- VACATION TIME ' Keep posted tn local . news while on your vaca tion. Have The Statesman follow you. Telephone 0101 to order the change of address. THE WEATHEIi 4 Cloudy today and Sunday iemperatare little changed; . Max. Temp. Friday 74, Min. 53, river .9 foot, cloudy, southwest winds. FOUMDEP 1631 EIGHTY-FIFTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning, June 8, 1935 No.CS -y - nmiirn nniiniiT ruvutn ouubni rnnnn nrniiTirn Veteran Statesman Wins In Situation That Caused Two Others to Fall Gravity of Franc's Flight Stressed; Confidence Vote is 326-161 PARIS, June 8. -(Saturday )-(JPy-Where two governments top pled before him. Premier Pierre Laval iron from the chamber of deputies early today emergency financial powers. The new premier the third to face the chamber in eight days wrung decree powers from the chamber to fight off the franc's devaluation by a vote of confi dence of 326 to 161. In an earlier test, the first for his newly formed cabinet, the premier had won another over whelming vote of confidence, the deputies voting 412 to 137 in his favor on the technical point of postponing all interpellations. "The situation is serious," La val told the chamber in demand ing his emergency powers. "The outflow of gold diminished last week but did not cease. "The budget deficit with the railroad deficit will reach 10 000,000,000 francs this year and the treasury will have to meet a payment of 9.000,000,000." Promises to Defend 'Parliamentary Rule He promised to defend the par liamentary regime as a "republi can Institution." Governments headed by Pierre- Etienne Flandin and Bernard Bouisson "e'i in the chamber on the issue of the financial dicta torship they declared was neces sary If the fight to save the franc was to succeed. The 52-year-old veteran of the foreign office, wearing his custo mary white tie, told the chamber the government's financial trou bles were the only threat to the franc's solidity. Business recovery, he declared, Is the new government's real aim In the hope that it will restore (Turn to page 2, col. 5) F .IS BUENOS AIRES, June, An end to the bitter, bloody Cha co war, three years old this month, seemed definitely In sight tonight. Foreign ministers of Bolivia and Paraguay, the belligerents, reached an agreement with neu tral American mediators on -the basic points of an accord to end hostilities. After the Argentine, Bratilian, Chilean, Peruvian and Uruguayan mediation group met, Jose Carlos Macedo Soares, Brazilian foreign minister, said only difficulties connected with phrasing of the agreement remained to be straightened out, V - The Paraguayan delegation an nounced that Foreign Minister Luis Rlart had "ratified Para guay's acceptance of the bases formulated by the mediators." - ' Bolivia's -foreign minister, Thomas M. Ello, had previously accepted for his nation. Earlier today Ellosald lie -believed the peace agreement could be signed quickly If Paraguay ac cepted several points. POLICE KEPT HAVANA, Jane Cuban police-threw their forces against , attempts to ransom the kidnaped 78-year-old multi-millionaire An tonio San Miguel tonight, taking one of the negotiators- Frank Steinhart, Jr., a prominent Amer ican to Camp Columbia. - "- After confiscating the $286,000 ransom money already collected to meet the kidnapers' demands, secret police took Steinhart to the camp when he appeared at head quarters to take back the money and buy the freedom of his old - friend and business ' associate. Earlier the kidnap band had released Jose Modesto Iglesias, San Miguel's bodyguard and one of three servants abducted with the former senator and had sent him to Steinhart with two letters, one from San Miguel authorising payment of the ransom and the other from the kidnapers setting a ransom rendeivous. Steinhart failed to obtain the mnntr from the tjolice. however. Authorities declined to say whe ther he was arrested of -merely taken for. questioning. . . " - BOND BILL VETOED - SACRAMENTO, June 7.- (ff) ' Governor Merrlam tonight .Tetoed allowed the issuance of revenue bonda to finance municipal water BIG TO ii moil HI and power districts, ? Some Men Portland Head Sleuth Wants Questioned in Kidnap Case f Sip. ( ;r- ;i I ' "J f I A " " V V .' I i -1 ' ) ' - ' vW s f ' V 9 - i -' . :' - t -v ""V J I "' t""1 ' nT 1 . j M"" -'Kl i ";,!"- ' 'These four men and a couple of something aixmt the Weyerhaeuser kidnaping case, says John L. Keegan, l'ortlaml captain of detectives. Top, left, Herbert 1. John- stone, ex-Olympia blackmailer; Richard Franzeen, lower right, oery case; lower icit, Liarence Martin, Oregon holdup man former ly in the penitentiary here. International Illustrated Xews Photo. I 91ST GRADUATION Baxters Entertain; Board of Trustees Will Meet Today, Willamette r Willamette university's 91st commencement was begun last night with the traditional presi dent's reception with Dr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Baxter, the university faculty and the class of '35 re ceiving hundreds of guests at Lausanne hall. This morning at 10 o'clock the board of trustees will convene on the campus to hear the report of the year's work, plans for 1935 1936 and to approve the present faculty list for another year. A proposal for removal of the (Turn to page 2, col. 4) WASHINGTON, June 7-(JP)-Donald Richberg and the new deal officially parted company to day "'ith the acceptance by Pre sident Roosevelt of the NRA chieftain's resignation dated nine days in advance. Mutual expressions of regret filled the two letters. The presi dent addressed Richberg as "Dear Donald" and said he would car ry along with him the "affec tionate regard" of the chief exe cutive. "I know that I can count on your service and help in the fu ture," the president added. He asked Richberg to stay a little beyond June 16 when the present NRA expires and help get the new one going. Richberg has traveled a mete oric path through the new deal. General counsel for NRA, direc tor of the national emergency council and other duties claimed him before he became head of NRA. At one time he was widely called "assistant president." . I HIGU6 RESIGNS AS IA CHIEFTAIN D iplomas A warded io 357 At S.H'.S. Commencement School days for 357 seniors of! Salem high school closed yester day morning when relatives and friends packed every available chair in the Elslnore theatre for commencement exercises. -They heard President Bruce R. Baxter of Willamette university briefly and forcefully describe the ever narrowing confines of the modern world and challenge each of the graduates to do his or her part in changing that world from a "neighborhood into a brotherhood.- Misunderstanding of the view points of other people Jiss been the salient cause for wars to recognize the rights and privileges of other persons of diverse color and creeds is the test of the edu cated man, ihe speaker declared. Silas Galser, superintendent of schools, presented the SB? diplo mas as one graduate after another marched across the stage and into the ranks of the high school's alumni... ...... ' Principal Fred Wolf presented others he mentions, might know right, Elliott Michener, who with is wanted in a Denver train rob- WEATHER HELPS IN L OF BLAZE 300 Men Fighting; Report BrOUght Back Of Rain T,,iA -7-... in irOUDie 0ne If weather conditions remain unchanged, the forest fire raging in the Valsetz district will be COM checked by tonight, Lynn F. I postoffice and general store. Sher Cronemiller, state forester, an- I If f s and state highway patrolmen nounced last night. Three hundred of northern Idaho, eastern Wash men, most of them CCC workers, ington and eastern Oregon were fought the fire steadily yesterday, hurled into action, and set up An area nearing 2000 acres in size guards on all roads leading from was being swept by the flames which had destroyed last night a considerable body of green tim ber. The forest fire In Polk county was well under control yesterday, Senator Charles K. Spaulding re ported late Friday afternoon upon return from ihat area. Senator Spaulding says the fire has been raging on the Spaulding logging company land and cover ed 1000 acres in cut-over timber, but that there was no crown fire at any point. A nice rain fell on the fire area Thursday night, and a mist yes terday was heavy enough that it was necessary to keep the. car windshield swipe operating to drive. "The only future danger there (Turn to page 2, col. 5) Judge Wilson to Hear BurkCase JudKe Fred W. Wilson of The Danes will hear Ihe case against complexion. Three former minis Sheriff A C. Burk growing out Urs retlred. one of them, Sir Ed- vj. lutticiuieuw vruuBut vj l"c grand Jury this week Chief Jus- tice Campbell of the supreme court, said yesterday. Judge Wil- son has tentatively set June 12 as the date for 'him to come to Sa- i n ouu. our " "rl.-7, " V vi iuiuuuiiii; null ucKUgeuu; Al lowing prisoners to escape from the county jail. Both Judge L. G. Leweliing and Judge L. H. Mc- Mahan disqualified themselves to hear, the case. - the class for the diplomas, pre- facing his remarks with an an- nouncement of the prlxe winners To Wayne WUliams went the E 1IK.. fA III. Itnrf-nt wvk w h .-root. t r,mM-M. tAw.rd-tii.-fiiMi tn eharacter, service and wholesome influence. Roland deVries won the American Legion Auxiliary prixe of IS for the senior cassias- a his - torr test with the hirheat rrade. To Sam SherrilL president of the senior class, went the award forimg the negotiation of a final re- excellent work in chemistry, bio - logy .and physics. To Donald Ka- vinanrh and TJ.1Ha -f!hmhrlln were awarded two medals a-Iven annually by ArtU i Gnllde, hi;h MARSHFIELD, Ore., June 7 school art society. - - I (-Sunday, June S3, has been Miss Lena Belle Tartar, director of masic at the high school," pre- sented an attractive irons of mu - slcal numbers. Boys and girls of the high school chorus sang four selections with Elbert Lachelle ac- companying at the organ. Later (Turn to page 2, coL ) I SEARCH OF ISSAQUAH AREA IS BEING MADE House Where Weyerhaeuser Boy Was Held Prisoner May Be Found Soon Clue of Supposed Ransom Money in Idaho Blows Up; Wrong Digits TACOMA, June- 7-(jP)-An air plane search, for the house where kidnapers held George Weyer haeuser was revealed tonight by authoritative sources as under way, while a breach over handling the investigation widened between Seattle and federal authorities. A source close to the- investiga tion. which could not be named, said a 10-mile area in King coun ty was being covered by airplane to find the house with "two ga bles" described by the nine-year- old kidnap victim O. K. Bodia, chief criminal de puty sheriff in Seattle, began working n a lead without con suiting federal agents, whom he declared will give him no infor mation on the investigation. An estimate that the kidnap bouse would be located "within 4 8 hours" came from the source which revealed the airplane search as new theories were ad vanced to indicate professional criminals did not execute the $200,000 kidnaping No information was revealed concerning the plane's base or its pilot. SPOKANE, Wash., June 7-(P) -A possible clue to members of the kidnap gang in Elk City, in ; ild north central Idaho, was immed late this afternoon when list of federal reserve notes sup plied by Postmaster White at Elk City failed to correspond with a 8t"V,pplIed by the department Postmaster White notified de- partment of justice omciais ana sheriff's officers at Grangeville. nearby, that he had Yeceff ed sev eral hundred dollars he -had iden- titled as ransom currency from three men who had visited his that region When the Associated Press in- (Turn to page 2, col. 1) fCoovrieht. 1935. by Associated Press) LONDON, June 7-w nite-nairea Ramsay MacDonald, veteran fight er for peace, stepped out as Great Britain's prime minister today and Stanley Baldwin, who typi fies "John Bull" himself to Amer icans, stepped in. The leader of the conservative party, who has been prime minis ter twice before, lost no time in reconstructing the cabinet. In which MacDonald took Baldwin's former place as Lord President of the council. Five -new faces appeared in the i j I - I ward Hilton Young ralUng neaith, "coupled with ,ki mttioM' d'ecigton to end Blx yearg and two d prime, minister. His re- as odvWus. for he smiled broadly as he arrived, in top hat I d morning coat, at the palace 7l . Oil 1 2 Mi UCUIUIC To Pay; Hint at Debt Settlement WASHINGTON, June 7.-(P- Hintinr at the possibility of a fu ture war debt settlement parley, Great Britain at the same time to- itav nntttimA thn tTnlted State that ,t would defauit on war debt ,,.,,,, cs 7 7k Jnae 15 and payment In arrea - 1 V V U. I Sir Ronald Lindsay, the Srit- ih ambassador, informed Secre- H,n1Jn form1 ate Jhat the British government had given comprehensive explanation, In a i note aeuverea last june. wny nis government baa been unable to make payments in the past -pend I vised settlement." I nirrvtx UAUtia wjuxitu et " the definite date for the ar rival of the Japanese training i barkentine Shlntoku Maru, on I which 80 Nippon cadets are com- pietlng a 16-year t.ainlng period, Extensive entertainment for the I students and the 11 -officers Is II BECOMES II PREMIER 1 planned. World News at a Oiance (By The Associated fress) Domestic: WashJnrtgon House votes NRA extension 364-121 as Roose velt accepts RIchberg's resigna tion for June 16. Washington Roosevelt asks congress to give ICC control of highway, rail, water and air trans portation. Tacoma Hunt "Percy'' and "Minnie" in Weyerhaeuser kidnap case. Washington Administration senators placate foes of utility bill; passage seen next week. New York Survey shows Job. prospects for college graduates brightest in years. Washington Britain defaults $85,670,756 war debt payment due June 15; other nations ex pected to follow. Stamford, Conn. Cummings outlines national crime institute to train local authorities. New York Boy, 5, missing from wealthy neighborhood; mistake kidnaping" considered. Washington Heavy gift and" inheritance tax program forecast. Foreign: Paris Deputies vote confi dence in Laval on fiscal powers issue that spilled previous cabin ets. Tientsin, China Japanese sol diers demonstrate as general says Chinese recognition of Manchou kuo is sought. London Baldwin as prime minister retains national coalition in new cabinet. Havana Ransom contact re ported in multi-millionaire's kid naping for $286,000; his lawyer held for questioning. Rome British embassy Is guarded as newspaper attacks English attitude on Italo- Ethio pian controversy. Belgrade Goering seen build ing anti-communist fence for Ger many with western European alli ances. Buenos Aires Bolivian and Paraguayan envoys agree on bas is for accord to end Chaco strike. Speqial Courtesies' 'Shown Rose Festival Guests Draw Praise Here Cherrians, and more especially their wives, were greatly pleased at the courtesies they were shown In connection with the uniformed Salem boosters' appearance in the Rose festival parade at. Portland Friday, they reported on their re turn. The 40 Cherrians and the Sa lem high school band marched near the center of the parade, and were on foot from 1:30 to 5 o'clock Friday afternoon. Previously they were guests at a luncheon at the Multnomah ho tel which was their headqiitrters, provided by the Rosarlans; and the Cherrians wives not only were guests there, but afterward they were taken to the stadium by Rosarian officials and provided with grandstand seats which had been reserved for them. The Sa lem "group was also privileged to attend a dinner Friday night. About 125 persons, including a number of the Cherrians, joined the special Cherrian coach yes terday morning, bound for Port land and the rose festival. The special included six coaches and a club car. Several Cherrians left Salem Ia ter in the day. Just' In time to reach Multnomah stadium for the parade at 2 o'clock, and several others made the trip on the spe cial bus chartered for the high school band. Prepare Briefs In Salary Case Briefs werev being prepared yesterday by the attorney-gener al's office on the suit brought by Ed Jory, Marion county taxpayer, to restrain the state from -paying the governor more than -$1500 annually. Ralph Moody, deputy attorney-general, is preparing the .... 1A T. n T .aw elling is to hear the arguments on the case. Late Sports PORTLAND. Ore., June 7.-P) -Big Smead Jolley smagned home run with one aboard In the eighth Inning to break a tie and enable Hollywood to defeat Port land to 3 here tonight. Hollywood 10 I Portland 3 1 Hebert and DeSautels; Chand ler and Cronln, H. Doerr. Missions t 11 Seattle Z -19 ti W. Beck, Osborne, Gallison, Tost and Out en; Plckrel, Lucas Gendreau, Barrett and Bottarlni. Oakland .11 13 San Francisco 5 IS Haid, Conlan, Bego and Kels; Ballon, Stitxel and Becker. Sacramento Los Angeles .8 10 -1 3 Koupal and Salkeld; Garland, Harris and Gibson. IIS 1 WIVES ENTERTAINED CHINESE GIVEN UNTIL JUNE 11, ACCEPT TERMS Tientsin Tense as Major Upheaval is Feared in Foreign District Military Demonstrations by Japanese Frequent in Native Quarter TOKYO, June 8-(Saturday (JP)-A definite date; Jane 11 has been fixed by which Chi na mast yield to Japan's north China demands, vernacular newspaper dispatches from Chi na reported today. TIENTSIN, China, June T.-W)-Japanese military boots resound ed on the pavements of the city today as the fear that north China is at the threshold of a major up heaval gripped the foreign colony. The 51st army of Gen. Yu-Hsueh-Chung, which formed the garrison of the former governor, evacuated this city and moved to Paotingfu, the new seat of gov ernment for Hopeh province, 90 miles to the south of Peiping. Throughout the day, during the first sessions of a Japanese military conference, business was at a standstill, while the question on the lips of foreigners and Chin ese alike was: 'What will be the next Japan ese move?" When the conference' ended and the Japanese announced no decis- io had been reached, the tension ended somewhat, the residents feeling there was at least one more day of grace. Japanese military demonstra tions along the streets outside the foreign areas continued intermit- f tently. It was a common occur rence to see detachments of sev eral hundred Japanese, in full equipment, marching through the crowded native areas. Responsible residents consider these parades of warriors are likely to aggravate the situation shortly, with incidents which may precipitate serious hostilities. General Shane Chen, the new ly appointed garrison commander for Tientsin, who was formerly stationed at Peiping, is expected to arrive tomorrow with the 3 2d army, which will undertake gar rison duties in this area. L S WASHINGTON, June 7. -- President Roosevelt asked con gress in a special message today for legislation which ultimately would give the interstate com merce commission control of highway, rail, inland waterway and air transportation. He called for the enactment' of bills to: Help along railroad refinanc- iag. Put air transportation under the Interstate commerce commis sion. Regulate highway motor car riers. Put inland waterway and coast al carriers under the interstate commerce commission. Broaden and reorganize the interstate commerce commission into a federal transportation com mission. Continue the work of Joseph B. Eastman as transportation co ordinator. Of the six bills, the president said . that giving the Interstate commerce commission broader powers might have to go over to the next session; . "It Is high time to deal with the nation s transportation as a single, unified problem," Mr. Roosevelt said in his message.. SEES NEW 1111 Tin College Graduate's Hopes For Job Bright This Year NEW YORK, June 7P)-The 1935 college graduate apparently has a better chance of finding a Job than he would have had in any of the years since he left high school. A nationwide surrey .tonight showed a decided Improvement In the prospects tor this year's crop of graduates, as compared with the last four or five years. Many students now bidding farewell ' to -their alma maters even have ' a choice of two or three offers. In only a few instances, not ably at Columbia university, was the trend downward. Only 30 per cent of Columbia's graduating class has made connections thus far and W. Emmerson Gentsler, secretary of appointments, said the Immediate outlook Is poorer than . last year. The 1934 class was -'35- per cent .employed i by October 1.- -c. , Tale reported 00 per cent in crease in - the number of jobs promised over last rear, which W angton bracks : Down:' Strike eadership Two Are Killed Two Injured in Mystery Blast SEQTJIM, Wash , June 7-iP)-Two persons . were killed in a mysterious dynamite explosion here today, two seriously injured. ? The blast wrecked a house, which burned to the ground. The dead: Howard Taylor, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Tay lor, theatre operator. Jack Spiecker, 17, son of Mrs. Henry Emory. The- injured: Jack Knappman, 86, grandfather of the Spiecker boy. Velma Spiecker, 16, the boy's sister. Bodies Of the boys were blown 400 feet, but officers were un able to explain the nature of the blast, except to speculate that since they had been shooting pig eons with a .22 caliber rifle, one of them might have fired a shot into a can of blasting powder. Mileage Costs of Sheriff's Staff are Criticized in Formal Report Mileage costs of the sheriff's office are held to be excessive and the county is urged to purchase Us own cars for u'e in that de partment in a grand Jury finding dated June C, but released by the circuit court here only yesterday. The Jury also reports that in a number of Instances, Sheriff A. C. Burk or his assistants could have used trains more economically than cars in transporting prison ers. A number of the expense claims presented for mileage by the sheriff's office are indefinite regarding the places rnd persons visited and the case in which the mileage was incurred, the Jury finds, recommending more detail ed reports hereafter for the ex pense vouchers. Reconstruction of the county Jail to make it impossible for a prisoner to tide behind the main door and there attack a guard when the door Is opened is re commended by the rand Jury while a new locking system Is also favored in the report which sets out that the present locking sys tem might make it Impossible to clear the Jail rapidly enough in case of fire. Using the audit of the state auditing department for its find ings, the Jury sets out that Sher iff A. C. Burk in the years 1933, 1934 and the first four months of 1935 has incurred mileage (Turn to page 2, col, 2) Three Named on Textbook Board Three new members of the state textbook commission were named yesterday by Governor Charles H. Martin. Mrs. Mary L. Fulkerson, county school super intendent here, being among the group chosen. Other new mem bers include Rex Putnam, super intendent of schools at Albany, and Roy L. Skeen, member of the staff at the Eastern Oregon Nor mal school. Holdover members are E. H. Hedrick of Medford and A. C. - Hampton of Astoria, each in charge of the city schools of those commnnlties. Retiring members of the board are Aus tin Landreth, Pendleton; R. R. Turner. Dallas: Nelson L. Boss ing, Eugene was 70 per cent above the pre vious year. Cornell, with about 60 per eent of its seniors placed before grad uation, hailed the prospects as the best In four years, almost equalling .the peak seasons of 1J27-28-2I. . r For the, first, time since, 1929 graduates of Wisconsin univer sity's school of commerce were being offered a choice of jobs. Twice as many Industrial scouts were on the scene as last year. The chemical engineering de partment of Rice Institute, Tex as, had more, job offers than graduates. All of its ' architects and electrical engineers were placed. . .. - ' . " . Thesame held true of the vari ous engineering school graduates at Texas university, v Chicago . nnlTersity '. reported prospects "much better" than last year. Forty per eent of the stu dents who applied tor jobs al ready have been placed, and of- (Turn to page 2, eoL S) JURY SAYS COUNTY SHOULD 01 CABS Governor Now S State Troopers Vmi Longview and Warn Picket Groups Committee Announces Locals Will Pay No More Dues LONGVIEW, Wash., June 7. (iP)-Eight state patrolmen and two patrol wagons arrived here tonight with orders to keep lum ber strike pickets from stopping traffic and preventing . persons from entering sawmills. The state officers at once went among the pickets and told them they must confine their picketing "within legal limits" and that blocking motor and pe destrian traffic would not be tol erated. It was, believed here the state patrolmen were acting under ord ers of Governor Clarence D. Mar tin who indicated in a speech be- . fore the Washington state grange that he intended to see that em ployes wishing to return to the mills are allowed to. Pickets have stopped mainten ance men and office employes from entering the Weyerhaeuser and Long-Bell Mills this week. SEATTLE, Wash., June 7.-(p)-Revolt split the striking lumber workers of the northwest tonight. Breaking entirely from the Northwest Council of the Lojrrers' and Sawmill Workers union. which has been the executive body ror striRers, the executive com mittee of the newly formed strike committee issued a statement ask ing local unions to withhold-dues from the Northwest council. The strike committee opposed Abe aiuir, vice-president of the Bro therhood of Carpenters and, .Join?, ers. This was at Aberdeen. The newly appointed strike committee cf Longview sawmill and timber workers went under, the banner of the Aberdeen com mittee today, repudiating the leadership of Mulr. Dan Hawk, chairman of the Longview strike committee here, said his group is now empowered to open negotiations with Long- view mill operators for a signed agreement calling for higher . wages, shorter hours and full union recognition. In Seattle, Muir commented as follows: "Whoever this Hawk is, he is not empowered to represent the national union, and if he is back ed by his local union, it will not long remain a memoer oi tne na- , t 1 i . uuuai uuiuu. Gov. Clarence D. Martin of Washington at Olympia today pledged the "full power and in fluence" at his command to pro tect lumber workers who wished to return to their Jobs, and asked the Btate patrol to oust "commun ists" and agitators who attetepted to intimidate such workers. The northwest strike commit tee of the lumber workers saost pass on any action taken toward renewing operations w i La. the Long Bell and Weyerhaeuiftsr com panies here,' the union men said, with local officials acting waxy la an advisory capacity. , WINS AT FESHl PORTLAND. Ore., Jrae ?.-(jfy -Out - of - town sweepstakes for Rose festival parade floats was won today by Pasadena, CaX. with a floral flag depicting "histeer in flowers." Two beautiful blondes aa a brunette riding gracefully the float caught the eye of the maltl tndea as well as that of the jud ges.' Vanconver, B. C. won eeeond' prixe for out-of-town entries, Se attle Potlach boat was third and Long Beach, Wash., gained hon orable mention. Cinderella, riding In a Otter ing coach of gold, drawn ay six spirited bay horses, won the covet ed grand sweepstakes for commer cial division floats for "the lint National bank. , Grand sweepstakes for non commercial entrants went to the Oregon City junior chamber of commerce. The winner was a long, graceful creation of 12,000 iris, 800 peonies and 600 carnations a "land of enchantment" in blue, yellow and white.' Clouds Provide Hopes for Rain Relief from the sudden intense heat Which prevailed IB. this sec tion until Thursday night came Friday, with light coats wont com fortably all daring- yesterday. Cloudy skies during the day, alone with reports of rain farther wear ied to hopes for showers, today. m PASH FL DM