-. 1 . Softball Newi The Weather Generally fair today and Monday but considerable morning cloudiness with fog on coast. Max. Temp. 83, Min. 49. River . ft. X-W wind. tTOth the state Softball tournament la the offing. The Oregon Statesman sport page remains a leader f& - porta coverage. E1GUTY-NINTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, August IS, 1933, Price 3c; Newsstands S No. 120 ie in rain 15 W I?" I'; TRASH piled against wooden wall of Foreman beer parlbr storage shed, shown above, flared up dur ing American Legion parade Friday night, giving the fire department a scare and parade crowds a thrilL Police believe blaze may have been set. A. serious fire would 'hare developed had the flames not been subdued before Igniting stock in rear of adjoining Metropolitan Chain store. Note charred win dow frame. (Jesten-Miller photo.) Lifted Squalus Sticks in Mud Sub Is Towed After Navy Lifts It From 240 Foot Depth PORTSMOUTH, N.H., Aug. 12 -(P) The submarine Squalus with Its cargo of 26 dead was held fast tonight by an uncharted mud hump it struck while being towed shoreward after the US navy had raised the vessel 80 feet from a 240-foot depth in an epic engineer ing "feat "Squalus cannot be moved ap preciably from position of first grounding," Rear Admiral Cyrus W. Cole, in charge of the opera tions, radioed from the salvage ship Falcon. V : He added, however, that Pon toon! attached to the submarine would be re-set tomorrow tor the second of three scheduled liftings. Naval officers ashore said th e mud pinnacle f had halted the shoreward journey, from 800 to 100 yards short of the first haul's destination. They expressed- In formal opinions. $ it a t tat unex pected grounding would r simply change the scene . of the second lift without materially interfering with the task of returning the Squalus to the Portsmouth navy yard. - The submarine struck the hump at 2:13 p.m. (EST). Salvage workers waited for the tide to rise to proceed with the tow, but when high tide failed to provide the needed lift. It was decided to suspend operations nntil tomor- TOW. Ten pontoons were nsed in mov ing the Equal us from the place at which It sank during diving tests $1 days ago. Hatches" of the vessel will not be opened until it is returned to the navy yard. Navy officers kept watch on a freshening sea in apprehension lest the weather delay another lifting and towing " operation probably early next '5 week that would carry the Squalus Into the sheltering lee of the now nearby Isle of Shoals. Once there, the Job Tirtnally would be done. ' ' ' Waterfront Meet Ends Sans Action SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 1 2.-(JPj-A. meeting of waterfront em ployers and 4 a longshoremen's ' union committee headed by Harry Bridges, called to discuss a 1940 Pacific coast waterfront contract broke up in disagreement late to day and employers e h a r g e a Rridkes had walked out. "break ing oft collective bargaining on his part" Bridges said the .union was faced with the choice of renew inav the present contract as it stands, for another - rear begin nlng September 30, or a "tight tn th finish" threatened br em ployers. He rejected renewal, he gald, F. P. Folsie, president of the WktnrfrnBt Em clovers association. mil RrMm. Pacific coast erest- dent of the International Long shoremen's and Warehousemen's union, disagreed sharply in their respective summaries of the situa tion. Each promptly wrote a long letter to the other, and Issued statements to the press.. Four Miss Death In Hood Slides GOVERNMENT CAMP, . ML Hood, Aug; 12-OD-A. rock slide near Crater rock, on Mt. Hoo. ' narrowly ' missed killing . three Portland youths today. . Flying stones slightly . Injured Eugene Starr, 15 ; Rufford Scott, 15. and his brother. Walter, s. First-aid treatment - was given them bv members of their oartv. - Scarcely 24 hours before, Vera Hays of Portland was Injured by two slides on the north .side of the mountain. Miss Hays was be ing carried on a stretcher when struck tha second time. Forest service officials have ls- ., sued warnings against climbing the mountain daring the rest of the summer. Hauser Urges Decrease In Salem Tax Spending City Treasurer Advocates Cutting Frills out of . Budget now in Making to Retire City's Bonded. Indebtedness Curtailment of tax-spending was urged upon the Salem; city government in a statement and financial review issued yesterday by City Treasurer Paul H. Hauser. j The treasurer specifically advocated cutting all frills: from the city budget now in the making and appropriating; the largest amount possible, without increasing the tax levy,! for a program of retiring theo I city's bonded debt. I Asked for his opinion on budget matters soon to come be fore the citizens' committee, Hau ser declared the financial status of the city was sound, had been materailly bettered during the last three years yet a steady In crease in taxes had occurred. ! These increases, almost unin terrupted, from 20.8 mills in 1935 to 244 in the current year, are "largely . attributable to the upkeep of auxiliary services de manded and roted for by the u&lm& jJto MjATorum payers." the treasurer explained. Further increase above the mill combined city, school,' coun ty and state levy on Salem prop erty appears prohibitive, he main tained. Listing what he termed auxil iary services, the - treasurer ad mitted that "possibly they can not be considered as non-essential municipal functions, and there should be no complaint If the tax payer understands and is willing to have his tax rate Increased by their operation." Services he mentioned and the amount of taxes levied for them this year Included the airport, $1107, developed under a 60,000 (Turn to page 2, col. 6) Hope Diminishing For 2 Sea Fliers DUBLIN, Aug. 12 (A3) Hope for the safety of two New York fliers attempting to fly from Can ada to Ireland vanished today as hours passed without word after their fuel supply was estimated to have been exhausted. The airmen, Alexander Loeb, 32, and Richard Decker, 23, left St. Peter's, Nova Scotia, at 9:04 a. m. (EST) yesterday wun s&v gallons of gasoline, calculated to be enough to last 25 hours. -r The odds were "100 to one against them," fliers at Baldon- nel airport said, when the sero hour for that supply, 4 p. m. (10 m. EST) was reached without any report from alert coast guard stations or ships at sea. The filers monoplane 'Shal om" the Hebrew word for peace carried no radio. ? Atlantic 'crazy' fliers over due'! read the headline over terse press accounts of the attempts of the two Americans to span the Atlantic In a plane similar to the one Col. Charles A. Lindbergh nsed in 1927 when he flew from New York to Paris: Legion Delegates Have "No39 Mood in Resolution Ballots Delegates to the American Le gion convention were, like the legislature whose work-rooms in the Oregon capltol they, occupied for three days, decidedly In a "no" mood on Saturday,' closing day of the convention, and numerous resolutions and propositions were turned down including: several changes in the department, con stitution. Almost the only Important reso lution passed on Saturday was the one thanking the Marion county Legion posts, the people of Salem, Governor Sprague, other state of ficials " and the legislature, for their part in making the conven tion a success. Another provided that the published record of the convention be dedicated to the late Senatbr Frederick Steiwer, a Legionnaire, and other promi nent members who had died dur ing the past year. The department adopted a con y v rolice seek Ino Who Started Fire Hutton and Minto State Fire at Beer Parlor Incendiary That the fire which Friday night and LaBranch beer parlor was. started by arsonists or incendiar ies was the opinion yesterday of Fire Chief Harry Hntton after viewing evldeneeln relation to the cause of the blase, and hear ing the story of Harry Phillips, Route 4, Box 225, that he saw men light a pile of rubbish in the rear of the building. 1 Police Chief Frank Minto simi larly stamped the beer hall blaze as "set," and indicated yesterday that Investigation of the fire and its origin was nnder way by his department. The downtown fire was one of five which harried local firemen during the hour period between 7:30 and 8:30 p.m. Friday, at the time when the 2000 marchers In the American Legion parade, and thousands of other spectators fill ed downtown streets. I None of the other four blazes was considered to be of incendiary: origin, the fire chief Indicated, though a house at 11 C 5 North 19 th street was entirely destroyed j while its owner, A. P. Hermanns; an oil salesman, was viewing the parade with his family. ! Marsh Gas Death Gaims two Boys WEST PLAINS, Mo., Aug. it -(ffJ-Two youths, one of whom attempted unsuccessfully to res4 cue the other, died from the ef fects of marsh gas in an aban doned cistern at the rear of a home here tonight. -: - - J One of , the victims, Charles Louis Elliott, 14, was playing with a wheel in the yard of Mrs. Law rence Ins-old. a neighbor, when the toy rolled Into the 10-foot well. Mrs. Ingold said the boy re moved a concrete slab and owt ered himself into the cistern. When he tailed to reappear in a few minutes, Mrs. Ingold's 8 year-old son summoned Rufus Ed wards, jr., IS, who Jumped in arter nuuott. iie, too, was overt- come. stltutlonal change providing for advance publication of committee and commission reports, so that they need not be read on the Jloor 01 mm convention. Speakers in addition to Louis A. Johnson, assistant secretary of war, included Congressman James W.Mott, who mentioned the vet erans legislation of the past se sion enacted to "undo the wrong done by the economy bill enacted by the 73rd congress;'! Congress man Homer Angell who empha sised congress success in regain ing its Independence, and Edward Brost, CIO president in Oregon who urged the Legion to appoint a committee to confer , with labor and denied ' both that the long shoremen threaten to tie up ship ping in September and. that there is any communism in the CIO. The assistant secretary of v ar, principal speaker at the morning iron. Iq page & col. 4j, - Alien new Legion Mead Three Ballots Taken to Pick Committeeman Joe Chamberlain Winner of Hotly-Contesteo. National Post Allen States Legion Is Determined Against Foreign "Wars By RALPH C. CURTIS Climaxing three days and three nights of intensive labor on the part of the American Legion's po litical medicine men, three ballots were required to settle the eon- test for national committeeman in favor of Jqe Chamberlain of Cor vallis, as the Legion's 21st annual convention came to a dose here late Saturday afternoon. Other offices were filled with out much in the way of fireworks. Neil Allen of Grants Pass was elected to the principal depart ment office, that of commander, without opposition. Hugh Bow man of Pendleton was nominated by Henry Heisel of Tillamook, but immediately withdrew, mention ing "unforeseen circumstances which, the delegates knew. Includ ed the death of his father two days before the convention open ed. Allen had been nominated by Hugh Rosson of Salem in an ad dress which mentioned hit ser vlce as first commander of the Grants Pass post, on the state ex ecutive committee and American Ism eommlttee and In other capa cities. Oregon Held Nation's Strength ,. ! . OotlinJnf th Tletpoln' gtion which his year's administration of Legion affairs will be based, Allen classified Oregon as one of the preponderantly rural communities which must be "the strength of America" and in noting that the Legion had "come of age," de clared that its members are des tined from this time en to have an outstanding part in shaping the course of national stents. His statement of the Legion's determ ination that neither its members nor their sons shall fight again on (Turn to page 2, col. 1) Moran Quits Post As Chest Auditor Herbert L." Braden Made Successor by Action of Directors Resignation of W. H. "Billy" Moran as auditor of the Salem Community Chest was announced yesterday by W. M. Hamilton, president of the chest organiza tion, who also indicated that the board of directors had selected Herbert L. Braden as his succes sor. "Mr. Moran' has made a very creditable record in his position as auditor of the Chest during the past two years, Hamilton stated. He has made many friends for the chest and the agencies affili ated therewith and has been suc cessful In making the collections tor the chest to an extent which has been highly gratifying to the board of directors and officers of the chest. Braden, who lives at 1710 Court street. Is at present general agent for. the Ohio National Life In surance company, has also been associated with the Miller store, the Salem Hardware company and the Metropolitan Life Insurance company during his IS years in Salem. ...... Oregon Fires Are All Under Control PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 12-Gp) -Western Oregon and Washington forest tires remained nearly dor mant today nnder a combination of cool weather and high humid lty. 4 All fires. Including the gigantic Saddle Mountain blaze, one in Dutch Canyon and another la the Columbia national forest of Wash ington, remained -Inside fire lines. One flare-up of the Saddle Moun tain fire was halted when tire fighters backfired. I John Gnlock, 69, of Portland, was the sole casualty of the Co lumbia fire. He dropped dead yes terday at a base camp pay window ' Governor Charles A. Sprague Satnday directed J. W. Ferguson, state forester, to provide him with a detailed report of the area barn ed over in recent fires and the amount of damage resulting. . The governor said he later would make a trip over the burned dis trict in Tillamook county; New Commander Oi State Legion Neil Allen of Granta Pass, who was elected department com mander of the Oregon American Legion, at yesterday's final ses sion. He succeeds John A. Beck with of Portland. Next Year's Meet Goes Sans Takers No Bid Put in to Stand Host; Meet Here May Pay Its Way That the 21st annual conven tion of the American Legion In Salem, declared by many veteran conventioneers to be the biggest ioA-4 besttTer ' xnay have been "the Legion convention to , ana ell Lesion conventions," was In dicated when no invitations from prospective host cities were re ceived. The convention 'time and place" committee made no re port. Incidentally, the Salem conten tion came at least within "hat passing distance of paying its own way; may have done so com pletely, though the finance com mittee of the convention commis sion will not be able to determine this nntil receipt! of Saturday night are counted and all or the bills are turned In. There had been some mention of Eugene, Corvallis and Tilla mook as possible 1940 hosts but none rose to the bait. The truth is that conducting an American Legion convention, has grown to such a task that it is a big prob lem for any post; Salem was as sisted this year by Silverton, Stay- ton, Woodburn, Mt. Angel .-ad Aurora as Joint hosts. There waa some informal dls cusBion of making the convention in future years less a show and more a : mere gathering of Le gion delegates to conduct their routine business. Delegates and visitors from all over Oregon praised the manner in which the 1939 convention was conducted and Salem's hos pitality in general, especially tne fact that except possibly In one or two minor Instances, there was no Increase In regular prices tori rooms and meals. Tropic Storm Is Felt by Florida TALLAHASSEE, Fla., Aug. 12 -(AV-A tropical storm with winds of CO miles an, hour or more skirted the northwest Florida coast tonight, cutting off several communities from outside com municatkms and causing the death of a fisherman when his boat capsized. Apalaehlcola, where waterfront property was damaged, ' Port St. Joe, Carrabelle and ' other com. munltlea along the gulf and Franklin county eoast were with out telephone and telegraph com munications. Streets near the gulf were flooded. Whether there was any serious damage or any casualties in that section Waa viot known but It was believed losses were not heavy. Tne storm was expected to pass inland near valparalsor Brain Surgery Is Used in Fracture ALBANY," Ore., Aug. 12 - ( - uiucner,v, Lawsoo, Z5, narpster, Ohio, was 'holding his own" in a hospital here today after an oper ation to repair a compound skull fracture. - Lawson was found in the Southern - Pacific freight yards here last night. District Attorney Harlow Weinrick said state police were investigating and i believed Lawson. might have been slugged by two men with? whom ht was riding cn a lumber, car, . , j ' " v- ; i ' "U1 - ' - C t I ;i'X;.-,:..l'.;,H Garner Backed ByRayburnas '40 Candidate Honse Floor Leader Says He's for "Liberal" Democrat Pronouncement Is First From Any of "big '4" on 1940 Men WASHINGTON, Aug. 12-(ff- Representative Sam Rayburn, who as majority floor leader has pi loted new deal legislation through the house for three years, Indorsed Vice President Garner today for the 1940 democratic presidential nomination. Rayburn announced his support of his fellow Texan In a statement issued In response to an Inquiry from the . Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram as to his stand. "I am for that outstanding Texan and liberal democrat, John N. Garner, for the presidential nomination in 1940. believing that if elected he will make the country a great president," the statement said. Garner's Friends Are Elated Garner's friends here were ob viously elated at Raybur&'s pub lic stand, not only because he has been an ardent supporter of Pre sident Roosevelt's policies, but be cause he is listed as an author of such Important new deal legisla tion as the securities act, the stock exchange act and the utilities holding company law. With Rayburn's announcement, they said the vice president had the backing of the two Texas senators, Sbeppard and .(anally. ana 01 11 outer members 01 the state's delegation in congress. They also said that Rayburn's definition of Garner as an out standing "liberal democrat van pleasing, ia the light of President Roosevelt's recent statement that the party must choose a liberal in 1940, or he would not active ly support the candidate. Kayounrs statement, too, "-as the first public pronouncement re garding 194 0 from any of the "big tour" of congress Speaker (Turn to page 2, col. 6) Young Demos Give New Deal Support Homer Mat Adams Named to Head - Clubs for Next 2 Years f - PITTSBURGH. Aug. 12-fl)-The young democratic clubs of America went down the line for the new deal program in the 1940 campaign today in concluding their thee-day biennial meeting. The convention adopted resolu tions urging President Roosevelt to "press forward'' with his "lib eral" objectives and recommend ing nomination of candidates next year favoring his program. A new dealer, 28-year-old Homer Mat Adams, Springfield, III., was una nimously elected president of the young democrats tor the next two years. Although their constitution for bids endorsement of candidates for 'the presidential nomination, the Junior democrats applauded and cheered Mayor Edward J. Kel ly of Chicago when he "demand ed" that Roosevelt run again. Mrs. Verda Barnes, 81, Idaho Falls. Ida., until recently a secre tary in the interior department in Washington, D.C., was elected vice president, and John Nef f, Staun ton. Va, apple-grower, secretary. John M. Bailey, Hartford, Conn., was re-elected treasurer. Louis ville, Ky., won the 1141 conven tion. . f : . Salem Drinks Water That Salem was In a heavy drinking mood last week. The city con sumed 63.340,140 gallons of wa ter, records -kept at the municipal water department disclosed yes terday. -' l " v 1 The combination of hot weath er - and ' influx otr convention crowds ran water consumption to near-record proportions on Tues day -and Wednesday, when 1,420.880 and 9.458,220 gaUons. respective! y, were checked through the master meters. Manager Carl E. Guenther sld the city may have used more than those amounts of water in a day before but added that the city's consumption had never touched the 10,600,000 -gallon mirk u far as he knew at the- moment. : "i Daily water uso did not drop below 1,600,000 gallons during jht entire weak, . War Department Aide Is Speaker Louis A. Johnson, assistant secre tary of war, urged . Oregon Le gionnaires to help preserve the American ideal when he ad dressed them yesterday at clos ing sessions of the Legion con vention at the state capltol. Johnson arrived here in a gov ernment airplane. (Courtesy Oregon Journal) 5800 Petition for PUD in Portland State Hydro Commission Requested to Study Power Proposal Petitions signed by 5800 per sons requesting the state hydro electric commission to investigate the feasibility of creating the Port land people's utility district were filed here Saturday. The petitions were brought to Salem lay Senator Harry M. Renin, i"Pprtlai'.J;rairman of the Bonne- ,CJC?:StrlcklIn, secretary of the hydro-electric commission, said a study would be made of the pro posed district and if it was found feasible a special election would be called. A public hearing on the proposal would precede the elec tion. Kenin told Strlcklin that the Portland district, if organized, would have the largest population of any similar project of its kind in the state. Acquisition of the Portland General Electric company and the Northwestern Electric company facilities was favored, Kenin said. This would be brought about either by purchase or condemna tion. One Dies, 26 Hurt As Truck Topples PHILIPSBURG, Pa., Aug.. 12-(JPj-h. young girl was killed and 26 persons injured tonight when a truck in which they were re turning home from the picnic of a Lithuanian fraternal order overturned at nearby Sandy Ridge. No one on board the truck es caped injury, all being catapulted onto the highway when the vehicle toppled over a 12-foot embank ment and rolled over twice. The Injured are residents of Osceola Mills, a small soft coal mining community close by. Helen Sokol died in Philips burg state hospital a few hours after the accident. Opening Envelopes Is Waste of Time ENTERPRISE. Ore., Ang. 12 -(P) The : postoffice here re ceived a unique request from a man whose name was withheld. The man requested that no mall be delivered to him, ex plaining that his mail is ;iot important and that he doesn't want to be bothered with It. Deep,' but it9s Is Fast Flowing Despite the heavy drain on the water supply, the Stayton island underground and well systems held their own, the manager said. The infiltration I galleries below ground are continuing to produce mere than ,0 0 0,0 0 0 gallons : a day even though ': an additional estimated 2,750,009 gallons a day are being pumped out of the two wells recently drilled en' the island. The level of the North Santiam river, which directly af- in the island, is at or close to fects the level of the water table Its record low mark of last sum mer." ' - ' r .- ' - Temperature of the water at the Fairmount hill, reservoir hov ers between 5 8 - and CO degrees. which is considered about right for domestic consumption, the manager aaidU - jt fc J y ,vi Former Salem Girl Is Among Thsse Injured 'City of San Francisco" Derailed and six Cars Are Wrecked Two Die "When Expressed uoiiiae at crossing "Near Denver SAtf FRANCISCO, Aug. 12-ffJ Twelve persons were killed when six cars of the westbound stream lined train "City of San Fran cisco were derailed In central Nevada about 200 miles east of Reno tonight. Southern Pacific headquarters here reported. Most of the dead were dining car employes, the company said. A large, number of persons were believed Injured. Four trains, carrying rescue and clean-up forces, converged on the accident spot. Full reports from the scene were not expected before morning. Several Cars f ;' Roll Into River The Southern Pacific said that several of the derailed cars rolled into the Humboldt river which flows below the tracks at that point. The train was traveling on Southern Pacific tracks at a point 15 miles west of Carlin, Nev. It was westbound, en route from Chicago to San Francisco. Cause of the derailment could not be determined immediately. but unconfirmed reports from rail road men at Elko, near Carlin, said the train had struck a rock on the track. The accident occurred at 9: SI p.m., coast time, but because ef the remoteness of the region, word of it was not received for some time.' j A hospital train with: seven dee tors and eight nurse, left Reno as soon as u couigee'msae a p. The train was expected at tha scene sometime after midnight. Ambulances Scat Ambulances were recruited from Elko and WinnemuCca, and sent to the accident scene. The streamliner travels through the sparsely settled section ef central Nevada at speeds of a high as 90 miles an hour. The sec tion where the accident occurred is in the Humboldt river gorge ef the Tuscarora mountains, a bleak and rugged region. Fragmentary reports from th dispatcher's office at Sparks, Nev.. Indicated that the dining car ef the 17-car luxury train wai swept Into the Humboldt river. The number of passengers la the diner at the time was not learned. The train was proceeding wesfcT through the rugged Humboldt riv- ... er canyon country, reports stated. The first three units of the train, corresponding to the engine and tender of steam trains, passed ever the rock, but pushed it back nnder the following cars. The boulder sheared off the deck of a steel bridge and plunge the diner into the river, the re ports said. DENVER, Aug. 12.-(P)-A Den ver and Rio Grande Western train, pulled by two locomotives and starting a trip through th Rocky mountains to Salt Lake City, plowed into the side of the Santa Fe railroad's "Navajo" la south Denver today. Instantly kill ing Conductor A, S. Mock, 2, ef the Na jo and Injuring 84 per sons, one of them fa tall; ' .Mock, who lived at Pueble, Colo., was crushed to death la a washroom. Roy S. Scott, SS, of Denver, a passenger aboard the Navajo, died at 6:40 p. m. of a skull fracture and Internal injuries. ' ' Fifty-three others all of them aboard the Denver-bound Santa Fe train required hospital ear. All but 15 were discharged after emergency treatment. Among the seriously injured were Mrs. Phyllis Shaw, 28. Mao cow, Idaho, fractured right arm and shock,' whose condition wtt described as poor, and France Rolfe, 18, Portland,- Ore., frac tured vertebrae, condition fair. (Mrs. Phyllis Shaw, listed as serionsly injured, attend Willamette university mm Phyl lis Dennison. After her gradne tloa in 1933 she worked for several years as laboratory teeh , nkian -for the jclinto of Morse, Robertson, Power, Burenf Ro bertson and Miller. She wa married la Moscow last year.) ' ' . The smashup occurred at a It degree cross-over track. Both-the "Navajo and the Denver and Rio Grtnde train, the first section ef the "Scenic limited," were behind schedule. " ' - ' C The two esme together with a terrific clash," said F. F. Mar latt, in ehai-vft'of a railroad coa- . trol tower near the wreck scene. A ; District V Attorney John A. Car roll announced M a r 1 a 1 1 had signed , a statement saying ., the : board was set against the Rio Grande train. The Santa Fe train had the right of way. Carroll; participating iu the in vestigation along with Denver po lice, said it was impossible fo both trains to hare clear ' signal at the aan time,