Dictator of Greece Nazi Tfiiiical ospltafe' Weed More tteHdMnte .. . t state MenFingt6 t ilment at Athens General uLittle John" Me I ax as Dies Whispering Hopes for Victory; . New Premier Is Appointed" . ! ATHENS, Jan. 29 (AP) General John Metaxas, the "Little John'! who dictated to Greece in peace and directed het aggressive defense in war, died Wednesday, whispering; It Is not .for myself that I mind, butl j?lace my hope in the Greeks." . , , " -A ... - - . ... . , . i vPriemier f dr. life,", he died of a throat infection in his Athens suburban home, Kiphissia, at 6:20 a.m. (8:20 p.m. PST Tuesday) while his soldiers were fighting in .Albania, ob stbe i snow-covered soli ol the Italian who- invaded them. 'Mfctaxast 70, short, chesty, do lorous of visage, had been secret ly 111 for three .weeks. .To-his countrymen he was a modern . Miliades, - the- spiritual counterpart of the , hero who led the Athenians to Tictory against the invading - Persians- at the battle of Marathon. , King George II, -with whose approval Metaxas obtained dic tatorial powers by a coup d'etat - August 4, 193d. quickly named a, - tall and studious banker, .Alexandros Korixis. to be pre- mier.. - ." " ; Korixia, S5, a close colleague of Metaxaa bat lacking any ex- - tensive army or political . ex ' perience, also will bold Metax as other portf olios. , Moreover, he is pledged to carry out to the letter Metaxas own program of "victory over the ene my r and afterwards, serving and promoting the welfare of the working classes, which constitute the; productive power of the na tion." "With the Italians, aided by the Germans at least with planee, ap parently ready to start a new of fensive 1 a gainst the Greeks, Metaxas' death was viewed else where . in the, Balkans as the heaviest rtlow Greece could suf fer, in Belgrade, political circles termed him almost Irreplaceable. i It appeared that, since the new premier , lacks military knowl edge, it will be' largely up to Generalissimo Alexanders Papa- ' gos, the Greek military commander-in-chief, to, fight off the IU1 ians, ti with .British, counsel and aid. - A i iV f:-':srr: King Exorta Soldiers .: to Ooatiaae Struggle King George, in proclamations Issued almost simultaneously with the announcement of Metax as i death, exhorted Greek sol- - dlers to- continue to the utmost ,;u Turn to page 2, col. 4) Paul Hauser$ Column We see where Ely Culbertson, -the' bridge builder.! has come out with a whole flock of new rules tnd reelnes f orrr-rrjr? a mud slim! m-.,' doubled epades. They will be no : more intelli- V ; i i i . ...:!. 4 layman or aum-: i my, as one says)?-, V man the last . oes ke and will be- p more effica-j ions than a Ju- 1 clo u s kick I . V tM. 1,, Dpi cions d diu It will An" tha most good. : MB.Biwt.li. One good thing about the burro or J kicking system of bridge Is tluU you don't have to -worry about -who Is vulnerable.: As " any . ol alley fighter can CteU you, xtearly 1 everybody4 Is ' "- vulnerable uromnd the shlna."- -' Wo don't know why we're even I bothering to write this, as there are more things in Mr. Culbert eon's mles than Horatio dreamed of or we're interested in. Anyway we play straight Cum bersome t MILITARY NOTE- Capt. Cecil Edwards of the nn moanted infantry arrived back In town the other day and imme diately started dictating letter! to his favorite horses. ; FHATLIj they think of "next dept. ;-)4.:-!f :---- Ts Whwa X My CsBesml ' Tbla cktla vu Urtd la 'Saas : in tfe k trinflnf apptaM to sU Utti feailnMB. usllks : Mt ikalu, Uls doss sat. . cost ay. aunply Mad espy ' f this lttc riv ntl frtaada. . Tkaa Vaadi yr wU sad , ' md tor M lu tU UM b4s tt UW TkB. vaa ' -ysw'mams warks ts ,Wa top, ' roa vtu la rctarn r ! 15,17 a-oriTMaa tlrla. HAVB FAITH v : AND DO HOI BREAK IHB CHAIW. 'Oaa aas broke taa ckaia aa4 gat Us awa wtta kack. i .WiaacBiacca Xv.) Kavs. Things are ; 1 o w I n g down around the legislature. : A sore ' sign of this, observers point out Is that Dick Neuberger has run ut of resolutions. - t MARrrniE note ; The commander of the Wheat land Ferry stood staunchly : by Major General George A. White's ' recomendation that Oregon needs no ' state gu r2 Immediately. What do they need a state guard a' national guard of even boy scouts for, when we're here," the commander f the guardian : of the Willamette river and Kick- real creek eaij. ( "A : .-..:-.-- X ...' . - .m".- ; . . J - Y ' 'M GEN. JOHN METAXAS Bend Attorney Seen as Judge Succeed T. E. J. Duffy; Governor Silent Though neither Governor Charles A. Sprague nor the pros pective appointee would discuss the matter, it was the consensus of opinion about the capitol on Wed nesday, that Ralph S. Hamilton, Bend attorney, would be appoint ed circuit Judge of the 18th Judi cial , district to succeed Judge T. E. J. Duffy who died last week. Hamilton, now serving aa le gal advisor to the governor dar ing the legislative session, was a Bend attorney from 1018 to 1931 and served aa a Deschutes county representative for sev eral, sessions, was speaker of the honse In 1929 and as such served as acting governor on several occasions. He practiced law in Portland from 1931 until 1938 and in that period served as president of the Portland chamber of commerce and of the state chamber of com merce, one term each. In 1938 he returned to Bend. It. was expected that Governor Sprague would announce the ap pointment following Judge Duffy's funeral which Is scheduled for to day in Bend. Raver to Confer With Governor Dr. Paul J. Raver, Bonneville administrator, and a group of his associates, will arrive in Salem today to confer with Governor Charles A. Sprague. The conference. will center on proposed amendments designed to clarify the people's utility district law enacted at the 1939 legisla tive session. , Two More Bills ? Congress District for State A second nrocosal to create a fourth congressional district hit the house floor Wednesday and another twill be Introduced today. The measure Introduced Wed nesday by the Lane county dele gation and the proposal which southern Oregon legislators will submit today both would make a fourth district by dividing the first (western Oregon) district and leaving the third (Multno mah county) and second (eastern Oregon) districts unchanged, v The . Lane county delegation bUl would put Benton, Coos, Carry, Douglas, Jackson, Jose phine, Laar, Lincoln and Linn counties In the fourth district. The first district would retain Clackamas, Clatsop, Columbia, Marlon, Polk, Tillamook, Wash lngton and Yamhill counties. Only Jackson, Josephine, Coos," Curry, Douglas and Lane county would be included in the fourth district.! proposed by v the south ern Oregon , delegates. : i "The Lane county proposal- Is the most logical Rep. James A WiAfrica . 4? o , : i -' ;:- v Germ. Jombers' Attack Ground Forces, Ships in Mediterranean First Night Raid in Ten Days Hits London; j Hitler Speaks LONDON, Jan. 2-Jff-A British military authority sag- gested U'edaesday that the ex- -pected early attempt of the! Germau to. 1 a v a d e nglaad r might be abandoned because of the necessity of giving large scale help to the Italians and . the. exigencies of nazi military adventnres in the Balkans. 1 . ' If the Germans do la fact try : the thrust across the channel, he udded. they will time it to begin bef ore American aid be comes too pronounced. j (By The Associated Press) ; An Italian prisoner at Tor bruk, Libya; said late Wed nesday, night that 'approxi mately 1000 German techni cians and airmen were now in Libya to aid i the Italian de fense against the British!. He said the majority were technicians but that the air men already were engaged in raids on the British ground forces and Mediterranean fleet. Previous reports have indicated the inazl airmen were doing their raiding from island bases in Italian Sicily, Thousands of captured Italians were being Loaded on British transports at Tobruk for ship meat to internment camps in Egypt. Dispatches reaching the later national cone of Tangier from French Algiera reported that at BERLIN, Jan. 30-(Thursday)- (JPAdolf Hitler today will ad dress the German people at 4:30 p.m. (6:30 a.m. PST) on his eighth anniversary of "der tag" when the nails rose to complete power in the reich. "Following the news reports t6fc ajidresa will be ' tepeatedr at 8:10 p.m." (10:30 a.m. PT)4 least six persons were killed in riots involving soldiers in Algiers, the capital. The cause of the re ported outbreak was not learned German raiders attacking Lon don after dark, for the first time in ten nights loosed high explosive and incendiary bombs on the Brit ish capital during a four-hour raid last night while Big Berthas on French coast shelled the Dover area. People Machine -Gunned Running for Raid Shelters The Germans also spread over western and northern England, East Anglia, central Scotland and the northeast coast. People run nlng; to air raid shelters at i northeast coastal town were re ported machine-gunned. The royal air force used its ma chine-guns too ground-strafing retreating Italian troops' in Libya between the-port of Derna, next on Britain's attack list, and the (Turn to Page 2, Col. 4) Lawyer Endorsed For Capital Job A young Tillamook attorney! Robert Y. Thornton, h a s been unanimously endorsed by the Til lamook county democratic central committee for appointment as successor to Rep. Jack R. Can field, according to word received here Wednesday. Union and busi ness men's groups were also said to have recommended him. Caufield last week announced his resignation from the legisla ture as of today to assume the Tillamook postmastersblp. i i A democrat, Caufield has served the third legislative district since 1935. . His successor will be appointed by the Tillamook county court to day. Propose New Rodman (R-Laae) said, "because it Is the most even distribution of population. There . would be 274,000 persons in the new i first district, and 241,000 in the new fourth district. Also, both the university and f the state i college would be In the same district. wnicn la as It should be."! i -Rep. William U McAllister (R-Jackson) i said, ' however, that the southern Oregon pro posal would "give southern' Ore gon the representation It de serves. For too long we' have been the tail end of the kite to the Willamette valley. ; There would be 339,000 persons in the new first district and 184, 000 in the proposed fourth district under the southern Oregon plan. Rep. Richard L- Neuberger (D Multnomah) - -has already ; Intro duced a redisricting plan which would make the city of. Portland a district by Itself, putting the rest of Multnomah county :, Into the. fourth district along with coastal counties ' sliced from the present first- district. '-! : ;Boetdi ! ' . J j: Temblor Hits Los Angeles ! Late in Day I LOS ANGELES, Jan. 29-, The metropolitan Los Angelea area was Jolted late Wednesday by a sharp earthquake lasting about lO seconds, but there was ne property damage or loss of life reported. . t ' - t : The shock began at 5:34 p.m. and waa felt in Alhambra. Ban Gabriel, Monrovia, Gleadale ' Monterey park. Temple City Santa Monica, Pasadena, Holly: wood, Arcadia and on the Los Angeles county coastline. j The earthquake was localised, however. Downtown Los Angeles ex perienced a severe Jolt. Many residents in Alhambra, San Ga briel and Monterey park ran Into the streets. NLRB Hearing Slated Here First Meeting of Board : Held in Salem Set on Mill Dispute Patrick II. Walker, Seattle, tri al examiner for the National La bor Relations board, will hold the nrst mlrh hearing ever con ducted in Salem today when he conducts a representation hearing In the law courtroom of the Mar ion county courthouse. Principals in the case, which involves no labor dispute in the ordinary sense between employer and employes, are the Miles Lin en; mill and 10 of their workers ho are members of the local number 2090 of the Textile Work ers' union. The hearing Is to; -determlna whether the 10 workers, a minor ity o those in the plant but all employed as net machine opera tors, constitute a representative group for collective bargaining with their employer under the terms of the labor relations act. Petition for the hearing was filed November 26. 1940, by C. W. Crary, business agent of the union local. County Cuts Debt ST. HELENS, Jan. 29-AVThe Columbia county clerk disclosed Wednesday that the county's bond ed debt had been wiped out and warrant obligations cut to S7684 Willkie "Moved to Tears" After Visits LONDON, Jan. 29-iPV-Wendell L.1 Willkie visited five sprawling alt raid shelters Wednesday night inj the midst of a German attack and said he was moved to- tears at; the sight of the public's pluck. i I am m pretty tough fellow, he said, bnt I had to turn my head away from these people to keep from downright bnb bling over." iwillkie, who is curtailing his visit to England and starting for home next . week, declared he uld be "delighted" to appear before the senate committee hear ing on the lease-lend bill In Washington when told that Sena tor Nye had said- he should ne heard. j Willkie was recognized easily and cheered wildly when be ap peared at the ministry of home security again without a helmet. j"He'a the big one In the white hat," the people called to one an other. I German nlahes were overhead aa the republican leader emerged from two shelters. 1 At one place a yonag. woman edged her way through a mra Of people around WUlkJe and said 4cme see nay baby. . Political. Writer Stricken at Work nalnh Watson, dean of legisla tive correspondents and political writer for the Oregon Journal for many years, was reported "rest ing Quite well" Wednesday night from the effects of an attack of acute Indigestion that caused him to collapse while on duty at the capitol earlier in the day. His physician advised him to remain la his room at the Marion hotel for a few days. - ;- -- i 1 . Searcher, for Bomber : Report "No SuccettV ! MEDFORD, Ore., Jan. 29-(H-Army fliers reported no develop ments Wednesday In their search of northern California and sou thern Oregon areas for a McChord Field bomber missing since Jan uary IS. . Seven members, under the com mand of Capt. John 1L O Hara, carried ' on : the search ' for the third day from this Meld. ! 7" o unnvTt jTi W cts Naval Convoy .Ban Proposal Committee Okehs Four Amendments to Bill - for British Aid ' Stimson 'Tells Senate US Might Salvage. British Ships I WASHINGTON, Jan.' 29 (AP)- A proposal to place an outright ban on the use of United States naval vessels to convoy supplies to Britain was rejected by the house for eien affairs committee Wed nesday as it neared the end of its consideration of the lease-lend program for aiding countries battling the axis. ' The committee did, however, approve an amendment stating that the measure neither author izes nor permits the use of Amer ican vessels aa convoys. ' This action was taken with the approval of administration mem bers, and Chairman Bloom . (D New York) later explained that if the constitution or any existing statute authorizes the president to order the navy to escort duty, this power would not be affected by the language agreed upon. Rep. Mundt (R-South Dakota) unsuccessfully offered the amend (Turn to Page 2, Col. 1) Hospitals Total ; Iijdigent Losses "Twenty four hospitals in Oregon which ' answered a questionnaire sent out by the Oregon state hos pital association lost S 12,30 7 in 1940 In unpaid bills of indigent accident patients, William Gahls- dorf, manager of the Salem Gen eral hospital, told the house com raittee on medicine, dentistry and pharmacy at a meeting Wednes day. jnie committee kas before It measure sponsored by the hospital association which would create fund to compensate hospitals for the care of indigent accident vie tims by putting a B0 cent tax on two-year motor vehicle operators' licenses. to Air Shelters 'The baby mast not have been over a week old, Willkie said later. In another shelter he talked with a man over 70 years old.- "He told me." declared Willkie. that he would sleep in a shelter forever if it would help win the war." In all the places he visited the people shouted such things aa: We are not down. They won't get as down. Willkie declared he found things better than he had expect ed. "Some fellow gave me a drink of his coffee, and I must say It was better than some in the fancy hotels." There were many cheers .for (Turn to Page 2, CoL 7) US Troop Train Wrecked 8 ANDERS YI LLE, Miss., Jan. IS-iPy-Eight cars and the engine of '. an Indiana ' national guard train, one of 33 specials bearing troops to Camp Selby, overturned today, killing the fireman and in jaring 27 soldiers, three of them seriously, - ; . t House neie Lobby Hobriobber 5 Tha 'flu bug caught Sen. Doug las McKay of Salem "Wednesday, and he was -reported confined to bed at his home. He may not be able to return to the capitol be fore Monday, hla family indicated. He la chairman of tha senate roads and highways committee.- One of the outstanding pub lic hearines of the session will be conducted by the senate mil ltary affairs committee la the. big basement auditorium room of the capitol at 8 o'clock to night. Two bills by Sen. Hex tills (R-Umatnia) wDl be con sidered. One la aimed at curb ing sabotage, particularly aa to military establishments. The other would prevent placing oa the ballot the name of any per-, son affiliated with aa organisa tion designed to overthrow the United States' government by force, or .violence. Most legia : lators accept the latter aa aimed ' at the communist party. Rep. Gil ea French Insisted on the letter ef the honse rules Wed e9 U ITI T! TVD NILILIL Heart A ttack Fatal to Major Babcock State Representative From' Pendleton ! Succumbs Despite Efforts of Salem First Aid j Crew; Wife Notified at Office in Capitol j; : -- Mayor Omar L. Babcock, 66, servinir his first term as state representative from. Umatilla county, died Wednesday about 4:15 p.m. of a heart attack in the lobby" of the Salem postoffice. The city-first aid crew was called, land he was pronounced dead by Deputy Coroner Virgil T. Golden. Babcock, superintendent of the Umatilla Indian airencv ior aooat is years prior to nia retirement three years ago, was j troubled with a heart ailment for some years. Mrs. Babcock, who was serving 1 as his secretary during the legis lative session, received word of his death in the house chamber. Rep. Carl EngdabJ. Ba brock's colleafrae front Umatilla conat ty, said last night that the body woak probably be taken to Pendleton today on a train. The Clonjrh-Barrick company la makiag local arrangements. Omar Babcock was born Octo ber 7. 1874, at Wilson. Neb., where he attended schools and did farm work. He later taught school in Nebraska, Iowa and Mis souri. In Government Insnlar Service as Islands Tear her He entered the government in sular civil service in 1904 as a teacher in the Philippine islands. He transferred to the civil service and was , employed as teacher, property clerk, land clerk and principal at Standing 'Rock In dian reservation in North Dakota. Following this he was succes sively superintendent at Colorado River. Winnebago. Warm Springs, Spokane and Umatilla reserva tions. Rep. Eagdahl last night ex pressed his regret at his col league's death -and mentioned es pecially Babeoclfn interest Anay thing in which Indians were in volved. About three year ago Babcock retired and made his home- in Pendleton, near where the Uma tilla agency is situated. Last November he was elect ed from the 23rd district, as a repnbllcan, te the lrgisUtnre withont opposition. HI stand in: committee a alignments were Tlce chairman of nssessment and taxation, federal relations, riftherlea, land nse and live stock. Major ' Babcock was a member of the Methodist church. Masonic lodge. Kiwanta club, grange and president of his local writers club. He, had been secretary of the grange PUD committee in Umatilla couaty and waa a mem ber of the Pacific northwest ad visory committee on weed con trol. Lato Sports SAN rRANCISCO. Jan. 29-WJ7 -Ray Partee, 22. catcher for Salt Lake City la the Pioneer baseball league last year, sent in his signed contract Wednesday to play with the San Francisco Seals in the Pacific Coast league this year. SEATTLE, Jan. 29VP-Seat-tle'a Pacific Coast league base ball management has made Its decision on a new manager, the Post-Intelllgeneer said Wednes day aight, bat hla identity will be concealed until he has a chance to come from the east to confer on the post. ' President Emil Sick and his aides have been seeking a big name' manager to succeed Jack Lelivelt, who died suddenly of a heart attack last week. McMINNVILLE. Ore.. Jan. 29 -OP) - MeMinnvtlle led Eugene throughout a No Name league game here Wednesday night to annex a 33-to-24 wla. Quips, Angles' and Pcrsonalltice the Capital nesday morning whea Rep. Frank Loaergaa, deaa of tke kease, pre pared to preside as substitute for Speaker Robert 8- Farrell, who was 111 Tuesday. He pointed eat that the rales caU for elecUoa of a speaker pro tern la sack a case. Loaergaa was promptly unan imously fleeted, oa motion of Reps. William M. McAllister and J. F. Hooch, - . Farrell returned to tke rostrum in the afternoon, smlllag and ap parently fully recovered. ' SJgtrid , Unander, pleasant ' mannered executive assistant to Gov. Sprague, has received word ' that be will be called Into active military daty aa soon aa the legislature adjourns. An officer ' la the field artillery reserve, be Is expecting an assignment to Camp Murray, Wash. telegram . from ' President Roosevelt expressing his apprecia tion for the legislature's recent well-wishing memorial was read Wednesday. At about tke same . (Turn ta Psja Jt CeL I) .Report inPosiqffice OMAR L. BABCOCK Joust Renewed At "Fish" Meet Sport ami Commercial AngleraFeud. at ' Senate Hearing Sport and commercial fisher men took ap their biennial legis lative Jousting anew Wednesday night at a senate hearing called i a bill to close the coastal streams sostk of the Columbia rirer to set acta and to establish uniform, shorter season. Nenriy SOO vigoronaly opin kmed cltisens 1 fattened, heckled and debated aa the hearing pro ceeded before the senate game committee, headed by (ten. Lew Wallace, Portland, whose com mittee In trod need the biU In volved, and the senate fishing industries committee headed by Hen. Frank M. Fraacisco vlch, ef Astoria. The sportsmen argued that closing all streams to glunetters from April 1 to June 1 and from December 1 to April 1 would take from them only 194.481 pounds offish, or ,3.7 per. cent of a year'a take. . BUI Anther Explain Reasons fee Passage Anther of the bill. William J. Smith, Portland., president of the Oregon WUdlife federation, as serted this poundage loss would be offset in part by a 89,009 pound catch of stselhead. Adop- tioa of this proposal, he said, would tend to discourage sport fishermen from pushing a meas ure to have the steel head trout declared a game fish, as It now is in California, Idaho and Waah iagtoa. Charts compiled from fiaa (Tarn to page 2, coL 2) Daily Data On Federal . Income Tax INCOME TAX DO NTS. DONT prepare year laeome tax return natil yoa earefally read and anderstand the in stmctloas accompaaying the forma. Malta oat a work-sheet and check It with tha Instruc tions before miing la the forma. j DONT delay in makiag oat . your income tax return. Tax problems deserve careful study, and the early assembling of your data expedites this. DONT destroy the data from which yoar return, la compiled. Ton will need them . tor pos sible reehecklng aad verifying tha return. DONT overlook any Item or ached ale on the form which yoa axe required: to mi oat. They are all necessary to the exact computation of your In come tax. - ' ' - DONT omit any explaaatma . or information that is essential to a complete - audit of your return. An ounce ef care may save you a. pound of unneces sary expense,' and time, and annoyance both te yoa and to your government.' The Second Lesson en now to avoid common errors in "Tour Federal Income Tax" ., series will be found oa TO DAY'S editorial page. . 1 V.-.' . !--. i i ' - . ' - at : - V - : , NBufloing,'' Inmate Shifts Are Advocated Fee eral Survey Requested by Board of Control ; I . for Legislature-- " ! ! I : Patients Left Unattended Too Long, Meals Good I but -Monotonous I . i - a . (Debused Reconttnendationa, . By ApL W. HAlRVEY, JR.: Oregon's mental hoDitaJa at Salekn and Pendleton -were said! Wday by the United States public health service to bi inadequately staffed, to be .serving monotonous meals, andjto be usin? too many me chanical restraints on- their patients. The iheaith service made the survey at the request of - Gov. Cbarlea A. Sprague and the board of control, who said the wanted it for 8e legislate re. i Its .most urgent! recommea--datidna were that there be. more ward, attendants, shorter s hours for attendants, more physicians and indrses, less mechanical re straint,! more physical activity for Oregon's official' are well lav. foi as 4 as the needs Tor tm- ' proelns; tne Salem and Prndle-; toaj state box pit is, says the United States public bcaltlk1 si ike report issned W ed nee da ji. It cosnment: i ; Thbee who are cloMest to t tbej prablesn In Oregon are very frann in their statensewr about the! needs o natlents. mmd ef things; that sboald j be " done to bring he pregnane- of the hos pitals o n propr standard. JAay reeoannsendatlona made here, therefore, will la anoM re gnrds "eche what has already been Ba-ged npoa the state as theHUes. - t-- j i I i ! L patients; and expansion of the dental facilities, particularly at Pendleteu where there is tao real- dent dentist. 1 ; - Other; "recommendation , wem that; th4 number oC patieats be increased at . Pendleton so tha number nt Salem may be reduced. employes he given a retirement system, land that the hospitals; train physicians. The Increasing number of those cltisens j of Oregon who! ander stand the needs of the mentally. Ul should Insist on lerislalWe ap- proprlatAcns that wUl liutt proper provisions for treatment, the report said, adding: t To Offer tha lowest posalbla appropriations that will keep the. instltstions going seta ss : intol erable standard." . ? . Kalem Hospital Shosjd i Havt Xw Bnildinx ; i The Salem hosDltal. the renort- saldj should have a new reception. building of ie to 120 beds, and. two j one-story buildings .to care . for 300 elderly patients, i i . ii'recpramenaea a y v-oea recep tion hospital be constructed at Pendleton. . larger , exercise gronsdav and repair of the sewage disposal plant to protect the health, or tae neighborhood ; i ; Because of the shortage of at teadaats. the patients at both hof. pltala ate left aaattended too loag. and toot many have to be fastened to their beds. The practice of lock ing Several paUeata ,in one. rooti wltaone attendance ns perilotl - aad j already has led: to fatal tir tastropie, it added; i Tbere Is eeavslderahle noso4. ewT in the nsenla, K said. sn aa jssew fear days: a week at -rVndleten, hat the food is Mgo4 It said th4 clothing- Ss geed. hni ef the male i natlenta me leaa attractive. . j ! h 1 There are If It patients at Ba- lem 'aad 1112 at Pendleton. i WhUa u AxaeHean Paychla. . trie !aoclatioa recommends doctor lo each lie patients, thei is eie to 111 at Salem, and ona Ji 221 j at, Pendleton. The ? ratio tt Waahlngtoa state mental hospital Is oaa te 134. . , Ta 1 aaaociatloa recemmes?! ona nurse to eight patients, hut U ratios at Salem aad Pendleton f ) oaettojli. and oaa ta 22, respty. Uvely.i. j i . . i j Oregon spends 1174 a year 1? maintain each of Its mental J J Uenta, compared with 1234 i Waahisgtoa and $211 j averait throughout the United St tee. - , Trajniporl. Sarvivors " KETCHIKAN. AUsa.Ja3. y (-fForty-eeven survivors f i : armir'ai wrecked 101 9-ton trtt port, Kvichak were landed tai. here today and told;of a n!xht horror; during which, three 2Sf , weri drowned and several r -eae4 b7 erewmea with flathllt who; pleked them cut ' as u ; struggled la the storm tossed ten- alt the Canadixa coait. : n i . 1 "