Social News News ef the doings of" Salem . and the Yalleya younger, older and In-between sets la carried In The Oregon Statesman society Pge. -ryrs The Weather Cloudy today and Friday. Rising temperature In inter ior. Max. Temp. Wednesday OS. Minimum 57. River 3 feet. Southwest wind. POUNODD 165! EIGHTY-EIGHTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning, August 18, 1938 Price 2c; Newsstands 5e No. 123 FCDlieClLW till baJem, Oregon, Tbnrsdaj Morning, August 18. 1938 mm . . ar m m . w - w mm- a . a b v b b aat m m m m . B ' ' ' B - SB- B B -i B B , B B mm B bbbt B bbbbb aai Bl B mw BBk. mrm a Bk JBT Br BK -bbbb .MBPB, - Bj a B BBBk mr BBk ' Bl BmBi VBK BBBI . .mmmm. m m mm BBF BBBKb .Bh. B B - aata.. M m . B B m mv 'BBv .BWBBBW mm Bk ff B BBk BBBBa Bk BT B B -b. .BBhh BBHBBI Bk mmm Bt B B mm m m m B B B m J W W B B JV4LWU.MU.4J-L i n MtuiM vi ,vi n ii ii nil vi y VI j tt Bridges Files To Be Handed Oyer to Probe Committee Investigates Charges Bridges Gets Labtfr Bureau Aid 'Rep. Mason Names Eight Officials in "Front Organizations" . WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 (j!P) The house committee ' on un American activities, investigating charges that labor department officials gare Harry Bridges, west crast labor leader, "aid and ad vlce while deportation proceed ings' were pending against - him, received the department's prom ise today to produce all its files on the case. Labor department officials ad vised the documents would be turned over tomorrow. Delay Had in File Delivery The committee had waited ex pectantly this afternoon for the tiles to be delivered with what members railed a "surprise wit ness" ready to take, the stand once they were at band. No rea son for the delay was given. Meanwhile, , the committee filled in with testimony by Wal ter S. Steele, chairman of the American coalition committee on national safety, charging wide spread communistic activities In this country, carried on through "front organizations with "re spectable names" but actually "dominated by the communist party." Representative Mason (d-Ill) a member of the committee gave the names of eight government officials who,, he said, were mem bers, and, in some cases, officials of one otjtbese "front organiza tion," the'Araerican League for peace and democracy. Kight Official' L r .Names Given ' ; v--.-, -.-'"tV' 'The names he gave were: John Carmody and Harry La ni ter ton, administrator and assis tant administrator, respectively, of the- rural electrification ad ministration; Dallas W. Smythe of the central statistical board; Fred Silcox, head of the forest service; Robert .Marshall, of the man, assistant secretary of the interior; Mary Anderson, director of the women's bureau, and "Alice Barrows of the office of educa tion. Several of th?se promptly de nied that the league was .com munistic. The Bridges case first came to the attention of the committee in a report from its chief investi gator, Edward Sullivan. Repre sentative Thomas (r-NJ) forced action with a motion for an im mediate investigation, asserting that at the time the labor department-officials were asserted ly helping Bridges, "patriotic citizens were trying to have him deported for alleged., communis tic activity." - - Botulism Attack Threatens Fowls LAKE VIEW. Auk. 17-UPV-A fatal phenomenon! in the once dry bed of Goose lake provoked frantic efforts today; upon the part of state police, US itiological sur vey experts and sportsmen to save 10,000 ducks and geese from death. About 5.000 already have died. organised and a truck was rushed here from Klamath Falls to trans port the birds there for treatment. The fowl apparently were suf fering from a form of botulism. C. J. Fairchlld, manager, of the Tule lake migratory waterfowl reserve, said the cause might lay In the fact that the lake bed, cow Inundated after a long drought, had been covered with vegetable matter which rotted when sub jected to constant Immersion. Presumably the fowl, feeding cn this spoiled tegetatlon, had uttered wholesale poisoning. They appeared to become para lyzed after feeding. Drowns First Day In new Found Job OREGON CITT. Aug. H-JP On his first Job after long pe riod of unemployment, Harold Wires, 3 4, who started out tooay as a pond man on a sawmill pond near Wilholt, was drowned- this afternoon when he fell into the water while steering logs. i Bank Executive Dies As Operation Starts PORTLAND. Aug. 17-pr-Charles W. Parcell, 44, assistant vice president of . the United States National bank, died today while he was being prepared lor an , emergency operation. Parcell was graduated from the JJnirersitX of Qregoa- :iiVi. y- ;. v;v:-.:-v:-,:. Q. , : ' Briusriirmief Clumge Forecast Street Program Voted In West Salem Special ; Election Calle for Septemher 30 on $105,000 Bonds All Major Streets Would Be Paved Under Plan With PWA Money WEST SALEM. Aug. 17. Thi "go" order for a 1190,096 city wide, all-concrete street paving project was given by the West Sa lem city council at a special .meet ing tonight at which its members reached; what tiey believed would prove a satisfactory solution to a dispute over the surfacing of Cas cade drive. The council also called a spe cial election for September 30 for the people to vote on the neces sary, $105,000 bond issue to raise the city's 55 per cent share of the PWA project's cost. The $5009 es timated sponsor's cost of a WPA project to be sought to grade the streets preparatory to paving will be paid from a reserve road fund. Acceding to protests voiced at a citizens' meeting Tuesday night, tbe council voted to pave Cascade drive, from Piedmont to Alta mont with concrete Instead of as phalt, to a width of 20 feet. To adjust costs to make this change possible, pavement widths of eiaht other streets were reduced to sizes as follows: Plaza, from Rosemont to Sen ate, 20, feet; Senate, from Edge water to Plaza, 20 feet; Sixth, from Patterson to Senate, 24 feet; Seventh, from Patterson to Gerth 24 feet; McNary, from Second to Third, 30 ''feet; Patterson, from Second t to third, 30 fee : King wood, from second to sixth,- 40 feet; Ruge,- from Rosemont to Senate 24 feet. Other streets pavement widths will remain as originally planned, most of them 30 feet. City En gineer Edward J. Himes said Sen ate street from -Edgewater to Franklin was virtually the only one not to be. paved under the present program. All of the paving will be seven Inches thick, of standard specifi cation,4 the engineer also stated. Application for an $85,543 PWA grant for the' project has al ready been made, according to City Attorney Elmer D. Cook. $44,000 Is Price Of Power Holding CASCADE LOCKS, Aug. 17- Mayor O. E. Manchester said to day that New York representa tives have agreed on a price of $44,000 for the holdings of the West Coast Power company be tween Lindsay creek and Multno mah falls. : ' The city wants the property for utilization of , Bonneville jam power and the price is $6500 un der the maximum set by J. D. Ross, Bonneville dam administra tor, j . . ' - The city will vote on the matter of issuing revenue certificates to buy the system and also the is suance of $45,000 more in certifi cates to provide working capital and Improvements. Tbe mayor said he was advised that the cer tificates could be marketed with Hop Allocations on Program Today for Controlling Board With organization of the Pa cific coast hop control board com pleted and the regulations govern ing marketing of hops under the recently approved AAA marketing agreement worked out in detail, the growers'" allocation commit tee will get down to tbe real busi ness of the program today the working out of individual grow ers' allocations. What those allocations will be however, the growers will not know; except in a general way. for some time. By tonight the committee may be able to make an announcement which-will give them a fairly accurate Idea ap proximately the percentage of the crops' that will be-declared mar ketable. This will be computed from the total of all individual estimates. In relation to the marketable vol ume. ' But before individual alloca tions 1 are finally announced, the estimates will have to be sent to the secretary of agriculture for his approval and the growers will have to be notified of their ten tative allocations and be given time to appeal from them. Six of Eight Convicts Dead After Attempt to Break Away dWour Shot by Bullets of $ - ' Two Others Drown River; Murder Charged Guard CROCKETT, Tex , Aug. 17. (AP) Six of eight con victs who engineered a break from Eastern prison farm lay dead tonight, the slaying of one leading to murder charges against a prison guard, and the promise of prison board members to investigate circumstances of his death. Posse's bullets killed John Hendrix Frazier, 21, of Dal- Monmouth Seeks Block of Power Mayor Bowersox Is Given Power to Negotiate for Electricity MONMOUTH, Ore., Aug. 17.-(Jpy-This city asked today for a block of Bonneville power to be furnished from the transmission line planned southward through the Willamette valley from Van couver, Wash., to Eugene. The council authorized : Mayor F. R. Bowersox to negotiate for the energy, which will be sold at a wholesale rate of $17.50 per kil owatt year for primary power. Authority also was granted for an Immediate appraisal of the properties of 'he Mountain States Power company and the council asked J. D. Ross, Bonneville ad ministrator, to assist In fixing a fair price for the system, i -To acquire tbe system, the council agreed to amend the city charter to provide for operation of a municipally - owned t power system, the proposal to be submit ted to the voters at the 'general election in vember. 1 : The, city previously has consid ered plans to build a diesel gener ating plant and e-'ablish Its own system but decided to forego this after finding that power would be available from the dam. Eby States Drive Need for Project The next Oregon : legislature must finance a drive to secure a congressional appropriation if the Willamette valley project is to be started In the near future, O. D. Eby, Oregon City, member of the project advisory board, declared before the Marion connty Demo cratic society last night. The com mittee's hands are tied unless it has money to work for the project in Washington, DC, he said. : Eby declared the project, with its seven dams, would control 75 per cent of the Willamette's flood waters. . .'IV The society voted to cooperate with the democratic central com mittee in a party picnic to be held at the state fairgrounds next Sun day, August 21. Democratic head quarters will be opened at once at 250 North High street, Connty Chairman E. G. Neal announced. Aim worker Killed ASTORIA Ore., Aug. 17.-,!p-Elmer V. Koski, 37, Svenson, was fatally injured yesterday when he was struck by a lumber slab while working In a lath : mill at Westport. ,1 : j T h e growers allocation com mittee is made up of the grower and grower-dealer members of the control board. It Is expected to have all of the estimates be fore it by tonight. At the Wednesday session, the control board drafted all of the necessary rules and regulations, governing marketing of 1938 crop hops and also "old hops" of 1937 and earlier, although these older hops do not come directly under the agreement. Jx It was decided that in addition to the main office in Salem, branch offices would be opened in Yakima for Washington grow ers and in Oakland for Califor nia growers. . - Because of tje control program, prices of hops are already advanc ing but it is difficult to determ ine what they will be by the time marketing is in full swing. It is generally believed they will be above cost of production, declared at recent hearings to be from 20 to 22 cents, plus at least a small margin of profit, members of the control board said. Dealers and brewers have declared themselves to be in favor of such a condition. - ---- - i j From Posse Posse When Cauzht and in Trying to Cross las, and Raymond Wilkerson, 24, of Fort Worth, in the Trinity river bottom early today. Two convicts were found drowned in the Trinity river, and two were shot yesterday. Sergeant Bob Parker said Fra zier and Wilkerson were shot when searchers caught up with them as the convicts were at tempting to kill bloodhounds em ployed in the chase. He said the fugitives resisted arrest. Roy King, serving time for rob bery, was the only one of the eight who stabbed a prison guard as they fled, to remain at large. Another, W. E. Garner, of Beau mont, leader of the break, was captured yesterday. 'At Crockett, County Attorney Leon Lusk of Houston coun'4 said Sheriff Arch Maples had filed a charge of murder in Justice of the Peace D. B. Long's court against Parker of the Eastern, farm in connection with the death of Frazler. Japanese Shake Off Hull Speech Spokesman Refers to Hull as "Idealist" as War Plans Intensified TOKYO, Aug. 17-0T)-The Ja panese foreign office indicated today that Secretary Hull's sev-ven-point program for "interna tional order" would receive no support from Japan. At the same time, the government intensified efforts to conquer China. The foreign office spokesman said the most Important state ment in Hull's International broadcast was that the United States could . not remain aloof from foreign conflicts. He said the remainder of the speech was a repetition of pre vious declarations. He referred to Hull as an "idealist", and to his speech as 'idealistic diplom acy." " Meaen while, the cabinet ap proved a broad program drawn up by five of the most Important ministers to speed the campaign in China with more drastic econ omic control at home and great er pressure by armed forces. The cabinet did not disclose details of. the program, but an official announcement said the fighting - would continue until Gen. Chang Kai-Shek's ; regime has been crushed. This indicated the Japanese wonld try to smash further Inland along the Yangtze river when and if Hankow falls. Beauties Battle Over Facial Bill PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 17-()-Offleer L. V. Travers said two women who couldn't agree on a beauty shop bill went into the alley to settle it with the following result: Adelia Harris, 25, Vancouver, Wash . suffered a possible jaw fracture. ." Martha Mackay, 19. Portland, was treated for head and face cuts. Passersby separated the pair after the - fight developed Into fisticuffs and rock-throwing, Travers said. Miss Mackay, said Travers, claimed that she and the other woman began arguing about a till rendered by Miss Mackay's beauty shop. Lindberghs Stop At Moscow Field : MOSCOW. Aug. n-iP)-Coh and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh arrived here In their orange and blue monoplane tonight after stops at Minsk and Mohilev on their flight from Warsaw. They were met by soviet civil ulrport officials and representa tives of the American embassy. To the foreign press Lindbergh gave a tour-word statement: "I have no plans." Soviet air authorities were planning to show him a sample of soviet aviation at tomorrow's air show in connection with avi ation" day....:-': Rift Between Chamberlain, Halifax Seen Foreign Blows at Policy I of England Is Cause of Rift Rumors Report Halifax Believes Firmer Hand now Need for Dictators LONDON, Aug. l7-iiP)-Italy and Germany have struck three blows at British foreign policy which today started rumors of cleavage between Prime Minister Chamberlain , and Viscount Hall fax, foreign secretary. Insurgent Gen. Francisco Fran co, presumably on the advice of Italian and German dictators, was said to have balked at Britain's plan for getting foreign fighters out of Spain. Premier Mussolini has resumed anti-British propaganda in spite of the British-Italian friendship agreement. Hitler Still Gives Jitters Chancellor Hitler, despite avowals of devotion to peace, gave Europe continued jitters with a program of army maneuvers some Critics regarded as a dress re hearsal for war. As a result mainly of the Span ish and Czechoslovak - German problems, informed quarters said. Lord , Halifax now is convinced that it is impossible to save peace without taking a firmer stand against dictators. Chamberlain's policy has been to try to moderate rather than oppose completely Germany's ambitions toward 'central Europe. To do this he sent Viscount Runciman to Praha as "unoffi cial" mediator to appease Ger many's desire for control of Czechoslovakia's 3,500,000 Ger man minority by some means shorj of granting them autonomy. Halifax Believed Swayed by Eden Lord Halifax recently has been seeing Anthony Eden, his prede cessor who resigned Feb. 20 In protest against Chamberlain's policy of dealing with Italy and Germany. Informed sources ex pressed the opinion that Lord Halifax has come to believe Eden's -stronger policy against dictators is right r It was not suggested- that there would be an open break between "the prime minister and the foreign secretaryt but Lord Halifax was believed to have asked to be relieved from his portfolio as soon as it Is oppor tune. There mven was some discussion of Chamberlain's retiring this fall. In that event, Sir Samuel Hoare, home secretary, probably would move up to the premier ship. Large Principles Behind Problems Everywhere In Europe it was recognized that the Spanish and Czechoslovak German ' questions were symbolic of , the larger doc trinal and economic conflicts be tween democracies and dictator shins. :The deepening cleavage be tween the two also was shown by comment in Germany and Italy on United States Secretary Hull's appeal tor peace, regarded among democracies as a warning to dic tatorships. - . Fascists in Rome saw Hull's address last night as an attack upon Germany and Italy. There Is a tendency in Great Britain now to discuss not if. but when a war will start. One high British foreign affairs offi cial is being quoted in London em bassies as predicting Hitler would move eastward about Sept. 15. Wliales off Coast FrigKten Fishers ASTORIA, Aug? 17-P)-Flsher-men off the Oregon coast are getting prepared tor anything. Recently they began making big- hauls of tuna and since then several have had narrow escapes when whales rose to the surface. Enroute from Kewport to As toria, Mauri Pesonen, Newport troller, and companions donned lite-jackets when a whale rose and nearly upset their 30-foot boat,: A party of sportsmen seek ing albacore were frightened when whales rose near the boat at the Columbia river mouth. . Courthouse Sought McMLNNvTLLE, Aug. It-iJPr' Another courthouse project for Oregon was started today when Yamhill connty applied to the PWA for a grant for $29f,000, three-story building. Voters first must approve a bond Issue to pay for the county's share. Convicts Face Death Penalty For Kidnap of Youthful Pair is J" -w-'-'. . mm. a '- V1 ' ft C v K . Captnre of two ex-convicts, Otis Jones Meredith, 21, and John Coach, 23, near Effie, Minn., was announced by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The men were arrested by federal agents for the kidnaping of Miss Peggy Gross and Daniel Cox Fahay Jr. of Kt. Louis. Officers said the ex-convicts apparently kidnaped Miss Gross and Fahay in St. Lools merely for the use of their car to flee the St. Louis area, where they were "hot. The victims were found near Champlln, Minn., bound with .wire and gagged. Meredith was seriously wounded as he attempted to elude officers. Photo shows Miss Gross and Fahay. (UN) Albany to Enlarge Staff of Faculty Religious Education Will Be Increased, States Trustee Head PORTLAND, Aug. -(Liquidation of the current obliga tions of Albany college, which will be transferred from Albany to Portland this fall, has enabled the college to enlarge its teach ing staff and the activities of the department of religious education. Dr. Perry J. Hopper said today. Dr. Hopper, president of the college board of trustees and pas tor of Westminster Presbyterian church here, said he would give up his part-time classes, assigcin3 work in Bible literature to the Rev. John D. Furnas, of San An selmo Theological seminary, who will also provide a program of re ligious education. Back from a California trip. Dr. Hopper said he was impressed by the "swing back to the small col lege church all over the country." He said four or five candidates tor the college presidency, vaca ted by Dr. Thomas W. Bibb, were under consideration. Dr. Bibb has gone east as president of Missouri Valley college. Two From Salem Are Fund-Raisers PORTLAND. Aug. 17-()-A committee to raise a war chest for the. democratic party for the general election in November was named today by Frank Tierney, state party chairman. It will be headed by Charles H. Leach and among the members are Tom Hol man and Mrs. Cora Cooter, Salem, and E. E. Wilson, Corvallis. Missing Port Or ford Meteor Is Apparently Still Missing EUGENE, Ore., Aug. 17P)-A hope of scientists that one of the Intriguing mysteries of the hea vens had been solved rediscov ery of the long lost Port Orford meteor appeared doomed to an other disappointment today. . Dr. H. H. Nininger, national meteorite expert of Denver, wrote Dr. J, Hugh Pruett, -western di rector of the American Meteor ological society and University ot Oregon astronomer, that a frag ment sent him as possibly from the meteor was "not in the least meteoric." The sample was found by. Ro bert Harrison, a miner, who claimed to have stumbled on to the meteor years ago. Told of in ancient Indian leg ends, the meteor was proved more than a myth nearly SO years ago when Dr. John Evans, gov ernment geologist, discovered it la 1859 but he died before be had Ume to map its location, some where near Port Orford. .V Better ; US -Nazi Trade Is Sought German Economist Pleads for Bilateralism in German Trade BERLIN. Aug. 1 7. - (JP) - The secretary of state In the German economics ministry pleaded to night for better economic rela tlons between the United States and Germany. - In an Impassioned address be fore the American chamber of commerce in Germany, Secy. Ru dolf Brlnkman said he believed if relations were, better, America could sell at least three million bales of cotton as well as metals, manufactured goods, wheat, lard and canned goods in Germany an nually. . He expressed hope the United States would "depart from rigid dogma" In trade relations with Germany as she did In the cases of Brazil and Italy, and give "greater consideration to the principle of bilateralism (ex change between two nations) In trade with Germany." - "Like Mr. Hull . (Secretary of State Hull) we believe the reduc tion and leveling of tariff rates is an important factor for the revi val of world trade, and like Mr. Hull we consider a most favored nation clause an' important means of attaining this aim." - Gambling Forgery Cause KLAMATH FALLS, Aug. 17 (ff)A study of four years of forgery and bad check cases here bas showed that 71 per cent grew directly out of the attempt to get cash to 7y gambling debts. Cir cuit J n d g.e Edward B. Ashurst said today in instructing the county grand Jury. Harrison said that years ago he came upon the meteor but lost in terest in it when no one offered financial assistance to recover it. His curiosity was again aroused when he read an article recently about It by Dr. Pruett. He sent Dr. Pruett a sample. Since then Harrison injured his back but he said he would lead an expedition to the meteor when he recovered. , The meteor is one of the larg est ever found and would be ot highest scientific value, ' experts say. However, Dr. Pruett said that Dr. W. F. Foshag, curator of minerology al petrology at the Smithsonian Institute contends that even upon rediscovery of the meteor the Institution would not be obliged to pay anyone for it because -it already belongs to the institution. "We should likely be willing to pay a reward for its discovery but this would not be in the nature of a purchase," Dr. Foshag wrote. Hines Agreed To Take Cut, Says Witness Former Schultz Member Says Tammany Chief j Got $500 a Week Courtroom Hushed While .Witness Tells of Plan to Protect Racket NEW YORK, Aug. 17-W James J. Hlnes, one of Tam many's most Influential district leaders, was named by a witness In supreme co rt today as tbe man who agreed to throw tbe cloak of political protection for S500 week around the op erations ot a multi-million dol lar a year policy syndicate head ed by the late Dutch Schultz. The witness, George Weinberg, husky, tanned, former 'buBinea. associate ot the slain racketeer, Schultz, rescribed before a hush ed courtroom a conference in 1932 at which he said plans were made to run -the policy racket without too much police later ference. Defense Objects, Asks Mistrial His testimony brought heated objections from Lloyd I'aul Stri ker, chief defense counsel at Hines' trial on conspiracy charg es, and a demand that a mistrial be declared. 1 Stryker, who earlier had de nounced Dist. Atty. Thomas K. Dewey's prosecution of the Tam many chieftain as being made up of "diabolical falsehoods" and "the rankest perjury," lost his motion. Dewey sent a flurry through the Crowded courtroom when ! charged, in his opening addrewi, that the Schultz gang had con tributed money and "thousands and thousands" of votes toward the election of former Dist. Atty. William C. Dodge, Dewey's pre decessor, a Tammanyito. Weinberg, who was indlctfd with Hines but who pleaded guilty and agreed to testify for the state, was the second witness called by Prosecutor Dewey la support of charges that the gon ial, ruddy-faced Hlnes was the political liaison man between tbe Schultz mob and law enforce ment agencies. ; Negro's Story Interrupted n .The first witness, Wilfred Brunder, a giant West Indian Negro who set out to give a first-hand explanation of how policy bankers work, was asked to step down when supreme court Justice Ferdinand Perora demanded that Dewey produce testimony which would link Hlnes with tbe conspiracy charge. Brunder was scheduled to re sume his story tomorrow, land Dewey said Weinberg probably would be recalled later to give a more complete story of now Schultz and his aides reaped a fortnnn from the nennle 'nlnkela and dimes of poor but trusting policy players. I 1 Weinberg, a brother of j the long-miaeing Abraham f Bo) Weinberg who is popularly be lieved to be encased In cement at the bottom of the East river, said' the conference with Hlnes took place at Schultz's Manhat tan apartment early In 1932. Weinberg State Huge Hums Paid During the conference, wbfrh he said was attended also by his brother and "Julie" Rosenkranz, the Tammany district leader re ceived thousands of dollars from Schjltz, the witness added. He said he was ordered to pay Hlnes $500 a week, plus any additional turns, up to $1,000, required for protection. Weinberg said he explained to hlnes that he and his associates wanted policy cases settled in magistrates court tnd not sent "downtown" to special sessions. "I was, told bv Schultz to males my arrangements to get In touch vith Hlnes whenever I netdVd him." Weinberg said. . The witness pointed directly at the defendant when asked to Identify him. lines, who has confidently predicted victory In the case which he describes as a "polit ical battle," let his gaze roam from Weinberg to tie Jury and back again, and occasionally to ward the celling j Fred Steele now Father of Champ SEATTLE, Aug. 17.-(T)-A rob was born today to former middle weight boxing champion and ?.'r. Freddie Steele of Tacoma. The youngster, named David Edward, weighed In at seven pounds. "Gee." said Freddie, "he looks Just like me. Homely as the devil. Big mouth and everything." The son was named David aft er Steele's one-time manager, the late Dave Miller, and Edward for Eddie Miller, Dave's brother. Steele lost the title to Al Ilos- tak ot Seattle last month.