PAGS T70 e Uhere Submarine Is Dovn Bibtter Urges Eolds.Brager' Fire Scourge Ravages Colorado Forests DIocked Area iJ! Now Isolated Aid to Youth AM-ftANHSr FRENCH NAMALBAS 1 - Japanese Install Fence of International Director VV , SUBMARINE " Vd MISSING. - fe, OFFSHORE . . t- - J32sV ' HERE " Chtn " K Hisda Voltage Tvire to Aid Block (Continued from page " ) , Lauds Ideal of Good Government (Continued from page 1) Melpedffidmg 75-Yeaipid Deputy Goer " Through Sams Spent k in 23 Yean . ' s (Continued from pagel) answer the defense questions about hit cheeks remained an un certainty, Keech Indicated, r - - e, lUrected Verdict Ilpllng. Aftkrd - Judge McMahan took with him at adjournment time the problem of .ruling on a motion for a di rected rerdict for the defendant, laterpoeed at the start of the day by Keeeh.The defense attorney averred the sUte - had neither proven either the taking or the converting of money by his client ' nor other facts to support a con viction under terms of the indict ment. Marsh offered no opposing : argument. . :" -- I iTribalations that befell Salem men Interested In a mine at Lib erty. Wash., some II year ago were detailed early la the after aooa session by Richardson. wh -said he helped save the day by taking over the task of raisin $100,000, on which he said a mas named Pember had fallen down. For oelllas: -enough stock to en able the 8slem Mining company . 4.v. nr tit Liberty mine. Richardson said he received '42,09 -shares as commission, of which he gave wager ivvv hares. By ehpurcaeee-ads- of, M00 shares, he said, pd had a cash Investment in the company of t&72l.9f. . . Richardson listed his other issa.ga In the Sdwarda Mhrtng company's m miB near Grants Pass. $160 la the Bl.ejay mine near Jack . .nn.ni UH In tht Federal mine. $455 In the Rlaiug Hop mine and 90 la.a mine near piacervllle. Calif. Only the Rising Hop mine paid , him profit. 92(3.71, He -saia. ltAM.hf IM MB IE 1m Trm VMrt ' Testifying that he had lived f rurally. Richardson told the jury he had bought only one suit of clothes In 10 rears, doubted If ha a nnn w sir nm ra n ii-n niaiin b m. ft- m. mM W S..t. J a dress In the same peiiou, naa th had . a nleasure automo- bUe, never paid for a telephone, had gone- without electric lights . long alter lines weer exienaea past his house, had with few .-ox- . Mntioni walked to an from hi' ' office, had bought virtually no furniture. Rlchardson'a estimates of his Income since 19 IS were: Salarv. .128.000: cash and notes ' on which ha largely re covered, 131 ou; mining proi, t'S57i- walnnt aalea. 1250: milk, sales,. $3000; other mining Tetania. 1843. He estimated his expenditures in the same period as iouows: Minlnc investments. $7387.18; - Iitm. 1&87 in- h ft n e rent. $4620; household expenses, $12 luv; doctor duis, siimu; aeniai bills. $150; cow feed $1440: money borrowed and not repaid. I13ZS. "Last Good Time" Sought by Killer (Continued from page 1) formed, she said. An assistant re ported Mrs. West wss in poor heslth due to a heart condition, . snd had expressed fear of death. The three with whom she fled were uciu at ie bcuuub cuages. flffirtala thanrlvAif ttiov atnla Van ' w. Mm MV v.w.w J . to their cells and dormitory. West, 20, wss the son of a na tionally known nurseryman. His wife Hailed him to, death with a hammer and table leg, bound him. changed clothes, got Into her free roadster and drove to the Cleveland party which West had shunned because he was too tired. At the party she played the piano, sang such songs as "Just Like a Butterfly, Caught in the Rain, .nd dealt cards late into the night. .. - Senator McNary HI - WASHINGTON,' June 1-AV senaior uusary - lK-ore) w a a routined to his home today with an intenstinal infection. Doctors said the Illness wss n - alarm tog; but the republican leader will not return to the senate for about a week. Tear Gas Routs Pickets in Milwaukee Strike 1 i L J - Tear as bomb exploding ;i '.:ore thsjx a dozen persons were Injured in a strike ict tt ths Als-Cialmera Manufacturing company jLuit la riUwaukee -when deputy, sheriffli .used gas bomts fwowlng an attempt of oflca workers to force a street car through the crowd. Polios said ... : I Plumn e thick gray awoke anarked CeaKjoe-riverlBi awmweetciai 1st some oectloms. This Widow Sentenced Porltobbing Mint PHILADELPHIA. June 11 .-MP) -Mrs. 31ixseth Cook. 71 and a widow, was given a suspended stance of a year and a day and fined 9100 today for embexxlisg $91 from the United States mint. She has. repaid $8t. The .mother of- five children. Mrs. Cook admitted inking nickels, dimes and quarters while she waa an examiner of finished coins. She said she didn't, know why. An attendant caught her sup ping coins into an open pocket. Gives PUD Okeh HOOD RIVER. Ore., June 19. -(AHood River rejected a pro posed public utility district in an election today but-surrounding districts approved one.' Aa a result a power district can be 'formed' with the approval of the state hydro-electric commis sion bat the city eliminated Itself. The county's three precincts. embracing most of he Hood River valley, approved a PUD by 92Z to CSS. The city rejected one, 655 to SSS. The Pacifie Power A Light com pany Is the privste utility serving the area. New Bishop :o:-:-vvfr: .1 I J v Msgr. Richard J. Cashing Director of the Propagation of the Faith society in the Boston arch diocese. Msgr. Richard J. Cushing has been named an auxiliary bishop of Boston by Pope Pius XTL He will nil the post left vacant by the recent elevation of Archbishop Francis J. Spellman as head of the church in New York. ! : .. the sweep of fUustes throwgh the ceeorado as hsworeas rowgtit to stem we xiaaamg aarance,, ana fins was men Lake City, coio la Mussel Poisoiiing six to Agonizing Death It Met by Cadifornians; Ban Placed on Food SAN FRANCISCO. June 19- (ffy-An agonising death struck four times today .to bring to six the fatalities from mussel-poi soning along the central coast of California this season.. At least 30 other persons were. in. hospitals at Oakland, Gliroy and Monterey, some of them In critical condition. Dr. Hermann Sommer. of the University of California's George Williams Hooper foundation, said the focal point Of the poisoning (resulting from the micro-or ganism gonyanlax found in phos phorescent waters) apparently was in southern Monterey bay, but warned that such a condi tion' usually spread rapidly to other points. Two persons died In Oakland today, Michael Labis, 48, and Anthony SUva, 68. Another died at Monterey, A. J. Brown of San Francisco. John Gallt, 29, died at Gilroy. Simeon Pacquina, 28, Sacramento, died at Monterey Saturday night. , Dr. Sommer two days ago Is- sued a warning against eating mussels from "the most highly toxic ocean water in several years" after Julius Panger, 4, died at Santa Crux early last week, and said "it would be well, also, to avoid- clams" for the time being. The state of California, as of June 1, placed a quarantine on all mussels between the southern boundary of Los Angeles county and the Oregon state line, with the exception of San Francisco bay. Summer Is Near, Believe It or not PORTLAND, June 1 9-jpW Summer will officially arrive Thursday, but you couldn't prove 11 today. Temperatures continued low and drizzling, winter-like rains covered most sections of Oregon. Siskiyou Summit had the low est reported temperature yester day, when the mercury dropped to 42 degrees. Medford wss high with 72. , A continuation of gneral show ers tonight and Tuesday, with cooler temperatures in the in terior, was predicted by govern ment forecasters. He Beat out Dentist, But now Need Doctor ASTORIA, Ore., June 19-iffV Shaken by the prospect of visit ing a dentist. Otto Rltterbush, Jewell, opened his mouth. In serted a. file and acraped off a jagged rear tooth. Now he's in the hands of a physician. He opened his mouth so wide he dislocated his jaw. 1 . v 'V ; ' x'- if " "' - : jjj jjS -N sang pickets la lUwaukee - pickets retaliated by throwtof stones and tveakbix . windows of the car. A formal strike at the com paoy began aaveraj days ago when a work hoIK day was called by the C L CX-U. A. "W. In an at-' tempt to force signing of a new labor contract, '- Rio Grande natkamal forest thicar untoer ana rassea Thetis Work Due To Be Re-Opened LONDON, June 20-(Tuesday)-. (-British aaval authorities hoped today that salvage work could be renewed this week on the British submarine Thetis, which sank off Liverpool Jane 1 with a death toll of 19. Tides have hampered the work and difficulty has been encountered fa getting hoisting ropes to hold in the hulL For Killer of two HATWARD, Wis.. June lMft -Darkness and a cooling trail to night balked a sheriffs posse In pursuit of a man Identified hy au thoritles aa Ray Olson. 25, wanted tor the cold-blooded slaying of two Hayward deputy sheriffs. N Search waa abandoned at night fall after bloodhounds led Sheriff George Seehunter's hundred-odd possemen to the Chippewa CCC camp In the northeast section of Sawyer county. There the trail was lost, A highwsy patrol was set up for the night. Olson gained two or three hours on the posse this afternoon when they paused to surround two cab- Ins. In one of them a woman was the sole occupant. Although the dogs went directly to the cabin, she denied knowing anything about the fugitive. The dogs pick ed up the trail hear the cabin again and the search went on. Seehuetter has plastered . Saw yer and adjoining' counties with one available pictures of Olson, fearing he may break through the woods, get to another town, and escape altogether. Once possemen thouht they ha Once possemen t h o u g ht they had cornered their quarry when bloodhounds led them to a cabin near Moose lake, but for the third time In two days he eluded his pursuers Just as capture seemed imminent. Stranger Pickets Are Held ulegal SPRINGFIELD, 111., June 19- (i(P)-Picketing by strangers to force a company's employes to join labor unions waa declared Il legal In Illinois today, the supreme court asserting: "Freedom of speech does not Include freedom to libel or slan der." The ruling upheld a circuit court Injunction granted Ross W. Swing, Chicago beauty! shop oper ator, to prevent such "stranger picketing" by non-employed. The high court held that Ameri can Federation of Labor picket signs .charging Swing with unfair labor practices were "libelous ban ners", because there waa no labor dispute between Swing and his employes. . . . Swing said he was neutral In the . campaign of the AFL . hair dressers' and cosmetologists' un ion to organize his employes, who had refused to join the union Dionne Quints fat; So They Get Diet CALLANDER. OnL. June 19- ( Canadian. Press) The Dionne quintuplets have been put on diet because they are "a little too fat. ; Dr. Allan ; Roy . Dafoe an nounced today. The diet cuts down oft starches and sugars. It la not stricjv but potatoes are banned completely; The quintuplets were five .years old May Jg At. their, last weigh ing .they registered . as lonowi Marie 50. Yvonne 50 ' EmQie Sl, Coctle SSK and ' Anette 03. Sentencing Postponed EUGENE, June 19-MfVSea fencing of Hugh . .lynolds; for mer local AFL labor .ouneil see- retsry convicted 'recent! - of per jury, wag ' postponed tcdsy by Circuit . Judge Carl JC Wimberly. The judgdrsald sentence " would be pronounced."Sturilai Jumps Sateljij? VANVOUVER. WaslL. Toi -It -)-Van - - Eggleston of -VRidge- fleld reported to the sheriffs of fice 'today he r jumped to .safety yesterday when his car skidded in loose' gravel on '. the Evergreen highway and toppled over a, 260- foot Cliff. t,i ? -Vi- . Hairy V. StcmftPIeV PORTLAND.4 Ore June 19-tfft -Harry W. Stone, who served as general secretary of -the Portland TMCA from March, lSOIYtO July, 1922, died here tonight. the c&ncesslons, but not enough. The danger of a shortage of water also loomed.', ? . The dispute between tne jspa- aose ana unuia vroiTea iru Japanese , demands for the sur render of four Chinese suspected of terrorism. The British refused. but suggested an invesugauon to ttm-mina whether evidence-war ranted prosecuting the Chinese. ' From this has evoivea a xar more serious dispute, including a demand by the Japanese for "eo operation" with the "new order la. Asia as agalnat Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Sheka regime ana Involving the rights or xoreiga nations la China. (Tokyo Informants lnuieatea th nrmr was -pressing for sweep ing revision of foreign concessions generally.) Japan Wans ' Other Nattowa A Japanese military spokesman today called the British conces sion a "branch office of the Chungking (Chiang) govern ment," and warned other govern ments not to aid the British la any economic reprisals London might adopt. The spokesman cnargea uniain - . m. -rr.iA.J was trying to get tae ushto 8 tales to "snatch her chestnuts out of the tar eastern fire." Japanese courteously in formed" United states officials of the blockade and were endear orlna to avoid Inconveniences to Americans and other third power nationals, he declared. , adding, however: if British propaganda la suc cessful la bringing widespread economic reprisals agalnat Japa nese for the blockade, then local Japanese military authorities would consider such action auto matically released them from ob ligations to protect foreign rights In China." British officials reported two British subjects were stripped and searched by Japanese guards as thev left the concession last nlchi. The Japanese consul gen eral rejected a British appeal for mitigation of the searching. SHANGHAI. June 20-(Tues- day)-(J)-BiitUh authorities aald today they had learned irom ex cellent sources" that Japanese military leaders at Tientsin have sent letters to Chinese employes of the municipal council threat ening to kill their families unless they resign their positions. The majority of municipal em ployes live In Japanese-controlled areas outside the concessions. Crew of Scpialus Re-Enacts Diving (Continued from page 1) have heard a pin drop as the Squalus' men stood at attention silently and stiffly. Only a few minutes, later, com mander A. L. McKee. one of the sunken vessel's builders, was ssked If it was possible tor the submarine's signal light to show "closed" if the msin induction valve was still open. There was a moment of thought ful silence, then McKee answered slowly : "Yes, If the mechanism was out of order." And, finally, late this afternoon. there came a climax as Lieutenant Naauin followed the board of in quiry into the submarine sculpln to re-enact the , operations that preceded the Squalus' disastrous dive. After the men climbed from the vessel, the hearing was adjourned with the announcement that Na- quin would testify tomorrow. In Tragedy Seren years ago Charles WeOer : and Julius Perbnan of Chicago were chums in grammar school. ; A week ago they were waiting to graduate from " different high schools.- They met -on the- street and engaged in e fist fight over ! slurs cast by one opon- the school i of the other, f Now Welter is dead i and Perlman, IT, Is being held by " pouee. i weuer died of a skua : t racrure. - - - .- ; : for s&lru Personally owned late 1037 1 Badck or . las)? Grahaaa. Both 1 have - had smvsiiaJ care. Low ' mileage. ' . , ' j - Caw he aeeat amy ereadnsr 5 aogQ 8. OoraniriTlal 8U after! Spvaa. V ' Y v-. V ' -T 3 S&.7V.V savswwssry - ar - rr ra r - m Ifap locates spot off roast of lade-Chlxa where the Frewch sabsaariae menu olaappearea after a dire with 6S - saea stboard. One of France's greatest smval bases Is la Caas-Raah Vay, Ideally salted to repel any attack on bKlo-Chlaa front north or east. Guards Speed up aMlling hchedule CAMP CLATSOP. Ore., June 19 -(P)-Oregon'a national guards men went on a high-speed sched ule today. In seven hours three rifle com panies of the second battalion. 182nd infantry, took a musketry course to which regular army troops devote from 2 S to 70 hours. The II 2nd Infantry double timed Us Job of organising Itself Into one war atrength battalion of approximately 050 ottlcera and men to meet a designated field problem. The maneuver will take place Tuesday. At Fort Stevens three machine gun companies of the 102nd blazed away at long-range targets. Pair Is Sentenced For Tavern Death CHICAGO, June 19.-UP-Two former Michigan convicts today were sentenced to death in the eiectne cnair ror slaying a cus tomer during a tavern robbery. Judge Robert J. Dunne, decree ing capital punishment for the first time In his seven years on the bench, ruled Edward RUey. 37, and Orvllle Watson, 29, must die July 7 for kilUng Alex Fergu son, an undertaker. In a gun bat tle In a north aide Inn May 2. Watson and two policemen, Ed win Mclntyre and Phillips J. Kel ly, were wounded. Kelly died later. An elderly physician was forced to remove the bullet from Watson's back with a razor blade. The two gunmen and Watson's girl friend. Miss Susanna Smith, fled to Detroit but were captured the next day. Royal Ship Steers Swift Course Home ABOARD EMPRESS OF BRI TAIN, June 19-(p-The royal yacht steered a swift course through the mid-north A 1 1 a n tic tonight taking King Georgo and Queen Elisabeth back to South ampton and an English welcome while their majesties viewed col ored motion pictures of their tour of Csnada's Rockies. Two days out from Newfound land, the king and queen spent part of the day lounging on deck and enjoying warm sunshine. The Empress ploughed through the warm haze at a steady 20 knots. She Is due at Southamp ton Thursday. Constance Fowler Gets Scholarship EUGENE, June .lO-iAVSeren-teen women and eight men, art teachers studying durli the summer, were designated today as recipients of Carnegie fund scholarships in the University of Oregon's school of art, : The university. '.von designa tion by the American Institute of Architects tor the ninth con secutive year as the Carnegie fund western holder. Included among recipients, was Miss Constance Fowler, Willam ette unlrarslty,' Salem., Nine Young People Hurt In Willamina Collision WILLAM INA; Ore June ?19 -VPy-A head-on collision between two automobiles yesterday In jured nine f young 'people, - two seriously; v - -: Madge Bob,; IT, Grand Rondo. Buffered - a fractured -skull,' 'and May petite, 21, Grand' Roade, possible " pelvis ' f -aetur ' SUte Police Sergeant Ralph GrenfeU reported.- Other injuries ranged ' from bone fractures to cuts ard bruis es. . ''J -- -: r FALSH TMSTH Ml: DDrrUI-EZE maris tnim rrr tm MIW ASAIMX ' TW rial. mtmm MONTHS! EW ,rr 4 ACJ HUM ; 1 I. C f ti--ir.T i-e m mm S IS a JBV SBP : 'ATI f F i? DUTCH NAVAL flASf tAf, Lunber Strike Is Los Aiigeles Fear LOS ANGELES. June 19.-4P)- Negotlatloaa to avert a threatened strike of 2000 lumber workers In early 100 Los Angeles county yards were at a standstill tonight. Kenneth Smith, secretary of the Lumber sad Allied Products In stitute, aald the AFL Lumber and Sawmill Workers union leaders here had Insisted that the demands of 1200 strikers of the San Pedro local be considered simultaneous ly. This, he announced, the Insti tute had: refused to do. A. W." Hughes, business agent tor Los Angeles local 2788, said a general walkout would be called for 7 a. a. Wednesday. His group is demanding a 40-hour week. with no decrease in pay from the present 44 hours. Demands of the San Pedro local are similar. Four hundred CIO longshore men ordinarily employed unload ing ships at the harbor hare re fused to paaa through the" AFL picket lines and all lumber ships there are tied up. Seventeen saw mills and lumber yards are closed. Kratt Is Elected To Be Music Dean PORTLAND, June 19-VF)- neoaore uraii, aean or the school of rine arts and head of the Miami university (Oxford, Ohio) music department, was elected by the state board of higher education today as dean of the University of Oregon scnooi or Music. He will succeed Dean' John Lsndsbsry, who resigned. Kratt studied at Linfleld col lege, Northwestern university. University of Vienna and the Cincinnati Conservatory of Mu- aic tit xormeny served as pro fessor of. music at the Chicago Musical college, as music depart ment head at the University of Idaho, and as director of music for Ohio at the Chicago World fair. He was at one time guest conductor of the Cincinnati sym- pnony orcnestra. 13 Die as Bombs Fall in Palestine JERUSALEM. June 19. -)-British troops aided by warplanes killed nine terrorists in a battle near Jericho today aa a fresh out break of Jewish-Arab strife csused 18 deaths la Haifa's market place. The encounter between the troops and the terrorist band fol lowed an early morning bomb ex plosion which killed nine men, six women and three children In the Haifa marketplace. Twenty four persons were wounded. Eighty-eight persons died In slmUsr explosions and subsequent Arab-Jewish fighting at the mar ketplace In July, 1928. Willing Arabs crowded the gov ernment hospital morgue st Haifa tonight In search of relatives among the bomb-torn victims of today's explosion. Authorities said they believed the bombs were brought Into the city from outlying districts and concealed In vegetable baskets. HONOLULU Ol ESUTEST TTJL7E STSTEfl fTiHESE great modern liners J. speed you across the Pacific in record time! paly 10 days to Yokohama ty "Direct Express! only 3 days more ria Hawaii, by Empress of Japan (largest, fastest liner on the Vscffic) or Empress of Canada Sailing from ysjiconTer and Victoria to .Hawaii, Japan, iiniria sntBlanIla. Low-cost fares. Tourist and Class, "' complWdetaOs sea your Agent, er :-gjjav ' Sg t'' - 7() ' '- CS LtL fftwana; farCsat J- - ,. - .- mm mm m J..,, V, .' : J - C-a .V H cherry pie opened the convention program Sunday. Fifteen hundred persons were served from the huge piece of pastry, measuring 14 feet In diameter. Highlights of yesterday's pro gram Included an Indian break fast at Chemawa Indian- school. a model luncheon with the Marsh field Lions club In cbsrge, snd a golf tournament. Entertainment numbers at last night's banquet included an acro batic dance by Lucille Shannon and a soprano solo by Gladys Mc- lntCT Thomas. William ewmyer presented awards for the Lions golf tourna ment held in the afternoon. Sid Milllgan hsd low gross with a 75. Low gross among high handi cap men was Loren Scbroeder; low net for low handicap, Clyde Marsh, 82-14 C9; low net for high handicap. D. B. Erwln; best score based on handicap, Carl Hopp. 81-14 87; high gross, low handicap. Jack Francis; high handicap, Walter Coover. Gimmack Is Made Head of Endeavor NEWBERG. Jun :9-tip-Paul Cammack, Salem, was reelected president of the Christisn En deavor Union of tl-i Friends' church at a final convention business session Saturday night Other officers Included Elvett Brown, Salem, rice p-esldent; Esther Cammack, -alem, finan cial secretary, and Lawrence Mc Crscken, Sllverton, treasurer. The union repor.ed a gain of 200 members last year. Cy bcrdsj 25 slower than t& mrts ef th 15 ether of th Ixrcast-sc!n32 brands tittsd slowtr thsa may ef them --CACI ELS give smok ers the eqslvdeiit ef lYL thriftier smoklng..Wbich cig r areoe offers all of mem? Read 3 im portant cigarette facts rerealed by adentinc tests oa 16 of ae largett selling brands: 1 CAMELS were found to contain MORS TOBACCO BY WEIGHT than the average lor the IS other of the Isrgest-aelling brands, 2 CAMELS BURNED SLOWER Tuiw iwv ivimu nv iMn TESTED 2556 SLOWER THAN THE AVERAGE TIME OF THE 15 OTHER OF THE LARGEST-SELL- nm Tin A TTV I Tt I , slower, on the average, Camels give : smokers die equivalent of 5 Ut'lRA SMOKES PER PACKI 3 In me same tests, CAMELS HELD THEIR ASH FAR LONGER man the svenute for die other brands. Thanks to Camels economy, tvtrjon :ean enjoy die real thrills la smoking 'the eoolmtss, m&imtt, dliclt tstt. : die added bonus of Camels costlier to baccoa. Don't miss the """g Amer ica rates No. L rjl J TO?'" F-m '