Weather ; Generally fair 'today ad, Sunday, becoming clendy Little changs In tempera tare. Max. temp. Fri. 5d, mln. 85. Klver -2.0 ft. South wind. Comics ' Four fall page of comics are Included la the big Bos day Statesman, besides the regular dally strips of lauiii starters. " KIG11TY.NINTH YEAH mi feifca Saturday llcmlr?, Novenber 4, Price 2c; Nenrsstan&i C No. 191 ;r ZD. CitV Q)f FliI2 eras TA7 1 VV v t Nasi c " . 1 " . . I - t i I At C Recorder Set vTakaOver GtVHaUDesk First Witnesses Testify .in Case Before County -Grand Jury ' , $200 Salary Warrant for October Will Be Withheld City Recorder A. Warren Jones will re tarn to daty at his desk In the city hall at 8 : 3 0 -o'clock this morning, ready to assume full re sponsibilities of the office, he an nounced last night. . This announcement earns at the close of the day that brought first witnesses before the Marlon coun ty grand Jury to testify, "concern ing the $4031. a sum for which a special audit last Monday asserted the recorder's books failed to ac count. -It also came on the ere of the day marking the passage of two weeks - from the time Recorder Jones left Salem to attend a Eu gene football game and lodge meeting and failed to return, tir ing rise to reports a few days later that he could not be located and to decision by the city council ways and means committee a week ago today to order the audit. Returned Home From California By Plane Jones returned home from San Francisco by airplane Wednesday with the declaration "there is nothing wrong with my -affairs as city recorder.' and the explana tion bo had gono to- the bay elty to rest sad recoren from a serere cold. He hsrrled'liom-when ? learned -In a telephone conversa tion with bis secretary. Caroyl Braden. that the audit had been made and condition - of his ac counts Questioned. ' i "I'm city recorder in this city and tomorrow morning I'm going to assume my position,.? : Jones said In his brief announcement to . (Turn to page 2, coj. 1) Paul I! outer' Column The Intelligence from Reno is devastating to all men .who hare red blood flowing In their slowly hardening arter ies. The dean of women at .the TJnlreraity of Ne vada has issued a . decree forbid dlng the major ette of the unl Terslty band to show her dim pled knees. That Is nbt good news. That decree jam rink with fMl EL EUMr. T- the revocation of the edict of Nan tes as a blow to civilization. It Is a stab in the back for all of as (and we are by no means a mlnor- Ity) who- believe firmly in the majorette -. as something that Is good and great in our civilization. Wo have been stabbed In the back, but we will net take It sitting down. Let the dean of women of the University of Nevada watch her step and everybody else will wateh the majorettes step. . What does the dean want? Why" she wants the majorettes to wear underpants of b 1 a e down to two laches above too knee; positively no shorts; blue skirt covering knee; no - more splits, nipups, fancy strutting; feet oa ground always. "ft on rronnd alwaTS. Te gods, whoever heard of a major ette who could keep ner ieei on the ground. . , We' hereby align ourselTes against the perfidity of all those rioana nf vnmrn who Would take frnm nnr elTillxatlon that. God- given right, the freedom of the knees. - .: TTT irp A 11 KT VKSS NOTE : The Marion county budget esti mate is Xl.l3.-&J.lo. we new wrttfc alarm the fact that none Of It. not even the dime on the end, is allotted " for increasing arma ment of the Wheatland terry., t IRATE READER DEPT.; t State of Oregon . Executive Department .-. . i ' . Salem , . Desk Memo To Mr. Hauser. CnMt nnvArnor's ScTSDDOOk . The rarious stenographers' (not secretaries) in the execuuve u hmnt MMnt the false, mis- leading. Infamous. Ubelous. scur rilous and otherwise offenslve-rer- .mkmi in tha condition Of the .u.. .nhut w well know the aavwvv bumvv! ' - desire of the management of The Oregon Statesman, to hare the nt Inost accuracy In the columns of tHat periodical ana can your j- tsntlon to tne facts, i wr. (Tarn to page t. coL41 Here's Connie Tali Fourth and 7 : .-. .Sv..;- : . 4- .- r Star of tie silent screen, Constance TaJmadge Is shown witb. ner fourth ,and most recent husband, Walter Glblin, broker, as tney de parted from their borne in New York. The two were married Octo ber 20. i Miss Talmadge divorced her wealthy third husband. Town send X etcher, last January. . - iSudset nody As ! e U. Nineteen Estimate Items Marion 1 County Committee to Continue and Probably Complete Task; ' : Estimate Totals $1,193,653.10 ' ' The 'Marion county citizen's budget committee, after a morning spent in listening to items in the proposed 1940 budget, bit into the major issue of deciding on departmental estimates during the afternoon and had agreed on 19 items after 5 p. m. r : K ' ' o j S : . - r - Charges of Russia foreign ; Minister States Finland Did Not " Makes Gestures i '.'. HELSINKI. Not. S-JF-Flnn- lsh Foreign Minister Eljsa Erkko tonight described as "untrue" a charge by the Russfaa newspaper Pravda that .Finland had made warlike gestures and added that if this and other soviet attacks on Finland were "of a tactical nature" : they "have failed our. attitude unchanged. . " "There is a limit to everything," Erkko said Jtt a press conference, referring to the statement of the Moscow organ of the communist party and Soriet Premier-Foreign Commissar Molotoffs disclosure Tuesday of secret Finnish-Russian negotiations. ' "We have shown our goodwill. the foreign minister continued. "We are not at war and we want to live In peace. In such condi tions proposals were pat to ns which in normal times would be offensive. Finland's answer to the Rus sian demands are In the hands of soviet officials and now It Is up to them to determine whether further negotiations are wortn while, he said. Investigation Is Untrae Says Jinns Union Activities in Panama WASHINGTON" Not. IMJP- The house committee oa unAmer- Ican activities ordered a detauea lnTestixstlon of union activities in the Panama Canal Zone today al ter receiving testimony that the mri'S organisation director there is a communist. - Thv testimony came iron rrea .tv r Phimiw. former official of the CIO National Maritime an ion, who told, the committee that the man in qnestioa was IL A. Stoudt and that he had heen given his Job through the Influence of John Ij. Lewis, CIO president, and niton recommendation of Joseph Currsn. head of the NMU. Moreorer Phillips said, there has been great organizational ac tivity In recent months ,a mo ng aon-seamen, and Curraa has em phasized the need "to lsy the basis for work among the 11,00 9 ciTil employes.',. . '' "'j4. e and Her 1 Recent Husband rees on Will Meet Again Today delegations favoring particular before adjournment was voted ; . ,-: i ,, , The committee will meet again today at 9 a. m. to continue, and probably to complete the task of making tentative decision on the dosens of particular . Items which add up to ah estimated total for the budget of $1,1U.53.10. , Of this sum $508,513.10 will be made op -from direct property taxation. $368,940 from revenues other than taxation, $121,000 from a t a t e taxes, and a final $108,290 credited to provide for delinquent taxes during the next fiscal year. As the budget stands, It is some $18,500 ever last year. Among the largest Items ap proved yesterday was $S900 for maintenance ' of the court house, a' figure down $290 from ' last year. Also passed was an estimate of $5190 for the county court and commissioners, $180 less than last year's total, and $4798 for the county Jail,- The committee cut $ 12 5 from the original " Jail re quest of $4920. ' .4 The coroner's estimate .was pared down $123 asked to take care of indigent burials to a fig- are of $885. The county agent was allowed $2200 as requested, and the ' county hortlculturallst was also allowed $1850 for which he had originally asked. : 1 The committee approved with little discussion an item of $5700 for county audits. Including $4600 for special treasurer's office audit and $1000 for general andit of records. " Items of $167 for the district fire warden, $2800 for the county herd v inspector, $650 for the slaughter of diseased cattle," and . (Turn to page 2, col. 1) Ordered dfl Mention of the Canal Zone, stra tegically Tital area in American defense plans, aroused the quick Interest of the committee. . Rep. Thomas (R-NJ) demanded to know why a maritime anion should manifest Interest "at this critical time" In organizing for eign employes of -the, Canal Zone who never go to sea. . - : t - -"There Is great significance to this," he said, "Snd X want, te go Into the matter in great detail' and hate a thorough investigation." However, Phillips said he was un able to give any details because he bad recently been out of touch with the anion, although he said he knew Stoudt was in the Canal Zone and that the subject previ ously had been under discussion sereral times at anion headquar ters early this year. , v? Rhea Whitley, committee conn- . : (Turn to pago.2, coL t).: eturm. io Bearcats artan To 15-0 Score 3500 See San Jose State Win Ninth Straight Contest Local Lads Are Worn to Frazzle hy Three ' t Full Elevens k - - . - ' . i Straight Warner stuffnothing naw lint thn helmets. rave Saa Jose State's nation-pacing Spartan scorers a is to a zootoaii -victory orer onr Willamette Bearcats be fn skoa on Sweetland laatnlcht. but not before the local lads were worn to a frazzle by the greater . m a . share or tnree xuu eierens. : rrainv fif wlnrbacka aa threats and pouring power to the middle wttfc tfcav fnllbaeV tan-rins n fake reverses, the Calif ornlans grabbed tneir nintn straignt . wm , current 13 -game season by Tirtae of a thlrd-auarter field coal and two final-period touchdowns. : Cats Held Thrice In First Half ' Although the Warner oDeGroot machine rolled to 99 yards from scrimmage and 12 from passes In the first nan, to a lonesome i frnm urlmmtn for the Cats. and hung ap six first downs to one, theT were thrice held for downs and couldn't score with a first down on the Willamette IX. They wound ap the first period, la fact, by relinquishing the baU en the Bearcat three-yard line, to which ma 1iiaa xrrisa tiv TTa.lfbaelr Manoogjaa tned, them rronvthi ; it wasn't antil midway of the fhrA that Oaard Ken Cook, sent la for the specific purpose, drop ped back to the Willamette is ana booted home three points from a difficult angle to break the dead lock. The Spartans were put in position for the boot whea Hansen MakVuI TOalitam'a itnnt and It was recovered by Allen on the Willam ette 10. Vlnter at the line rained bnt two, a pass from Zimmerman to (Turn to page z, eoi. j Grew and Japan's ister Confer Reports Say Two Discuss American-Nipon Relations TOKYO. Not. 4.-(Saturday)- JFV-nnlted EUtes Ambassador Joseph C. Grew and Foreign Min ister Klchlsaburo Nomura aeia today a 90-mlnute conference at which both were reported to have spoken with "entire frankness" in exploring the entire field of American-Japanese relations. A high official source said they exchanged views on positions of their resnectlTe rovernments re garding three major Issues some 600 Instances of American prop erty damaged by Japanese bomb ings In China, alleged Japanese restrictions of American' trade to China ant general interference of American business transactions. , "Diplomatic Jockeying notably was absent, both diplomats tak In r hold of the nroblems In a businesslike manner," he added. Resumption of ,the talks was not fixed Immediately. . Hold Sp Team CONCENTRATION CAMP FOR U-BOAT CREW .1 Kaxland too has Its concentration camps in wartime,' and radlopboto above from London shows the cap tain and three members of a German submarine rew being escorted by av cordon t Britlub sailors to Just such confinement. The German prisoners are shown disembarking from a naval tug. The name Cf tae ttttisame as wen as max THESE BOMBERS AWAIT FR'S i t . J a . : . :-. ..- : ::: .i. -..:: ;....-:-. -v. - y IK- I PJsmaBtlcd nltra sfiainHerd bombing planes, made in Los Angeles, , tared being loaded oa bargee at - for immediate shipment whea embargo umA snbetltntimg m system ef "eaab. and Carry sales. The be transported en foreign snipe. Silver Falls IEU Reaffirms Stand Local Union Determined to Keep Organization as Bargaining Agent . . EILVERTON, Nov. 9-VPh-ln special session. Bllrer Falls IKU Friday night eTerwhelmlngly re affirmed their determination to be represented by the Industrial Em ployees Union in collective bar gaining with the Silver Falls Tim ber company.. The -day shift erowded one hall. while the Bight shift met at another hall. A number of improvements In existing contracts were Toted and negotiations for these will be started at once The nature of these improrements was not re vealed to non-members, .and local officials said they would probably not be made public" for another month. Speakers at the meetings were A. D.-Chisholm, IEU president. and Nicholas Jaureguy, IEU at torney, both of Portland. Chlsholm compared the IEU tactics with other unions where loss to groups of workers resulted from the rarious strikes, while the IEU continued Its '-steady work and negotiations at the same time. : -;.:' Jareguy outlined the legal end of the labor hearing held sometime ago at Toledo In which the labor board involved the whole IEU or ganization but finally had to drop the charges against the IEU and that organization was completely cleared. Salem Woman Is Welfare Chairman INDIANAPOLIS. Not. t.-(JP-Selection of Mrs. J. H. Turnball, Salem, as child welfare chairman for the area was announced today by the national American Legion auxiliary headquarters. She will direct auxiliary activities for needy children of world war ret erans in the western states. : Mrs. Tarnbull Is a past presi dent of the Oregon department of the auxiliary. cz tae unasa bcx saown were tucicu ij - r. . . ; -' r s -. - Manhattan's noycl Bennett airport President Moosereu aftlxee bis signature to the bin repealine the an President Passes Off Suggestion As 'Poor Manners' WASHINGTON, JTot. V(ffV Presidemt Roosevelt ascribed poor manners to Russia today, answering press conference' invitation to comment on tne - recent snggestlo ef Represent ative ICcCornaK (D-Mass) tE2t" the Uatted States withdraw her ' ambassador to Bassla, be said he never bad believed poor manners shonld beget poor McCormack was indignant orer Premier MolotofTs criti cism of President RooseTClt for "intervening" in behalf of Fin land in the latter conntry'a-di-. pate with Russia. Roosevelt Due to; Sign Bill Today Congress Adjourns Special Session After Approval Of New Act WASHINGTON, Not. 8-(ff) The special session of the 7th ' con gress adjourned at : 2 S . o'clock toalght after finally approving the Roosevelt administration bill to repeal the arms embargo and sub stitute' a system of "cash and car ry" sales to the belligerents of Europe.- - r - - ' , ." The legislation, product of six weeks' fighting as to the best way to keep America free of war, went to President Rooserelt for his sig nature, scheduled to be affixed at noon tomorrow. Ceremonies, will accompany the signing of the measure,-with members of house and senate who were prominent in the long fight attending; -' From the White House,-meanwhile,' came word that soon after approving the bill, the chief exec utive would Issue proclamations making It effective as applied to the war in Europe. -Final congressional action came with the approval by both (Turn to page 2, col.' 2) ' SIGNATURE CaL, for sale to England are pic- In order that they win be ready plaavee and aU war materlabs wOl Highway Body to Spend $lCa,CC3 Amount i to Be Used for Adyertising State ToTourisU PORTLAND, Ore- Not. l.-PV- The state highway commission de cided today te, spend 1100,000 to advertise Oregon's tourist attrac tions. Tne aecision wss reached orer objections by an Oregon State Motor association representative. Ray Conway, who asked the adver tising program be altered. . Most of the money will be spent In the east and Conway argued that more of it should be diverted to western states. Harold B. Say. director of the travel and infor mation department of the commis sion, said that of 1130,000 spent for magazine, newspaper, radio and motion picture advertising in 1939, approximately 47 per cent will be west of the Mississippi. The commission recommended that the state board of control accept Richfield Oil's low bid again to supply the state's gasoline In 1940 The bid was about 115,000 lower than the nearest competitor on the annual business of about 1335.000. It included prices of 13 and a fraction cents on bulk gaso line and 19 cents on service sta tion gasoline, taxes included. Yamhill and Benton county of ficials asked paring of the Day ton-Amity- road because . of in creased traffic around the Yam hill farm labor camp. - - Benton Farmer ; TKpayer Head Corvallis. Ore.. Not. tOPV Claude Buchanan, Benton county farmer and former state legislat or, was elected temporary chair man of a newly-formed state tax payers' federation today, and Mrs. Anna - Krnrer. : Bearerton, was aamed secretary. - . - Taxpayers from 11 western Ore gon counties participated In the organization meeting, Benton, Co lumbia, Coos, Clackamas, Lane, Linn, Polk,- Marion. " Multnomah, Josephine and Washington. , Salem was awarded . the next meeting -when a committee con sisting of O. K. Dewitt and Carl Pope, Salem; and A. L. Thomas; Independence, will submit a con stitution and by-laws. - American Factory Wheels 5 ' NEW ; YORK. Nor. t-V- Amerlca's ' factorr wheels are whirring at the fastest rate since the boom days of 1929, the na tion's leading statistical authori ties estimated today.". - i Tha federal reserve board placed Its monthly Index of industrial pro duction lor. octooer.at zuper cent of the 1923-25 average, two Mints orer the previous recovery peak reached In 193.7. v I.- Economists in . waantngton ana trail afreet asked.ls this recov ery the real thing T" - ; At the pace estimated for Oc tober, goods were rolling out ef industrial 'plants at a rate less tnan 4 r cent under tbe boom- time level of decade ago. .Unemployment, or course, u much greater .than 10 year ago, and national' income, partly , re flecting a lower jprice level, much less.:.'.; ' '- Kerertlitlcss, &a iwecping' ao- ShinR etnrned At OsloTPort Admiralty Says Vessel. IV 1 in - Harbor. Without I ; 'Valid Reason ' ; Steamship ts now Free to? Sail Wherever She , ' 'Desires . HATJGESUND, Norway, Not. ' 4-(Satnrday)-()-The ' Ameri- : can freighter . City ot Flint, ' freed from her German captors' ' by the Norwegian government, - left this port early today and ' turaed - northward toward Bergen.! - BERGEN, Nor. 4.-(Saturday). (p) Norway today released the American freighter City of Flint from a. German prize crew and a. - To Americans interred her captors after they had failed to' obey re;la.UonalA Norwegian territorial waters, h. . The release came at about i N a. m. (5 P. m. PST Friday) and the reason ascribed by Norwegian naval officials was that the City of Flint. had made an illegal en try of the port of Haugesund. . Previously, also, they said, she had tailed to respond to a warn ing . to . slow down, given by a Norwegian destroyer. The war ship put a warning shot across the freighter's bow. . The City of Flint, which had been held by the Germans since! a prize crsw from the pocket battleship Dentschland boarded her in the north Atlantic October 9, now is free to sail at will under her own crew and under the American flag; t -' She had not yet put to sefir. ever, up to 7:30 a. mnTiO:30 p. m. PST). : ; OSIyO.VNofwjty,"' Nov, L- Sat- - nrday)-(a?t-rie wanderings of the American freighter City of Flint under a German prize crew ended early today when Nor wegian officials Interned the nasi crew at Haugesund, on the west ern Norwegian coast, and released the ahlp to her American crew. The Norwegian admiralty an nounced the ship, en route from Murmansk, Russia, to Hamburg, Germany, anchored at the Nor wegian pdrt without "valid rea son" and that it was decided to Interne the German crew and that -the vessel should be "given free. This meant, - one usually well informed Norwegian source said, that the City of Flint, a prisoner of the Germans and an object of diplomatic action since she was seised by the .German pocket battleship Dentschland on Octo ber 9, was free to sail away whenvv ever she wished. This source added that the freighter may already have sailed away -once more In charge of her American crew. ' The freighter, first carried to Murmansk by the nazi prise crew after her capture In the Atlantic with what the Germans said was a - contraband cargo, . reached Haugesund .at 5 p. m. (8 a. m. PST) yesterday. .. No m Seaman v. Taken From Ship ' " There were reports that the ahlp put into the Norwegian har bor to land an American seamea who was 111 but as the hours wore on there . was no indication that (he seaman. woald be put ashore. . - Then came - the admiralty's statement which said: "The American City ' of Flint with a German prize crew, was allowed to use the Norwegianter rltorial waters from Tromsoe southward. The ship, accompan ied by a Norwegian ship Olar TrygSjason and - one torpedo boat, arrived at Haugesund FrK day evening and anchored off Haugesund without permission. ' "As there was no valid reason for calling at the Norwegian port authorities decided, the' ship Should be given free and the Ger (Turn to page 2, col. 7) celeratloa - of - business activity since last spring and more than a third of it, as shown by reserve ooard statistics,- occurred before the outbreak of .war has hoisted hopes high that at last the Aerarl caa economy may- be beginning to dick. . t Yet recalling the false recovery starts of 1933 and 1927, and try lag to analyze the extraordinary influences of European war, man? economists said' they frankly had their fingers crossed. ;" -' ; Tia reserve board warned "ua lc.s tere is considerable Increarj la tLa consumption goods, the ac cumulation of Inventories which is now under; way is likely to reach ssbstantial pronoftlons. J" That meant that bus'.aesa mlj:M. as two years ago, find" Itself ttajrerin under a big load of unsold good. ; The reserve board and a number of Wall stree . tclrcles estimated , ' (Tern to page 2, cel. 2)