Tournament News ! Basketball fans will find the most complete coverage of the state tournament la The Statesman and read It hours ahead. Weather Rain today and Saturday, lightly warmer; Max. Temp. Thursday 47, Min. 82, river 12.8 feet, rain .04 Inch. POUNDDD 1651 I EIGHTY-SEVENTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, March 18, 1938 Price 3c; Newsstands 5c No. 303 Drafts .broad Relief inmeii: VV .Rail over ' . - ; ... -.. - - . .. - ejj 1 ose Finishes O- Upsets Add to our r - in Interest; v . Amity, Mac High, Baker and St. Helens Billed for Semi-Finals Three Overtime Tussles in Day; .Attendance Continues Heavy YESTERDAY'S RESULTS . Championship Flight Amity 26, Chiloquin 21. Mac Hi 34, Unl. Hi 32. Baker 40, Sandy 20. St. Helens 43, Med rd 25. Consolation Series Thurston 26, Adams 24. Woodbnrn 36, Salem 34. ' K. Falls 42, Dallas 22. Eugene 41, Myrtle Point 40. TODAY'S GAMES Championship Flight 7:30 p.m., Amity vs. Mac Hi. 8:30 p.m.. Baker vs. St. Helens. (3d and 4th place brackets) 2 T.m., Chiloquin vs. Uni. Hi. "3 p.m., Sandy vs. Medford. Consolation Series - 10 a.m., K. Falls ts. E a gene. 11 a.m., Woodburn ts. Thurs ton. By RON GEMMELL ncvuiui jevcai . lull luiiruejf entrants staged nearly as wild a day inside Willamette's hoop haven yesterday as the weather men Etlrred up without. While the weather man upset his bucket and all precedent to enfold Salem and environs in a tlanket -of snow, the 16 court teams that are busily battling for superiority on Willamette's court turned In just as startling linnet of Mr ' Tlonastera unofficial nil.-. ; The congealed "mist"', that, en gulfed the capital lt? yesterday morning kept Willamette's jovial president. Dr. Bruce Baxter, busy explaining that "not every insti tution of higher learning would - go to such lengths to entertain its visitors.' and the ambitious kicking the dope bucket kept prognostlcators up to their necks J .uvt. lit o.w&s. - Nightcap games found Baker's Bulldogs graciously . gratifying one prediction, oy running to an easy 40-20 win over Sandy, but the Saints of St. Helena nearly caved in all prognasticators, pots by soundly trouncing Medford, 43-25. "Sodden Death' Games Prevail Three tilts went into the "sud den death" period before being decided, setting an all-time new one-day record, for overtime games. Salem, for its second time, saw hopes of a tourney win go glimmering as Wood bum's Shaw put the "out" s'gn on the Vikings with, a two-point toss In their extra session; -Eugene's 'Whitey' Austin flipped from far out In an overtime with Myr tle Point to save the day for a teaia that was badly beaten near ly all ' the way; and Mae Hi turned in number two tourney triumph." over University high, tIb the two-point, "sudden ' death' route. - Bauer's smooth ball-handlers, -. J (Turn to page 12, col. 1) 91 Drivers Lose License, February Ninety-one motor, vehicle driv ers' licenses either were sus pended or; revoked In Oregon Jn - February, Secretary of State Snell Teported. There were 53 permits Tevoked or suspended during Feb-.- ruary, 1937. - Forty-nine of the 54 revoca tlons last month were for , driv . ing while Intoxicated. Convic tions for reckless driving result - : ed In 20 of the 57 suspensions. ' : Snell .-warned against automo bile owners allowing other per sona to drive their ears. He said . 65 per cent of defendants in cases .subject to the safety responsibility . act this year were driving , machines ; registered in ' another person's name. Mrs, Itaac t. Patterton Reported Critically III PORTLAND," March 17-65V Mrs. Isaac Lee Patterson, widow of the former governor of Oregon, was critically ill at the Good Sa maritan hospital today. She suf . fered an attack of pneumonia. Case Goes to Jury r SEATTLE. March . 1 7.-UP)-Aft er deliberating 50 minutes, the Jury which heard the Claire and Dell Richardson "bathtub death trial" retired tonight, to resume ita pondeiings tomorrow. AMITY HOOKERS WIN STATE B TITLE .v. I ff-V The Amity high school basketeers, state champions among schools with enrollment of less than 150. They won this honor by defeating Chiloqnin 26 to 21 In a hard-fought and close contest Thursday. Am ity goes on Into the senior tournament sejni-finals tonight. Front row, from left, M. Giesy, Kidd, Lee, W. Giesy, Shields and Meeker. Back row, Freeborn, Wildt, Moddemeyer, Worthington, Peterson and Coach Orile Bobbins. r o : : : Amity Quintet Is State B Champion Comes From Behind, Beats Chiloquin 26-21 With Wildt Sparkplug At 4:10 yesterday afternoon Amity high school, by Tirtue of its 26-21 win over the highly touted Chiloquin quint, was un officially crowned king of the state's "B" teams. Formal crown ing will come Saturday night, when the Orile Robbins-coached clan will receive the trophy ecu bjematic of that championships ; On the short end of a 6-1 Xirst-quarter count, 'Amity lorged to the fore four minutes into the second period on a bucket by Moddemeyer,, and from there was never headed. Both teams were ragged throughout most of the contest, and both had tough luck in con necting with shots. Arnold Wildt, Amity guard, kept the fire burning sufficient ly for his team, by scoring buck ets in the clutch when they were needed most. He led the scoring with 8 tallies, on four field goals. . , The Chiloqnins, led by the red-thatched Rice, member of last year's all-star 'B" selection, swarmed all over the Amitys in (Turn to page 12, col. 3) Labor Board Man Silent on Issues PORTLAND, March 1-UP- Nathan Witt, Washington, D. C, secretary of the national labor re lations board, left here today aft er a one-day survey of the 31-week-old AFL-CIO struggle for control of sawmill workers, which he termed the most involved case to cctne before the NLRB, Witt refused to comment on the situation after interviewing fac tions in the dispute. He said he did not expect congress to make any vital changes in the Wagner act. He conferred with Trial Exam iner Harry Haxel and NLRB Atty. John Babe, who have been con ducting a case against the Indus trial Employes' . union, - formerly the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen. at Toledo . for the past four months. Transcript in the .case has passed the 12,000 page mark. Relief Administration Probe To Be Opened An Investigation of the admin- Utration of relief la Marlon coun ty will be launched definitely to day by the grand jury. Dist Atty. Lyle J. Page disclosed last night. The first witness this morning to be called before the jury will be C' A. Sprague, editor and pub-; fisher of The Oregon Statesman." - Reports front sources, dose o the grand Jury gave promise of the Impending investigation soon after The Statesman in two edi torials last month pointed out re ported cases of alleged incivility and prolonged delay In the han dling of relief "clients" in this county. ' - - - . - Members of. the county court at the time said they would wel come the investigation but de fended the relief committee, of which they are a part, and averred they were handicapped by regal tlons.from above, such as rules promulgated 'by, the state relief Provide Hoop A Grandson to Get $7500 Inheritance Of Man He KiUed r rockford, in., March 17- (AVMartin Pearson, 82, and fee ble, was slain two days after Christmas last year. He was struck with a hammer handle, gagged, bound and thrust under a bed. His assailants filched 240 and fled. His grandson, Gordon Malm, 19, pleaded guilty to the murder. His accomplice, Delora Wayne Montgomery, 16, was convicted by a circuit court jury yesterday and fris penalty was fixed at 14 years in prison. Both will be sen tenced Saturday. v . The case took an ironical turn today. Attorneys said young Malm would inherit the old man's es tate estimated at 17 500 since he la the sole heir. Vice Probe Urged In Klamath Falls KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., March 17-itfV-Circuit Judge Ed Wftrri "R A c r nrot In Aie1 Inatn lions to a grand' Jury today, read acrmintn nt iha mnrrior trial Dell and Claire Richardson in Seattle in support of a charge that gambling and vice Interests were trying to "make monkeys" of the law here The judge read excerpts from a Seattle newspaper story which quoted Patricia O'Neill of Klam ath Falls as testifying that she operated a vice establishment here, that she "imagined" it was againBt the law and that "vice doesn't fight the law; it buys It. Asserting that the gambling take In Klamath Falls was $500,' 000 a year, Judge Ashurst told the grand Jury that "when a city administration will let such things exist, the inference must be that it Is either actuated by cowardice or corruption. Derrick Falls, Worker v f j ff,. i i$ brushed by, Timber ST. HELENS, Ore., March 17 -(AVOscar M. Olson, 64, creo - sotmg piant worker, was killed mstanuy today when a derrick overturned and he was" struck by falling logs. surviving are his widow, a daughter and three sons, all of I St Helens. by Grand Jury committee and the federal govern ment. The grand Jury received Some testimony regarding the relief or- rantutlnn last mnntii Iwfnn ft turned to the brewery picket cases and routine matters. "Complaints reported in The Statesman editorials Included the following: Lack of civility and consider tion toward relief rolls people calling at the relief office, v Lack": of " attention " to relief clients', needs, such as repeatedly requiring them to return to the relief office before they are final - ly granted an audience to explain their problems. .Failure to perform within rea - sonable time promises , to havelditiona would force suspension of case workers visit clients, without which needs for food and fuel are often passed ever. Lack of harmony among mem (Turn to page 2, col. 2) - I Gale, Heavy Rain Follow Snowfall Occurrence Repeats St. Patrick's Day of 1920, Is Recalled Winds of gale proportions re turned to buffet Salem and vicin ity last night after a day that brought the rare occurrence of an inch of snow in mid-March. A steady, cold rain accompanied the blow, which averaged nearly 40 miles per hour and rose to 45 on the gusts. Overnight rains and the snow added .84 inch to the month's precipitation total, raising it to 3.71 Inches, or .04 inch below mean average for the entire month. The United States weather bu reau predicted the rains would continue today and Saturday and heavy snows would fall in the mountain regions. Exactly 18 years ago yester day four inches of snow blanket ed the ground Jn Salem. Mrs. B. L. Steeves recalled. She said she dug daffodils out of the snow to decorate a party table. WPA work in the Silver Falls Keational area was halted yes- """J "J 'c""rcu a reported one loot depth of snow and workmen were told to stay at home. Many travel (Turn to page 2, col. 7) j Henry Quam Wins Directed Verdict EUGENE, Ore.. March 17-(M- Jurors in Circuit Judge G. F, Skipworth's court returned a di rected verdict of acquittal today for Henry Quam, AFL barbers' union member, who had been charged with riot in connection with stench bombings of non union barber shops, Judge Skipworth ruled there was no evidence to connect Quam with the crime. He was Indicted with Ray W. Blaine, local AFL i Q&roers union oiiiciai, uui vu- tained a separate trial. Blaine i i ... ... . was convicted Charges against Arthur Peter- I son and S. Hughes, also Indicted, were dropped when they turned I state's evidence. 'Upset Boat' Just Floating Log, Said THE DALLES, March 17-iflV jg' State police said,. today a huge seen floating down the Colum rlver was responsible for a report that a boat carrying two people had gone over CelQo falls and capsized. The log, but bo boat, was found below the. falls and no mid-Co lumbia residents were reported "tosl." the officers said after j patrollng the river for several hours. Wishram resident; and a gov ernment , lock operator at Ten Mile reported the object. . Big- Coquille industry To Closed Employs 600 i COQUILLE, March 17-ff)-The f Smith Wood Products company in- formed more than COO employes 1 todav unfavorable marketing eon I operations March 25. I The AFL bargaining agency re- ijected a proposal by the manage- - 1 ment that it endeavor to continue lby reducing wages 10 per cent. Thrills 600 Killed by Rebels' Bombs At Barcelona Insurgent Planes Still Come; 1000 Wounded, Officials Claim Caspe Captured in Drive by Franco Forces to Reach Coast Goal BARCELONA, March 17-(JP)-Relentless insurgent bombers struck at Barcelona again to night in the tenth of a series of raids which already had taken 600 lives within 24 hours. The planes dropped about 20 bombs on a section of this refugee-packed capital which had not been hit in raids earlier to day. Casualties were reported heavy and dozens of ambulances were summoned from the north ern part of Barcelona. The raid began at 10:10 p.m. (5:30 p.m. EST) and at almost the same time other Insurgent planes bombed the cities of Tar ragona and San Vincente on the Catalan coast, inflicting a con siderable number of casualties. Before the last raid, a careful check by the defense board show ed 415 dead and 700 wounded, but it was explained that the fatalities listed included only bodies removed from debris in this greatest industrial city of Spain. Estimates by doctors gave the dead as COO and the wounded, 1000. The war ministry reported officially that 600 had been kill ed and 400 wounded. Wave on wave of insurgent bombers roared over Barcelona nine times in 16 hours raining (Tarn toj- ptge 1, col. 5 ) , 'Flatfeet' Ousted By Police Chief PHILADELPHIA, March 17- (!P)-Policemen of suburban lower Merlon township won't be called flatfeet if Superintendent Samuel Gearhart can help it. Gearhart announced today each of the township's 110 policemen would have his feet examined and measured by a foot special ist. Custom-made shoes, cost ing $13 a pair, will be furnished each patrolman. "Half the troubles of mankind are due to the feet," Gearhart said. ' LEDFORD ' l ... .' - b , ! iMii..i wi miw . --:. ,J.t -t.-i--i - " rirrMririrntriBM,MrrM11III tr-aMW M , m m WiiiiiiiisawaiwiaswiiaMsawaawMaassiaissilisM . f I " i "' j , i t f " P y I .i ! " ;- .i ; , - ' v ' : " "V t -t""y . 1 :' Upper picture, Jory trying Mrs. Agnes JToan Ledford on first degree murder charge Inspects the Led ford home near Yankton, not far from St. Helens, where the state contends Bath and Dorothy Ledford, the defendant's stepdaughters, were poisoned last September. Below, wild blackberries which the state when a nearby potato field was Lithuania and Poland Snarl; Gash Feared Six Demands Mentioned; Nazi Propaganda Is Spread, Austria Russia Invites to Peace Parley; Blum Is Given Confidence Vote WARSAW, March 18.-(Friday) -(JPJ-Tension over the Polish-Lithuanian crisis mounted today with an official government an nouncement that a strong note had been sent to Lithuania. Details of the note were not made public, but the newspaper Weiczor Warsawski declared it centered ou six points, which it described as: 1. Immediate reestablishment of diplomatic relations between the countries. 2. Immediate resumption of railway and postal communica tions. 3. Cancellation pf a paragraph In the Lithuanian constitution re ferring to Wilno as the Lithuanian capital. 4. Conclusion of an agreement on treatment of minorities in both countries. 5. Immediate conclusion o f commercial and customs treaties. 6. Complete and proper satis faction for the frontier incident March 11 in which a Polish border guard was killed. VIENNA, March 17.-(P)-Tbe new Austro-German nazi admin istration threw its propaganda machine into high gear today to (Turn to page 2, col. 7) BigNavyMenWin Victory in House WASHINGTON, March -Big navy men exalted tonight after the house tentatively okehed a 20 per cent Increase in the United States fleet They said the decision assured them of an overwhelming victory when, the administration's billion dollar navy expansion program comes to a final vote on Monday The 20 per cent fleet Increase is the first, and most important. section of the expansion bill. It authorizes construction of 46 new warships, 22 auxiliary vessels and 950 naval airplanes. Earlier in the day. Majority Leader Rayburn (D-Tex) solemn ly informed the house he thought congress might be called upon to vote an even bigger armament program before next January. JURY INSPECTS BERRY PATCH contends was ute source ox tarn pouou, wowm onio we Berry dwki sprayed Associated Press photo, Foreign Policy Now Under Fire NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN Chamberlain Will Clarify His Views Statement Is Designed to Alleviate Pressure ; Hostility Grows LONDON. March 1 7-UP)-Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain de cided tonight to make a clear-cut statement on Britain's foreign policy to quell a rising tide of op position to him In the cabinet, commons and the eountry. Menaced by revolt within his own ranks against his own cau tious policy, Chamberlain was re ported to have given ground in an effort to restore harmony. Sources close to the govern ment said Chamberlain would tell commons next week the stand the cabinet is adopting on such cri tical issues as Czechoslovakia and Spain. ' " . Such a course was expected to do much to pacify those clamor ing for an immediate declaration. Government sources have ln- (Turn to page 2, col. 7). Billfold Stolen, R. Perry Reports Ralph W. Perry, nominee for the Oregon state grange master ship to be voted on next month, reported to city police Wednesday that a billfold containing approx imately $45 was stolen from his room at a local hotel. He said he left his room, locked, for a few minutes to answer a telephone call and found the billfold miss ing when he returned. the Jury inspects the patch of y A' r - - i ' - I f One Merger Is Already Given RFC Scrutiny Quick Action Advocated by President; Three Men Given Task ICC Members Chosen to View Situation ; Job Already Started WASHINGTON, March 17.-MP) -The Reconstruction Finance cor poration is studying the feasibil ity of a merger ; of the Chicago and Northwestern and the Chica go, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pa cific railroads. Chairman Jesse H. Jones, an nouncing this at a press confer ence today, said the study was be ing made to determine what sav ings could be effected. He indicated similar studies of other railroads might be made in the future. Calling the Milwaukee - North western study "not a little Job. Jones said he did not expect the RFC's railroad experts to have a report ready for two or three months. WASHINGTON. March n.-(Ja -President Roosevelt, advocating quick action to stave off more railroad bankruptcies, assigned three experts today to draft an ' emergency and program within a week. He nicked Chairman W. M. W. Splawn, and Commissioner Joseph B. Eastman, and Charles D. Ma haffie of the interstate commerce commission from a group of 14 ad visors who discussed railroad pre- Diems wnn him. They were asked to make a definite recommenda tion by next Thursday. bplawn said the trio would start work tonight on recommendations dealinr with Reconstmrtinn Fi nance Corporation loans, refinan cing, economies ana other means Of tidins ttiA raf1rn1 niroi. SV current business recession. " He estimated SO per cent of Am erica's railroads mileage was in bankruptcy and said other ralK ' iuuub were inreaienea witn re ceivership. No effort would be madA t tkia time, he indicated, to solve' sutfh long-range problems as consolida tions and reorganizations. r One of the 14 advisors told the nresident. Snlawn rennrtort that virtually dictatorial powers would have to be wielded by some gov ernment agency to effect any sub stantial savings in the cost ef railroad operations. This advisor, who was not identified to report ers, estimated consolidations and other economies ronld en vn . t ha roaas up to Z50,000,000 a year, but said 70 ner eent of the aa-rlnn would have to be made on labor. He also declared the opposition of many cities. markets and rail road officials would have to be overriden ruthlessly. Ruge, Pioneer of West Salem, Dies Charles S. Ruge, resident' of West Salem for 35 years and a re tired farmer of this section, died last night at the residence, 1243 Edgewater street, at the age of 70 years. He came here In 1903, lived In Salem for a year, then moved across the river to West Salem, where he was a farmer for many years. He served as water super intendent of the city for a period , ending about Jive years ago. Rnge , street in West Salem was named for Mr. Ruge. He was a member of the German Lutheran church -and affiliated with the Woodmen of the World.. .. if Mr. Ruge was born la Berlin, Germany, April 25, 1887. On com ing to this country he farmed in the Dakotas before coming here. Survivors include three daaga- " ters, ; Mrs. Fred Gibson, Miss Charles Unrub ; and : Miss Lillie Ruge, all of Salem, a brother, Al bert, also of Salem, and a stepson. -Albert Schwartz, Portland.' - ' Funeral arrangements in charge of the Clough-Barrick : company. ' are Incomplete. - v From Stock Mart . NEW YORK, 'March 17. Richard Whitney, who twice has' pleaded guilty to grand larceny in r the spectacular ' collapse of his Wall street ' firm, was expelled ' from v the . New t York stock ex-" change. Five times he had been v Its president '" ' " - His two senior partners, Edwin ' D. Morgan, Jr and Henry D. Hy- gatt, were exonerated of any will ful wrongdoing, but nevertheless suspended for three years nndet a rule which makes an exchange member responsible for the -act of his associates. No criminal ac Whitney Expelled tion is pending against them. ?