The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 01, 1938, Page 1, Image 1

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

    Art Appreciation
Hundreds of Statesman
readers hare takes advan
tage of "this newspaper's
offer of 48 reproductions of
famous paintings. -
Weather
Occasional rain today and'
Wednesday, snow in moun
tains; Max. Temp. Monday
81, river 0.6 feet, rain .02
Inch, X-NE wind.
POUNDDD 1651
ISICJHTY-aKVENTIl YEAK
Salem, Oregon, Tuesday Morning, February 1, 1938
Price 3c; Newsstands Sc
No. 266
British Vessel'
OFBC
-w-.i -s i . i v IV-. -y.
v -
died.
JJJie
even
sis
'iff.
Y
Sixteen
On Labor Terrism
Hosch's Entiy
Defines Issues
In Demo Ranks
He Stands for AH That
Martin Doesn't; may
Make Strong Race
Expects Piihlic Power's
Advocates and Labor
" ; i to Back His Cause
By RALPH C. CURTIS
The governorship contest in
the democratic party is cleanly
and sharply defined right now.
Whether It will continue to be,
depends upon who else, if anyone,
jumps into the race.
The announcement by Dr. J. F.
Hosch, Deschutes county state
represents tire, that he will, seek
the democratic nomination,
coupled with strong indications
approaching a certainty that
Governor Charles H.--Martin will
run to succeed himself, auto
matically divides the democrats
of Oregon Into two distinct fac
tions, liberals and conservatives.
each with its champion in the
lists.
Out of Oregon's 199,569 demo
crats so registered at the latest
count, few of those who are dis
satisfied with the record of Gov
ernor Martin, on such issues as
public power, labor, relief and
even liquor, will have much: dilfl?,
eultyvin adjusting their views to
those of the - athletic physician j
from Bend. That ia why the battle
is clearly defined, as it stands
today, regardless of the merits of
those Issues.
"Left" Opposition No
Surprise to Martin
No new Hnes of worry were dis
cernible on the blafld countenance
of Governor Martin as he off
handedly made . passing mention
of Dr. Hosch 's candidacy yester
day. "Let him run" was about all
Martin had to say. The governor
has known all along, as he con
sidered campaigning for a - new
term, the angle from which sop
position would come. Judging
from his recent pronouncements,
he has deliberately courted it.
' Nevertheless," if the issues are
left to stand as they are, Dr.
Hosch Is in position to make it
an exciting race. An Inkling as to
the support he expects appears
In a portion of his initial state
ment as a candidate:
-I believe in the rights and
welfare of the common people. I
am opposed to Governor Martin's
abase of the grange, school
teachers, labor unions, Townsend
ltes, veterans, drouth sufferers
and all other progressive forces
in the state."
In the legislature, Dr. Hosch
was active principally In support
of measures looking toward pub
lic ownership of utilities. It was
he who swayed the house of repre
sentatives last winter to vote for
a power memorial which was con
(Turn to page 2, col. 1) i
dditics
... in the Neu
SALISBURY, Md., Jan. 81
I (JPyThe mercury shot tip to an
unseasonable 68 degrees yester
dayand the weather observa
tory burned down. Loss: f 1,000
and January weather records. -
CHICAGO, Jan. SlHflVIneior-
able justice took a brief respite tn
municipal court today in favor of
cupid.
Convicted of disorderly conduct,
Homer W. Harvey, 84, an unem
ployed elevator operator, was or
dered to jail to work out a $299
fine. As police led him from Judge
Eugene Holland's court. Miss Ma
rie Chirello, 28, stepped up and
'asked the judge to delay the de
mands of Justice until they were
married. Harvey was brought back
and Judge Holland performed the
ceremony. ;
So flustered was the bridegroom
he forgot to kiss the bride goodbye
as he was led away to a cell.
NOBLES VILLE, IntL, Jan.
Sljpj-After Ansel Castor, 60,
fell down an embankment and
broke both legs on a midnight
hunting trip, his 'coon dog led
him a half mile to a farmhouse.'
Castor told about it today from
his bed.' W:
I tied the dog to me," he
said, "and crawled after it as
best I cowld. - . - w
SEYMOUR, Ind., Jan. 31.-P)-The
roice of Nelson Eddy, the
singer, floated. from a radio set as
a son was horn last night to Sir.
and Mrs. Nelson Waldkoetter. So
they named him Nelson Eddy.
More 1 Arrets
Prevailing Wage Issue ,
Causes Debate as big
Housing Bill Scanned
Lodge and Wagner Engage
Labor Act Accused of Working Against Men's
Interests; Amendment may Be Restored
WASHINGTON, Jan. 31 (AP) Tall, aristocratic Sen.
Henry Cabot Lodge, jr. (R, Mass.) and portly Sen. Robert
F. Wagner (D, N. Y.) breathed fire at each other in the sen
ate today, each accusing his opponent of going against the
best interests of labor.
A long step toward fascism would be taken, said Wagner,
Labor Board Can
Not Be Enjoined
From Holding Hearings, Is
Supreme Court Ruling;
Reed Is Sworn in
WASHINGTON, Jan. 31 JP)
Federal district courts cannot en
join the national labor relations
board from conducting hearings
on alleged unfair labor practices,
the Bupreme court decided unan
imously today.
The . Massachusetts federal dis
trict court bad Issued an. injunc
tion In May, 1936, In behalf of
the Bethlehem Shipbuilding cor
poration, Ltd., and Its action had
been upheld by , the , first circuit
court of appeals.
The Newport News Shipbuild
ing & Drydock company's request
for a similar injunction was de
nied last Jnly by the eastern Vir
ginia federal district court. This
decision was affirmed by. the
fourth circuit court of appeals.
The supreme court decided the
issues were similar to those In
the Bethlehem litigation, and
passed upon both cases at the
same time.
The court disposed of a score
of other cases today, but before
announcing the decisions it was
joined by a new member, Stanley
Reed, of Kentucky, President
Roosevelt's second appointee to
the high tribunal.
The former solicitor general
took the judicial oath, adminis
tered by Charles E. Cropley, court
clerk, in a brief and simple cere
mony in the courtroom.
Three Qualify for
State FFA Finals
Out of the 11 contestants that
narticinated in the annual sub-
lie sneakine contest held by the
local Future Farmers of Amer
ica in the high school auditorium
last night, Roy Gerig, James
Thnmnmii T on Hansen and Hen-
A .V
ry Beutler emerged winners,
thereby gaining the right to en
ter the state contest over radio
station KOAC at 7 o'clock Satur
day night f this week.
- Judging was done on a basis
of 20 per cent for manuscripts.
40 per cent for delivery, and 60
per cent for the contestant's abil
ity to answer the single question
each judge was allowed to ask
of each contestant at the conclu
sion of his speech. .
Ratings on the four winners
will not be divulged until after
Saturday night's radio contest.
The radio audience will send in
votes on participants, which will
(Turn to page 2, coL. 3)
Teacher Retirement Act Is
Unconstitutional, Decision
PORTLAND, Jan. 31-(ff-cir-
cuit Judge H. D. Norton of Med
ford held unconstitutional today
the 1935. legislative act retiring
teachers aged 65 years or more in
districts of more than 20,000
population. '
He said he would grant a tem
porary injunction to restrain the
Portland school district from car
rying out contested provisions of
the act.
Portland school directors said
they would retain teachers listed
tor retirement February 1 pend
ing an appeal to the supreme
court.'-
The. act, which affected the
Portland and Salem districts only,
could not abbrogate contract
rights of teachers acquiring per
manent status tinder the law of
1913 before It was amended In
1933, the Judge ruled. . "
He said teachers were subject
to dismissal "for causes develop
ing within the volition of the
o
5? V .
in Tilt With Author of
Oit the senate accepted Lodge's
"prevailing wage" amendment to
the Roosevelt housing bill. Where
upon Lodge declared the AFL was
backing his amendment and his
opponents were thwarting the will
of the senate.
Tacked on the housing bill
when it went through the senate,
the Lodge amendment would re
quire all contractors to pay pre
vailing wages on housing projects
covered by federal housing ad
ministration insurance.
However, a Benate-house con
ference committee deleted the
Lodge amendment, to the housing
bill (which is designed to stimu
late a home-construction boom by
cutting the down payments and
financing costs).
When bill came back to the
(Turn to page 2, col. 1)
Chansein
Policy Is Sought
Sanctions Held Useless,
Possibly Dangerous
by Small Nations
GENEVA, Jn. 31.-(fl-Repre-sentatives
of small nations today
called upon the League of Nations
to abandon its system of obliga
tory sanctions: the economic
weapon by which members origin
ally had hoped to curb warring
powers' and enforce collective se
curity.:
The long-expected
attack on
sanctions, embodied in article XVI
of the league covenant, was led
by delegates from Switzerland,
Sweden and the Netherlands.
They urged the committee on
covenant revision to recognize of
ficially that the league should, end
could no longer wield, such puni
tive power.
The section has been invoked
(Turn to page 2, col. 2)
Seadlund's Trial ,
Opens Wednesday
CHICAGO, Jan. 31.-(ff)-Trial
of John Henry Seadlund, indicted
as the kidnaper of Charles S. Ross,
wealthy retired manufacturer, was
set for Wednesday by Federal
Judge John P. Barnes today.
Conviction carries the death
penalty upon recommendation by
a trial jury. -
Ross was kidnaped on a subur
ban highway last September and
his body was found in northern
Wisconsin this month following
Seadlund's arrest by , federal de
partment of justice agents.
Seadlund has asserted he would
plead guilty to the kidnaping but
would not admit the slaying of
Ross. -
teacher as weU as those causes
that operate to terminate the con
ditions that brought the employ
ment Into existence." !
"I think it requires no stretch
of the imagination to realize that
a teacher may be disqualified by
reason of age before reaching
the age of 65 years and that such
teacher may not necessarily be
disqualified from competent
teaching until long past that age,"
he continued.
"If a teacher Is disqualified to
day to perform the duties, of the
employment at and after 65 in
districts of 20,000 population, a
like condition exists In districts
of less than 20,000 population.".
The original 1913 law was
amended In 1933 to : provide re
tirement at the age ef 65 begin
ning February 1, 1938, and re
pealed in 1935 when a new act
was passed making - the retire
ment; provisions compulsory
Leagu
Made
Charges
Eight Held to
Grand Jury on
Felony Counts
30 Arrested to Date in
Roundup ; Various
Charges Faced
Labor Committee Avers
any Violence Wholly
Contrary to Rule
PORTLAND, Jan. 31.-(;P)-SIx-teen
alleged labor terrorists were
arrested tonight in a continued
drive by state, city and county po
lice. The latest haul brought to 30
men arrested in connection with
250 reports of Vandalism and vio
lence. Police said three of the men
arrested tonight were taken at the
Labor temple, where the central
council was In session.
Two were charged with assault
and battery with a dry cleaning
establishment operator as com
plaining witness and the others
were held without ball for the dis
trict attorney.
Eight of the original 14 taken
Into custody Saturday night and
Sunday were bound over to the
grand jury on felony charges of
attempted malicious destruction of
property and assault when they
waived preliminary hearing in mu
nicipal court today.
The group included Ed Garner,
secretary - treasurer of thaAFL
Masters, Mates' and Pilots Un
ion Local No. 17, charged on five
counts with bail set at $25,000.
District Attorney James R. Bain
said the cases would be prosecuted
vigorously.
The policy committee of the
central labor council issued a pub
lic statement today declaring it
had "at all times instructed that
all picketing activities be conduct
ed peaceably."
"It is the policy of the American
(Turn to page 2, col. 8)
Navy Program Is
Deemed Essential
WASHINGTON, Jan. 1-(JP)-A
congressional committee heard a
warning from the navy's top
ranking officer today that the
United States fleet might be
called upon to prevent seizure of
Central and South American re
publics in event the Monroe Doc
trine broke down.
When hearings began before
the house naval committee on
President Roosevelt's proposal
for a 20 per cent Increase in the
size of the navy, Adm. William
D. Leahy, chief of naval opera
tions, said there was "nothing to
prevent" seizure of those coun
tries except the Monroe Doctrine
and the fleet.
The construction progTam. es
timated to cost about $800,000,-
000, would provide 47 additional
combatant warships and 22 aux
iliary vessels. Chairman Vinson
(D-Ga) of .tbe naval committee
said the . ships would require
1,200 more officers and about
20,000 enlisted men.
Tokyo Drive Upon
"Reds" Conducted
TOKYO. Feb. l-( Tuesday) -UPt
Metropolitan police made another
drive against alleged communists
today, arresting 15 persons in
early morning raids.
Most of those arrested were
government and private university
professors.
"The main point of their move
ment ' the notice said. "aoParent
ly was to lead a general revolu
tion based on communism."
Quick Results
Witli Statesman
Classified Ad-
The following ad appeared
in The Sunday Statesman, The
house was rented Sunday.
Twenty-six people answered tbe
ad' during the day.
3 ROOM HOUSE A garage,
f 12.50 per month. Phone 9870.
This ia just one of the many
testimonials of theesnlts ob
tained with The Statesman
classified ads which come to
the of flee. - . .
If yon need help, have some
thing to sell or want to bay
something use The Statesman
classified for quick, sure re
sults. Phone S101. ..... v . - .
Major Battle
Progresses in
Central China
Each Army Reports big
Losses by Other " in
Mingkwang Clash .
Over Half Million Take
Part; Conditions at
Nanking Improved
SHANGHAI, Feb. 1-(Tuesday) -
(-Conflicting Chinese and Jap
anese dispatches indicated today a
major battle was in progress on
the central China front where
Japan Is seeking to link the wide
ly separated areas she has con
quered. The center of the battle surged
around the town of Mingkwang,
100 miles south of Sochow, vital
junction of the Tientsin-Pukow
and Lunghal railways, which is
the objective of one Japanese
army marching from the north
and another moving from the
south.
While the dispatches agreed the
fighting had intensified along the
bitterly-contested Tientsin-Pukow
railroad, each army reported
heavy casualties and severe set
backs had been suffered by the
other.
The troops, believed to total
upward of halt a million, have
been skirmishing for positions for
more than a month.
In a counter-attack at Ming
kwang Chinese troops asserted
they killed at least 1000 men and
officers."
The Chinese declared vicious
hand-to-hand fighting marked by
repeated bayonet charges was tak
ing many lives and that to the
(Turn to page 2, col. 4)
Gty.Editor Dies;
Suicide Indicated
ASHLAND, Jan. 31 -(P)- The
body of Paul Swanson, 27, city
editor of the Ashland Tidings,
was found today under his auto
mobile on 'lonely Dead Indian
road, 14 miles from here.
Deputy Coroner William
Dodge, who made the discovery
with a state police officer, said
a blanket covered the body and
the exhaust pipe of his automo
bile. A note in Swanson's pocket
said his act was the "result of
accumulated disappointment, a
tired mind and a sick body."
G. M. Green, manager of the
Daily Tidings, said the dedica
tion of the newspaper's new
building, scheduled for tonight,
had been postponed until Satur
day due to the editor's death.
Boy Aged Four Is
Sought in Wilds
UKIAH, Calif., Jan. Z-(JPy-An
ominous trail the tracks of
a cougar beside the footprints of
a small, lost boy spurred a
posse today in search of four-year-old
Ted Thompson, missing
from a mountain cabin since Sat
urday. Nearly 200 men beat through
the forests, lashed by wind and
rain. The little boy wore only a
light shirt and overalls.
The tracks those of the moun
tain animal and those of the boy
were found a mile and a half
northwest of his home. He dis
appeared about 4 p.m. Saturday.
The search started at dusk, con
tinued through the night and
Sunday. Today hunting dogs were
put on the trail.
Washington State
Secretary Called
OLYMPIA, Jan. 11 py- Fun
eral services for Secretary of
State Ernest N. Hutchinson will
be held here at 2 p.m., Wednes
day, it was decided today, and
burial will be in Masonic cem
etery. In the state capital, where
the state official ended his life's
work.
Dr. Hutchinson died in Seattle
early Sunday, after several weeks
of Illness.
Late Sports
VANCOUVER, Jan. 3 1
Vancouver Lions snapped out of
a four-week slump tonight and
registered a 4-1 victory over Spo
kane Clippers, their first win in
11 starts to take over undisputed
second place in the standings of
tbe Pacific coast hockey league.
NAMPA, Idaho, Jan. Sl.-(a-Eastern
Oregon Normal basket
ball team from LaGrande .tonight
defeated the Nampa Nazarene col
lege, 48 to 37. , .
Could Be Salem Year Ago Today
But It Happens to Be Michigan
IT
A view of Muskegon, Mich., street, where heavy snows tie np traffic
and give motorists extra work cleaning off their automobiles. Nor
thern Michigan was hardest hit in what was described as one of the
worst blizzards in history of tbe section. Drifts in spots were SO feet
deep. UN photo.
-O
Guilty Plea Filed
By Burglar Bourg
Sentence Awaits Results
of Charge Faced by
Martin Broom
Clovis "Frenchy" Bourg, 34, of
Portland, waived indictment and
pleaded guilty before Circuit
Judge L. H. McMahen yesterday
afternoon to a district attorney's
information charging him with
burglary of the Harry Hinkle
garage at West Woodburn, one
of the series of IS rural burglaries
to which state police announced
Saturday he had confessed.
Judge McMahan ordered Bourg
held pending sentence to be im
posed later after disposition of
the burglary charge facing -Martin
"Mark" Broom, 59, of Dexter,
In connection with the same po
lice roundup.
Bourg by his plea admitted
having broken Into the Hinkle
garage January 21 end stolen
carpenters' tools. At that time
Broom was already in jail here
under a Mt. Angel, justice court
order holding him for the grand
jury on a burglary charge. He has
denied participating in a series of
burglaries that occurred before
he gave himself up voluntarily to
the sheriff at Eugene January 20.
Observation Wells
In State Planned
PORTLAND, Jan. 31.-fP)-The
Oregon state planning board
recommended 200 base observa
tion wells, averaging one to every
480 square miles, to investigate
the value of t h e state's ground
water resources.
With the possibility the federal
government would share in the fi
nancing, the board estimated the
cost at $8750 the first year, $11,
250 the second year and $5000
for following years.
The board also recommended
20 experimental observation wells
and corollary reconnaisance work.
Carbon Monoxide
Kills Three Boys
CLARESHOLM, Alta., Jan. 31
(CP) -Playing In a closed garage
where they had started the motor
of an automobile, three young
boys were asphyxiated by carbon
monoxide fumes here late today.
The dead: Jackie Yd:om, five
years old; Lawrence Williams, 11,
and Tommy Foxcroft, eight.
Jack Burns, five, escaped a like
fate when his parents refused to
let him go out to play with the
other children because it was "too
cold."
Five new Precincts Created
And Two Dropped in. County
The county court yesterday ap
proved increase of the county's
voting precincts from 77 to 80
and accompanying changes which
County Clerk U. G. Boyer an
nounced last fall were likely to be
made. The changes included the
creation of five new precincts and
the dropping of two old ones.
The new precincts will be
known as Salem Nos. 25 and 26,
Hayesville, Union Hill and Sil
verton Hills. Those being merged,
in the Union Hill and Silrerton
Hills precincts, are Victor Point
and Silver Falls.
The rearrangement of voting
areas was made in an effort to
secure more convenient polling
places and to lighten election
board's loads in the most heavily
populated precincts. "
.. Salem's two new precincts are
approximately halves of the old
Salem Nos. 1 and 14
Snow Anniversary
Marked by Storm
Ocean Gales, Cold Rains
and Some Snow Come;
Shipping Suffers
PORTLAND, Jan. 31-yp)-Ocean
gales moved shoreward today,
staggering shipping and threaten
ing chill r a 1 n sleet and snow
flurries for western Oregon.
Higher temperatures were fore
cast, with snow in Cascade and
eastern Oregon sections.
Sleet disrupted traffic at Port
land's east city limits today, fol
lowing a light snow storm which
dusted the city.
A windstorm with a velocity oi
45 miles per hour blew down trees
in the vicinity of Klamath Falls. A
slab of marble was blown from
the corner of a downtown build
ing.
Fruit growers welcomed snow
and freezing temperatures in the
mid-Columbia district, where mild
temperatures threatened to bring
trees into bud too early.
Bend and Pendleton reported
minimum temperatures of 16 de
grees above zero. Wind with vel
ocity of J 4 miles per hour damag
ed power lines jn Portland. Mount
Hood ski crowds dropped to -4000
persons Sunday because of cold
and icy roads.
A two-day sleet storm left
Astoria highways in dangerous
condition. Rotary snow-plows
worked to clear the Santiam Pass
of five feet of snow.
Grants Pass received a half
inch of rain from midnight to
dawn today. "
The freighter Nabesna nomplet-
(Turn to page 2, col. 3)
January Building
Is Near Average
Building permits last month
valued $267,015 less than those
for January, 1937, but it Isn't
as much of a decrease as is sur
facely apparent In January, 1938,
a permit for the new Salem post
office was issued, amounting to
$255,600.
Deducting the valuation of the
permit to the US government.
last month's issue was but $1315
less than the same month a year
ago.
There were 72 permits issued
last month, valuing $20,244, as
against 42 written in January,
1937, for $287,259 Including the
government permit.
But four nermita for new dwell
ings were issued last monthto-
taling $10,244 In valuation. In
January, 1937, there were 12 new
dwelling permits granted, aggre
gate valuation of which was $22,
820. The new Salem No. 25 will be
that part of old Salem No. 1 lying
east and north of a line running
from Madison street south along
17th to Market, east to 18th and
south on 18th to D. Its eastern
boundary is the city limits line.
Voting in Salem No. 25 will be
done at Englewood school and in
Salem No. 1 at the United Breth
ren church. The old No. 1 precinct
bad a registration of 898 voters
last fall.
The half of old Salem No. 14 ly
ing between. North Fifth street
and the Willamette river will
constitute the new Salem precinct
No. 26 and Its polling place will
be Highland school. The No. 14
voting place will be the Immanuel
Baptist church. There were 924
voter registrations in old Salem
No. 14 last falL
Neither of the precinct changes
(Turn to page 2, coL 2)
Loyalists Say
It's Attack by
Insurgent Sub
Three British Officers,
Swedish Official Are !
Listed as Victims
Francisco Franco Takev
Dictator Office Over
new Spain Regime .
MADRID, Jan. 31 JP)- The
Spanish government tonight an
nounced 11 lives were lost when,
the British steamer Endymiop
was torpedoed and sunk off the
Spanish coast near Cartagena.
An official communique said
the 887-ton vessel was attacked
by "a submarine in the service
of the insurgents" 16 miles off
Cape Tinoso south of Cartagena,
important government-held Med
iterannean port in southeast
Spain.
The government gave no fur
ther details of the attack.
(Spanish newsagency dispatch
es, however, said four of the En
dymion casualties were foreign
ers three British officers of the
vessel a&d a Swedish non-intervention
committee official.) i
The Endymion ws built in 1909
and was owned by the Verano
Steamship company. Gibr alter
was her port of registry.
LONDON, Jan. 31 -VP- The
British Admiralty tonight an
nounced the British steamer En-
dymion had been tropedoed and
sunk in the jMediterraneaa off
the eastern Spanish coast.
The 887-tonj vessel sailed Sat
urday from Gibralter, ita port.of
registry. j
HENDAYE, j France, at the
Spanish Frontier, JanJ 31-jP)-Generalissimo
I Francisco , Franco
made himself president-dictator of
La reorganized insurgent regime to-
day while his troops continued an
offensive in south Spain.
Heavy fighting went into ita
second day on the border of Bad
ajos and Cordoba provinces near
the Almeda mercury mining re
gion which the insurgents vainly
sought to capture a year ago.
The new Franco government,
which will have its parliamentary
seat at Burgos in north central
Spain, Included a number of prom
inent, members of the national
council with! which Franco has -been
ruling since October, 193
when he modelled it after the
Italian grand council of fascism.
Until now Franco's title has
been simply ?E1 Caudlllo" the
chief.
The reorganization, decreed by
Franco yesterday, created a cab-,.-.
Inet of 11 ministers.
Franco retained supreme com
mand of the armed forces and as
sumed the presidency of the coun
cil of ministers. He lost none of
the absolute dictatorial powers he
previously held.
Gen. Luis Orgaz was made head
of the war department, Vice-Adm.
Joaquin Cervera, son of the
Spanish-American war admiral,
head of the navy department, and
Gen. Kindelan, the air depart
ment, i
Postoffice to Be i
Turned on Street
The southward course of Sa
lem's old postoffice, being moved
to the Willamette university cam
pus to serve as a law depart
ment building1, was halted yes
terday as it approached, the south
erly curb of! State street and
preparations for turning it for
the trip eastward were begun,
the complicated task -of turning
it is expected to require more
than a week.
Because of widespread interest
in the moving job. The States
man has arranged tor E. W. Le
beck, moving! contractor, to be
interviewed on the "Just Think"
period over radio station KSLM
tonight at :J0 o'clock. He will
answer questions about details of
the moving task. ' -
Spring Beauties Appear
On Hills, Eola Dhtrict
Ralph Ferguson of Eola picked
the first spring beauties reported
this year. Ferguson found the
flowers In the hills near Eola.
B
A L LADE
oi TOD Ay
In Nanking an American gets
slapped, off coast of Spain, a
British v e s 8 e 1's sunk; and
though all peaceful clUzens
agree attacking non-combatants
is "the bunk,", wherever there
are wars and battles waged, it's
certain that some men will get
excited, and folk who haven't
urgent business there had best
stay elsewhere, even though in
vited, i .
4- (