. !t Deadline Near The Statesman will closet .Its jule of the 48 famous P tat lag oa May 1. Late , porchaserse are- coming la ' rapidly. Get yours now. Weather Fair today' and ' Friday, cloudiness near coast, ao temperature change; max ' temp. Wednesday 68, in la. 84, river 10 feet, tartly cloady. PCUNDQD 1651 EIGHTY-UIGHTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning, April 21, 1938 Price SerNewsstandVSe No. 21 Try ario Power Rate fo ystem .Bb On Stale Heating Plani&ays Van ion Holds Project Legal If Emergency Board of Control may Bay Site Despite 1937 Act, Says Holds Commission Has Power to Pay for Equipping Plant Arf attorney general's opinion Issued here yesterday possibly opened the - way for the state hoard of control and th- capitol reconstruction commission to ne gotiate for a site for a central heating plant - to serve the state buildisg group. . The opinion, by Attorney Gen eral I. H. Van Winkle, ruled that provided an ! emergency existed the board of control had author ity to purchase land or such a I-lant and the commission, to ex pend building funds for it con struction. The state legal adviser's writ .ten decision varied from an an , nouncement made at a recent Ward meeting by Wallice Whar j ton, state budget director, who said he understood the capitol, Opin commission had no antnonty to equip the . plant if it were lo cated off the property purchased under," the 1937 legislative act for building expansion. Land Across 12th . Street Tentative Site Land' east of the tate office building, across 12th street, has been eyed by the board ot con trol .and the commission as a site for the proposed new heat ing plant. 1 The commission re cently reported it would have $160,000 left after paying for tbe hew library-office building. Remodeling and enlargement of the old heating plant has been estimated at $10 000. Expenditure of capitol recon struction commission funds would be contingent npon the plant pro viding heat for the n w Btate capitol building and library and ' office structure or in coopera tion with the board of control ' in providing a heading plant riot only to serve the new cap'tol and library buildings but also other buildings owned by the stale. .... Baker; Man Given Term and Parole 1 BAKER, April 20-;P)-Charged with embezzling $300 while an employe ef the World War Veter ans State Aid commission, War ren Lemmon, Baker, was sen tenced to two years in prison to day by Circuit Judge C. H. Mc Colloch and paroled to his broth er-in-law. I dditics . . . in the N etc , PITTSBURGH, April 20-tfJ)- ritIsMhrWcal circles today ..... tmmithti idb ; nueiuon urtj u 111- . - . . . at : Vlll billy tunes music tnd hillbilly bandsmen musicians?" A local muslstan's anion denied the hill folk admittance to their organization on ". grounds "that noise" they created really was not music -" ' So the "hillbillies" started anion of their own. - - Jim Toomey. who jigged his way from Texarkana, Ark., and says he is "some pumpkins" with a banjo, announced 167 of the hill folk already have signed up WASHINGTON, April 20-P) -Art Judges flipped SDO plas ter models today and picked design for a new nickel show 1 ng I- Thomas Jefferson ' on the heads" side and his Monti cello home on the tafls.,r Jast . which design iron, however, may not be an nounced for a day or two. There is a $1,000 prize for the winning artist. The new nickel is to cater circulation this fall, replacing the present "buffalo" which has served tta minimum statu tory life of 2S years. ; ROME, April 20-;PHl Duce's campaign for more Italian tables has gotten results this year.- - The official Gazette today pub- : llBhed figures tor the first three months ot 1938 showing a total of 281,629 births compared with 257.030 for the same period last year. - The figures represented an an nual birthrate of .5.8 per 1.0 0 Inhabitants compared with 23.8 for tbe first three aionths of 1937, : : 'Has- Authority to Mother Kept his Earnings; now Son Jackie Stops her Eviction i V i ... x v. ' , V .a 1 - ' a MfrAfctva Sirs. Lillian Coogan Bernstein, who " x i t 7"'-:'" la connection .with son Jacfcle's suit to recover f4 ,000,000 estate he vers he earned as child screen star bat never received fi um irfa parents. Yesterday when a receiver was named for the estate claim ed, Jackie agreed to let her keep her .three automobiles and remain In her mansion. - - - Judge Criticizes FR Pump Priming Summers Says Townsend Tax Cure for US' Case of 'Pernicious Anemia' President Roosevelt's new pump priming" proposal came in for strong criticism when Judge M. C. Summers addressed a crowd which comfortably filled the au ditorium of the armory Wednes day night, on .the subject of the general welfare act. Judge Summers painted a life- ike word picture of the "sickbed of Uncle Sam," describing the ad ministering of a "billion dollar shot in the arm" by "Dr. J. Pler- oont Morgan." who, it was ex plained, was making his 37th visit, the reference being to tne present size of the national debt. Then a new physician, ut Francis E. Townsend. was called into consultation. I- He t diagnosed the" disease " as ' pernicious ane mia" and prescribed a 2 per cent (Turn to Page 2, Col. 6) .. Polk Republicans To Meet Tonight Republicans of Polk county win meet in the West Salem commun ity hall tonight at 7:30 o'clock to organize a county republican club, Harold Prultt, state president of the Oregon Republican club,-re ported yesterday. A temporary chairman will be elected and a constitution and by laws committee . appointed. The Polk, county group will be one of several county units which .have organised actively in the past two or three months. ; Several candidates for state and county office will be introduced Charles A. Sprague of Salem, re publican candidate for governor, has indicated he will attend. Prultt .said he will leave Sat urday for Hood River, where he will meet with republicans of that eonnty before proceeding to other eastern Oregon points on an or ganization tour. Seven Veterans Hurt When Riot Flares in NEW YORK, April 2Q-VP) Seven men, described by - their comrades as American -war vet erans were injured' seriously enough to require hospital treat ment in a riot tonight in the Torkville casino,; where the pro Nazi German-Anvjrican Bund was holding -; a meeting. ; The outbreak, in which chairs were thrown and ? m a were trampled underfoot, was precipi tated when -Jean Mathias, who said he was a member of . the v wept as she testified la court Peasant Purge Is Halted by Stalin Says Much Harm Done; Seeks to Boost Grain Farms' Output ., MOSCOW, April 19-i!P)-Joseph Stalin today forbade further purging of collective farmers in what some foreign circles regard ed as a move to assure produc tion of a bumper grain crop. The order, one of the sharp est ever to issue from the Krem lin, bluntly prohibited "any purges in collective farms under any pretext whatsoever." How widely expulsion of peas ants from farms had affected agriculture was not disclosed, but the order indicated " many had been turned out by the farms' administrative officials for un satisfactory work or merely at the command ot the farms' chair man. ' : ' :? -... Such drastic punishment of recalcitrant peasants waa forbid den in the future except in ex traordinary cases of "incorrig ibles." Hereafter, - public repri mands, fines and transfers - to other Jobs will be the penalties. Stalin's order declared - much harm had followed mass expul sions of peasants from farms for trivial reasons on the pretext of purging them as hostile elements. Truck Backs Down Hill, Pair Killed BAKER, April 20- -A truck loaded with grain; stalling as it approached the top of a steep hill, crashed down grade Tues day night, carrying Gliomas E. Elrod, S u m p t e r rancher, and John A. Frerlks, Baker, believed to have been the driver, to their deaths in the powder river. The accident was disci jsed to day when Henry Elrod, anxious over the failure of his father to return home, found the wrecked truck. Bund Meeting American Legion . and one of a group of about 60 veterans who had gone to the hall as observ ers, interrupted : the proceedings to inquire: - Will any English be spoken here?" Fighting broke out instantly and spread to the street, r -Three men were arrested. i An unidentified man vearing the Bund -uniform ' was. one of those -beaten in street fighting. He was rescued by the police. : : Build Winkle Jaclde Blocks Move toEject Mother, House " . i . Ex-Star's . Intercession Brings. Revision in Receiver's Power Mrs. Bernstein Seeks Permission, Change Her Testimony LOS "ANGELES, April 20--Jackie Coogan, who is suing his mother and stepfather for an ac counting of $4,000,000 he claims he earned as a child actor, inter ceded today to prevent their be ing ejected from their mansion at nearby Van Nuys and deprived the use of three costly automo biles. Atty. John Bilby, named as temporary receiver of the Coogan property, was empowered by the court to seize furniture and fur nishings in the Coogan home. Permit Mother to Keep Cars, House At Jackie's instance, a stipula tion was entered between his law yers and those of his mother and stepfather, providing that the lat ter, be permitted to retain posses sion ot the house, the three auto mobiles and all personal effects. Mrs. Lillian Coogan Bernstein, who called her son a bad boy, was accused of having made "incon sistent and contradictory state- ments under oath" in an affidavit filed in answer to her deposition preparatory to trial of the suit for an accounting brought by Jackie. Later today Mrs. Bernstein pe titioned the court for permission to amend her deposition, stating she had either erred in some of her sworn statements or had fail ed to properly present facts. Her petition was filed after her son's lawyers had refused to grant her the right to change the story she told under oath. Says She Didn't Plan on Trust The ex-star's mother, who mar ried Arthur L. Bernstein, overseer of the Coogan finances after her husband's automobile death, de clared last Monday that she nev er intended to create a trust for her son, that he had no estate, mat every cent ne earned as a minor was her's. Attached to the affidavit made by Jackie were copies of docu (Turn to Page 2, Col. 8) Dayton to Secure Fuel Distillery PORTLAND, Ore.! April 20-MP) -Manufacture of fuel alcohol from farm wastes will be inaugurated soon at Dayton, a Yamhill coon ty delegation told a meeting of farmers, business men and chem Ists, called by the Oregon farm Chemurgic council to open a cam paign for one of four federal farm research laboratories here. - Speakers said a major oil com pany was using one-third alcohol in English motor fuels. They said if 10 per cent of the United States-motor fuel supply was al cohol, it would require all the produce ot tillable lands in the nation. "Agriculture should be self helping - and not - .continuously looking, for Santa Claus," James W. 'Richardson, Dayton, told the group. "American agriculture does not want a dictator nor a dole, but a fair price for farm products." Navy Bill Meets Delay by Critics WASHINGTON,. April i(t-JPf-Hopes of administration leaders for quick senate action on the $1,156,546,000 naval expansion bill faded tonight because of at tacks by critics, but the leaders said there was "not the slight est doubt" ot ultimate ' passage by an overwhelming margin.' Beginning a fight against - the measure today. Senator Nye "(R ND), contended it was unneces sary because there was no "group of foes" that could - "even threaten- an encroachment : on our territory." - : To this. Chairman - Walsh CD Maes), of the naval aif fairs .committee- replied that .a combina tion of German and Japanese sea- power, or the navies of Russia and Japan together could attack and destroy the present United States navy. . Meyers Stick To Guns, Call Of Legislature Defies State Attorney Ruling Holding He Lacks Authority Washington's Governor Flies From East, Has no Comment OLYMPIA, April 20.-(P)-Lt, Gov. Victor A. Meyers said late today the special session of the state legislature would "go through as scheduled," in spite of a ruling by Attorney General Hamilton the "acting governor has no authority" for such actipIL informed of the lieutenant gov ernor s decision. Governor Mar tin, who returned to the state from the national capital today, said he had "no comment" to make. Meyers issued Ithe proclamation early today, had it notarized by a King county justice of the peace, and presented it! to the secretary 01 state to have it attested, which was refused. i Asked for an opinion regarding ne legality of the matter, the at torney general gave his decision, that the acting governor had no authority to call an extraordinary session of the state legislature, but said: Supreme Court Ruling Held Needed "It seems to me there is a ne cessity of the matter being de termined by our supreme court." Meyers, when informed of the attorney general's decision, said: "I bave obtained legal advice here and in Seattle, and the opinion is, the call is en y rely legai. Tne proclamation was made while I was acting rover- (Turn to Page 2, Col. 4) LA Mayor Scored N In Kynette Case Prosecutor Says Campaign Financed by Gambling Interest Backers LOS ANGELES, April 20.-UPI- The political campaigns of Mayor rrank L. Shaw were financed bv Los Angeles' gambling Interests and his brother-secretary, Joseph bhaw, was a party to the collec tion of the money, the state charged today in the trial of act ing Police Capt. Earle E. Kynette and two other officers for the bombing of Harry Richmond, pri vate investigator. Chief Deputy Dist. Atty. Eugene D. Williams made the accusation in an opening statement in su perior court. The prosecutor launched into a bitter denunciation of the police "intelligence squad," headed by Kynette, and declared the state would prove Kynette threatened to "get" Raymond for his activi ties In the investigation of graft ana corruption in Los Angeles. "This case arises out of the uau ,u rase 4 o ) Late Sports ' new York, April 2o-(pv- Natie Mann came back to New York tonight for the first time since Joe Louis dy. .united him , and stopped Hans Harerlick the Austrian champion, in the third round of a 10-round bout at the Hippodrome. Mann weighed 193 to his rival's 184. - Referee Arthur Donovan halted the proceedings at 2 minutes, 54 seconds of the third round as Harerlick was on the floor for the eighth time in the abbrev iated - contest. Mann, the New Haven husky who lasted the same , distance against Lovis a couple of months ago, hit Haver lock with everything but the ring posts. 1 ECGENEv Ore.. April 20-0 The University of Oregoa base ball squad warmed up for the northern division opener with Oregon State here Friday by de feating Oregon Normal 16 to 8 today. - . Paul Thunemoun, sophomore left-hander, gave ; eight hits in nine innings on the mound for Oregon. The squads used a total of SO players. Oregon Normal: . .'. .. . 8 7 Oregon .............16 11 4 . J. MCler.sMohler and Tarpln: Thunemann and Walden, Beard, CORVALLIS, Ore.;: April 20-6iP)-Oregon State college's tennis team defeated infield college 4 to 8 in ' a non-conference match here today. Oregon state won three ot five singles matches and broke even in two doubles games - CORVALLIS, April 20-CPH-The Oregon State college Rook base- ball squad turned out a 6 to 3 victory over Xebanon high school today for a sixth straight . win- Lawmakers Worry To Settle Profits Tax Dispute v. jysv s sJt-f inSMiinsssssnwiMirtSi i.uaiiMnn!snnBnssSB , v- ts. 4 Ii . ' , j, '?' , f- 't-'". ' " : V-S - : ? :i J i,J : ' 1 1 Shown discussing the new pending berg of Michigan, Representative lina, chairman of house ways and means committee, ana tennior Pat Harrison of Mississippi, chairman of senate finance committee. Effort to Outlaw Profit Tax Grows Byrnes9 Committee Says Levy's Abolition to Aid ' Business WASHINGTON, April 20 -(P)-Fowerful new pressure for com plete abolition of the undistrib uted profits tax came today from an unexpected source the senate unemployment committee but Roosevelt lieutenants in-? he house still insisted that the levy be re tained. . ... There was no sign that the new development would break the deadlock between the senate, which has voted repeal of the tax, and the house, which has decided to retain it In modified form. Nevertheless, critics of the tax were heartened by the report of the unemployment commit tee headed by Senator Byrnes (D-SC), usually a strong supporter of the administration. The committee, which has been studying the cause and cure of Joblessness, declared that enactment of revenue legisla tion along lines approved by the senate "will be exceedingly help ful" in reducing unemployment The senate bill, besides provid ing for repeal of the surplus tax, calls for a flat 15 per cent rate on capital gains in lieu of a house- approved graduated scale. Bus iness men have contended the sen ale bill would encourage business and unfreeze capital. Drive for 'Army' Hall Is Renewed Immediate start of a drive to ixaise $5000 needed to complete the new Salvation - Army post headquarters building here was decided on at a committee meet ing yesterday oyer which T. A. Windishar presided Twenty local business men agreed to work un der Windishar's direction to this end.- r ; - - - ' ' ' - While construction was in prog ress last fall efforts to obtain the full building fund , quota were postponed so as not to conflict with the community chest drive. William McGilchrist, chairman of the : Army advisory board, . ex plained yesterday. "With the roof and exterior walls now finished, we believe Sa lem people will be glad to help complete this fine new hall," Mc Gilchrist said. "The $5000 - is needed to pay for the windows, finish floors, partitions, . doors. concreting the basement and in stalling a heating plant." McGilchrist Invited the public to inspect the - hall as It now stands, at 241 State street. Franco Captures Government ; Field Headquarters in North HENDAYE, France (at the Spanish Frontier).' April 20-(- Generalissimo' Francisco Franco's Galkian troops in a surprise at tack tonight captured Albocacer, the' government field headquar ters for northern CasteUon prov ince. ; . V '. -r. : ' ".. ; ; Albocacer . is 'only 2 C m i 1 e s north of CasteUon dels Plana, the largest coastal , city between Vat lencia and. Tarragona r U . : ."Insurgent dispatches r said two main columns moved south on parallel coastal and inland high-, ways while - tbe Galiclan troops captured the hamlet of Tnrig and then moved across the fields to Albocacer. - v" ' ' They tell on Albocacer from the Over Attempt tax bill are Senator Arthur Vanden Robert Doughton of North Caro O ! Dam Dynamited to Free Flood Water River Kept Within Banks at Chiloquin; Spokane to See River High KLAMATH FALLS, ' April 20.-(P)-Seeking to avert flood condi tions, anxious workmen blasted a wooden dam at the Chiloquin Lumber mill to prevent the rising waters ot the Sprague river from pouring oyer it ,baaks today. - Removal ot . the dam turned swirling waters away from river banks and into the midstream. Despite this precaution, the river still threatened the founda tions of the Southern " Pacific's main line trestle near Chiloquin and railroad crews piled sandbags along the shore to protect it An other sandbag barricade was being erected on the Williamson river, a mile and one-half below the Sprague river itself. SPOKANE, April 20.-(P)-B. M. Merrill, superintendent of power for the Washington Water Power (Turn to Page 2, Col. 4) Spending Program To Aid Utilities WASHINGTON, April 20-)- ine Koosevelt administration in cluded loans to public utilities in the new spend-and-lend recovery program today. It was not known immediately just which companies would re ceive loans. However, the dis closure that loans were in the of fing created unusual Interest be cause of the long and bitter con troversy between the Roosevelt administration and a number of concerns in the utility field. ,. A White House (inference dis cussed a plan for advances to the pover companies by the Recon struction Finance' corporation to enable them to catch up on many millions of dollars worth of job spreading construction .. work left undone during the depression years. . Sustained Yield Timber Bill Hit i KLAMATH FALLS, April 20. (AIHrhe forest committee of the Klamath Falls chamber of com merce attacked the sustained yield timber bill of Senator McNary to day, claiming it would be ruinous, Several years ago, the commit tee said in a report, the bill would hare been practical but operations since have been developed in the basis of a timber supply which the bill would eliminate. I northwest finding only a: small '"rrn whlcn Quickly surrender Unyielding government resist ance frxn the foothills ot the Py renees to the Mediterranean; sea at Tortosa forced Franco to send new drives against two main ob jectives. .- : . Targets ot the insurgent offen sice w r e : ',; Puigcerda, on the French f horde r ' to Catalonia, northeastern corner Of Spain now severed from government' Spain proper, and CasteUon, - Mediter ranean seaport south ot Catalo nia. ; :y -. , -: i ' Bitter fighting raged on i both the sunbaked ' seaboard and the snowcovered Pyrenees mountain passes. - . " v" Direct Buyers Pay, Basis of Kilowatt Year Scheme new to US but Proven Successful , ; . in Canada, Says . Will "Avert Waterpowei Waste, Permit Full . Use of Energy PORTLAND, April 20-JTV-' Bonneville ' dam power will be sold on a kilowatt year basis, J. D. Ross, administrator, an nounced formally today. Ross said the basis was new to the United States but had been tried successfully In On tario, Can: Rates for a kilowatt year to the public utility district or pri vate utility which purchases Bon neville power retail consumers can not purchase d 1 r e e t will soon be announced by the federal -power commission at Washington, Ross said. The kilowatt year sales unit is based entirely on the coat of production and is an attempt to leave present practives of selling power "from the old scarcity standpoint," Ross declared. "Consumers now pay foi mil lions of kilowatt ! urs of elee- I unity mai tucjr u, nnu aatrt. "Immense quantities of water- power are wasted over the dam because people will not pay ex orbitantly high rates." Ross said a kilowatt year was., 1,000 watts furnished day and night for 12 months, or 2,760 kilowatt hours of electricity. The distributing city, company, or power district would be inspired - to encourage customers to use an . the power needed. Ross added. subsidize the large industrial ist," Ross- said. "Wo simply: say, . a kilowatt year costs us so much. Pay us our cost and use that kilowatt - continuously day and night, throughout the year " SPOKANE. Wash., April 20.- (i!p)-Charles West, special contact man between President Roosevelt and congress, said here tonight Columbia basin authority to ad- minister Bonneville and Grand Coulee dam was "inevitable." "In accordance with t" e admin istration's policy in regard to sueh projects, a Columbia basin project will ultimately be established," he said. "The program has not been pushed because of certain political contingencies, but the final es tablishment -of such authorities wherever large areas are depend ant nn anms a a tha PnnlAA dam. for their very existence, is inevit able." Governor Speaks Mind on Prison EUGENE, April 20 - (JP) - The annual commonwealth conference' and first annual youth conference. sponsored - by the University ot . Oregon, ended with a warning. irom uoyvunaries martin agaiuai loose thinking and sentimentality in dealing with, first offenders. The governor, speaking on the subject of providing separate eon- uoemeni tor cuuvicia - vuicriu prison, for the first time so that they will not be under the influ ence of more hardened criminals, said a study ot records put a dif ferent light on the problem. - "The- tlrst : offender front .tha . . . . . . . . , . . . ' ... sianapotnt oi ueLag tamiiwa. iv the penitentiary tor the first time, has in the majority of cases, a long history of trouble with local police 2nd law enforcing authori ties," the governor declared. "-"Commitment to the peniten tiary is made only after the local authorities have exhausted their patience and resources in trying to correct the individual. Our us ual run of first offenders is us ually very thoroughly steeped in crime." . . Guilt of Weidncr 'Affirmed by Jury . Decision of the Woodburn Jus tice court in finding Thomas ou ter Weldner of St. Paul guilty of drunken driving was upheld by a circuit court Jury yesterday; after over four hours deliberation. Weldner appealed to the circuit court after being sentenced i by Judge Hiram Overton at Wood burn to 90 days In jail and fined $100. ?' - -: t : i s -- The appeal - was ' heard before Judge McMahanr . ; . , Meet at Silverton A group of republicans inter ested in the campaign of Charles A, Sprague of Salem for the re publican nomination for governor, will meet, with him at Tony's res taurant in Silverton Friday morn ing at 10 o'clock. . '