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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1938)
' famous Funnies' Follow the five f anions fenny features daily In The Statesman: Fopeye. Mickey Blouse, roily and Her Pals, Annie Rooney and Toots and Casper. The Weather Cloudy, with possible rain Sunday and Monday. Some what cooler. Max. Temp. Sat.:73; Min. 42. River -3.5 feet. South winds. - - r - . . - POUNDQD 1651 EIGHTY-EIGHTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, October 9, 1938 Price Sc; Newsstands 5e No. 168 Britain's King And Queen to Visit Canada Valsets Mill to Resume Operations as Dispute ers At Rail Wages Spanish War Battlefield es Is Settled mte Probe rom -i . . j. ...... . ; -" Temp Ital 7T7 Was Disv ID: 1 i 1 Trip to United States Not Mentioned, but Is Possibility England Is Appreciative of Roosevelt Efforts for Peace LONDON, Oct. 8 - (JP) - King George VI and Queen Elizabeth will become the first reigning British sovereigns ever to set foot in "the new world" by a vrsitto Canada next summer which may take them to the United States. A brief - official announcement today from Balmoral castle In Scotland said the British rulers would make the precedent-shattering trip' "in the early summer" . and spend "about three weeks" In Canada. Ko Mention Made Or US Visit - No mention was made of the United States, but many believed It was possible their majesties might go there as a gesture of .Anglo-American solidarity for In ternational reasons and increas ing pressure here for- closer ties -between the United States and Great. Britain. Some sections of the British press have urged the king and queen to visit New, York's world fair next year. If they do not ' enter the United States, there was the possibility they might meet President Roosevelt on the inter national boundary. There has been a deep appre ciation in England for President Roosevelt's two appeals to Chan cellor Hitler of Germany against war during the gloomy days of the recent crisis. , , Two Princes of Wales have vis ited Canada and the United States. The late Edward VII when a stu dent at Oxford was the first de scendant of King George III, who reigned when the 13 colonies re Tolted to form the United States. He went shortly before the out . break of the civil war. The present Duke of Windsor was acclaimed tumultuously when he visited the. United States and Canada in 1919. While Prince of Wales he visited the United States a second time incognito in 1923, and a year later went a third time on a private "Visit. i ? '-i The news magazine Cavalcade in a recent "article proposing such a visit to the United States said the projec thad the "blessing and support" of United States Ambas sador Joseph P. Kennedy. WASHINGTON, Cct. 8-(P)-The possibility of a British king and queen visiting the White House for the first time in his tory , thrilled capital diplomatic and society circles today, but no one here knew whether it would be realized. -. , No official word of the forth coming visit of the royal pair, to -v Canada had been received here tonight, authorities said. - Should 4hey come here they probably would be dinner or even overnight guests at the White House. Queen Marie of Rumania, with her two children, was the last ruling monarch to visit Wash ington. She was received and en tertained at the- White House by President Coolidge. Previously King Albert and. Queen Elizabeth of Belgium made an extended tour of the United States and were re ceived at the White House by President Wilson. Cattle Rustlers Paroled by Judge Roy, 37, and Harley Charpil loz, 19, of the Silver Falls . dis trict escaped three-year peniten tiary sentences yesterday when Circuit Judge L. H. McMahan pa roled them on condition they pay $400 within four months to Clay Porter, -to the theft of whose cat tle they pleaded guilty Friday. They were made .responsible to Deputy Sheriff Kenneth RandalK The two were arrested Septem ber 12 at the conclusion of a state police investigation of the report ed disappearance of 14 head of registered Herefords from a herd of cattl3 Porter had grazing in the Silver Falls area. They admitted having taken three of the animals, which Porter valued at $100 each, September 5, butchering them on the spot and selling the meat in Portland for "10 cents a pound. fGhSi-E-GSBPS Scio j. farmers have been en tering some mild kicks and some not so mild about hunt ers; or at least about the after math of the hunters' hunting. And now a Salem dealer backs up the grounds On which .farm ers base their complaints. The farmers are more or less Irate because hunters are kill ing livestock not covered by their hunting licenses. The lat est victim is Frank Cawrse whose farm is In the Providence neighborhood near Scio, who says he lost a steer via a hunt er's gun. " ; - Now comes the Salem dealer who tells Scio stock raisers that , stock hides from the Scio -vi-' cinlty contain more shot than those from any other valley point. . " Unions Vote to Accept C Pay Increase for J Cents ! ! VALSETZ, ! Oct. J -""jr day followed a Vote Q ,ma oy accept a eompromibv ement of their wage dispute. The mill local vote. 95 to 7 and the woods local 35 to 6 to accept a3 a compromise a 55-cent an hour minimum wage, Death i Ends Man's Journey to Bride W. K. Carleton Is Killed as two Cars Crash on High way Death came to W. K. Carleton, 58, of 111 15th avenue. Long view, Wash., almost Instantly yesterday morning when his car hit a shoulder of the road about nine miles south of Salem and slithered in front of a car driven by John Graff, Albany. To have been married here to day to Enna HolHster of Creswell, Carleton was said to have been driving down the new four-lane highway at a high rate of speed. When he reached the termination of the widened highway his ma chine hit j the shoulder of the road, and swung directly in the path of the oncoming Graff car. Mrs. Graff, who was riding with her husband, sustained severe cuts and bruises. She was said not "out of danger" last night. Both she and Mr. Graff, who sustained facial cuts and bruises, are hos pitalized at the Salem Deaconess. With, the side of the coupe caved in against the body, it was necessary ;to procure a wrecker before Carleton could be removed. His death wa3 Que to a fractured skull and a broken neck. New Registration Mark Is Forecast Clerk Estimates Record Number of Voters to Cast Ballots County Clerk U. G. Boyer last night announced that a new high mark in voter registration In Ma rion county porbably had been set for the November election. He estimated I at least 1000 voters registered! yesterday, the closing day. j The last day rush was not as great as in other years but Boyer said early; registration was great er It will be at least midweek before returns from the rural registrars' reports have been re ceived and tabulation of the total registration completed. The final rush to the registra tion desks grew heavy at 4 p. m. yesterday j and continued steadily until 8, the closing hour. Boyer and nine' assistants were kept busy during the four hours and from three or more clerks arlier in the day. The all-time registration record was set in October, 1936, with 35,327 voters recorded. For the primary election last spring 34, 251 were registered, including 19,892 republicans, 13,908 demo crats and 454 of other political faith. . j ' ; Uniform Liquor Ads Are Soudit i . & PORTLAND, Oct. 8. --Federal alcohol administration was urged today to adopt uniform regulations tb govern liquor ad vertising s over the nation. In a resolution passed by advertising managers: of the Oregon News paper Publishers' association. The association awarded the Fenger-Hall plaque to the As torian Budget for the best mer chandising cooperation with a na tional account. Honorable men tion went to the McMInnville Telephone-Register, the Roseburg News-Review '. and the Coquille Tribune. I Tallest Man in World Stops Here for Steak or Three i A giant came to Salem last night and that's no fairy tale. He was Robert: Wadlowr 19, who has proven to the world that corn Isn't ; the .only product of Iowa that grows tall. Robert is eight feet, seven Inches tall and weighs 485 pounds.;! ' ' ' En route to Portland, he and his three managers stopped un announced at The Spa for dinner. Unabashed, Frank G. Myers, pro prietor, -i fed Robert "on the house." He- ate a dinner that in cldded two cocktails, two bowls of soup, i two salads, two porter house steaks, two pieces of pie and the usual side dishes. The vounsr : riant was . so tall vnromise-of 10 Percent tlinimum of 55 ' jur Wage -lnouncement that the Cobbs- resume operations nere Mon- mm ana wooas union locals to 'VTe cents lower than the rate de manded when the mill shut down August 15 but five cents higher than the minimum in effect at that time. The new wage is a flat minimum without the sliding scale feature of the old 50-cent rate. Union officials estimated the settlement would return 300 men to work. j The planing mill, shipping de partment and woods crews will go to work Monday and the saw mill workers the following Mon day, October 17. ; Valsetz ; workers', claims for state compensation while they were unemployed are still pend ing, Pete Latham, president of loggers' local No. 2692, reported. AFL Leaders Seek CIO First Move Convention to Be Asked to Uphold Policy of Waiting HOUSTON. Tex., Oct. American Federation of Labor leaders, apparently resisting strong pressure within their ranks for immediate renewal of peace talks with the CIO, were reported ready tonight to ask the AFL convention Monday to uphold a policy of waiting for John L. Lewis to make the next peace move. ; Standing between the leader ship and a ratification vote, however, was Daniel J. Tobin, one of the federation's vice pres idents, who wants the ; AFL to do something more than merely hold- open the door to labor peaces. v ,. ... -;"";. .. After a meeting of the execu tive council earlier in the day which debated Tobln's urgent plea to the convention Friday and President Roosevelt express ed hope. that labor leaders would "make and keep the peace," To bin told reporters: : "My interpretation Is that the president is extremely 5 anxious as a friend of labor, to briag about unity tn the family of la bor in the interests, not only of the workers, but of the pub lic." The possibility Mr. Roosevelt might be drawn into the situa tion as a mediator or arbitrator was considerably dimmed, how ever, after AFL President Wil liam Green and the council fin lhed their extraordinary session. First Lady Meets Veteran Trouper NEW YORK, Oct. 8-(P)-Anoth-er exploit in amiable unorthodoxy by the first lady of the land was written today in the fast growing ledger on Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt.- ' ; ; ; She stirred a flutter of excite ment in the cast of the revived play "Lightnin' " last night by slipping backstage, unheralded, between the second and third acts. She had come to congratulate her old friend and stage favorite, Fred Stone, starring In the role made famous by the late Frank Bacon. .' j : ' :'. Stone grinned delightedly as he took the first lady's hand. "Thank you, dear," he saidJ i Mrs. Roosevelt smiled: , : "I hope to see. you in iWashing ton soon." ! Chatting informally with Mrs. Priestly Morrison, who plays the part of Stone's "old lady,", Mrs. Roosevelt described herself as "a reai home-body, too." ? After congratulating Stone, she shook hands with each member of the assembled cast and told them Low much she enjoyed their per formance. t ; and so broad of shoulder :. that he had both to stoop over and to turn ' sidewise to get through the restaurant doorway. .Hewas so heavy his manager, inquired about the strength of the restau rant bench before allowing him to sit down. ; ' Wadlow travels in 1 a seven passenger sedan with back - seat especially constructed to accom modate his size. Seated at an or dinary table, he can see over the head of a more than average tall man. " . . Everything the blond giant wears Is made on special order, Including gold-rimmed spectacles, the gray business suit ; he wore rlast night and his bnge shoes. He travels for a shoe company. Brotherhoods Attorney Contends Living Costs 5 Prohibit Cut Hay 'Says Insinuations of Road Counsels "Insulting WASHINGTON. Oct. 8.-(iT)-Tentpers flared at the rail wage hearing today in a dispute over the cost of living and pay data offered by opposing side?. David Kaplan, statistical wit ness for the railroad workers' brotherhoods, and J. Carter Fort, railroad counsel, engaged in a three-hour debate over differences In statistics offered by labor and management. . - Railroads Show Pay Charts Railroads had presented a sheaf of charts to show railroad pay was at a peak, living costs had gone down, and rail revenue had dropped as wages went up. The data was offered in sup port of a proposal for a 15 per cent wage reduction a gainst which 1,000,000 workers have voted to strike. Kaplan accused railroads of trying to compare "apples and pears," and offered his own ex hibits 'to (how the cost of living did not warrant a pay reduction. When the labor witness answered questions with long ex planations, Fort protested: No Filibuster Wanted "I don't want this to develop into a: filibuster on my time." At another point Kaplan of fered to read a newspaper inter view quoting Ernest T. Weir, steel executive, on the relation of wages to cost of living. A rail road attorney questioned its au thenticity, and Charles M. Hay, of counsel for the brotherhoods, shouted: "That's insulting'" Then, after thinking it over. Hay added: "I promised not to get road, but this fellow gets on my nerves." Bert M. Jewell, president ofihe railway employes department of the American Federation otrLa bor," testified present "wages'"were at about the same level as In 1920, when they were fixed "by a government board." ' James M. Landis, member of the fact-finding board which ls investigating the justice of the wage reduction proposal, asked railroads to provide estimates on just how much each railroad ex pected to save by the reduction. Rail spokesmen had testified the entire Industry would save $250, 000,000 annually. Mexican Tribunal Drops Oil Appeal Prospect of Long Delay Before Final Ruling, on Legality MEXICO CITY, Oct. S-(JP)-An appeal by American and British oil companies for an injunction against expropriation of their properties. March 18 was dismissed today by the Mexican supreme court. The dismissal raised the pros pect of a long delay before Mexi co's highest court finally rules on the legajrty of the sweeping ex propriation which took over prop erties valued by the foreign oil companies at $400,000,000. Today's ruling said the . ques tion was not one for the supreme court since the companies thus far have not exhausted admini strative recourses open to them in seeking relief from theiexpro priation decree. Mexico's department of nation al economy has under considera tion an appeal against the decree which President Lazardo Carde nas promulgated last March fol lowing extensive disputes between the companies and their workers. It Was a big Day For Jung Won Hai PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. Today was a day of days for Jung Won Hal, which means in Chi nese "why couldn't she have been a boy." , Jung, 22, tiny and looking as fragile as a Chinese vase, arrived here to become the lady of the house of Wong On, 3, Portland Chinese restaurant operator. Jung became not only a wife, but a foster mother and a foster grandmother, for Wong. On has sons at the University of Wash ington, and others still older, married with children of their own. ' Wong On arranged for his new wife 'by cable. He knew her family but had never seen the girL She arrived Tuesday. Ironically on the Empress of Japan. They were married when the ship docked in Victoria, B. C. Jung speaks - no English but her husband, who speaks it per fectly, said Jung was simply in fatuated with America. Jung dimpled and giggled. Cardinal Hurt As Vienna Mob Stones Church I .:, . .'i i I Spirited Sermon Against Nazis Cause of Riots Before Palace I Splinter From Windows Smashed by Stones Cuts Prelate VIENNA, OcL 8-(,!P)-Theodore, Cardinal Innitser was injured slightly today when a nazl crowd stoned his palace and smashed a window in the cardinal's private chapel where he was praying. Virtually all palace windows were shattered by the demonstra tors who invaded the archepisco pal offices, carried out numerous pieces of furniture and burned them in St. Stephen's square. The nazl attack came apparent ly in retaliation for a demonstra tion last night involving Catholic youths who had heard Cardinal Innitzer preach a stirring sermon. Glass Splinter Cuts Cardinal The cardinal's injury; was caused by a . splinter of glass as the demonstrators hurled stone after stone through the private chapel window. With attending clergy, Innitzer had retired there to pray during the hostile demon stration; Palace'attendants bandaged the wound which did not require hos pital attention. Police dispersed the nazis after they had rioted for nearly an hour, and a fire brigade quenched the blazing furniture. ! Last night's near riot, which brought nazi retaliation today, followed upon a service for Cath olic youth who packed St. Steph en's cathedral whUe 10,000 oth ers stood outside. Innitzer exhorted his listeners to "preserve faith and gtve out ward testimony thereof, difficult thouglf that may be, for it Is not enough to carry faith only within the heart." After the service ended, crowds demonstrated before a cafe popu lar among nazis. Cafe customers shouted "To Dachau with Innit ser," referring to a notorious Ger man concentration camp, while angry roars came from the rowd gathered in St. Stephen's square. Police were called to quell the disturbance. Students Dislike Stylish Coiffure PULLMAN, Wash., Oct. rJPr- The new piled high coiffures may be all the rage with the stylists and beauties of London and Paris, New York and Hollywood, but it doesn't get by with Joe College. Not, at least, at Washington State. ' To test the sentiment. The Ev ergreen. Washington State1 col lege paper, polled the students. Today it announced the men pre dominantly against the new hair styles. . Typical comments: i ' Richard Miles, Spokane: !They look like they'd just got up.' Leslie Edwards, Montesano: "Not enough good-looking j ears for that stuff here." ! Bob Smith, Longview: TWhy don't they get some hoop skirts, too?" - Not with the herd, though, was Jack Feely. "Up," shouted Jack. "Definitely up. I come from where they set the styles."; He's from -that's right Los Angeles. No Purge," Says Democrat Nominee PORTLAND, Oct. 8 -()- A promise that there would be "no purge of workers in any state de partment under my control as governor" came today from Henry L. Hess, democratic nominee for governor Hess previously had been, quoted as assuring a clean out of those not in sympathy with him. , ' j ' He said he believed the "tax payer should have an honest re turn on his Investment in govern ment administration", and that so long as efficiency prevailed ' he would "not disturb the balance Pro Golfer Weds Fortune Heiress WASHDMGTON, Conn., -Oct. 8. Horton Smith, a leading profes sional golfer, and Miss Barbara Louise Bourne, heiress to a por tion of the Singer sewing-ma chine fortune, were married here today.: j .The bride, herself a! top' rank ing golfer went to the finals of the Aiken, S. C, women a tourna ment last year, losing to Patty Berg, : present women's national champion. . . S . Mr. an4 Mrs. Smith's honey moon plans call for a year of travel. I . M a rin es Wh ip Bearcats . 14-0 With Two Second Period Scoring Drives ' ' j ''.'!., " Willamette Outgains! Devildogs but Interception, Fumble Prove bad Medicine as Marines Capitalize on Breaks to Win !-.. . ' SAN DIEGO, Calif. j Oct. 8 (AP) Sparked by a 94 yard touchdown run by Halfback Russ Honsowitz,, the San Diego Marine football team made two second-quarter scoring' thrusts to defeat Willamette university of Salem, Ore., 14 to 0, before 3000 fans here tonight. The Collegians outgained the Service Men, but the latter capitalized on two break a to win.O ; 5 The first came on the second play of the second quarter when Hon sowitz intercepted a pass thrown by Bunny Bennett and scampered 94 yards to the goal. Immediately after the next kickoff. a Willam ette fumble was recovered by Dick Patch, Marine tackle, on the Bear cat 32-yard line. From that point the Devildogs scored on six plays, two of them passes, with John Gormley covering the last yard on a straight smash. Gormley also provided both conversions from placement. Willamette got inside the Ma rine 20-yard line three times and once reached the one but each time 1 their goal was threatened the Leathernecks tightened up and took the ball. Gene Stewart, elusive Bearcat halfback, pestered the San Diegans throughout the gamelwith his tricky running. (LINEUPS ON SPORT PAGE) Severed Woman's Head Discovered i j; Tacoma May Have 3Iystery Rivalling . Cleveland , Tjefrso Slayings I .! " ' . ' " i : i ' " ': TACOMA, Oct.1 8.-(VThe gruesome discovery of a woman's severed head in a secluded Ta coma park today provided police with a possible murder mystery rivaling Cleveland's famous torso slayings. Deputy Coroner W. G. Hoffner said the head was that of a white woman, about 45 years of age. It bore no marks to : indicate the cause of death, he added, and a search of the vicinity failed to reveal any other parts of the body. Hoffner estimated the woman had been dead about a year. The discovery was made by Emory Harrington, of Puyallup, who was in Wakefield park, for merly known as Galllher gulch, digging fishing worms. The head was lying on top of; the ground, he, said. He added, however, that he had been digging worms in the same vicinity Friday- and had seen no signs of it then. A police search for other clues was ended by darkness tonight; but plans were made to continue it Sunday. Several Tacoma women have been listed by police as missing" since- a year . ago. School Budget Is Up. Tuesday A half million dollar Salem school budget for the year 1938-39 will be up for action at the annual taxpayers meet ing at the administration build ing, 434 North High street, at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. I. j ; The budget proposes expendi tures totaling $530,610.46, of which $76,087.50 is for bond In terest and retirement of i prlncl pal. District indebtedness amounts to $683,666.30, includ ing $681500 In bonds. The proposed tax levy amounts to $335,162.39. Of this sum $259,074.88 is for current expenses. Released Americans in Spain Ask Who's Winning in Series Hendaye, F r a n c e (at the Spanish frontier) (5s)-. Fourteen Americans who had been captured by the Spanish insurgents were freed today after months of im prisonment, given clean clothes, fed ham and e?gs. and told that the New York Yankees were do ing nicely. - i "Who's winning Ihe world ser lest" was one of the first ques tions asked as the group arrived in France from Irun, across the border in insurgent Spain. ' The fourteen were exchanged for 14 Italian aviators in a deal arranged by United States Am bassador Claude G. Bowers. They came from the San Pedro de Car dena prison camp. In n abandon ed, monastery, wher ,74 other Americans are reporieJ still held. The Americans had been im prisoned for an average of seven months each. Luis Omits, of New German Officials Deprecate Trial So What?" Says Foreign Office to Spy Trial in New York BERLIN. Oct. S-y-German officialdom remained indifferent today to the approaching trial in New York of. Fraulein Jo hanna Hoffman, 26-year-old for mer beauty salon operator on the German liner Bremen, and others charged with spying in the United States in behalf of Germany. An undisturbed "so what?" sums up in a nutshell the feel ings of foreign office and other German authorities regarding the trial, opening Friday, on indict ments -which accused high of ficials of the German war min istry of directing a. ."spy plot in the United States. "We view ; the eoming . trial with absolute equanimity," said a German foreign office official. "We have the feeling that even in America there is no great en thusiasm over he spy case be cause the. very man who dug up the information on which the charges Were based since has tried to sell his stary for publica tion." (Leon G. Turou, agent of the United States federal bureau of investigation whose work led to the indictments, resigned after they were returned to write for publication. His sory of the case .was sold to a New York newpsaper, but publication was prohibited by Washington.) Effort for Peace. In Portland Fails PORTLAND, Ore... Oct, Efforts to end the suspension of two Portland furniture plants failed today when theioint executive- board of furniture workers union again rejected wage cut proposals of the Doernbecher Manufacturing company and the B. P. John Furniture corporation. The two plants, which employ approximately 1500 workers, closed last Monday vwhen the unions refused a 10 cents per hour pay cut. The executive board, however, gave assurance the tie-up would not spread to other Portland fur niture plants by approving renew als of the 1937-1938 agreements between-10 firms and the Up holsterers local No. 65 and be tween six firms and" Furniture Workers local No. 1482. Couple Are Unharmed : When Car Hits Garage HILLSBORO, Ore.. Oct. S--Although their machine struck a garage at Gaston with such force that the building was moved. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Farmer. Ellens burg. Wash., escaped with only minor injuries today. Sheriff J. W. Connell said Farmer apparent ly, was confused by fog. York City, was "dean" of the group, having, been a captive for 14 months. " . Escorted by an insurgent guard, the 14 crossed the international bridge and were met ' at the French side by Ambassador Bow ers,' French officials, the Spanish government consul and a repre sentative of the French Red Cross. They wore Tagged khaki uni forms which were exchanged im mediately, fas new overalls and blue Basque berets by agents of the American organization, the f i lends of the. Abraham Lincoln brigade. . " : They sat down to eat what they called "the first square meal we can remember" ham and egfcs and steak. While arrangements were being made to send them to Paris en route .to the United States the ! Americans talked of their exper 1 lences. . Action Clears Way for Pact With Britain 10,000 of Troops Under Order of Withdrawal - From II Duce ! German Army Takes Over Fifth Zone of Czech Ceded Lands i (By the-Associated Press) Italy laid the groundwork yes terday (Saturday) for settlement of her differences with Britain and France in particular and for possible European appeasement in general. .The action came with the-aa-nouncement Premier Mussolini was arranging immediate: with-' drawal of part of his trocps from insurgent Spain. The announcement said Italian Legionnaires with more than 18 months uninterrupted campaign ing In Spain would be recalled. Private sources estimated thi step would mean withdrawal of 10,000 of II Duce 's forces whose presence in the Spanish ciTil conflict has been major thorn rin Italian-Eritish and It&lian- French relations. j Paves Way For j Amity Pact This move on Italy's part to ward abandoning the Spanish conflict to the Spaniards cleared the way for Prime Minister Ne ville Chamberlai of Britain to seal the dormant Easter Anglo Italian friendship pact. j . By the same token, it brought an opening for Chamberlain to pursue his cherished desire of bringing Europe into one happy family. j The British prime minister felt a long step In this direction was accomplished through the four power Munich accord for the dismemberment r of Czechoslo vakia. . . -' - "-v. II Duce's announcement yes terday removed one of the major stumbling blocks remaining in the path of his ambitious pro gram. In return for Italy's withdraw al of troops from Spain, -Britain already is prepared, along with France, to grant formal recogni tion to Italy's conquest of Ethi opia. This prospective Improvement in International relations found France in the midst of an up heaval at home. Daladier Calls In Leon Blum Premier Eduard Daladier. faced with a communist plan to wreck his government by resur recting the people's front, called In-Former Socialist Premier Le-. on Blum and Leon Jouhaux, sec- . retary of the general confedera-" tion of labor, to discuss the eit uationj j . . Two immediate differences be tween Daladier and the two leaders were over the questions of French recognition of the Spanish insurgents as belligerents and the nation's continuing ; labor troubles. . j Adolf Hitler, meanwhile, sped from his newly acquired. Sude tenland toward the Saar " valley for speech today in which' be was expected to seize upon his close proximity to French terri tory to make another gesture f friendship toward that neigh boring democracy. The fuehrer left behind his army of occupation which moved yesterday into the fifth zone ct Sudetenland, delimited by the International commission in Ber lin. . In Berlin itself the govern ment revoked all German pass ports in the hands of Jews. The action clogged up the visa machinery of United States consulates, since .several thou sand visas issued recently will be worthless unless they are ex cluded from "the order ct the German ministry of interior. Consulate . officials asked the ministry for an early confertnee. Gloom and resentment in creased in Czechoslovakia as Ger man and Polish troops pushed deeper into the republic. The Prague government's dif ficulties were far from over for it still must settle Hungary's territorial and minority claims. Negotiations of this issue start J.oday. ; American and British oil ecxri panies. which -appealed against the Mexican s;overninent'3 ex propriation of tttir properties on .March 18, received-a setback in Mexico City when the supreme court dismissed their case. -Mexico's, department of na tional economy still has under consideration their appeal 'for re vocation of the expropriation or der. An announcement in London said King George VI and Queen Elizabeth would visit Canada next year. No mention was made of a possible visit to the United States byk the. royal pair. ; Agreement Reached - PORTLAND, Oct. S -;?)- F Portland sawmills and" the CJO Timberworkers union) local No. 2, reached a new working agreecu r,t today. !