PAGE TWO OTi OIlEGCtti STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon, Wednesday Moraine, June V 1938 Demo Internal Crisis Looming Primaries and Lawmaking Both Playing Part in Political Drama' Br KIRKE L. SIMPSON WASHINGTON, May 31-)- Step by step the democratic party that in 1936 swept the nation. on a scale never before recorded in American political history is mov ing toward an internal crisis in 1940 no less dramatic than the policy rift in republican ranks in 1912 that ended 16 years of re publican sway in Washington. State by state, the slow-mov ing and ponderous political ma marie s is sorting out the cast for the big 19 1. show. And item by item, bill- by bi?i. mes sage by message, President Rcose- Telt la-writing th-j lines and pre paring the issues around which the drama will turn. That ti Hotti t Twpf nnil wpl- eomes a party showdown then on the social and economic policies that make up the new deal is in dicated by every step he has taken or countenanced in the way ot administration intervention in state primaries. 1940 Is Real Goal l V n r mnnDii anmlnixiralinn political aides from harnvony- minded Postmaster General Fart ley ilown to the most bittei new deal advocate of lie-hard combat with party foes hate been dis missing the 193 3 campaigning as merely a prelude to 1940 There can be s-nall doubt that, for those in the inner new deal circles, the Inajor interest In the 1938 contests lies in 1940 por- gists undoubtedly take for great er interest in what the primary may mean in connection with the oew deal's possession of the party machinery than in its effect on the holding of the present num ber of congressional seats. While they ira iot disposed to risk loss of working majori ties the fact remains thai the top-heavy,' discord-inviting ma jorities in both house and sen ate hare proved In fact an em barrassment more than an aid to presidential leadership. Rale or Ruin, Aim '- Without question, a consider able loss of seats to the republic ans would cau3e , few regrtts at the White House if it could ex ercise some form of selection re garding the democrats kept in of fice.. , And so far as senatorial primaries are concerned, a rmcesa of administration-selection is ob viously at work, and as obvious ly is increasing the bitterness of the Party strife. It is helping long materially toward a 1940 party crisis. Whatever parallels the.-f may be between the liberal-conserva-tive republican break-up of 1912 and the possible democrat!.: split of 1940, President Roosevelt has distinct advantage over hi dis tant kinsman, Theodore Roose velt, who led his Bull Moose fol lowers out of a republican na--tional convention to form the progressive party. Repillican old guard organizations con trolled that convention through federal and sufficient slate pow er to "steam roi'.er it into re nomination of President Tart- It Is already clear that the administration is playing in this year's democratic primari? for 194 0 convention control to make the anti-new dea'ers take the walk, if there Is to be a bolt. Behind the scenes of every demo cratic primary contest to date that is the real .-take." direct or Indirect. It tenis to make con trol of the 1940 democratic con vention and of the party, or ganization more Important in some new dealer eyes thai, net democratic gains or losses in con gressional or state elections next November. : uean trooamcn is iriven Recognition cs Actor Word has been received In Sa lem that Dean Goodman, Jr., of Salem, a student at the University of Washington, has been selected s one of the three best actors in the dramatic department of that Institution. Mr. Goodman was graduated from Salem high school la 1937 and this is the first time a freshman student has been ac corded that .honor. Scene of Police V. Fist fights, flying stones and swinging clubs took a heavy toll among police and pickets at Rockiord, 111., when the former attempted to treak up an assembly of strikers posted before the J. I. Case plant. Appeals from the mayor and sheriff to disperse were Ignored by the pickets and a pitched battle ensued on the bridge leading1 to the . jvLa&t which has been closed because of the labor dispute for several . . " weeks,-' .' ..i Tanimany Leader Under Arrest V1 s EX Arrested on charges brought by District Attorney Thomas Dewey that he was "fixer" for a huge lottery ring In New Tork, James J. Hines, Tammany Hall chieftain, center, was released on $20,000 bail when he appeared In court, above, with his attorney. Dewey said that Hines received from 5500 to $1,000 a week for protecting ths ring, jeputedly headed by James (Dixie) Davis. Hundred Aviators En BattL gage in (Continued from Page l-) - i counter-attacking ; to break the Japanese drive westward i toward Hankow. j Chinese pursuit planes, Chi ang's air officials euid, knew in advance of the approach of Ja pan's . air raiders and hovered hawklike above Hankow waiting. When the Invaders appeared, they 'said,' the Chinese planes dived and scattered the Japanese squadrons, engaging them in thrilling dogfights, part of which could be seen from the city be-, low. " i Chinese .,declared they , shot down 12 Japanese planes, losing only two themselves, and then pursued the invaders, shooting down three more near Kiukiang. Martin Write-ins High, Multnomah - PORTLAND, May 31-(;P)-The official Multnomah county guber natorial election returns showed 1526 write-in republican votes for Governor Charles H. Martin, com pared. with 189 for his victorious opponent, Henry L. Hess- The democratic! vote was Hess 26,516; Martin 18,335, and O. Henry Oleen 2443, for a total of 47,34 4 votes of 89,497 registered. The republican vote: Charles A, Sprague 23,341; Sam H.Brown 7471; Clarence RJWagoner 4776; Henry M. Hanzen 3293; J. W. Morton 1373; Charles L. Paine 1249; M. S. Shrock 924, and R. J. Hendricks" 883, for a total of 43, 315 votes of 82,430 registered. Building Permits Up 33 per Cent (Continued from Page 1) commercial buildings, that raised last month's total over the $100, 000 mark. There were 3 6 new con struction permits issued, with a valuation of$97,670. Threeuild ings contributed $20,500 of this amount: the Salem Steel & Sup ply company's $12,500 warehouse, the $3000 boat house being. erect ed by W, L. Ham and. the $5000 store .building that Is nnder con struction for Dwight Lear. - Picket Clash 7 t 'J X J. ' - .4. . h 4 (A Salmon Run Lack Declared Serious (Continued From Page One) Bonneville dam. "The fish are getting .by Bonneville," he said. "The government did good work in the $7,000,000 spent there for fish ladders by which the salmon pass the dam through a series of lifts and waterfalls." Contrarily, one of the greatest obstacles is gigantic Grand Coulee dam farther upstream and so high that no fish can be laddered be yond it to the natural spawning grounds that lie above. Efforts are being made to trap salmon at Rock Island dam, be low Grand Coulee, and spawn them artificially , in nearby streams. Finley doubts the success of thi3 the changing of habits rooted in antiquity. The salmon can't be taken at Bonneville be cause, being too' far from their spawning period, they will fight and damage their eggs. I J Besides compulsory ditch screening and less commercial fishing, a solution, says Finley, may be to block plans to dam the Willamette, great Columbia tri butary, and permit fish normally running to Columbia headwaters to turn to the Willamette's. 300 Arc Killed in j Insurgents' Raid - (Continued from Page 1) fanned still further today by the sinking of the British, freighter Penthames in Valencia's harbor. ; The Laborite Daily Herald, in an editorial entitled "free run for Piracy,", declared the British gov ernment "simply must take effec tive action." The paper sharply criticized Prime Minister Neville Cnamber" lain's "deplorable failure to re peat his firm anti-piracy stand taken at the international confer ence at Nyon, Switzerland, In September, 1937, when European powers reached an agreement to stamp out piracy in the Mediter ranean." Fine for Failure to Have Car Inspected More Than Its Value, Holts Claims PORTLAND.. Ore., May 31-(P) Glenn O. Holts, hailed into traf fic court for failure to-have Lis automobile inspected, protested a $3 fine was too heavy because he had sold the car. "Just deduct the $3 from the money you got for the car," Mu nicipal Judge Julius Cohn said. : "But I only got $2," Holts de clared. He served one day In jail. Graduate Nurses Open 31st Convention Today KLAMATH FALLS, May 31-(-Approximately 100 del gates headed by President Jane V. Doyle will open he 31st annual convention of the Oregon Grad uate Nurses association here to morrow. ; Mrs. Alma H. S-H'-tt of New York, director of the Ameri can Nurses association headquar ters, will be the principal speak er. " ' I-::'.- Thomas E. Epplett Dies; One Daughter in Satem PORTLAND, May 31.-(AV Thomaa E. Epplett, 79, retired farmer known as the "Sage of Es tacada Lake Park," died at his home there yesterday. Surviving were two sons and two daughters. Including Wini fred Epplett ot Salem. Boy Rescues Aunt j GRANT 3 PASS, May Heroic Billy. Andrews, 13, swam the Chetco river ravids to rescue his aunt, Mrs. H. D. Rerrnson, who had been trapped nnder an upset boat. -? V ; (-S - v;tv, : Wallace Given Rebuke, Court Same Principle Declared Applied as in Other '."'; Stockyards Case .(Continued From Page One) to the court, dissentde without stating his reasons. (He had also dissented from the decision criti cized by Wallace.) Justice Reed, the former solicitor general and President Roosevelt's other ap pointee, did not participate. Like wise, Justice Cardozo, who Is III, took no part in consideration of the case. ; . Leaves Way Open Wallace Contends Secretary Wallace said In a statement tonight . that today s opinion by the supreme court left the I way open for further pro ceedings to determine what shall be done with $700,000 in com mission fees impounded in the courts during the litigation. In that respect he called the opinion "a highly important vic tory for the government." Concerning the supreme court's denial that it had reversed itseif, Wallace said it used "involved reasoning, which both the farmers and the livestock commission men will find it difficult to follow." After today's session, the court adjourned for the summer. It will reassemble on the first Monday In October. The high tribunal, In a 5 to 2 decision, also decided today that the labor relations board wai within its legal rights In asking the circuit court of appeals of Philadelphia for permission to withdraw an order directing the Republic Steel corporation to re instate 5,000 striking employes. The circuit court had refused to permit withdrawal. Guard Character, OSC Seniors Told (Continued from Page 1) He criticized the attitude that con victions were "out of fashion" and -described tolerance as "ex alted beyond reason." The editor attacked an econom ic system which pitted industry and labor against each other, "both to get as much as possible and give as little as possible." Willard L. Marks, president of the board of higher education, encouraged a spirit of hopeful ness and helpfulness to combat "defeatism rampant in the world." The following honorary degrees were conferred: J. C. Stevens of Portland, de signer of hydro-electric plants at Eugene and Hood River, a doctor of engineering degree. Thornton T. Munger, forest ex periment station at Portland, the degree of doctor of science. Dr. E. J. Krause, head of the department of botany at the Uni versity of Chicago and former head of the Oregon State college department of horticulture, a de gree of doctor of science. President George W. Peavy con ferred 586 degrees, including five doctors of philosophy, the larg est number at an y commence ment ceremony here. Sharp Earthquake Causes no Damage LOS ANGELE3, May Sl-fjP)-An earthquake, centered approxi mately 50 miles southeast of the Carnegie seismological laboiatory in Pasadena at a point some where in the Santa Ana moun tains rocked sleeping southern Calif ornians awake, at 12:35 a.m. today. Although it was the most se vere earth movement since the big qnake of five years -ago, no damage was reported. Dike Breaks and Big Area Floods BONNE RS FERRY, Idaho. May Zl.-(jpy-While the flood situation remained little changed here, a break in a dike and the flooding of. 3,000 acres near Creston B. C, across the border, was reported tonight as the Kootenai river re mained at peak level. Authorities said the Canadian break might ease the situation In Idaho, where water has backed up from Canada's Kootenay lake. General Motors Deemed I Violator of Wagner Act i INDIANAPOLIS. May 31-JPfA national labor relations board re port here today held the General Motors corporation bad violated the Wagner Labor act by discour aging union organization, foster ing; a company union and using labor spies at its Delco-Remy parts plant at Anderson, Ind. Slayer Aged 22 Executed ! MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., June 1 ( Wednesday) Py Twenty - two-year-old John Dee Smith was put to death in Indiana's electric chair here early today for the holdup killing of Arlie H. Foster, Fort Wayne restaurant owner. TODAY r .CWAWRDRlSBflM FRANCHOT TONE -2nd Hit " DELORE9 DEL RTO . in "International Settlement Roosevelts Entertain Royalty - T v -T , ' ; v, N , , , . V . " ? - ' - v - O I - i K ' "vS . r 7 . ; i. -nn-inii n phml' '- -- M-:-..:-.:::-: ..-:-:-x-:-x.--::s;Kvt")-: '' ViiiWs1WsWHi i y ' JJXJ&2ryuc. . , t j ,V- imt I r; " f ; am -Hff-- y -m: '- - ii 1 1 r it i ill Following their arrival in New York, above, on a round-the-world honeymoon trip, Prince Louis Ferdinand, grandson of the former German kaiser, and his bride. Grand Duchess Kyra, daughter of ths pretender to the, non-existent Russian throne, were guests of Presi dent and Mrs. Roosevelt at their Hyde Park home. The Call Board ELSIXORE Today "The Adventures of Robin Hood" with Eiioi Flynn and Olivia DeHavil- land all in technicolor. Friday Double bill, Bot by Breen in "Hawaii Calls" with Ned Sparks and "Dinner at -ha Kits" with Annabella. ' ' CAPITOL Today Double bill, "Mystery House" with Dick Purcell and Clark Gable and Jean Harlow in "Saratoga." Friday Double bill. Lit- tie Miss rhoroughbied" with John Lltel and Ann Sheridan and "Law oi the Underworld'' with Chester Morris. - - STATE Today "International Settle ment" and "Of Human Hearts." Friday "Borrowing Trou ble" with the Jones Fam ily. HOLLYWOOD Today Double bill, Preston Foster and Whitney Bourne in "Double Danger" and "Thrill , of a Lifetime" with Yacht lub boys and Judy C?no va. Friday Double bill, ' The Three Mesiuiteers" in "Call the Mesquite rs" and' "Everybody's Dping It" with Preston , Fetter and Sally JEilers. GRAND Today Double bill. Smith Ballew and Lou Gehrig in "Rawhide" and "City Girl" 1 with Ricardo Cortez and Phyllis Brooks. , Saturday Return ensge- ment. Will Rogers in "Life Begins at , 40." i Indiana Farm CirL Spelling Champion WASHINGTON, May il-JP)-A knack for remembering how words look oh a page and her mother's careful tutoring won the national spelling title today for 12-year-old Marian Richardson, a shy Indiana farm lass ' with long blonde curls. "Pronunciation" was the word which won her the title after Jean I. Pierce, 13, ot Kenmore, N. Y., spelled it "pronounciation." 81st Birthday Is Observed by Pope i CASTE L GANDOLFO, May 31. -yp)-The papal court gathered In a parish church tonight for a solemn te deum to render thanks to God for preserving for another year the health of Pope Pius XI who celebrated his 81st birthday today. The pope himself did not at tend the service which was held outside his summer villa. The an niversary found him in compara tively good health. Ask $23,700,000 Dam WASHINGTON, May 31 Congressman Walter M. Pierce Introduced a measure toduy re questing $23,700,000 for a navi gation dam at Umatilla rapids on the Columbia river. liLUJLVA nun Betty Grable, Judy fanova, Dorothy Lamour, Larry Crabbe ind Ben Bine. " , AND, SECOND FEATURE . Ti-L ADDED - XEWH MUSICAL Coos County Suit Verdict Modified Plaintiff Logging Concern Must Pay $2060 for Right-of-Way The state supreme court Taes day modified a decree of Circuit Judge James T. Brand, Coos county, In a suit brought by the Coos Bay Logging company against Hugh Barclay and -Mabel Barclay, appellants, and Walter L. Buzzard, defendant. Involving condemnation of a right of way for a logging railroad.- The lower court held for the plaintiff and defendants appealed to the supreme court." The opinion was written by Justice Bean. Justice Beam held that the 'plaintiff was entitled to judgment condemning the right of way upon payment of $2060 damages, the amount found by a Jury in the lower court, without any deduc tion because of certain reserva tions. Reservations approved by the supreme court authorize the de fendants to construct grade cross ings and lay water pipes across. the right of way, for the purpose of , carrying on agricultural and logging operations. f The Coos County circuit court was directed t? enter a judgment in compliance with the -modifications. The supreme court approved the application of Frederic A. Fischer, Portland,, for permission to practice law in Oregon perma nently. He previously . practiced law in Massachusetts. Patronage Scrap Brings Threat to Call out Troops PHOENIX, Ariz., May 31-P)-Gov. R. C. Stanford checked a threatened purge of administra tion appointees' from the: state highway department payroll to day by issuing verbal orders for the "Arizona national guard to take over the department tomor row. Just as he was ready to sign a written order for mobilization of 100 troops, however, the highway commissioners capitulated to his demands and sent him a written agreement that no dismissals would be made for the present.. The governor placed the formal call in his desk without his sig nature. , "I will use It tomorrow if the highway department doesn't live up to Its agreement," he said. Cherrians Broadcast About 40 Cherrians will go to Portland tonight to 1 broadcast over radio station KEX m con nection with: the Rose Festival. The program will be on t.e air from 7:30 to 8 o'clock. They will also stage an inform J pa rade and call upon the offices of two Portland newspapers. Baseball's Idol Become a Slagging Cowboy . BALLEW GEHRIG D Planetarium Has Sun Image Inside Not Picture but 25-Foot Reflection Done With Mirrors, Telescope NEW YORK, May 31.-()-The sun will come indoors tomorrow for the first time. It will shine in the man-mad'j sky at Hayden planetarium a blazing disc 25 feet wide, so big that sunspots which now appear as small black dots will look like volcano craters. r It will not be a picture, but the sun itself, reflected through a set of-mirrors and a telescope de signed and built for the occasion. "We actually bring the sun tn doors, and thus make It possible for thousands of people to see the sun," said Prof. William H. Barton, jr., Hayden's executlre curator. . . Few Have "Seen Sun' "Very few people have seen the sun itself only its light." Old Sol's personal appearance will feature the planetarium day time shows on each clear day in June. The mirrors will go into action at 3 p. m., catching the solar image through an opening in the planetarium domel and throwing It through magnifying lenses to the indoor sky. June was chosen for the unique demonstration because of the sun spot cycle which is approaching its maximum.- I Sunspots at Height "The sun Is a fascinating sight at any time," Professor Barton explained, "but It ought to be particularly interesting now, "Sun spots are really solar cy clones of, enormous proportions. Due to the distance between us and the sun, these solar hurri canes appear as mere black spots to the eye and on photographic plates. However, through the sys tem of high magnification Just In stalled In the Hayden planetar ium, we can glre close-ups of sun spots." . Davis Dies; Noted Mountain Climber CORNWALL-ON-HUDSON, N. Y., May 31.-;p)-Brig. Gen. Mil ton Fennimore Davis, 73, presi dent of the New York military academy and noted as a mountain climber, died today after an ill ness of several months. He had been associated with the academy since 109. General Davis was one of the first explorers of the Grand can yon. He also made the first ascent of1 the 12.000-foot peak in the high Sierras which later was named Mt. Davis in his honor. In 1897, he made a record ascent ofMt. Popocatepetl In Mexico. Ho was also known as a big game hunter from Alaska to Mexico. " He was "born in Manterville, Minn., attended the University ot Oregon- and was appointed to West Point in 1886, graduating wtth honors. Bound Druggist Wounds Holdup ! I II PORTLAND. May 31-(p)-F. C. Bi-yant, drugstore operator, freed himself from tape binding last night and shot Harold B. Lewis, 25. of Oakville. Wash. Lewis, wounded in the chest, was charged with assault with Intent tof rob. j Captain ot Detectives J. J. Keegan said Bryant broke the tape In a rear room while Lewis was in the front of the store attempting to divert the attention of a Chinese customer who had interrupted the alleged assault. Neal Creek Region Fire Fought by Large Crete s HOOD RIVER, May 3 l.-(JFy-Rapidly. spreading through slash ings, a fire in the Neal creek re gion brought out more than SO CCC enrollees today and a hur ried call for equipment from Her man creek. The fire was in the heart of the Hood River valley and near green timber and ranches. Forest service officials said they expected to control It before morning. - Baker Is Safely Ahead In Typographical Vote INDIANAPOLIS, May, 3 1 -(-Woodruff Randolph ' of "Chicago, secretary-treasurer or tne inter national . Typographical union, said today unofficial returns from 682 ot the 850 locals In the May 25 election showed for president: Claude M. Baker of San Francis co, 35.154. and Charles P. How ard of Chicago, 21,946. 4KY1K& SMS". ssssas, v:w ' t Slayer Suspect ' Si S.. Latest outbreak in the troubled labor situation In Minneapolis re sulted In murder charges , being lodged against Arnold Johnson, 30, accused of having slain Wil liam S. Brown, president of the General Driver union. No. 544. as he sat in his parked car. Columbia Crest Friday Forecast PORTLAND. May 31-;P)-Th government weather bureau pre dicted today" the Columbia river, swollen by the snow run-off in major tributaries, would begin to recede Friday. Backwater Into the Willamette rirer has flooded lowland sections and wharves without damage. Dock operators removed equip ment before the high stage. A decline In virtually all tri butaries eliminated the danger of a serious flood. The fall in the Snake river will offset rises in lesser streams, the weather bu reau said. - ... The Willamette river probably will reach 21 feet, three feet above flood stage, before It drops. A peak of about 21.6 feet was pre dicted at Vancouver, Wash. Railroads9 Income Cut Still Further, Shotcn WASHINGTON. May Sl-(;p)-The Association of American Rail roads reported today that class one railroads had a net operating Income of $9,236,818 in April, compared with $48,357,723 in April. 1937, and $60,882,332 in April, 1930. Sj ijCj laXO ll Today and Thursday Thrills That Have Never Been Kqnalledl I ERROL FLYNN Olivia DeHavilland Basil Rathbone Claude Rains FATRIC KNOWLES UCNE PALLETTS MELVILLE COOPER Feature ' UNA 0CONNOB at 2:44 7:00 9:30 IAN HUNTER HALE H in Color Pmrnted by WARNER BROS. Bmm4 mich aei cvmrtz 4 wiluam ailCHUY ' ADDED March of Time Popeye Cartoon Tonight and Thursday 2 Big Features! A Thrift. in SI AND 2ND FKATVRB. CLARK GABLE JEAN HARLOW in "SARATOGA" j 117, iil I MM) LaeMsaHSaawiawBBWlaMaMaiaimwiMHNi i v- XV Cm