PAGE TWO Work in Army uiraity loia w iiness in images ... uuse Reveal Infiltration Technique ' (Continued from' page 1) ,. . 1 in court, and. Leech replied. i m srraia u ui (a renuu. . Leech's testimony came as Lsn ' dis approTed Issuance of - a sub poena for Stanley Morton Doyle, Thorn the defense charged was the "mainspring" of an employer conspiracy to get Bridges deport ed to his native Australia. Doyle, former national commander of the 40 et I society of the Americas Legion, waa jesterday reported in Minneapolis. jpridges Defendant . ' " te Libel Salt --As Bridges stepped onto the gangplank of a boat today for the half-hour trip to the scene of the trial, ne was served yfith a complaint naming him co-defend- nt with John U. Lewis and a publication, the "Timber Worker" la a $100,000 libel salt filed by the Oregon-Washington council of "the Lumber and Sawmill Workers of America, AFL. I. I The complaint charged that writings in the ."Timbep Worker," organ of CIO lumber workers, had defamed the AFL group. Landis, head of the Harvard law school, disposed of accusa tions of false testimony against the first government witness, Ma jor Laurence Milner of Corvallls, .'Ore., by discharging the witness 'and directing that his testimony ? placed in the hands of the la bor department's solicitor general for a decision on whether crim iinal action would be Justified, j Bridges' defense counsel bad asked that Milner be cited for (contempt. f ; The examination of the 3f-year-i old Leech was conducted by iTbomas B. Shoemaker, chief coun 'sel for the immigration service. '' The Western Worker, organ of ihe communist party which has jbeen discontinued, was abandoned, I Leech said, in order to create If papers with an appeal to a great fer mass of people." "In this period (1934 to 1931) She communists' papers were pab llshed from , t biased point of tlew, biased from a communistic standpoint, and not always ap tpealing to trade unionism and other organisations.'' j . The party, had a purpose, also, leech testified, in running eandl dates for public office in Califor nia. 'All Propaganda !j.vennes Used t -MIt Is a logical excuse to use all tthe avenues of propaganda to Ibrtng forward their program be jfoite'' a great number, of people; tend second, It tends to establish authority and legalltyof the com jmuhlst party as an open political .organization," he said. 1 - The witness added that com- f. "m'unlsts believed that even should 'party members be elected, they 'would be prevented by "macbina ' ions of the other side" from tak ;lng office or carrying out the par ity program. Leech said he had attended the 193C national convention of the 'communist party in New York 'city at which he claimed Bridges 'was elected to the United States central committee. " "Today he said he did not see Bridges at the convention, but de clared the Australian-born long shore leader "could have been .there." Bridges might have been ..with delegates from Spain, Mex Ico, Russia and France, Lee eh Mid. bidden' behind a curtain on ,ue stage or the Manhattan opera house. ; - Leech reiterated he had attend ed at least three communist meet ings in California at which . Bridges was present. y He made affidavit to that effect in Portland. Ore.. In August.: 1937, i he said, upon the urging ot Doyle. 4 Doyle gave him $100 cash tor ex penses in going to Portland from Los Angeles, he said. Doyle met ;him there, he added, but was not .present when the affidavit was .signed In immigration headquar ters at Portland, j jllcNary to Leave ; For Home Shortly WASHINGTON, July . Senator McNary of Oregon said -today conclusion ot Important congressional business would give him an opportunity to leave the Masquerade Ends 1 v Jt CUnerva Phlppe (above), 46, was betas; held ta Los Angeles on v- suspicion of false Impersonation ; t after a minor traffic violation lT arrest disclosed that she. bad I posed as James W; Phipps. ' rhanffew, for 23 years, and bad --' married two women 'daring that Lime, according to Samuel Bai- - ley, Los Aagelee rice aqwad of- Couple Trapped Five Hours in 'Parachute' li Trapped for five boars la a parachate Jump device at the New Tork world's fair, Mr. aad Mrs. J. Corne lias Rathbone are showa Just before they were brought safely to earth.' Thousands of spectators re - maiaed at the fair, throughout the night until dawn, as rescaa efforts were being undertaken. The coaple were held 123 feet from the ground when one of the cables attached to their "chute Jammed. capital at the end of the month. He will return to his Salem, Ore., borne to recuperate from a recent illness. Only the neutrality issue may delay his departure from Wash ington's midsummer heat, Mc Nary said. He reported it was nnlikely the rivers and harbors bill passed by the house would be considered in the senate next week. The meas ure carries committee approval of the $23,700,000 Umatilla dam. Rights Violators To Be Prosecuted Asst. Attorney General Praises "Bar Croup's Bill of Rights SAN FRANCISCO. July 1Z.-OPI -Violators ot civil rights, wbeth' er by labor organisations or em ployers, were promised quick prosecution and punishment by O. John Rogge, assistant US attor ney genenJ, here today. Rogge, addressing an informal meeting of the American Bar as sociation delegates, praised the work of the ABA bill ot rights committee which had come under fire at the convention. Meanwhile, the house of dele gates received from the general assembly a recommendation for action on resolutions which were to be considered and disposed of before the convention adjourns tomorrow. A crowded convention calendar. Including an address by Charles Fahy. Washington, general coan sel of the national labor relations board, left Insufficient time tor full assembly discussion of the bill ot rights committee, so Gran ville Clark, New Tork, chairman or the committee, called an Infor mal side session. Speaker also at the side ses sion was Robert Carey, Jersey uty, who has opposed some of the committee's activities and who served notice that he would aak the convention tomorrow to limit those activities. Carey criticized the committee's intercession in the case of the CIO vs. Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey uuy in tne supreme court "free assembly" litigation. He declared the committee should not partici pate in the .bame of the aba in controversial matters. United Press Hit 's Rebuke WASHINGTON, July .-)- rresjent nooseveii, Stephen Ear ly, his secretary and Lyle a Wil son, manager of the Washington nurean ot the United Press, con ferred late today on a story car ried; by the news acencv to which President Roosevelt strongly ob- jeciea. xso statement was issued loiJowing the conference. ; Earlier In the day President Roosevelt, in a formal iif,m..i said that the United Press had' "been guilty of falsification of the Actual facto" in reporting that he ana secretory Hull disagreed on the language of a neutrality mes sage to congress. The story said the disagreement was reported in administration quarters. Mr. Roosevelt was de scribed in the story as wanting to use lorceiui language In the mes- mm, tl n . M wuue oecreiary f null was said ta have ' opposed language mai nugni anger the Rome-Berlla axis and , further antagonise an aireaay rebellious senate. This was., false, the president Riaryland to' Stay 1 1 Democratic State ; PORTLAND, Ore., July li-4Jf -Maryland will continue In the democratic column. Got. Herbert B O ConoiLof -that state declared at an Oregon dem era tic dinner tonight He - asserted - the 'democratic party had gained the confidence By FDR r Hoover Gives Engineers Job Getting People Back to Work Is Their Task, - He Declares SAN FRANCISCO, July 13. -() -Herbert Hoover told a group of engineers at Treasure Island to day : returning the American people to work was "a vital emer gency Job for the objective minds of the engineers." . "You are the diagnosticians of industry," the former president, honor guest at "engineers' day" at the Golden Gate International ex position, said. "Ton . are . the trouble-shooters. Moreover, you are the third party between capi tal and labor. Tour profession is to make things work. Something has gone wrong in the functioning of industrial life. Whether the sociologists, the economists and the politicians are wholly to blame 1 shall not discuss. But we have gone through nearly nine years with seldom less than 11,000,000 of our fellow citizens without Jobs. "And unless there be a better solution than the confused think ins' now current, there are no productive jobs in sight for them And so long as they are unem ployed, our farmers will suffer also." Hoover declared that unem ployment, to the Individual man, means justifiable discontent with a system under which such misery comes upon millions through no fault of their own." "Pending its (unemployment's) solution," he continued, "the gov ernment must provide against destitution. Americans cannot al low their fellow citizens to go hungry. But support by the gov ernment can offer no security or hope for the future. "And solution through relief to both unemployed and farmers cannot go on Indefinitely. We are borrowing all the money to pay these gigantic deficits which unemployment causes. That road leads to bankruptcy .which no democracy has ever yet survived. We still, have some economic fat on our bones even after these nine years, but It will not last forever, "It was predominantly unem ployment, its causes and conse quences, which drove a dosen nations In the last 29 years to abandon democracy and its sys tem for tree men. The only al ternative to long failure of em ployment is dictatorship and A system of forcible coordination of a nation." , To remedy the situation. Us causes must first be found, Mr. Hoover said. "And for those causes we must go outside the field of mechanistic economics and dema gogic politics," he Eaid. "I suggest to you that the real cense lies in the emotional field. Ours is a system of voluntary ac tion on the part of Individual human beings. Voluntary action Is dominated by the emotions of confidence in future or of un certainty, and fear. 'There are great uncertainties . a n d fears about, f "I believe thst' if iron would Investigate you may find in this Sild both the real cause and e solution for these 11,000.009 Why Self ci wHxar OTHzna yiai mr , CbiaM ramcdiet. Amu in 800-' CESS for fteoe Tm CHINA Jf Butter wit wht ilaient fom mn -- AFFLICTED disorder, at-, auiilis. heart, loof. lirar, kidney, Uimtrfe, na. eaaatipatiaa, Vicars,' diabctla, rheumatism. ; ; rail, aad taaaar, raver, aaia. feaaale "eaaa-' pialau Charlie Chan CUbcm Herh Co. aw xV reac. a Tt Sraetiea - in ' China, tfica fcottra t ta S Sw' aV awapt 9m?'. day aad Wedaaaday, 10 a. av The-OREGON STATESMAN Salem, ... ' r...::rr-.:.v I I , ' 4 t j A h. : ilili'-'i 1 fill .j oy:-::-: , fellow Americans now In dis tress. Ton might give your great est service yet to the republic it yon would apply yourselves In your usual manner to the de termination of fact and sane con clusions therefrom." Burgunder Closes Dramatic Defense Divorced Parents Appear in Drama of Summing up Defense PHOENIX, Ariz., July Robert Burgunder's divorced par ents Joined him today in provid ing a dramatic close to his defense against murder charges. The mother, Mrs. Ruth Bur gun j der, of Alhambra, Califs blamed herself for creating her son's mental attitude on the day he be came Involved in the alayiags. The father, Robert M. Burgun der of Seattle, Wash., associate defense counsel, asked the ques tions which drew Mrs. Burgun der s testimony. The son, completing a long siege on the witness stand, in which he denied the slayings and blamed ah unnamed "pal," sat with eyes downcast as his parents took the center of the stage which he had so long occupied. Mrs. Burgunder, quiet -voiced fiction writer, assumed the blame for -emotionally upsetting the 22-year-old son the day he lured Jack Peterson and Ellis M. Koury te the desert, where they were YOUltkjSET m -: ' V V f ' V X J V"- - - ( for Mor Pleoswv at th th oO-stor combinohon of - MELVYN DOUGLAS and JOAN BLONOELL . e ... In ' . . GOOD GIRLS GO TO PARIS CQlUMSIAriCTUIES COKPOIATlOrrS current hiL - VVFor Mors Pleasorsr ln ttnokinQ. nfoy ' CHSTEFHLOS happy combincrHoti V ; of th world! best dgaretts tobaccos. Oregon, Friday Morning, July House Voles FDR Library Republicans Object, but Bill Sweeps Through 221 to 124 WASHINGTON, July 13-PV-The house agreed today to estab lish and maintain a library for President Roosevelt's papers at Hyde Park, NT., but cut the ad mission charge from SO to 25 cents. Over republican objections that the president's estate - on the Hudson river was "inaccessible. administration forces swept the bill-through, 221 to 124. It now goes back to the senate for ac tion on amendments. During the bitter house de bate. Representative Short (R Mol asserted that the papers be longed, in Washington, and add ed: . V. "Is he afraid to hare his docu ments in the congressional lib rary where the constitution and the Declaration of Independence are housed? Is he afraid to have them in the Archives ; building for tear they might be polluted by contact with the farewell ad dress of Washington, the Get tysburg Address of Lincoln?" Short said he was opposed to erecting "memorials to living men" and added that "only an egocentric ' megalomaniac would have the nerve to ask lor tnis legislation." The greatest of all men," ne continued, 'the simple Carpenter from Nazareth, left no libraries. but of course he possessed mo desty and humility. Franklin D Roosevelt possesses neither." Assails Admission Charge Assajling the admission charge, he said, "aad they're going to charge the poor forgotten man two bits to get Into the ground and two bits to get into the lib rary. The Roosevelt family Is an unusual family. It is always so licitlous of the underprivileged classes but it is slso always sure the kids don't marry any." Representative Coffee CD- Wash) said he was "ashamed of Short's criticism of the presi dent. "Franklin D. Roosevelt will go down in history as a great humanitarian," he said. "All the vindictive attacks on the presl dent will not justify opposition to this bllL" The house majority leader. Rayburn (D-Tex), appealed to the republicans not to make the library bill a "partisan issue. Had a similar bill been proposed by a republican . administration, he said, the democrats would not have opposed It. Rayburn supported an amend' ment by Representative Tread way (R-Mass) to eliminate a 25 cent tee for admission to the library grounds. The amendment was adopted. "If we're going to have this library," Tread way said, "let's have it with dignity. Let's not make it a dime museum." shot to death. He received a letter from his mother the day before the slay ings, and in It she criticized him for continually asking for money and for his dissatisfaction with college life. . "I guess you will have to shift for yourself," the mother wrote. "Ton haven't been of much com fort to me lately." Mrs. Burgunder's testimony completed the defense case, based entirely upon statements of the parents and the son. The state did not cross-examine the mother. x x mm m mr mm - mr m PLEASURE , t v ' mavrn oeueus sm J 'Xe4 V- BBBaat m m m lv m w m m mm m m m mm m mm a r i .-.v .. v.. v..-.-- a.-. movies se 14; 1939 i Heads Elks- v-rV 'v ' : -- - '-,.-. S V 1 Henry C Warner," Dixon. UK, at torney and industrialist was re cently elected grand exalted ruler of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. He succeeds Dr. Edward J. McCar mick, Toledo, Ohio, surgeon. Democracy Need For Future Good Woman Judge Is Speaker Before Delegates of BusinessWomen KANSAS CITY, July 13-W)-The future well-being of women and of all citizens depends on the preservation of American demo cracy. Judge Florence E. Allen, Cleveland, of the United States circuit court of appeals ,said to night. , Judge Allen addressed a ban quet of .delegates to the biennial convention of the National Feder ation of Business and Profession al Women's Clubs, Inc. Judge Allen stressed that wom en having gained the right of suf frage and steadily forging ahead in economic equality with men. must be mindful of the responsi bilities accompanying their sta tus as citizens in a democracy. "The business woman of tomor row in America," Judge Allen said, "will have, If our democra tic system Is maintained, advant ages and instruments the business women of yesterday never had. "If our democracy Is destroyed she will lose those advantages and instruments just as have the wom en under the despotisms of Eur ope have lost the gains of a cen tury." Judge Allen said women Mn the past 100 years hare gained the right to education, to handle their own affairs,' to vote and to take their place beside men tn the busi ness and professional world. "But the business woman of to morrow with all her unique ad vantages, faces problems which did not confront her older sister. The business woman of yesterday had the advantage of a rising mar ket and of expanding instead ot contracting opportunity." Murderer Dies in Chair EDDYVILLE. Ky.. July 14. ( Friday )-(ff)-Charles H. Smith, 42, convicted of murdering three men since 1918, died in the elec tric chair at Eddyrille peniten tiary early today tor decapitating' a cellmate, Clayton Sloan, 21, with a knife blade stolen from the prison kitchen. FROM THIS ALL-STAR COMBINATION Chesterfield's Right Combination of the world's best cigarette tobaccos gives smokers what they want because THEY'RE MILDER THEY TASTE BETTER. Try Chesterfields. See for yourself what pleasure there is in a really satisfying cigarette. Youll agree there's nothing like Chesterfield's can't-be-copied blend for MORE SMOKING aW M , -wj" M wmr m.wrm m m sjaSL jSS- :.-:. .-: i -. ' ' - I f?fS vV-AsW IVmsrrWwmmimttlCUm m I mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm nestei Senate Okehs: Security Act Amendments Are Believed T toTGaiii Bill Approval .-f Businessmen WASHINGTON, Jury 13.-)- The senate adopted amendments to the social security law today designed to make it more attract Ire both to business men and to its beneficiaries. It registered its approval by a roll call vote of 57 to 8 and Sent' the measure back to the house for action on changes made in the amendments by the senate. The- amendments contained a provision freezing old age insur ance taxes for three years at one per cent for the employer and one per cent for the employe. Other wise, the rate would have advan ced to one and one-half per cent. For social security beneficiar iesthe amendments provided: Additional payments to widows That old age insurance pay ments, under the contributory system, shall start in 1940 Instead ot 1942. Increased payments to workers E. W. Cooley's Grocery 2360 State Street OPENING of JEW STORE At 2265 Mill Street These prices also for our store at 2360 State street. We will have some thing to give to every customer that makes a pur chase in our new store. Specials for Saturday ... SUGAR PEN-JEL COFFEE 1 Pound of Can Coffee SHORTENING BUTTER Grade "A", 1 Pound CORN FLAKES A Party Kit FREE RAISINS NUCOA CHEESE Tillamook. CANNED MILK COFFEE 1-Pound Pkgr ICECREAM All Candy Bars and Gum 3Pkg, ICC A A I f SWl ' I who retire during the early rears of the system. - Needy Aged Get f 25 A $25 per "month pension for the needy aged. (This Is distinct from the old age Insurance system under which workers on retire ment receive a -pension tor which their wages have been taxed.) The bill contained a provision, adopted by the senate at the last minute, requiring that for each needy aged person receiving as sistance, .the states should contrib ute a minimum of $10. . To this, the government would add. $16. Yesterday the senate wrote into the measure a provi sion . that the government should double state contributions up to $5," and match them evenly above that figure. These two changes made by the senate were expected by. the lead ers to furnish the principal con troversy when the time comes for drafting a compromise between the senate and house versions of the legislation. Twenty-eight states, it develop ed, are now contributing less than $10. - The senate rejected proposals that old age pensions, be increased to $40 and $30 monthly and de clined to recommit the bill, as urged by Senator Downey (D Calit), for a study of the Town send old age pension plan. 2265 Mill St. 10 n, 49C 3 pkes. 29C Any in Stock. 25c 3 ib, 49C Snowdrift 27c 5c With 3 Packages 19c Mb. pkj. 2 m, 35c 2 pound brick 39C Per Can. 6c 15c 25c . r -mt,:-m,Z,:mii z. I , ' g J 74.' - yy 1 A V? - J ; X. !s ' . 1 . of nearly all Americans la the MnssTg last tew year. in V. OmI ft Sale. Or i Cow i ! -t i M f W -