CIRCULATION Average Dally and Sunday 1 for February, 1935 Distribution 7981 Net PaM 7562 MEMBER A. B. C. THE WEATHEK Fair today, frost ia morn lng, Sunday fair becoming cloudy; Max. Temp. Friday 65, MIn. 37, river feet, rain .07 inch, S.W. wind. . li FOUNDED 1651 EIGHTY-FOURTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning, March 16, 1935 No. 304 - - - ITS STI LL ENTITLED TO BLOCK SALE Transfer of Timber to U. S. Not Possible Without Approval, Stated True, Says Commissioner, but Pressure by Owner Will Be Intense Full , power to block sales of privately-owned timber to the- fed eral government rests with the Marion eounty court or any other eounty court In the state, Inso far as Its own territory Is con cerned. Governor Charles H. Mar tin yesterday advised Roy Melson, Marion county commission, in a letter directed to him at the courthouse here. The; governor's communication came as a result of an interview with Melson in The Oregon States man yesterday in 'which the local commissioner said there were five billion feet of timber in the coun ty subject to purchase by the fed eral government. "There is an unfortunate mis understanding on the part of our county officials in respect to the purpose of this bill," wrote the governor, referring to Senate Bill 189 which went through the as sembly at his urgent request. "Neither the federal government, the state board of forest conser vation nor private persons can force the sale of a single tract without the consent of the county court of the county wherein such tract Is located." Take Advantage of Weeks Law, Purpose The governor's letter stated that the only purpose of the , en actment was to enable this state to take advanage of the Weeks law which made it possible for the federal government to carry the burden now represented large ly by delinquent taxes In forest states. , ' "You may feel that the people of Marion county should not take advantage of this law. If bo under the provisions of 8enat BUI 1S9 you will be permitted to control the situation," the governor wrote. "But why should counties desiring federal funds be denied them by the defeat of this law?" The governor accompanied his letter to Melson with a copy of bis special message to the legis lature urging support of Senate Bill 189. Members . of the county court here pointed out yesterday, prior to receipt of Governor Martin's letter, that they thought it very doubtful If any county court in the state would take advantage of lta power to block sale of privately-owned timher to the fed eral government. Pressure for Approval Wfll Be Strong, Held "You could get an Idea of the pressure the private timber -interests could exert by noticing the pressure they put on the legisla ture to enact Senate Bill 189," Melson commented. Countv court members here said the courts would be unlikely to tie up a deal when some tim ber owner, insisting on liquidat ing his imber by selling it to Uncle Sam, sought support of the court. Aside from the payment of back taxes, the courts feel that such sales will take all the in come features away from the tim ber lands which pass to the fed eral government. While eventual ly the counties will receive 35 per cent of the income from the tiio (Turn to page 2, col. 6) More Strike Troubles on Coast Likely - SAN FRANCISCO, March 15.-()-Another strike of a maritime union at Seattle added to uncer tainty over the Pacific coast sail ors' strike from oil tankers today as efforts to arbitrate the latter dispute started here. The Masters, Mates and Pilots' association brought the develop ment that added to the uneasiness at Seattle when it declared a walk out In sympathy with other mem bers of the trans - Pacific liner President Jefferson's crew. ' Trucks were stopped as they at tempted, to transport cargo to the dock from which the liner was scheduled to sail for the orient to morrow. Longshoremen also became In volved in the President Jefferson conflict when they refused to work with six non-union cargo handlers. The crew had walked out In protest against employment of officers who are not members of the Masters, Mates and Pilots' association. : 1 v More than, 20 oil tankers re mained tied np on the coast by the strike of the sailorB union of the Pacific, which is demanding pre ferential employment of its mem bers; though the, Associated Oil tanker H. T, Harper slipped out of Portland , with a crew which onion officials said was apparent ly transferred from another ves sel. '. ' . . COUNTY Warlike Note Sounded as Flandin is Upheld; Larger Army is Voted "France of 1914, of Verdun" Rediscovered is Word of Premier After First Vote of Confidence; Given Powers PARIS, March 16 (Saturday) (AP) Premier Pierre Etienne Flandin won three votes f confidence in the chamber of deputies early today on his demand that army service must be increased as a defense against a heavily re armed Gemany. The government was given a free hand to increase World News at a Glance (By The Associated Press) Domestic: WASHINGTON The S14.880, 000,000 work-relief bill sails to ward final passage as senate scraps McCarran prevailing wage amendment and accepts comprom ise. CLEVELAND Wiley Post forc ed down on cross-country speed flight. WASHINGTON 1700 Jailed in opening of vast federal drive on narcotic peddlers, counterfeiters and other law violators. WASHINGTON President files tax return; 13 told first quarter's total shows an increase. Floods render thousands home less in Missouri; Rocky Mountain states are choked by dust storms. Foreign : PARIS Premier Flandin re ceives three votes of confidence in demand of doubled army con script service. BELGRADE Political and economic entente expected from negotiations between Italy and Yugoslavia. MECCA Would-be assassins slain in Mosque in attempt on life of King Ibn Saud. STOCKHOLM Princess Ingrid will wed Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark in love match. PARIS Robert and Dorothy Switz, Americans, are Indicted on spy charge. LONDON Rooftop air tend ings visualized by De La Cierva, autogyro inventor. CODE IS SCHEDULED WASHINGTON, March 15-(JP)-Farm administration officials to day scheduled seven hearings on a proposed butter marketing agreement tor 11 west coast and mountain states. The hearings will be held as follows: Missoula, Mont., March 25; Seattle, March 27; Portland, March 29; San Francisco, April 1; Los Angeles, April 4; Salt Lake City, April 8, and Denver, April 11. The proposed agreement Is de signed as a voluntary pact on the part of the industry and will not interfere with existing chan nels of trade or prevent prices from responding to supply and demand conditions, the AAA de clared. The principal provision calls for establishment of grades for both cream and butter in an ef fort to stimulate production of high quality butter. Other objectives are to reward producers who supply high grade cream for butter production and to insure payment of premium prices to producers who offer high quality cream. MARXEA MAY COME HOLLYWOOD, March The Marx Brothers and a com pany of 25 are rehearsing a vaudeville act for appearances soon in Salt Lake City, Seattle, Portland and, possibly, San Fran cisco. They say they're doing it to try Out some gags they've thought up for their next film. HEARING BUTT II Relief Complaints Topic of Gathering Here Today Definite plans for handling re lief complaints in Oregon are ex pected to be laid before the state relief committee here this morn ing when it convenes at 11 o'clock in Governor Martin's office. Governor Martin would not comment yesterday on the exact plans he had in mind but well founded reports were to the ef fect that he expected to ask the committee to move vigorously to counteract an attempt made by the legislature to throw the en tire relief setup before a special investigating committee. Following a conference yester day with T. L. Edmonds, north west representative of the Federal Relief Administration, Governor Martin announced that Edmonds had termed Oregon a "model state" in handling. Its relief moneys. "Mr. Edmonds told me that the government has always been very much pleased by the efficiency and economy of relief administra military service by decree from one year to two years. After the first vote of confi dence Flandin said: "The world will know the country had discov ered the France of 1914, the France of Verdun." The votes approved the tall pre mier's denunciation of Germany's "vast rearmament" and France's refusal to approve the establish ment" of military aviation in the reich. The first vote was 389 to 190 In support of the government, which refused to accept a social ist motion to have the question of two-year conscript service sub mitted to the nation at large. The socialist attempt was in line with their campaign to force new elections. Record Try Ends Short of Goal; 340 Miles per Hour Achieved CLEVELAND, March 15.-P)-The second attempt of intrepid Wiley Post to set a new trans continental airplane non-stop rec ord in the stratosphere between Los Angeles and New York ended at 5:20 p. m. today when lack of oxygen forced him to land at the Cleveland municipal airport. Post covered the distance of 2, .1.63 miles "as the crow flies" in 8 hours and 4 minutes. His aver age speed was approximately 270 miles per hour. The flier made an easy landing on he skids of his plane, the famous Winnie Mae, alighting on the belly of the ship without dam age to himself or his craft. Most of the trip was flown at an alti tude of greater than 30,000 feet. Post was 60 miles east of Cleve land when he discovered his oxy gen supply was dangerously low. He swung back to the airport here and made a "dead stick" landing. As Post sped downward through the denser atmospheres ice con densed ou the induction coils of his motor and two cylinders "cut out." This did not, however, ham per the flier's maneuvers. (Turn to page 2, col. 2) S SAN JOSE, Cal., March 15.-JP) -The state suddenly shifted its tactics today in the second trial of David A. Lamson, charged with wife murder, when it introduced poetry written by Mrs. Sarah Kel ley, red-haired Sacramento divor cee whose name was linked with Lamson's in the first trial. This evidence was a variation from offerings by police and for mer sheriff deputies who had been on the witness stand for several days, telling of the scene in Lamson's home on Stanford university campus -after Mrs. Lamson's body was found in the bathtub. Howard Buffington, jailer, con fronted by Lamson in the court room, said the scar on Lamson's forehead resulted from the scratch he saw on the defendant's head the day the body was found. tion in Oregon," the governor said. "However, Edmonds agreed with me that we must take full cognizance of these complaints and go to the bottom, without fear or favor, to see if there have been any careless or misdirected expen ditures." The governor promised in his campaign that relief affairs in the state would be probed. He had in tended to reorganize the relief or ganisation in the state following legislative adjournment. When Representative Er win Informed him last weekend that he would attempt to put an investigation resolution through, the house, Mar tin moved quickly to replace four members of the Btate committee with persons of his own choosing. Erwin criticized the governor for looking to his own relief .com mittee for the Investigation. He said a separate organization or group of individuals should be picked to probe relief affairs. POST FORCED DOWN WHEN OXYGEN GONE POETRY IS READ TD 11 ON CASE JURY ILL CITY AND WHEELED STAY V CONTEST Marion County Entry Takes 30 to 14 Victory Over Westport Quintet Benson Portland Champion With Lincoln, Jeffmen Tied for 'B' Spot McMINNVILLE, Ore., March lS.-iT-With driving offenses and air tight defenses, the Mill City and Wheeler high basketball teams boomed to the finals of the district 15 "B" league tourna ment with lop-sided victories here tonight. Mill City beat Westport 30 to 14 and Wheeler whipped Dundee 25 to 6. The winners play tomor row night for the championship and state tournament entrance. Seim, Mill City forward , was high scorer of the first game with 15 points while Frye, a substi tute, was high ( scorer with eight points for Wheeler in the other game. Lineups: Mill City 30 14 Westport Allen, 2 F...... 6 Lovelace Seim 15 F 4 Tuom McAuley 8 C Foytich Smith, 6 G Forrest Catherwood G Belleville Wood...... S 2 Boone Herron S 2 Quinlan Wachter S Referee: Emil Piluso of Port land. PORTLAND, Ore., March 15.-(;P)-Benson high won the Port land prep league championship to night with a 24 to 17 victory over Lincoln high in a thrill sat urated game. : But Portland's "B" entrant in the state tournament won't be decided until Monday when Lin coln and Jefferson play off their second place tie. Jefferson, an In-and-out team, finished strong this last night of (Turn to page 2, col. 4) More Levees Cut A. way by Rising Water (By The Associated Press) The turbulent St. Francis river tore a gap in the levee in Ken nett, Mo., yesterday and surged over a mile wide area, driving 60 families from their homes. Before the Kennett levee was washed away the Red Cross had estimated the flood homeless at 5000, and it was feared the num ber might be doubled by today. Backwaters of the Mississippi in undated 3000 acres in Perry coun ty, Mo. The danger was lessening In Il linois and the Ohio river valley for the most part, although fore casts of rain held a threat of ris ing waters again this weekend. Saline county, Illinois, which was 40 per cent under water In midweek, was drying speedily and residents were moving hack home. Resorts in southern St. Louis county, Mo., were under 10 feet of water from the rampage of the Meramec river hut the crest had passed last night. Flood, conditions were most se rious around Fisk and Kennett, Mo., and St. Francis, Ark. More than 60,000 acres near Kennett were under water, and 2000 fam ilies depended on the Red Cross for temporary shelter. VANCOUVER, B. C, March 15. -(P)-Rapplng in two goals in the second overtime period, the Van couver Lions defeated the Portland- Buckaroos 2-0 here tonight to tie up the two-out-of-three ser ies in the Northwestern pro hock ey league semi-final playoffs at one game each after a sensational game. The Lions speeded up the pace in the first of the two 10-minute overtime sessions but found Ait kenhead'p stonewall defense in the Portland goal too much to beat Hextall and Clint Smith each broke through the defense to slam hard drives from short range but the Bucks' goalie han dled everything that came bis way. Hemmerling soloed through the Vancouver team twice but both times was wide of the goal. A third attempt was stopped at the Lions' blue line. Gordon Fraser and Munson fol lowed Hemmerling to slash a pair of bullet-like drives at Clark, but the Vancouver goalie saved sen sationally, sprawling on the ice to stop Fraser's shot which sipped for the corner of the net. EVENS wm Leader in Move To Free Islands ... His smile reflecting satisfaction at the progress of the campaign for Philippines independence, Manuel Quezon, president of the Philippine senate, is shown on his arrival in the United States bringing the new consti tution which he will ask Presi dent Roosevelt to sign. I Famed Moscfue Sees Battle; Two Shot by Guards, Ibn Saud Grapples Third MECCA, Saudi Arabia, March 16.-jP)-Tb.ree thugs stealing into ancient Mecca's most famous mos que were shot down and killed this morning as they attempted to assassinate tall, bearded Ibn Saud, "warrior king" of Saudi Arabia. The assailants, men of Yemen, launched their sudden, daring at tack as Ibn Saud and his son, the Crown Prince Emir Saud, joined 200,000 pilgrims in celebration of the sacred Mohammedan "feast of sacrifice." The king's armed bodyguard shot two before they reached the spot where he stood. Emir Saud himself grappled with the third, staying his knife, until pistol shots stretched him lifeless. They fell close to the sacred black throne, an object of especial reverence to every Mohammedan making the pilgrimage to Mecca, which followers of Islam believe the angel Gabriel gave to Abra ham. An official announcement said "it has now been proved that the would-be assassins were Zeidus (presumably residents of the Zei di river area in trans - Jordan) from Yemen." (Last year Ibn Saud heavily defeated $he Imam Yahyi of Ye men in warefare started by bor der disputes, capturing the port of Hodeidah and other Yemen territory. A treaty concluded last May 13 ended the war, the Imam Yahyi accepting Ibn Saud's peace conditions). "Investigations are still pro ceeding," the announcement Bald, "to ascertain their motive and find out whether they had any accomplices." F. fl. SERIOUSLY ILL WASHINGTON, March lS.--Louis McHenry Howe, who for 25 years has stood at the right hand of Franklin D. Roosevelt, lay seri ously ill today at the White House. Throughout the wide corridors of the executive mansion voices were softer, faces graver. The president worked in the executive offices much as usual but he re ceived frequent reports from the bedside of the man who in the last two decades has been friend, counsellor and secretary. Callers came and went from the executive offices. The cabinet held its regular meeting. Newspaper men canve for their semi-weekly interview. The president chatted with them, laughed with .them. But those who watched closely seemed to catch a glint of concern in his eye, to notice a deeper line about his mouth. His hand trembled a little as he stuffed a cigarette into Its ivory holder. ' No mention of the Illness was k - n i i sum RIGHT HAND Mi OF I made at the press conference. HIRING SPEGIAL LAWYERS BACK TD OLD STATUS Martin Vetoes Measure He Was Presumed Backing; Says Abuses Kept 4 Governor Explains Bill He Favored Was Different; Van Winkle Silent After constant attack on the "racket" of special attorneys for state departments, Governor Charles H. Martin yesterday about-faced his assault and sent Senate Bill 3!L9 providing for se lection of attorneys by the attorney-general to the execution squad. In a brief veto message, the governor said: "The employment of special attorneys by boards and commissions to perform legal ser vices which should have been per formed by the attorney-general's office has cost the taxpayers hun dreds of thousands of dollars and has become all but a public scan dal. This bill legalizes the old abuses and prevents their correc tion." "I'm going to prevent a contin uation of this racket and to hold all boards and commissions to strict accountability to me and not to the attorney-general," he add ed. Doesn't Dovetail With Bill's Wording The veto statement was in strange contrast to the provisions of Senate Bill 359. That enact ment, which passed the senate unanimously and went through the house with only Representa tive Wallace dissenting, provided that the attorney-general's office should do all the legal work of the state except where attorneys with special qualifications were needed for a departmental attor ney. In such instances, the attorney-general's office and the de partment were authorized to agree mutually on a deputy attorney-general to act as depart ment counsel. In event a deputy could not be agreed upon the gov ernor was to have the deciding vote. Governor Martin had tacitly ap proved Senate Bill 166, written by the attorney-general office and containing most of the provisions of Senate Bill 359 which he ve toed, except that the latter afford ed him more control than did the first named bill. While the governor's office did not send the legislature a formal (Turn to page 2, col. 1) Records for Tax Payment Broken; Over Half Paid PORTLAND, Ore., March 15.- (P)-A11 recent records for prompt tax payments were broken today when more than half the 115,286, 665 current county roll had been collected today at the end of the first quarter of the tax collection season. Sheriff Martin Pratt gave much credit for the showing to the state bargain tax rate plan under which discount is given if full taxes are paid at this time. At the corresponding date last year 47 per cent of the year's taxes were remitted. Monorail From Grants Pass to Sea Is Proposed GRANTS PASS, Ore., March 15. (TJ-A "monorailway" line with a single overhead rail carrying an engine and cars suspended be neath it, was proposed by its in ventor, P. S. Combs, to link Grants Pass and the Pacific coast at Crescent City, Cal. Combs left for the coast today after outlining his proposal to business men here last night. Seventeen Hundred Jailed in Federal Drive on Crime WASHINGTON. March 1 More than 1700 in jail, and con traband valued in the millions were the" rewards tonight of a swift and widespread anti - crime campaign which linked all the agents of the treasury in a con certed offensive. Narcotic peddlers and addicts, smugglers, counterfeiters, liquor tax evaders, violators of every law for which the treasury holds en forcement responsibility were rounded up the nation over. The seizures made a varied list. They rank from silks to tapestries and veered off to cabin cruisers, morphine and lottery tickets. In Baltimore alone, they were valued at SM35.S40, Including $913,928 in lottery tickets and 700 gallons of liqnor. . .Secretary Morgenthan received reports on the progress of the E1LK WAGE Compromise Proposal Wins Over Six, Upsetting Result of Previous Vote 50 to 38; New Proposal is Then Approved Almost Immediately; President Permitted to Set Wages Except on Federal Building Jobs Way Cleared for Early Adoption of $4,800,00 0,000 Aid Bill; Wagner, Champion of Organized Labor, One of Die-Hards to Shift Over; Robinson Announces New Plan Will Have Administration Approval WASHINGTON, March 15 (AP) Roosevelt forces to day pushed a prevailing wage compromise through the revolt-torn senate, ending in a matter of minutes the deadlock that for weeks has held the $4,880,000,000 work- relief bill stationary. Gaining six votes, they defeated 50 to 38 the McCarran amendment, written into the, bill by 44 to 43 nearly a month ago. Opposition to the compromise then crumbled as if by magic and it was swiftly adopted, with just two members voting against it. The compromise, bearing full White House approval, directs the president to set uch wages as would not tear down existing wage levels, but with prevailing wage rates to be paid on all federal public building projects. The Mc ' oCarran proposal flatly directed Jill COLLEGES BILL MEETS VETO Expense Chief Reason; Ax Also Falls on Sunday Closing Measure As he had indicated Thursday, Governor Martin yesterday vetoed the Junior college bill and the Sunday closing bill. Five reasons were given in the veto message disapproving Senate Bill 89 which permitted school districts to organize and operate junior colleges. They Included failure of the bill to provide any means, other than tuition charges, for out-of-district pupils, too low a valuation limit on the territory permitted to organize a junior college, inabiliy of property to stand a higher tax for education purposes and existing aid furn ished by the federal government to needy students who wish to go away from home to attend insti tutions of higher learning. "This is no time to enact legis lation which would authorize in creased levies on real property," the governor said in his veto mes sage. "What is needed is some vigorous pruning in the school or chard and not the planting, of more trees as potential excuses for taxation." The governor said the Sunday closing bill, applying only to (Turn to page 2, col. 8) Oregonian Held On Counterfeit Count in South SACRAMENTO, March 15.- -A man identifying himself as Rex Alexander Hall, 24, of Lincoln county, Oregon, is in Jail here to day charged with possession of counterfeit coins, following his arrest in Arbuckle, near here. Federal agents who arrested the man said they found him play ing a slot machine with counter feit coins. He is held on 12500 bond, but his mother, who came here from Oregon, is attempting to obtain his release on his own recognizance. drive as It developed, and late in the day expressed high satisfac tion with its results, telling news papermen they were "extremely pleasing." A total of 11,517 men were massed in the great attack. The coast guard mustered 9, 000. The alcohol tax nnit furnish ed 1700. The narcotics bureau as sembled 300, the secret service 240, the intelligence nnit of the bureau of internal revenue 152 and the customs bureau 125. The alcohol tax nnit of the treasurywtook the lead in report ing arrests with 741 early to night, followed with 257 arrests, by the narcotics bureau, includ ing six women. Customs men held 19S prisoners, mainly for liqnor and lottery, ticket violations, while (Turn to page 2, coL 1) ENTS LOSE mt that prevailing wages be paid. The ending of the weeks' long impasse cleared the senate air, and there were predictions that the pace of the big measure through the senate would be measurably swifter next week. Other amendments remain to be dealt with, but leaders expressed confidence that the bill could be shoved along substantially as the president desires. The climax of the long battle came as three senators Wagner of New York, Q'Mahoney of Wy oming, democrats, and LaFollette (Prog-Wis) announced they would support the administra tion's compromise. Portly Senator McCarran (D Nev) ended the argument for his amendment after a long day of debate by assailing Seaator Wag ner for his shift to the administra tion proposal. Wagner earlier bad defended his position, saying the compromise gave protection to the "going wage" scale and fix ed the responsibility on Presi dent Roosevelt. Taking the floor shortly before the roll call votes were demand ed, Senator Glass (D-Va) told the senate he was authorieed to say that President Roosevelt would veto the relief hill If the McCar ran amendment prevailed and that Senator Robinson of Arkan sas, the democratic leader, was authorized to say the chief exe cutive would approve the com promise, introduced by Senator Russell (D-Ga). THREE PASS BHD TO ELECTRIC CHAIR TRENTON, N. J., March 15.-(iT)-Walking one by one past the cell of Bruno Richard Hauptmann, three convicted murderers met death in the electric chair to night. Michael Mule, 24; Connie Scar pone, 26, and George De Stefano, jr., 25, all three like Haupt mann, convicted of murder in the commission of a felony - paid with their lives for the holdup slaying of John Szczytowski, 37. Hauptmann shook -hands with each of the men as they paased his cell. "Pray to God," he was quoted by a prison official as saying to each. Scarpone, the first to die, star tled the gathering of reporters and officials in the execution room 1 by making a statement in' which he involved another man in the -Szczytowski slaying. "I'd like to aay something be fore I go," he declared, as 'the executioner i repared to slip the mask over his face. "Any members of the press here? Then tell Detective Dl Louie ' to go arrest ." (He named ' a man who gave evidence against him An his trial). "He was in on it." ' Necessity Made Robbery Defense PORTLAND, Ore., March 15.-WV-Admitting his guilt, Noble C. Smith. 30, who was charged with assault and robbery with a dan gerous weapon today told the court Ma fellow's got to IiTe.Mt So Circuit - Judge Jacob Kanz ler handed Smith a 20-year room and board ticket to the state pen itentiary. . i