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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1939)
'Balanced News Only the local newspaper presents . balanced fMti city, connty, state, national and foreign- la their right proportions. I. - f : J Ttc Wealhcr j Fair today and Saturday, Higher hiunidlty,vcooler to- - day. Max temp. ; Thursday. t 82. Mia. SB. Rala O. River t feet. KNB wind. EIGHTY-NINTH YEAR j- Salem, Oregon, Friday Horning, April 21, 1939 Prica Se; Newastanda Ze"' No. 22 v . -1 -v - ( oue T .Q)Vie1! :0C "J j ? !. - Cases Uenmt vuit-vva -a. vra. ja. vuf Of Picket Law ' ' . ' . 1 1 - r Four Disputes Mentioned in Amended Complaint of 4 Labor Groups '. Coal . Strike and Coast's Hiring Hall Quarrel no Nearer Windup ; PORTLAND, Ore., April tHfl) Organised labor amended its complaint against Oregon's newl onion regnlatlon law today, alleg ing .. four factual labor disputes lnrolrlng employers and their em ployes, and adding the Portland C-ntral. Labor eonncil as a plain tiff. : ,r v V : The American Federation of La bor, Congress for Industrial Or ganization, Railroad brother hoods and now , the . Portland council ask a declaratory Judg ment holding the law nnconstltu tloral. ' . The law, passed by voters last Norember, Imposed such I limita tions on labor activity that unions claimed it made . their i proper f nctlons illegal..?' j ? ;;; Amendments to the complaints to Include specific .alleged In fringement of labor's constitution al right to picket and bargain fol lowed a hint from the three-judge court that the original complaints were too general. The four fac tual disputes Involve a truck com pany operating between Portland and Boise, a foundry, a large ho tel and a chain of retail stores. The court decreed last week It had jurisdiction and gave the plaintiffs and defendants city, state and county officials farth er time to prepare for the main case testing the , law's -constltu-tlonallty. - -; Uy& . ! NEW ' TORK,Jipr330.--(ffn-. Leader&wDf the United Mla .W ott ers ia Pennsylvania .reiterated promises today , to supply coal to schools, hospitals, churches and homes of the sick, as the pro longed shutdown of operations In the eight state Appalachian area brought a progressive- reduction in the supply of bituminous avail able to Industry, Here, where for nearly six weeks the delegations of the CIO anion and Tthe . operators .- hare struggled over a new labor con tract, and Xhns to put the Appa lachian Into production again, an other day's conference ended ap parently as fruitlessly as had all the rest. In the Appalachian the imme diate area ot dispute some 538, 000 miners are idle; and the UMW laid its plans to call out by May 6, unless a contract is reached in the meantime, the miners of out lying . fields. This orders union ' sources said, would affect an addi tional 125,000 to 150,008 men in 14 states.:. -I 8 AN FRANCISCO, April 20-iA3) -Z. R. Brown, district secretary of the Maritime Federation of the Pacific, said, tonight the federa tion would refuse to participate in any attempt by the sailors' union ot the Pacific to tie up all Pacific coast shipping in event four sea title ressels are manned by crews from government "hiring halls." i Brown said a special federation meeting here today r decided ", it . would not. recognise picket .lines placed "indiscriminately ? against ships and docks not directly con cerned in the dispute." The federation meeting, how ever, joined the SUP in opposing non-union 'hiring halls." Asks FDR to Aid. Umatilla Dam Bill WASHINGTON, i April t iHF) Sen. SchweUenbach (D-Wash) asked President . Rosevelt. day to support early enactment of a bill to construct - the , Umatilla dam at cost oM2S.000.VOO on the 'Columbia river between the Grand : Coulee and Bonneville dams. J . Picking Ttlefliiuii i Customers! , 4 Todays Statesman, wlthont the impetus of any nnnsnal mer chaadlsiair event or special edi . Uoa of the: paper, cnrrlee fa Its 24 pagea, the largest votaaM of aTcrtising for any aewspa per published this year ia Sa- The tssae 1 proof poslUvo that business is available for . merchants who go 'after- it throash - aggressive aterchaa Clslsj. Tbey have chosen The Statesman ' because 4 its wide - prad elty aad ratal eireala - tkm hrlnga reamlta at a sntah Bnra cost per custompr. it: Newswise readers, too, are demandiag Tb Statesman which at the end of March had an averaso paid daily and Sun day sabecrtptloa list of. 9203 customers largest ia the his tory of this tTear-old Oresoa -. aevrr?ajeT.. :;- 'r DESOLATION Lhi IN, WAKE OF EARLY, FOREST FIRES v t g Preliminary Prolc Said Completed; ' Recheck - Iade Upon Audits,,-. . . -,..t-...,,. f,s-.; Facta surround Ins the-alleged shortage.' In the . Marion .' eountr, treasurer's office 4 -will cbo pre sented to. the grand Jury when it reconvenes next Monday, - Francis E. Marsh, assistant attorney gen eral, made known yesterday af ternoon in '.confirmation of... re ports this phase of his extensive investigation waa not far off. The grand jury's probe of the $23,520.41 discrepancy reported by the state division of audits to exist between the treasurer's cash and fund balances Js expected to consume several days' time. Marsh did not disclose the iden tities of any of the witnesses he will present to the grand jurors. (Turn to Page 2. Col. 4.) Spring Drought's End not in Sight Track Farmer May Suffer . Heavily; Irrigation Supply Is Ample PORTLAND, Ore., April 20- (-Drlfting smoke from forest fires, common to Angnst, marked the 36th day of Oregon's long est . recorded drought today, and "threatened heavy losses to agri culture and the forests. J)espite tL. leries or western Oregon brush fires,', dim recesses of ' fir, spruce and pine ioresis have -been spared ' although woods experts feared: 'destruc tion of costlv reforestation pro jects on logged-off lands and old burns.- - Natural resertoinr !; in . 1 h e mountains protected farmers' and stockmen on irrigation projects. Truck farmers, dependent upon seasonal moisture, faced possible. tremendous ' losses. v- ' Two more: weeks without snb- stantlal ralnwill resnlt ia keavy tolls through the state's reheat belt, experienced -observera sald - Spring . drought records . for all time fell six days ago. .Not since March and April: lt8S, has there been. suck. a. period .without the rains which gave Oregon the name; of WehfoOt state. Is- ISIS, the dry spell - was ( ended by storm in . SO days. , , " ; ji. a. cmapier -' oi me zoresi - (Turn to Pago 2, Col. 2.) t:. Eight Hundred U1" V Christian ' lrht hundred, youths. hers of - Christian Endeavor un ions trom all over OTegon, crowd ed the First Presbyterian church last nfaht tor the opening ses sions ot the - annual Oregon CS convention. As the eonvenuoa opened, 122C registrations were on. hand - and when -the conven tion crowd is swelled by tonight's arrivali, i it It expected nearly ISO 0 -youths win, be 'here. -The eoaventlon 1oms fiwidy. .w . Two of tho most remote an ions in. Oregon, Klamata Falli and Baker, were sending in large delegations late last night, the former 2$ and Baker. 25 youths. pr.-M Howard Fagaa, pastor of WUshire Boulevard Christian church, Los Angeles, opened he convention theme, "My Best for Christ'. vita aa - Inspiring fad- ToHaveAiriii u Flre that broke oat in Oregon forests months fa advance of the vsoalO season. lert .tnia swatn, ox aesoiauoa along runpaJa luage near Hillsboro, where seTeral homes were destroyed, livestock killed and 600-acre stretch of brash andlogged-off land blackened before fire fighters controlled the blaxe. AP photo. , j Situation Ope Fire PjFear Rainier. Menace? Fim Homes, new Diaze r ougni mear : vaies irceK; numerous new Blazes Reported in Washington SEATTLE. April , 20(AP) Flames, radnsr. through brush and second growth tunberlands, menaced several farm homes at Apiary, near Rainier, Ore.,.late today, and a logging camp was destroyed by fire at Sepost, northeast of Everett, Wash., as T. S. Goodyear, Washington- forest! supervisor, termed the Pacific northwest's abnormally early 'forest fire season "critical" today. ci . O He estimated 100 brush and timber fires In western Washing ton; most ot them under control. Most have been in old "burns" and in slashings areas so the damage has been light. But if a wind springs up and the drought con tinues, he said, a major tire situa tion will arise. , - "Many of the fires are man made, clearing land for grating purposes," Goodyear said. MaJ. C. S. Cowan, chief warden for the Washington Forest Fire association, said 21 new fires were reported today. -; Two of the most serious biases were in this county; one menac . (Turn , to . page 2, eoL 2) World Fair Scene Sent Eight Mies '" ,. ? V tvJ V.'f ' h- NEW 4YOBRV April 20P)-An audience sarin a"92nd-story room of the RCA building today and watched and heard the ceremonies attendant upon the dedication of the Radio Corporation of America building on the New York world's fair grounds eight miles away. The occasion was a forerunner of regular television broadcasts Which will start April 20 and .the sale ot new television commercial receivers which will start this week at 2200 to 2100 pins 250 Installation'' charge. Swinging Chain Kills r PORTtAND. April zO-tiPV-Xn- Juries suffered when a Swinging chain struck his - head ' Tuesday Were,' fatal U todaf , to Fred : I Kuhn, K 0-year-old WPA employe. He was employed on the 'Skyline boulevard, project. ; iA ttemftStciie sswn dress last night on ,His , Best for Cs.:,. " ' . ... Dr. Facta nointisr" to , the matchless personality of all time, challenged the youthful an Hence to remember Jesus Christ, and to glorify God la their everyday Be cautioned "the youths that the plane upon ; which, their tuoornts dwell : is thtt ' vltne anon which , they vffl live. - Mlsa Dorothy KUks. MeMinn- Tillo, i state f president "wha pre sided at ltst ' night's . gathering. named these committees: Resolutions, Clark - Ens, Cor Ttliis,Tehtlnaaa: Bruce Ferry. Dallas; Thelma Cole, 1 Portland. and ; wumer Gardner ' Jennings Lodge. - - Nominations, - Dorothy Howes. Forest Grove, chairman; 1 .imnu pate z, cot 2.x Endeavor out; Still Serious Willamina Labor Difference Aired Unions Object to Giving Jobs to new j Arrivals Says Agent Here Charles W. Crary, business agent for the Salem Building Trades council, Thursday after noon denied her that he or Panl Savage, vice-president of the In dustrial Engineering and Con tracting company of Tacof a, which la building the new plywood mill at Willamina,' had ever agreed to the hiring of men for the job through the state employment of fice at McMlnnville. He said he had conferred with Savage on the matter yesterday , morning. The local unions,' which have jurisdiction over Dart of Yamhill county, will stand by a promise to give work to men who were bona fide residents of Willamina when the mill job began, Crary de clared, but will not give -prece dence to newcomers over unera ployed members of the locals. He asserted tnat' a promised list or 20 carpenters and building labor er's constituting the Willamina re sidents referred to, had never been . (Turn to Page 2, CoL S. ogetic Is Hit by Se PORTLAND. Ore.. Anrfl 20Wjn -Governor Charles i. Sprague of Oregon took churches, to task to night for what, he termed their apologetic attitude.' : - Addressing the annual meeting of tiie First Presbyterian church, he advised, that to the two types of church, .triumphant and mili tant, be added'a third, the ehurch apologetler - ;. " "There are those today v who apologize for their ehurch connec tions. he charged. l r - To be worthwhile,' a church, he said, must preach a religion and not. lose sight of its essential pur pose ' by - over-aecentaatlon -of what he termed 'sideshows- choirs, sdcietles and other inbsld iary organisations. 1; . ; : .8 i - - : DaFoc Kin Naturalized PORTLAND; Ore-: April 20-iff) -Among 104 persons granted US cltlxenshlp In --: federal - district court today was Carmie Roy Da Foe, Canadian, distant ralatlre.xf Dr. Allan Roy DaFoe of quintup let xiBV-.ij.wU.: Church Ap ysa twMBftwwaiaaAessi Three Dead in Prison Blaze 15 Ininred Durinsr Panic of Prisoners; Fire Soon Controlled . "Worcester, Mass., April to ttV-Three prisoners were killed 1 wiiH.ii.wajs I when fire hroke out in a wing of the Worcester county jail. throwing 250 yammering prison ers into confusion before they were , herded to safety in other wings and the blaze was con trolled. Sheriff H. Oscar Rocheleau said a prisoner - may have set the fire, and a guard reported he believed two prisoners had escaped a cordon ot hastily-summoned police. I Chief Guard Robert Buss said he believed the fire started In a basement cell and that one ot the three victims, a negro, was burned . to death In a "madded Mil The victims were unidentified. mm lire waa cuscoTerea oj Joseph Peters, a guard, shortly before t o'clock, and it was un der control a half hour later. Ruling Upon IEU s-v . v I 1 ."NtQtnc I lAmanriAll a""va - EUGENE,. Ore., April 20-(PV-lot Alter li , months ot waiting, the Willamette .valley council ot lum ber and sawmill workers' onions, AFL, is a little anxious to learn whether the industrial employes' union is fowl or good red herring. Council Secretary C. L. Brown said today. He added that the council was considering a resolution demand ing that, the national .labor rela- a waabb. uscj uauvuai wuvt avaear- Uons board give an, immediate decision in its hearings on charges that the IEU was a company un ion.- .-.- . . ; . The NRLB completed its hear ings 11 months ago. l - Many AFL local unions already hate telegraphed the NLRB and PORTLAND, Ore April IO-5) -Portland's artillery f got -1 h e ranee . after Jack salveson r f Oakland., had retired the Jlrst two batters' In :' the's first" Inning of a Pacific coast "league game tonight and before .the frame closed 4 the Beavers chased, in Sp 1&&4B;Fafc Judging Finished and take a 2-1 serieVlead. . . I ..... . CT j-O ; . - r Tho explosive opening.. Inning saw Sweeney , double, Coleman single, - Hawkins and Rosenborg double and Jeffries single ' after two were out. y t-- ... " ... ? 5t The rortianaers added tnree more . in the third and one each In the fifth and sixth but they were- unneeded. The Oaks scored their t only three runs in the sixth when Bmead Jolley hit1 a home run. Ed Coleman homered la nho sixth for Portland. It was his sixth consecutive hit ye terday and today. Oakland ..,....... ; 1 Portland t. ...... t lS. -Tr . ,-Salveson.- Tiefje. S h e e h a n. Prleat, ' Bnxton and. Raimondi; Radonits, Douglas and reman- BT. "LOUIS. Aortt J0-4V-Todr- d Yarosx, crafty Pittsburgh for nr middleweight f champion, banded Archie Moore,' 15 t-pound St Louis negro, a 10-round beat- lag . tonight. " Tardcss weighed liSaii-.j ' ' " Hope of Peace SeeninDuceV eply Way Held left Open for Discussion; Plan for : Exposition Cited Neutrality Bill Hearing Continues with Attack Upon Present Law WASHINGTON, April 20. -- Disappointed, though hardly sur prised at Mussolini's disdainful reaction to President Roosevelt's anti-aggression plea, state depart ment officers nevertheless found in the Italian premier's words at least a taint hope for peace. They expressed belief that how ever much the Duce derided in his address at Rome the value of the conference table a a means of ad justing economic inequalities, he still did not absolutely bar the way to an effort at stabilizing the European situation by collabora tion. While Secretary Hull and his associates were weighing the Ital ian leader's informal reply, there were, elsewhere in the city, ad ditional developments bearing upon Americas plans for defense and her place in foreign affairs: Senator Green (D-RI) confer red with President Roosevelt and with Colonel ; Charles A. Lind bergh, and then expressed the opinion that if a major war should arise, the United States "could not keen out of it." He said he would advise his friends "by all means' cot to visit Europe this summer. MCaflh and Carrv" Policy Advocated I HafAiA rn aAnotaTn frtroffrti r. latlons committee which is study ing proposed changes In the neu trality act, Raymond Leslie Bu ell, president of the foreign pol icy association, asserted ..that if jugtte" Great; BriUiniand France they probably would turn to the western . hemisphere next. For that reason, he urged economl help to Great Britain and France. to be achieved by nermittinsr be- llggerent nations to buy war sup plies here on a cash and carry oasis." Felix Morley, editor1 of the l Turn to Page 2, Col. 1.) Gestures Held Red Herring Talt Says FDR Tries to Divert Attention From US' Own Troubles WASHINGTON, April 20-fl-Describing the new deal as a "failure," Senator Taft (R-Ohio) aaMi wnigni mat ine aaminisira- I tlon was baUynoolng" the for ei(n tiuaUon "to Uke tho minds people. Off their troubles at home." The Ohloan, i In a speech pre pared for a "republicans-on-the- march" dinner, said that three months of the present session of congress ; had forced analysts ot government and economics to two conclusions: - nai me new oeai aas "re duced us to a tremendously dan gerous situation," with more un . . . !?2fdJa Jebruary than the average for any month In the previous four years and with national income for 193$ 114. 000,000,000 less than that for 1928, although the population was 10,000,000 smaller in the earlier year. j That "the new dealers don't idea has appeared since congress sr- avww am-aau uua. w aaasww met in January. The dinner waa one of a series sponsored by Representative lfa.v tin, of Massachusetts, the repub lican floor leader, to bring re publican leaders together, -jake newly elected republican gover nors, senators : and house mem. here, acquainted and prepare tor the big battle of 1940. Caustic B Foreign Demonstrations Scheduled 'Clarion county's 4-H spring ii snow v aiiracvcu uuuBua.ii uui numbers of 'spectators yesterday afternoon although tt ' opened Cay earlier this in" other years, With judging completed and sp eiat eonteata t tntahed, today program will be devoted to dem onstrttions a a d Saturday's . to more demonstrations.', tho county stylo revaa Tand - award preaenta Uons. Tb.o. exhibit buUdiag will be opea frofa 9 a. m. to f p. ' Eiaht boys and alrla sifted trom the vS .watered Inv. the- healtbtea boy- and. girl -contest .will, bo re examined at the county health ct- Cicea at 1 o'clock this afternoon to I determine tho winners.-They are: Charles Ronte, St. Lonls school; Teddr Gordon? Leslie-- Lee Er- wert,' Mt.' Angel,' and Hal Cuffel. KeUer, for the hoys and Grace Laidlaw. 'Keizer: - Dorrls Rents jLabish Center; .- Wtlma. Gorton, Counter At Brilisfr , . ' - ..- ! Parley With Turkey Reliable Report; as Hitler Fete Germany's Military Review on Fuehrer's ; Birthday; "Little Berthas" on Display, ; J.ONDON, April 20 (AP) Soviet Russia was report ed reliably tonight to have sent the British foreign office proposals which indicated soviet the British-French coalition. A source usually well informed said that "the entire forces" of the three nations would be pledged to resist any aggression in Europe if the proposals were accepted. j The soviet proposals, which countered those put forward in Moscow by the British ambassador, Sir William Seeds to Foreign Commissar Maxim Litvinof f , were being considered by the British foreign office. It was reported also that' O Blunt Questions Asked by Hitler Inevitable "No" Answers to Be Used in Reply to FDR, Is View 'PARIS, April 20-flP)-DipIoina- tic sources reported tonight Adolf Hitler had asked several of his smaller neighbors the blunt, two- point question: "Do you consider yourself menaced by Germany and did you ask President Roosevelt to Intervene .in European affairs?" These sources said the question and the response ho receives wonld form a part ot the German chancellor's reply to President Roosevelt's peace appeal when he faces the reichstag a week from tomorrow. -Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Hun gary were mentioned particularly amonnd the countries Hitler waa eald to have sounded out. They were among the SI Mr. Roosevelt singled out in asking Germany and Italy for 10-y ear-non-aggres sion pledges, . It was a foregone conclusion In diplomatic circles here that the Sofia. Belgrade and Budapest gov ernments would answer muer with a "no." This, these sources said, wonld be a strong part of the fuehrer's "ammunition" when ho answers the American president who asked him for "a frank statement" on the policies ot tho Rome-Berlin axis.-'-?- - 4 , Informed French circles, have predicted that Hitler would not reject flatly Mr. Kooseveit s peace message. - The French press has professed to seeing the axis partners wrig gling somewhat ander tho "Roose velt torchlight" thrown suddenly cn their camps. Carlton Sawmill r Crews on Strike CARLTON, Ore., April tO-VPi- Seventy-flve CIO lumber workers at the Llnke-Haynes Lumber com pany struck yesterday because a demand .for restoration of a. pay eut was rejected, Jodie Eggers, chairman of the local union's plant committee, said today. The cut, Eggers said, was made last year. He added that 2e an hour was restored later. Be de clared the union was not asking a closed shop, but continuation of a recognised agreement.. . E. J. ,LInke, one ot the own ers, said the. offered a IHo per hour increase, beginning May 1. Balem Heights and Janet Rogers, Leslie, for. the rlrls . Today's demonstrations .wlll:,W as iouows: w . . j., . 1:30, a. in., liarion, cooking 10, Woodburn. clothing: 10:30 Marion, cooking: ; 11. dollar din ner, Bethelr enter bootha at. this time and Out at S p. in.: 11:30 Keiser cooking; l p mucKeiser cooking, . Z, ' AumsTiue cooking, 2:30, AamsvlUe. alothing: S, An burn. cooUnt: 1:10. Balem Heights, health: . Salem Helghta. nealtn;4:SO, KeUer. healUi. : Blue -ribbon awards made by the Jadres yesterdiy lncladed: . Homemaklng- Linen Lnella Nichols, ; Bethel, and MyraKat ser, Mt. Angel; cotton Ada Ma rla Bewley, Salem: Roberta Ba iea, Livingston; Dorothea Froen lich. Bethel.. ". -y' K Hobby C 1yd Rogers, dob (Tura to Page Z. CoL I.) r Proposals v. ....... .-, ' : Progressing jSaya View Ctimislic Passes Quietly f Might Passes in willingness to participate in : i '. . . I talks with Turkey were pro greasing. Thus some quarters believed that if agreement could be reached with Moscow, Britain shortly would be able to. announce the inclusion of two new allies one with great reserves of man power and raw materials and the other .of prime strategic impor tance in the front she is build ing in an attempt to check the Rome-Berlin axis. Poland, Greece and Rumania al ready have received promises ot French-British aid it their Inde pendence is threatened. Prime Minister Chamberlain to day appointed a minister ot sup ply fn effeet a dictator charged wiux apeeoins up oeiivery ox mu nitions supplies for the amy answ finding and storing raw material; for wartime use. The foreign office took a littK more optimistic view ot tho Euro-; pean situation, meanwhile, partly because there was no announce" ment of new territorial acquisi tions during the Berlin celebra tion of Chancellor Hitler's birth day- .;. ' : w : r . (By The Associated Press.) BERLIN, April 20 Reichs- fuehrer Hitler, in a display ot armed might obviously intended to impress a nervous world with the vastness of nasi preparedness, today celebrated hiauB Oth birthday with the greatest military parade la 'Berlin's history. i For four and one-halfihours the clatter of grim engines of destruc tion, the tramp ot 40,000 soldiers and the roar of squadrons of war planes' dinned into' the ears att several hundred thousand spec tators, kf. .". T-t ';' i'-.-,. Enthnsiastie nails said the throngs that lined the three-mile route along the 'avenue of spies dor," Berlin's new boulevard from tne old imperial castle to the tech nology school, exceeded 1.000.900. Tne inenrer waa visibly stirred by the acclamation ot the crowds as he stood with arm upraised ta) nan saints to review the treat parade. if z t? : . . 4.. One of the host of rifts that ar. rived in tribute to the World war corporal who became "augmentor 01 tne retch" builder of greater Germany was an honorary citl senship in the free city of Danzig. tuiuer Has increased Germany! area and population by about one fourth, la . the past It months- : from 07,000,000 inhabitants to 87.000,000 and from "208.000 square miles to 260,000.) , . muer received the Dansig hon orary citizenship from Albert Foe r ester, nasi district leader of the once-German free city, shortly be fore the parade began. Rumors for days had said thai the fuehrer wonld receive net only citizenship but Danzig Itself as a birthday tribute but he celebrat ed his milestone wlthont adding more territory to his empire. ' Most discussed were the heavy anti-aircraft guns which' were so long they and their mounts had to be carried on four, trucks. Ger nany waa ; known previously to have developed an excellent aatl llrcraft gun, but it was, by com oarison, small and Innocent look ng. v, ' . -To wind np the parade on aa enthusiaatle note , for those who had -stood" for hours, Hitler showed several pieces of -"Ut tie Bertha", artillery heavy loaz range cannon that were carried by six trucks.,-, '-.v Hop Market Plan Extension Passed If vea - - - V ? WASHINGTON,7 -April 20-p- Sen. McNsry (R-Ore) von sesits aproval - today of , legislation) . ex teadiaa- tor two years the tadetal marketing program for hops in Oreton, tshlnrton. and Ctllfcr aJa.". fisv-i-iv! 1 The senate approved end aeat ,' to the house an amendment to the agricultural adjustment act cov ering the orders and marketing ' agreement for hops. Authority for this expired April It and woufri beextendej.unta Sept. 1K II IX.vf ,