. Back to Yon The pennies you speed for Christmas Seals come back to yoa Increased many fold in helping to free your county of tuberculosis. 6 t I PSUNDSO 1651 The Weather. , Fair today and Sunday, T alley toga. little change la temperatures.' Max. temp. Friday 43, mln. 23. River. .0 ft. South wind. EIGHTY'EIGHTH YEAR 8 Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning:, December 17, 193S Price Sc; Newsstands Sc No. 227 Man of Many Identities Puts Bullet Thrpugh Head as More DevMopMentsFoundirobe Coster, nee MusicaJ Shoots Self as Federal Officer! Knocking to Make Arrest -1 Other, Officials of Dug Firm Shown to Be Musica ; Brothers and Are Under Arrest : ." ' vi-r- ; IT . ,' - NEW YORK, Dec. 16-U ( AP i-F. Donald Coster, an in credible dual personality of evil financial genius, who wiped out his earlier identity as Convi$ Philip Musica to become head of an $87,000,000 drug concrn, killed himself today at his Fairfield, Conn., country estaje. He fired a bullet into his heir at the very moment a squad of federal authorities was Blocking on his ornate door to rearrest him in the investigaticfi of a great financial scan dal involving his firm McKessoif and Robbins, Inc. All Mnsiras While . Coster was jdylng in. the Connecticut mansion, authorities In New-York identified George Vernard, Canadian agent of tne . corporation, and two: of its other employes as Musicas all broth ers of the financier. They were "George Dietrich," assistant treasurer of the firm, and "Rob ert Dietrich, purchasing agent for the firm in Bridgeport, Conn. Late In the day, Vernard was arraigned on a grand jury indict ment charging him with filing false Information on McKesson and Robbins stock listings, and 'Robert Dietrich, youngest of the brothers, was arraigned on a sim ple charge of violating the SEC act. They were heldfin $100,000 each. . .v. j - j ; The same bail was required i of George Dietrich upon bis arraign ment in New Haven, j ; ; ; i Coster,' Vernard and Dietrich already were under Indictment for making . false statements to e New York stock exchange In con nection with McKesson and Rob bins securities sold to the public, - and their bond f 5,000 for Cos ter and Dietrich and $3,600 tor Vernard had been pet at" com paratively low; fignres-j; ; . vl i But the hour of Coster's un masking as Philip Musica; a man with- a. criminal record going " back 10 years or more, had come Is st night, and this morning the process of revelation hi d gone on until the government decided to re-arrest the three and ask 1100,000 bond. ' f New Developments Overshadow Theft Piling on - top of , disclosures that more than one Musica broth er Lad made a new j name and new life were other developments that completely overshadowed for the moment the' central purpose of a four-sided investigation that for more than a week has sought to discover the reason for an ap parent 118.000.000 overstate ment of McKesson and Robbins assets. j - " -j':-' These developments Included disclosures that Coster- who was Involved 25 years ago In the million-dollar collapse of t h e United States Hair company was suspected of shipping arms to belligerents abroad In eases labeled , "milk of magensla." . j , It turned .out, too, that he might have' been the hidden backer for the Spanish . govern ment ship Cantabrica which was sunk about a year ..go with a cargo of munitions which the OS '' government had vainly tried i to keep in this country. Third Identity Is Discovered It developed, too, that Coster at one time In his life had even a third Identity that during the World war he was an Investigat or iu the attorney generals of fice, engaged principally ion crimes of espionage under the name of "William Johnson.! From the description of : As sistant US Attorney, Art Gorman of the visit of the federal men to Coster's home, j it appeared the elderly promoter had made his last decision just before their arrival. "I arrived about noon In com pany with about 10 other men connected with the Unite J States marshal's office in New Haven.1 aaid Gorman. 4 J "As we stood at the door we heard a shot from Upstairs. The - household was In turmoil. I have , seldom - seen . such - hysteria -j or heard such weeping as was set up Immediately. Body Is Found In Bathroom i "US Marshal Bernard Fitch ran upstairs and found the body of Coster in the bathroom, a bullet through his head. He was dead thoroughly dead when Fitch found hini. f'Mrs. Coster was panic-strick en and hysterical almost beyond control. - "Mrs. Coster kept repeating: He told me he wouldn't do this. He swore he wouldn't ;, : ... . t ... ... . . .- '; Stage Malioutt Negotiate With Company Over Strike PORTLAND, Dec 1 C .-iPV-Ne- a-otiatlons between drivers of Un Ion Pacific stages in tbe PorUand- ban xa&o vx4j ui4i.w uu vuui pany officials opened today In an attempt to avert a smxe. - - ; Drivers broke off contract ne- c-otlatlons over the company's , re fusal to rehire two discharged drivers. Ff)R and Garner To Have Confab p twTiii m sr w m m r WUI Mull Problems of Legislation After Luncheon STASHINGTON, Dec. 16 -ff)- Praeident Roosevelt and Vice Pres ident Garner will hare a chat abut legislative problems tomor roy for the first time since con grs adjourned last summer. tjarner has a White House ap pointment for lunch and a talk wiVn Mr. Roosevelt afterward. fhe conference will give them aniopportunity to exchange pre views of the new congress the wa; revised party lineups will fucltion and prospects for the ad ministration program and for in dividual measures. pnee the senate, over which Gainer presides, must approve malar presidential appointments. speculation arose over whether Mrf! Roosevelt would consult Gar- t9. , . G 4 Vengeance f f at Its Costly : - v , , . ' -"'syi X--7 x :- - . " ,1 If - v - - - Vi , V In; j : y '-v-a, 1 -1 - -1 A ;- ' fO v 1. I - I , ' 4 I Kennedy "Pan-Ameridon Nations Aimtove VVfir Immitipnt JL JL ton). US aaflop. broke into the neon prospective ClftifaA'd BtK :WlSim- Francisco county hoepltal. prn court selections. preis conference today on his pos sible choices. He gave no Indica- UOU UI WUVU Lilts cyyumuucuu might bO expected. i f Eater in the day the chief exec utive presided at a cabinet meet ing attended by Daniel C. Roper anf Harry I, , Hopkins, , who is mentioned as a possible successor to fRoper as commerce secretary. Hcykins, who sits in ; on cabinet meetings because he runs the WA, remained with the president afUr other cabinet members had lef Civilization End Huge Droughty : Prediction Made foS ANGEtES, Dec 16.-(P)-Beause of lack of water, western civIiatlon : will go the way of the Sumaria, Chaldea, Mesopo taniia and the Inca and Astec civ illation, J. C. Stevens, consult InsJ engineer, of Portland, Ore., predicted today. a a paper read for him before theft hydrology section of the American geophysical union at the University of California at Los Atieles, Stevens said, reservoirs wiM be filled with silt, catchment basins eroded flat, and trebeled anj.i quadrupled populations will tryo live off flood waters. lAen, in S00 years he said, will conxe the end of westers civiliza tion except that wj,th aa inten sive soil and water conservation program, it could be postponed another two centuries. '3 challenge anyone,: said Ste vens, "adequately to evaluate a repfleve of 200 years to western civilisation. ' To t'aveBge the asserted be Una of his sitter, George Dally critically wounded m poUceman who barred bit way, then shot down" bis sister's former hus band, - Morris Cornpropet (be low)." Cornpropst waa recover ing from a bnllet wound : his former wife Inflicted. ' Infection Threat To Wounded Man SAN FRANCISCO. Dec. H-tiP), -Peritonitis threatened to devel op tonight in t h abdominal wound of. Policeman Walter Sal isbury, who was shot yesterday while attempting to stop a hos pital affray in which Morris Cornpropst, 24, was slain as he lay in his sickbed. The accused perpetrator of the brief terror reign, George Dally, 21, US navy sailor, pleaded in nocent and Innocent by reason of Insanity to a murder charge. .. Dally, former brother-in-law of Cornpropst, said he had pray ed for the recovery of Officer Salisbury, , who was shot . down before he could draw his own gun when he attempted to stop the sailor from entering the hos pital prison ward, where Corn propst lay. Unions Launching Drive To Gain Sunday Closing PORTLAND, Dee. 1.-V Unions launched a campaign to win public favor to a Sunday clos ing of food stores last night. The Independent Retail associa tion, the Independent Retail Meat Dealers association, the Retail Grocery Clerks onion and fhe Meat Cutters anion banded to gether to seek public support of Sabbath closing. . 11 n Proposed Insurance Plan I settlement of : liability in surance premium dispute on the baa of WPA labor's being KO percent efficient, was proposed to he Salem water commission las vj night. : ,v. . - T)xe Insurance bill, $2325, waa recently objected to by the commission- because It Included more tba?i 11000 in premium claimed duejlhy the company ' for; protec tion of the water department on theiWPA projects it sponsored thisyear and last. icinting out that Manager CuXjer Van Patten of the' water department ' had maintained the work done by WPA crews; could haVj- been carried out by con tract or day:; labor at approxi mately half the cost . in wages, Merrill - D. Ohling, Insurance eget, suggested a settlement on thaf basis. He also pointed ' out thef company had paid , several claims arising from the WPA program. ' TJie premium, which is deter mined ty the department's pay rollft, would under Ohling't pro- r-osal be eut In half as far as it, applied to WPA work. The commission v named the manager and Commissioners . B. Grabenhorst and Van Wleder a " committee - to confer - further with. Ohling and report back at a special meeting next week. , - The r -department last month earned a 113,257.93 operating I-rofit, the greatest for Novem ber in the three years the -city has owned the water system, the manager resorted. Gross earn ings aggregated 16,: 3C.80 and operating "-expenses. S34T80.87. Van. Patten pointed out that the operating expense with the pres ent gravity linpply tanged from 11600 to 12? 00 lower than with the old pumping system. Surging . of seven test wells on Stayton Island to remove sedi ment from around the casings and clear , the way for pumping tests beginning . next week was ordered. If the tests show a large volume of water available, the commission plans to develop large shallow wells to augment the present water supply. War Imminent For Europeans Envoy Reports to Chief That War Is Possible . in few Months Denies Report That He'll Quit Post; to Return in February. WASHDSGTON, Dec 16-ff)- Joseph P. Kennedy, United States ambassador 'o London, paid a flying visit here today to report to President Roosevelt that he thinks the possibility of war In Europe within a few months Is very 'great. -'n-He brought a pessimistic view of political developments there to the White House and to state department officials whom he saw during a busy eight-hour stay here. Swift-moving develop ments centering around Germany were uppermost in his mind. The ambassador smilingly de nied reports that he would re sign and said he would return to his post in February "unless something happened before then." Recent Events Change Ideas Kennedy, who was in daily and some times hourly contact with British leaders throughout the September crisis over Czechoslo vakia, - Indicated that recent events had changed his mind about the prospects of peace. "Last summer I predicted there would be no war In Europe. Well, I'm going out of the pro phet business on December SI," he said grimly. Foreign affairs occupied much of the nresident'e attention throughout today. At the White House reception last night he asked Sumner Welles, acting sec retary of state, to report to the White House early this morning. They conferred for about half an hour and Welles later de clined to eomment. William C. Bullitt, ambassador to France, entered the presidential study for a talk as Kennedy was leav ing. The latter said he had re viewed the entire British and European situation with the orenldent. tellina him of man - Interesting and intimate episodes. "The - sHnation Is ... changing fast and not tor tn' better,;- ne said. The Munich accord as not slowed things 'down any. Treasury Sleuths Waiting for Spies Department Has Its Men Available to Spy Reductions in Trade Barriers PARTY LINES FORGOTTEN AT SESSION -: V . J jr,. a. 1 ii I " t ' , . ; - Ka i- r " Mmm Kiii mi I m- I Seated side by side Cordell Hull, left, and Alf Land on J right, listen Intently to speakers during sessions of tbe eighth annual Pan-American conference at Lima, Peru. Mr. London, President Roosevelt's op ponent at tbe List election, was appointed a delegate to tbe convention by the presidents (Acme Tel-ephoto.) on Foreign Spies NEW YORK, Dec. 16-UP)-El mer L. Irey, chief of the treasury department Intelligence unit, said today he had advised secretary Henry Morgenthau that his 3,060 investigators were "thoroughly or ganised and ready for any assign ment in counter-espionage." Irey made the disclosure after conferring with a number of ag ents In several treasury - depart ment units here, many of them veterans of World war counter espionage investigations. The trained criminal investiga tors, located throughout the Unit ed States and Its possessions, in clude. 1,400 alcohol tax agents. 2 SO customs' agents, 600 border patrolmen 225 narcotic agents, 250 secret service agents, zbo in ternal revenue agents and an un disclosed number , of coast guard intelligence agents, , - ,"We proceeded-immediately on the president's order on counter espionage a week ago to pat our house in order," Irey said. "Now we are ready to cooperate wltn all other federal agencies is track ing down foreign spies. Our agents were quite successful la this wort during the World war. We antic ipate even greater success in view of our large trained staff and thoroughly modern lied equip ment. - .j - "Thanks to Secretary Morgen thau's reorganization of all units, the adaptation of treasury intel ligence units to counter-espionage has been swift and easy. v Increased Bounty On Cougars Asked OREGON CITY, Dee. 16-UPV-A demand that the legislature in crease bounties on large predators was ffiade yesterday by Clackamas couni sportsmen,-who charged cousins and timber wolves were preventing Increases in the coun ty's 150 elk. . Sportsmen asked the bounties be boosted from $20 en cougars and $36 on timber wolves to $50 for either. : The Oregon State grange adopt ed a similar resolution recently. Sportsmen and forest service of ficials said proposed plantings of Roosevelt elk from. Clatsop coun ty in the Mount Hood forest could not be carried out successfully un less predators' depredations were curbed. They blamed cougars and wolves with desUuction - of deer and domestic stock as well. , State Representatives Herman Chindgren. Jack Greenwood and E, W. Klrkpatrick promised their cooperation in thi program Delay Sentencing CCC Extortionist Lawyers Plead Young Blan Was Kicked by Mole, , Is Mental Case PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 16-tip) -Declaring "we have a problem on our hands," Federal Judge James A. Fee delayed today pass ing sentence on Hinton C. Hardi- son, CCC worker from Tipton, Ga., who admitted attempting to extort $10,000 from. Shirley Temple, child film star. John Mowry, attorney appoint ed deffsd the 24-year-old CCC boy pleaded for probation ton Che ground that Hardison had been kicked by a mule when he was three years old and consequently was mentally deficient. He eon tended Hardison was not equip ped to carry out any threats. Judge Fee ' expressed belief that a - penitentiary se n t e n e e would not teach Hardison a les son. At the same time, the Judge declared he had a duty to pro tect society. Hardison was Indicted on a charge of using the malls in an effort to extort money, and plead ed guilty. His letters warned Shirley's family that ir you want your Shirley to live, get her off the stage and screen by December 1. The alternative was payment of $10,006. Propose Changes In Billboard Law A compromise noon some of the provisions of the proposed new billboard ordinance was sug gested at a hearing held jointly before the ordinance committee and the building and regulations committee of the city council JTri- day night. However a represen tative of Foster A Klelser, prin cipal billboard firm operating here, declared the :. compromise would not be satisfactory.' The.? proposal was - that the tighter regulations outlined In the original ordinance would, be made to apply only to billboards erect ed in the - future, provided that the billboard e o m p a n y would agree4 to remove several boards that, are especially objectionable Alderman .- David O'Hara pre sided at ' the ; meeting, attended also by Aldermen ,L a u g b 1 1 n. French, Perrine and : Williams. Oklahoma Orphans To Get Nut Gifts ROSEBURoi Dee. 16-(jP)-OkIa-homa orphans, will have. walnuts for Christmas despite a California border" ban on a shipment of nuts from that state. . ;- The junior chamber of com merce and. Douglas- county, grow ers stepped into, the breach fol lowing aar appeal by Acting Gov ernor James E. Berry,' Oklahoma, and notified Berry Umpqua val ley growers would donate an ample supply. .. Dorothy Lee Head Of Alultnomahans PORTLAND, Dec. 16.-WV-Mult nomah county legislators elected State Senator Dorothy MeCulIough Lee, their chairman yesterday In a meeting to organize- for the coming legislative session. - Mrs. Lee, a veteran 'of both house '.' and senate service, was appointed to the senate ' to till the unexpired term I of Homer Angell, who was elected -to congress. . . - Water Body Gets Bouquets Instead Of Usual Bricks Used to brickbats, the Salem water commission was surprised last night when it received a bouquet The city water system, Mrs. B. L. Steeves wrote in a letter to the commission, supplies cold, good-tasting water and its water bills are reasonable. That was the bouquet. "Well, that makes a fellow feel pretty good, after the criticism we've gone through," Commis sioner I. M. Doughton commented. "Girls"5 Give Party For Eleanor Smith King County Jail Scene of Delightful Affair for "Wolf Mother" SEATTLE, Dec 16.-(ifH5ome of the girls got together and had a party at the -King county Jail tonight in honor of Mrs. Mary Eleanor Smith. The 73-year-old mother of Decasto Earl Mayer was sentenced this week to life imprisonment. - Other "guests. of honor" were three women convicts from the state prison at Walla Walla who were brought here td testify for Mrs. Smith Florence Snell, Mar Jorle Clark and Ethel Willis but who did not testify because Mrs. Smith changed her plea to guilty after her son's suicide. .. Other women prisoners In the county. JalL, led byj. Claire Rich ardson, under a life; sentence her self in the "bathtub murder case of the .former Clara Compton, were the hostesses, Mrs. Jean Jackson, jail matron, - provided cakes, sandwiches and coffee. There was only one inmate of the.' women's ' ward I- who did not attend. " - - - - She ,1s Mrs.- MUUcent Paddle ford Fawcett. to whom Mrs. Smith made the confession that reopened the 10-year-old James Eugene Bassett ease. It ' seems she was not invited.' ! i Whales Seen Spouting . DE LAKE, Dec 16-iP)-Lincoln county beach community resi dents, aided by a calm sea which afforded an excellent view, sight ed a large school of whales spout ing just beyond the breakers. .. Memory of Shots Denied by Blonde "Office Wife" Says She Can't Remember About Attorney's Death ST. JOSEPH, Mich., Dee. 16-(i"P)-Blonde Mrs. Fern Patricia Dull insisted today she remem bered nothing of the fatal shoot ing of William Holbrook, her employer and sweetheart, under vigorous cross-examination by the prosecution at her murder trial. Edward A. Westin. Berbien county prosecutor,, rapidly fifed questions aU Mrs. Dull tbuf she answered- eacixjone coaly jtid;' de' liberately, s usually - asserting' . "I can't " Temember." s '!'' Mrs. Dull contended she could remember "practically nothing" until she was at the county J-il many hours after the shooting on October 17. Westin read a lengthy Question and answer statement he said Mrs. Dull made to Sheriff Charles L. Miller but the admitted "office wife" of the slain attorney said she could not remember giving any of the an swers. "I loved "him I worshipped him," she said of Holbrook when asked by Westin why she did leave after repeated beatings. Mrs. Dull testified under cross examination that "even now" she did not know that Holbrook was married and had four children. She said that all she knew of his past was rwhat William told me that he was divorced. Burke Maintain FR to Run Again OMAHA. Nebr., Dee. 16.-UrV Senator Edward R. Burke (D- Nebr.X" said 1 6 d a y he believes President Roosevelt will seek a third -term as the candidate of a third party: in 1640. . Burke said be thinks the presi dent will run again because he believes no other man could carry ont his objectives, because he Would like to break the third term' precedent, and because "he likes the Job. If . real democrats' are in charge of the p it t y in 1640. Burke told a chamber of com merce group here, the president will be forced to run as a third party man, and added that "ground work" for a third party Is being . laid "all over the country. . ' junior High Student Admits String of Home Burglaries Salem's "Bedroom Burglar," who has operated over . a period of six weeks and entered at least eight homes or apartments, was nabbed about 1:30 1 last night by City Officer Claude Litchfield. : Donald Hugh Baker, lS-y ear old ninth grade student, admit ted to eight break .and entries after being apprehended ' at the rear of the apartments at 405 Division." streets, where he had attempted to enter the apart ment of Lester Wray, Jr. . Four women's purses were re covered, o a . yet containing 66.48 that the youthful burglar had overlooked, as young Baker showed officers where he had hidden them under . shrubbery and atop garages. - ; Officer Litchfield, aeeompen iel by E. W, Hewett, went to the apartments at 415 Division street,, owned by. Sgt. Don Nich clson, from where a man 4 residing- over the apartment inhabited by ' Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Craven had telephoned the police, sta- tion. Tonng Baker had attempt ed to get in the Craven ' apart-; ment. :"v - - .Seeing a light down the street at the apartments owned, by Lu cretia Hoover, 405 Division street.', Litchfield Investigated and, caught Baker as he was attempt ing to enter the Lester Wray apartment there. The .youn gster had the tools with which he ad mitted to officers he had - used in - previous burglaries, ; a huhU ing knife with which to slit the screens, and a. . stick to open windows. - , - Police said' Baker admitted to entering the following places: v - G.'H Quigley's apartment. In Hawthorne Court.: 1000 North Capitol, where : a purse belong Ing, to Mrs. Roy Kelson was tak en, the ' only one not recovered last night. ' - .-'-V . .' Pauline Manarch's apartment in Hawthorne Court. The -Alfred Alue home at 870 Shipping, where a. purse was (Turn to page 2, column 2) Defense Plan To Go Before Parley Today Bolivia Demands Oulleti While Ecuador Seeka: Peru Settlement TUT va -ia a -M- ivmu s,t a c-wv Nations to Stay With Democracy LIMA, Peru, Dec. 16-MFV-The Pan-American conference took its first concrete action tonight, una nimously approving a United States resolution for reduction of international trade barriers. Two deep-rooted Latin Ameri can controversies, however, came to the fore. Eduardo Dies de Medina, Boli vian foreign minister, demanded, outlets for which his land-locked country fought unsuccessfully la the Gran Chaco war with Para guay. Ecuador, desiring to settle her border controversy with Pern. filed a resolution to set up two permanent commissions of Inves tigation and conciliation. Seven Nations Keep Reserves The United States economic re solution was presented to the full session of the conference with sig natures of all Pan-America a states attached. But seven coun tries filed reservations on points which the conference held did not Impair the resolution. United States delegates circa lated among other delegations to night the final draft of a. contin ental solidarity and defense plaa preparatory to presentation before the deadline tomorrow night. adoption of a declaration for the solidarity of the Americas against any foreign threat appeared as sured. -r Secretary of State Cordell Hull was said to be convinced that all could agree on a "dynamic draft. St a aeciiration. Such a declaration, Hull was said to believe, could be framed- and adopted merely by linking together sentenced out of antl- aggresslon speeches by - himself and other delegates. ; J . Mexican Urges Democracy Way: This evening au delegates garn ered to hear Francisco Castillo Najera, Mexican ambassador to the United States . and chairman of the Mexican delegation, declare that all American nations must follow the way of democracy. The delegates some of whom1 have been avoiding the subject ustea in suence or-ppiauaea Najera declared: "Democracy in substance end spirit is the very being of Amer ica ... in the popular conscience of all our peoples democratic as pirations are. : deeply laabeddeds and nothing and nobody will sue- ceea m preieuuut vuciu uuw veloplng yU'-' n .--' As for a mutual defense meas ure. Hall has definitely ruled ont the possibility of anything in tbe nature of a Pan-American league of nations or a military pact. . Dread Infection Is Death's Cause PORTLAND, Dee. 16. -TV-Un aided by repeated blood transfu sions from a man who had sur vived the dread - disease, . Brook Gale, 36-year-old electrical engi neer, died yesterday of a staphy Iecocous infection. . Gale's fortitude and resistance io the infection was amazing. Dr. Donald Nlckelson said. Gale had received 16 ; blood transfusions and dally vaccine injections dur ing the past week. . 1 Surviving are his widow, and young son. u : Warehouse Blaze Slakes Hot . Syrup PORTLAND, Ore., DeW 26-UPV A" fire in a Wilhelm company warehouse tonight '- converted 2000 sacks of sugar, Into what firemen called $10,000 worth of hot syrup. . Firemen kept the burning mess controlled and although the sugar was ruined the building was only slightly damaged.-- - - - 1 More days to BUY and USE CIIRISTLIAS SEALS . .FBOTECT . : '. Toua:A ltw-u . They tesch persons with active tuberculosis regarding proPf Pr cautions te protect thoee with whet they some In contact.. trr:'-.?,tl