PACE TWO Thi OREGON STATESMAN, Saiga, Oregon, Tnescar morning, December za, i37 - - County Roads Here Flooded Pilot ; Car , Is Needed on ' Salem-Dallas .Route; r . Rain to Continue , tnrrnroed from pat e X) weekend storm because of the - effectiveness of the new D tareet ewer. Two pumps being operat ed ba the South High street sever in .the vicinity of Superior "were barely folding their own against the Tain yesterday afternoon. Sbeltoa Ditch Is Wlthla IU Banks Sbelton ditch yesterday, carried more water than ever, before. En fineer Davis reported, bat re- . mained within its -banks and' did mo' appreciable damage. , Erosion together with dry aeason excars . tion carried on by the city bare deepened and widened the ditch channel markedly during the Jast ' year. ' ' .,f The high wind accompanying the rainstorm waa- blamed for water damage to the new senior - high school shops building.. Nei ther . waterproofed nor stucco covered, the south concrete wall leaked so badly : that . interior 7 woodwork was damaged and tools eld to be removed and dried to prevent rusting. No rain damage w'as reported in the main building. Lands east of Salem which had . remained relatively dry In recent stjorm seasons were inundated yesterday when 100 feet of sew dyke along Mill creek below the peaitentiary annex gave way. The - water covered many , acres of ground and flowed across Air port road, above the state hlgh wayvshops. Southeast Salem, how ever! escaped' serious flooding. West Side Highway T To South rteopened The,, west side Pacific highway, blocked early in the day by flood , waters in Holmes gap, .north of RJckreall, was reopened to traf fic by nightfall. South of Mon irioufn near Helmick park a slide necessitated one-way traffic. Out of Dallas the highways to th.e coast, at Wallace bridge, and - to. Kings Valley were closed on atcount of high water, as. were . the Amity-Dayton, Kings Valley and Bellevue-Hopewell secondary --' highways. . 1 Storm conditions on other state highways were reported j by the highway department as follows: f Washout on upper Columbia river highway, east of Troutdale. with one-way traffic; early repo a of slide blockade at- Multnomau fills found erroneous. : Lower Columbia river highway blocked by slide at Westport. 'Slide near Montgomery Ward stbre on highway 30 in Portland. Detour. . liMcMinnville-Tillamook h i g h wiy closed by high water between Valley Junction and a point six ' miles south. . , . ' j Dallas-Coast highway closed by SThe Call Board j i STATE 1 Today Ronald Colmm, t i Madeleine Carroll in "Pris- : oner of Zenda. Thursday-pW h e e I e r and Woolsey in "On Again off '. Again," 4 acts nf eastern k circuit vaudevil. . Saturday noon, kkidles club. J, Midnight 5rre, New '., Tear's eve fun frolic, stage show, first run picture, Dick Merrill and Paula Stone in "Atlantic Flight.' i j, I HOLLYWOOD Today Deanna Durbln- In "100 Men and a Girl. ii Wednesday D o u b 1 e bill. "It Cant Last Forever." with Ralph Bellamy and Betty Furness and George O'Brien in "Park Avenue. i iBriday Double bil "Hop- along Rides Again" with William Boyd and "Bull dog Drummond C am e s I Back" with John Barry- more, John Howard " and . : Reginald Denny. - t - GRAND Today Jane Withers in "45 Fathers" and coronation ' of King George VI all in J color. Wednesday John Boles and : Lull Deste in "She Mar j ried an Artist." ; Saturday Ann S o t h e r n , Jack Haley, Edward Ever ' ; ett Horton a.nd Mary Bo- r land in "Danger Love, at r ; Work." LSINORE ' Today Double bill, Bette ' Davis, Leslie Howard and x : Olivia deHavilland in "It's -Love I'm After" and Fred Stone In "-Qulek Money." Wednesday D o u b 1 e bill. jwith Robert Young and ' Lionel Barry more and SkK 1 Larking mrsterr "Hideout in the Alps' with aU star i cast. .- ; Friday Mickey Mouse mati nee. iz:3(? p. m. wew Tear's eve -frolic 11:0 p. m vaudeville and -screen feature Siturday Double bllL Clau- dette Colbert and Charles Boyer in 'JTovarich? and Mickey Roone? ta :ThoT oughbreds. Don't Cry.' CAPITOL . r T' d a y Touble bill, Ann I Sothern 4n "There Goes j ithe Groom" and Dick Fo- iran In "She Loved a Fire- man." - v;-. '. .Wednesday D o n b 1 1 bill. ' i i'The Missing i Witness". ' f with John Utel and "Here ; . Comes Flash Casey" with , -an! all star cast.. ,Friday Special New ' Tear's ' eve frolic, 11:30 p. m. Saturday Double bill; Ed- ' ?ward G. Robinson in "The iast Gangster" and- VEx- nif In Rhnh'sl" w 1th Wallace Ford. Saved From Being r- i. - Virginia A i-I :t ' :; ' ' '. mm r hi 1 tm A modern version of the tale of the bartered bride came to a coa' elusion when 14-year-ld Margaret Gozmanian, right, arrived In New York with her sister, Virginia, 12, after having nearly been forced to marry a 40-year-old French farmer to whom she had been "sold" by her uncle for S135. When her parents returned to United States, leaving her in custody of an uncle in France, he allegedly made the marriage deal with a neighbor, but appeals of the child to the Ameri can Aid society resulted in her rescue. flooded conditions at Wallace bridge near Junction with Mc-Kinnville-Tillamook highway. Schools secondary highway closed by high water near Sweet Home. Six inches of water on Spring-tield-Creswell Territorial road. Similar condition on Willam ette highway three-tenths of a mile' west of Goshen. ' - Klamath Falls-Lake View high way closed because of snow.. SILVERTON, Dec. 27 The lower highway between Silverton and Salem is flooded but the up per highway .is still passable. The AblQua creek is over the highway on the south side of the Silverton Mt. Angel bridge but the high way waa passable late Monday afternoon. Silver creek Itself-, is rapidly rising and threatening basements in Geiser addition. Science-Religion Tie-up Is Sought INDIANAPOLIS. Dec. 27.-flV A plea for cooperation between science and religion to "domesti cate and civilize the wild beast in man" was made tonight by Dr. Edwin G. Conklln of the Ameri can association for the advance ment of science. The ethics of great scientists Is "essentially slm'lar to that taught by great religious leaders," he de clared, "and the Christian churches of the United States are concerned with the cultivation of ethics." "That so little has been accom plished." he said, "and so much remains to be done is due in part to refactory material, poor meth ods and the necessity of repeat- ing. this, work in every genera tion' The Princeton university scient ist, who has written, among other books, one on "The Direction of Human Evolution," declared no race of super-minded or super bodied men could be developed In less than 20 centuries by scien tific . breeding methods used: on human beings. New Fords Being Damaged, Report ST. LOUIS, Dec. z7-P)-Police tonight were investigating com plaints of owners of new Ford automobiles that - their machines had been damaged by vandals. Dr. G. C. Briggs reported "a strong acid solution" was thrown on bis new car while he was mak l ( i professional call. The paint was blistered, he . said. Doctor Briggs told police he "had been warned" not to accept ' the new car. . .Earl C. Sampson, an anto sales man, reported his new Ford was overturned m front of nis home last night Police said they had received other similar complaints. "Bart Gantner. personnel direc tor at the local Ford plant where a strike of CIO united automobile workers was Tailed several weeks ago, declared the company oper ater today "with a full force and turned 90 cars off the assembly line." Police In scout cars con tinued to escort workers lea via g the plant,;,--. r-n-"-:-- Tax: Turnover Is : : Made by ; Sheriff A $20,1(6.29 turnover,; of 1936 taxes was mate by the sheriffs office yesterday, accord ing to a statement filed' with County Clerk U. G. Boyer. Yes terday's payment over Into the county treasury raised - to $10(, 205.49 the amount "cleared from the tax7 collector's books since the December 15 deadline on 1937 taxes. 'Bartered Bride9 and Margaret Gonnantan Dramatic Battle On Inside Teruel HENDAYE, Franco-S p a n I s h Frontier, Dec. 27.-(fl3)-Beleaguer- ed insurgent troops at Teruel ra dioed the insurgent high com mand tonight that they had suffi cient munitions and food to con tinue defense of their flaming strongholds. The insurgent remnants, barri caded six days in the massive Te ruel seminary and the bank of Spain, both on fire, fought to hold off a ring of government attackers until relief forces under Gen. Mi guel Aranda could break through to them. General Aranda's counter-off en sive was reported by insurgent dis patches to have advanced to with- ing a mile and a quarter of the northwestern section of Teruel, 135 miles east of Madrid. - An insurgent communique as serted the fighting within the cap tured city was "only a dramatic episode" compared to the maneu vers launched by Generalissimo Francisco Franco to retake terri tory lost in that strategic sector because of the recent government offensive. Government troops,, however, strengthened their grip on Teruel by hammering their way into the civil guard barracks, leaving only two citadels to be taken. Industry Opposed To all Monopoly Leader Declares NEW YORK. Dec. 27-(P)-Wil- liam B. Warner, president of the National Association of Manufac turers, said today "American In dustry is opposed to monopolies in production, distribution or labor.' Ho was commenting on Asst. Atty. Gen. Robert H. Jackson's address in Washington last night, interpreted in some quarters as an opening gun in an administra tion , anti-monopoly drive, and containing, specific criticism of the steel industry. Warner - said he hoped Jack son's views and "expressed an tipathy to business" did not rep resent the view of the government toward "the desire of the manu facturers to help solve the na tion's economic problems." He went on: "Above all else the manufac turers of the nation believe that calm and non-partisan considera tion of our national problems la the need of the hour. They have offered Tepeatedly and stand ready at all times to cooperate toward bettering economic condi tions. Meantime their pledge to the American people fa that they will do all In their power to main tain employment." Films of Bombing Come via Clipper SAN FRANCISCO. Dec. 27-jF) Pan American Airways, an nounced Its China Clipper left Honolulu harbor at 3:43 p. m. (PST) today for Alameda, Calif., carrying Norman Alley, newsreel photographer, and 4,500 feet of film . he took of the bombing of the U. S. S. Pansy in the Tangtxe river. The film, to be- tamed over to the state department In Wash ington, and thence released for public showing, will be flown east tomorrow by special plane. The China' Clipper was ex pected to resell the Alameda base between , 10 and 11 - a. m. tomorrow. . -" Mine Official Is Killed v TRAIL, B. Cr vDec. 27.-H7P-A. "B. Ritchie, general superin tendent or the Sullivan mine at Kimberley, B. C, was instantly killed today when a large rock was dislodged by blast and fell on his head " -. Gale Reaches 75 Miles Per That City Entirely Cut Off Communication Except by Radio (Continued from Page 1) . washouts were numbered by the score. Rainfall ef 4.47 Inches in 24 hours was the heaviest since 1111. A small tugboat, the Ben Hur, overturned and sank in Portland harbor this afternoon while en deavorlng to move a heavy barge. Two- men, who were aboard, were picked op by a lifeboat from the tug George M. Browi, which was assisting in the tow. The Willamette river .continued to rise, threatening 45 families at Grand Island and Wheatland. The Wheatland diversion dam waa hacked by swirling waters, which cut through a country road. A flood crest. It was feared, would break Into the Willamette alough. changing the river course and washing out farm homes. Highways generally were flood ed or blocked by slides. Bus schedules west of "McMlnnville to the coast and between Forest Grove and Carlton were cancelled because of high water. Schedules were maintained over the Columbia river and Pa cific, highways and tbe Wapinltia cut-off. ' Rising waters, particularly in the Long Tom river at Monroe and the Pudding river, threatened highways south of Portland. The Yamhill-Newberg road was closed. and the highway south of Forest Grove menaced. The Dalles-California highway remained open. Bus travel was restored be tween Portland and Seaside. Pas sengers were transferred and forced to walk 300 feet around the Westport lide. - The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company said 2000 Portland telephones put out" of commission, by the storm had mostly been restored to service. A 25-man crew worked in the As toria region to restore communi cation. The Portland Electric Power company reported 218 separate line breaks in the city. Vast portions of southeast Portland were Inundated by swirl ing, yellow waters from Johnson creeki City workers stood vigil over a log jam ready to dynamite if necessary. Officers helped rescue residents when water flowed over lower floors of buildings. A slide at Lake Oswego buried tbe boathouse of N. M. Troland and a motorboat.' Clifford Tro land and a companion escaped injury. ' The Wapato lake dike was threatened by the Tualatin river. Sand bag barricades were rushed into position. The Willamette river was ex pected to reach flood stage at Eugene tomorrow. Unemployment's Benefits to Help (Continued from page 1) the states having a 16-week limit. The 22 systems to start pay ments soon are these: Alabama, Arizona, California, Connecticut, District of Colum bia, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia and West Virginia. Eight other states will start payments later in 1938. Board officials say they expect the entire country to be covered in 1939. Baby Cold, Quoted As Slaying Reason GREENBROOK, N. J.. Dec. 27. P)-A young mother of a two- month-old baby was arrested to night, accused of killing the five- month-old daughter of her land lord because "their baby . was warm and mine was cold." . County Detective Charles Alleg er said 24-year-old Mrs. Sophie Arcuri. who had complained of lack of heat In her home, slashed the throat of tiny Christina Bord olon with a paring knife this aft ernoon and laid her body under the Bordolon Christmas tree. The Arcuris and Bordelons live In the same house. f . The dead baby's mother, Mrs. Louis Bordolon, found the body in a pool of blood. She accused Mrs. Arcuri of the slaying, Alleger said, and asserted Mrs. Arcuri chased her, knife in hand, to the home of a neighbor. Mrs. Arcnri, married a year, was. held without bail pending a court hearing. Corvallis Hooper Injured in Crash CORVALLIS. Dec 27-(y-El- mo crocaett. corvallis nign school basketball player, suffer ed serious injuries yesterday when -his automobile collided with one driven by O. I. Paulson of Salem. Paulson, Lyle Paul son and , George Buckingham, Corvallis water works employe, suffered minor injuries. LAST TIMES TODAY Borah Criticizes Anti-Trust Move "Consent Decree" WASHINGTON, ' Dec. H.-(JPh The government's abortive hand ling of anti-trust proceedings against three big automobile com panies drew condemnation today from Senator Borah (R-idaho). He critic! xed the government on much the same grounds that Fed eral Judge Ferdinand A. Geiger did recently when. he discharged a Milwaukee grand Jury which had received evidence against' the companies:. y Referring to the fact the' jus tice department and the compan ies had discussed a "consent de tree" settlement of the case, Bor ah said such negotiations were "all wrong, both In morals and In their practical benefit s especially when Ihey are made after the guil ty parties hays come within the Hatches of the law." ' " He said he did not know all the details about the Milwaukee case. bat "nothing could be more calcu lated to encourage the violation of law than to adopt a system per mitting great organisation leaders to bail themselves out by agreeing not to violate the law again." Akron Man Dying Of Rare Malady AKRON, O., Dec. 27-(53-"Doc-tors say I have three years to, live," Thomas Lloyd, 35, said to day as he disclosed he was 'the victim of a rare disease which causes the bones to decay and literally to disappear. Medical history records but 483 cases of the malady, multi ple myeloma. Dr. G. M. Steven son" Kent, O., said..' . The first symptom Lloyd said he observed appeared eight weeks ago when he was on his way home from a theatre wtth his wife and three sons. He noticed ho lacked control of his right foot. The . condition seemed to disappear . but then he lost control of his right eye, next his right arm. Lloyd submitted to elaborate X-ray examination at a hospital here, and went to Cleveland and Philadelphia for diagnosis in osteopathic clinics. Doctor Stev enson said medical records show no instance, of an authenticated cure. Salvador Quake Reported Severe SAN SALVADOR. Salvador, Dec. 27-(J5JI)-One person was killed and five injured in an earthquake that shook the towns of Ahuachpan and Atiquizaya near the Guatemalan border last night. Considerable property damage was reported in both towns and the shock disrupted electric light and telegraph services. Less severe earthquakes had been felt since Christmas night. but they were considered minor in this Central American republic until the Sunday night tremor caused more serious destruction. The government and the Red Cross dispatched food and med ical supplies to the quake area, a short distance inland from the Taclflc coast. No unusual volcanic activity was reported" but the region is pocked with small volcanic craters. (Dispatches from Guatemala said three persons were killed in the Salvador quake and 20 houses destroyed.) Roosevelt Chief Of Hearst Radio NEW YORK. Dec. 2 7 -;P-Appointment of ' Elliott Roosevelt, son of the president, as general manager of Hearst Radio. Inc. was announced today by Joseph V. Connolly, chairman of t.h board. Young Roosevelt has been vice-president and general man ager of southwest stations of the Hearst chain. In his new post, which he assumes January l, he will be located in New York. He Is ' the second member of the Roosevelt circle to be con nected with Hearst enterprises. The president's son-in-law, John Boettlger. is publisher of W. R Hearst's Seattle Poet-Intelli gencer. Most of Students Earn All or Part of Expense EUGENE, Dec. 27-MVA regis trar's office survey showed 30 per cent of University of Oregon students entirely self-supporting. Less than one-seventh depend en tirely upon their parents for fJ nances. Students repaid from their own earnings practically all of the 940,000 borrowed from the emer gency loan fund last year. Sentence Commuted TRENTON, N. J Dec 27-P)- Mri. Margaret fox Deibow and Naman Disc oil won today their two-year fight to escape death In the electric chair for the slay ing of Mrs. Delbow's husband. The state court of pardons commuted their death sentences to life im prisonment, , j 3 , MAKE YOUR NEW , TOUTS ItESESVATHm i 2 . I , . tw 1 1 Babe Shying Is Blamed on Ghost Ydutliful Parent Avers His Father's Ghost Caused Him to Beat Child WISCONSIN RAPIDS. Wis.. Dec. 27-(jp-Henry J- Nead. 1. husband of a 15-year-old bride, today blamed his father's ghost for tha "snirit driven" slarinr of his infant foster son early Christ mas. The - baby, Earl Albert, born November 14, -died from blows struck on the head With the heel of Need's open palm in ' their apartment over a grocery at nearby -Vesper Sheriff Henry J. Becker said Nead confessed. Dead six years, Need's father "appeared spiritually4, and drove him to commit the slaying, tbe youth said in his confession. His father's spirit had appeared be fore, Xead related; tormenting him because of his belief that Henry was not. his legitimate son. Nor was the- dead baby Nead's. He married Lnella Shaw last June knowing he was not the father of her unborn child, the sheriff said both admitted. Nead's fantastically worded confession, as made known by Sheriff Becker, began with the arrival of the "spirit" and said, in part: "I was laying (sic) there just half asleep. My dad appeared spiritually and he said that he alwayj said when he came, 'I got you coming.' And he said he was going to cause me trou ble for the rest of my life. "Everything was black then until I struck the baby . . . Things started to come back, but he still made me hit the baby some more until she (his wife) grabbed my hand." A first degree murder charge was filed. Russian Aid for China Indicated (Continued from page 1) which any material Russian aid for China must flow. (Reports reaching Shanghai recently said hundreds of thou sands of. coolies were working on the motor road from Lanchow to the Russian border to make It fit for heavy military trans port. Japan's invasion of Cha bar and Suiyuan provinces hss cut the old caravan route be tween north China and Siberia, by way of outer Mongols.) Luganets-Orelsky was under stood to have spent much time en route in outer Mongolia under soviet protection and at Urumchi, capital of Chinese Tur kestan, and Lanchow. Ralph McCullough Live Wire Victim (Continued from page 1) the Salem Y W C A, had been teaching this year at Willamina. McCullough, prominent in forensics and also as a distance runner and active in other campus affairs while - at Willam ette, had been associated with the law office of George L. Rauch since his graduation. ' McCullough 's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. P. McCullough, formerly of Portland, now live In Cali fornia. . Four Deaths Are Caused by Storm (Continued from Page 1) 24. his companion, was seriously injured. Mrs. Ray H. Mack, 48, was kill ed Sunday night in a collision on the ice-coated skyliners road, four miles west of Bend. Four others were slightly injured. Mrs. Clyde Brown, 21, was kill ed Sunday when a trnck carrying a gay party of 11 Powers resi dents, returning from a rural Christmas dance,- went over an embankment near Myrtle Point. Mrs. W. M. Brown suffered serious spinal and internal injuries. Saves Chicks but Is Fire's Victim HAZELTON, B. C. Dec. 27- tAT-oscar mna, 73, saved his baby chicks, but lost his own life when fire destroyed his cabin near this northern British Columbia - town yesterday. Lund carried tbe chicks ant. side, then ran back, apparently ior personal eiiects. His body was found Inside the front door, near a cnnhoaVif where he was believed to keep nis money. - - : SPECIAL, MATINEE TODAY 2 P. M. 1DD MEIK.RIRI' LEOPOLD STOKOWSKI AUULfnt KtlUuSJ ALICE : : BRABY.KISCHA A0E8 Our Gang Comedj News, and Travel Reel George OTJrien "Park Avenue '. Logger 1 a 1 "It Can't - Last Forever with - Ralph Bellamy Betty Faroes 'Cop With Golden Voice' to htudy Music in Europe SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 27.-(ff) A "golden voice" lifted George W. Stinsen, 34, from a motorcycle today and brought him a round trip ticket to Europe. . The "singing cop," a patrolman on the Oakland-San Francisco bay bridge, will entrain tonight for Italy. Germany and the great teachers of music. Admiral Noble to Head Naval Force LONDON. Dee. 27.-P)-The admiralty announced tonight Vice-Adm. Sir Percy Noble, fourth sea lord and chief of supplies and transport, would leave immedi ately after the holidays to be come commander-in-chief of the China station. Admiral Noble, regarded as a man of action, is to go directly to Hongkong. That colony now is considered the principal danger spot for British interests in tbe far east because of an imminent Japanese drive against nearby Canton, south China metropolis. British admiralty experts were said last week to have advised the cabinet that six capital ships battleships or battle cruisers were necessary for adequate pro tection of British interests in the far east war tones. If the cabinet should approve such a step, it is understood the naval power would be concen trated at Hongkong. Change in Silver Policy Predicted WASHINGTON, Dec. 27 -(P)-Some informed officials indicated tonight that. President Roosevelt might put his silver buying pro gram on a 24-hour basis. His custom in the past has been to issue a proclamation fixing the treasury price for newly mined domestic silver for a year. It was learned today Mr. Roosevelt might in the future announce that silver prices would be subject to change at any time that conditions war ranted. This action may be taken Thursday or Friday. He has prom ised to "say something about sil ver" this week. Unless he extends the present policy, the existing proclamation, establishing the do mestic silver price at 77.57 cents an ounce or about 32 cents above the world price, will expire Friday night Romance of Bowl Game Culminates LO ANGELES, Dec. 27-(JPy-Arthur B. Chapman, jr., and Gwendolyn Trimble, who met each other at the 19 3 S Rose Bowl football game, were married to day by Superior Judge Parker Wood. Chapman Is of Los Angeles. The bride was an Oregon State university student when they met. Pioneer Jeweler Dies PORTLAND, Dec. 27.-JP)-F. U. French, 85, jeweler at Albany since 1879 and Oregon Retail Jewelers' association president, died yesterday at the home of his daughter here. His widow, two sons and two daughters survive.' Tenth Victim Counted PORTLAND, Dec. 27.-()-Struck by an automobile Christ mas eve. Thomas Dillon, 47, died yesterday Increasing Portland traffic deaths to 10 since Decem ber 1. 2 Majjo? AI1DC0LD ftOSERT YOUN0 .JAMES STEWART tit Sry1f LESLIE ENDS TODAY III -VBBOBMBBi Plus J Latest A March fJ of M Time M Time SSJJ ) ysfSTi PLUS 2ND FEATURE, "QUICK MONEY Art Certificate No This Certificate entitles you to one tweek Y Set of Four Pictures upon payment of only 39c (46 if by mail). ; J IMPORTANT - T ' Be awe (a rder Set NtL 1 If r have that or sab- f., " sequent seta, order tbe next umbered Set of Four. J 'iiimiiim mi i. inn mil n Soviet Submarine May Probe North Hint of Expedition Under Polar Ice Noted in , Machine Journal MOSCOW. Dec. 27-flJ)-SovleT authorities hinted today a sub- " marine expedition to the north pole-was being considered as the next step toward establishing regular airplane , service from Russia over the pole to the United States. , The" cruise in exploration un der the Arctic ice was suggested recently in the official newspaper of the .commissariat of the ma chine building Industry In much tbe same manner as the soviet flight to the pole first was sug gested early, this year. Publication, of the. article -In the official journal was taken by some foreigners as an Indi- - cation that a submarine colony already may be under construc tion for the adventure. Without indicating Russia planned a similar expedition. Prof. M. N. Zubofr, an authority on the Arctic, today said tbe soviet union would watch close ly the new submarine expedition under the polar ice which Fir Hubert Wilkins. British explor er, was reported planning. Wilkins has been searching the Arctic by plane for Sigls- mund Levaneffsky and five other missing" Russian fliers. Salvage of Panay Sister Ship's Job (Continued from page 1) two United States consuls, John M. Allison and James Espy, and Code Clerk A. A. McFayden on their way-to Nanking to reopen the United States embassy as soon as conditions permit in China's conquered capital. It was considered possible the American foreign service officers would - proceed to Hohsien and then await instructions from Washington since Japan has asked - foreign nations withhold, reopening of their diplomatic quarters lemporarily. The Japanese said the presence of foreigners would be danger ous because of military clean-up operations still to be completed around Nanking. Although British and German diplomatic representatives had planned to sail on the Oahu none made the trip. They were un derstood to be waiting further instructions from London nd Berlin. Gfrl "0 T l'TF",ITr r"""l Starts Tomorrow TWO ACE FEATURES jom uia rraoi-jaw Bui -Plus Sad Hit Here's Flash Casey with ERIC UNDEY BOOTS MALLORY LAST TIME8 TODAY 'THERE GOES THE GROOM" with MARY BO LAND and "She Loved a Fireman" with Dirk Foraa Starts Wednesday Feattuaife s Death-Daring Ski Jumps . . Aerial Hazards ... Breath Taking Scenery ... An Ava lanche ef Thrills 1 HOWARD - BETTE DAVIS Mi yr K .aamojnauutai I 3 a "-". -. - m i - j 1 OLIVIA DeHAVILAXD In "ITS LOVE I'M AFTER" with Psfrie Knowles Eric Bloro WARNER BROS. PICTURE 62 -r-Tfirc