The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 25, 1936, Page 2, Image 2

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PAGE. TWO,
The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning January. 25, 1336
Mouse Overrides Ron'us VzMessa
id;.
Spirit
Senate Dae to
Ballot Monday
Over- Roosevelt's
Disapproval Expected
' - There Too, Word
By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL
- WASHINGTON, Jan 24.-t-
The house thundered a 324 to (1 j
disapproval of President Roose-
elf s hand-penned yeto or the im
mediate payment bonus bill today
and rushed it to the-senate, where
an equally" hostile reception ap
parently awaited it.
Even senators who almost un
larytaglT upport the administra
tion announced they would ote
. te orerride when the yeto is
taken up on Monday. Not a sin-
' gle leader ventured to prediction
the President would be sustained, j
" Thus a final chapter in the le
gislative history of the bonss a
: congressional storm signal for
' .r early two decades; a subject for
Teto by every president since
Hardin? would be closed.
Tax Problem Eyed
But even as the house swiftly
and boisterously scuttled the veto
- disregarding the President's prin
cipal assertion that his "convic
tions' were as -impelling" as
- when he vetoed the inflationary
patman bonus bill last year, tne
nntsibiiitT of new taxes to fin
ance the baby-bond cash payment
plan took the stage. It became
a principal topic of off-the-reeord
, congressional discussion.
Mr. Roosevelt gave no inkling
of his present views on that
touehy issue in his 200-ward veto
lvessage. In fact, he said little.
In it beyond advising senators and
representatives to look up his last
disapproval of payment of the
bonus. 'But from the White
House came indications that the
chief executive intended to do
some writing tomorrow night, and
there was speculation that the
subject matter might be -on mone
tary matters
. Some congressmen said private
ly ' they believed he was almost
certain to ask tor additional taxa-tion-to
raise the payment money;
others were Just as emphatic in
declaring enactment of a tax bill
-would be out of the Question in an
election year.
Blue Ink Employed
The President's terse message,
penned In blue ink in his own
handwriting to break a precedent
of a Quarter century, sent scsaa
ennrreavmen nrrTlny frpi onn.
ies of the veto message he deliv
ered in person eight months ago
There much note was taken of
one significant paragraph, ' It
said:
' "I Invite your attention to the
feet that solely from the poin;
of view of the good credit of the
United States, the complete fati-
, vre of the congress to provide ad
ditional taxes for an additional
expenditure of this magnitude
would in itself and by Itself alone
. arrant disapproval of this meas-
. tire."
' In the senate. Chairman Harrl- '
y son (D-itiss.) of the finance com
- mlttee, who plays a keyvrole in
the bonus dramas, said flatly:
"It Is my opinion that the reto
j will not be sustained. I shall vote
to sustain the veto."
.ff i. l -
Demos Proposed
Marion county democrats , are
Agoing to place a fall ticket of can
didates for county officials here in
November, John S. . Marshall,
county chairman for the party,
. announced yesterday."! think it
is an exceptional case when a pub
lic office cannot be better handled
when a change is made after the
- officeholder has held the job
eight years," Marshall said. "The
ordinary man becomes Inefficient
on the job; a shaken p is neces-
. sary." :
- Marshall said the party had
held : no official meetings lately
but indicated there had been some
unofficial discussion of' candi
dates. He said the next meeting of
democrats would be the gathering
of the Marlon County Democratic
society here Friday, February 14.
The Call Board
GRAND
Today "Charlie Chan's
Secret" with Warner Oland.
HOLLYWOOD
Today Double bill, "The
: Throwback" with Buck
: Jones and "A Dog of Flan-
ders" with Frankie Thomas.
' !
ELSrXORB
Today Claudette Col-
: bert In "The Bride Comes
Home."
1 l CAPITOL '
Today Double bill.
"Freshman Love" with Pa-
tricia mils and "The Great
impersonation" with Ed-
mund Lowe.
STATE I
Today First run. Hoot
. Gibson in "Frontier Jus
" tice" and chapter 1 of
' The Adventures of Rex
' and RintyV
25c : , 25c
to
'8
i;9-Piece Band .
Mellow Moon
TONIGHT
Follow the Crowd! .
25c . 25c
Mickey Mouse
Club Notes
JUST a minute: Clark Gable
receiving the five-millionth fan
letter in six years. Betty Furness
via! ted "The
- A V i f
day thirty -eight
of the-fifty danc
ing girls were
1:
knitting. Fred-
die Bartholomew
trying to per
suade his aunt to
4
let him buy a
p o n y. Harpo
I
Marx invited to
be guest star on
program with
it,
the New York
Philharmonic or
Jf.
Some
chestra. Jackie Cooper having
to stay after school because he
"forgot" his homework I
M.M.C.
UNTIL next Saturday! That's
the last chance offered you to
have your "fifty word or more"
theme written. Title it "Who's
your favorite athlete and why." If
a girl receives first prize, she will
be given a pair of roller skates
To the boy goes a swell basketball
M.M.C.
HEARING young Eugene Bell
bellowing: "But what this country
needs is a good spot removed to
remove spots made by these pat
ent spot removers." His proposed
suggestion was hailed at David
Hoss. "
M.M.C.
NEXT week begins "The Ad
ventures of Frank Merriwell.
This hero was designed by his cre
ator to be the idol and objective
of American boyhood. It was this
conception of youth, not preachy.
not priggish, not too-good-to-be-trne,
that Universal chose as the
subject of this serial, "The Ad
ventures of Frank Merriwell."
M.M.C.
QUITE an amusing Incident!
Mi&s Ada Ross, head of the Eng
lish department of Salem high
school was attempting to find a
day of the week on which most
students differed in their daily ac
tivities. Picking Saturday, she
assigned "What I do on Satur
days," as the topic for the theme.
As a result, nine out of ten wrote
that they attended the Mickey
Muse show.
M.M.C.
CLEVER youngsters performed
on the broadcast program last
week. Songs, dances, instrument
al atd comedy acts were numer
ous and entertaining. Talent pre
sented was: Bethel McMillan,
Dorothy Holloway, Dorothy Shep-
hard. Helen Smith. Mary Lou Wis-
ner, Neva Ramp, Dlan Perry, Bev- employes. Including the plant en
erly Jean Wickstrom, Marguerite gineer, are not under the labor
Mosier. Shirley McLeod, Gordon
Wlnchcomb. Seth Jayne. Herman
Demogolla, Mildred Beach, and
Charlotte Cohen. Contest prize j
winners were: Raymond Van tifiS, j
Tom Medley, Martha Dave Wo-
doege and Ellis Woolerv.
I M.M.C.
TODAY: Contest, prizes, broad
cast, - last chapter of "Tailspln
Tommy's Great Air Mystery,"
and tna comedy musical. "Happi
ness Ahead." starring Dick Pow
ell. The regular attraction is
Claudette Colbert and Robert
Young in "The Bride Comes
Home."
M.M.C.
So long.
ZOLLIE.
!ora Ellen Owen
Funeral Is Today
Last rites will be said in Port
land at 3 p. m. today for Mrs.
Cora Ellen Owen, 55, who died
there after a short Illness Thurs
day. Services will be the chapel of
the Portland crematorium.
Mrs. Owen had been a resident
of Salem for nearly 25 years, mov
ing to Portland recently when her
husband's work with the Oregon
Electric took him there. They re
tained their house here at 2290
North Church street.
Survivors include Mr. Owen and
the following: a Mrs. M. M. Gray-.
ble, daughter, Gering, Nebraska;
Mrs. H. J. Walrath, daughter, Sa
lem; J. W. Owen, son. San Diego;
Jud West, brother. Yreka, Calif.,
Mrs. William Leifheit, sister,
Great Falls, Montana. One grand
child also survives at Gering, Ne
braska.
Continuous Performance Today
1:30 to a p. m. 10c
Two Features
BUCK
JONES
In
"THE
THROW.
BACKt
A DOG OF
FLANDERS'
with Frankie
Thomas
O. P. Heggie
and Lightning
Also Cartoon Comedy, News
And Buck Jones in Serial
The Roaring West"
Sunday, Monday and
Tuesday
Continuous Performance Sunday
2 to 11 P. M.
FILMDOM'S NEWEST
WONDER SHOW I
lac SrU.
r i
"i
M-G-M'l NEW GIANT HIT I
Packing Plant
Workers Idle
Negotiations, to Settle the
Issue Expected
Get Under Way
to
(Continued from page 1)
R. A. Gilmer, president of No.
280, local meat union, said that
Gross had told the men to get
their checks at noon yesterday.
He said the men went ahead and
finished the meat on which they
were working and cleaned up all
equipment before leaving their
jobs. Gilmer said the men, more
than 30 in number, were fully
paid late Friday for all work
they had done.
Xo Complaint on
Local Treatment
Hugo Nissen, secretary of the
state organization of meat work
ers, met with the local union last
night. Gilmer said Nissen was
ready to negotiate with the Val
ley Packing company today. Gil
mer said there was no complaint
among the workers regarding
working conditions. He said the
only move the union would make
today was to picket the com
pany's plant here. He said there
would be no interference or pick
eting of downtown establishments
where Valley Packing company
meat is sold.
We have contributed out of
our wages to support the men on
strikes in the east," Gilmer said.
"We cannot work against them
now by accepting meat here
which is 'unfair. "
Cross said the point at issue
was whether union men wouia
take over the management of the
company's operations. He said he
had dealt fairly with employes at
his plant. Turnover in men em
ployed has been very small. Most
of the employes of the company
have lone periods of service to
the firm.
No work i3 conducted at the
plant ordinarily either on Satur-
day or Sunday and union officials
said last night they were hopeful
that the disagreement could be
ironed ont before time for opera
tlons to resume Monday.
Cross said the action of the
workers at the plant surprised
him as he had ordered the car in
good faith and expected another
carload of meat from Morrell &
Co. to come in within a few days.
The valley Packing company
has operated steadily as a union
plant and has a working agree
ment with the local organization
Salesmen of the firm and certain
union agreement
League Adjourns
Sans Peace Plan
(Continued from Page 1)
Italian attack, and conducted
their negotiations outside the cor
enant of the league.
Delayed dispatches from an As
sociated Press correspondent with
the Italian southern army said
Gen. Rudolfo Grazlani's forces
had driven through the Ethiopian
army and seized the undefended
village of Neghelli, capital of the
Gallas Borana region. The Italians
thus gained control of all water
holes within 250 miles of Dolo,
in far southern Ethiopia.
6 AilSt
1 in A y I
1 flit X,' '' - i
f Chan's
. Newest
f - Adventure!
"ilr
wb?r 1
Lyons Woman in Serious
Condition; Hit by Auto
STAYTON, Jan. z4. Mrs. El
mer Hiatt, Lyons. Is in a serious
condition at the Stay ton hospital
as the result of having been
struck by a car, while crossing the
street at Lyons. s
Her injuries consist; of a slight
concussion, a fractured knee,
bruises and severe cuts. Her son
LeRoy Hiatt and wife have been
here from Roseburg. 4
Three Convicted
In Bremer Case
ST. PAUL, Jan. 24.-P)-A fed
eral court jury late today convict
ed three mere of the 15 persons
charged with participation in the
kidnaping of Edward G. Bremer,
St Paul banker, two years ago.
Convicted were Harry Swayer,
St. Paul underworld character
whom the government charged
pointed out the victim for the ab
ductors; Cassius McDonald, De
troit engineer charged with trad
ing ransom notes for other cur
rency in Cuba; and William Wea
ver, Arkansas convict accused oi
participation in the actual seizure.
Two of them Sawyer and Wea
ver were ordered to ioiiow sev
en other alleged conspirators to
prison, for life terms. Judge Gun-
nar H. Nordbye deferred the sen
tencing of McDonald until Feb
ruary 1.
Conviction of the trio left only
three of the conspirators unac
counted for Alvln Karpls, Harry
Campbell and Dr. Joseph P. Mor
an, Chicago. L
Find Eighth Body
In Iowa Disaster
ASTORIA, Ore., Jan. 2i.-OPi-
The eighth body to be recovered
from the wreck of the steamship
Iowa lay in a mortuary here to
night. It was found on the beach
near OyBtervllle, Wash., fully
clothed with the exception of
shoe's and socks. Coroner Hollis
Ransom said fingerprints will be
taken to aid in identification.
Seven other bodies previously
were recovered and Identified.
The Iowa was tossed on treach
erous Peacock spit January 12 in
one of the worst storms in the
Pacific northwest in years. Thir
ty-four men its entire crew
were lost.
Snow Follows Up
East's Cold Wave
(Continued from page 1)
had been imprisoned in a farm
house near Jennerstown for two
days.
Fires brought death to 18 per
sons in Maryland. New York
West Virginia. Kansas, Missouri
and New Foundland.
Elderly Woman Killed
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 24.-J5)
-Miss Beate Sofia Hetlesaler, 70,
of Garden Home, died tonight
shortly after she was struck by
a car near her home. State Offi
cer At Johnson said the car was
driven by Donald Ragen of Port
land. Ragen was released on
bis own recognizance.
Constitution
Tinkering Hit
Centralizing of Power
Would Be Dangerous
Noted Demo Says
(Continued from page 1)
Liberty league which Smith will
address In Washington, spoke be
fore the New York Bar associa
tion. Centering his attack mainly on
proposals for changes in the con
stitution to centralize administra
tive and economic powers in the
federal government, he declared
in his prepared address:
"There is cause to wonder, in
passing, whether some of the leg
islation of these last 'three years
was not enacted in the belief such
an amendment was already on the
books."
Regulation is a term behind
which every form of tyranny.
great and small, can hide itself,"
he said.
Fails to Mention
New Deal by Name
Davis spoke only in general
terms but left no room for doubt
that the present Washington ad
ministration was his target.
"Just as the obligatory force
or contracts is the prop or our
whole social order," Davis told
the bar group, "so the solemn
promise of a public officer to
keep within the law that makes
him is the cement that holds all
free government together."
'To violate this oath or treat
it lightly is surely the mortal
sin. For liberty, it has been well
said, is possible only when the
sovereign power is made to obey
the law. . . .
"And if we have lived to grieve
at the passage of not one, but a
whole series of statutes passed in
bold defiance of its (the law's)
basic principles, we have also
lived to rejoice that in the courts
of the country the law has found
its champions and defenders."
Davis said he had no re
proach" for any man advocating
constitutional amendment "who
gives his reason for saying so,'
but that "when panaceas are of
fered on the one side, only to be
answered by panegyrics on the
other, the argument lacks con
clusiveness."
"It Is all very well to say that
law is a part of the life of
people and must change with
their changing lives," he said
"that the constitution Itself is
not an iron framework, fixed and
immuable, but a plan of govern
ment subject to alteration by the
popular will that gave it birth
"But when it Is indicated for
its supposed Insufficiencies, the
bill of particulars is extremely
vague. When new patent medt
first run! TODAY ONLY! Tms'r RrN!
Hoot Gibson in "Frontier Justice"
"Adventures of
with Rin-Tln-Tin Jr. and
ITS
GREAT!
Sj IT'S 1
EXTRA! Added Special Auractionl
FIRST SALEM SHOWING! i
... kfi
ntt ft
J2J ' UCUCC
MS3
. ft
17D
cine fs offered the patient Is en
titled at least to hare the for
mula printed on the outside of
the bottle.
He called upon the bar to con
sider subjects "which men in
high places" .would place within
reach of federal power.
Manager Form Is
Needed Says Kuhn
(Continued from page 1)
or Kuhn explained how he be-'
lleved the city manager form of !
government would have the city
at least three times the cost of
the salary the official would re
ceive. Talks Winter Sports
Conrad Frigaard spoke on the
winter sports area being planned
in the Cascades east of Detroit
and called the attention of the
club members to the proposed ex
cursion tentatively planned for
Sunday, February 2. He said that
if sufficient Interest were shown,
the federal government was ex
pected to place 3300,000 in devel
opment of the region as a sports
area, easily Accessible to the pub
lic. Frigaard pointed the present
projects at Mt. Hood and in the
Klamath and Bend areas as ex
amples. Two delegates, "Pat" Patterson
and C. S. Emmons were named to
attend the Twenty-Thirty conven
tion of this district at the Lincoln
beaches today and tomorrow.
Lawrence Brown and Doyle Car
ter were received as new mem
bers.
Former Missouri
Residents Gather
More than a hundred Mlssou
rians men and women whose
birthplace was that state en
joyed a potluck dinner followed
by a program at the Knights of
Pythias hall on North Commer
cial street last night. A varied
musical program was put on.
Numbers included the following:
Vocal solo, Ernestine Barry; ac
cordian and bass duet, Herman
Domogala and Glen Burright; vo
cal duet, Clara Dodson and Neva
Harn; vocal solo. Vera Clinton;
piano solo, Doris June Cutler;
accordian solo. Herman Domo
gala; vocal solo, Ronald Craven;
vocal solo, Doris Clinson; old-
time music, Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
Pruitt.
An orchestra of members fur
nished several numbers.
Albany Loses Again
LA GRANDE, Jan. H--
Eastern Oregon Normal made It
two in a row over Albany college
here tonight .winning the second
basketball game of the series 53
to 33.
plu
Rex and Rintv"
Rex, the King of Horses I
SUNDAY!
Q MM
starts Hill U lalU U2lru li-i ;j 1
-s5ri TNSv FRED MaeMURRAY I
jlWW 1 Robert Young i
V f "," I Mickey Mouse Matinee Today 1 P. M. I
,. Yy.'rjA Dick Powell In "Happiness Ahead" mi Serial J
r V Sk BIG DOUBLE BILL . 1
o.iiin ll
A Nothing mvttcal m4y pecked
jam fell ef jelliventieg fats m4
Jack Oakie
George Burns
G r a c i e Allen
Lyda Roberti
Wendy Barrie
Henry Wadsworth
A Minkal iowbwM pk4
the biggnt Week ef (pdotti
9 vac colieclsd fof site pichife
B.ing Crosby
Amos V Andy
Ethel Merman
Ray Noble Is
Mary Boland
Charlie Ruggles -Bill
Robinson
7i v c- :'
JJLSTfJLUA
IN TECHNICOLOR.
st m m m m sw
1 WW . . A .
Van Ylack Insane
Defense Contends
TWIN FALLS, Idaho, Jan.
P)-States attorneys called
of their 30 witnesses today
24.
11
as
they launched their drive to send
Douglas Van VTack of Tacoma to
the gallows for the alleged mur
der of his pretty 22-year-old ex-
wife, Mildred Hook, near here
last November 26.
Prosecutor Edward Babcock
and Bert H. Miller, Idaho attor
ney general, who Is assisting In
the case, moved Quickly to place
evidence before the jury after Leo
Teats of Tacoma, in his state
ment for the defeTTse, portrayed
the 21-year-old defendant aa a
mental defective, the result of a
series of accidents.
Their main effort lay in ques
tioning of Sam B. Elrod, Twin
Falls chief of police, who found
Miss Hook's body. Teats drew
from "Mrs. Joseph F. Hook, mo
ther of the slain girl, an admission
that her daughter had sought to
obtain an interlocutory divorce
the day after she told her mother
that she and Van Vlack were mar
ried
Teats and his assistant, ET. V.
Larson of Twin Falls, to the x-
' - .1
A Fast and Furious Comedy
Romance ! A Positive Hit ! !
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tremo both In examination or
jurors and witnesses, offered lit
tle resistance to testimony oi
state's witnesses.
Stone Expected
To Plead Guilty
FRESNO, Cal., Jan. H.-UP-Legal
machinery went into high
gear today to speed Elton M.
Stone, former convict, toward the
gallows for the sanguinary killing
of 14-year-old Mary Louise Stam
mer. Less than S hours after
Stone's arrest and alleged confes
sion, the county grand jury in
dieted hlnr today on a murder
charge.
District Attorney Dan F. Con
way indicated Stene would be
brought here Monday from Fol
som prison, where he was taken
to forestall possible mob action,
to plead.
Sheriff's officers quoted the
surly, defiant stone as saying he
would plead guilty.
Inebriation Charged
E. N. Givens. Salem.
was ar-
rested by city police last night on
a charge of being drunk.
Starts
Today
Seats