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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1940)
PilGS TWO Pair Is Read Out of Pnrtv Statement Declares' Men now Owe Allegiance ( to President f ! (' j ; (Coottaued from Ipase 1) ad letrned that Mr. Rooserelt jgsre Colonel , Knox such a com jmltmest lereral weeks ago In WonneeUon with his entry Into the cabinet. They were, howeTer, uncertain whether, in riew of the Intensity of the foreign crisis which has developed-since, some thongs In the arrangement has been mad. A few hours after the news was received ! Hamilton Issued the Statement which was the subject of the national committee's action later. . j . : A party official was asked for an "official interpretation" and this Question was put to him: roes (his mean that you no longer consider them members of th party?" That is correct." So preoccupied were the dele- gates with the cabinet aereiop ( went, that virtually all else was i t orrotten for the remainder of t the day. j . Karlier, however, Alf M. Lan- don who. la chairman of the eub commlttee -drafting the plank on ', foreign atflars, postponed a m-eet-1 Jan of this group ntit tomorrow, i l.audon explained that the foreign , altuatton ,;was so uncertain that f delay seemed desirable-. ; The day also brought the ar . rlral of Frank Gannett, of Ho- fheater. NY, a candidate for the presidential nomination, and the convention's first brasa band. It accompanied him to his head Quarters. Draft Bill Goes In Senate Hopper k (Contlnuea lrm Fart 1.) - free, would provide for payment f S monthly and trawling- ex I penses to those who took the J Ifxht-ponths' training course. Men whoso numbers were drawn ay lot for service would appear before local boards for' the deter mlnatton of any poaalble causes lor loferment of eerTtce. 1 - A 'nan proved to be a member at 'lany Well organised religions fcect? whose creed forbade partic ipation la war would be exempted front combatant training and serv- j i Persons; who- sought to evade jtae aet would be punishable bylm jprlsewmenl up to frre years and a tlnap to $10.e0 or both. I In, its Statement, th National Training Camps association an Jan organisation which krew out ef the "Plattsburg- movement" for military graining- In 1915-18 aid -that recent eventa have shown that the nation could not rely on the navy alone for defense acatatt an aggreesor. It said the country "must have a second lino of defe IXW -! LIFK AT COIXKGK "TH08K WKUK T11K DATS" William Holden nam n its army. ' MI,H:Hi U wssassssBassssssas i air corromoNEi-cooL T ' STADTS ToingnT 2nTEriTAinr.iEnT... kr..s L.'rf i SiUmt aw yuid 3SSS. yd" a n::;:D t tf NY A Students at Chemawa Earn Schooling V f JV J - ' . J. ' 'a 4- l -MB Their first yar at Chemawa Kadlaa renter there cowsrracted th shop - v v v t ' ' ; jjwijMitj-j uiixn:un mi n if rmin nTi -nTnin'iriirnJi r n wmumvmirt f,ft-nr"r' r'imM""a vr ,mi 14' i '-"T" iW T"" w-"i"i,"iii f 'n n ..a-.r....hnirr-.vl.rlirTl mirtVrini-11,lir-T.r 1m ,,-1 i n ft - v -,""' vrv f i - Fv . .'.-'.4-' '. : ' way incladrd tramac catUo, below. First 30 White Boys at Chemawa Complete Initial Year Under NYA; Study and Work, Earning Own Way Thirty boys, the first white persons to be allowed to at tend the Chemawa Indian school since its founding' 50 years ago, have completed work at the national youth administra tion residence center at Chemawa. Authorities pronounce the center, started as an experiment last December, as "very satisfactory. Similar to Camp Dodgs in Port-O- land sod Skinner Butt center in Eugene, the residence center was established to provido living q a art era tor Willamette valley youths aad to give them the op portunity to recoivs Yocatlonal education , Work at the center waa under the supervision of the NYA whllo vocational education classes were supervised br the In dian school. To be admitted to the coater, boys between if aad XS from Marion, Polk and Yamhill conn ties applied to the NYA district offico, where Director Chot Nel son mad the selections. Those assigned were -p!acd under the direction of Robert R. Board man. residence center supervisor and advisor. Rc4vod SAO Moaith On floor of a regular dormi tory at the school was set aside for living quarters for ths NYA students, who found themselves under double authority. Half of each day was devoted to NYA work, mainly building and dairy ins projects, for which the enrol ees received S0 a month. The re mainder of tho time tho NYA stu dents were a regalar part of the Chemawa school, attending voca tional classes with ths Indian stu dents and taking part In athletic and social events of the school, andar the sprvlaloa of Superin tendent Pal T. Jackson. Construction Supervisor Al Thomas directed building activi ties, which provided ths NYA youths with bread - and - butter mosey and furnished the school needed buildings. Principal building projects were ths con- m ff mat Xs aBastaMVwi . t..w Mrsst .- - u? c? CAtsi:t Knrusi 41 v - V,;- JW- .1 TL.. ST ; rw feeitwlais; Li iviurin CD YD - Cieeed by ieiy.$44eeev Tlx - - - 1 I , " if school completed, 80 whits boys, boildlnf, top photo. Other activities by straction of a shop building" aad of a dwelling tor faculty real dance. Of the $J0 a student earned each month, 117 went for hoard, room and medical care, while ths remaining IIS could be spent at his own discretion tor clothing aad personal expenses. AH Coarse Offered All vocational classes at ths school were open to NYA stn ttents. Including anto mechanics, machine shop, electricity, carpen try, wood working, dairying, farm mechanics plumbing, print tax, shoe repairing-, mechanical draw, ins;, eooklns. baking, barbertag, commercial courses and kick school ngllsh. , Enrollment was kept at aa ave rage of St, although some drop ped out before completion of the course when they f onnd lobs. In this manner IS replacements were made, making a total of roughly SO taking advantage of the center from December to Jane.' Both NYA and Indian school officials are enthusiastic about the success of the center. Evi dence of the ralue of ths training, NYA Director Nelson pointed out, is found in the fact that all but four of those completing- the training- have already secured jobs. Althourh the eenter was ter minated June IS. reestabllshment is probable. Woman's Remains Found Far at Sea ASTORIA, Ore.. Jane SHV A body tentatively Identified as that of Bertha Corlsnd. 10. As toria, was found four miles at sea todsy by two Astoria t rollers. Sheriff raul Kearney said. The woman had been missing since Saturday. Identification was made through, a watch pinned to a housecoat. : I Trouble la the west . aplenty with yosur . I kriils favorite. Ml EQTOI5 V " LEVIEEDS"' PLCS:-'.' : . it .J ltalpliL i ' fica Charter 4 cr --' t OlwdOIf STATESMAN, Cdiza. earoIje4 at the IfYA residence which tker their 23 Siirvwe After i Craft Torpedoed MADRID. June SO-I Tweedy three sanrrivote of the merchaaUhlp Sary Malta (un listed tit Lloyds) 4000 tons, tor pedoed by a U-boat 400 miles nvortk of Cape Ftiilaterre, were landed! by SfeuOsk flshJUas boats ssUsht. The ship was carrying coal t Liverpool froan IVnea, France. The flshersnea salkl nsost 8paa tan flatung boats -weeidjag Ireuuaa were Spain becmeae of sines seen there Marshh eld MiU . Dtroy cd, Fire MARSHFIKLD. Tune 1.-JF)-The Waterford Lumber company was destroyed today by (lames whlek also fired three bosses. Sparks front the mill, ignited by a sawdust burner, were carried by a 4S-mUe wind over North Front and North First streets. damaging the homes of John Mc Clelland. Mrs. Hayes Howard and Archie Philip. ' Other warehouses, factories and homes in the vicinity were endan gered before Marshfleld, Korth Bend and Coo, utile firemen quenched the biases. - Insurance underwriters rained the mill, leased to James Lyons and Howard Irwin, owners of mill B, North Bend, at nearly 40.000. An insurance conference was called to consider underwriters recommendations for settlements. Amnesty Granted Rumanian Guards BUCHAREST. Jane l.-(Frl-day)-6TvA royal decree rrant- tng complete amnesty to all pe uueu prisoners and all those awaiting trial on charges of com mitting acts against the present regime Is to be published today. It is the first complete amnes ty since formation two years ago of the national rebirth front. Ro mania's jonly legal political parry and follows by a few hoars the reponea return of see iron guard, lata wbo fled to Germany last Sep-, t ember after the assassination of Premier Armand Calinescn. District Meeting Of VFW Tonight Veterans of Foreign Wars post In district No. win meet tonight at the iaew VFW ; bunding on Fairgrounds Toad and the aux iliaries of Salem. Silrerton, Dal las and' cio will meet at the Woman's club rooms on North Cottage street at S o'clock. Awards for membership gains will be ; presented and new dis trict presidents will - be elected to succeed Alma Tiers t and Charles Durloo. both of Silver ton. -i Xaat 3y r sua sta t Sarepe lUMOiiUUWj LEin:icu;iEn' n v - - r (S V Ya 2. vrar i aiiMt i i h' ' 1 aa i Tim Xmrf 1 . .. , . . i Orocn - Friday MarXag. Jua 21, Conpiegnels Parley Scene French' Plenipotentiaries . Fly Across Nazi Line I in White Plane i (Continued from Psgs 1.) cllltles and aircraft plants at Bris tol land Southampton in thslr second consecutive raid yesterday morning. 1 - ' The British, saying they shot down four of the more than J.00 raiders and had anffered eight British dead and 60 injured, de clared more than a dozen Ger man; cities including ' Hamburg andj Brunsbuttel, bad felt the British reply. - Munitions plants, oil refineries, munitions trains and track depots were hit, ths British said. Britain's royal air force met the j Italians in a battle of Bug bug, Egypt, near the Libyan fron tier. The British said they shot down three planes and lost one, the ! Italians said they destroyed British tanks in the fight. Corsica, Tnnla Hit by Balds . Widespread Italian raids were made off French Corsica In the Mediterranean, the great French naval base at Blzerte In Tunisia, the British base at Aden in Ara bia, and! other objectives in Brit ish Kenya and sundan. The Ital ians said a submarine sent a French destroyer to the bottom. The allies were striking back at Sardinia and the Ligurian coast, the Italians admitted. The defeat of France brought even widening repercussions in Washington where President Roosevelt took steps to form a coalition cabinet by nominating CoU Frank Knox, Chicago pub lisher, as secretary of the navy, hadj Henry L. Stbnson aa secre tary of war. A bill was introduced by Sena tor Borke tor selective compulsory military training, requiring regis tration of all men between IS and, 65. Gathering her forces of empire for the struggle on the little S, see square mile island where she thinks the war will be decided, Oreat Britain at a northern port welcomed 60,000 bronsed Ansaes Australian and New Zealand fighting men. Canadians already are in England. Britons from 31 to 34 prepared to register for military duty next month to raise British armed forces to 4,000,000. While the house of commons secretly debated home defense, it was' announced that the 13,369 auxiliary e raiser, Andanla a converted merchant a h 1 p had been sunk by torpedo. It was the fourth such loss of the war tor the British who 'hare equipped nearly SO such ships tor war. i . Plishe Arriving at Meet GKARHART. June 10--Flfty newspaper publishers and their wires, the vanguard of 173 ex pected to attend the Oregon News paper Publishers association con vention, gathered here today. Sessions will open tomorrow after a confidential meeting of the group's directors. , Speakers will include Robert Carsgnaro, New Tork representa tive of the Associated Press, aad J. L. Peiper, San Francisco of ficial of the FBI. ' Call Board 1 KLStN'ORB T o d a :y MDr. t Cyclops with Albert Decker aad Janice Logan; all teehnK i color. Plus "Those Were ! the Days- with William ! JJolden and Bonlta Qran- Tills land Exra Stone, j CAPITOL U - . Today Virginia Briei Dennis Morgan ana Wayne Morris in "Flight Angels." Pips; Bill "Hopalong" Boyd and I Russell- Harden in "Stage Coach War." ' STATK . T o d a y "Reraember" the Night' with Barbara Stan wyck and Fred MacM ar ray. Plus "Pride of the Blue Grass' with Edith Fellows and Jimmy Me Calllbn. Saturday Midnight Show -"Grapes of Wrath" with Henry Fonda. ' ") GRAND !' TodayH-"Mad Men of Eu rope." Plus Soa of the Navy" with James Dunn . and Jean Parker.1 , ; Saturday Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier la "31 Days Together." Plus The Lone! Wolf Meets a Lady with Wsrren William, Jeaa iluir, . - ! - -f HOLLYWOOD Today v Charles Starrett ta t "Outpost of the Mouatles. I Plus ! Walter Pidgeon and ! Rita : Johnson in "Nick j Carter. Detective." ' I ! LIBERTX r - - ' " Today Gene Autry In "Rov ing Tumble Weeds" with Smiley Burnett.- Plus "S.OJ3. Tidal, WaTe with Ralph Byrd. Plus ehspter S "Dick Tracy's G-Mea. a.: EtuJLf3i - V?V' Asm srfjnm rszx i Wlier Pl4jtee Hit Jobjasoa.: . f . - . fa urttt, aw,, ... , - JDUo Serial, News aad Colore i . i Carton. "GfSk-r Ostk 1240 Redheads? King Jess PaschaBV Portland ntlllties leader, who has been appointed kins; of this - year's Redhead Roundarp to be held at Taft on Jnly 27 and 28. . The "Rose City redhead win rale over the "carrot top" festival under the title of "Eric, the Red." One of the' tiatles of the !royal red head" win be the selecting of Judges for the bathing beauty contest, one of "the featnr at tractloas of the Lincoln county redhead celebration, the winner of which will he awarded aa expense-free trip to the Saa Frsuriaco world's fair. (Photo by Gladys jC3&hert.) i Bomb Blast Hits NYNaziBiMding (Continued from Page 1) shook the building at SI East iSthj street, la which are the offices of the communist news paper. The Dally Worker; Earl Browder, general secretary , of the eoaunttalst party and candi date for president; the national and State party headquarters, and the Toung communist league, - The bomb apparently had been pleated near the ground floor entrance. It wrecked; .the dou ble swinging doors and shattered a plate glass window of the "Workers Bookshop,-" I showering two busts ; of Stalin 1 with, the Pisces. A negro elevator opera tor said he thought the building waa going to eeHapse. t a woman ia 4he hallway was cut by glass, the only Injury. Here agala wUaesses told po lice that -they had seea a sns- ntdona-laAkinr nm tn nrtv'K- borhood. He parked an automo bile near the baUSfng shortly he- fore iae Dixit aad later drove away. -Some said a second man was trenched on the car's run ning bears with a hex large enough to held a bomb. Clarence Hathaway, editor of Tan Deny worker, belittled the incident, hut said it "apparently was the work of some stupid, mls- ea assise, wno undoubtedly thinks he Is giving service to the anti-communlstie forces. i Chief Inzneclor Lonis V. Cos. turns, who issued the order for increased Tigflanee at foreign consulates, oaid that a detective had been atatloned ia the office of the German consulate and a uniformed policeman at the door since the war began. As for the communists, . he said, "those people always had our attention aad consideration, too. It might even have come from one of their own." 30 Lightning Firet Arm Fought in Coast Range : EUGENE, 'Jane 30.-&-Crra-ians and CCC ebrollees fought it small lightning fires in the central Coast range mountains today.1 " . Some, la Isolated districts, hare not yet been controlled, i Only two are within JStuslaw national for- ett houndaries. Phons S757 NOTICE, FOLKS! SBop McDowelTs as we always have stomach. Well by shopping at Salera'a leading market IMne pH;npU A Gd64 Bay H' - Ssbies? 2 None Better t Opns. Etf 3.5c ScTar Cored Oaf Own Peril Gcasfjlb. 12s Ci li SI!gc3 Lksr gn. 3Kgg" Drcnsi ci ?C2!i!. 3.2c;-: For steffiar. with the rocket--. - '. -H wUJt I C? T. I ) rw . '' Our Own JIaie ! r u.Tt. m , . - x IW fc f0 TTe sure- llu-orh yrirs tf experience la iiyrLti. zV.s ta cfrcr smv r'i "WarGaIinetw Charges Flung i . . - Administralion Jlen Say Move Is to Sink Partisanship (Continued from pags 1) nra" frnm IndAB ta ret HlITT Woodrlng, who resigned today as secretary of war, out or tne cam net. . "It has succeeded,' Holt shout ed. "Did Lord Lothian, the Brit ish ambassador, tell the presi dent!" Holt said Woodrlng tried to do everything within the law to aid the allies, but to look out for the TTnttail RtalM first, while his suc cessor's policy was "to do anything for the allies tnac is necessary and America be damned." When Holt charred that "there have been commitments made f of our involvement in iwar" sena tor Byrnes (D-SC) arose to, reply: "tf Mr. stimson or Coll Knox hare made any commitments that is a matter that would be suscep tible of proof. I have no wea that the senator's information is correct. 1 . L "I only regret that a denial never catches up with the charge: At this tim we should forget partisanship and politics. Senator wneeter- to-Momj m a low Tfliet declared that "it Is with a heavy heart, that I see the drift of events." He naa nopea, he said, that the democratic patty would be the "liberal, party and the peace party" and that it would not "pound and drive the people by hysteria." j The men who ui e t in New Tork have the same old slogans in the same old way," he said. "Now, instead of having them in New Tork or Chicago, w are go ing to bring them down and put them in tns caoinet." Berkley Speaks up 1 ffnv PrMldDt . To this. Senator Barkley re plied: r ! , "I do not believe j the appointments-indicate that the democra tic party has turned its back on liberalism. I do not i believe they Indicate we ars headed toward wan . i "The outstanding ' significance is that the president recognises that in - this hour j partisanship ought to be abandoned so far as it may be. - j .... Senator Maioney (D-Conn) said that a man waa "entitled to serve" whether he was a "liberal or conservative. i Ia hurried conferences, political leaders sought to assay the effect of the appointments on the third term, issue aad the coming elec tion. Former President ' Herbert Hoover expressed the belief that the 114 campaign would ba un affected because the "national is sues remain exactly) where they were- . -,,... He added that the appointments did aotrspell a republicaa-demo- cratte coalition; that the two men were "entering the cabinet to give personal service and not repre senting the republican party." Oa eapltol hill, reporters asked Senator Barkley of Kentucky, the democratic leader, whether he be lieved the president had assured Stlmson and Knox that he would not seek a third term. Barkley replied that he did "not believe the subject waa even discussed." Republicans gathered in little groups la the house of represen ta tires corridors, and cloakrooms, expressing bitter condemnation of Stlmson aad Knox. Some demo csats Joshed them with gibes that the appointments meant "liquida tion of the republican party. Senate Passes Defease Bill The appointments far over shadowed other events today In the rearmament effort, such as kajs? ca I to t SSSBBBBBaSBBBBBSBaBBBBBBBS S3 s iv EIM1EET . Salsa's Leadisri Ilarliel lb. 12c 1 f T - n.2Sc : Cr 17c Blake fw - ...! r"-! ri.-,- Quick senate passage of a $1, 717,439,783 emergency defense bill an announcement that. con gress would be asked for 165. 000,000 to Increase TYA's power output for rearmament purposes; plans by the war department to tive d u t y. and introduction by SenStor Burke (D-Neb) of a uni versal draft bllL Scenes of excltment were en acted on the senate floor when the ! Stlmson and Knox nomina- tlnna worA Vonif fmm thn rostrum. When Senator Clark (D-Mo) caught the name "Stlmson," start ed, f as if involuntarily, and ejaculated. "Who?" Senator King (D-utah) arose to express "the hope that there will! be prompt action on these able and illustrious men and that they will be approved." Later Clark cried that the ap pointment of "interventionists' amounted to "selection of a war ' cabinet,"-. "1 cannot vote to make the democratic party a war party, and l wiu nov iouow vne aemocraiiq party as a war party, he said. Farms Are Fewer Than Decade Back Census Funis Conntj lias 40 Less i Farms Than It Had in '30 ''.'' -'H'".'"-"v---t-. V '' U' -M : Marion county has 40 fewer ago,! A. R. McCall, district census . supervisor, announced yesterday. Figures revised late in the afternoon upon receipt of addi tional reports gave Marion county a total of 4781 farms. Like Polk and Yamhill counties, this county had more farms at the time of the special 1938 census .than either today or oa the occasion of the 1930 decennial census. Tillamook and Yamhill coun ties alone of the tour reported on by McCall hare more farms listed for 19 4 9 than for 130. Of the four counties Marlon has the greatest number of farms. In 1938 there were 8181, 400 more than in the 1940 report, and in 1930. 4831., The census takers found 1798 farms In Polk county this year as against 1188 in 1935 and 1883 in' 1930.-,-;-: : The farm count i la Yamhill county for 1949 Is 3798. There were, 193$ in 1938 and 3890 in 19X9', " .;'!' :', ' i I The number of farms in Tilla mook county increased from ill in 1930 te 889 la 1938 and to 972 'this year., I . ' :. . McCall urged that any farm ers who may have been missed by his enumerators should communi cate with his office In the Oregon building here. .: .. j V. '. Liquor Commission Seeldng Facilities The state liquor commission, ' meeting here yesterday with Gor- was loaklng for new headquarters and warehouse facilities la Port land. We are thinking of either buy ing or leasing new facilities," the commlasloa said, 'fas our present facilities are inadequate. The commission granted four licenses and refused five others, all refusals being oa grounds that the neenses are not demanded br public interest or convenience. None of the applications acted upon were from the mid-Willamette valley." ; --j. Fred ' Barbara lrf.Iurrcrr Stanwyck THS HIGHT" and .rams or ths BLUE GRASS CsSHHSsl . sLsBBBBbI 171 South : Commercial St. a coraplete Tarictr f choice yon get the best for less. Vcd Sto . o , , a lb. Oc Spir Wbs . :1B. M O tx 12 c Bztk Hzzzz -YQ lbs. 25 c riseUa SiCT' fo-v H 5c , tzttzr Lzlh. P.' 5 & 10c-;: "Si3 Passae'fcwavy; 3.2c LcjclCdlza.e, e .D.1SC vm