The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 13, 1940, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    'JT
- PAGE TWO" ' ' - ' 1 " ' ! " "f "!?'" - Th OEEGON STATESMAN, Salem. ;Orej,Thiirsclay Moniinejvlgns 13. 1940 . y':v' .v -V:-i V' : " iS !?V-:?.V i- -
f a . . -- ' i "" ......- 1 . I PI' ,1- t I ' I
I A ' ... I '
Grangers Will
.Outline Policy
90 RIutlons Due
'Action; Election J
for
Gill Confirmed ,
' ' (Continued from Page l.
proclaim its faith in democracy
and the American way ot life,
d we thould Keep away irom
fHi b&ttlefields of Europe.
iTfce
natimial craned challenKea
toe
xraas of. the great state of Ore
rm ta Increase membershio ilOT-
alty. - and- entbuslasm. National
welfare depends on national ub
itj. AsL inaater. of the national
grange, I again . ehallenge the
grange of the .great northwest to
fret an example to .the nation In
fighting for our program and in
patriotism and In progress,"
I Machinery is displacing propor
tionately more farmers than! ln
darial workers, L. K. Sanm,
cooperative specialist with! the
federal security administration,
said In a talk before the conten
tlonJ Machines will force more
than, 2,000,000 farm persons! off
theland during; the neat 10 years,
according to studies made by eco
nomists of the; US department of
agriculture, he said.
!l. Both Saum and A. O. Brown,
manager et the Interstate Asso
ciated Creameries, emphasized the
,-tmpbrtance ofi the cooperatiye
(movement to -farmers. I
W. J. Wilcox, manager of j the
Oregon grange; wholesale, in re
clewing the record of that organi
sation, reported that sales L of
'farm machinery, fertilizer, tires
tand other items during; the year
totaled more than $98,000. a sub
jstantlal increase over 1938.
1 Initiations ' w e r e, conducted
'Wednesday night by the Marlon
Icounty and Clackamas county
jgrangers and itableaux by Netel
'grange in Clatsop county,
j Drill teams from "many granges
iwill compete at 3:15 this after
iiooa on the high school grounds.
.The winner will lead initiates in
'the sixth degree tonight
Thirty Are Killed
I In Raid on Malta
! (Continued from page 1)
ohjective of the war.
; Her other activity against the
"allies in this third day ot her
: participation on the side of Ger-
many was largely an unknown
quantity, howerer.
t (It Is less than 100 miles from
ifiicily across tlie Medlterfanean
to French African Tunisia". Rough
;y half way lies the Italian island
of Pantelleria. Apparently the
i mines are .intended to keep allied
Inaval forces and sea-borne sup
plies from the western Mediter
ranean from reaching the allied
land and sea forces now in the
'middle east.) , ' , j
, Non-enemy ships passing from
tone end of the Mediterranean, to
jthe other now must go tbrongh
Ith mrrn BtraltB nf fcsfna he-
It Ween Corsica and the toe of I Italy l
proper.
illkie Exnects
f -I l !
r 70 Votes Early
Y WASHINGTON, June l2-(fP)-Wendell
Willkie of New York es
tlmaited today his first-ballot
strength for the presidential! nom
ination would be about 70 rotes,
rising; on later ballots.
"Start small and grow," he told
a preia conference. "I think who
ever rk nominated will get it by jthe
sixth' ballot."
f had just announced that
RetwllaJleck of Indiana, Willkie's
native state, would place his same
before the convention.
Willkie said his delegate strength
was shattered among many states
and Indicated 'its real growth
would start after favorite; son
pledges were .disposed of. He said
he hajd received promises of sup
port from individual delegates in
Minnesota, Massachusetts, j New
Jersey, New York, Utah, Missouri,
Indiata and elsewhere !
. '1 have talked with delegates
in 1 7 states,' he said. "They are
aa juriusually intelUgentand serious-minded
group. It will be! no
controlled convention." 3
ii
.1. j .
TpMen Held for
f Burglary Query
i" p , .-- ' . . u "1 ,
r BOURNS, Ore., June li-y-Tmd
Fortianders, Oscar Dean Thomas,
SC.iand Alvin Leroy Moore, 51,
were la custody today for ques
tioning in connection with ia se
ries of Baker burglaries. j
- Fond at an automobile camp,
then men had in their possession
aix ibottles of narcotics, more than
J63, in cash, tools, electric drill
and a. pistol, said City Patrolman.
Robert Officer and State Patrol
man ; Glen Mar,tin. They were to
bo turned over to Baker author!
Obituary
$ .. f rvj- Jacobs s- ' !
'r: Mrs, Mary .E. Jacobs, at a Ideal
hospital, June It, at the age; of
S 9 'years.? Late resident of Ger
vais. Survived by daaghter. Mrs.
Cora Wilkinson of Gervaia.fFune
xali - announcements later from
Cldugh-Barrick company.
Postal cur
hVGOOD
'iixoiErnnimD;
Music Teachers Convene
if
Mliw' Jeaa WilUatnsJ (left) state president of the Orego Music Teach-
era assoeiauoa, aiscnssca me awm-wtiuu a ,
tlon with Sirs. JIabel 8. Powers, presldeiit of the Salem association,
Te convention convened here yesterday and wUl be adjourned to
ntKht. (Statesman staff photo).
Music Teachers' Convention Under
Way; Public Programs Are Offered
(Continued from page 1)
hall. The concert is open to the
public.
Tn addition to the orchestra's
musical numbers, winners in the
vanons music classes in the state
contest will be presented.
ki ion of officers at the 5
o'clock meeting will be followed
hv a formal band net in the mirror
room of the' Marlon hotel. State
President Jean Williams will pre
side and Rev. George Swift will
be toastmaster. A musical pro
Time omb Harms
British Freighter
(Continued from Page 1)
ed, however, that the injured
were men, engaged In loading
meat.
The explosion shattered a fuel
tank and opened the side of the
4716-ton ship.
Fearing that time bombs
might have been placed on other
British ships in port, Argentine
authorities suspended loadings
pending a thorough search of the
vessels and their cargoes.
Warnings were broadcast to
British ships at sea because ot
the possibility that similar bombs
may have been smuggled aboard
other vessels in an effort to cut
a British foodline by widespread
bombings.
Refugees Arrive
Safely in Japan
PORTLAND, Ore., Jane ; 1 2.-JP)
Seven political "refugees, crew
members of the tramp 1 freighter
Peeelopi, were disembarked safe
ly Id Japan after a voyage from
Vancouver, Wash., in the "brig,"
a letter received here today re
vealed, j
The men sought to remain at
"Vancouver last April after learn
ing the ship was headed for the
Russian port of' Vladivostok. A
superior court judge denied their
petition to remain here, and they
sailed with the ship owner's prom
ise to laod them at Japan.
George Lindemier. anti - nasi
German sailor, wrote Margaret
Carman of Portland from Muror
an.Japan. He said the three Rus
sians joined their families some
where In Japan and the three
Poles proceeded to Shanghai.
Swiss Say Bombs
" Of British Origin
BERN, Switzerland, June 12-(!p)-Switzerland
prepared a pro
test to Britain tonight over bomb
ings of the Geneva and Lausanne
region in which four Swiss were
killed and 20 Injured and serious
damage was done to railroads and
private property.
The government earlier an
nounced a check of bomb fragt
merits showed them to be of
British origin.
Swiss generally, however,, took
the bombing calmly.
A protest already had been
made to France against a recent
bombing of the Kreuzlingen area
near : Lake Constance and to Ger
many against frequent flights of
battle planes over j neutral Swiss
soil. Ten German ' planes have
been shot down or forced to land
by the Swiss, while three Swiss
aviators have died tn battle with
the Germans, , . ;
Olendorf Neto Potentate,
North American Shrinert
j ..
MEMPHIS, Tehn., June 12.-UP)
George Forrest Olendorf, 67-year-old
Springfield, Mo., adver
tising executive, was elected po
tentate of all North, American
Shriners at their: annual conven
tion today and Screen Comedian
Harold Lloyd started on the 10
year climb to the same post.
QUESTION "Does RPl4'
long aa Eastern, oils?"
AHSVEI yes-air! And you
ned a millkn -dollar laboratory to niura.coK7WOrauroiKu , u , ,
Prove it. Vouir own car win prtrr. Af.tlHICA'S PSLVJIS EOTCS 01l25 A QUAHT
gram will be given during the
banquet and Dr. C. A. Howard of
the College of Education will
Bpeak on "Education and Cul
ture." A folio at the T. S. Roberts stu
dio, following the banquet, will
conclude the convention.
Yesterday's programs included
a piano recital at Waller hall,
given by Sergei Tarnowski, emi
nent pianist and teacher of De
Paul university, Chicago. A ban
quet was held at the Marion hotel
last night.
Claim of British
Occupancy Denied
(Continued from Page 1.) .
terjtnls second big raid in two
days.
A raid yesterday by 117 planes
caused at least 50 casualties. One
bomb fell within 30 yards of
the US embassy.
Offices of the German trans
oceaft news agency were destroy
ed by fire, the building housing
the Haras (French) and f'Tass
(soviet) news agencies was de
stroyed, and the Associated Press
building was near collapse.
One bomb scored a direct hit
on the air raid shelter in which
Dr. Oliver Lockhart, director of
the salt admialstration, was re
fuged. He was unhurt.
The hospital was badly shak
en but remained open, and Amer
ican property there was hit.
The total area bombed prob
ably was about 'a mile square
but because of the density of the
population about 150,000 were
left homeless.
Foreigners escaped. At the
Methodist union hospital center,
W. A. McCurdy of Glens Falls,
NY, F. O. Stockwell of Dewey,
Oklar, and; John Mathieson of
Winnipeg, Canada, left dugouts
to give first aid to victims.
Newsmen Heroes
Says Warcaster
NEW YORK, June 12A-
American and British newspaper
men in TourS, the French emer
gency capital, are "real heroes,'
Eric Sevareid, CBS correspond
ent, said in a broadcast from
France tonight. v
"They are working exhausting
hours every day, getting bombed
as they come and go, sleeping
often in their cars or on the
floor," he said.
"But I think the real heroes of
this struggle to keep the flow ot
news going are one young Amer
ican and four Frenchmen. The
American is Louis Buell, native
of Duluth, Minn., and the others
are his staff in the transmission
office of press wireless.
"They are handling every
word of the stories being flashed
to both the English and Ameri
can press. They all but collapsed
over their machines last night
but tonight they are at It again
Teddy Roosevelt
Urges Calmness
ATCHISON, Kas., June lt-(Jpi
Col. Theodore Roosevelt called
tonight for an end to war panic
in America and accused Presi
dent Roosevelt of beisg "among
those who are fanning the hys
teria of the country."
"The president;" l;e told a
first congressional district rally,
" . . . outlined bombing attacks
on middlewestern cJtleB such as
Omaha clearly an Impossibility
from anv stand do in t and de
manded a standing air force of
50,000 airplanes,! which would
be unnecessary, impractical and
impossible. ... I
"My father used to use a mot
to, 'Speak softly bat ctrry a big
stick!', .President I Roosevelt has
reversed this motto. . . .
last aa ' ecmala or "outlssta
regardless of what tbey
dcm whe f-
speaks loudly and carries a feath
er duster."
IASTS TURRIDLE LONG
Defense Bills
Wtk ! r-
ess
CCC Military Training
Refused'; Navy Orders
Start on Warships
(Continued from Page 1.) '
rotary of the navy; General
George C. Marshall, chief of staff;
Admiral Harold B. Stark, the
chief of carat operations and Sear
Admiral John H. Towers, chief
of the navy's bureau of aeronau
tics, met in. Secretary Morgen-
thau'a office.!
They had hardly left when Ar
thur B. Purvis, the chief allied
purchasing agent, and Sir Henry
Self, British! aircraft production
expert, entered. Upon their de
parture, they made their an
nouncement that more supplies
would be made available.
"I understand some mare ma
terial will be declared surplus,
which we will have an. opportun
ity to obtain' he said. "I cannot
tell you what the material will
be, but we are naturally encour
aged to know that Some more
will be available."
Wheeler to Bolt
if Party for War
In the senate, a group of leg
islators angrily assailed what
they termed steps in the direction
of war.
"Every move Is being made to
take ' us down the road to war,"
Senator Wheeler (D-Mont) thun-
aerea.
"We have seen this country led
away from neutrality to non-bel
ligerency," said Senator Holt (D-
WVa), "and if certain Individuals
in the government have their
way we will strike out the 'non
and be belligerent before the snow
flies."
Wheeler also asserted that if
the democratic party -should be
come a ' war party," he would un
hesitatingly 'fbreak with it." He
would not, he said, "support any
candidate fori president who's try
ing to get us into this war."
Senator Clark (D-Mo) called
attention to an article In .the Lon
don Daily Express saying that
Senator Nye (R-ND) and Senator
Johnson (R-Calif) appeared to be
the only remaining bulwarks
against American participation in
the war.
"I think that as time goes along
it will find many another bul
wark." Clark shouted, "despite
the Kndon Daily . Express."
Senator Bone (D-Wash) said
he noted that the newspaper pre
dicted American conscription of
manpower resources, materials
and everything needed for war.
"It's a reryj pleasing- prospect,"
Bone said sarcastically, "to know
that we are about to embrace to
talitarianism in order to fight to
talitarianism." Order Work Started
on 3 Battleships
Pushing forward with all poss
ible speed with the task of build
ing up the nation's defenses, -the
navy annonnced during-the 'day
that it ordered work started on
two new battleships and 20 lesser
craft last night within an hour af
ter President Roosevelt had signed
legislation providing the funds.
At the same 'time, the White
House disclosed that the govern
ment was turning reserve manu
facturing equipment over to pri
vate industry to make possible the
"Immediate" manufacture of six-
able quantities of smokeless pow
der, ammonia: and small a r m a
ammunition. It said, too, that "ex
cellent progress" had been made
in surveying I army-navy stocks
for. the determination of what may
be declared surplus and be made
available to the allies.
Five Killed When
Airplane Crashes
A RED ALE, ! Ia., June lZ-(P)-
r lve persons, tnree ox tnem mem
bers of the same family, were
killed tonight; when an airplane
spun out ot control and crashed
from a height; of 150 feet three
and a half miles north of here.
The dead:
Chester Bajrnett, 20, of Are-
dale, owner and pilot of the plane.
Mrs. Clarence Barnett, about
42, mother of Chester.
Clark Barnett, 18,1 brother of
the pilot. . ; -
Miss Mable N4 Vane, 19, of Da
mont, Ia. j
Carl PfaltxgraffL 27, of Hamp
ton. Ia.
Witnesses said Barnett,
li
censed pilot, apparently was pre
paring to land. He had takes the
group on a ride over the Barnett
farm. .
Early Preacher's
Daughter Passes
PORTLAND.! Jnna 12-avTk.
last 'of a circuit rider's It chil
dren, Mrs. Addle B. Wood, S
died here vesterdav.
Mrs. Wood, j daughter of Rer.
o, Bperry, Baptist clergyman.
Wax a nativ tit Rrfivnirni TT
widower. John), H. . Wood, former
operator or aa Arlington wheat
ranch, survives.
thero aH
coat or
rastliOnsT
in One Ear e
j (Continued irom Page 1.) j
went; on talking about Itself and
opening- vp its secret cnnnJee,
turning mgnta on ana on wnue
the multitude on the sidewalk
gaped and gawked;
It leren undressed ltseii so xar
aaitoi open up its hood and show
off lbs innards. Pretty soon it be
ran talking about what a capa
cious' luggage compartment It had
and opened that up too.
That's: when weJ old dlslilnsion-
er (that we are, went to work. We
got- down and peaked and saw
therei behind a stack of pretty
sn4piry iSs-gase; an impressive ar
ray of electrical apparatus That'
what .made it talk we guess. ;
Wei found out,! too, that the
talking ear is one of the "cnie
idejas!-o.f jthe DeSOta division 'Of
Chrysler iMotors ana; is Deing- es
corted around the country by -a
Mrj: R. Porter (no! relation to the
late soft drink of the same name).
Pretty:' soon the car bid every
body ! goodbye and stopped talk
ing before anybody got a chance
to ask it wbat U thinks or tbe
war. The crowd slowly dispersed.
It was quite sua impressive crowd,
tool. Both' the mayors were there.
Butch and the ether one.
i - I I
Mrs. LaDoyt Davies. who lives
at 11470 North Capitol street. Is
beginainsj to wonder what's so
wonderful about public utilities.
Mrs. Daries was burning some
garbage tn her basement Inciner
ator yesterday and it got too hot.
It Started? the wan' afire.
lira. Davies discovered the
blaae, stm a small lose and rushed
to tbe aciarest tap to quench the
fire. She tamed it fall on. No wa
ter! came out. The mater company
had chosen just i h t tfano to
chaage meters and! the water was
shut off. :
Frantic, Mrs. Davies rushed up
stairs; to the phone.' There would
n't! hare been any dial tone even
If h had waited to listen for It,
The phone was dead, having chos
en that particular Itime to be out
jot order. :
mra. varies ruuuiy got the rlre
department through tbe good of
fices of neighbor whose phone
was working. Their water supply
wa working too, bat they didn't
have a fire. I
There wasn't much damage, ex
cept to Mrs. Davies' morale.
i !
Henry Tord says he's ready to
torn utflOOO planes m day. If
the: nazis, get ideas in this direc
tion they won't be jbapPT to watch
the Fords go by. i
Niels P. Peterson
Of Portland Dies
PORTLAND, Ore., June 12-OP)
-NleW Peterson 87, grain ex
pert ana crop forecaster, aiea to
day. He Suffered a heart attack
two weeks ago.
A native of Denmark, Peterson
came to the United States in 1ST2.
He j moved from the middle west
to (the Pacific coast in 1900 as
eastern Washington representa
tive ot the Pacific Coast . Elevator
company.1 In 1908 he became asso
ciated with Max Houser, Portland
grain man. He retired soon after
the World war.
1
i -r rv -.... f" v
II : Ul i I
-h i- - - 0
IT'S one of the really big thrills in
life...tho lift" you get when you
first say good-bye to the smaller
cars, and step proudly op to the big
Dodge Luxury 4-irier !
AU the finer things you ever
wanted in motoring are here in good
iraasure all wrapped up in the
jrsost magnificent "value; package"
( that ever ranged a highway.
'4 : '
Thfak of it! For just a few dollars
more than the smaller, low-priced
cars, Dodge gives you the tiding
comfort of a full 119-inch wheel
base... the luxury of chair-high seats
and gorgeous cpholstery. .
of handling: that makes
Luxury Liner such a thrilling car. to
drive!
Itfow"
British, Polish
Troops Rushed
Nazis 20 They Say l2
-g Miles From Capital; -j.
Augment Forces
(Continued from Page 1)
which is 20 miles straight north
from the heart of the "French cap-
-i-J-.::. ..:-;.tv
The immediate drive on Paris
has developed into three separate
main- thrusts, from the east and
west;trhere the Germans are 40
to tb miles away, and from due
north, , where haxls hare made
their greatest advance, at Persan-
Beaumont. v
West Drive Roan
Along Seine Banks
On the east the drive was in the
Chateau Thierry region-, where
American, marines won -glory in
the last war. The west drive
roared along both banks to the
Seine river from. Rouen to Ver
non. There the Germans , were
seeking to reinforce their detach
ments which had plunged across
the river.
The Germans flung more and
more troops, tanks and yet more
tanks against the bitterly fight
ing French.
In the Senile regions the gar
dens of the Chantmy chateau of
American Ambassador. William C.
Bullit became a battleground.
The German gains were being
made at fearful -cost
The French said they learned
from prisoners that counter-attacks
by French tanks and planes,
some returning to the - fight five
times during the day, had inflict
ed heavy losses.
In Berlin the Germans figured
they had guaranteed victory In
the battle of France.
They said they had eaptnred
Reims and Rouen (which the'
French did not admit), crossed
the Seine and the Marne on the
two flanks of the French capital
and blasted away the resistance
of a French force near St. Val
ery,, on the English channel, tak
ing 20,000 prisoners and six
generals.
One Store Spear
May Be Started
In the center, said the Ger
mans, tbey had made the Olse
river valley their , road to Paris
and were 12 miles from their
goal. This is closer than the
French concede.
The possibility Germany might
be pointing up another spear to
thrust Into France arose with the
report that German artillery was
active on the . upper Rhine front,
a quiet area op to now,
A German spokesman cautious
ly commented that a new front
might be in the process of "being
brought into motion."
Turkey, non-belligerent ally of
Britain and France, sat tight.
Her cabinet decided that for the
present Turkey would stay out
of the war, meantime, she kept
up her traditional watch on the
Dardanelles' and awaited what
might come out of Italy's bellig
erency. (M$mm
And style? Here is the kind of
beauty that rnakea heads torn .. and
eyes pop as you whisk by in sSent
ibandeur! 1 . r
Economy, toot; You get the gas and
oil savings for which Dodge is fa
mous!. ..You get the low upkeep and
high trade-in value that mean money
in your pocket.
Why don't you graduate, too?
-Right now your Dodge dealer has a
big "4-wheel diploma' ready and
purring for a convincing spin on the
highway. Your present car wSl prob
ably make the full down-payment;
balance on easy terms. Drive in today
for an appraisal! I ' : ,
. the
' today's
UuHwmk. ffssrf
'.,-' - tfessra tsitgM
.'IEIdblbacc Mottop - .(Do,
Lato Sports
. OAKLAND. Calif., Jane 12-
-Stanley Corbett pitched Oakland
into the Coast league lead to
night with an 8-2 victory over
Portland. .
Portland 1
Oakland ; ; .8 9 0
Liska, Goniales (7) and
Schults; : Corbett ; and . Raimondi.
SACRAMENTO, June 12-(Jp)-Hollywood
played Indifferent
baseball here tonight, tossing off
runs in' an unorthodox way as
Sacramento won a 5 to 1 deci
sion to ? eren the current series.
An . Idea of the type of ball
displayed by the Sheiks may be
gleaned from the report that one
run. was sent home on a balk,
another on a. hidden ball in the
catcher's - protector while another
came la when a runner was hit
in the back by a throw from
third base that would have re
tired the side.1 And to add to the
confusion, one player was tagged
out for taming the wrong way
after singling, thus killing a rally
before it started.
Hollywood . 7 1
Sacramento , .. 5 5 2
. Fleming, Tost (8) and Bren-xel-
Judd and Grilk.
San Francisco
3 3
..fj 4 0
Los Angeles
DassO and Botelho; Wetland,
Berry (9) and Holm.
TOTJNGSTOWN, O., June. 12-()-Tony
Zale of Gary, Ind., out
standing contender for the world
middleweight boxing title, kayoed
Baby Kid Chocolate of Philadel
phia In the fourth round of- a
scheduled ten-rounder tonight.
Zale weighed IS 7 and Chocolate
155.
Relief From Heat
Enjoyed in Salem
i .(Continued from page 1)
Washington's hot' spots with an
official maximum of 101. Yakima
sweltered at 94.
Temperatures dropped sharply
in western Washington and Ore
gon. Roseburg, Ore., which topped
100 degrees Tuesday, had only 83
degrees. Portland was down to
82 and Seattle 74.
Lower temperatures were fore
cast for today.
EL CENTRO, Calif., June 12
(Jf) The temperature shot up to
118 degrees today, making one of
the hottest June days on record
in Imperial valley where later sum
mer . temperatures sometimes ex
ceed 120, but not often.
Two Boys on Bike
Struck, One Dies
PORTLAND. Ore., June 12-P)
-William Tedder, 14, was killed
and Lesley Delhi, 12. gravely in
jured in an automobile-bicycle
collision today. '
Deputy Sheriff Merle Tillman
said an automobile -driven by D.
A. Nakamura of' Portland col
lided with a. bicycle -on which the
two youths were riding.
' ' " - - BBBBBSs!
FKCa FSSSITTO tZZX
the Dodge Luxury
Liner is assigned as
, a complete unit of
rsar ensemble ia
Jest as striking as
; the front! There are
. no hard lines, bnmpe
. . et .bnsUes"...the
- epaclon luggage
.compartment is en
tirely concealed.
Tsudii; t ts IS f.
Ssslss Hmf-,-j?-,:.:
Banldng Quarters
Expansion Slated
(Continued from Page 1) -
the consolidation has more than
outstripped our expectations : and
this has still more increased- the
necessity for an expansion of
Quarters.- , r 'v"
. "Every member of tbe organ
ization,", went on Dick, "has an
Inherent pride in the Ladd and
Bush building- and its historic. lo
catlonT heref ore, no thought has
been entertained at any time but
that adequate enlargement' could
be made with the present bank
ing room as the-nucleus for the
expansion." : .
Wi-S. Walton and D. W. Eyre,
vice-presidents in charge of opera
tion at the Salem unit, stated
that it was gratifying to every,
member of the local organization
that plana were nearlng comple
tion for putting the expansion
program Into effect.'
The Ladd & Bush corner dates
back to 18(9 when the Ladd and
Bosh, bank waa established. In
1912. Increased , business . necessi
tated, enlargement; and again la
1927! expansion was required whea
the pank lobby was enlarged to
its present site. This doubled the'
floor apace previously occupied. V
The expansion now announced
will be the third time in its his
tory that the walls hare had to
be pushed - out . to accommodate
the patronage. . i
Mexico, Unigua;
Hit Fifth Column
(Continued from page 1)
right of association with a view to
suppressing organisations which
might carry on "fifth column" ac
tivities. Passage came at the end of a '
stormy .session In which leftist
deputies contended that the bill
represented treason to democracy.
The measure, went f through,
without any amendments and waa
sent to the senate. I
In expectation that the bill will
become a law, the German minis- ;
ter here has ordered closed alt
naxi centers and organizations in
Uruguay.
' t sw
French Gold Safe
Even if Paris Is
Captured, Belief
VNEW YORK, June ll-
Banking circles here said today
they believed France's large gold
holdings would be safe from
nazi seizure even if Paris falls
before the German onslaught.
The impression Is that the -French
have already taken ail of
their gold from the underground
vaults, in the capital.- In March
the federal reserve bank estimat- v
ed France's gold reserve at about
$2,000,000,000, making it the
second largest In the world.
CO UPC
ODD AN
OB"
Tbca arc Detr&it arllv
rcS prices and ioclad
mil Federal Imm and all
taadarS eaimat.
TriiwmHa.witMi4
tet tae(tf aaylvastra.
Sbt t cfaaac wKa-
- Mltcm.
rhone 4113
Cclaxau Oregoa
- .'- -' :; - - :' - .f.;:..;-
V''
!
.1.: J. .,;;