The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 19, 1936, Page 1, Image 1

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    ft
- Aurora Borealis
Kortbern lights were visi
ble from Salem last night.
Perhaps job didn't know it
Kb til you read it. Your news
a ilce sever sleep.
The Weather
Increasing elond lnes .
trowing unsettled today
rain Saturday; Max. Temp.
Thursday 74, Mln. 40, river
1.5 feet, rain .06 Inch, south
wind.
FOUNDED 1631
EIGHTY-SIXTH YEAR
Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, June 19, 1936
Price 3c; Newsstands 5c
Nov 72
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""- I ' '; " -"-"V--' ;- :T
fig From Meliet Conimill
: : ' ' : : : O
tr; i iirrii
' Here Plainly;
Unusual Sight
Northern Lights Display
Keported; hclipse is
Said Explanation!
Brilliant Illumination
Noted from Numerous
Northwest Cities
Salem sky gazers last night
caught an unexpected glimpse of
"northern lif bis" display. It
was reported by B. L. "Buck"
Tirorilav umittur aslrnnnniAr
Prom Bradley's hilltop home
south of the city, great beams of
grayish-white light wavered up
ward from the horizon while
bands of the same display extend
ed in a semi-circle from east 10
west across the sky, he said.
The light beams and bands ex
tended far above Jhe horizon
along an arc from east to north
to west and at times were intense.
An-east 10 west movement in the
sky appeared to be more of shad
ow than of light, Bradley said in
attempting to describe the phen
omenon. The display was most
noticeable from 10:15 to 10:30
o'clock, but was still clearly vis
ible early this morning, weather
observers at the airport reported.
Ad exhibition of the aurora
borealis had long been unreported
in Salem. !; '
The only'reportof the display's
having affected radio reception
here came from police headquart
ers. Clive Scott, operator of the
police radio station, said he had
noticed that the Portland police
radio, had at times assumed a
'wavery tone.' Thia condition, how
ever, might have been due to in
terference from another station,
he said.. !!
WENATCHEE, June
A peculiar and unusual display of
northern lights paused a sensa
t!on here tonight. Appearing first
as a narrow band of light stretch
ing from horizon to horizon, from
southeast to northwest, the light
remained apparently stationary
for more than half an hour be
fore suddenly disintegrating into
moving, wavelike blobs typical of
the aurora boerealis.
SPOKANE, Wash., June 18-()-Wbile
the Russians had their
total eclipse tonight, the north
west had the season's first feeble
display of northern lights.
The aurora borealis was report
ed from Tacoma and Montana,
the telephone company here re
ported the electrical effect was
strongest in the Butte and Helena,
Mont., region, where it ? caused
considerable trouble.
t
WALLA WALLA, June 18. WP)
-A Whitman college authority
who would not be quoted explain
ed the strange d 1 s pi a y of the
northern lights here tonight 'as
having been influenced by the
sun's eclipse in Russia. "
Appearing first like a search
light beam, the lights later broke
into small shafts and lighted the
northern sk'y like nearby city. ;
Eight to Remain
On Relief Staff
Five caseworkers and three of
fice clerks will remain on the
Marion county relief staff under
the curtailed administrative pro
gram adopted by the relief com
mittee Tuesday. Glenn C. Niles,
executive secretary, reported yes
terday. The committee ordered
dismissal of two caseworkers and
three clerks to comply with the
state relief administration's gen
eral orders to reduce administra
tive expense.
Caseworkers who will remain
on the staff here are Katherine
Laughrige. Sylvia DuBois, Faye
Henderson, Deena Hart and Jan
et Weil. Dorothy Ann Gordon will
continue as head of the .asework
division. v
Russian Novelist I
lies
MOSCOW, June W.-iiSV-lIaxim
Gorky, one-time ragpicker and
foe of the czars who became a
hero of the Soviets and their
outstanding writer, died .today: of
pneumonia. He was 68. , : ,
The world famous novelist had
been 111 for ten days. Russia's
leading physicians had kept him
alive for the last 24 hours by
stimulants and applications of
-oxygen.- .i'
Gorky had only one lung, the
other having been destroyed: by
a tuberculosis infection after, he
"abet himself in a suicide attempt
as otb.".
Maxim Gorkv D
F ederal Inquiry into Flogging
Cases in Arkansas Is Ordered
r or
WILLIE SUE
o-
Woman Will File
Assault Charges
Social Service Worker Is
Confident She Can
Identify Men
LITTLE ROCK, June li.-iff)-A
federal inquiry into reported
floggings in the east Arkansas
cotton strike was ordered today
while one of the alleged victims,
a woman social service worker,
said she would file charges
against her assailants.
Attorney General Cummings di
rected Sam E. Whitaker, a spe-
cial assistant, to question Miss
Willie Sue Blagden, 29, of Mem
phis, and the Rev. Claude K. Wil
liams, Presbyterian minister of
Little Rock, who said they were
beaten Monday night near Earle,
Ark.
Cummings said a report on a
previous investigation by Whit
aker of "peonage" charges in the
strike area would be withheld un
til the second inquiry is com
pleted. (Turn to Page 16, Col. 7)
Only One Hammer
Crew Works Late
It wasn't Mill creek mosquitoes
that, at a distance, caused a buz
zing sound in the vicinity of Un
ion and Winter streets early last
night, residents of the .neighbor
hood had agreed before they went
to investigate. They found a city
street crew working overtime
tearing up the concrete pavement
with the aid of a compressed air
hammer.
Members of the crew explained
that since the city water depart
ment is using the air hammer on
a pipe laying job at the new Fair
mount hill reservoir site In t b e
day time, the street men had to
wait until evening to attack their
concrete breaking job.
. A small section of paving at
the northeast corner of the Un
ion and Winter street intersec
tion is being torn up to get at a
poplar tree root which has bad
ly cracked the surfacing.
400 Scouts Expected Here
Today for
i
Additional registrations yester
day Indicated that at least 400
Boy Scouts from Oregon and
Washington would arrive here
this afternoon for the camp-o-ral
to be held at the. state fairgrounds
tonight, Saturday and Sunday, it
was reported by ; Scout Executive
James E. Monroe of Salem, who
will be camp director. The boys
will set up camp in the tent city
grove and stage their exhibitions
and contests on the fairgrounds
parking area. - ' .
, Today's program will consist of
registration and setting up of
camps at 4 p. m., supper at C, gen
eral campfire program at 8, tatoo
at 9:30 and taps at 10. The high
light Saturday will be a parade
through the business district led
by the Portland scout drum corps.
All Programs to .
Be Open to Public . -
Monroe said the camp, exhibi
tions, and campfire programs
would be open to the public. Com
petition .will be by patrols.
Now registrants yesterday in
cluded the Panther patrol of Ba
- " -
asm i
BLAGDEN
Bonus Station Is
Open Until Eight
Number Cashing Bonds Is
Dwindling; Some Vets
Are Keeping Them
To accommodate those 'men
who will be unable to get to the
certifying stations during the day.
Postmaster H. R. Crawford an
nounced yesterday that the cham
ber of commerce station for the
cashing of the bonus bonds would
remain open tonight from 6
o'clock to 8 o'clock.
Practically all of the bonus
bonds that have been received by
the department are delivered,
Crawford said yesterday. It is ex
pected that 300 additional bonds
are yet to be delivered at the post
office. Yesterday's lines for the cash
ing of the bonds were not as long
as the first day and the amount
of bonds certified fell off about
50 per cent, postal officials esti
mated. The number of men Cash
ing the bonds were about the same
but the proportionate number of
bonds w-as lessj The certification
stations will be open all day to
day. Crawford said that he was glad
to see that quite a number of the
veterans were keeping some of the
bonds.
"It has been a pleasure to work
with the boys in the department
during the ruFh period," Crawford
said yesterday, : "and you may be
sure we appreciate the cooperation
the veterans groups have given us.
The work U well in hand now."
Gapitol Plans to
Be Ready in Time
Plana and' specifications for
Oregon's new eapitol building
should be completed in advance of
September 15, Tfowbridge & Liv
ingston and Francis Keally, New
York architects, telegraphed state
officials "yesterday.
The interior floor plans are now
being worked over by Whitebouse
and Church. Portland architects,
for transmission to the New York
architectural firm.
Big Camp-o-ral
lem troop four, led by Walter
Bushnell; the Flying Eagles of
Albany troop 21, headed by Ray
Talbert; three patrols from Med
ford . and one from Jacksonville.
Monroe said approximately 60 pa
trols had signed up to participate
in the camp-o-ral. Patrols in Mar
ion, Polk and i Linn counties are
eligible to attend and Join In the
contests only in case they earned
A or ; B , ratings at the Cascade
camp-o-ree held at Lebanon last
month, ir . .t. f i , - . j
The camp staff will consist of
Monroe as director; ' director of
program, G. H. Oberteuffer, Port
land scout executive; director , of
campfire and ; morale, Irving P.
Beesley, Medfbrd executive i Sun
day" observance. Rev.- George H.
Swift, Salem, council commission'
er; registrar, T. C. Roake, Salem:
grounds,. N. J Billings and R. W.
MHlison, Salem; divisional camp
directors, - Verne C. Gilbert, .Wil
liam Johnson and D. P. Heming
way of Portland, T. D. White of
Albany; concessions, R. W. Milli
son. . -
Dissolving All
Armed Group
France's Move
Difficulty in Enforcing
Orders Anticipated;
Cabinet Working
Workers in Hospital Get
Quick Victory ; Most
of Demands Met
PARIS, June 18.-i"F)-Striking
workers at the American hospital
forced a quick victory tonight
while official France made a firm
thrust at "enemies of the regime."
Sixty hospital assistants, scrub
women and other workers at the
Neuilly-Bur-Seing institution won
almost all their wage-hour de
mands in one day of entrenched
idleness.
Authorities at the hospital said
they had to give in hecause the
government, despite a personal
appeal from Ambassador Jesse
Isidor Strauy, refused to oust the
strikers by force until negotiation
had been tried.
Doctors and nurses pitched in
to scrub floors, clean rooms and
cook meals for the 85 patients.
mainly Americans, 23 of them in
a serious condition.
All Combat Gronps
Ordered Dissolved
On the political front, the cab
inet decreed quick dissolution of
the Croix de Feu and three other
rightist leagues described as
"combat groups." Reports from
the leagues indicated difficulties
ahead.
Premier Leon Blum's socialist
government moved also to,remedy
Frances shaky financial- condi
tion. '.m':X-'j.
Authorities sought repatriation
of capital with a bill prociding
prosecution of Frenchmen who
fail to declare what gold and se
curities they have abroad.
. The cabinet : approved a bill
which would permit the general
federation of labor and indust
rialists' corporations representa
tion on the regents' council of
the bank of France.
A weekly Bank of France state
men disclosed a new 7-day gold
drain of 959,000,000 francs ($63.
614,306). The senate all but completed
parliamentary action on Blum's la
bor bills by approving a collective
bargaining measure. The vote was
279 to 6.
Improving Police
Efficiency Is Aim
Committee Will Meet Soon
and May Fill Vacancy;
Problems Viewed
The city council police commit
tee is expected to meet early next
week to discuss plans for improv
ing the efficiency of the police
department, it was reported yes
terday. Whether a new appoint
ment to the department and fill
ing the sergeancy left vacant by
the discharge of Orey G. Coffey
would be delayed until after this
meeting was uncertain yesterday.
Chief Frank A. Minto- indica
ted last night he planned to fol
low the prescribed procedure of
requesting the civil service com
mission to certify to him men for
appointment to Coffey's old posi
tion and a new man from the elig
(Turn to Page 16, Col. 7)
Two Lads Escape
From Institution
Two 16-year Inmates escaped
from the state training school for
hovs near Woodburn at midnight
hast night, Salem police were in
formed. They were Stanley Sears,
Lebanon, and George Persons,
Portland.
Both were wearing the regula
tion: clothing, dark reddish brown
trousers and hickory shirts. Sears
was described as being five feet,
seven inches tall and 147 pounds
in weight, with medium complex
ion, blue eyes.: Drown nair.
freckles and a scar on the head
Persons was reported as five feet.
three inches tan, weigning
pounds and having medium dark
complexion, blue eyea and dark
brown hair Both needed haircuts.
Late Sports
SEATTLE, June 18.-(P)-T u e
Seattle' Indians clubbed their way
back to the lead-in the Pacific
coast league tonight, winning 7 to
5 from Los Angeles and taking a
one-game lead In the series.
Los Angeles . . . ...... 5 Id 4
Seattle ..... . . . . t 7 13 . 1
Thomas, ; Gabler and Stephen
son; Wells and Bassler, SpindeL
Radio Brings
Direct News
From tront9
(Editor' note: The following is th
fint of eerie of newi dispatches which
Salem amateur radio operators attend
ing the annual national guard encamp
ment will transmit to amateurs remain
ing here, for the benefit of eitiiens in
terested in the local guardsmen's activi
ties. Jerry deBroekert, owner of ama
teur station W78T, received this dsi
patch at 10:30 s'clock last night direct
from Fort Stevens where Milton L.
Marsh and J. Wayne Taylor of Salem are
operating the Headquarters battery radio
transmitter.)
By CORPORAL PHIL BELL
FORT STEVENS, June 18-(Via
Amateur Radio) - Headquarters
battery, 249th -coast artillery, of
Salem, started firing subcalibre
this afternoon. A few trial shots
were fired by the six inch bat
teries. The mortar batteries tracked
with preparations for firing to
morrow. Targets for the mortars
and six Inch rifles are towed in
the river. The ocean tug tows the
targets in the ocean for the big
10 and 12 inch guns, which track
ed today.
Firing of service ammunition,
some shells weighing over one
half ton, will not take place till
next week. If weather and other
conditions are favorable the ar
tillery will fire at Fort Stevens
and six-inch guns at Fort Canby
Wednesday.
The first casualty of the en
campment was Private, First
Class, Max Hauser of the medical
detachment. He went out on the
ocean tug as a first aid man and
became seasick. He was quite ill
today. .g
Radio contact with the tugs
from the shore group and com
mander was established with good
results. The radio was manned by
the men of Headquarters battery
and consisted of two five-meter
voice sets (ultra 'short wave radio
telephones) and two 50-watt
voice sets.
.r i
Cooking School's
Final Meet Today
0
Attendance Bigger Second
Day and More Expected
For Last Gathering
Today The Statesman cooking
school holds Its final session in
the armory from 2 to 4 o'clock.
Mrs. Fern Hubbard will lecture
on and demonstrate meat dishes.
Folger's coffee will be served
as usual at the conclusion of the
afternoon as the audience leaves.
An increasing number are stop
ping at the attractive stand
where the coffee is dispensed free
of charge to cooking school pat
rons.
The loud speaker Installed yes
terday projects Mrs. Hubbard's
voice all over the armory so that
she may be plainly heard and un
derstood. Many women in the
audience take pencil and paper
for note-making.
Foods prepared today will be
an oven dinner, fish loaf, cream
fry potatoes, carrots and onions,
baked lemon pudding, vegetable
cokery, Kolaches, spiced ban
anas, horseradish jelly, broiled
steak and puffed potatoes and
Hawaiian beans.
The audience today is expected
to exceed that of the two former
afternoons. Six hundred attend
ed yesterday.
Beer Sale Permit
Denied Two Here
PORTLAND. Ore.. June 18.
(Jf) The Oregon state liquor com
mission voted today to discon
tinue handling half-pint bottles
of liquor after the present sup
ply is sold.
Beer license suspensions includ
ed: R. E. Curry. Mickey's Tav
ern, Salem, route '4, 21 days;
Playmore Tavern, Woodburn, 10
days. Both were charged with
selling beer to Intoxicated per
sons. Among those refused licenses
were Glenn H. Lutx, 163 South
Commercial street, Salem, and
Marlon club, Salem. Refusals
were based on the contention
sufficient 1 licenses already had
been issued.
The location of the proposed
"Marion club" is north of Salem
on the Pacific highway, the for
mer Eckerlen location. Mr. Lutt
has been . remodeling the former
Tourist. cafe quarters for a beer
parlor. ' , . v
Active Clubs Convene
UEDFORD. Ore., June 18HJP)
-The first of 200 delegates to the
12th annual convention of the
International Active clubs arrived
here today. The organisation has
members in Canada and western
states. The session will continue
I through, Saturday."
Agreement on
Taxation Plan
Now Complete
But Bitter Fight Looms
in Senate When Bill
is Brought Back
Final Draft Veers Over
to Original View of
Chief Executive
WASHINGTON, June 1 .-)-After
tossing into the discard a
move to increase surtaxes on indi
vidual incomes, senate-house con
ferees today reached complete
agreement on a tax bill estimated
by them to produce $800,000,000
for at least one year.
The compromise measure, call
ing for an entirely new system of
corporation taxes, was engineered
closer Into, line with the original
tax recommendations of Presi
dent Roosevelt. In that sense it
veered away from the senate bill.
The action placed congress
nearer its much-sought goal of
adjournment by Saturday night.
Chairman Dough ton (D-NC) of
the house conferees, who said he
was certain the new bill would
meet with the administration ap
proval, asserted that the confer
ence report would be called up
Saturday in the house. Bill draft
ers, ready to work night and day
to place the measure in legisla
tive language, said it would be
in shape by then. v
Fight Apparently
Looms in Senate
But a bitter row apparently lay
ahead of the conference report in
the senate. There was no specific
evidence, however, of any inten
tion to filibuster.
As it emerged, the compromise
corporation tax plan called for:
A graduated levy of 8 to 15 per
cent on all corporation income.
On top of that would be im
posed a 7 to 27 per cent tax on
earnings not distributed to share
holders, after deducting the nor
mal tax from total income.
Corporation dividends, now sub
ject only to surtaxes, would be
subjected also to the 4 per cent
normal individual income tax.
New Dike Planned
For Brownsmead
More of Old One Goes Out
as Governor Appeals
For Federal Aid
ASTORIA. Ore., June 18.-(JP)-Farmers
of the flooded Browns
mead area voted today to call im
mediately for plans to construct a
new dike Inside the old levee
which has crumbled rapidly under
heavy water pressure of the past
two days.
The county court voted to ad
vance 85,000 to the diking dis
trict and loan the county engin
eer to assist in the work.
Another 75-foot strip went out
today.
Sandbags were thrown up has
tily to protect a small road dike
which keeps water from covering
another 600 acres. Crops on three
farms were believed a total loss.
Governor Martin yesterday ap
pealed to Senator McNary and Ma
jor Generol Edward M. Markham,
chief of the federal army engin
eers, for immediate action to cope
with a serious break in the Co-
(Turn to Page 16, Col. 6)
Grandstand to be Finished
Saturday; Public May View
The face-lifting that has been
transforming Sweetland field Into
a more adequate scene for soft
ball battles will be completed by
Saturday night and the field will
be ready for the opening of the
summer Softball season Monday
night, Gurnee Flesher, sof tball di
rector, . announced last night, '
Work on the Willamette grand
stand has reached the painting
stage, the mill stream has" been
shunted to its new bed and much
of the work of smoothing out the
fill-in of the old bed completed,
riesher stated that the infield
would be laid out Saturday and
that anyone who wished to see
what it looks like may see It San
day. The Home plate will be di
rectly in front of the new grand
Stand and the diamond, will face
the old- grandstand . across the
filed. There has been some talk
of boarding up part of the front
of the old grandstand to bounce
back a' few fly balls that go that
far. . :'
Covering Planned
For Softball Opener
The 1836 Softball season' will
start off with the usual panoply
and ceremony. All eight , teams
Controversy Harms
All Concerned Says
The Dalles Member
New Crisis in Row Over Direct Aid Is
Precipitated; Governor Blamed
For Creating Overdrafts
Martin Remains Silent as Second of
k State Workers Quits; Audit of
Relief Books Is Ordered
PORTLAND, Ore., June 18. (AP) Miss Celia Gavin, The
Dalles attorney, announced her resignation from the state
relief committee today as another climax in the current
controversy between the committee and Governor Charles
Martin over the expenditure of funds.
Her letter to the governor said ,she was resigning effec
tive July 1 on the assumption the audit now underway would
be completed by that time.
Her resignation was the second to be announced since
the governor last week declined to sign additional certifi
Resigns Relief
Board Position
CELIA L. GAVIN
Amity Man Killed
By Logging Train
AMITY, June l8.-(Special)-Roy
Allen, about 50. of Amity was
killed lnstanly here tonight when
a special log train bound for Sa
lem struck his automobile and
threw it against a bell signal post.
The engineer said the locomotive
hit the rear end of Allen's ma
chine. The heavily laden train was
"dynamited" tsa stop 100 yards
down the track from the Fifth
street crossing here.
Coroner Glenn Macy of Mc
Minnville took charge of the body.
Allen, an employe in the Yam
hill county road shops at Mc
Minnville. was a grandson of the
pioneer Willamette valley Beck
ett family, which came to Oregon
in 1847. His grandfather Beckett
built one of the firsi houses In Ca
lem. Surviving are the widow and a
son, Granville, Amity; his mother.
Mrs. Olive Allen, near Amity;
three sisteTs,- Mrs. Ray Vincent.
McMinnville, Pearl Allen, HiHs
boro and Vealeane, Amity.
will meet in uniform at the Y.M.
C.A. at 7:30 Monday night from
where they will parade througn
tnwn to Sweetland field. The
parade will' be led'by the Salem
high school band ana sponsors
and officials wUl ride in cars.
Ceremonies, which Flesher said
would be short and snappy, will
be held at the park before games
start at 8:30 o'clock. , Dr. Bruce
R. Baxter, president of Willam
ette, and Max Page, Softball pres
ident, will speak.
Teafn Selling Most
Tickets Will Play
The team selling the most tick
ets to the opening night Win be
assured of playing in the first
game. Thejothet, three teams will
be drawn by lot. The Paper Mill
entry is at present leading in the
ticket selling campaign. ' V
- All but two teams have turned
In their list of contracted players,
due Monday noon. Nearly all of
the teams ere stronger than last
year and observers state that the
outlook . Is for : a much stronger
league. v. v..? . . -v :
Teams entered are Atwater
ITent. Master Bread. Horr Bros..
Wait's, Paper Mill, Eagles, Arti
sans ana. Man's Snop. - t
' J J j
sbbbbMSsHbsbbW '"'''"'MtMBjMMW
cates of indebtedness for direct
relief and ordered the commute
to proceed on a cash basis. K. R.
Bryson, Eugene, made known his
plans to retire from the commit-'
tee in a statement last Saturday.
Won't Be Party to
Harmful Controversy
Miss Gavin's letter set forth
she felt citizens on reUef, the
relief committee's administrative
staff and county relief commit
tees would be- injured by a con
tinued controversy.
"The inevitable loss of pablie
confidence would result," sbe
wrote. "I am unwilling to fee a
party to any controversy that
might increase their burdens."
She also said "No one could
appreciate more than I the saerit
of your desire to conserve the
funds of the taxpayers whenever
the conserving can be Justly ac
complished and without causing
suffering to the helpless,, and
with that desire all the commit
tee members concur." s
Understood Funds 5
Already Set Aside
Miss Gavin said the Jun
checks, some of which "bounced'
before the governor instructed
the liquor commission to caver
overdrafts, were drawn on a fund
of 8300,000 declared to have been
set aside by the board of con
trol. '
As I understand it. the fail-
nre to so complete the minister
ial provision for the finances y
your, board, caused particularly
by your refusal as a member of
the board of control to sign that
anticipation certificates, caused
the overdrafts to which yoa have
taken exception'."
Home from a tour of easterm
Oregon where he fired aeveral
salvos at the state relief pro
gram and denounced the feeding
of reliefers at taxpayers? expense.
Governor Martin returned to his
desk Thursday and enveloped
himself on the relief subject. All
the governor said was that he had
ordered an audit of jfhe books
and would await the production
of the audit. He made no an
nouncement of a successor to E.
R. Bryson. ,E u g e n e attorney,
whose resignation had bees sub
mitted prior to the recent pas
sage at arms.
Confronting the governor to
day will be the resignation - of
Miss Celia Gavin, The Dalles at
torney, as relief committee mem
ber. Miss Gavin, prominent dmo-.
crat, fears controversy will im
pair public confidence in the ad
ministration of - relief and savs
'she is not willing to, be a party
to such controversy which would
' (Turn to Page 16, Col. f)
Bonus Recipient
Not Necessarily
Off Relief Roll
- Bonus bond recipients will sot
be summarily cut off the Ma
rion county relief rolls. Glenn
C Niles, county relief adminis
trator, said yesterday. Cases f
World war veterans on reset wOl
continue to-be treated, as tat the
past, on the basis of need.
"Some of these men have debts
to " pay off," "Niles - explained.
W.'ll 1st tfim An titmt wftfe
their money and if that taken all
they have, they will stay est the
relief rolls. One man -on our list
that I know of, for another in
stance, is going to Portland for a
surgical operation which -lie
needs. If a man gets his bonus
and has enough to live m for
awhile, be will go off relief.
Whether or; not veterans will
remain on relief after their bonus
checks come tn - will be decided
oy me ; caseworkers oaring isery
routine investigations, Niles lndV
cated ' ; -; ,