The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 13, 1938, Page 2, Image 2

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    The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem,"
Oregon, Wednesday Morning, July 13, 1938
Yakutsk Next
Halt of Plane
Plane" in Constant Touch
With Soviet Weather,
Airways Bureaus
. (Continued irom page 1)
to fir orer without halting and
then pats Krasnoyarsk and Kansk
before winging Into Yakutsk.
Foarth Lrjr, To
Take It Honrs
This foarth leg was expected to
take about II hoars.
Early summer dawn was Just
breaking OYer mid-Asia when the
firing laboratory got away.
Hughes spert aout four and
half hours In Omsk.
Hughes landed his huge mono-
place more than 20 hours ahead
of the eomparatire globe-circling
time of Post which he set out
to beat.
It was stilt daylight in this an-
dent, northern city, center of car-
ran routes and Important station
on the trans-Siberian railway.
when the millionaire sportsman
pilot and his four companions set
their twin-motored plane down at
t p.m. Moscow time (1 p.m. EST).
Omsk. . CI0C miles from New
York, Is approximately the half
way point of the scheduled 14V
7 c 9-mile course.
The plane's wheels touched the
-Ooask field only 42 hours and 40
minutes after the takeoff from
New York in a flight to better the
1933 record of Post, made in sev-
en days. It hours and 49 minutes.
Compared with Post's time of
( hours and 17 minutes from
New York to Novosibirsk
slightly mors than two hours fly
ing time beyond Omsk Hughes'
gleaming cruiser was nearly a day
ahead. "
The American flier covered the
1111-mile distance from Moscow
la seven hour?,' 35 minutes.,
He left the soviet Russian cap
ital at 1:11 p.m. (5:25 a.m. EST)
after a stop of but two hours and
12 minutes for refueling.
His previous hops were covered
la IS hours and 35 minutes. New
York to Paris; and seven hours.
49 minutes, for the 1675-mile leg
from Paris to Moscow.
He still had nearly 4000 miles
of. Siberian steppes, to cross be
' fore striking out j over Bering
Strait, for Fairbanks. Alaska, and
home.- j
Here's Highest and Highest Priced Garden
i In.
the shade of skyscrapers '"
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A
is
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- - Precarious perch!
One of the most unusual Jobs In the United States la
that held by John Buckley of New York whoa duty
It Is to plant and care for the sky garden atop
famed Rockefeller Center. Eleven stories' above
the street la this terraced roof where vegetables
and flowers grow In an attractive atmosphere of
shrubs and trees. This miniature garden, probably
Corner of the sky garden L,
the most expensive piece of aerial agriculture lav
the world, has a vegetable plot 250 feet square and
winding walks landscaped In a manner which would
do credit to any country home. Now accustomed
to his unusual job, Buckley goes about his duties
with a casual manner which seems to foretell the.
distant day when sky gardens will be common.
Six Nazis Given
' !
Sentence in NY
Brick Works Fire
Ends Famous Kiln
(Continued from page 1)
the fire started about 8 p. m.
whea a wooden tramway for han-1
dling hog : fuel for the kilns
caught fire from a furnace.
The . factory, which had been
closed down . for several months
ewiag te a labor dispute, had
Violation of Civil Rights
Law Charged Against
Germanic Croup
RIVBRHEAD. N. Y July 12
UP A Suffolk county Jury de
liberated less than two minutes
today and then convicted six of
ficials of the German-American
Settlement League. Inc., and the
league itself for violation of the
state civil rights law.
Judge L. -Barron Hill, in met
ing, out near maxium sentences.
said he would ask the district at
torney's office to forward minutes
recently been reopened for oper- Xi .i -
" , r I of the trial to the proper au
ction. It normally employed from th0rltles- Ia .WashIa gton. . '
T5 to SO men. O. K. Edwards Is
manager of the plant.
The brick factory, one of the
largest of Its kind, has for years
supplied brick to the construction
trade and many buildings at
Portland. Salem, on the Oregon
State college campus at Corral
lis sad other cities have made use
of Its products.
He characterized certain ac
tions of the defendants at the
trial as "amaiing," referring to
one of the defendants who gave
the nasi aalute to the American
flag In the courtroom and when
asked it that was the American
salute, replied: - i
No, but it will be!"
The specific charge : accused
leaders of the league an affil
iate of the German-American
bund which claims 400,000 mem
bers of conducting a secret oath
taking society without filing a
list of members with the secre
tary of state. i , -
Judge Hill Imposed the max-
Imnm 1fl AAA mva?.... . I.
PORTLAND. Ore, July 12.-W l". " V V ' . " .T " 7
-CIO longshoremen picketed the Mueller, league ! president, to
uip weorge i. uison loaay sna 1 r,. n vear in the counfv 1tl
CIO Longshoremen
Won't Load Ship
declined to losd 300.000 board
feet of lumber from the West Ore
gon sawmill.
CIO lumber workers picketed
and fined him $1,000
The other defendants were
fined 1500 each and sentenced to
one year in 2ail, but the sen-
the mill becsuse It recently signed I tences were suspended -during
an agreement with the AFL.
Tie up of the comparatively
small shipment did sot seriously
affect the West Oregon's opera
tions. Union officials did not com
ment, however, on whether the
action would be extended to other
ships loading the mill's products.
, The AFL asserted the long
shoremen were bound by contract
with the Waterfront Employers
association to load ail vessels.
good bhavlor.
f
Engineers Quiet
For Mink's Sake
Rescue Man From
ASTORIA, July XZiJPAxmy
engineers, who were told sereral
weeks ago that operations of the
Drokfleld company on a Lewis
and Clark river dike might cause
mother minks at a nearby fur
XXT Til j larm to devour their young,
WaSte X lie rire thorIxed the company to con
tinue work today.
workers were1 ordered to Pro
ceed Quietly, however, and to re
frain from burning brush near
the Lewis aad Clark mink farm.
The coast guard board resum
ed today a hearing on a claim
for SC7SI by mink farmers who
said low-flying coast guard am-
pnibiaa planes i had frightened
mother mink late frenzies.
EUGENE. Ore.. July
Knocked unconscious by a wood
slab. B. C. KarL Walton, worker
at the Keith lumber mill, fell
forward onto a conveyor belt
which carried hint to a burning
traan pile. Rescued by bystand
ers. Earl was In a serious condi
tion at a hospital.
Veteran Stricken
By News That Son
Is Killed by Car
Robert Burness. of Garibaldi,
leader, of the Tillamook boys and
girls' band sponsored by the Vet
erans of Foreign Ware of that dis
trict, collapsed Tuesday morning
when he received a telegram that
a son. about 12. was killed when
run over by a truck.
After receiving first aid Bur
ness was placed In ore of a
physician and flown to the coast
by Lee U. Eyerly. The lad's name
Is not known here and the tele
gram gave no details of the acci
dent. Burness was attending the
state encampment here.
Ancient
Preparin
Walker
Hike
or
GRANTS PASS, July 12-(P)-If
Adam Ziegler, 55-year-old ath
lete, does a marathon here from
San Francisco, via his feet, he can
look for no pot of gold such as
showered Flying Cloud. In fact,
100 postcards of himself seems
to be the whole prospect of re
ward.
Ziegler, warmed up by a. 106
mile walk from Trucked to Sac
ramento, was poised today In San
Francisco to take oft on' his walk
ing-running jump to Grants Pass,
via the Redwood highway, hope
ful of breaking the record of
seven days set 10 years ago for
the 470-mile trip by the Indian,
lying Cloud.
The 65-year-old walker hopes
to do the trip in five days. Zieg
ler, who was an entrant in the
famous Pyle bunion derby of oth
er years, said all he was waiting
for was an automobile from
Grants Pass to check his time.
However, the question of
whether he gets an official timer
is up to Clyde Edmondson, of
the Redwoods Empire associa
tion in San Francisco.
Loyalist Troops
Are Holding Own
BENDAYE, France-(At the
Spanish Frontier). July 12-lfPV-
Spanish government troops were
reported tonight to be holding
their own in the wild Espadan
mountains north of Valencia aft
er stopping an insurgent push to
ward key highway cities.
Despite previous admissions of
retreat, government forces report-
en tney were holding the highest
peak in the range and surround
ing strategic positions.
President's Visit Spurs Treasure Isle Building
Core Curriculum
Theory Discussed
Competent Teachers Need
for Making Education
Theory Success
EUGENE. July 12-fl)-The
Core corrlculum theory of educa
tion rests upon competent teachers
and an up-todate curricula. C. C.
Trillingham, Los Angeles, and Dr.
IA X Macomber, University of
Oregon professor of education,
told a conference of educators as
sembled here to study how to put
the theory Into practice in Oregon.
The speakers explained the
theory as a fusion of related
courses starting as early as the
age of six and continuing through
high school. Instead of studying
arithmetic, grammar, spelling and
the like, teachers would Instruct
on the basic functions of life.
Such functions would Include
study of the development and con
servation of human resources,
non-human resources, production,
distribution and consumption of
goods and services, communica
tion, transportation, recreation,
achieving spiritual and aesthetic
needs, organising and governing
and education.
The primary purposes is to
teach the child to relate what he
learns to actual experinces.
Patton Corner
Value $45,600
Similar Frizzell Case Is
to Open at 9 o' Clock
This Morning
(Continued from Page 1)
than the average that the commis
sion had paid for. other property
tn fh two blocks sonxht for cap-
itol site extension, on a basis of
area. : . ; -, -
It waa brought out in closing ar
guments, by the defense, repre
sented by John H. Carson and
Custer Ross, that the per SQuare
foot prices paid by the state had
included: Henry:: Meyers, $1.84:
Staley. $1.31; Kimball. SS; Frank
Meyers, S2.44; Baumgartner,
$1.81: Huntington, $2.38; Wil
liams, $1.98; Bowersox, $2.12;
Lachmund, $2.62; Bean, $2.27.
The awrd la the Patton case
amounts to about, $1.83 in com
parison to the average of $2.18 ac
cording to defense figures.
Defense Bays . ?
Offer Low :
The defense , stressed these
comparisons in contending that
the state's offer In the Patton
case was unreasonably low. The
state attorneys, J. M. Devers and
Rex Klmmel, relied largely upon
the appraisals of the Salem Real
ty board appraisal committee and
that of Albert E. Bullier.
Witnesses T u e s d ay forenoon
were Ed Rosteln, real estate 'man
who estimated the property's val
ue at $59,024.4". an' O. K. De-
Witt, who had cooperated with
Rosteln in making the appraisal
and backed up his contentions.
F. N. Derby, the final witness,
said hef paid $25,000 for the Flem
ing property which figured large
ly in testimony and argument be
cause" it was a private sale.
Investigate Death oi Heiress
Martial Lay May
Be Palestine Lot
JERUSALEM, July 12.-0P)-Martial
law was believed immin
ent tonight In the Haifa area of
Palestine, where British marines
fought an armed guerrilla band.
Another battalion - of British
troops was landed to aid In quell
ing Jewish-Arab disorders. Ma
rines from the British battle cruis
er Repulse hurried to aid the de
tachment battling a barricaded
band near. Haifa.
The new clash came after a
Jewish bus was overturned and
bombed, with Injuries to one pas
senger. .
Sydney Moody, acting govern
ment chief secretary, was in Hal
fa, conferring with northern dist.
Gov. ' Morris Bailey and Comdr.
J. H. Godfrey of the Repulse on
advisability of proclaiming mar
tial law.
' i Such 1 a proclamation was ex
pected, at least in the northern
district, where Haifa has been
the main trouble point in disor
ders which resulted in 820 cas
ualties since July (. The casual
ties included 47 Arabs and 24
Jews killed. 14$ Arabs and $7
Jews wounded and five British
soldiers wounded. In addition, IS
Arab members of organised units
have been killed and scores
wounded. -'
$8,985,157,600 h
Spending Program
.. (Continued from page I)
Last year revenues fell short of
expenditures by only $1,524.
713,050. the smallest deficit in
seven years.
The president said the reces
sion would make inroads on every
important branch of the treas
ury's revenue. Total revenues, he
said, probably will fall from
$4,241,661,227 last rear to
$5,000,270,000 this year.,
' His revenue estimates Indicat
ed a decline of. $600,000,000 in
the yield of the income tax. as
compared with last year, a drop
of $370,000,000 in miscellaneous
taxes, and a decrease of $80,000,
000 in customs receipts.
Reflecting increased unemploy
ment, social security taxes, which
are based , directly, on payrolls,
are expected to fall about
$506,200,000, as compared to
about $60,200,000 last year.
Japanese Troops
Halted in Drive
(Continued from page 1)
holes in warehouses and wharf
buildings.
Barbed wire entanglements,
trenches and sandbag redoubts
were erected in the streets.
Most civilians had fled. For
eign missionaries established an
emergency refuge tone at Kuling,
a mountain resort 13 miles away.
Eighteen bombers carried out
a.jaid on Wuchang, across the
river from Hankow, and killed
or wounded 200 Chinese.
United States missionary In
stitutions. Including Boone uni
versity, St. Hilda's school, St.
Joseph's hospital and .Christian
Missionary Alliance mission were
endangered by some of the 100
bombs dropped.
V
With Prevklcat noosevelfs visit a little more thaa a w.eefc away, work on the administratlosi building,
the Sua Tower and other structures en Treasure Island waa rushed in order that they may be com
j lcte for the presidential Inspection tour. .The president will lunch and deliver a speech from the ad-j-
.'nMratloa buihllng of the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition and then tour the man-niade
lilaad ea a preview glimpse of the fair. Photo shows a section of the exposition buildings looking from
the OaVland aide of the Saa Francisco bay. Ia the background la Sam Francisco's skyline. Same day
Itoosevelt win review the United State mate fleet ia Saa Francisco bay after which he will head for
Yosemlte valley, Los Angeles and Saa Diego to embark for Pensacola, Fla. US photo.
Martin Installed
In new Quarters
Governor Charles H. Martin
formally moved into his new auar-
lers in the state capltol building
at 4 p.m. yesterday. The gover
nor indicated that he would be at
his desk all day tomorrow, v,
The executive . department I n
the new Oregon - capltol building
Is equally an elaborate as the -governor's
quarters in the Washing
ton state capltol and contains ail
modern conveniences. The Wash
ington capltol cost $5,000,000 and
the Oregon capltol $2,500,000.
Included In his suite are a re
ception room, public office, pri
vate secretary's office, conference
room, stenorgraphers rooms, gov
ernor's private office, and quar
ters for his assistant private secre
tary. A shower bath, such as in
stalled in the offices of the state
treasurer and secretary. of state,
was omitted from the governor's
suite.
Medf ord Unionists,
Mill Heads Confer
BEDFORD, July 12.-aVIn-dustrial
employes union represen
tatives of millworkers and the
management of the big Medford
corporation, lumber producers,
met last night in what waa de
scribed by James H. Owen, gen
eral manager as a "backfire chat
to discuss differences. Owen
said all questions were tti
amicably, although the mattters
at issue were not divulged. The
plant employs about 300.
Flame t Destroy Studio
At Newport Owned Here
NEWPORT, July 12 -"() -A
building housing a photo stndlo
and owned by Mrs.. Mildred
Dwyer, Salem, was destroyed by
fire today with an estimated loss
of $1200.
Obituary
Knight
Lory H. Knight, 73. at the resi
dence at Jefferson. July 12. Sur
vived by - widow Mrs. Louise
Knight, sons, Elmer B. and Har
old . L. Knight, all of Jefferson ;
daughter, Mrs. Claude Armstrong
of Livingston, Mont.; brother, Ed
C. Knight of Berkeley, Calif.; sla
ter, Mrs. Mattie Wruck of Winona,
Minn.; "also three grandchildren.
Announcements later by the E. E.
Howell Funeral home, Jafferson,
and . Walker V Howell Funeral
home ot Salem, In charge.
r." - ' ; Wood i .
Fred A. Wood, at a local hos
pital July 10. Late resident of
2015 Trade street. Survived by
widow, Mrs. Cora Schweiafnrth
and Mrs. Minnie Apple, both of
Salem. Mrs. Nora Roberts of Tur
ner; sons, W. A. Emery, James.
Carl and Everett Wood, all ef
Salem. Services were held from
the Walker & Howell chapet Tues
day. July 12, at2:30 p.m. prwt
poned eommflal, services wllj be
held Wednesday, July IS. tX fO
a.m., at City View cemetery.
Ontario autnonnes launched an intensive investigation into the death
of Mrs. Maybelle Horlick Sidley, American heiress to a $7,000,000
fortune, after her death at the Toronto mansion of W. Perkins BulL
Canadian barrister, where she had been staying for the past year.
The investigation was ordered by Attorney General G. D. Conant of
Ontario because of the minions involved and the fact that she was
1 an American citizen.
Buying Flurry Is
Cause of Upswing
NEwl YORK, July 12-(ff-The
midyear - market was resumed In
Wall street today with a flurry
of buying la stocks .which sent
prices to around the tops of the
upswing-, recahed 10 days ago.
After several days of . Indeci
sion, , in which i the market fluc
tuated narrowly, traders switched
to the buying aide and sent lead
ing issues up $1 to more than $4
a share.
The average price of 80 repre
sentative, issues rose $1 to $48,
biggest rise since Julv 1. and
within 40 cents of the 1938 peak
reached the Saturday before In
dependence day weekend.
Sixty -r five individual Issues
reached hew top prices since last
autumn, and j hundreds more
came within striking distance of
their recent highs.
i : '
Sees friend Sink
Before His Eyes
"SPOKANE. July 12.-!p)-EarI
William Pellltt, 37. Spokane pipe
layer walked off the end of a log
boom In the Spokane river today
while a life-long friend watched
helplessly, j '
Christ Schuler. who said they
had been friends since boyhood,
said Pollltt walked ott the end of
the boom into swift water, grasp
ed a log nearby, slipped loose and
sank. The body was recovered an
hour later.)
"I shouted "but he didn't seem
to even hear me," Schuler said.
j -
Ask Yamhill Courthouse
McMINNVlLLE, July 12 (jp)
Yamhill county planned today
to apply to the PWA for assist
ance in constructing a $300,000
courthouse.
Battle Over Word,
So They Separate
! SPOKANE, Wash., July 12-()
-A, word to the wires. -
i Count your syllables before you
speak If you want to keep peace
in the family.
In Judge Louis Bunge's court
here today, Mrs: V. L.x Gage
testified she and her husband
separated when they quarreled
oTer the word 'reticent.'
Mrs. Gage said when she de
scribed a girl as reticent,'' Mr.
Gage said "shy" was. the proper
word, and accused her of shownig
off.
Mrs. Gage was granted a di
vorce. '
Umpqua Jetty Workman
A.OS0S Laje m Ucean
MARSHFIELD, July 12-WV-
Floyd Tobin, 28. ot Winchester
Bay lost his life In the surf .to
day when a wave washed him
from the south Umpqua Jetty
where he was employed on a re
pair crew. An unidentified work
man, swam 50 feet through the
surf to recover the body.
HarKoring Charge
Placed on Woman
PORTLAND, Ore., July
United; States Commissioner
Kenneth Frazer today bound
Mrs. Jean Miller, operator of a
small Portland hotel, over to the
federal' grand Jury on a charge
of harboring and concealing An
thony Garguilo. accused of kid
naping an Idaho farmer.
Mrs. . Miller was released on
bond after her attorney made an
unsuccessful effort to hare it re
duced from $5000.
D. D. Swenson, agent in charge
ot the federal bureau, of identifi
cation, told Fraser Garguilo had
been arrested at the hotel, after
Mrs. Miller previously said he was
not there. Swenson also said $300
had been left at the hotel by
Garguilo, alias. Charles McCul
lough and taken as evidence.
Garguilo and Lee W. Tomble
son, Portland special police offi
cer, are accused ot abducting
Thomas Lowe, Idaho, and taking
him to Spokane, where, as "Unit
ed States marsha's," they took
$$70 "ball- from him. They will
be given preliminary hearings Fri
day. .
,.
Windsors not to
Meet King George
WHY SUFFER? WHY BE
DISCOURAGED? Tv
1TEMOKKHOIDS (Pile) f Sr '
: ...... " v. u r i n,...".' r .
murm Ulcars. AU lUctml. I "1 "
Ctea and Stck troubles 1
oapttlr liaiaatwtth. ' I
j sel MrttM Mlxmt j -.-,V
! all thr aiathosa katra
! tailed. Wa bar 4om itaW-
i tor taofda ( thars w cam 4s it
to yo. 2 7ars sa Portland,
rRIK BOOK LIT mt
Tor rauMC Call mr write
Dr.CJ.DEAfi CUNIC
XJt. Cor. K. Bornsid aad Graad At.
Talapaoaa KAat 1S ForUaad, Orom
CANNES, -France. July 12-iff)-The
Duke and Duchess, of Wind
sor sailed today on a yacht cruise
ot Italian and Dalmatian waters
that will keep them away from
france throughout the state visit
of King George and Queen Eliza
beth in Paris July 19-22.
All possibility of the first meet
ing .between Edward tend George
since the elder brother's abdica
tion Dec 12. 1936, thus seemed
definitely eliminated, though. It
never had been very probable, j
Medford Man Suicide .
- , .... f
MEDFORD, July 12.-()-Ap-parently
despondent orer 'domes
tic difficulties. Frank Mitchell,
about 42. killed himself with a
bullet in the brain. Coroner Frank
Perl said today.
T. T. Last, ST. D.
Herbal
O. CkSD, K. I.
remedies for ailments
ot stomach, liver, kidney. skin,
blood, glands. e urinary sys-
tern of men & women. 21 years
in service. Naturopathic Physi
cians. Ask your ' Neighbors
about CHAN LAM.
on. cunn mm
CHINESE MEDICINE CO.
393 Court St.. Corner Liber
ty. Office open Tuesday ft Sat
urday only. 10 A. M. to 1 P. M.
( to 7 P. M. Consultation, blood
pressure, ft urine tests are free
of charge.
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