PAH. TTYQ irti -Tb". OREGON STATESS1AN,-"&Lle, ' OreOT;'-Thttf3iar-Maniiie,":.7foeiTxr' 25, 193i Martin, Carson Decry Failure Premise to Do all in Their Power to Get Blen Back 'CA to Work : (Continued from Vf 1) ' gress Md Governor Martin today that the labor valuation ' had topped a county timber salvage program on 210.000 acre of burned over land which had pro Tiled en income to the county and state of 136,000 per day. Payments from timber 'owners os .the county' $500,000 in de linquent, taxes also has stopped, the telegram said, and 2000 men hare Jost employment in. the past few weeks..'" i . "We, insist on a sane. and im mediate adjustment of this intol erable situation,'1" it concluded. - Approximately 12 billion feet ef timber was being salvaged from the burn at the rate of two mll lioa feet a day. :,lrrjtes Restraining Ordor -' PORTLAND, Ore., Not. 2tE) -Albert B. Ridgeway, special mas ter to chancery, upheld today the contention of the Plylock corpor ation that affiliation of its env pleyes with the CIO was a viola tion of a closed shop contract with the AFL. ? '. Fie recommended that Federal Judge James Alger Fee grant the company a temporary order - re straining picketing or other inter ference by the CIO as. being in violation of the Sherman anti trust act. . ; u 4. - - He held that the Norris-La-Guardia act ; did not apply inas much aa employes could not cre ate a labor .dispute within the meaning of the act through viola tion of their own contract, . The plant was closed when em ployes accept ed a CIO charter, contending it was bound by; con tract to employ only members of the AFL. It later opened with a partial crew of AFL workers, and was picketed by the CIO lumber anion. ! Judge Fee signed today a show cause order, requested by the Portland Waterfront Employers association and 40 shipping lines which seek to restrain CIO long shore and lumber unions from in terfering with . the., .loading of AFL lumber cargo. J The United States marshal's office started serving 40 subpoe nas on CIO officials. Fell! Is Insane, Examiners Report MEDFORD, - Not. 3 i-Uf-k physicians' certificate, filed in cir cuit court' here "alleged Earl H. Fehl, former Jackson county Judge, was Insane and suffering from paranoia. , , . The report, signed bf Drsl C. Berkes C. O. Sturdevant and Dr. H. H. Dixon. Portland alienists, said, in part: ' ' "In our opinion - Earl Henry Fehl is suffering from paranoia, and for this reason as set forth in a physicians certificate is In sane, and in need of institutional care for; his own. protection, and the protection of others." - It said further that Fehl "has fixed ideas relative to prosecutory activities of former associates, which are apparently definitely systemiUixed." Circuit Judge H. D. Norton! set a bearing on an insanity com plant filed by Fred Kelly, Med f ord, for December 1.1 NOW PLAYING! 1 I . The Rhythmic Band Leader of cry'Ibd Groat ZicnSold" INi .. .. ... WAiffW ' ViVcl pA5&i Zn'd -;:t-.n.a I:m:i?i (Zrl '. ; Hear Lou Webb at the ( j I l -im: V Hammond. Electric Organ' . I jVH ) FLCSI ON THE SCREEN J Hi ' I . V CLAIRE TREVOR J'- i Continuous Michael ViHAteM Stase Shows Show 2:23-4:40 jThanks?jyInV ' ' - 9;2D" , . ., . . . 'J Ruse Traps Two Fugitives After ! ' If J f, 4 , v I Ivan Whltfordl Sensational escape of three O'Connell abductors came to an end for two of them when a house painter, Ivan Whitford, of Syracuse, N. Y trapped them with a clever ruse. Whitford Induced the three to come to his mother's lodging' house, and then called police,; Harold Crowley and John Oley. Hatchery Will Be Erected, Declared The state fish commission and net the state game commission will erect a hatchery -on, Foster creek, a tributary of the Rogue river. Governor Charles H. Mar tin declared la a statement yester day. ; The governor said reports 'that the game commission had aban doned its plan to erect the hatch ery were without foundation.' The game commission never agreed to do this," Governor Mar tin declared. Governor Martin said that as a result of conferences concerning the development of the Rogue riv er fishing and mining industries it was decided that the hatchery on Foster creek should not be built by the game commission but by the fish commission. The game commission was to improve its facilities higher up the stream, the governor said. ' "I have been informed," Gov ernor Martin said, "that the fish commission " has selected its site on Foster creek, is proceeding to acquire more land, and has placed an order for all the materials for construction of the hatchery. It should be in operation by March Three From Cresham Are Injured Near Roseburg When Car Has Blowout 'ROSEBURG, Nov. 24-Jip)-Mrs. Jack Arrants. Cresham, and her sons. Jack. Jr., and John, were brought to a hospital today after their car plunged over a high bank south of here when a tire blew out. Mrs. Arrants was seriously in jured, suffering a crushed chest. Jack's collar bone was broken and his chest bruised. John escaped with minor cuts. " m i 1 Harold Crowley and The Call Board GRAND Lri":', Totfay Irene Dunne, . Cary Grant and Ralph Bellamy in The Y Awful Truth." . ; . Feature begins 1:15, 3:23, 5:31, 7r3, 0:47. -. HOLLYWOOD Today Double bill. Gene Stratton Porter's "Michael OUalloran" and Jack Holt in "Outlaws of the Ori ent." Friday Double bill, Bob Al len in "The Rangers Step In" and "Dangerous. Holi day" with Hedda Hopper and big boy Williams. ELSINORE Today Errol F 1 y n n and Joan Blondell in "The Per . feet Specimen" and Laurel and Hardy in "Beau Hunks." ! CAPITOL . Today Double bill. Jack, Oakle and John Boles in :', "Fight for Your Lady" arid , Buck Jones In "Boss - of Lonely Valley.", . ; - ...'.:. Friday On - the stage, five acts greater coast to coast vaudeville and on . the screen, William Gargan in ' "Some Blondes Are Dangerous." . " ; STATE ' j Today Eastern, e I r c u 1 1 vaudeville and ."Time Out for Romance' 'with Claire Trevor and Michael Wha-r len. Stage shows, 2:40,'- , 7:30, 9:20. Barkley Doubts Tax Action now WASHINGTON, Nov. 24-flV For a few hours today it sppear- ed congress might lighten the tax burden of business immediately, but senate leader Barkley, (D-Ky) quickly declared the Idea of such early action was "ridiculous. f "It is ridiculous to think that a bill could be passed by the house, considered by the senate finance committee and passed in the sen ate by Christmas, he said. "I am Just as anxious as any one to speed tax revision, but I don't want to botch it up Just to hurry. "Arid anyway, we will pass a bill before the corporations bare to report their income tax on March 15." Senator. Harrison (D-Miss) of the senate finance committee held a round of conferences with ad ministration officials and an nounced he favored quick revision ef corporate taxes. This was a de parture from his previous stand that -action this year was unlike ly, and at first it was believed to make immediate legislation more probable. . - - But house leaders, like Bark ley, continued to t be adamant against what , they called "too hasty" legislation. The bouse ways - arid means subcommittee, beaded by Repre sentative Vinson (D-Ky), has been making a detailed analysis of the . undistributed surpluses and capital gains taxes, principal objects of business criticism. Ohio Court Upholds Newspaper's Freedom COLUMBUS, O., Not. 24-p)- The Ohio, supreme court upheld today the freedom of the press to publish names of grand jurors and witneses summoned to appear before grand juries. It refused to review the case in which Walter Morrow; former editor of The Akron Times-Press, had been held in contempt of court for publish ing the names. , . Common ?leaa Judge Walter B. Wanamaker, who held the editor in contempt and fined him 1 50. had been reversed by the appel late court. The supreme- tribunal's refusal to review the case upheld the newspaper's right to . make such publication. - LEARN TO FLY! Low Cost Terms Salem Flying Service SAIJSM AIRPORT , Phone 65fll r Prison Break v 1 John Olcyjj were captured but the third escaped through, a win dow. They had broken out of j&Q at Onondaga where they were bebig" held pending transfer to Alcatraz for the kidnaping- of. John J. O'Connell of Albany, N. Yn who wm freed after payment of S40v000 ransom.. ' ! Christmas Seals Co on Sale Today ' (Continued from page 1) Holmes; Stayton, Mrs. Floyd Falr-t - W. L. Phillips Is Salem sal sale chairman and Mrs. H. F. Perkins, Salem mail sale chairman, v Seventy-five per cent . of the funds from the seal sales will be retained in Marion county for tuberculosis work here, and all but five per cent, which goes to the national association, will be kept in Oregon for work of tuber culosis prevention and eradication. Marion county has right now 37 persons in the state tuberculosis hospital and 12 1 persons on the list awaiting admittance, officers of the health association point out in urging full support of the pub lic in purchase of the sheets of cheery Yule seals now in the mails.--' ! No seals will be sold in the schools this year, but school call dren will, do their mite in the luoercuiosu war tnrough pur chase of Bangle pina,. the emblem of the -national tuberculosis asso ciation. . .- ; Japanese Plan to Drive on (Continued from pageT) tack was believed to have been an attempt to smash quickly this possible challenge, to Japan's air strength - k ' Five of the largest Chinese morning newspapers, with a com bined circulation of 400,000, sus pended publication in Shanghai because of the pressure of Japa nese demanding full authority In the city and suppression of all anti-Japanlsm. United States and other foreign nationals in Nanking asked both Chinese and Japanese officials to set aside a neutral cone In the capital similar to the area re served in the Nantao district du ring the battle for Shanghai. Japanese officials said they fa vored the inclple of the plan bat that army officers would hare to consider military factors in volved. Recited By Power Board WASHINGTON, Not. 24 jtiaie cnanges ny many Oregon utility companies in the past two years left those of publicly-owned companies lowest in many cases. the federal power commission said today. ..- 1 ' , Some of the lows and high In basic charges by the companies (private unless j otherwise desig ns tea) included: Cities of 10,000-25,000 for 25 kilowatt hours: Eugene '(munici pal ji.oa, and Astoria, 12.04; for ioo kilowatt hoars: Eugene, 52.55, and Klamath Falls and Medford, $6.50; cities of 5,0 00- 1 0,0 00 for 25 kilowatt hours: Oregon City, S1.3 4, and Baker and La Grande 12.25; for 100 kilowatt hours: j Oregon City SCO 9, and Baker and La Grande, Pioneer Photographer Is Dead at Kellogg, Ida. SPOKANE, Not. S4-(flJ)-DanleI F. Ross, 70, pioneer photographer of Kellogg, Jdaho, . died In a hos pital here today after an illness of more than a month. -i His widow, a son Floyd, In Kel logg, and a daughter, Sylvia, tn Tacoma, survive.- Find Life : Preserver, . Reminder of Shipwreck ASTORIA, Ore., Nor. tl-p CCC boys found a ring buoy life preserver Inscribed 'Nevada" and "3-M-L" at Sunset Beach today. It recalled the wreck of the freighter Nevada off the Aleutian islands about three years ago. LHfWRENE DUNNE UAHY Cart ANT Nanking House AgBiU Finally Ready Embraces Strict Control With Fine for Violators - After Referendum :. (Contiaaed from page 1) lesa than $100,000,000 of new revenae for farm benefits, - but that Tie was not at all certain Chairman Doughton (D-NC) .of that committee would agree, V President Roosevelt has urged that new taxes be enacted to fi nance any Increase in agricultural outlay. '; r " ; ' . "Unless we get additional funds." commented Representa' ttve Coffee (D-Neb) t f'Theret is Tery UUie in. ims diii ior me pro- Debate May Start . ; First of Week Jones said he would send a re port on the measure to the floor of the house Friday and hoped de- rbate would begin there the first of next week. The senate listened today to ar guments by Senator Pope (D-Ida ) that the senate bill is constitu tional. Minority Leader McNary (R- Ore) and Senator" Copeland CD NY) suggested that the bill be amended to. prevent wheat, corn and cotton farmers from diverting acreage to crops for dairy produc tlon. - : ' WASHINGTON, Not.- 24 MJPy- The -house agriculture committee s general farm .bill Included today provisions for compulsory control, through marketing quotas, for corn and wheat. Similar in this respect to the senate committee bill, it also pro vided ' for soil Conservation pay ments to participating farmers and for government loans on corn and wheat sealed in storage. The house bill made no provi sion for "parity" payments pro posed in the senate bill. Where the senate measure pro vided fines of 50 per cent of par ity prices for marketings in excess of quotas, the house bill provided taxes of 15 cents a bushel for ex cessive marketings ' of the two grains. As they affected the corn-wheat farmers in general, the house pro visions Included: Offer Farmers Soil Contracts Farmers would be offered soil conservation contracts and would be entitled to benefit payments for compliance with soil conserv ing practices. Participants would, be eligible for commodity credit corporation loans of not less than 55 per cent or more than 75 per cent of parity prices, on warehoused corn and wheat. When the anticipated supply of the. grains exceeded the norma supply plus 15 per cent, market ing quotas-conld be declared. The quotas would not be . operative however, it . rejected- by one-third of the farmers in a referendum. If the provisions were approv- ed, quotas, would be fixed foH farms and producers who market ed in excess of their allowances would be required to pay taxes of 15 cents a bushel on the amount in excess of the quotas. Farmers in corn belt states who exceeded their quotas would be eligible for loans of only 70 per cent of the parity price. Roosevelt Menu On Thanksgiving WASHINGTON. Not. 2 4 -(flV The menu for President Roose Telt's Thanksgiving dinner: Oyster cocktail Saltines Clear soup with sherry : Curled celery toast fingers Olives Roast turkey " Chestnut dressing-cranberry Jelly Deerfoot sausages String, beans Scalloped sweet potatoes Apples Grapefruit and orange salad Cheese straws Pumpkin pie -' Ice cream-rCoffee McElhaney Was Scout In Early Indian Wars YAMHILL,. Ore., Not. 24-tffJ- Fnneral services will be held Fri day for M. ' S. McElhaney, 85. scout in the early Indian wars in the northwest and a resident hero since 1909, who died last. night; He came west by ox team 1 1859, and once operated a wagon freight line between The Dalles and Lewiston, Idaho. Continuous Performance Thaaksgivlng, 2 to 11 P. M. And Second Feature im r:2is-cii:LU!Einrm K- sisiet lucmi'iarE nisiit Also News and Our Gang Comedj "GLOVE-TAl-S Expect Windsors At Rugged Ranch SPRINGER, N. M., NOT. 24 UP) -Pre para tiona for a Tisit by the duke and duchess of Windsor Into the Cimarron country of moun tainous northern ' .New-, Mexico came to light here today,.!.. Leonard W. Horbury of Rugby, England, millionaire member of the -Liverpool " cotton exchanger disclosed he was . putting into shape his luxurious VaJteja polo ranch at a cost of;? 8 5,000 to en tertain the royal couple on their expected forthcoming trip to the United States. Herein the rugged country, just east :f the n6wrtopped peaks of the Sangrer de -Chriato mountains. Horbury h"asetabllshed: what is considered jon "of ' the most -pre tentious guest ranches In the west. Mr, and Mr: Horbury arrived here this month, and have indi cated. that the duke ' of Windsor and the Xoraer M. WaUla Simp son might be expected lit the Unit ed States some time after the first of the year. - . -. " Gram Will Propose Restaurant Peace (Continued from page I) one representative each from the Associated Restaurants of Salem, Inc., and the culinary alliance lo cal - and a' - third member to be named by Governor Martin. Frank, H. Chatas, Joseph H Randall, Frank G. Myers and H. H. Nohlgren represented the res taurant organization at the meet ing, it was understood. Such a -committee arrangement would not be acceptable to the culinary auiance witnout a pro viso binding the operators to sign an agreement with the union. Business Agent C. A. Chambers declared. "Wage scales and hours won't get us anything unless they sign up, too," Chambers added. "We want to build our organization up so we can guarantee these wages and hours and negotiate new agreements from year to year." Chambers said that alliance fees and dues had been misrepresented and; that they were actually $5 to $10 for initiation and $1 to $1.50 per month according to the position held by the union mem ber. Both Randall and Chatas, the only operators affected by the tfeamster ban on deliveries, ex pressed optimism over the day's turn in the controversy. Chatas said it was planned to complain to the interstate com mission Friday, regarding alleged failures of Southern Pacific Mo tor transport to deliver consign ments of goods to him. Issuing- a brief statement for the teamsters last night, Business Agent Banks declared that "any statement to the effect that union operators or employes are mak ing deliveries through picket lines, is purely agltatlve." Banks reiterated his assertion that "no unioa man or truck" baa passed a picket line and declared; that "the next move Is not up ta the union." - Trophy Awarded To Eugene Senior CORVALLIS, Not. 24-fcP)-HeV en Michael, 16, a senior in the Eugene high schools was awarded the Moses trophy by the national 4H club congress in Chicago, I J. Allen, assistant state club lead er, was advised. She was the fifth member in 11 years to receive the award, given each year to the highest ranking boy or girl on the basis of achievement. I Her record includes 9 years of club work, leadership of 16 clubs and winning 16$ prizes totaling more than $500. She will receive a $200 college scholarship trip to Chicago and win appear on a n-" on-wide broadcast Dec 4. At least six other Oregon mem bers will Tecelve free trips to Chi cago, including LaVerne White head, Turner, state style review winner, and Jaqueline Morton, Cottage Grove, first In western states and fourth nationally In a girla' contest sponsored by a mail order firm. Miss Morton win re ceive also a lUOTicholarshlp. - ATTEST RCA SOUND" I, Today, Fri. & Sat. BIG HOLIDAY BILL BPS PESFEST.mSRPS NOT -' f ' l j TT HAFFEKED una sight" agS ADDED ATTRACTION'S Latest Laurel & Hardy - Comedy "Beau Hanks" "MARCH of .' TIME" r 1 I J CONTINUOUS TODAY S TO II Pi It. Start to Return River to old Bed First Step. " to ; Submerge low Dam at Coulee " Undertaken U - GRAND COULEE, Not. 24-) -The first step in the ; return of the Columbia river to its original bed after three years of being fed through diversion . channels was made tonight at 5:55 p.m. . . Workmen of the. Mason-Walsh Atkinson-Kier company,. low dam builders-, started the river funning into, the area between the lower face of the dam and tire .lower cof ferdam, known as the bucket, of the spillway. Approximately 48 hours will be required before the bucket Is filled. Second step will be the removal of the lower cofferdam with drag lines and the start of water over the- spillway itself. The third and final step will be the turning of the entire river from the diver sion channels into the spillway. The operation will take a week or more to complete, and when it 'tis done, the major portion of the $65,000,000 structure-will be hid den forever under water. GRAND COULEE. Wash.. Nov. 24-tiFr-Edmond B. Terry, 45, rig ger for the Mason-Walsh-Atkin-. son-Kier company, Grand Coulee foundation dam builders, died to day from a fractured skulL : Terry, whose death was the 45th fatality among the com pany's employes and the 48th since the dam was started, was in jured "Sunday when he fell 60 feet from a construction trestle to a concrete block. Terry's home was In Barnsdall, Okla. Career of Corliss Is Distinguished PORTLAND, Nov. 24-P-Guy C. H. Corliss, 79, first chief Jus tice of the supreme court of North Dakota, first dean of the Univer sity of North Dakota law school and Instructor at the -Northwestern college of law here for23 years, died today. Admitted to the New York bar in 1879, he moved to Grand Forks, territory, of Dakota, in 1886 and was named chief Justice of North Dakota supreme court when the state was formed, serv ing 12 years. He came to Port land in 1912. Surviving are his widow and three aons of Portland and a daughter, in New York city. Local Government Favored by Dill SPOKANE, Nov. 24-MVCen- tranization of power in federal and state administrations was at tacked today before the Spokane Kiwanis club by C. C. DIU, former fr FRIDAY - SATURDAY Greater Coast to Coast 10 S; J THE SELBYS "Swing Stepsters" 4 ROYAL SWEDISH BELLRINGERS "International Musical Sensations, Radio and ' Picture Artists" JL DUBB TAYLOR "The Boy From ; " ' the South'- , ON THE A PANIC OP LAFFS AXD XCNACYI! WILLIAAI GARGAN NOAH 'BEERY,;; JR. "Some Blondes Are Dangerous" MATINEE 2:15 LAST TIMES TODAY Jack Oakie - John Boles 11 Buck Jones in -"Fight for Your Lady" "Boss of Lonely Valley" coxTixrors todat 2:00' rm 11:00 P. M. A rL Certificate No This Certtificate entitles you to one week's Set. of Four Pictures upon payment of only 39c j (46c . if by-mail). , ' ! -IMPXRTAXT- Be sure to order Set No. 1 If yo have that or ewn seqnent sets, order the next numbered Set of For. democratic senator from Wash ington. " ; r : i . "We all recognize the dangers of a Ierelgn war," he said, "but we may overlook the: danger of giving too much power to a few government officials far removed from many of the problems they must solve. "This country is too big to he regulated in many activities from Washington, D. C. This state has too many purely local needs pe culiar to its individual counties and cities o be governed by state wide laws and regulations from Olympiad Death Toll Three In Freight Wreck FRESNO, Galif., Nov. 24-()-The death toll in the derailment of a southbound Southern Paci fic freight train near Kerman laat sight was placed today at three when a final search of the wreckage failed to disclose the bodies of two additional victims, first believed to have been crush ed to death beneath the twisted mass of steel and wood cars. The train was derailed when an arch bar buckled under the head oil tank.- i Coroner J. N. Lisle said the dead are: Joseph Nelson Conver, 16, ot Los Angeles; ;Earl John son, a registered nurse, Denver Colo., and an unidentified youth. Seven ether men and boys who were riding on the train were in jured and physiciaons said some of them may die. ; ! Premier Outlines 26-Point Program VICTORIA, Nov. 24-(CP)i-Pre-' mier Pattullo tonight outlined for the British Columbia legislature a 2 6-point program of government objectives among which were. Maintenance of empire tariff preferences for the benefit of the province's primary industries and ai ice same ume expansion oi me province's business with the Unit ed States and other countries. Bringing about construction of a highway through British Colum bia and the Yukon to provide transportation for territory . not now served the establishment ot highway connection between the United States and Alaska. ' Extension of British Columbia's boundaries "not only to take in the Yukon Territory but also the territory east of the Yukon fol lowing the 120th meridian to the North Pole, which would add 400,000 square miles to British Columbia's 365,000. Owen W Matthews Dies, Prominent livestock Man i SPOKANE, Wash., Nov. 24-jP -Owen W. Matthews, 68, national ly known figure 'in the livestock and packing industry, died here today, j Matthews had been identlfied with the packing Industry, most of the time with Armour St Co., for more than 40 years. Mat. 30c Eve. 35c ON STAGE : JMissi Alissing Brothers Pantomimic Aerobats" Dorothy & Lew Rella i ."20th Century Speed SCREEN, 34 EVENING 6:45 t Seats SSC f-