dp Like Blondie? Headers of the Sunday comi section reported ' the sew comic "Blondie which tint appeared last week had, caught their fancy. Weather Mostly fair but sou cloudiness today and Mon day, slowly rising tempera tare; Max. Temp. Saturday 63, Min. 44, northwest wind. PCUNDOO 1651 EIGHTY-SEVENTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, August 1, 1937 Priet 3c; Newsstands 5 No. 109 Moody TTTiP mails i Jlltoiilliii Open Season, Games Senate Passes Wage Measure Over to House 40-Cent Pay and 40-Hour Week May Be Set by . Board, Provided Shipment of Goods Made by Child Labor Would Be Banned, Voted "WASHINGTON. July Admlnistratlon forces pushed the revised Black-Connery wage and hour bill through the senate to day, overcoming defection in democratic ranks. A long day of -debate and roll calls on amendments neared an end when the senate defeated, 48 to 36, a motion to send me bill back to the labor committee for further study. This move was quickly fol lowed by another roll call which passed the bill to the house by 56 to 28 margin. Twenty two democrats and 14 republicans voted to recommit the measure, a move which would have ended its consider ation for the session. One re publican and three independents Joined 45 democrats in defeating that effort. ? The measure, one of the major Hems in President Roosevelt's legislative program for this year, was drafted to accomplish tome of the ends that NRA once ion eh t to reach. " It would give to an adminis trative board power to fix mini mum wages and maximum hours for Industries engaged in inter state commerce. It also would outlaw child labon in trade cross ing state lines. Moro Drastic Bill Drafted in House- Th board could not fix a min imum wage higher than 40 cents an hour nor a maximum work week shorter than 40 hours. A much more drastic bill has been drafted by the house labor committee, permitting the pro- nnspd labor standard board to fir minimum wages as hlgb as 70 cents an hour and a work week as low as 35 hours. Opponents forced more than a dozen successive roll call votes on amendments. Among major amendments . ,) r a ttin atihat Itnttnn of BUVIU the Wheeler-Johnson child labor out lor u cum iuui jimuoiujij in the bill. The Wheeler-Johnson proposal would prevent shipment of child labor goods Into a state in viola tlon of the laws of that state in addition to barring , such ship ments from Interstate commerce Child Labor Age Limit Set at 10 ( The wage-hour bill contained a simple prohibition against inter state shipments. Both measures -fixed the child labor age limit at 18 and. In the case of hasardous Industries, at 18 years of age. Senator Byrnes (D-SC) appeal ed to the senate to recommit the bill on the ground it would harm small business establishments. He said also It would cut farmers' profits by making their purchases more costly. : Majority Leader Markley (D Ky), Making his first appeal for a major administration measure since his election as floor leader, told the senate it was "not deal- ins: WHO COld economic lisures. but human : prooiems ana soci problems." After passing: the wage-hour bill, the senate voted to begin de bate on the Wagner housing bill when It convenes Monday at noon. Restaurant Operators Turn Down Union Contract 1 erms The Salem Restaurant Opera tors' association last - night an nounced that final consideration had been given union contract proposals made by the culinary alliance, local No. 452, and they r had been rejected. Contract ne gotiations had been in progress since early June. -. ; The announcement, of action 4-flken Thursday night, came on the eve of the deadline, August 1, whieh the alliance recently set ' as the date by which the res ? taurant operators must sign, up f with the union. - - The alliance will Immediately i place association members on the I unfair list and at a special meet ing Monday or Tuesday will au ' thorixe picketing of one or more ' of the restaurants, C. A. Cham ' bers, business agent, said when he learned the . contract had been denied. " '-:"-'. Minimum Wage Scale Set by Operators ; Coinciding . with the announce ment that negotiations with the anion had been dropped, came the report from Frank Chatas, as president, that the association ox W ! - inf luential miles .ay- Repudiate Lew' policy Says Capitol $ bserver Opposition to Sitdown Strikes and Domineering Attitude Toward President Is Mentioned; Recruiting Slows NEW YORK, July 31. (AP) The New York Herald Tribune in a special dispatch from its Washington bureau said tonight, that six influential leaders who collaborated with John L. Lewis in forming the Committee for Industrial Organization are on the verge of tacitly repudiating the Lewis labor politics. 1 O Those named by the news Valley Scheme Is Opposed, Waltons Project Delay Urged Until Survey Made; Censure of Martin Tabled McMINNVILLE, July 31-)-The Isaac Walton league in con vention here today took the coun sel of Irvine E. Vining of 'Ashland and tabled a formal censure of the state game commission and governor Martin for "lack of in terest." The criticism was presented by Chester McCarty when he said it was-apparent that no members of the commission nor the execu tive were in attendance at the league's convention. Vining, a former of the game commission, urged moderation in the protest and Matt F. Corrlgan, retiring president of the league and also former member of the commission, suggested no action be taken. The criticism included the declaration that the governor and the commission were playing politics with the conservation in terests. William P. Davidson of Port land was elected new president of the league. Ed Keitzer of Cottage Grove was re-elected vice-president and Harlan Wood of Tilla mook was named secretary-treasurer. The Waltonians passed a reso lution opposing the Willamette ralley flood control project until the federal bureau of fisheries had made a survey into the prob able damage to fish life from the dams. American Pilots May Join Chinese LOS ANGELES, Calif., July 31-(i5,)-The Times said tonight it had learned that 182 American pilots and aviation mechanics were planning to sail from here soon to man combat planes in China. The newspaper quoted Russell L. Hearn. soldier of fortune, as denying knowledge of any re cruiting here but saying: "There are lots of boys who have been training as pilots and who would like to be stunt fliers in the movies, but who are out of work. "If Americans wish to go to China and then enlist, there's nothing to stop them." Baxters Car Overturns Bui Couple not Injured Dr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Bax ter, returning to Salem after two weeks In Los Angeles, es caped serious Injury when their car overturned- south of Salem yesterday morning. Except for being shaken' up, neither Dr. Baxter nor Mrs. Baxter was hurt- operators had established a min imum wage scale of Its own that approximated the union pay levels in effect the past year. Chatas declined to disclose the minimum wage figures but Indicated the new scale represented an Increase of as much as 20 per cent la nu merous cases, outside of the larger eating houses. In a notification to Chambers, Chatas stated that the union pro posals had received "earnest con sideration" by all member opera tors and they had decided they were "unable to fit these pro posals Into the conduct of - our business without seriously Impair ing the service which is so essen tial to our business or without raising prices to such an extent that we-would be faced with a serious loss of patronage." The primary reason for rejec tion of the union, contract, Chatas declared, was that "It came from the union and not from our em ployes, who had nothing to say about it." He gave as a secondary reason what he represented as a union requirement that the em (Turn to Page 2, Col. 1) A 1 1 up, Paper Claims paper as differing with Lewis on such CIO strategems as the sit down strike, in particular, are: bidney Hillman, president of the Amalgamated Clothing Work ers of America. Charles P. Howard, president of the International Typographi cal union. ' Francis Gorman, head of the United Textile Workers. David Dubinsky. president of the International Ladies' Garment Workers union. Harvey C. Gremmlng. president of the oil field, gas well and re finery workers. Max Zaristky, president of the cap and millinery department of the United Hatters, Cap and Mill inery Workers' International union. Another reason for the reDorted disaffection, according to the Herald Tribune, was the "domi neering attitude" toward the Roosevelt administration which the powerful CIO sub-leaders see (Turn to Page 2, Col. 3) Insurgent Revolt Gaimed, Granada But Rebels Counter With Story of Government Troops' Surrender H E N D A Y E, Franco-Spanish Border, July Sl.-fpj-The Spanish government asserted today re volts had broken out at four points in insurgent-held territory. The reports brought emphatic denials from the headquarters of Generalissimo Francisco Franco. Government communiques de clared outbreaks occurred at the old southern city of Granada, on the Santander front in the north and at the southern coastal cities of Malaga and Motril. Said the Insurgents: Two thousand government soldiers surrendered near Espiel, in southern Cordoba nrovince. while Franco's troops In eastern Spain crossed the border of Cuen ca province in their march south ward toward the Madrid-Valencia highway, the link between the old and new seats of government. Government sources gave these accounts of the Granada revolt: Spanish Insurgent soldiers in Granada rebelled when they were told to move out of their barracks to make place for Italians fight ing for Franco and when Italian officers were placed in high posi tions. Bombs were loosed within the city to crush the uprising. Relief Trucks to Have no Priority PORTLAND, July 31-GPWNo priority will be given relief owner- operators of trucks on WPA pro jects, the Portland Oregonian re ported tonight in a dispatch from Washington. The work will rotate. The ultimatum was given Col. F. C. Harrington, assistant WPA administrator, to Senator Charles L. McNary. Harrington said the practice of giving all truck work to those on relief led to abuses in many lo calities, and the new regulations opening the work to both relief and non-relief workers should be given a trial. The official stated the old sys tem never was intended to allow a relief client to purchase equip ment for that purpose and to build up an equity as a result of this employment. Pritchett Thinks ' Boycott Unlikely HOQU1AM, Wash., July 31- -Harold Pritchett, president of the new CIO International wood' workers of America, today an swered a challenge of A. J W. Mulr, Pacific Coast Carpenters and .Joiners leader that carpen ters would not handle one stick of CIO lumber, by saying that "the International Woodworkers do not believe , that carpenters intend to boycott themselves out of a Job." Pritchett gained entry Into the United States from Canada on a border permit today, j Agreement on Surplus Hops Ratified Here Half Million Payment Is Provided, Diversion : of 34's and Older $7 per Bale to Be Paid Growers, Announced as Board Meets improvement in the western hop market to be brought about by wiping out an old surplus ap peared likely through the approv al yesterday by the Pacific Coast Hop Stabilization corporation board of a proposed agreement with the agricultural adjustment administration. The agreement has been approv ed iin Washington and it went into effect with yesterday's ratifica tion by the board here, directors said. The new agreement provides 1U1 IUO U1TC1B1UU 1 1 V til Ulcnuif, channels of approximately 75,- 000 bales of hops, which, grown in 1934 and prior years, had hung over the hop market and worked a depressive effect on prices. Most of the surplus hops hafe been signed up by the star billzatlon corporation. These hops, the directors ex plained, will now be rendered un fit for brewing purposes and, in accordance with the agricultural adjustment act, will be diverted from the normal channels or trade. Payment of 9)7 per Bale Due Growers Growers in return will receive 7- per bale, less costs of diver sion. The directors estimated this would mean a distribution to growers holding these hops of ap proximately one-half million dol lari. Ratification of yesterday agreement was believed to have effected one of the stabilization board's two main objectives. The other is enactment by congress of legislation, now pending, to ob- (Turn to Page 2, Col. 6)- i Shite Celebrates Birthday in Lung (CHICAGO. July 81-0iP)-Fred Smte, jr., celebrated his 27th birthday today as a "very cheer ful" prisoner in the "iron lung" which has kept him alive for 16 months. The only guests, in addition to members of the family, were the Chinese nurses who accompanied young Suite on his long journey frem Peiping, China. The youth, then 25, was stricken with in fantile paralysis while on a va cation trip in the orient. Paralysed from the neck down and encased in a large barrel shaped machine which helps him breathe, young Snite reads by having the book placed on a glass over his head and looking straight toward the ceiling. Earmers to Seek Labor Showdown THE DALLES, Ore., July 31-()-Wasco county wheat and fruit growers set Thursday sb the time they "will hare it out" wjth union organizers, accused by growers of attempting to im pose drastic restrictions on farm truck operation. J A resolution adopted by 150 of! the irate workers of the soil here stated that the farmers wuld "meet force with force" and refuse to tolerate any med dling by unions among workers supported by farm industry. They will appear at the ; scheduled mjeetjng In a body. jLusk to Assume Duties PORTLAND, July 31-P)-Jadge Hall Lusk, recently ap pointed to the state supreme court bench to succeed the late Jtstlce J. U. Campbell, said he wjcmld take over his new duties next week. He win finish his work on the circuit bench here Monday. Notice to Subscribers Effective August 1 subscription rates for The Ore gon Statesman will be as follows: BY CARRIER Monthly One year .10 7.20 UNITED STATES OUTSIDE OREGOX Monthly .50 Six months . , . 2.00 One year ' 1.00 Increases are made necessary by present and Impending increases In costs of producUon of newspapers Including news print, wages of employes, taxes and provision for additional com pensation to carriers. ; FEAR FOR lll " ;1 Japanese Troops Move Southward Extend Control Over big Area Outside Peiping and Tientsin Zone TIENTSIN, July 31 iP The Japanese army announced today its airforce had carried battle against the Chinese farther south ward with the bombing of troop concentrations at Paotingfu, 85 miles southwest of Peiping. The bombing of Paotingfu car ried the zone of hostilities well beyond the Peiping-Tientsin area, over which the Japanese claimed to have established almost com plete military domination. Japanese army spoksmen said their troops controlled all of Ho- peh province north of a line from Tangku on the seacoast, running through Tientsin and thence gen erally following the railway west northwest to beyond Peiping. Japanese units were reported in control of part of the Peiping- Sulyuan railway, outlet for Mon golia and China's northwest. Japanese Infantry, having ap- turedthe important railway town of Changsientlen, 15 mUes from Peiping on the west bank of the Tungting river, were reported to have advanced seven miles fur ther to Liangsiang. The conquests of the last few days have placed the Japanese army astride of China's two main north-south railways and In eon trol of a section' of the Peiping Sulyuan link with the northwest. New Precincts in County Probable Several Marion county pre cincts probably will be divided following the contemplated No vember 2 county courthouse election, County Clerk U. O. Boyer said yesterday. The clerk's election staff plans be tween November and the May, 1938, primaries to study all large precincts in the county and In instances found advisable, to split them so as to lighten the load on the election boards. Among the precincts being considered for possible division are Salem Nos. 1, 2 and 14, Fairgrounds, Englewood, and one or two or the four silverton precincts. The law requires the breaking up of precincts having more than 500 registered voters, Boy er stated. In some counties a maximum of 250 has been set up locally. At present Marlon county has 77 precincts. McKalip Chosen For Rooks Coach At Oregon State CORVALLIS. July 3.1.-(ffV rercy Locey, director of athletics at Oregon State college, an nounced tonight the appointment of William W. "Wild Bill" Mc Kalip as coach of freshman sports at the college. McKalip has been a profession al football player for five years. He was formerly star end for Ore gon State and captain of the eleven. He graduated in 1931. For a time he was assistant to Dutch Clark, head coaeh at the Colorado School of Mines. BY MAIL IX OREGON Monthly .SO Six months 2.50 One year 8.00 AMERICANS IN CHINA EASED, f'.rr cr r V pill J i Above, the American legation In Peiping, center of the Sino Japanse war tone; below, Col. John Mareton, in command of the IT. S. marines at Peiping. TJX photos. Police of Seattle Disperse Pickets SEATTLE, July Sl.-D-Police called by Mayor John F. Dore to day dispersed picket lines in two Seattle strikes. Patrolmen first moved against the CIO fur workers' union and arrested 20 pickets and sympathi zers who Were charged with dis orderly conduct. Ball was set at $25 each. Squads later broke up a dem onstration at the Seattle Star plant where newspaper guild members are on strike. The group left quieUy after charging a "lockout" by the Star manage ment, j Gordon Stein, International vice-president of the CIO fur workers affiliate, which is en gaged in a dispute with the AFL over jurisdiction of fur shop em ployes, charged Mayor Dore and the AFL were "trying to demoral ize the strike." Physician Killed At Church Altar EL CENTRO, Calif., July 31. W) Before the horrified eyes of 65 members of the congregation, Fred W. Simmons, 40, prominent El Centro hatchery owner, shot and killed himself today at the altar of the Seventh Day Advent lst church here. Simmons did the shooting with a .30-30 rifle, just after the Ad ventists' Sabbath church services ended. The bodies dropped near a placard which read: "The law of God." Police Sgt. Ceorge Bucklin said investigating officers reported Simmons frequently had expressed dissatisfaction with the church and at his wife's conduct with cer tain members of the congregation. Mrs. Simmons saw the shootings. Members of the congregation told officers they had been un aware of any personal enmity be tween Simmons and Dr. Webster. Dr. Brady Added, 7 College Faculty CORVALLIS, July Jl-ff)-Dr. James J. Brady will be assistant professor of physics at Oregon State college thenext term. He has held a similar position with the St. Louis university. .Brady Is a graduate of Reed college of Portland and later add ed degrees at Indiana and Cali fornia universities. -Ml? i - r - v - n Its i r Tension Eases at Peiping Legation Americans There Allowed to Leave; Corvallis Folk in Vicinity CORVALLIS, July Zl-(JP)-Fears for the safety of Dr. and Mrs. Raymond D. Jameson, known to be in the Peiping area, was expressed here In Oregon State college faculty circles. Dr. Jameson is the son of Mrs. Kate W. Jameson, dean of wom en. No direct word has been received from the couple. Other persons known to be In the area, now the scene of the Japanese-Chinese conflict, are Letty Warrington, Corvallis. and Betty Chandler, Eugene, co-eds who went to China as exchange students. They were scheduled to leave there late in the sum mer. PEIPING, Augil(Sunday) (ffWThe United states 'embassy today" permitted Americans to quit the ' international legation quarter where they sought sanc tuary when Sino-Japanese out (Turn to Page 2, Col. 2) Silverton Postal Building Favored When government funds for federal buildings are allocated a new postofflce structure at Silver ton will be given careful consid eration, Senator Charles L. Mc Nary telegraphed Governor Charles H. Martin on Saturday. McNary said he had presented the required data to the federal procurement department and had requested that the Silverton proj ect be included In the federal al locations. "I understand that the procure ment division is withholding final consideration of the Silverton postofflce project until such time as the allocations for federal buildings are made," McNary's telegram read. Governor Martin recently sent a lengthy telegram to Senator McNary urging the latter to in quire into the status of the Sil verton project. New Era Project Bid Call Dropped PORTLAND, July 31.-(P)-The United States engineers an nounced cancellation of their call for bids on the opening of 46,000 cubic yards of material from the New Era bar in the Willamette river above Oregon City. The reason given for the action was the lateness of the season. Bids were to have been opened August 3. Ross Hits Back at Critics; Declares Attack Premature SEAVIEW, Wash., July 31-(ff) -J. D. Ross of Seattle, prominent ly mentioned, as probable admin istrator of Bonneville dam power, answered his critics here tonight, declaring that "those who attack me happen to be those who do not want a good administration, or they wouldn't attack me ahead of time without cause. Speaking before the nine-county democratic league of south western Washington, Ross said that no Bonneville power bill had passed the senate and that, there fore, there la no administrator. "All this attack on me Is pre mature and unwarranted. For me to answer the questions would be totally presumptive." . . . . Ross was referring to Inquiries sent him by Mayor Joseph Carson of Portland asking him his stand on Bonneville rates and whether he would favor a cheaper rate for Portland over Seattle because of the dam's proximity to the Ore gon city. I Continuing, he said: "I am ap preciating the criticism - raised against me as It arouses the en Injunctions to Be Called off Says Attorney Appeals From Rulings of Crawford not Filed; Stipulation Cited New Cases Also May Be Quashed to Permit Prosecutions uo yiuuau buu waruie uuarq business will be thrown wide open this week for prosecution fey law enforcement officers throughout Oregon, Ralph E. Moody, assist ant attorney general, predicted yesterday afternoon. Mr. Moody, as special prosecu tor of gambling cases for Marion county, announced that Monday morning he expected to secur dismissal of the supreme court ap peal of J. H. Campbell and N. J. Arnold, pinball game owners, from the decision handed down in Portland last February by Circuit Judge Crawford. The Multnomah county judge ruled, on an equity suit, that the game boards were lotteries and gambling devices and therefore were prohibited by the state constitution and state law. Following up a renewed war against the marble board busi ness, Prosecutor Moody announc ed that on Tuesday be. would go before Circuit Judge L. G. Lev elling here and demand that in junctions recently obtained by Ar nold, Campbell, John A. Moore o A Tn)in Pi.!(, In .tm1, .rt rAfl - auvi tfvuu v .14 Dim iiai vavo, be : dissolved. Demurrers to the five separate actions, contending that the court of equity was with out jurisdiction and had no power to grant the relief prayed for, . were mailed yesterday for filing in circuit court Monday morning. Other Injunctions " "When these injunctions are dismissed. Injunctions In other counties may be dismissed and it the district attorneys want to act, they may stop these machines in every county in the state," the prosecutor declared. ' The imnendinsr dismissal of the combined Arnold and Campbell cases on appeal. Moody disclosed, was provided for in stipulations which both mm signed early last June, in exchange for an exten sion of time to complete their ap peal. The stipulations provided that If the appellants tailed ttf file their appeal briefs by Juna 10, making a supreme court hear ing possible "before vacation time, the matter would be left in abey ance until August 1. On that date, the stipulations further specified either the appellants would move for dismissal of their appeal or the state would have the right to do so without notifying them. "They did not perfect their ap- " peal nor file their brief," Moody said. "They did agree that if the matter were permitted to be con tinued to August 1 without court action, they would remove their machines and cease to operate In Marlon county within three days after the case was dismissed." (Turn to Page 2, CoL 1) B A L L A D E of TODAV By R. C. With federal help the pro ducers of hops will get rid of some burdensome holdover crops, then hope to cash in on the ones they raise new, with out much assistance from downy mildew. thusiasm of my friends and the curiosity of others." No One Must Get Edge, He Asserts Urging the cooperation of all classes seeking cheap power for home and industry the manager of the Seattle Municipal Light and Power system declared: "No one must get the edge on the other or the project will be a failure. If Portland can get lower rates, bless them. My opinion is that BonnevUle should cost the .same to every type of business, the farm and the home." - Turning to criticisms hurled at him by Oregon's Governor, Martin, Ross declared that in 1933 Governor Martin said that "power our government develops is not Intended to force -down rates of existing power compa nies. - It is to develop our great chemical growth." s Answering the governor about his stand on reduced rates, Rosa said "Uncle Sam is ready to give you reduced rates. I know tbe temper of the administration to- (Turn to Page 2, CoL 2)