ine viuuikuix &i airman, saiera, Oregon, Thursday Morning; September 8, 1933 IE ranee Troops Rushed To Frontiers Marseille! Dock. Workers Under Military- Rule aa Defense Move By the" Associated Press) PARIS, t Sept. 7 Prance purred military preparations to night by mobilizing all Marseille dock-workers end sending more - troops toward the German fron tier la apprehension of conflict developing from the German : Czechoslovak Quarrel. i, Pledged to aid Czechoslovakia ' fr-om foreign attack, France speeded additional reserve troops to her eastern border, bringing to 1,209,000 unofficial estimates of the soldiers under arms or stand ing by for orders from Premier . Edouard Daladier. 6000 Under Military The Marseille mobilization put ai estimated 5000 dock-workers - under military discipline at the nation's vital gateway to the huge man-power "of her colonial empire. A previous government decree pnl the Marseille port under mili . tay jurisdiction when stevedores strikes tied up . operations on weekends and holidays. ' Reset res and overlapping classes of new recruits have swelled the 700,000-man standing army f that France ordinarily maintains. ; Mobilization plans Made Circles - close to the- interior ministry reported instructions relative to war mobilization had been sent to the prefects of each of the nation's . 9 3 departments in France and Algeria. Similar instructions were said ' to have been sent to the governors of France's overseas territories by the colonial ministry, ' -Another important development was a communique issued by the . general confederation of labor in dicating that workers of the pow , erful organization will cooperate In strengthening national defense. - The 5,000, 000-raember confed eration had fought Daladier's -moves to end the 40-hour work week, but the communique show ed willingness to favor longer hours in view of the threatening international situation. A war ministry order Instruct ed an undetermined number of re servists to report immediately for duty on the Maginot line facing Germany. Buses to Be Used To Carry PARIS, "Sept. 7.-p)TTiie "taxis ot.theiMarne"rwhich.Jhelied turn ... the . tide of German invasion, 24 years ago will be replaced with buses' if the necessity of rushing , troops from . Paris ever" arises again..-..-.,1 J- '; . . - - The war ministry: ordered the Paris Transport company,- owner of the capital's buses, to turn over a number- of ..their, regular city buses for use in the recent army maneuvers near Besancon. - If the French army is ever hard pressed before Paris- again as in 1514, military experts say the gen- erai staff expects to find the big buses; .each seating 48 persons, fsr more efficient than Paris taxis for emergency troop transport. ' . V . , . .... . . : Diplomat Shakeup In japan Rumored TOKYO, Sept...--(Tbursday)-(fP)-A comprehensive, shake-up in Japan's diplomatic circles, affect ing ambassadors to Rome, Berlin, Moscow . and London, was pre dicted in informed .quarters today. : "While ;Jt iias long been rumored that f Ambassador : Hlrpshl -Saito would be recalled from .Washing ton, definite indications this move would be made were lacking.;- Britain4 " National Debt " Highest Ever in History LOND6N,ep7r(BrIUto national debt; was revealed'today to hare- - passed. 8,000,1)00,000 (about -f5T40.Ofr0,OO&,QGO" mark for the first time in 'history. - Rejects Bid t 1 r -t ( 1 5 i - j 1 . Florans Blasch, star 21-year-old Chicago athlete, is pictured in New York City, where she revealed that Lithuania had offered her a place on Its 1943 Olympics team. ?Bat I'm coins to get Into the Olympics thi tard way, she said, "by going out for the American team.? Troops Czechs Are Ready George Boochever, chairman of the Board, of the American Czecho slovak Chamber of Commerce, is pictured as he returned s to New York from abroad. Referring to in-: terriew with President Benes be de clared the Czechs are ready and -willinr to fight if necessary. Marauding Kept From (Child PORTLAND, Sept. t-)-How two marauding timber! wolves great, gray fellows stjil lurking in the Mount Wilson wilderness missed their kill after a! tiny girl's childish prattle drew them from the woods was related pere today by A. C. Bull, Portland attorney. Bull said the incident happened last Sunday in the Mount Hood area. His four-year-old daughter, Marilyn was with himj "Marilyn was skipping down the trail and suddenly I heard her scream. I looked' down the trail to see two timber wolves slinking toward her. They were within 10 feet or so whien 1 scram bled over the log and yelled and waved my ; arms. Theyj raced into the timber and disappeared. Had she been 60 feet farther down the trail she would have been out of y,sight and I don't know what would have happened," A forest ranger said wolves were fairly common in the area. ft Portland May Request Btg Housing Project PORTLAND. Ore., Sept. 7-(JP -The city council today asked the city attorney; toj prepare a resolution calling! fori a ? 5.000, 000 housing project for Portland, if and when voters authorize Joining the federal (government in the program. j Insurgents Deny Franco His Post Might Resign ' PARIS. SeDt. i 7-iUPV-SDanIah insurgent representatives In Par is flatly denied reports jn the London Financial Times today that - Generalissimo! Francisco Franco, insui gent leader, might resign in favor or a Spanish poli tician, favorable to Deviation. .- ' : .J" '.' ;v:,:-. -,:.' :.::.( :::- . V' " . , - - ... , W - . V . ;-.-.- ':: ' ' -1 X :.:. 1 , V' i iriTir-niiiiTir-i-ii "iv vi '-m i ry mfwniartf ' '-Triiiwi mh Wolves CFriday and Saturday OnlyiO fl I M This Coupon is UJorth $4.41 to Uou h! 0 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONtY f j , 10 A. 51. TO 8 P. M. , ATTENTION! This is a Factory Demonstration Of fer on the; New Fountain Pen, with a Genuine 14k Gold Point, Iridium Tipped. Writes both ways. First Time in Salem. Something New By arrangrements with the Manufacturer of this reg ular $5.00 ; Nationally advertised, pen, wej are posi tively limited in quantity. Get yours immediately. Hold the point normally and It writes medium1. --: ' - - - M " Hold the point reversed) and it , writes fine. ON . T Genuine ttlTlfftv -' Tha PaIhI- which you are eettinir Remember: The point portant for Smooth U i ' ; tCertificate VVf i 6c Extra lA(H X for 111 Mail Orilra I S . X 1 x y Price After I . n x L-l V til ! 1 S u $1-25 Pendl to Match; at This Sale, Only 29c ; ' This Pen has all features required in a fine writing Pen today. 1 Lifetime Guarantee by the Manufacturer. Greater Ink Capacity. r , ; .. Two-way writing points In choice of 14k Gold or Platinum Alloy Points, with Iridium Tips. ; ; Modern Colors Speed Line Designs. Re-fill Ink Indicator. 0 r- . CORNER COURT AND HIGH STREETS, ' Military Dewev's Case to Lawyer. Backs up Charge Hines Fought Naming I of Devrey j NEW YORK, Sept. 7.-(JP)A rapid fire of testimony intended to bolster the charges of gangland informers that James J. Hines served as paid political protector of Dutch Schultz'a mammoth pol icy racket today concluded Dist, Atty. Thomas E. Dewey's case against the 61-year-old Tammany district leader. j ; : j The last prosecution witness, James D. C. Murray, New York lawyer, boldly underscored prevt ous testimony that Hines attempt ed three years ago to block the appointment as special rackets prosecutor of Dewey, the crusad ing young man who eventually brought him to trial. Fire Chief Testifies Hammering home his - final piece of evidence I that Hines al legedly was associated with Schultz, the underworld overlord Dewey produced Cornelius Casey, fire chief of Troy, N. Y., for 20 years and democratic chairman of Rensselaer county, A friend of Hines for 15 years, the ruddy, white-haired fire chief quietly testified that Scbults came to him in February of 1935 with two attorneys and, "they wanted to know' if I could stop the police from interfering with them." "I told them I didn't think I could do anything, but I would see," Casey said, soon received a from Hines. adding that he telephone call Asked For Aid "He said, 'they j are giving some fellows a run-around up there. and he wanted to know if I conld do anything." j By "the fellows," Casey said. Hines told him jhe meant "the Dutchman." "I said." Casey testified, "I don't know how much I can do, but if they are all right and be have themselves here, I don't think anybody will interfere with them. " When Murray left the stand. Defense Counsel Lloyd Paul Stry ker announced he would make a motion tomorrow to dismiss the .charges against Hines and asked for a recess until 2 p. m. to pre pare nis ; argument. The recess was granted over tions. Dewey's ohjec- 17 Bombers Land At Pearl Harbor . HONOLULU, Sept. --Seventeen great bombing planes of the United States navy bearing 119 men descended upon Pearl harbor before dawn today, com pleting a moonlight flight of 2,570 miles from San Diego, Calif. I The big flyingj boats flew in mass formation throughout the night and completed ; the long over-water journey in- officially announced elapsed time of 17 hours, 17 minutes. m : -. . - i , New Mexico WP A j Object of Probe ALBUQUERQUE. N. M.. Sept. A federal grand Jury was launched tonight on an investiga tion of "common rumor" of graft, payroll padding and political ac tivity within the works progress administration of! New Mexico. US District Judge Colon P. Neb lett tersely charged the Jury with the inquiry as it was sworn in at the start of the fall jury session today. 1 I u d SALE T ONLY Ideal for School Work -A Never Heard-of price for a pen like this with a .Genuine Gold Point, Iridium Tipped, i f f & - J . . ' , . . . d --r U Limit 3 Sets '''l'jfy.f U . to Each ,; n this Sale. Just think! Tou have a 14k Gold Point with Iridium tip. or Platinum Alloy Point With Iridium a n . Never again will you get , this oo nor- I I an t a t V. t the whole pen at this Sale.- 0 of your Pen Is most im and fast writing Prepa 0 dditi os ' in the News By the Associated Press ' NEW YORK, Sept. 7-(fl)-The General Burglar Alarm company la s concern wihch protect small retail shops from robbery by a wire alarm system. Today, two men V held up the company and took 250. . i PONTXAC 'Mich.. Sept. 7 (") in hurry, Mrs. Merle Croteau telephoned for: a taxi . cab. A few minutes later three fire' tracks and police 'cruiser polled up at her door. CLEVELAND, Sept. 7-ip)-Reginald H. Kent, 26, won a divorce today after . testifying her radio technician' husband continually played funeral dirges on a phonograph "just to both er me and get on my nerves." . WASHINGTON, Sept. 7-()-A well-dressed middle-aged couple stepped from an automobile bear? ing New England license plalesi They stood gazing at a 3ig white building, then' halted- a passerby and asked: ' ' "Pardon me, could you telt us what that building isT' The passerby, stared -in aa tonishment: ,1 r "That building?" "Yes, please. . ... J " - "That, sir. Is thel capttol of the United States." j PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 7-P) -David Beerman, 41.: asking for a reduction of an order to pay his wife $6 a week.! told Judge William M.. Lewis today: 'I have four wives, your honor her two sisters and her mother. They all told me what to do." j Judge Lewis reduced the or der to 14. i 'Boat on Wneels' Conveys Family SEATTLE, Sept. T.--A, boat on wheels in which ten members of a Richmond, Va., family crossed the United States neared Seattle tonight, Alaska-bound. Paul Satko, 48-year-old welder, brought his wife and eight chil dren from Ri .hmond in the novel conveyance in nearly three months of alternate traveling and work ing at odd jobs. j : The land-going vessel, in which the Satkos crossed the Cascades east of Seattle today, consists of the steel framework of an uncom pleted 40-foot boat, mounted upon a truck chassis, steered from with in by a snip s wheel and equipped with a ship's bell Instead of an automobile horn. i:, s . , Satko explained that when em ployment turned dull in Richmond be constructed the; boat frame work and headed westward, plan ning to finish the vessel here and take his i family . to Cook Inlet, 'Alaska. : j "I'm going to salt up to Alaska just as soon as I get this thing finished." Satko tdld Interview ers. ; "I hear life isj easier up there." 4-Day Week Asked By Typographers BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. 7-(P)-Proposal of a 4-day week for the printing industry along with suggestions to eliminate present contracts j calling for work over a 6-day; week are ex pected to come before the In ternational Typographical union during its week-long convention beginning here Saturday. Charles E. Wilfong of Chica go, chairman of the Important committee on law, said today dis cussion of a 4-day week for the in du i try was probable. Try One o These Tasty CEnusaese PusEaes At Salem's Foremost Oriental Restaurant We rater to banquets and private parties. Ph. 7082. Special Sunday Chicken Dinner SO; Special Mer chants Lunch 25c pre pared by expert Chinese cook.1 Orders to take out any time. Open Day or Night I Sanitary Kitchen. BEST MEAL FOR 25c IN TOWN : New SHANGHAI CAP E 121 S. Commercial Opposite Ladd & Bush Bank" '(3 ly jpimcacE : For I . CI ean Cotton Rags No Small Scraps or , ' Stockings K :;. S 1" A I ESM Ml rations Deporting Suit to Government Appeals Case Which Has Bearing on Bridges .. , . , - WASHINGTON, Septr T.-- The government appealed to the supreme court today a deportation case which may affect the status of Harry Bridges, west coast CIO leader, against whom deportation proceedings are pending. Solicitor General Robert H. Jackson and Gerard P. ReUly, la bor department solicitor, asked the court to decide in the case of Joseph G. Strecker of Hot Springs, Ark., whether an alien member of the communist party la subject to deportation under a 1938 stat ute. This statute provides deporta tion for alien members of organi zations which advocate the over throw of the government by force. Deportations Reversed The fifth circuit court recently reversed a deportation order against) Strecker, granted by a federal district court. Pending final disposition of the case, the labor department has .been de ferring further action against Bridges. Chairman Diea (D-Tez) of a house committee investigating un American activities, recently asked Secretary of Labor Perkins to conclude deportation proceed ing against Bridges. Dies declared there was no Jus tification for delay and . said he eould not! see how the Strecker case would have any bearing on Bridges' case "since the facta are so dissimilar." Witnesses before Dies' committee testified Bridges associated with communists. Appeal Recommended Secretary Perkins replied that her department had recommended an appeal from the circuit court decision to the-high court, adding that, "it was recognized at once . . . that unless this holding were reversed the charges against Brid ges, even if proved, had no legal significance whatsoever." Strecker came to this country from Austria in 1S12. In 1933 he filed a naturalization petition. Before this proceeding was com pleted, however Jhe waa arrested and ordered deported. He had Joined the communist party in No vember, 1932, but stopped paying his dues in February, -933. Grants Pass Cats Like Oil j Surface, But Owners Don't GRANTS PASS, Ore., Sept. 7 (iSVThere are a ; lot of dogs and cats here which are in for a hot time. Dick McCulIough, superin tendent of a crew surfacing some streets here, says the felines and canines have taken to rolling in the first coats of asphalt oil all with sorry results. He says the only way he knows by which the owners can cleanse their pets Is to bathe them In kerosene. Those who know say there Is only one thing worse than tying a can to a dog's tail and that is coal oil applied to the seat of its pants. JomG boons 1 Lons; Terms Easy Payments Abo FHA Loans nnionins a nODERTS, Inc. Guardlaa Bids. Phone 4108 Pork Chow Mein for 1, 35c; for 2, 50c; for 3, 75c , Chicken Chow Mein, 75c Pork Chop Suejr 35c Fried i Rice 35c Home-made Noodles, 25c Stanfield Named Action Defendant Severance of Fixtures . From Real Property Is Charged ONTARIO, Ore,. Sept. An indictment charging severance of fixtures from real property " 5a pirect from M New York K 1 Velvets X )v .. Sheer 001---::- ) ! Alpaca .t-pi': -&x sh- Crepes . ' -- -J - --j :1m :3: :W , - if . Colors: I 12 Tjeel Blue V Wine X Kust jJ M . " ; i Black I : 895 1 1 095- Zfir Millinery S -. ;J - . i -'l. - - i Sizes 12 to 50. ' . !--,' . A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL RESERVE ANY GARMENT tThe Ladies Store Complete" V named as defendants, today for mer US Senator Robert Stan field, who was defeated last May for the republican nomination.! ' , Jointly named aa defendants were Miss Kathleen Klyett. his secretary, and John R. iCorbett, foreman of the Crowley ranch operated by Stanfield. -j M. A. Biggs, Malhen? county district attorney, asserted that the defendants directed the re moval of a house, barn, chicken house, blacksmith shopl - stock ade, corral and fence from the ; 1 Grant Walters ranch, owned by the state and adjoining the Crowley ranch. Biggs said' that Stanfield and his associates 'said they believed tha property was included in a lease of state-owned range lands negotiated last year by Stan field. The district attorney said that while negotiations -bad been carried on br Stanfield and state representatives, the lease had not been signed although . t h e document . had been, mailed to Stanfieid's office. I nc. 357 COURT ST.