ZZTtfflZGOU &TATES7IAN, Baler, Oregon, Friday Morniaar, Ancst tU KCj
Lisbon Revolt
Not Confirmed
Caraiona Believed. Killed
in Outbreak; Radio in
' Capital Is Silent
(Continued from Page 1)
-
and search of the German steam
er Kamerun by armed forces of
the Spanish loyalist cruiser Lib
ertad on the high seas off Cadiz.
In Bellicose. If diplomatic,
terms, the sail government In
structed Its charge d'affaires at
Madrid to make plain its resent
ment to the anti-fascist loyalist
government, and to warn the loy
alists that if any similar incident
should occur the loyalists would
hare to answer from the guns of
German . warships.
. Last night seven ? nasi battle
ships ; steamed toward Spain to
keep a rendezvous. with nine oth
er armed nail vessels' in or near
Spanish waters.
Aligned with German nasi . In
political sympathy to the Spanish
fascist-rebels', cause was ' fascist
Italymade ready on land and In
the air by Premier Mussolini.
II Duce sent 200,000 men off
to. war. games, and kept mobilised
the class of 1914 recruits. His air
pilots remained on call, and the
airdromes housing, his hundreds
of . fightitfg planes ' were made
ready for Any eventuality. .
Cascade Glaciers
Retreat,' Claimed
Carey Martin Sees Future
Threat to Supply of
Water in Valley
(Continued from Page 1)
lng "snow In the higher areas and
rain In the lower", Martin points
out.' '
Snow and Rain Will
Decrease, Forecast
"With the glaciers gone, the
snow and rain must gradually be
come less and less during each
decade," Martin's letter contin
ues. "Indeed, it is a fact that our
snow-mountains now have less
snow thaif they did 50 years ago.
Many of them now present a
black, volcanic rock appearance
in summer time.
"This writer can remember
when- the average depth of snow
on McKenzie pass summit flats.
west of the high point on the lava
was 20 feet. The mail was carried
on snowshoes by hardy mountain
eers, across the McKenzie pass on
the star route from 'Eugene City'
to Prineville. the only town in
mid-eastern Oregon. When the
now became deep, these mail car
riers cut blazes on the pine trees
to mark; the route of travel.
"These blazes were on an ave
rage of about 25 feet above
ground and remained visible for
many years. Assuming that these
markers were cut at about the
height of a man's shoulders would
Indicate at least a depth of 20
feet for the snow in the years of
the lata 70s. Some winters now
have only four or five feet of snow
at the same places." :
Martin declared that "the loss
of great masses of ice storage in
glaciers and consequent depreci
ation; In high, mountain snows
must, seriously diminish our wa
ter supply very, very slowly but
with that certainty knon as the
law of the gods."
"No person now living will be
seriously affected," Martin con
cludes, "but what of the distant
future?"
Crowds Greet as
Landon Goes East
. (Continued fj-om page II
an overnight stay at Omaha.
) Ilia train was scheduled to
reach that city at 10:15 p. m. Cen
tral Standard time. He will break
fast there tomorrow! with Nebras
ka party chieftains. '
In brief platform talks at Fort
Morgan and Sterling, where the
special made three-minute stops,
Landon declared himself in favor
of federal protection of the sugar
ret industry. :,i
"I know this is one of the rich
agricultural counties of Colorado
and the west, and that the . beet
Sugar industry Is the nucleus and
backbone of your prosperity," he
told a crowd at Fort Morgan,
fand it should receive every pro
tection from the federal govern
ment. ( "It is one of the crops that we
can grow here at home."
At Sterling, like Fort Morgan a
beet growing center, Landon said:
I "Good government Is one of the
ifcsuea of this campaign. Too much
legislation has been put" through
Without proper debate."
Violence, Spread
Of Strike Feared
(Continued from Page II
was no need for the state patrol
nor national guard because no
emergency exists.
He answered a "screaming and
laflammatory newspaper editorial
declaring that disorder prevails in
Seattle, that the freedom of the
press is abridged, that the gov
ernor Is delinquent, and that the
governor Is submissive to the may
or and certain labor leaders In Se
attle." j"A strike on a Seattle news
paper plant should not be of state
wide concern," he said. "It
should be confined to that par
ticular plant, and It should be set
tled by frank- negotiations be
tween the employes and the own
ers or their representatives.
'But, unfortunately, live strike
has been seized upon by a few ex
tremists on both sides, and by a
Itw 'political opportunists . .
w&Ich is being spread ... to dis
turb the people thro iaout out
Dallas Man Is
L
Robert 8. K reason of Dallas, chosen this week as Oregon's safest
driver, who wilt attend a two-day conference on traffic safety prob
lems In Xew York City with all expenses paid by the Oregon State
Motor association. The conference will be attended by a "safest
driver" from each state in the anion. Mr. K reason in 210,000'
miles of driving in the last SO years, has never had an acJent nor
been arrested for a traffic violation.
Guild States Its
Side. P. I. Strike
- I
Reign of Terror Now On in
Seattle, Is Charge of
National Officer
XEW YORK, Aug. 20.- (JP)
The American Newspaper Guild,
in a statement tonight, asserted
that "the real insue involved" in
the Seattle, Post-Intelligencer
strike "is the right of j organized
newspapermen to seek fair work
ing conditions, and the right of
other organized workers to sup
port them in a strike brought ou
by the denial of those condi
tions." !
The statement, signed by Hey
wood Broun, international presi
dent, denied that the strike had
led to terrorism and the break
down of law and order in Se
attle. - ? . j
Replying to a statement issued
by the general management of
Hearst newspapers last night it
said that this management while'
declining conferences to end the
strike "is filling downtown Se
attle hotels with armed men.
termed 'loyal workers') Imported
from Los Angeles and San Francisco."'-
! j ;f '
Denies . Violence
. It denied there has been vio
lence on the part of trade unions
picketing the Post - Intelligencer
but said many of the trade union
ists have been assaulted and that
the Hearst management ; "is using
its immense nation-wide resour
ces to confuse the public mind
and befuddle and misrepresent
the issue." j
The guild charged that work
ers imported by Hearst from oth
er cities wore fake identifica
tion buttons of local unions and
"cruise the city in cars, beating
up pickets and terrorizing the
wives of strikers late at night
while their husbands are on the
picket line."
The Hearst management, it as
serted, breaks into. Seattle radio
programs "with attempts to incite
a spirit of mob violence against
the duly constituted authorities of
the cky because they have re
fused to condone the reign of ter
ror which, Hearst has already, in
stituted," and quotes from old
telegrams of international presi
dents of the printing crafts unions
in an effort to misrepresent the
present situation and make the
strike illegal. j
Says Unions Aiding
The statement said that scores
of labor unions in Seattle are ac
tively behind the strike;; that the
American Newspaper guild, an af
filiate of the American Federation
of Labor, assumes full responsi
bility for the strike and its direc
tion, and that Jonathan Eddy, na
tional executive secretary of the
guild, is on the scene and in per
sonal charge. j ' "
The guild says it welcomes the
aid and cooperation of other un
ions "including the valuable and
active aid of the teamsters, long
shoremen and woodsmen," and
will go further by seeking the
backing of the entire labor move
ment in America. 1
It adds that "for the last six
months the American Newspaper
guild has been engaged in a strike
against Hearst's Wisconsin New3,
in Milwaukee, where his cries of
terror have served to conceal the
blunt refusal of the management
to accord any form of I recogni
tion to his exploited employes." .
U. S. Turns Down
Peacemaker Role
(Continued from Page 1)
tlon of all the circumstances In
voked we are constrained to be
lieve .hat the prospect that such
an o! ?r as is suggested, would
serve a useful purpose, i is not
such as to warrant a departure
by this government from i Its well
established policy. j
"t am confident that, in the
light of the foregoing, the gov
ernment of Uruguay will fully un
derstand why this . government
finds Itself unable to accept the
suggestion that, it participate in
any oner or. meaiauon
Rnanlsh conflict.
in the
Safest Driver
s
Two-Hour Parking
Areas Designated
Signs Govern, Stated by
Police Judge; Police
Tag Numerous Cars
- Confusion which resulted from
a sudden , police attempt this
week to enforce all parking re
strictions yesterday prompted Mu
nicipal Judge A. Warren Jones to
list the streets on which one- and
two-hour parking limits prevail
between 9 a. m. and 6 p. m. daily
extept Sundays and holidays. The
new city traffic code, omitting
mention of specific streets, pro
vides the time limits shall exist
according to the . signs posted,
which may be changed at any time
by the council.
Two-hour parking. Judge Jones
said, is In effect on Ferry street
from Church to Front; on Che
meketa. Court and State between
High and Church; on High, Lib
erty and Commercial between
Chemeketa and Center; and on
Chemeketa, Court and State be
tween Commercial and Front
streets.
One-hour's parking only la per
mitted on High, Liberty and Com
mercial streets between Ferry and
Chemeketa streets, and on Che
meketa, Court and State streets
between High and Commercial
streets.
Protest Registered
The unannounced beginning of
enforcement of the two-hour limit
on Ferry streets brought many
protests because of misunder
standings that had arisen through
frequent changes in - the regula
tions governing this parking area.
Two-hour parking was Provided
for on Ferry street by ordinance
until 1930 when the restriction
was removed. The two-hour limit
signs, however, were never re
moved. Under" the new traffic
sode, since the signs are still
standing, the limit again prevails.
Another parking regulation
which caused several motorists
surprise, was to receive police
"tags" under the .traffic code re
striction on overnight parking.
The code prohibits parking for
more than one hour between 1:30
and 5:30 a. m. in the area bound
ed by Union, Trade and Cottage
streets and the Willamette river,
and more than two hours else
where in the city during those
hours.
The municipal court was turned
Into an information bureau rather
than a place for penalties by the
police drive. Judge Jones was fol
lowing a policy of advising first
offenders of the regulations and
admonishing against violations.
New High in Bank
Deposits Reached
WASHINGTON, Aug. 20-(iip)-National
bank deposits were. re
ported by the treasury today to
have established a new high re
cord on June 30.
J. F. T. O'Connor, comptroller
of the currency, announced that
on that date, when the last bank
call became effective, they stood
at 126,200,453,000. an increase of
$1,340,998,000 over the previous
cell on March 4. As compared with
June 29. 1935, deposits showed an
increase of $3,682,207,000.
Loans and discounts also in
creased though not at the same
rate as deposits.. On June 30? they
aggregated $7,759,149,000, an in
crease of $328,285,000 since
March and of $393,923,000 for
the year.
The ratio of loans and discounts
to deposits declined. On June 30
it was 29.61 per cent, while, on
March 4 it stood at 29.89 per cent
and on June 29, 1935 at 32.71
per cent.
Pinball Factory
Has Costly Fire
SEATTLE, Aug. 20.-CP)-Ex-ploding
gasoline In a pin - ball
game manufacturing shop set fire
to the Bavlew building here to
night and swept through the third
floor with a loss battalion Fire
Chief O. H. Ebbinghouse estim
ated at $42,000.
" The chief said about $7,000
damage was caused to the build
ing and the rest of the loss came
from ctmtents .
Rescuers Wear
Entombed Men
Chances Held 1000 to 1
Luartet Dead Though
Efforts Continue
(Continued from Page 1)'
Covered with dirt and breathing:
with difficulty, the rescuers wield
ed shovels, axes and pickaxes 100
feet below the earth's surface In a
crumbling hole seven feet square.
They worked in squads of four
men, sending to. the surface in
buckets the dirt from the mine
tipple that was destroyed by fire
Tuesday and collapsed Into the
shaft while A.' W. McCann, 60,
Edward Stonner, Jr., 26, Demmer
Sexton, 82, and George T. Cam'
eron," 27, negro, were laboring in
the abandoned tunnel preparatory
to reopening the mine.
Tonight , approximately 7,000
persona from all sections of cen
tral Missouri had assembled to
watch the rescue operations. .
About 9:35 o'clock,' the steel
cable of the shaft cage was un
covered by the diggers. . Arnold
Griffith, state mine inspector, said
this indicated -their goal was only
few feet away. '; -
Woman Is Caught,
Gar Theft Charge
A Salem police
broadcast
at
6:29 o'clock last night that an
automobile stolen from Albany at
5 p. m. had been seen speeding
northward was followed 20 min
utes later by the announcement
that a state policeman had arrest
ed a 20-year old married woman
garbed in man's clothing a mile
and a half north of Salem city
limits. Brought to police head-
Quarters' here, she immediately
signed a confession of the theft.
Giving her name as Margaret
Georgia Genevieve McGee and
home address as Taklma, Wash.,
she told police she had hitch
hiked from Holland, Ore., to Eu
gene and then had ridden an Ore
gon Electric train to Albany, she
stated she found an unlocked au
tomobile there and drove It north
ward at speeds as high as 65 miles
an hour. She was headed home,
she said. The car belonged to
Nelson Buckle of Albany.
State 'police arranged to have
the prisoner kept in the county
jail here pending the arrival to
day of Linn county officers.
City police declared last night's
arrest was the first of a woman
on a car theft charge here in
their memory.
Canvass Reveals
Clark as Winner
BOISE, Idaho. Aug iOj-UFV-
Official canvasses of the August
11 Idaho : primary by the state's
44 county auditors today showed
Mayor Barzilra W. Clark of Idaho
Falls winner of a red hot demo
cratic gubernatorial race by 233
rotes.
The municipal power champion
will oppose Frank L. Stephan of
Twin Falls, the republican nom
inee, in the November 3 general
election. '
Clark finished with 10,081
votes. Attorney General Bert H.
Miller polled 9.848 and Lieut.
Gov. G. P. Mix of Moscow 9,846.
Five other candidates trailed far
behind.
Complete returns on the repub
lican senatorial race settled ear
ly last week s bowed Senator
William E. Borah carried every
county in his bid for a return to
congress a sixth time. He polled
32.503 votes to 9,547 for Town-
send-backed Byron Defenbach, a
former republican state treasurer.
More Old Age Aid
Checks to Go Out
Seven per cent more names ap
pear on Marion county's old age
assistance list for August than
for July, according to a report
from Glenn C. Niles, county relief
committee executive secretary,
yesterday. The average individual
payment for the present month
due September 1, has been in
creased 20 cents, or 1 per cent
over July.
Old age payments have been ap
proved for 884 persons, Niles an.
nounced. as against 825 in July.
They will receive $17,952.66, of
which the county and state each
will pay one-quarter and the fed
eral government one-half.
Financial aid to blind persons
for the present month has been
granted In 17 cases, an advance
of five from July. Total August
payments to the blind will amount
to $364, an increase of $78.
Japanese Explain
Nation's Policies
YOSEMITE. Calif., Aug- 20.
(JP) Unofficial Japanese spokes
men tonight told the Institute of
Pacific Relations that their coun
try's international trade and ter
ritorial policies were virtually
forced upon her by the policies of
other nations.
Repeated criticisms of Japan's
allegedly "aggressive" methods
drew the general answer that
speed was necessary to give her a
proper place in the world trade
picture and that so many barriers
had been raised against her that
she had been forced to use every
commercial weapon at her com
mand. British sources suggested the
rapid tempo of Japanese expan
sion constituted a source of un
easiness for other nations. They
also asked whether Japan's in
come from mounting foreign trade
was being distributed to earners
at. home. -
Union Secretary to Speak
' ' ' '
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", . .....
T.
9
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-s- .- . ; . i
V. . m . -
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- """ i
Stfward C Kennedy, national secretary of the Farmers Union who
will speak at several places in the Willamette Yaliey starting 8at
nrday. lie will give an address at the statewide picnic of the Union
at Champoes park, Sunday, August 23. ' -
Lumber Strike Is
Believed Settled
Official Announcement Is
Awaited; Soldiers to Be
Removed Soon
PIERCE, Idaho, Aug. 20-UPV-
The next move to make complete
termination of the north Idaho
lumberjack strike rested tonight
in announcement of plans by Pot
latch Forests, Inc., major logging
operator in this area.
C. L. Billings, general manager
of Potlatch, said he had no offi
cial word of the ending of the
strike, and until he received it he
would have no statement on pol
icy.
Strikers remaining here voted
yesterday, 120 to 18 to resume
work, and the general opinion in
this region was that the seven-week-old
walkout was history.
Couriers reportedly were sent
from this tiny mountain Tillage
to all camps of the area to advise
loggers the strike was over.
Got. C. Ben Ross announced
from a hospital bed at Boise that
martial law would be ended prob
ably Friday and that Col. S. D.
Hays, of Boise, would withdraw
the 35 remaining national guards
men on duty in the area. Martial
law was declared Aug. 2. After
strikers and. non-strikers clashed
with guns, and 90 guardsmen
were sent to Clearwater county.
Fire strikers were shot and sev
eral non-strikers were badly beat
en in the clash. '
The ousting of six I.W.W. lead
ers from Pierce and Orofino
Tuesday by national guardsmen
preceded the vote to return to
work. At that time, the lumber.
jacks said, they understood they
would go back with some of their
six original demands granted by
Potlatch Forests.
Portes Gil Quits
As Party Leader
MEXICO CITY, Aug. 20.-(-
Emilio Portes Gil, under sharp
fire for monthB, quit tonight as
president of the powerful revolu
tionary (government) party.
Sending his "Irrevocable" re
signation to President Lazaro
Cardenas and the party's execu
tive committee, he said the sen
ate's refusal yesterday to seat
five party candidates declared
victorious in recent elections bad
decided him in the action.
A former provisional ; president
of Mexico, former attorney gen
eral and former secretary of for
eign relations, Portes : Gil had
held the party presidency since
June 13, 1935. The post is con
sidered the second most Import
ant political position in the coun
try. .
Big Firms Aiding
Demos' Financing
WASHINGTON, AugJ 20.-JP)-William
Hard, In his radio broad
cast sponsored by the republican
national committee, said tonight
that approximately 125 important
corporations have "contributed to
Mr. Roosevelt's compangn expens
es" by purchasing space in the
democratic "convention book."
He said they included such
"Top-class 'economic royalist out
fits" as Genefal Electric, General
Motors and United States Steel
corporation.
"The acceptance of their mon
ey," Hard asserted, "has caused a
considerable outcry among left
wing supporters ot the new deal."
Loggers in Court'
In Shooting! Case
OROFINO. Idaho, Aug. 20.-A)
-Eight employes of the Fromelt
logging camp, accused of shoot
ing I. W. W. pickets in the clash
24 miles south of here on Aug
ust 2 which precipitated declara
tion ot martial law in Clearwater
county,, were arraigned' before
Probate Judge E. B. Steele to
day and were released under
bond of $750 each when a pre
liminary hearing was demanded.
Heroic Girl Has
White House Bid
Threw Herself in Path of
Sled to Save Boys as
Lives Endangered-
ZANESVILLE, O., Aug. 20.-(JPy-A
shy Ohio country girl, 12-year-old
Clara Kathryn Van Horn,
considered , tonight 'an invitation
to visit the White House and re
ceive from President Roosevelt
a medal in recognition of her her
oism in rescuing. two playmates
from death on an icy hillside last
February.
Notification that she would re
ceive the medal of the army and
navy legion of" valor Sept. 12 was
made personally by Capt. Ralph
W. Robert, national commander,
who came from Cambridge, Mass.,
to visit Clara at her modest home
in the nearby village of White
Cottage.
Captain Robert said Clara
would be the first girl ever to re
ceive the award. He asked her to
go with him to Cincinnati Aug.
30 to reign as "queen of honor"
during the four day convention
of legion medal holders.
Modest almost to the point of
timidity, the little school girl ac-w
cepted, and then, as she shared
with visitors a large box of candy
Captain Robert had brought, told
him briefly how she saved Ger
ald Nixon and Raymond Kelly
from death under the wheels of a
train.
On February 5, Clara related,
the two boys,' 10 and 12 years
old, lost control of their sled as
it coasted down a steep hillside
at the foot of which was a rail
road crossing. A train whistled
down the grade, and the panicky
boys headed straight for it.
Clara, trudging the hill, flung
herself Into the path of the sled,
tossing the boys Into a snowbank.
The tied cut and bruised the girl
as It passed over her body and
was smashed under the train.
"There wasn't anything else I
could do," said Clara, wide-eyed
at the attention paid her.
Captain Robert said there was
only-about 1,000 members of the
army and navy legion of valor,
which was founded 46 years ago.
Sure, Pm Keeping Up On the World
During fly Vacation"
. . . Fm Having
1 he statesman
Sent Me at
My Vacation
Address...
O
DIAL 9101
THE OREGO
Hippodroming of
Court Criticized
Hanptmann Case Is Cited;
Cnr on Publicity of
Trials Is Sought
INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 20.-(ff)-ProposaU
for curbing what it
termed newspaper aad radio "hip
podroming" of American criminal
Justice as in the Hauptmaim and
Mooney trials are contained in the
report of the American Bar asso
ciation's; committee on criminal
procedure to be presented to the
association at Its annual conven
tion starting Monday in Boston.
. ; Stressing publicity given the
trial of Bruno Hauptmann for the
kidnaping of the infant son of Col.
and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh,
the report proposes enactment of
legislation that would strengthen
existing contempt of court stat
utes, j
, The committee report was made
public here today by Attorney
General I Philip Lutz, jr.; ot In
diana, chairman.'
The report said "the most seri
ous criticism of American crimin
al procedure today is that t he
judges of the courts permit news
papers t usurp the court's own
duties a4d functions."
.'.'Newspaper interference with
criminal justice always appears
most flagrantly . in celebrated
criminal cases." the .report said.
"Those judicial proceedings,
therefore in which American
criminal justice most needs to be
a calm Investigation of the truth
are, on the contrary, most violent
ly 'hlppcldromed" and 'panicked
by the press."
Citing j proposals advanced In
the past for "correcting the pres
ent system," the report suggested
that a nfew statute might be en
acted to give the courts more
broad powers of punishing for
contempti as a weapon for control
ling publicity In criminal trials.
Other subjects covered by the
report lqciuaea proposals or en
actment jof , procedural statutes
which have proved effective, but
have notlbeen widely adopted; to
admit evidence obtained by police
officers Acting in good faith, but
with technical illegality, and for
interstate I compacts to obtain
more cooperation in law enforc
ment
Heroj Saves Two,
Then Is Drowned
GREAf FALLS, Mont., Aug. 20
-yP)-Alter rescuing two youths
from the Missouri river near here
late today. Harry Ritter of Great
Falls. WPA timekeeper, drowned
in an unsuccessful attempt to save
the life df :a third, Buster Lake,
16, of Cascade.
Lake a id the two other youths
stepped into deep water while
bathing and were swept down
stream pfcst Ritter and another
WPA timekeeper. J. C. Haney,
who were cleaning fish on the
bank. ' ) .; ;
Ritter lunged in and brought
two of the trio to shore but
drowned in his effort to save
Lake. f--
Haney i lso tried vainly to reach
lake.
Houses Tossed by
Nebraska Twister
WASHINGTON, Neb., Aug. 20.
(JP) A twisting wind tore three
houses , f com their foundations
here tonight, poured a torrential
rain Into) the community and
drove almost the entire Washing
ton population of 117 into storm
cellars. No injuries were re
ported.
All communication facilities
were interjrupted, and roads were
made impassable.
And
Ask ' to Have Your Statesman
Foncardcd to Your Vacation Address
N ST
Most of Tourists
Found For Landon"
Carl Pope Reports Alaskq j
Trip Ideal; Colony Is
Joke There, Learns
All but one passenger on thoj
Prince Robert, de luxe steame
carrying tourists through Alas
kan waters, planned to vote fo?
Alfred M. Landon for president,
it was reported by Carl T. Pope,
Salem attorney who with Mrs.
Pope returned this week from a
Tacation trip to the Yukon coun
try, The one passenger who fav
ored President Roosevelt for re
election was a Chlcagoan.
Native Alaskans laugh at the
Matanuska colonizing . venture,
Mr. Pope reported. Potatoes rais
ed there are so watersoaked the
have no value as a commercial
product, due to frequent raina
and the short growing season
which also handicaps other crops, t
The Yukon Talley is thinly
populated now, with nobody to
be found there aside from xur
traders and tourists. Two steam
ers carrying tourists on the Yu
kon were wrecked this summer
but only one life was lost. '
Glaciers are Seen '
Highlights of the trip includ
ed the Taku and Mendenhall gla
ciers, the Yukon river and 'the
old Russian capital at Sitka. The
Prince Robert called at all of
the principal Alaskan ports and
passed close to the glaciers.
While cities near the coast
have up-to-date daily newspapers,
Mr. Pope displayed a copy of a
Dawson paper which, 11 days
old, was the freshest news me
dium he could obtain there and
It, Incidentally, sold at 25 cents
a .copy.
Mr. and Mrs. . Pope were en
thusiastic about the Alaskan tour
as a vacation trip, describing it
as both interesting and restful
Hewitt Case Will
Continue, Decided
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 20.-JF)
-Deputy District Attorney August
Fourtner staked out a new legal
battleground tonight on which to
continue his prosecution efforts
against two physicians involved in
be sterilization of Ann Cooper He
witt, heiress.
Still smarting over Superior
Judge Raglan Tuttle's dismissal
yesterday of mayhem and conspir
acy charges , against the physici
ans, Fourtner said he would ap
peal the -decision to .the state ap
pellate " court "as soon as' possi
ble." ...
He also asserted he would
bring the girl's mother, Mrs. Mar-,
yon (Cooper Hewitt, to trial hero
on similar charges "It It's the last
thing I ever do."
The . physicians. Dr. . Tilton E.
Tillman and Dr. Samuel G. Boyd,"
received congratulations from
their friends and prepared to re
sume their practice, , which had
been interrupted frequently be
cause of the legal -proceedings.
Republican Heads
Talk at Lake view
LAKE VIEW, Ore., Aug. 20.
(P) Walter L. TOoze, assistant
chairman of the state republican
central committee? Lars Bladine,
secretary, and David Hobs, young
republican club leader, reached
here today on their tour of east
ern Oregon.
They spoke at a meeting pre
sided over by County Chairman
T. S. McKinney.
Last night the trio conferred
with Harney county republicans
at Burns and earlier in the day
spoke at a Grant county meeting
at Canyon City.
A TE S M AN
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