The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 04, 1938, Page 1, Image 1

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    Humming "Wires
Over a vast network of
leased vires. Associated
Press d is patches bring
world news speedily to read
ers of The Oregon States
man. : Tlie Weather
Clear today and Friday,
Somewhat cooler Friday,
Max. Temp. Wed. 9. Min.
60. Rlrer -3.4 feet. -Northwest
wind.
POUNDQD s 1651
EIGHTY-EIGHTH YEAR
Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning, August 4, 1938
Price 3c; Newsstands &c
No. Ill
Tteow Another Attack at Border
WLW W L C 4i M T (Tl TO ril
w ...
-.!"'
Police Lock tip
Dance Hall for
Code Violation
. - : " x'v- . - -
' , . ' - '
Crystal Garden Band Ends
Music on Orders From -City
Policeman ,
License Lack Is Charged;
Allege Building Code
Violated in Hall-
Dancing last night at the Crys
tal Gardens,' Ferry and ' Liberty
streets, was ; abruptly halted 'one
Jhour after commencing at 9
o'clock when a city policeman and
the city: police matron stepped to
the band stand, halted the music,
announced the hall was closed
and arrested .the 'hall owner and
dance manager?: Otto Klett on - a
charge of-running a dance ball
without a license.
Failure to comply with build
ing and sanitary regulation, as or
dered by the city building and
sanitary Inspectors, was the rea-
. son given in Monday night's city
council meeting for not granting
a re-license to Klett for tbe dance
hall. He had formally applied for
a license, and' had received a city
treasurer's receipt for $60,
amount of a half-year license.
Busbnell Says. ,
Wiring Defective
City Building Inspector E. C.
Bushnell said last night his office
had withheld official okeh of-the
dance hall until such time as de
fective wiring had been remedied
and fire hazards such as the six-year-old
paper decorations that
hung from a board ceiling were
removed.- He said the ceiling in
itself, not being plastered, pre
sented a ftre hazard.
Police revealed unsanitary con
ditions, condemned by City Sani
tary Inspector Batty Cooper in his
report to the council, were still
in evidence last night. These con
ditions had to do,, mainly, with
display -nand dispensing of soft-i
drinks.
Permission Given,
Klett Claims
Klett, who resides at tbe Sena
tor hotel, said the building regu
lations committee of the city
council granted him permission to
operate last night, and that he
had begun work on the changes
deemed necessary by the sanitary
and building inspectors. Addition
al exits, including a new stairway
from the second floor are nearly
completed. Klett said failure to
take down the paper streamers
was through an employe's over-
. sight. . ' - ' -
An attempt was made by the
management- to refund entrance
fees to the dancers, but as many
entered the hall free after police
had shut it down, there was not
" enough "take" to cover the de
mands for "give." Consequently,
the management is planning a
free dance for next Monday night.
A crowd of about 200 would-be
dancers milled about the dance
hall after the closing order.
Bar Association .
OkehsWU School
CLEVELAND, Aug. S-iVThe
law college of Willamette univer
sity at, S a I e m , Ore., was listed
among those receiving official
approval of the American Bar as
sociation at its convention here.
Willamette's college of law has
for several years been considered
as virtually standardized. The
complete recognition by the Ame
rican Bar association, announced
yesterday, had been held up dur
ing the past two years by Inspec
tors' reports demanding improved
housing of the institution and
certain faculty readjustments,
such as to teaching load.
The 54-year old college antici
pates an 18 per cent increase in
enrollment this fall, when It will
-be moved into the old postoffice
building, which has been moved
to the campus and will' become
the university's law and govern
ment building. '
37 Fighters Sent
To Combat Blaze
: Calls for 130 men. to fight a
forest lire on the Pistol rlTer
southwest of Grants Pass on the
Redwood highway was received
here last night and the first bus
load of 37 sent southward before
midnight. Placement official said
they expected to have the remain
der on the way during the night.
( The fire was in a national for
est, the state forestry department
said. v':;;. --V
Revetment Work Bids -To
Be Due Augutt 16
PORTLAND. Aug. 3-ff)-Unit-ed
States engineers will open bids
August 16 on a bank clearing and
revetment project along the . Wil
lamette river near Salem. The
project, in the Probst district, will
Involve 1880 feet of work.
McMahan FJnts Efforts
To Oust Him From Case
By Filing of Demurrer
Alleges Supreme Court Lacking Jurisdiction in
j Case; not Likely That Demurrer Will
j Be Argued Until September
t . : ' : .
Circuit Judge L. H. McMahan yesterday filed a demur
rer in supreme court to contest the effort of the state capitol
reconstruction commission and Rex Kimmell, assistant attor
ney general, to. force him to permit another judge to try the
condemnation case against owners of the Boeschen property
at 292 North Summer street. The property is part of the land
Voters to Decide
Tennessee Battle
Campaign Has Been Bitter
One With Threats of
Militia Hurled
NASHVILLE. Tenn.. .'Aug. 3.
OPHTennessee's bitter, political
battje of personalities rather than
issue will be decided at the bal
lot - boxes tomorrow with the
democratic nominations for gov
ernor,! US senator and public ser
vice commissioner at stake
. Candidates concluded their or
atorical blasts tonight in a melee
into which have been hurled
threats of use of militia, a fed
eral court injunction to bar the
governor from such a step, the
swapping of acrimonious charges
and a warning . from the senate
campaign expenditure committee
that the victor might have to
face a contest' on "excessive ex
penditures. " ; - .
Highlighting the races is that
for the gubernatorial nomination,
with Gov. Gordon Browning,
seeking indorsement for a second
term,? facing the determined op
position of National Commit
teeman E. H. Crump and his
Shelby county ?JemphisJiorgaBf
ization that for years has been
all-powerful in Tennessee's "most
populous city.
Crump is backing Prentice
Cooper, ShelbyvWe attorney,
against Browning and each side
has accused the other of "dicta
torship" aspirations. Tbe friend
ship between Crump and Brown
ing two 'years ago, when the gov
ernor was nominated, changed
into bitter enmity.
I
Father Accused
Of Girl's Death
I ...
Youth Who Confessed to
Crime Calmly Charges
Father Slayer
SOUTH PARIS, Me.. Aug. -3.-(flVCalmly,
deliberately, 19-year-old
Paul N. Dwyer today accused
Francis M. Carroll, father of his
former sweetheart, of the two
"death tour slayings which the
youth had previously confessed.
The former sheriff's deputy, on
trial i, for the strangulation mur
der of 67-year-old Dr. James G.
Littlefleld, stolidly heard 'Dwyer
testify - the peace .officer also
choked Mrs. Littlefleld to death.
Dwyer, serving a life sentence
for the doctor's killing; was never
brought to trial for the second
slaying, last October. Today he
first ; accused j Carroll of killing
the elderly doctor, but did not
make, the second accusation until
cross-examined. , - v
Prosecutor Ralph M. 'Ingalls.
In ' his direct examination, had
sedulously avoided any mention
of (3 -year-old Lydia Littlefleld
or how she met death.;
But 'Defense Counsel Clyde R.
Chapman, leading Dwyer into a
recital of the gruesome "death
tour" that ended in his arrest late
last October at North Arlington,
N. J., with the bodies ofboth
victims, brought' from 'the youth
a charge that Carroll- struck the
woman with a pistol and later
strangled her. x
Corrigan Befuddled by Plans
For His Royal IMY Reception
NEW YORK, Aug. 3. Douglas
Corrigan; the man who proved
that east Is west, gets borne to
morrow from . that transatlantic
junket he made In a 3900 air
plane, and lest there be some mis
understanding about the arrange
ments, Mr. Corrigan is In a. fair
way 1 of getting pushed arond
when he debarks.
New York's city hall, which Is
In Manhattan,, and Brooklyn,
which is a borough f the city
on Long Island, hare been argu
ing for three days now about
which is going to get the first
crack at receiving the-flier, when
he arrives aboard the liner Manhattan.-'
.-." - !- - o
Corrigan himself, who. comes
from Long Beach, Calif., where
things seem to move a little more
atowly, is completely nonplussed.
Omarnea ror the new capitol ap
proach. r '
The demurrer alleged the su
preme - court lacked - Jurisdiction
both as to the petitioners and as
to the subject matter, that the
commission had no authority to
carry on the proceeding and that
their- petition was defective be
cause ft did not make the attorney
general a party. i
Tbe writ of mandamus Was ap
plied for last month after Judge
McMahan had denied motions" for
change of judge in the Boeschen
case on the day it - was set for
trial.
The demurrer was filed by Car
son & Carson. . i .
It is not deemed likely the de
murrer will be argued until the
supreme court reconvenes at Its
regular time in September.
The mandamus action is hold
ing up possible negotiations for a
settlement of the condemnation
action. George A. Rhoten said his
associate in the defense, 'Wendell
Gray, came here from Portland
Tuesday to discuss a compromise
but was notified by Kimmell that
there would t be no negotiations
until the mandamus matter was
concluded. . li ,
Kimmell declared : that as far
as he knew there had been no ne-.
gotiations since the suit was filed.
The commission has taken over
the Boeschen property and under
Its orders the owners have razed
the house 'involved, t -
Special Election
Urged by Hockley
PWA Director Makes Call
by Phone After Court
Letter Received
That a special election be called
to authorize the new courthouse
project for Marion county was
urged upon the county court yes
terday by C. C. Hockley, regional
PWA director, in a telephone call
from Portland. The call came af
ter Hockley had received a letter
written by the court : Tuesday
renewing its request for a time
extension so the question could be
presented at the regular election
In November.
The court, however, still feels
that a special election would not
even be a gamble, with stakes of
f5000 election expense on the
county s part and a $266,000
grant on the part of the PWA, but
rather would he throwing the
$5000 awry, its' members indicat
ed. Hockley had contended the
chance of the people's authorizing
the project at a special election
was worth taking. ft..
The PWA director has urged
that the court either call a spe
cial election or cancel its hold on
the grant. The court has determ
ined - instead to press for more
time." . . ' , i ,
WCTU Roacl Signs
Due ; ior Oregon
j PORTLAND, Aug. 3.-iip-As a
result of Oregon's participation In
the National Women s Christian
Temperance union educational
campaign, motorists will view
roadside signs such as theBe:
"Alcohol plus gasoline equals
danger." i 'if -
"Safety first don't drink tra
vel safely." ;-:..-; '' t'rr- '.i
Mrs. Necia Buck, president, an
nounced the project would display
2 S slogans. ;
. People have been calling him on
the ship-to-shore telephone night
and day, telling him what he is
going to do when the ship noses
up the bay. ; ;
Mostly his reply has been, J'oh.'1
He is on record -once as having
said, "is that so ?" -
i - He Is anxious to avoid offend
ing Brooklyn and the mayor and
an organization which - prints . its
announcements in green ink and
calls itself the "Douglas Corrigan
committee. New York Irish-American
harbor reception. !
" Nor does he want to offend Col
Jacob Rup pert, the baseball man.
who has offered the Yankee sta
dium for a jamboree Friday night.
i"If the mayor says all "right
about the Yankee stadium thing,'
Corrigan Is quoted as saying,
why then, all right."
Maytag Plant
To Be Opened
With Soldiers
Washing Machine Factory
Will Reopen Despite
Strike of CIO
Question of NLRB Right
to Hold Hearing Also
Ended by Governor
: DES MOINES. Aug. '3 (ff Gov.
Nelson G. Kraschel of Iowa, to
night : ordered the f strike-bound
Maytag Washing Machine factory
of Newton, la.; to be opened at
noon tomorrow under martial
law after the CIO Maytag local
union had refused a proposal to
return to work under a 10 per
cent wage cut. .
The governor at the same time
disposed of the question of the
Tight of the national labor rela
tions board to resume the Maytag
labor practices hearing right In
the federal court house here by
amending his previous order' to
confine "the military district of
Iowa to Jasper county-, only."
The governor said the Maytag
CIO union had refused to accept
the wage cut proposal and a mili
tary commission ruling which
would have denied jobs to 12 of
the workers while the city con
tinues under martial law. The 12,
the governor quoted the commis
sion as saying, were "particularly
active in matters tending to ag
gravate and provoke disturbances
in this community."
The Maytag plant closed May
9 when the union refused to ac
cept a 10 per cent wage cut. The
plant normally employs about
1400 men.
The hearing on charges
brought by the union is scheduled
to be resumed tomorrow, with
Charles Fahy, NLRB general
counsel, and Robert Watts, asso
ciated general counsel,, present as
observers.
Tbe governor last week ordered
martial law authorities to close
the labor board hearing in New
ton as a "disturbing factor" in
efforts to reach a settlement in
the Newton strike. Kraschel later
bearded the board by issuing a
statement in which he said:
"You can tell the cockeyed
world that there will be no labor
board hearings in the military
district of Iowa."
Both Sides Claim
Air Fray Victory
Japanese Say 32 out of 54
China Planes Put out
of Action
SHANGHAI, Aug. 4-(Thurs-day)-;p)-Both
Chinese and Jap
anese claimed victory today in a
large-scale air battle near Han
kow, . provisional Chinese capital
and target of the Japanese drive
up the Yangtze river. '
Japanese asserted that a Jap
anese air , fleet engaged 54 Chi
nese planes, shot down 32, and
destroyed seven more In a bomb
ing raid yesterday oa Hankow
which ended with only two Jap
anese craft mlSBlng.
I Chinese declared they lost only
six planes and brought down 12
Japanese raiders', Including" one
bomber. T - -
i Japanese srround forces were
admitted by Chinese to have en
tered Hwanemel. slightly more
than 100 air miles east of Han
kow. but ; Chinese said the in
vaders were "under water." The
city was said to have been flood
ed by rising Yangtze river wa
ters which poured through . bro
ken dikes.
' The "warfare prevented re
pair 'of the broken embank
ments,? Chinese said, in appar
ent denial of Japanese charges
that the dikes were being cut
deliberately to halt the Japan
ese, advance.
Flying Nipponese ;
Say War Unlikely
PENDLETON, Aug. 3 - () -
Pausing here on - an airplane
night to New York. Baron Y. Ya-
suva and Count I. Goto, members
of the Japanese house of peers,
said in an interview that the Sl-beria-Manchukno
border dispute
was not as serious as it appeared
but that Japan would go to war
if Russia Invaded her territory.
They said the Ill-defined border
aggravates such Incidents as those
transpiring.
1055 Forest Fires Are
Fought in ttco ? States
PORTLAND, Aug. S.-CSVOor-
ernment forest fire fight jrs have
battled 1055 blazes in Oregon and
Washington this year.
Lightning caused 751 and 30
developed from man-made condi
tions. -. :,:.
The fires damaged 52,317 acres
under government supervision. -
PORTLAND MANUFACTURER D
r
Man Dies in Fire
As Mansion Burns
R. H. Bayly, Manufacturer,
Trapped in Bedroom r
by Early Blaze
' PORTLAND, A n g. 3.-(r-A
A neighbor's caretaker found the
body of Russell H. Bayly, 39, so
cially prominent manufacturer,
among the debris in the basement
(-today after a fire razed a luxuri
ous residence in' , the Highland
road district.
Payly, .Apparently -trapped la a
bedroom by the early morning
blaze, was plunged to . the base
ment with a burning mass of tim
ber and furniture when the fire
gutted the interior of his 375,000
home.
Caretakers Uninjured
Mr. and Mrs. .William Acker
man, caretakers, were uninjured
in a leap from a second story win
dow. The victim was vice-president
of the Bayly - Underhill overall
manufacturing concern which has
offices here. Denver, Oakland and
Long Beach, Calif. He was a
graduate of Williams college.
His widow, the former Isabel
Wilson of Denver, left for the
coast by "plane from New York
where she had been visiting with
her three children. His parents re
side at Los Angeles.
A brother, Charles, Jr., ot Long
Beach, arrived from California
last night but did not stay at the
residence. ,
Arbitration Plan
exico
MEXICO CITY, A u g. 3-6fP-
Mexico today rejected tbe United
States' proposal of July 21 to
submit to arbitration the question
of Mexico s failure to indemnify
American - citizens whose farm
lands she has expropriated since
Aug. 30, 1927. .
Instead, Mexico proposed two-
party discussion or tne issue, as
serting arbitration to be "unne
cessary" and "unlawfuL"
A note handed by Cordell Hull,
United States secretary of state,
to the Mexican ambassador in
Washington, Francisco , Castillo
Najera, July 21 admitted Mexico's
right to expropriate, but insisted
upon prompt payment. Hull de
clared international law provided
for this. ' . -
Secretary Hull stated that 310
132,388 ' was the value placed by
the owners on the small farm
land 'properties Involved.
Need of Project
Seen in Weather
: CORVALLIS.' Aug. 3-flP-Dr.
W. L, Powers, Oregon State col
lege soils department head, said
today Willamette valley : weather
conditions this year had empha
sized the need for the . Wlllara
e tie valley project to avert either
extremely high or extremely low
water.-' - -.; - -s. ,. . r--
fDr.f Powers, . secretary- of the
Oregon reclamation congress, said
that in contrast to winter condi
tions, when floods caused thous
ands of . dollar sot damage.
streams . were now so low - that
farmers were experiencing: diffi
culty In getting enough water to
irrigate. '. .
College weather station records
show this to be on of the driest
and warmest summers on record
in the mid-Willamette valley. No
rain of any consequence has fall
en since May 11, while the mean
July temperature was 70.4. com
pared with a normal of C5.5.
IT ' ' " i -n ar
VetoedDvM
1 I
if
'Ladies First'
Is the Motto
Of Bartenders"
SAX FRANCISCO, Aug. 8.-(;P)-Becau8e
of the Women's
Christian Temperance union,
the AFL-af filiated Bartenders
International alliance has post
poned the opening of Its an
nual convention.
The two groups . chose the
same San Francisco hotel for
their gatherings. The WCTU
convention, however, opens to
morrow and lasts through the
date the bartenders originally
intended to start their meeting.
So the bartenders have decided
to wait, mttll lAngnst IS. '
Judge Sets Aside
Ring Bill of Sale
Automobile and Beer Hall
Also Involved in Bill
Under Dispute
A bill of sale by which Monte
Leonard acquired two diamond
rings, an automobile and a beer
hall in Mill City from the late
Edgar R. Ellis was set aside by
Circuit Judge L. C. Lewelling
yesterday at the conclusion of a
day-long trial of the case of A.
A. Keene vs. Leonard and Mildred
Ellis Kerrick.
Whether the pleadings were
such that Ellis will , lose the car
and beer hall on the basis of yes
terday's decision - was uncertain
since the formal decree had not
been signed and only the; rings,
valued at 3750, were involved as
far as the plaintiff was concerned.
; The court held that Ellis, ill
at the .time he gave the bill of
sale, ' was believed incapable of
knowing what he was doing. ' ' .
"A Keene filed the siit as admin
istrator of the Pomeroy ic Keene
partnership .to ascertain whether
the firm should deliver the rings
to Leonard, - who -had left them
there with Instructions to re
mount them,, or to Mrs. Kerrick,
executrix of the Ellis estate.
Hit and Run Motorist ,
' Sought at The Dalles
. THE DALLES, Aug. 3-(1)-Po-Uce
searched tonight for a hit-run
driver who struck Clarence Van
Winkle,-54, Condon, as the lat
ter stepped Into his automobile
two miles east of here. Van Winkle-suffered
back and neck inju
ries. He was hurled 30 feet by
the impacL
Label League's
vi Disclosed as
Jewell and Wendell Cross of
2C5 North 21st street were dis
closed yesterday as the stars of
the all-Salem motion picture,
"Union Labor - on the . March."
which will be presented at din
ger field . at 8:4a o'clock Friday
night. v " . -; '
- The attractive young couple
performed their parts in the ro
mance scenes going into the pic
ture and. then spent most of tbe
day making a tour of business
houses and - industries, with the
movie cameras operated, by J. T.
Anderson, - state fair Industrial
show director, and Ci IL Carter,
director of the production, follow
ing them.
Today's issue of The Oregon
Statesman will have a place in
the picture." Action - shots of its
mechanical department, including
its swift-rolling news -press were
taken early this morning.
. Seventeen alert men and wom
I E S IN FIRE
, i
. i
,' r
'
f
Fire of undetermined origin de
stroyed a $73,000 home In an
exclusive Portland district
, Wednesday and killed Russell
II. Bayly, vice-president of the
. Bayly and Underhill company,
manafactarers of overalls at
Portland, Denver, Oakland and
Long Beach, Calif. The victim
is survived by his widow and
three children, who have been
visiting- in w York. . .
Blaze Threatens
Mill on Highway
Crown Fire Near New Era
Endangers Doernbecher
Furniture Plant
OREGON CITY, Ore., Aug. 3-VPy-A-
spectacular crown fire,
sweeping through old growth fir
timber along the Pacific highway
near. Coalca, south ot here, threat
ened the Doernbecher furniture
- . e
mill tonight.
The blaze, started from an
abandoned camp fire, covered 75
acres. Fire-Warden Tom Steen-
son said. It broke out of control
twice during the day A 50-man
crew laid hose lines a quarter
mile from the Doernbecher plant
in an effort to check tbe swiftly
running flames. A b r 1 s k wind
menaced the mill; across the high
way from the fire. i
- Three other forest fires, at
Jennings Lodge, Cams and West
Linn, were controlled today.'
Movie Stars
Filming Opens
en yesterday won merchandise
prizes la connection with the pic
ture filming by finding a mystery
girl brought into Salem as a feat'
nre of the business tour, which
continues today.
' All that is necessary to win ons
of these prises is to approach
the mystery girl, touch her on tbe
arm and ask her, "Are yon the
mystery girl?" She will admit her
identity nd give the person iden
tifying -her a merchandise order,
according to Walter A. Chambers,
president of the Salem Union La
bel league, sponsor - ot Friday
'night's show.
' Tickets for the show are not on
sale but may be obtained at stores
displaying signs announcing they
are taking part In it.
At these same stores the mys
tery girl her identity Is known
to ne one outside the show spon
sors will make appearances to
djr -.
Japanese Say
Russ Advance
Losses Heavy
Tokyo . Message Claims
200 Soviets lxst in
v Latest Attack
Russians Maintain Their
v Attitude Is Defense
of Russian Land
TOKYO, Aug.. l.-(Thursday)-(AVeovlet
Russia threw four bat
talions against Changkufeng aat
8hachofeng at 10:30 p. m. Wed
nesday (8:00 a. m. EST, Wfdnes
day), but met a repulse In which
they lost 200 men, a Japanese
army communique said today. ,
. The Russians advanced la a
dense fog, Japanese reported, but
their ranks were exposed when
Japanese suddenly fired "thous
ands of flares" Into the sky throw
ing a ghoulish light over the bat
tle. Examination of tbelr uniforms,
disclosed the attacking force was
composed partly of the 118th No
voklevsk infantry, which la re
ported to be a unit of tbe far east
ern red army.
The Soviets abandoned 15 tanks
and 25 pieces of light artillery,
advices from the front related.
Japanese casualties were net
stated. ' i : . '
Claim 250 Tanks
Are la Area :
Tbe number of men In the three
attacking battalions was not esti
mated by the Japanese war of
fice, but it was said 250 tanks had
been concentrated In the area by
the red army forces.
This was believed to be part ef
the relnforccements which Japan
ese said yesterday soviet Russia
was moving up to the far south
eastern corner of Siberia la the
disputed border sons facing Jap
an's Korea and Mtnthoukuo. .
Despite the dally encounters.
Japanese official quarters IntlnteJ
they did not want a genuine war
with Russia.
(Russian officlafs yesterday
said their army's operations were
purely defensive, and there were
Indications she wants to rearh a
peaceful settlement. Nevertheless,
mass meetings of workers and res
olutions passed by red army
groups Indicated the public was
being prepared for a real emer
gency should the necessity of lar
ger operations arlae.)
Official circles declared Japan
"Is fully prepared If necessary"
and repeated their stand that the
course of the incident, most seri
ous In a long series of border
clashes, depended upon Rusnla.
(Russia maintains she is defend-
ing her territory and has ' set
crossed the border.)
With the Changkufeng area re
captnred, authoritative sources
said, Japan would not adraa.-e
further. Russia has contended
that the sector Is soviet territory
while Japan insists it is a part f
Manchoukuo.
Antijew Orders
In Italy Started
. ROME, Aug. S.-OfD-The Italian
government today announced tbe
first of anti-Jewish measures fore
shadowed by the recently-promulgated
fascist doctrine which holds
that Italy's-47,000 Jews "do not
belong to the Italian race."
Tbe order barred foreign Jews
from Italian schools a measnre
of limited scope since ft does not
affect Italian Jews, and the num
ber of foreign Jews normally at
tending Italian schools is not
large.
Foreigners attending 1 1 a 11 an
schools in 1J36-37 totaled 2,12
but the proportion of Jews was
not known.
Nevertheless. Italian Jews con
sidered the xegnlatlon symptom
atte since it disclosed that tha ra
cial campaign already has paste,!
from tbe academic to the practi
cal stage. Other more stringent
regulations were expected t fol
low. Republican Slalc
Executives Named
PORTLAND. Aug. 3 - (,T") - A
state-wide executive committee
was named today by Kern Cran
dall. Oregon republican chairman.
. The members are I-of1 Ffo k
mas, Pendleton; C. y, lo)linrer,
Clatskanle; Roy Kilpatrirk, fan
yon City; C. M. Kennedy, Cafe
way; N. R. Allen, Grants Pass:
Arthur Triaulx, Chlloqufn: Crar.t
Murphy, Stayton; E. J. Iia?)l,
Sheridan; Mrs. Dona Waddvll, '
Roseburg.
Aid Hold Strikers
MARSIf FIELD. Aut.
Strlklng hotel workers of Port
land were given the support to
day of the southwestern Orcy-r j
central . labor trades council.
hlch voted to make a rah d -
cation to the unions Involved.