The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, March 16, 1937, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE TWO
The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning, March 16, 1937
Striliers Hold
Detroit Plant
Caution Against Defying
Law Is Expressed By
Governor Murphy
(Continued from Page 1)
America, announced abandonment
of the injunction rote plan at a
union rally. " .
"We did not pat the men in the
.plants and we are not going to
take them, out, Martin told the
meeting. "We are not going to
Vote on that question." j -
It had been said earlier that the
strikers themselves would rote to
night upon whether they would
comply. with the injunction.
; Governor Murphy concluded a
Conference in Lansing with prose
cutors from fire iadnstrial coun
ties and three state officials by
issuing a statement that labor dis
putes can be adjusted peaceably
and that enforcement agencies are
prepared to- prevent defiance of
law:-.
- The automotive and numerous
unrelated strikes in Detroit led to
an order by Superintendent Fred
Frahm for all city police to go on
a 12-hour day, effective tomor
row, instead . of the usual eight
hour shift,
penalty Assessed
In Case of Refusal
; Circuit Judge Allan Campbell,
acting on petition of the Chrysler
corporation against the strikers
and officials of the United Auto
mobile Workers of America and
the Committee for Industrial Or
ganization, ordered the men to
evacuate the plants by 9 a. m.
Wednesday and fixed a penalty
of 110.000.000 to be- levied on
their "lands, goods and chattels'
for failure to comply.
"Knowing their- sentiments,' I
don't think they'll come out of
the plants," Richard T. Franken
steen, union organization director
and a former employe of Chrys
ler's Dodge division, said. He add
ed that "the corporation has
large-force of strike-breakers
waiting to go into action if the
men come out. A picket line and
old style strike would be danger
ous to public safety. It would mean
Hots."
i The strike and Its effects have
left 80,00 Chrysler workers, and
I. 400 employes of the .Brlggs
Manufacturing Co., body - pro
ducers. Idle. Other automotive
strikes in progress have affected
more than 10,000 employes or me
Hudson Motor Car Co. here, some
g.tOO Reo Motor Car Co. workers
at Lansing. -Mich., and sevftal
hundred Bohn aluminum employes
la Detroit.
Portland Strikes
Reported Settled
- (Cos tinned from page 1) :
40-hour week, and wage increases
of from $5 to $3 a week.
Terms of the Goldberg Brothers
Bag company settlement, affecting
bout ten persons, were not dis
closed. The strike has been on for
two months.
Labor relations board hearing
on charges that the Portland
branch of Montgomery Ward and
company violated the Wagner act
la scheduled for Wednesday. Dr.
Towns Nylander, regional direc
tor for the labor board In Calif or
nia, will sit as trial examiner, and
'A. N. Somers, labor board attor
ney. will prosecute the case.
'. Dr. Nylander arrived today.
The charges involve alleged dis
crimination by the company
against employes for union activ
ity. Meanwhile the tense situation in
the Columbia district lumber in
dustry was unchanged, with local
union officials in Seattle on an
anknown mission.
HOLLYWOOD
Today "Born To Dance"
' with Eleanor Powell,
James Stewart and Vir-
ginla Bruce.
Wednesday Double bill,
Zane Grey's "Desert Gold"
with Larry (Buster)
Crabbe and "Killer At
Large" with Mary Brian
and Russell Hardie.
Friday Double bill, Jean
Autry in "The Big Show"
and "Lady From Nowhere" -
, with Mary Astor.
STATE
Today "P a s s 1 n g of
the
Third Floor Back."
Friday Eastern Circuit
Vaudeville plus "The White
; Legion" with Ian Keith.
CAPITOL
Today Double bill, Joe K.
Brown in "Polo Joe" and
? Bob Allen , in "Ranger
Courage."
Thursday Double bill, Vic-
tor Moore In "We're In
The Jury" and Pat O'Brien
la "China Clipper." -
ELSIXORK
Today "Maid Of Salem"
with Clandette Colbert and
Fred MacM array, added at
traction all color, "Cinema
Circus" with 25 stars.
Wednesday Double bill. Ed-
ward Arnold In "John
'Meade's Woman" and Ro-
land Young in "ine Nan
l Who Could W o r k Mlr-
; ' . aclea" and latest Issue of
"March Of Time."
, Saturday Double bill, Joe E.
Brown In "When'a Tour
Birthday" and Gordon
" - Jones in "China Passage."
GRAND
Today Grace Moore and
Cary Grant in "When
Tou'ra In Love."
Wednesday Slim Summer
vllle and the Jones Family
- In "Oft To The Races."
Saturday Victor McLaglen
in "Nancy Steele Is Missing.-
.
The Call Board
!
I
Seismograph
V, -
ft
I
r-r.-.5 5.-.i--. - .
Recorded on the seLimogrsph chart (above) the earthquake, which
, recently shook the Saa Francisco bay region, became so intense
the needle waa completely thrown off the graph. The seismograph
on which the record waa made la on the campus of the University
of Calif oral at Berkeley. At m
was shaken down, below, and
looking through what was her
region suffered broken windows
shaken to the floor. International Illustrated News Photo.
Compromise Upon
Court Issue Seen
?
(Continued from page 1)
been proposed would undoubtedly
be received . by the public with
favor. These amendments, how
ever, do not have, direct relation
ship to the increase In the su
preme court membership which Is
contemplated , by the president's
plan. j
"The latter Is gaining ground
steadily and I believe will be
passed by both houses during the
present session." j
.Norrls submitted two proposals
which he hoped but would not
predict might furnish material
for compromise. They were a con
stitutlonal amendment limiting the
terms of federal judges to nine
years instead of a lifetime, and a
bill requiring that at least seven
of the high tribunal's nine mem
bers concur before an act of con
gress can be declared invalid.
LaCuardia Swats
At Fuehrer Again
(Continued from Page 1)
the course of his speech:
"Adolf Hitler and his imme
diate staff of nasi: pathics have
become a sort of monster, threat
enlng the peace of the world."
From his prepared I text Johnson
dropped an assertion following
next in aequenca that Hitler and
his associates menaced peace
only a little more than Stalin
and his crew of primitives.
He also omitted thereafter vir
tually all denunciations of Stai n,
the soviet and communism
which he had made In the orig
inal text. I
There was., he i asserted, "a
paid nazl propaganda in progress
here. The- whole mess of dirty
intrigue and attempted sednction
of American citizenship doesn't
yet amount to anything." '
Bootleg Milk Is
Hurting, Charged
(Continued from page I)
milk shed now, despite the fact
that boost la feed coats and other
production factors seem to war
rant, a higher price.!
Members of the co-op alleged
factory milk Is beinr put in the
bottle here Instead of inspected or
a grade milk. ;
Two Postoffices
Finished,' Report
WASHIXGTdN. Msrch 18-UP-k
-The treasury department . re
ported completion j of two pro
jects of its emergency construc
tion program in Oregon, .with
two others under contract
March 1.
- The completed projects were
the ..60,000 postofflce at New
berg and a $10,000 postoffke at
Oregon City. - r
Prelects under ! -construction
are a $310,000 postoffiee build
ing at Salem and a $126,000 sub
station at East Portland.
Records Bay Region
r
. ? , :
7'.;
home In Berkeley a brick chimney
Mrs. Anne Ostrander la pictured
fireplace, Blany stores in the bay
and stock from the shelves was
Six Convicted in
Vote Fraud Case
KANSAS CITY, March
A federal court 'Jury late today
convicted all six defendanta in
the third vote fraud conspiracy
trial here bringing to 13 the nam
ber found guilty of charges grow
ing out of the November general
election.
The defendants, all election
officials or democratic party work
ers, were charged with conspiracy
to disfranchise voters.
In two previous trials, seven
were convicted of similar charges.
Six pleaded nolo contendere and
one Jury failed to agree on three
others. They were part of a total
of 75 indicted by a federal grand
jury Investigating the election.
Convicted today, were Alice-M.
Froeschl and John T. Little, dem
ocratlc judges; James F. Maxey,
republican -judge; Forest C. Hoi
man, democratic, clerk; Joseph
Hobdy and Gilbert Stevens, dem
ocratlc precinct captains.
Mrs. Ruth Hogendorn, repub
lican clerk, and Mrs. Lena T.
Green, republican judge. Indicted
with the others, pleaded no de
fense.
New Woolen Mill
Official Arrives
Wilbur F. Berry has arrived
from Providence, R. I., and taken
the position of superintendent of
the Thomas Kay Woolen mills In
the production end, succeeding
Chester A. Page, who resigned
recently to take a position in Co-
lumblaville, Mich.
Berry has had 22 years of ex
perience In woolen and worsted
mills in New England where the
greatest number of looms are lo
cated. His last position was with
Joseph Hall & Sons at Norwich,
Conn., where he waa superintend
ent and designer. Prior to that
he was overseer of wearing for
the Peacedale mills at Peacedale,
R. I. He also served for a time as
superintendent of a worsted mill
at Lewlston, Maine.
Berry is a graduate of the Low
ell Textile Institute . at Lowell,
Mass.
George P. Powers
Called By Death
George P. Powers. Shaw 1 rnlt-
grower, paased away at the age of
79 at a local hosoital Snndav ftr
being ill for about two months.
Mr. Powers was not married anrf
lived alone near Shaw. He had
two prune orchards there.
Interment will ba In Pnnun
where he has a nenhew ud thi-M
nieces.
1
"BORN TO DANCBT
m m r mm inn - - - - - ,
"Killer at Large" -Tl
) Zane Grey's "Desert Gold" J
Earthquake
Strip of Willson ;
Park Given State
(Continued from page 1)
to 7'rote to accept a resolution in
troduced by Edwin C. Goodenough
arbitrarily reducing, the city's
street lighting payments to the
Portland General Electric com
pany for the next four months to
90 per cent of the bills for the
corresponding month a year ago.
Goodenough, whose other power
resolution, providing for negotia
tion ot a new franchise, was ta
bled and then rereferred to com
mittee, declared a contract offered
by the company waa unsatisfac
tory. !
: The 'power company's proposal,
as placed In the hands ot the
council utilities committee, is to
reduce the rate per street light by
approximately 10 per cent on con
dition that 61 more corner lamps
are Installed, bringing ; the total
number to 720. The city's month
ly electric bill would remain at
its present level with i the extra
61 street lights In service.
Preparing for the city's new
traffle system in the business dis
trict, the council passed resolu
tions permitting the Oregon Mo
tor stages to load along the south
side ot State street. Immediately
west of Commercial street, all of
their city busses which previously
stopped in front ot the United
States National bank on the west
side of Commercial with the one
exception of the South Commer
cial line. The South Commercial
bus will continue to stop In front
of the bank. .
Objections from Aldermen Fred
A. Williams and Evans failed to
defeat a resolution setting up ma
chinery for operation ot the Floyd
B. McMullen first aid car. which
will be equipped for use in about
30 days. The resolution places
the car and its crew under the su
pervision of the council fire de
partment committee, creates two
new cItII service positions, those
of first aid officer with Junior
captains' salary rating and pro
vides that the car shaU be man
ned in two dally shifts with a
first aid officer and one firemen
on each.
Slaying Is Based
Upon Tribal Laws
. SPOKANE, Wash., March 15
(AVBaptiste Andrew, ageing Col
vllle Indian, sat behind the tars
of a Jail today, perplexed be
cause the white man's law de
mands his death because he slew
a. tribesman he Insists stole his
wife.
He admitted. Deputy U. S
Marshal Elwyn Daniels said, that
he shot John Joseph dead with
a 70-year-old -buffalo gun after
the wife, mother of his four
children, went ,to lire with Jo
seph on a neighboring allotment
on the ColviUe reservation.
Through an Interpreter, the
64-year-old Andrew let the mar
shal know he was ' following a
custom old among the Colvilles
when the white man brought his
law to the upper Columbia river
country. If another man, tribes
man or not, that law wag, took
property that belonged to anoth
er, whether it be a pony, a fish
basket, or a wife, death was the
penalty.
Young Democrats
; To Convene, Coos
NORTH BEND, Ore., March
15 (Jpy- Mrs. John Boettiger.
daughter of President Roosevelt
and wife of the publisher of the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, will
address the convention of Oregon
Young Democrats here neze
month. - :
Howard Latourette. national
committeeman, and Willis Ma-
honey, former mayor of Klam
ath' Falls are also scheduled to
speak. -
Walter Tooze of Oswego vis
ited here In the interests of his
campaign for the presidency of
the organization. C. C. Carlson
of Portland, present president,
Is a candidate for re-election.
Pius to Bless Throngs
VATICAN CITY. March
Pope Plus XI plans to bless Eas
ter Sunday throngs from the log
gia of St. ePter's. The pontiff ap-;
parently was unaffected by his
brief prostration Sunday.
limn yominim'
Utter, Treece
Resign
No Statements; Irvine'
39-Year Educational
Work Also Ended
(Continued from Page 1)
Utter was turning In his resigna
tion. He said he had taken no
personal interest in the parole
bills. ' j. "
Irvine Praised for
Extended Service
" B. F. Irrlne," who sent In 'his
letter, declining reappointment
nearly, two weeks after his term
bad expired, wrote:
"I regret exceedingly to say
that multiplying duties and the
obligation to the public as a Jour
nalist to remain tree from all
outside Influences seem to impel
me to decline reappointment in
that field of wonderful and sacred
aerrlces the education of oar
youth fo- life and ; citizenship,
Irvine wrote. -
In reply, : Governor : Martin
wrote a letter to Irrlne In which
he stated that he was "deeply
conscious ot the loss that higher
education, and all allied Interests
ot the state, will sustain in your
retirement as a member of that
Important body.
"On the basis of your serrice
to higher education in this state.
a record unparalleled by any tir
ing person, yon hare abundant
right to retire with honors.'
No successor to Irrlne
been appointed. .
Other appointments expected
soon are members of the new min
ing board and the new board to
manage the adult blind trades
school in. Portland.
Big Gtizensliip
Gass Up Today
Preliminary hearings on nat
uralization applications of between
SO and 60 persons Is to be held
at the courthouse today. T. J.
Griffith, associate division direc
tor ot naturalization, will conduct
the hearings. - -
Most of the cases will probably
concern women who lost citlxen
ship by marriage to aliens during
the period from March 2, 1907
to September 22, 1922. Under a
new federal statute, a simplified
procedure for the restoration of
citisenship papers has been estab
lished.
As there has been a dual Inter
pretation placed upon the new law.
the naturalization office haa hand
led all of details of the work
which Is ordinarily taken care of
by the county clerk's office so that
office is not Informed upon the
procedure for today.
Flight of Amelia
Is Delayed Again
OAKLAND. Calif., March 15-
(JF) Stormy weather, the bane of
fliers everywhere, caused a sec
ond postponement today In the
start of Amelia Earhart'a pro
jected 27,000-mile world-girdling
flight.
Between 500 and 600 miles
westward, directly on the 2400
mile route to Honolulu, centered
the same storm area that caused
a delay in the flight yesterday.
E. H. Bowie, U. S. weather bu
reau official, said the depression
area was moving westward, "very.
rery slowly," while winds prob
acy varying from 35 to 50 miles
per hour howled in Its center.
The same storm area caused
postponement of the flight ot the
Pan American seaplane Hawaii
Clipper for Honolulu enroute to
Manila, and the start of a surrey
plane for Australasia.
Turrpa Case Set
Week From Today
PORTLAND. Ore., March 15.-(iP)-Federal
Judge James Alger
Fee postponed until March 23
hearing on Injunction proceedings
of Captain Isaac Turrpa, Colum
bia river pilot, against the federal
marine inspection bureau.
' Judge Fee Issued a temporary
order last week restraining the
board from proceeding with trial
of Turrpa on charges growing out
of sinking of the Italian motor
ship Feltre in a collision with the
Edward Luckenbach February 17.
Turrpa waa pilot on the Feltre.
Curb on Kite Flying h
Aim of Ordinance Bill
An ordinance aimed to halt kite
flying accidents- Involving power
lines was offered the city council
last night. A result of three recent
kite-power line accidents, the bill
would forbid flying of a kite so
that any part of It came within
50 feet of a power line and would
prohibit use of wire or metal
bound kite strings. The measure
provides for a. 225 fine.
Grange Official Dies
SEATTLE. March 15.-ffV-Fred
W. Lewis. 74. secretary or the
Washington state grange for 29
years, died here today after an
illness of two and a half months.
He was a charter member, of the
PS
MSEM
id
A
.Tonight and Wed.
2 FEATURES
JOE. E. BROWN v
- in. ,.,
"POLO JOE"
And Hit No. 2 -
BOB ALLEN
"Ranger Courage'
Tanker Rammed
- - ; - . , 1 ;
I f - yi: -
V ' : : 7 ; ft - - , ; ;
JVA I :
I The tanker
This dramatic photo of the stricken tanker,' Frank, H. Buck, was
taken & few momenta after H was rammed la k tog" off San Fran
cisco by the liner President CooUdge. Although the tanker was
badly damaged, it remained afloat and waa towed to port after its
crew of 36 had been aared. The liner, .carrying L200 passengers,
was forced to turn back for repairs.: - "
21 Women Killed
In Manila Blast
MANILA, March lt-(Tuesday)
(dp) A new tire hasard. punc
tuated . by sharp explosions, hin
dered rescuers attempting to re
cover additional bodies in a Chi
nese fireworks factory catastrophe
that already has claimed the lives
of 21 women. ,
Sixteen women are in hospitals
suffering from injuries, and the
condition of four is critical, au
thorities said. -
More than 100 women" were
working in the plant yesterday
when an unexplained powder ex
plosion shattered part of the plant
and started a fire which got
quickly out of control.
- Authorities feared .additional
bodiea might be- found in - the
smoking ruins, but rescue work
ers, halted until daylight, were
hampered by a renewed blase and
a series of minor blazes.
An accurate check of the miss
ing persons was. not Immediately
possible, authorities said. It waa
esmated between 20 and 50 of
the factory workers were still
unaccounted for. i
Knife Brawl Has
Police Attention
CORVALLIS. Ore., March 15-(JPy-Stere
Fetcko, about 45, mem
ber ot a tCC unit north of here,
was n the Vancouver, Wash.,
barracks hospital with a knife
wound received In a street brawl
here.
Hollis Hoop, also a CCC en
rollee, was held in the county
jail on an assault charge.
Hospital attendants said
Fetcko's wound was not serious.
Murder Denied By
Jacksonville Man
MEDFORD. Ore., March 15-OPl
-William J. Fields, 65. of Jack
sonville entered a plea of Inno
cent today to a second degree
murder charge involving the
death of M. M. Mow, 40, of Ash
land, February 6.
Fields was Indicated by a Jack
son county grand Jury. .
Bond waa set at 12,500.
Queen Mother of Rumania
Seriously III But Poison
Rumor Officially Denied
BUCHAREST, March 15-iSV
vtueen uotner Marie or Rumania
tonight was officially reported
suffering from complications fol
lowing an attack of grippe.
The-statement aald the queen
mother was being kept on a strict
diet and obliged to "remain per
fectly quiet." It made no mention
of foreign reports ahe had been
poisoned, which evoked prompt
and emphatic official denials.. -
I riiiiiijii.a- Mii
I Kndoraed and Sponsored by the
ftalem A. A. TJ. W.
It Starts Today I :
-
One of the Great Pictures
of AH Time!-
Jerome K. Jerome's Great Play
Now on the Screen!
by Liner in Fog
7!
A
Frank IL Back
Insurgpt Attack
On Madrid Heavy
MADRID J 1 March 15 -(iP) In
8urgent artillery battered down
town Madrid-today with one of
the heaviest bombardments of
the war. j !
The "barrage
started about
noon and lasted through the. day
light hours4jf I
During ttte shelling, three In
surgent plaies appeared over the
city and propped propaganda
leaflets. A 1 squadron of govern
ment pursuit' planes put them to
flight. - -1
War ministry ,. communiques
said all fronts near Madrid were
relatively qieU I. Both sides took
advantage ?bf bad weather to
prepare neirj offensives.
(Insurgent dispatches, report
ing General Francisco Franco
planned -to Coordinate attacks on
the Jarama and Guadalajara
fronts to close in on Madrid sim
ultaneously! from two " directions.
said his Xorf es had gained ground
in both sectors.) ,
i
Hi-Y lcks Hosts
For Guest Teams
i-
The Hl-t j club, high school
Y.M.C.A. organization, yesterday
selected a group of its members to
act as .official hosts to .visiting
teams contesting the state bas
ketball toufn'ament.
Those selected were: Ashland,
Dick Smith j ! Athena, Ed Bishop;
Astoria. JerV Cottew; BeUfoun
Uin, Bill .aughlin; Chiloquin,
Jim Leedy; Eugene, Kirk Bell:
Franklin. Frank Page; Klamath
FaUs, Orval Cooley; Lincoln, Wil
son Maynard; LaGrande, BUI
Smith; McMinn vllle, Dick Cham
bers; Milwaukee. Amos John; Me
Loughlin, Jack Hansell; North
Bend, BiU jParker.
. -fH p 1- .
Allocation fdr Baridon
- M -
Rehabilitation Sought
: i ' ..
BANDONjiloreU March 15.-OP-Gllbert
Cable, mayor, and L. D.
FeUheim. publisher, will seek -a
federal allocation of $300,000 to
finance rehabilitation of the town
of- Bandon; i destroyed by forest
fire last fa'RV )
They arejje:n route to Washing
ton. -. I i . . .
Preferring Local Labor .
On Pipeline. Plea Made
The city! council received a re
quest from! the Salem Trades and
Labor council last night to make
certain that jsalem labor is given
first preference on the water sup
ply pipeline: contract and that un
ion wages prevail. The matter
was referred, tol the special com
mittee whih Is I investigating em
ployment conditions on the pipe
line nrnltrfi! I
mr -
LAST? iTT3IES TODAY
TSTOMORROW
MASTER OF
EVERYT::."3
...CutLOYQ
tDWAXD AtNOlDV 4
LlsllHnDr - sio. BAMCtorr
1 i
Building Program :
To Get Attention
Joint Meeting of Control
-Board, Capitol Group I
Is Planned Soon
A Joint meeting ot the state
board of control and the capitol
reconstruction commission will be
held at as early date to consider
the group capitol program author
ized by the 1937 legislature. It
was indicated when the board ot
control . discussed . the matter
briefly Monday.
. The program Includes purchase, .
at an outside cost of 9300,000,
all or part of the four blocks to
the .north ot the capitol site and
the construction of one or more
buildings, at a cost ot $550,000.
The buildings must Include library
facilities. The capitol reconstruc
tion commission is given the re
sponsibility of handling the pro
gram, with the approval of the
board of controL-
Pnrchase Discussed
. With respect to the purchase or
construction ot an office building
in Portland, which was left to
the board of control. It was indi
cated that Portland property
owners Interested will be given
notice when the. Issue is to be con
sidered, probably next month.
A revised program for tn
tuberculosis hospital at The Dalles
was approved for application for
PWA funds. Under the -new pro
gram, construction of an addition
al pavilion, completion of the
nurse's home, and construction of
a physician's cottage, in addition
to a heating -plant .and laundry
would be provided. ,
The legislature appropriated
951,400 for the heating plant and
153,400 for an addition to house
50 more patients at the hospital.
Elaine Postpones j
Her Divorce Suit
HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Marca-15-iT)-Lore
alone, aays ; Elaine
Jacobs Barrymore, Is a thread
too thin to bear, the weight ot
marriage. '
"Consequently, 1 don't know
what to do now. John .wants te
come back to me. He thinks we
can begin over again. I'm not
sure about that. But I can't ge
ahead until all the Issues are
straight in my own mind."
For this reason, the dark. 21-year-old
Brooklyn- beauty ex
plained, - she has postponed her
divorce. s i
Last IVIiniite Tax j
XiUBU S-E VWBC1CU
WASHINGTON, Msrch l$-Jpy-The
greatest throngs of income
tax payers since 1924 jammed fed
eral collection offices today, fil
ing an estimated three million re
turns and raising treasury hopes
that government income tax may
match outgo during the rest of
this fiscal year.- -
Today's rush Is expected te
boost the total of March returna
to about ,000,000. Treasury of
ficials said the heavy rolume of
returns indicated that their 5840,
000,000 estimate of tax collec
tions this month would be born"
out. .
Colgaartl Slaying ;
Case Is Scanned
EUGENE, Ore.. March IS-jpy-The
case of El win Sr Brown, 23,
Elmlra, charged with the slaying
of Peter P. Colgaard, Elmira
storekeeper, will come before the
Lane county grand jury -thir
week. . ' L
urown was returned to the
Lane county jail from an unre
pealed place of incarceration.
Sheriff C. A.. Swarts said. i
Levee Location Topic i
Portland, March 15-(.ip)-The
Dalles port officials and Union
Pacific - railroad representatives
will participate in a hearing
March 23 at The Dalles to de
termine the location of a levee
on the Columbia rirer.
. TT..N..'
4
-'
TWO FEATURES
r
- ..aam. m n m t ufrM 1