All Hollywood's younger ac tors have been assembled to por tray faithfully the fire and en thusiasm of youth in Cecil B. De MUle's spectacle of modern times, titled "This Day and Age," which comes to the Elsrnore theatre to day. Accordingly, in the cast are Richard Cromwell. Eddie Nugent, Ben Alexander, Mickey Daniels and Miss Jndith Allen, DeMUle's latest discover:'. Also in the cast are the sons of famous screen stars of tod-y and yesterday, in cluding Wallace Reid, Jr.; Eric von Stroheim, Jr.; Carlyle Black- well, Jr.; Bryant Washburn, Jr.; Neil Hart, Jr.; Frank Tinney, Jr.; and Fred Kobler, Jr. 'Continued from pas 1) the Dillinger gang was keeping a car at the garage and went to the establishment with a plain clothes detail preparatory to setting a po lice trap. The officer entered the place alone, his companions remaining In a car at th? enrb. A man and a woman entered a moment later as the officer was talking to Bloomberg. Shanley walked toward the man intending to question him. The latter whip ped out a pistol and sent a half dozen bullets into Shanley's chest. Showers Today Expected; Rain Total Now 7:6 Intermittent showers which last night had brought the rainfall to tal for December to 7.6 inches are expected to continue today and Saturday, according to the weath er bureau forecast. The Willam ette river, which receded after the heavy December 6 rainstorm, is rising slowly. Yesterday it was np two-tenths foot to the five-foot level. In the 30 hours ending at 7 p. m. last night, .62 inch ofaln fell here. Using CWA Pay For Liquor Will Mean Dismissal KLAMATH FALLS. Ore.. Dee 14. (JPi EmDlores workine on civil works administrations in Klamath countv were warned to day br Nelson Reed, head of thn federal re-employment office nere. tnat tney would be cut off the list if they were found to be spending their pay checks for li quor. Reed said he had recef vaA word that several men had anmt ineir cnecks last week "on a ben der." Today and Saturday mmrt tsun rbtuu tram t- -zz: DO mm mm SLAVS Ml From" ! J & 'Saturday I C r Pot Story Ijjj . 500 Seat J 15c 'ST Malm Floor J ftXTT ' The Taking; i of- testimony Cfor the plaintiff, principally throtrgh the evidence offered by Mrs. Xyllia F. Price herself, marked ' the - first day la circuit court here- of the contested divoreo action of Mrs. Price against Oscar E. Price, her husband. Judge L. G. Lewelllng la hearing the ease which yester day attracted ap audience which filled the courtroom throughout the day. Mrs. Price testified that she waa urged not to place her prop erty in trust before she married the defendant. She contends that a trust deed he executed the day before their marriage to three pieces of real property he owns should be set aside. The Instru ment was not recorded until the marriage was consumated. Considerable t e s t i m o ny waa taken concerning payment of a claim for loss during a burglary. Mrs. Prico contends her hnsband included articles as stolen which had been lost before the burglary occurred. Frederick A. Greier, in surance adjuster, testified brief ly on the incident Plaintiff is asking for one-third of the defendant's real property and sueh an amount of the per sonal property as the court may see fit to award her. Mr Price Is expected to take the stand to. ex plain his position today or tomor row. Prof. Thayer Has Charge oi Bands In Redlands, Cal. Dr. H. C. Epley Is In receipt of a letter from O. P. Thayer, for mer bandmaster at the high school, now in charge of band and orcBestra music at Redlands, Cal. Regarding his work Prof. Thayer writes: "I have a high school band of UK nleeea -an orchestra of 75. two junior orchestras, one of 54 and one of 40; also six grade orcnes tras of 95: a girls' band of 38. a jazs orchesta of 24, a saxophone ensemble of 10; so you see we have very little time to go fishing. I go to work every flay at and work clear throuKh till 4:30 with 30 minutes for lunch, al though don't mind It as everything is so pleasant here. School board, superintendent and principal are mighty fine to work with and we have a wonderful band room, 3 Ox 80 with a 40-foot ceiling, two pianos, plenty of chairs, light and heat. "Our hi eh school, both, band and orchestra handle some won derful numbers. We will give a concert after New Year's. I will use about 110 pieces comprising about CO violins, 10 basses, 12 cellos, besides the other instru ments including a harp, we will play Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, ballet music from 'Sylvia,' Bix et's suite from 'Carmen a violin concerto, a harp solo and a num ber of other pieces on same order, so you can see they must play well to handle this kind of a program. On our band program for Orange hnw In Fehrura.T we Tlav Unfin ished Symphony,' Egyptian ballet music, overture 'Rosamunde' and numbers on same order. Dallas Cagemen Play Willamina DALLAS, Dec. 14. Dallas high's basketeers will open their season here tomorrow night when they tangle with the Willamina high school team. Both A and B squads from the schools will play in the double header. The cur tain raiser is scheduled to start at 7:30. Not much is known here about the Willamina team but they are expected to provide some good competition tor the locals. Today and Saturday usurping usllcoJl o EXTRA Dave Apolloti Orchestra Cartoon Oomiag "little Women fys crumbling world! m i tytf. fa- i OREGON STATESMAN, Salem. MREliQtD;iGUNS!X;0INS Collected; ;,&jHD. E Decker,; Nfiw Rciident EXHIBIT A fortune in oldTOns and coin cornea to this section with D. E. Decker, artist and antique collector who haa just leased the Cherry Hill filling station four miles west of Salem on the 8a-lem-Dallaa highway. Mr. Decker haa on display at the station his collection of old guns and coins. He haa more than 100 guns, some over 400 years old, and for the gun col lection alone he haa refused fSOOO. - Of especial interest in the gun array are two: One whiqh came from a pirate ship sunk oft the west coast of Florida more than 400 years ago, and the other a sword on which is contained some highlights ia Egyptian his tory. Inscribed in hieroglyphics. He owns guns and spurs once the, property of the James brothers. Among the numismatic collec tion are 30 B. C. coins, including several used in the time of Julius Macon Trip Here Off Indefinitely SUNNYVALE, Calif., Dec. 14. &) Because of unfavorable wea t h e r conditions the scheduled training, flight of the navy dirig ible Macon to Washington and Oregon has been Indefinitely post poned, naval officers here an nounced today. No plans for the flight would be mde pending the arrival of clearing weather. F. E. Needham to Address Ad Club Alderman Frank E. Needham will speak at the Ad club luncheon at the Gray Belle restaurant today noon concerning the hop growing Industry and Its prospects. L. R. Childs of the Portland Woolen Mills, the scheduled speaker, yes terday found he would be enable to keep the appointment. RAYNOR CAR STOLEN W. H. Raynor, Jr., 483 South Cottage street, notified city police last night that his car had been stolen from Its parking place near Parrlsh junior high school. The machine, a large coupe, bore Ore gon license 153-891. ED Mi MILLER SUNUTi NEW NOMERAL WARMINCAI COrTK kyJH?lZ2?ml SSLft S2Sf.wt?" !ii ?to.l.ex ,e'7w SIM'S tkMk ft Uy ft . ttLSsi: jtSC5 cssri-srss soSXr. KrtLrzzfz , 5!g?BS? ttMCTL,r'jrtT .. ?... Xiim. TkrM-kMt awtteai lal heat praaf UaI II L?V iciivii .tT$3"95 S"--$595 ' .. t ri "r i"11 ASTERW-j ECC SERVICE SET SANDWICH TOASTER "f AjslV -SrC'tvH.KS - TMa la laa aatt mt FT aha A la.ufaU aaaf-l rift that " - QS TTl TlZJ "Bg ZZy. mSZwSTEtic&wJXi NEW ROOM HEATER fi- J? iS.'t&a ta2Zl rs " -SS2SES?S tZ9SSssri 'A-lrTrr. kitchin clock Esrsss: 22? SSS "A 1 sFl&s: 55.45 vzLZrttnztgzz &s?mJSz2?ts; iTWitesr 3 awSTrairIw . TW y ar eaa aa aag taa yaU. T .-A--y ,t sJTw ... artth rtiiaaaaiii 4ana a Pi"MPWiW i wi-i ?k thtmx taa mat to ilraty Taw aaalta at Uwea ralr. 11 a it an at IM" w BS.aJ. (maSSSi SSa Ksr--rr s NT -' SaifiaS'ai'aaapSSTi j I ' V "SV " s faajgViLBV.laA n-zee . y ' TnTZtT.ZT. HAIR DRYER ALARM CLOCK NV - 5 ttriTaaTaaMB: ZSSttgSVTjsS XZZSttZLE: Njv X . aa ataia a4 tarn, atrW. at jt Si 1m uZZZ SH7 afaxaaU Mata . X : ... v v - ; Oregon Fritey Morning; December 15, 1933 NEAR HERE Caesar and others representing almost every historical period of the world' history. A coin he possesses and issued 504 B. C. is the oldest dated coin known to exist. Who hasn't heard of the "wi dow's mite" Decker haa one a small brass coin. It will be re called these "mites brought words of praise from Jeans Christ to a poor woman who dropped two of them In the temple offer ing box. Mr. and Mrs. Decker and their two children hare "settled down" here in order that their two chil dren may enter schooL The Deck er's hare traveled about the country so uuch In their collect ing that the children have never attended school. Decker haa work ed for the federal treasury de partment In purchasing old gold and silver and for a Texaa numis matic company In purchasing old coins, in addition to working his own hobby. ArfcneOitgTk&sr n3 Q&LYT7QOU Tonite & Saturday ON OUR STAGE TONIGHT 19 BOYS from the SALEM INDIAN SCHOOL SINGING THE SONGS YOU LOVE TO HEAR One Appearance Only, 9 pjsu Tonight is Race Night THUNDERING THROUGH THRILLS DANGER! Treason' Also Comedy, News, Cartoon Comedy and "The Three Musketeers" Bucjc Jones Ranger Club Meets Sat. 1:30 P. M. mm mm be BEETI REGULATIONS CCootmued from page !) revenue the city will have from this source for . upwards of two yeara since the special session legislature appropriated the first 83,000,000 of llduor revenues un der the Knox law for unemploy ment relief. - - Right of the city to collect Its own, licenses and taxes from beer and, wine Is somewhat in doubt under the Knox law bat the li cense committee will attempt . to hare the new ordinance enacted and enforced until It may be held illegal. , T. E. Needham la chairman of the police, traffic and license com mittee, and Walter Fnhrer -the third member. . for Holiday Travol Save ttaatsve moaty go by Bus.De lexe easy riding coaches, comfortably hated.Thefiame"Gryhoaad'is your guarantee of a safe, pleasant, econom ical journey. LOW FARE EXAMPLES Jt9 Portland $1.05 San Francisco . 9.75 Engene 1.45 Medford 5.00 $ 1.60 17.55 2.15 9.00 . DEPOT - Senator Hotel Phone 4191 mitsmn JOSS BOH R CCoattnuad from page ''ljj ' ; gar the work the pun Hereto fore adopted under : work relief projects cuts down each worker, he said, to a hare subsistence. With 10.000,000 men estimated out ol work at the start of CWA's program. White said the govern ment aimed to employ 4,000.000. Government estimates are that 2,- 009,000 remaining men are pre- samably unemployable. The re- malBlng 4,0 90,0 09 must rely, on JWAWAVA'W.V v.VAV,y,v.v I 1 1 W.V.VSV.V.t I I I - ' ..v..v.v.v.v.-; I I I j r . V.VAWAV.V I I ' .. .- , .W.WAVA'.V I V YOUTH Bonn DM3 3yx. v ' And oeiow a V SEEKING LOVE AND ADVENTURE I a MARY CARLISLE Sw K WALTER BYRON A WALIR BYRON I Continuous Show Daily - - resource 'stored j the re- general' Uditfn'es which CWA is. expected"! tan provide, j ; : 5 Whiter tatned Uie lpqal ,com mitte( that i$dct la 4coinc prac tices must be followed in disburs ing all CWA fnnds. These will be audited by Comptroller General McCarl and If any moneys are Im properly spent checks are likely to "bounce" back. White averred. , ' FUN NIGHT STAGED DALLAS, Dee. 14. A second American Legioa "T u n Night" will be held at Tom and Dick's confectionery . tomorrow night starting at T: 10. The affair is being held at the confectionery due to th fact that the armory is undergoing repairs. a 3DBQ, Coming Kathleen Norris American Magazine Story "WaUs of Gold" 1 p.m. to 1 1 p.m. summer, oa ;reli4f rQt ita fte vival la ' SklVIIR i: A. t :J i