The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 07, 1936, Page 2, Image 2

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fAGB TWO
The OREGON STATESMAN, SaJeM, Oregon, Tuesday" Morning, January .7, 193S
AAA Reversal 1
t 1" w . ... . ... . :
' Results Viewed
Little -Immediate Change
-1 , -. . . -. .
In Prices Observed;
; ' Views Various
t. (Continued from page 1)
official word came from Wash
ington. Some Retailers
Happy Over Ruling
A checkup about town showed
many retailers were happy orer
the invalidation of AAA. One
large dealer in meats said he had
Beyer been able to collect enough
from Increased retail prices to
pay the $500 a month processing
tax bis firm was assessed. "As a
reanlt we have kept eating Into
oar assets and the suspension of
the tax means putting our busi
ness back oa an even keel' he
declared. "I think the public can
expect some' reduction in prices
on. pork 'sad also some increase
to the grower of hogs. The $2.25
hundred processing tax came in
part from the grower, in part
from the pnblic and in part from
reduced margins to the retailer."
Grocers predicted an eventual
decline in floor prices although
they said the supply of high
grade, blended flour was scarce
this: winter and the result has
been a stiff price.
' Hop men were set back in their
plans for a cooperative production
control agreement. All hopes for
direct help from AAA were gone.
When R. H. McDrew, federal rep
resentative, was here last week he
had promised possible help for
the hop men through the 30 per
cent of federal import taxes on ag
ricultural products set aside for
AAA. President Roosevelt yester
day recommended repeal of this
act and that outlet for hop coop
eration vanished. Only possibility
for the growers was a voluntary
cooperative association in which,
without federal help, they would
agree to red need production and
to destroy surplus through a self
imposed tax. Prospects to get
enough growers signed to accom
plish Ahis seemed slight with fed
eral assistance removed. .
Corn-Hog Contract
Procedure Unknown
Harry Riches, county agent,
said no word had been received
regarding the next step on corn
hog contracts, and the procedure
to be followed on wheat produc
tion contracts. However, advices
from Washington were that all
treasury payments on these con
tracts -were ordered stopped last
night and AAA employes were or
dered from the federal payrolls.
As a result remaining one-half
payments on Old contracts for
corn-hog producers may not be
met.
Marion county will not be af
fected as adversely as many-sections.
It was pointed out. Acreage
of wheat here averages slightly
more than -8000. Under the feder
al reduction program the acreage
annual hog production has been
14.682 in this connty. Corn pro
duction has 'been reduced to 3803
acres.
The new AAA act In Oregon has
never been put into operation
pending exhaustive Investigations
into the -effect of the old act. now
under way by S..T. White, direct
or of agriculture. A. A. Retd. state
marketing director, said a test
nit had been expected for some
The Call Board
ELSIXORE
Today Joe Penner in Colle-
giate."
Wednesday Ronald Cole-
man in "The Man Who
Broke the Bank, at Monte
. Carlo."
r turday Sabatini's "Cap-
tain Blood," with Errol
Flynn.
GRAND
Today "Music is Magic,"
with Alice Faye.
Wednesday George O'Brien
in "Thunder Mountain."
Saturday George Raft and
Joan Bennett in "She
Couldn't Take It"
- CAPITOL.
i Today Double bill. Ad-
miral Byrd's "Little Amer-
ica," and Tim McCoy in
" "The Square Shooter."
Thursday Double bill, "It's
, a Great Life," with Joe
. Morrison, and "The Crime
, of Dr: Crespl," with Erie
, , Von Stroheim.
' ' ,
HOLLYWOOD
Today W&llaee Beerv !n
"O'Shaughnessy's Boy."
Wednesday Edmund Lowe
. in "King Solomon of
Broadway." f
Friday Double", bill, "The
Black Room'? with Karloff
and western picture.
STATE
Today Preston Foster in
"The People's Enemy."
Thursday Sylvia Sidney in
"Accent on1 Youth."
Saturday only Burns and
Allen in "Here Comes
' Cookie."
Deaf Alan Hears Minister
First Time in Years
After using OURINE. the pre-
paration of a Vienna specialist,
only a short while, Joseph Mere
dith of-Ontario, Canada, : reports
that "all the head noises have
gone and I can hear people talk
ing, i X - heard the minister read
the Scripture for the first time In
" tfo years.. If you are hard of
hearing, bothered by head noises,
ear-ache, ringing and bussing in
ears, sick with the dread , of ap
proaching ' deafness, get, OURINE
today. Zasy ; to use.'; Relief; Is
Quick. Costs -only a few cents a
' day, Aloney back if not satisfied;
: WRlett's Capital Drag Store -403
State St.
Here and Ihere in Oregon
Associated Press leased Wire Service
Nun Born Near Woodburn
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 6.-r(P)-Mary Jane Casey, Sister Mary
Placid e of O. S. B., died today at Sacred Heart-schooL She . was"
born Jane 15, 1853, on her father's 'donation land claim near
Woodbura. She observed her golden Jubilee as a Benedictine
nun 'In 1934. Survivors included two sisters, Mrs. Josephine
Campbell and Mrs. Margaret Allen, both of Eugene.
Portland Banks Report Big Gain in Deposits
PORTLAND, Ore,, Jan. .-(A)-Portland bank deposits gained
S3S.91S.861 in 1935, a surrey showed today. The total as of De
cember 31 was reported at $197,412,754. The United States Na
tional with a total of S102.S41.C35 (a gain of more than flft
000,000), and the First National with a total of $6,24,T72
(also a gain of more than 416.000,000) topped the list.
MedforrOlan New Scout Executive at Boise
BOISE. Idaho, Jan. .-jf)-A. O. Socerberg of Medford, Ore.,
arrived 'ttfday to assume duties as executive for the Boise Boy
Scout area council. He succeeds Russell Conklin, who resigned
recently to enter business at Spokane.
Hotel Clerk Robbed of $325 in Early Morning
PORTLAND. Ore., Jan. .-;p-S. F. Sibert. clerk at a hotel,
reported to police he -was robbed of checks and cash totalling
S3 2 5 early today by two men who forced him to open a strong
box.
Chinook Moving Into Columbia anft Onto Market,
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 6.-(,fp)-The Chinook are moving into '
the Columbia river! Such was the "word received today from
fishermen. The first Chinook to arrive on markets weighed 18
pounds and retailed between 35 and 40 cents A pound.
Sawmill Men Strike Over Sunday Pay Controversy
COTTAGE GROVE, Ore.,. Jan. 6. -(-Pickets paraded at the
J. H. Chambers & Son mill here. today as a result of a contro
versy over payment for work Saturday and Sunday. Union mem
bers said the extra house comprised production work calling for
time and a half. Company officials said the work was in the na
ture of an emergency and that only straight time was due. The
mill was closed today due to lack of logs.
Lane County Fanners Pledge 300 More Acres Flax
EUGENE, Ore., Jan. 6. -(-Members of the Lane county
flax committee said today farmers had promised to plant an ad
ditional 300 acres of flax in an effort to obtain a planting of 800
acres and thus become eligible for a WPA retting and scutching
plant.
Labor Trouble Brings Warning About Firearms Law
' ASTORIA. Ore., Jan. 6.-(;P)-Ttae district attorney's office
! said today the law against carrying concealed weapons will be
I strictly enforced. The announcement followed reports that mem
j bers -of the International Sulphite and Pulp Makers' union were
carrying arms as protection against asserted beat-up threats
; attributed to the members of the sawmill and timber workers'
union.
Missing Transient Found by Searchers on Mt. Hood
GOVERNMENT CAMP, Ore., Jan. 8.-P)-A party of searchers
headed by H. C. Hiatt, district ranger at Zig-Zag station, found
Charles Elliott, missing since early Sunday, near the timberline
of Mount Hood today. Elliott, 18-year-old member of the Hood
I transient camp, said he spent the night at the timberline cabin.
I He was not injured. Elliott came to Oregon from St. Louis.
time on the new act. He pointed
out that invalidation of the feder
al act did not necessarily mean
the state act, aa amended, would
be invalidated since power to reg
ulate production by states did not
come under the ban of the su
preme court decision.
' Capital observers pointed out,
however, that state AAA's follow
ed the national act, and that Ore
gon would hardly vetnure to con
tinue her act unless a majority of
the states had similar acts- a
condition that does not prevail.
Market Quotations
Little Affected
i Salem market quotations Mon
day showed no reflections of the
supreme court decision invalidat
ing the federal AAA, but dealers
knd wholesalers, especially on
wheat and corn products, were in
clined to doubt that any immedi
ate drop in prices will follow the
court decision.
A reduction in the price of pork
to the consumer is held probable
as result of death of the process
ing tax on pork, but how soon this
will be effective the largest buy
ing concern here had no knowl
edge yesterday. The hog market
did drop 25 cents yesterday, but
this is not as great a change as
has occurred one way or the oth
er during the usual run of market
quotations.
Under the AAA, the buyer of
live hogs has paid the processing
tax. up to yesterdav running
about $2.25 per hundred pounds.
ana mis has been added to the
market quotation and passed on
to the consumer or the retail mar
ket.
Wheat dealers and wholesalers
here indicated yesterday their be
lief that wheat, if it takes m
change following casting out of
the AAA. will climb instead of
drop in price, for at least the
si. 35 per barrel tax which has
prevailed. They argue that pur
chasers of wheat products, know
ing that the AAA decision was due
yesterday, held their stocks to the
minimum. Now, as the decision is
announced and the tax off, the
.to
.ALICE FAYE
KAY WALKER
E8CDAMO.S
PI32CIIX
LAST TIMES TODAY
Wednesday and Thursday
V
t V DOaOTHY MSB . J
' f : -riM S7 TOWU M j fT?
in 1853 Called By Death
immediate demand for wheat
products will be unusually heavy
to replenish the stocks, they ar
gue, pointing out further that
wheat prices have been on the
boost for sometime. ,
Vacating Portion of
Capitol Street Has
Opposition from 17
Seventeen residents in the vi
cinity of the' Salem board's pro
posed site for a new grade school
hist night remonstrated by peti
tion to the city-council to the va
cation of Capitol 'street between
Mission and Leslie streets.
Vacation of this street, lying
between blocks purchased by the
school directors for the new
school, has not yet been formally
requested. M. A. Estes headed the
list of remonstrators.
Drainage Authorized
Drainage improvements for the
areas in the vicinity of Kay park,
of 17th and D streets, and of the
Schindler dairy on Riverside drive
were authorized by the city coun
cil last night.
Ey fatigue,
htadachet, in
dicate thatyoMw
vision requires
optical lent ee
s determined by
ian optometrist.
TODAY & WEDNESDAY
..in m tin k lira
II lllTIIlt nisi
"Tho
uu ut
MEim DOICLAS
Also
Pathe News , .
nd Other Short ;
Subjects.
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physical
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VDEFECTy
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A
Demo Leaders
View Problem
Agricultural Act
Found
Unconstitutional by
6 to 3 Decision
(Continued from page 1)
president "smiled' bat declined
to reveal what he sain.
Justice Roberts opinion denied
that the court "assumes a power
to overrule or control the action
of the people's representatives"
saying that Its "delicate and'diP
ficult office was merely to ascer
tain whether legislation Is in ac
cordance with the constitution. . -Justice
Stone, however, declar
ed that "the present act is hell
invalid, not for any want of pow
er in congress to lay such a tax
to defray public expenditures . . .
but because the use to which its
proceeds are put is disapproved."
Stone added:
"The removal of unwise laws
from the statute hooks appeal lies
not to the courts but to the bal
lot and to the processes of demo
cratic government.'
Garissa A. Cox
Funeral Is Held
ALBANY. Jan. 6. Funeral
services for. Mrs. Clarissa A. Cox,
77, were held from the Fortmil
ler funeral home today, with Rev,
Albyn Esson in charge of the ser
vices. Burial was in Central
cemetery.
Clarissa A Morgan was born
April 2, 1858, in West Liberty,
Missouri, the daughter of Wil
liam and Plessa Morgan. At the
age of six years she, with her
parents, crossed the plains, the
family locating on a farm on Oak
creek, two miles south of Albany.
On July 4, 1875, she married E.
G. Cox and to this union six
children were born. Mr. Cox died
several years ago, and three of
the children have passed away,
one son, iewis G. Cox, died Octo
ber 10, 1935.
With the exception of one year
spent in southern Oregon, Mrs.
Cox had been a resident of Albany
and vicinity since her arrival here
from Missouri. Her home for the
past several years had been at
540 East Second street, and
where she passed away Saturday
morning, January 4. She had been
a member of the Christian church
for 40 years.
Flood Makes Job
At Abiqua Intake
SILVERTON. Jan. 6. The
high water has necessitated men
working day and night on the
Abiqua intake, keeping the leaves
off from the water screens. The
work is being supervised by El
gin McCleary, superintendent of
the Silverton water department.
BETHANY, Jan. . The over
flow on the pavement at Pudding
river here had had receded suffi
ciently Monday morning to make
driving through possible although
in places water was still over the
road. Sunday morning the road
was impassable.
30 OF CABS OPERATING ON CAPITAL'S PHENOMENALLY LOW RATES ARE PLYMOUTHS
'If-- r
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WVSHINGTON, D.Ccsbrider find
'as!-
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DUVEk HLED HOUSE picfcsd Plymouth (be coaoeay.
"T TTsrrcaa to WASHrNaTON marvel at the
V splendid taxicab service., juid low rates.
They see the high percentage of Plymouth -cars
in Washington's taxicab service. Reg
istrations today show almost every third
phenomenally.
Plymouth's economy is the answer . . . gas
and col eccfnonry...Iow ropkeep cost...
amaring; ability to stand up under the grocl-.
Perfect Deb and Perfect Model
k -tMrtwfwsMHai
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V
Perfection met perfection when Hardee Hon, 21, selected by Ameri
can artists as the model with the most beautiful figure, was intro
duced .to her fellcV New Yorker, Virginia Hyde, right, 18-year-old
society girl, chosen the "most perfect debutante".
Editorial
Comment
From Other Papers
WHAT KIND OP STATE? "
Stung by the criticism of the
two Salem papers the Oregonian
denounces the original program
for a S3, 500, 000 state capitol of
which this state was to contribute
only $1,925,000 as "grandiose,"
far beyond Oregon's real needs
and adds that the people never,
never would have stood tor it.
Washington spent about $8,000,-
000 en her capitol. Utah and Ida
ho, each with about half Oregon's
population spent considerably
more than Oregon would have had
to pay if the "grandiose" program
had gone through. What kind of a
state does the Oregonian think
Oregon is anyhow? The rank and
file of the folks out on the fsrms
and in the stores and shops have
a lot more faith in their state's fu
ture than that Baker Democrat
Herald. Vacation Is Voted
The' council last night took fin
al action to vacate the east 20
feet of 13 th street from Ferry to
the alley, clearing the way for
4 z
' v ' "
A
r
v :: : f
i .v
rates extremely low.
if '
V"'7a7g0?0-1
PEOPLE IXKB CABS with the sa&ry.
ing punishment of big-city taxicab senrke.
General Manager Harry Wechsler, of the
Gty Cab Association one of Washington's
largest says: TVe find Plymouth has the
operating eccfnomy necessary to give good
cab service at Washington's low rates. More
than half our cabs are Plymouth."
Garage Superintendent Setgel, who esti
mates that City Cabs run rap a yearly total
of fourteen million miles, reports: "Our
N
V
s5'
I VirgmU Hyds
future construction of a city
shops and warehouse building.
Inquest into Death of
Moorhead Will Be Held
This Morning, Planned
An inquest into the death of
Leona4 Chester Morehead Decem
ber 27 will be held at the Clough
Barrick mortuary at 9 o'clock
this morning, Coroner L. E. par
rick announced last night.
Morehead's body, a bullet hole
through the head, was found ly
ing in his bedroom at 1549
Broadway the afternoon of De
cember 27 by a cousin, Dean
Tucker. A .25 calibre automatic
pistol was lying near the body.
That night authorities said the
wound probably was self-inflicted.
What led to the call for the
Inquest was not revealed.
NoJ'arking Area Near
Leslie Is Established
Parking on the south side of
Howard street In front of Leslie
junior high school at all times
was forbidden by the city coun
cil last night and parking on the
north side during school hours
was ordered banned. Erection of
"slow" signs and painting of ped
estrian lanes near the school also
was directed.
Zone Is Changed
For Capitol Area
Suggestion to Stop Funds
Of Health Department
Isn't Acted Upon
(Continued from page 1)
drank Is given the police by the
health officer. Alderman John D.
Minto and Fuhrer both cited ex
amples they said showed that Dr.
Douglas often was either out of
reach or slow in reporting when
police needed his certification of J
a motorist's drunkenness. Both
agreed, however, to laying the
matter on the table.
Reservoir Bond ;
Sale Is Tabled
Overriding a strong plea by Al
derman Brazier C. Small for cre
ation of employment by the water
department, the council tabled an
ordinance providing for sale of
$200,000 worth of bonds to fi
sance reservoir consruction. It
also rejected 6 to 9 a motion by
Alderman Merrill D. Ohliag to
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DQELED VEEi2
Toniglit and Wednesday
THIS GREAT DOUBLE BILL
SYLVIA
SDBntlV,
AND
"AS THE EARTH TURNS"
t &
of big 1936 Plymouth.
PlymcthdriTmgctanmidl8n-akstotha
gallon of gas ia city traffic
la Washington, D. C, they know a Plym
outh costs less to ran. You can compare' AH
Three. . . and find out for yourself about
Plymouth's famedafcty,rcEabffity and com
fort... as well n economy 1
See your Ouysler,Dcige or Dc Soto dealer
today., .hell gladly arrange it.
FUKOIJTfl DITCIOa OF CEXTan: C01P.
CDOQBS
mm
transfer $31,103.94 lying in the
water bond f and to the water
commission to be used tor con
strucUonal Improvements to the
water system. m
Aldermen E. B. Perrine, David
O'Hara and Minto denounced any
expenditure of water bond funds
until the final determination of a
source of supply and of its cost,
"I'm going to vote 'no' on ev
erything till we decide on the
source of supply' Minto , an
nounced. N. C. Janssen, weU driller dis
charged' by the water commis
sion carried his fight to get a
well contract from the. city to
the council last night, after being
presented by Carl T. Pope of the
Salem league of taxpayers. He
proposed to drill wells within a
mile of Turner and collect from
the eity only if he could produce
a supply testing 10,000,000 gal
lons a day for seven days and
guaranteed for one year. He of
fered to produce this amount of
water for a flat J SO. 000 tee or.
if the city chose to furnish cas
ings and other materials, for
$58,000. His written proposal
was referred to the speeiar water
committee.
Starts
Tomorrow
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