The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning:, July 8, 1937 Foes of Court Plan Accused 7 Did It With These Hands? Says Dyer in Close Steel Works After Blast not nister, aavs &4. Ditter Debate Upon F. It. Scheme Is Halted by ; ' Baseball Recess PAGE TWO Mae West Is Threat ened E - Marco Polo Bridge Held by Invaders at End of Bitter Battle " j ' ,- -' (Continued From Page 1) Previous Denials Aren't Official, Explained hj - Her Attorney j .- - -.- - - 1 ! I (Continued From Fags 1) . report, on the original court bill, signed by eight democrats, "could be coh&trued only as an effort to destroy the president." Some ot Its signers - hastened to assert their, loyalty-to s the chief execu tive. . . . ; .. The'Kentucklan declared, .too, that the report was being widely used by "followers of the golden calf" who are attempting to form a new political party which will "take over the republican party and bring "disaster to Franklin D. Roosevelt." - - s. Tothis, Wheeler replied with a repetition of a previous statement that two close advisers . of the president had suggested the court reorganization to him more than a year ago.-Wheeler said it was kept out of last autumn's cam paign at his urgent pleading -that It weald "wreck" the president. The Montanan added that he did not wish- to see the president meet disaster then, and does sot wish it now. For an hour and a half, lead ing opponents of the measure - Wheeler, Burke of Nebraska, Con nelly of Texas, all democrats be ' set Logan with accusations, with ironic and sometimes angry ques tions. Then, the senate quit to go to the all-star baseball game. Previously, Senator Guffey de livered a prepared address con tending that throughout Its his tory the -supreme court has been "a partisan political body," that "the statesmanship of President . Roosevelt" had recently "forced the court to act on behalf of the peoples" ' The court and . Chief Justice Hughes, he said, entered the cur rent controversy - over the reor ganisation bill with "masterly po litical strategy." Hughes he as sailed, as. one whose background r was' political, who received his judgeship as a "political plum." - Haghes Disqualified, Bat not Robinson j "Do1 1 understand that you are objecting to Chief Justice Hughes ' on the ground that his life has been devoted to politics?" Burke . asked later. ; "1 am merely calling attention to that fact." "1 "Well, what is your opinion?" I think he's disqualified." "Now we .have a vacancy on the court," Burke continued. "The man most frequently mentioned for the appointment Is one who has devoted a life-time to poli tics." (He referred Senator Rob inson of Arkansas, the majority leader. ) Do you consider him dis qualified.?" . "Under no circumstances do I consider 'him disqualified," Guf fey replied. Logan's opposition was all on the democratic side ot the cham ber. There, the seats were well filled. By contrast scarcely a half doien republicans were, present. . They are leaving the battle to TKc Call Board CAPITOL Today Double bill, Glenda Farrell In "Fly Away Baby" and Bill Boyd in "North of the Rio Grande." i ELSINORE Today ! Double bill, "Hlitory I) Made At Night" with Charles Dov er and George O'Brien in "Hollywood Cowboy." HOLLYWOOD Today F red ;"Astaire and Ginger Rogers In "Swing Time. ' . Friday J 6 h n n 1 e Mack Brown in "Trail of Ves icae?" and ""Circus Girl" with- June Travis and Bob Ijlvingston. ; GRAND Today Harold Bell Wright's "It Happened Out West" with Paul Kelly. r Saturday W a r n er Baxter and Wallace Beery in "Slave Ship." I 4 ! STATR - Today VNancy Steel la Missing" and "Clarence." Friday Eastern circuit vau deville and Charles Ruggles i"Mind Tour Own Busl - ness." - j IL&T TIMES TONIGHT America's Dancing Stars Fred .Astaire - Ginger Roger i fSWING TIME" Added Comedy and News Two Features 1 Johnny "Circus Girr with June Travis Mack; Brown "Trail of Vengeance 75 Daring Xllli UP TODAY .jThrill3 ! ' and ( ' Chills, j 'Galore Participating in One Gigantic Sky and Show Air Circus SPONSORED BY CHERRIAXS - Featuring TEX RANKIN World's Champioa Stunt Flier :. I UUINADINE KING She Picks Up Her 'Kerchief With the Tip of Her Wing , GAILEE3 TIIIIPOEIT TODAY ONLY ' ' . -,- rli-; 1 .11. --.mmm,,... - . , m,-" r . g 'Before God. I killed them I strangled them with these hands!" This was the cry of Albert W, Dyer, as he raised his hands after confessing to the fiend murder of three little Inglewood, Cal., girls: After his confession Dyer collapsed and was carried to the Los Angeles eotxntjr JaiL He was heavily guarded there after fellow prisoners uttered threats to "get him." I. Li N. photo. members of the president's own party and hugely enjoying the con troversy within it. Logan based his remarks pri marily on the comrnittee report. Therej was nothing in the pro ceedings of the committee, he said, to indicate that the report would be a "violent document," attacking the president. "It the statements in that re port! are true," he asserted with emphasis, "if they are established, the president ought to be im peached and removed. And yet we are told there is no charge againsUthe president in the re port." Dusting Airplane Crashes, Two Die MORRIS VILLE, Pa., July 7-JPf-Two men lost their lives late today when the airplane in which they were dusting crops with in secticide struck a tree and plunged into the old Lehigh canal. An eye-witness told how, first on the scene, he held the head of the injured pilot above water but could not pull the flier out because , he was pinned in the wreckage. When more men ar rived to help, their weight proved too much for the plane , and it sank deeper, carrying the injured man with it. The victims were identified as Richard Shanklln, 25. Chicago, a transport pilot, and Stanley Pen gally, 25, Trevorton, Pa., duster, by A. C. Wilson, their employer. Seattle Paper to Reopen on Friday (Continued from page 1) "AH of those employes who so desire are invited to return to their posts Friday, without preju dice, and without any questions as to their labor affiliation. The Star has not attempted and will not attempt to dictate to them what their union affiliation shall be." . Martin Initiated By Eagles Lodge Governor Charles H. Martin was one of a class of 15 initiated Into the Salem aerie ot Eagles at Wednesday night's meeting, with the HcMinnvllle aerie de gree team in charge. Following the ritualistic work there was a social meeting at which: talks were made by Gover nor .Martin who discussed labor and general conditions in Ore gon; Secretary of , State Earl Snell, Senator Douglas McKay, Dr. P. 0. Riley," A. Warren Jones who . was formerly state presi dent of- the Eagles. John E. Cooter of the national reemploy ment service and Herman La Iky. Flood Control District To North incorporates McMINNVILLE. July 7.-ff)-Property owners of the Wheat land. Grand Island and Weston districts completed Incorporation of a flood control district includ ing approximately 5300 acres along the Willamette river. Roy Will of Dayton is chairman. : Pilot and Plane OUldrem to la Tra. Aecom. pauiea Dy Fareuts FREE Children to 19 Trs. Uuaccomponled dsfi ADULTS 50e Maritime Unions' i Control CIO Aim WASHINGTON, July 7-(ff)-John L. Lewis began today one of his most ambitious of all his unionization efforts an attempt to bring all maritime workers within his CIO movement. ; The labor leader estimated that more than 300,000 workers would be enlisted at once in a new "na tional industrial maritime federa tion." The drive was started after Lewis conferred with 28 labor leaders representing 24 maritime unions, some of them affiliated with his adversary, the AFL. An organization committee of seven members immediately be gan to make technical arrange ments for a membership drive un der the leadership of John Bro phy, CIO director. Lewis said the CIO la prepared to "finance to any necessary ex tent" a "streamlined organiza tion drive." "This is the first time the men in the maritime industry have been able to raise their eyes to the hope of fair treatment from the shipping industry," Lewis said. The federation will Include all seafaring, longshore, fisheries, ship repairing and shipyard unions. Lewis asserted. Geograph ically the organiztation would in clude workers on the east and west coasts, the Gulf, the Great Lakes and inland boatmen. Auxiliary Leader Visits Portland PORTLAND, July 7.-(fl)-Be-cause, she contends, the day when a nation can isolate Itself from the world is passed, Mrs. O. W. Hahn, national president of the Ameri can Legion auxiliary, favors a pol icy ot "cash trade only" with na tions at war for the United States. Interviewing Oregon auxiliary leaders, Mrs. Hahn, whose home is in Wayne, Nebraska, said the or ganization advocates such a pol icy, with the responsibility of transportation placed upon the buyer nation. A universal service plan to take "abnormal" profits out of war and modernization of the Ameri ca nair force are other objectives of the organization. Road Agreement Made " THE DALLES. July 7-p)-The United States engineers will con struct a spur rail and highway connection with the new ti7c aaa docks here in return tor flowage rignis on lands to be covered by backwater trom Bonneville dam, under an agreement with the port commission here. Dillon Transferred WASHINGTON, July t - () -The war department announced today that Major Lee Dillon of the engineering corps is relieved ot his assignment as assistant to the district engineer of the first Portland district and la assigned o Fort Belvoir. Va. -COOKE'G Stationery Company Offke Supplies and , Filing Equipment, Stationery Kodaks Kodak Finishing Greeting Cards, Gifts, s Fountain Pens 840 State . Just East of Ladd A Bush . LAST DAY TODAY! VICTOR McLAGLEN JUNE LANG "Nancy Steel Is Missing" Plus ROSCOE KEARNS IN "CLARENCE" FRIDAY - SATURDAY VAUDEVILLE Headlining CAPT. FRANK'S TRAINED DOGS I 1 rrjl- Report on Values To Be Presented PORTLAND. Julv 7.-UPV-T. TT Banfield will report to the capitol reconstruction commission at a meeting here Fridav on the nnlt values ot property in four blocks norm j or the capitol site at Sa lem. purchase of which was an tjhorized by the last legislature to proTiae grounds ior new Duiia In trs. ; I The commission is expected to discuss also whether to undertake Immediate construction of both a library and office building and highway department structure, or cue library buildrng alone. i Revised requirements on the 450,000 PWA grant permit con struction of such structures as the fund, plus $550,000 appropriated by the legislature, will nermlt. j With the building program de termined, the commission will face the qnestion of whether to re strict 1 competition by architects for drawing the plans. Advocates pi restriction contend the new building should be designed in Jmrmony with the capitol building puw uiiiuer construction. Wolf Creek Road Viewed by Party PORTLAND, Ore., July The Wolf creek highway will not be ready for travel before the spring of 1939, an official inspec tion party headed by Governor unanes H. Martin learned on a visit to the project. The Wilson river road, comnan ion route to the coast, will require a greater time for completion, it was estimated. Two WPA camps, at Wolf creek and Bear creek, are concen trated on a 7.1 stretch connecting me east ana west enas of the Wolf creek Job. The party. Including Secretary of State Earl Snell, State Treas urer Rufus Holman, members of the state highway commission and officials of the WPA and the bu reau of pnblic roads, sat in with the WPA workers at lunch. The governor, true to bin imi training, inspected closely the aitcnen ana sleeping quarters, in quiring about the erada of hntta and closely scrutinizing the bread served to the workers. Amount of Relief For Quarter Told WASHINGTON. Jnlr 7 n ... . . ' vicbuu win receive ieaerai grants 01 s37.tz for aid to the aged, blind and children during the first quarter of the new fiscal year beginning July 1, the social security board said today. The amount Includes $104,650 for children. $421,231 for the aged and $11,74$ for the blind. The estimated number of recip ients for July are: Aged, 12.900; blind, 420; children, 4,000. Grand Opening Saturday July 10 at Hazel Green Park Halfway Between Salem and Silrerton (Under New Management) Oscar Muralt98 Dance Orchestra One of Portland's Snappiest Dance Bands Adm. tfCc 35c negotiations were proceeding for a settlement of the ' Incident, Soldiers of the 2Stharmy said the ) battle ' started 1 when night maneuvering Japanese troops at tempted to capture the marble bridge across the Ting-Ting. Af ter a brief skirmish the Chinese withdrew into the city which1 the Japanese : brought, under artillery fire at dawn. A portion of the city..waJL destroyed. . The -. bambardment of Wan plnghBien was said te have started without warning. The ' Chinese Garrison within the walla did not hare artillery or machine guns. '- ' y-- y' -i SHANGHAI, July 8 -(Thursday )-(ff)-The Domel (Japanese) news agency reported from Pei plng today a spokesman for Jap anese military headquarters there declared the Chinese forces bat tling maneuvering Japanese troops would be "wiped out" un less they threw down their arms Immediately. ' ' . The -virtual ultimatum came, Domel reported, at 10 a.m., ( p, m. PST Wednesday) after fire hours of severe fighting for pos session of the strategic Fengtal railway Junction and Marco Polo bridge, ten miles west of China's ancient capital. At that time the Japanese high command was reported to "have accepted a Chinese request for an armistice. The Japanese spokes man indicated, however, cessation ot hostilities depended upon the Immediate withdrawal of Chinese forces in. the vicinity. An official Japanese commun ique declared "Japanese troops executing night maneuvers at Fengtal late Wednesday were at tacked by Chinese machine gun ners." The communique claimed the Chinese brought reinforcements into the action, including artil lery,, "forcing the Japanese to re turn the fire." Chinese advices from Pelping charged two Japanese dressed as civilians had tired on the Chinese garrison at the temple half a mile northwest of the bridge. Delay Results of Woodworker Vote PORTLAND, July 7.-(P)-Offic ials of the Northwest Federation of Woodworkers said here today results of the t-eferendum being conducted among the membership on the question of affiliation with the C. I. O. will not be announced until July 15. A general convention of the fed eration has been called for that date at Tacoma. The sealed ballots have not been tabulated and any unofficial announcement of the vote must necessarily be guesswork, R. R. Dewell, secretary of the Lumber and Sawmill Workers union local. sam. The referendum is to be com pleted in each district by July 10. Beer Case Postponed PORTLAND, July T-JP)-CIr-cuit Judge James W. Crawford ad journed until tomorrow trial on thesult brought by the brewery workers' union to restrain the teamsters union from using the disputed red label on beer. THE SHOW OF THE TEAR OREGON TRAIL PA6EANT Also : 2 Comedies Novelty . Newsi I oo7ynsf ' I PAUL KELLY J IUDITII ALLEII. Johnsy J13TU3 jff Uty ll$C j. I. T : y J- X " ..kv. a Six thousand men were thrown out of work when the Bethlehem Steel plant at Johnstown, Pa., was forced to close down after the two main water lines to the Cambria works were dynamited. The blasts occurred about eeveu miles above the plant, shattering the huge . mains, above. I Spanish Loyalist Victory Claimed (By the Associated Press) Spanish government troops smashed hard at the Insurgents Wednesday and claimed capture of two' strategic villages far. be hind the Madrid siege lines. Gen. Jose Miaja's men, it was announced in Madrid, seized Villanueva de la Canada, roughly 18 miles due west of the city. They already had reported occu pancy of Brunete, south of Villa nueva de la Canada, although the insurgents denied this. Apparently General Miaja's plan was to cut off the insurgents who have clung to the western out skirts of Madrid since November. But government troops also were striking farther west, toward the town of Ouiiorna. and tn th south, toward Navalcarnero. Spectacular air battle accom panied the fighting. Three insur gent planes and a government snip were shot down in a clash over Madrid and another inaur gent plane was brought down In an air right over the town of Boadilla, which lies west of Ma drid but east of Brunete. One Death Caused By Blaze at Mine MINERAL POINT. Pa.. Jnlr 7 -P)-One man died, two were res cued after being trapped in the smoke-filled Interior and four were in a hospital tonight as fire swept through the fan house of the Black Diamond mine of the Mineral Point Coal Co. near this Cambria county village. James McCalla. superintendent. announced 24 men were at work in the diggings and that all but two had staggered, choking and ounded or the smoke, to aafetv. He expressed the opinion a short circuit caused the fire. Mello Moon Sat. Night FEATURING DAN FLOOD aad his 11-PIECE JANTZEN BEACH BAND Admission 85c and 40e Ladies Free Until 0:15 mm BffEWEnCtO -choose tfce calm St Lawrence Sea- ratw .a a I 11 - .uic. uwougn Deautirul rrench " "7 impress o Britain. Trajn-to-ahip service from Vancouver. , ,u" na rrench ports ... luxurnutEmpnss liners from Quebec and Mont ships sail from Montreal """I nucxpens I ours horn your owft Travel Agent.or call. " - wi mil ouices. DMCE 1 K2?5-4J K'JVXX a v. 1 t : i - t ? -s. Alieloists Silent On Dyer's Sanity LOS ANGELES, July 7.-(P- A parade of prosecution psychia trists today examined Albert Dyer, 32, charged. with the mur der of three young Inglewood girls, but . none i reported his opinion as to Dyer's sanity. Dyer is scheduled to appear in court tomorrow morning to plead to the Indictments which the grand jury returned against him in special session last night. He tried to plead guilty them, but was not permitted to do so, as he had no counsel. County Jail Matron Vada Sulli van' quoted Dyer's wife, Isabel, still held as a possible material witness and for her own protec tlon, as saying that on the night of June 2(5, day of the slayings. Dyer told her to "He to the offi cers to throw them off the track to I protect him and I did." "I felt all along he had done it,? Miss Sullivan quoted her as saying, "but he beat me with a belt and I was afraid to say any thing." - Frn - 17 . "4f H -- I j v, WMBMA 0" ofttu- of Woviaa who fisi proved be made ot iron, can. xSv jrj$ V"1 , - ine Newest Adventures of "Torchj Blane j W2S Z1IUh P0"" Mrcl Ralston Warner Bros. Picture Directed by Frank McDonald -And 2nd Big Hit- 1 WLiM- vanotonet on 91 ::j.mmmm mmammmmmmwmmwm i HJ.KJiiriBir i in r- " t (Continued from Page 1) . .' the marriage, although frequent and pointed, never have been official. v' 1 The next , move in the case Is for Friday, when Miss West is scheduled to give a deposition in the office of Wallace a attorney. Previously, there was trouble about the deposition matter, when Miss West on advice of counsel. refused to vouchsafe any informa tion save her name and address. She faced a contempt of court citation, but in the meantime the original suit Wallace, filed here was thrown out of court on the ground that it was filed under the wrong statute. A new complaint was drawn under the correct sta tute and that brought Miss West's admission today. The second suit was accom panied by letters which Wallace said he wrote to Miss West one speaking of his love and affection for her and asking that sue recog nize him as her husband, the other setting forth that he had a legal claim to community prop erty. Miss West could not be iouna today. A friend said she was "at the springs." ,There are several spas in this region frequented by motion picture folks. She has never had much to say about Wallace's claims. Once she lamented: "It's really too bad I haven't had a husband the last couple ot years. If I had, it would have saved me money on my Income tax." NEW YORK, July 7. (iP)-Frank Wallace, the forgotten man in Mae West's life u n 1 1 1 today could not be found tonight to be told that she finally had remem bered marrying him 26 years ago. Home to a hoofer is usually where he hangs his hat and Frank Wallace's hat was not hanging tonight in the theatrical district hotel given as his last address. He popped out of obscurity two years ago with an order from New York supreme court serving notice on Miss West that he had applied for a declaratory Judgment af firming his status as her husband. WASHINGTON, July f.-ff)-Mae West. Hollywood screen si ren, had a movie Income of $480,833 in 1935, topping all other movie stars that year. The figure was disclosed in a treasury report to congress early this year. Salaries for 1938 were not in cluded. Sat. V! AND 2ND BIG HIT SB "?- to Mine 2:1525c -Double Evening 0:45.83e Talk TONTTE FRI.V& SAT. a blood-trodl , ., K An Seats 25c Logos 8Sc