y ' - -. . . t. t ... .- :;'. - ' Churchill Is to interview Hess, No. l sail who pin-' chitted Ids war Into Scot land Saturday; ; Germany, says Y. Tarn to pages 2 or 3 for these sidelight stories on this extraordinary happening. " " Vedthcr . Partly cloudy with local showers trer mountains to day, sllthUy warmer: partly cloudy Thursday, Max. temp. Tuesday, C3, Jiia. 45. North west wind. Kirer LI feet Main .St inch. Clear. Will Mull am HINETY-FIHST XEAR . . -.; , .. U . 7 - - : : ' - ' - ; 7 7-.- 1 1 " .. ' r . Snlm fMSMn J . 7. . - , , ! i . ? . . . .. . " - - . : . v " PHc 3ci NoTOtands 5c - " " Wow 41 ' JS ; Board T"Ur,7So HP Ik ..n.,., O.? -n TFT) 1 "II iCi ' ' o . I w II i I ff Jilt "f II 1111 I I - I I I I I I i II II. ! i I " I 1 - ' I I I I II I I X T l n Al 'V fjTT V " I MRow Capital Hearing Ordered; Oregon strike Settled SEATTLE, . May 13-(vP-The northwest s timber strikes actual and threatened were in !the hands of the national de- i 'fense mediation board Tuesday .xueht. The board ordered a hearing fiu.asiungion next xvionaay on . issues involved in the walkout . . . I- ir. t. . . . . . in wasninnon state oi most ol the lop?er af filiate hv International Wonrtwnrlr I America. Previously, a threat ened Oreeon strike had certified to the board, but later .Tuesday -a tentative agreement was reached. The announcement of the hear- Mi came Tuesday night simul- taneously with the break-down of negotiaUons between IWA and employers' representatives here, Federal Conciliator E. S. , Jackson, after a day of eon l f erences, said he had suggested i that all the issues involved r wares, vacation with pay. the union shop, preferential hiring . and abolition of piece work- be submitted to arbitration. Employers, he said, had agreed tot arbitration of wages and vaca tions but balked at submitting tne other subjects; while the i (Turn to Page 2. Coi. 4) , Paul Mauser's Column i Well, we have been reading the papers again and we can't say that it s the worst way to get a liberal education. " . I We learned, for Instance, about the camera business up around, Nome. From what we . read down in the last columns of : the last page of our paper thai fellow who went to Alaska to sell an Eskimo a refrigerator (and did. It, too) must ! have .taken along a supply of cam eras. . , . 1 . ; Anyway when the army flew a couple of four motored bombers to SL Lawrence, which Is only about 20 miles across the Bering strait from the land of the, Soviets, they were greeted by a crowd of natives. Every last one of them had a camera and were Khnnfinv pictures all over the place,' so the army said. Some of them were movie cameras, too. ' We don't want to scare the army, but wouldn't a Jaiinese make a pretty fair looking Es kimo if yon took his camera away from him and pat him in furs? Then we got a little closer to home and were reading the Amity J Vi urn io -ace z. LOL 01 I Til- - 1 T -c IVIllTllfll l-fclCllrGf " WZ.l TVT a 1 lth INetWOrKS ST. LOUIS, May 13-WVThe Wurual RrnadVactin 77; dint Hfh th. t, major radio networks over the ,v)wjr music war ana ine gov ernments anU-monopoly policy, iuesaay DroKe oil relations I with the National Association of j Broadcasters and three principal StOCkhOId(r urithHMur thsi'v vnom I ' . u. w.. luiu- bershin. ' - They are the Bamberger Broad- casting Service, Inc., WOR). Newark, NJ; WGN, Inc, Chicago, uiM, uic, umcago, i Broadcasting sts-I ana tne uon Le TLfntiial asfiv-t ai4 ICHID m...s. . I aTS!:! nounced they were conUnuing negoUaUons with ASCAP. nounced they were conti negotiations with ASCAP. Giant Panda Dies in NY NEW YORK, May 13-(-Pan-1 dora, a giant panda, died Tuesday, u " . . OIlu Panaa to die fa capuvity in tins country. For sev- cf moauu sne naa suixered from .iu wjuvuisivB anacxs, ou x-ray ex- I TVT ' t aminations faUed to disclose theNaZlS JrCler soo June 10, 1938, from western China. There are four remaining pandas In the United States, two each in the Chicago and St Louis aoos. ' - . .... Our Senators T7a G-2 ' ts 1941 Gtizens' Committee Approves Increase of Six Mills Levy j The Salem school board and its citizens hudtret aaontedi Tuesdav iVM-. - I - ; r - wuva pt rallina j.-i i . ..-f, iv,i CiUaiUilUTB OI i7S7WftM. :i-i T; .iV-Trr Vi "lc year - 1 in? budget calls for a school Wx Jevy r $377,725.50, an in- crease ' $18,139 over the levy for If:?"1841- 7116 levy in mills is Z2a mills, an increase of six. tenms of iU over the previous years lev3r-. The citizens committee adont- ed the budget estimates prepared oy uerk c. C. ward without a Single change, but discussed and recommended increases in teach ers' saianes for the 1942-43 bud get. actress, a member of we citizen's committee, made th motion that the committee to on record recommending that the school board "do everything it can io raise teachers salaries In 1942-1943 -In keeping with sound budgetary nrlnclnlea The committee discussed nnb sibility of making such an increase in salaries by putting before th people an increase in the budget over me statutory six per cent limitation, but it was pointed out mat thereIs not now sufficient time for such a Question ia suDmittea at the June school elec tion- . . Mumanea receipts from Ha- unqueni taxes and from other sources, lncludm elementary vuwt wna apporuonment and non-high school tuition fees, were 1 M. J .7 piacea at $379,855, an amount off. setting the, amount to be General items in the bud't ln ciuae; Administrative expense! 13., 875, an increase of $700, mostly in saianes. Instruction, supervision 140 060, an increase of $2004. ac counted for largely by a change in oooajceepmg method. 1 . i a Instruction, teaching $315. U urn to rage , coL 7) Qfof o T ictol JULSttjtl For Nev Army lraininff C7 WASHINGTON, May 13-tiPW The selection of sites for nine of h 28 new training camps which wuuia nc neeaea ir congress nnouncea toaay by me war de4 partment. The training camp sites which have been approved were at Blackstone, VJ! August Ga iMeosno, Mo., Fort Smith. Ark : Columbu. Santa Maria-Lorn- poc, Calif. Medford and em: Ore, and Cookson Hills. Okla. , i would accomodate about til' ill -"t w,wv.ig J3'00.0 s- They would be usd ", , -"""fc uuuitumr uuanirj i Ulv'n ana armored divisions, fnd for anti-aircraft firing ce& R Arr, A nii XlOIIie i2iaill twTi 1PP11GPC Wi I )K ROME. Mav 13WTh ficialluThannewsagenVslefahl ?id Tuesday ;. night that well- informed;, circles, in Washington uiuui. nwscveii is worxing out an enormous political and finan- cial combination in agreement with London and IsraeL I The plan. Stefan! said, "ia th. I umung of one political and eco- nomic union of all peoples of the EngMsh lanffuap. thn lnnnrriinif to histnrv a tArt nf ,.. federation of peoples of British origin the center of which. course, should be Washington." Radio Ban BERLIN, Wednesday, May li-J ()With the entire reich aroused over The case of Rudolf Hess", and eager for details, the official German news agency, DNB, bub- Board Adonts He, Salem Camp lished a list of seven recent cases points between Seattle and San in which six men and one woman Diego,' and Bellingham, Wash a were arrested in different localities similar stopping place between Se for listening to foreign radio attle and Vancouver, EC, had broadcasts. frowned on the establishment The seven were given prison 1 terms ranging from four to six I years. DNB said. , I 1 "Z1 9reon' J. in th. k-v a - majman Homer Angeli In Twashikn ZSZZZttZZSZS ! ! 2L?r 5" tuirauui ua un mmil wenitinr nf w oanner State Leads US Safety Reduction of Traffic Deaths First Three Months- Sets Mark Oregon and its principal city, Portland, led the nation in the saving of lives in traffic during the first quarter of 1941, Secre tary of State Earl Snell announced Tuesday. On the basis of the state's re duction in its traffic death rate during the three-months period, the state saved 16 lives, Snell said. Illinois was second with 14 lives saved and Texas third with 13 lives spared. - Portland led all cities of mora than 250,000 population with a reduction of 5$ per cent fn traf fic deaths. This record excelled that reported by Kansas City,' Mo, and Dallas, Tex, winners In the cities traffic safety eon test sponsored by the National Safety council for 1940. - While Oregon made a fine rec- ioi, v.rZrZI " V rr. . -." uuea rf,7th.T when traffic J totaled 40 compared to 22 month a year ago, Reduced speeds on the ; high- W-JB were "commended bySneU means of reducmg fatalities. ij TT ilCSerVe Ulllt : Wlnfn- Tl. Report of an auditing committee and the transfer of books to the new officers will mark a dinner meeting of the Marion chapter, Reserve Officers Association, at the Argo hotel tonight at 6:30, chapter heads announced Tuesday, The transfer of duties to the new "icers is being necessitated by ttU-1 w active aury in tne army of tb5 last year's officials. Major Clarence Collins, Salem, and Lt Werner Dinteman of Aurora are expected te be in charee of the insirucUon Airline Service for Salem I?pmme7icierf That United Airlines should be authorized to establish regular service to and from Salem was recommended in Washington, DC, Tuesday by civil aeronautics board examiners.. ;.i Press dispatches from the na- tion's capital Indicated 7 that the examiners - who approved the company's application, to make Salem and Eugene intermediat service to Klamath Palis. Although the report of the ex. aminers, Francis W. Grown and re s Proof of Oregon's Safety Record . : - ' - " -- i i . - --rr' ! I victory in the western division of . 1 i lEMraTirW vt ulc sum: procuiminr Oreron winner iMbm rfLirU. . . .i' " 7 7 v - City Planning, Zoning Lommiss ion Enabling Ordinance Year Ago, Gty Attorney Finds ! Changes Unaffected, ... By PAUL H. The Salem planning and zoning comrnission that it no longer legally exists. - The commission and City Attorney Lawrence N. paring to revamp- the Salem Youth Nabbed As Burelar . Police Say "Suspect Is "Fishpole" Thief and Has Admitted Crimes , Salem's fishpole', burglar, the gent who haunted the homes pf party givers to lift the purses of women guests from beds by use cf a long pole, has apparently at tended-his last party, Salem police believed last night Under; arrest on a charge of burglary was Jesse W. Barham, 17, 1010 North ; 18th street De tective Hobart Kiggins said Bar- ham has admitted several party burglaries, including an attempt to take a purse from a bedroom of the E. J. Church home. 755 North 16th street, which was foiled when a five-year-old child frightened him away. Dolores Picha, the five-year- old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bart Picha, was s gvest along with her parents at the Church home on March 24. The- Uttle girl walked into a bedroom just in time to seel her mother's purse being lifted from the bed en a long pole. She grabbed the : pole and It droped to the floor. , Men In the. house and police were unable to track the ma rauder..;..'. '7.. yi.-s- Barham, police said, also ad mitted theft of two purses from the Dwight Lear home, 555 North 20th street. 4 . , John W. Belt, is subject to review by the board. United Airline of ficials said Tuesday that such re ports are ordinarily accepted by tiie civil , aeronautics board. ' ' "It has been granting applica tions which do not Involve mere equipment or route miles,' such as. those at Eugene. . Salem: and Bellinsham." said W. B. Thlx- pen, : the ; company's Portland district' traffle manager. : Immediately upon the board's approval and approval of the air ports : by the local inspection board, his . company would , be ready to inaugurate the service, according to Thigpen. Approximately a year ago Unil- .ed's application was planned. It the Jtatlonal Ryf m -.J "' When . . r ' program in irame safetr dnratlAn m au a aoauaa mu iun iiaiiunai aBmTaoar Is Illeeal .Was Repealed Just Is Opinion HAUSER, JR. discovered " : ' i . ' .7 zoning code ordinance iwn, pre tave dis- covered that the enab! ig ordi nance, creating the zonih mission was repealed in a i crriiiiim oruinance two yearsxago ana nas never een reenacted. The discovery casts a shado on proceedings of the zoning commission since May 15, 1939,; when the ordinance setting up the commission was repealed. 1 The repeal; was part of sjc! ending of the city ordinances sponsored by the League ef Ore-! ton Cities. It was apparently Included with other ordinances which were i considered out- ' moded. 7. " - f! - , m ' fi v ' il; ' ' ' -;:. Yj : ;f Brown said , Tuesday that ire enactment of ;&e original ordin- an. ? J t..i taaaSiT-l the citv ronnHl i .. , h- d It is doubtful If the discovery 01 affect rnn. n it will affect tone changes or local option permits granted during the last two years as they are made final by the councfl.; The plan hing and ; zoning commission (Turn to Page 2, CoL 3) , Former Salem Man Purchases Border Paper v " Al Haworth; former Salem bov. and a partner have bourht the Calexico . (CaL) Daily Chronicle. newsnaiMn hv viiii ha dd. -- '-- employed since leaving Salem aoout ten years ago, according to word received here. S The paper Will be changed to a weekly. Ha worth Is the son i of I Prof. C. C Ha worth. Instructor In J theatre. His condition was re Spanish at Willamette university. I ported as -fair" early Wednesday. has been given extensive local support. Late last September State Senator Douglas McKay ap peared, as witness" before "the examiners In behalf of Salem. . A compilation of information concerning the area's principal in dustries, extent of the city's trade area, probable increase in popula tion, current' volume of business and travel, express shipments, mail and" similar information was prepared and presented by Fred D. Thielsen, Salem chamber cf commerce manager. . .' - Governor Charles A." Sprague and Secretary Of State Earl Snell were among those lending their support v - igher Farmer Loans Okehed By US House Stiff Penalties Set f .. on Alarket Quotas; Full Parity Seen WASHINGTON, May 13-(P-The house' oveiwhelrningly ap proved higher loans to fanners Tuesday on this year's crops of wheat, cotton, corn, tobacco and rice,, with stiff penalties for ex ceeding marketing quotas. J Agriculture department offi had estimated that the higher loan would increase food costs to con sumers by 10 to 20 per cent but Edward A. O'Neal, American Farm Bureau , president, today . denied these contentions. He. said ' that nhe Increased cost to the consum er would be of very little conse quence and estimated that pork would go up 5 per cent, bread one sixth cent a loaf and cotton 1.6 to 1.8 per cent v By s roll call vote of 275 to C3, the house approved and sent to the senate a compromise bin to require the government to make loans ' of S5 per cent of parity on the five crops. - arm members said that if former chose to put his crop in the 1 nMtf lAan . .A . . o per cent conservation parity payments i - . - I n&S not been -rearhod (r. fnanv.. " 7 " a w r-i x vx-wiix prices are tnose which would give farmers purchasing power, in terms of other commodi ties, equal to that of 1909-1914.) ;i . . ine legislation would require loans as follows: wheaL 1S72S eenU a bushel; corn, C9J7 cents; . cotton, 13.49 cents a pound; fine cured tobacco, 19 cents a pound? rice, 9L9C. Current market soioa are approxfmaiely as fol lows: wheat. l; corn, 7J cents; cotton, 122 cents. 7"1- With prices rising and certain to rise still more when the nrice- veggmg loan program becomes ef fective as the crops are marketed predictions were made in the house that small quantities of all commodities actually would be placed in the loan because. they vutu move more easily in th i marxets. Bush Changes ffice Site " eight years and five 1 months from the time Ji mfer. Bush, Bankers In the his father. Ashahel Jush on Tuesday mov- ld familiar location corner of Stote I . .uum uic intersection to the Pioneer Trust company, successor to. the Ladd f 1 company which he founded In 1924. i; ? Desiring to make his headauar. ters in the offices of the trust com pany, which he still heads as president, Mr. Bush moved bis detic and personal belongings from tne position near the corner entry of the Ladd & Bush building to the front corner of the Pioneer I Trust offices, in the former US national bank building. , Mr. Bush, as successor to hi father, headed the Ladd it Bush bank until its merger a year ago Willi ute saiem branch of the United States National bank of Portland. , i , .. Suffers Heart Attack Owen O. Lacey, Turner, i was treated at the Deaconess hospital Tuesdav nirht fro- h. .m..w suffered in fmnt -- Since presentation of the com- panyrs application approval has been granted i rAA.wp fense program project for expan - aion and sion and dW-loonwmt thi . Z ttu n jn w. unua toiaung ap-1 proximately $500,000 have been apportiondi for the work, which u vmxicu un as scneauiea, snouid WASHINGTON, May 13 -m ttake possible the safe landing A bill exteding' President Roose-andtokina- off of United Airlines velt emergency monetary pow- Al "r I One and possibly two stops a uax nere oy coin norm and south quickly Tuesday that an amend bound planes are contemplated, ment designed to forestall farther accruing , w ttusseu vv. jMunson of Chicago," assistant lo the com- vanj a president. USWmimwre nr w armnm irro Berliii Sources S rebple Aroused Ov liesertio n British Claim Solum Routed; Turkey Will UAlil I ! a ll. J : lO Druisn muance , J ' By Th AssocUted Press I ' i f Germany pointedly warned early today (Wednesday) that SSTtSST ?f ' but " Sd was not P to detel Informed circles in Washineton said th ment owing an operations zone in the northern part of the Red I U AT....1 T f a r arm bw v m-m l 1 BEMJN, Wednesday. May 14 -W-Ten British bombers at tacked the German Island of Helgoland Tuesday night . kill ing seven civilians and causing aught damage to non-mliitary .n . t . .... ojtchycs, , authorized sources isald today. TOKYO,.Wedjes4Uy..Maj 14 -i)-The flight of Rudolf Hess from Germany to Great Britain .was prominently displayed to day In the Japanese newspapers and the Times Advertiser said that "news of the flight of Hess caused "great consternation In . Japanese diplomatic circles. - HONGKONG, Wednesday. Alay 14-PhChtnese dispatches today reported Intensified fight ing in Sooth - Shansl province and said the main Chinese Japanese battle line extended more than 150 miles in an In verted "V" shape front Tshlng- shul to Siahsien and. Menrhsien. SHANGHAI, Wednesday. May l-VP-CUrenc E. Gam, new US ambassador to China, ar rived on the liner President Garfield: today, enronto to Chwigklng. ; JuRLIN, Wednesday, Slay l.-f-Government tax, re turns for the fiscal year 1940, which previously had been es timated St 25,009,000,000 marks (abo.t $ll,000.00,te) actual ly yielded 2700,000,000, Stoto Secretary of Finance FriU SelnhardL said today. BJO DE JANEIRO, Wednes- daj, Jlay 14.-VTlie BraxU- ' fan consulate at Hamburg, Qermaay, has been serlonaly umagea in suiusb - raids on that city the foreign ministry announced early today. MADRID, May 13.-yP)-Gn. Jean- Marie Bergeret secretary ef state tor aviation in the Vichy government, arrived . at Dakar. French West Africa Tnesday f or tonr of lnspee tion. Dispatches from Dakar said Bergeret will stady aerial defense plans for the. entire North African region. ",' 7 NEW TOCK, Blay 13.-4V The British radio, neard here Tuesday night by CBS, assert ed that It was officially an nounced In Cairo that "bombs were dropped en Alexandria this morning" but that neither damage nor casualties resulted. New Tax Plan Offered An Individual cT rLJZltV taxing wage and salary increases and other . additions tn mvtm L' VWosed to the house mJ?nillM "VrtTO 1.1 conmutte. Tuesday by 4 I Catr2 X OTJl I. rt" xuesoay ny If Washington at- torney. Bill Passes Quickly rs xor-two years won approval cf the house coinage committee so devaluation of the dollar slipped into the measure almost unno- uced. x , Muvy Secret i . ! F - ay er of Hess Axis Push at Roosevelt xecenUy reopened . iu( sea route tn m4M. .i;.. lt i -r"r"-" The administration has refused to recognize the legal ity of Germany's method of block ade and sea warfare. i Many observers also question ed Germany's ability to harass Red sea shipping by air attack unless she establishes closer bases than those presently avail able In Iibsau It Is approxi mately a 140-mUe roand trip by air from Egypt's' western 1 frontier to the edge of the Red "-,:-'. i . German submarines would have to pass Britain's powerful I WASHINGTON.1 May 14 -(Wednesday) The United SUtea will imore German Warnings against sending ships Into the Seal tn area and will rush plans for getting supplies into that gateway of the Medi terranean informed ' circles ' be Ueved Tuesday night. j' ' , naval defenses at t the Gulf cf Aden to get into the Red sea. , It was believed in Washington that US officials i ah-Mriv s.j taken Germanv'a offiHai th-.9 (Turn to Page 9, Col. 5) US to Train British Men s - " ' 1 WASHINGTON. May 13.-UPW I British and - American officials are perfecting a plan for bringine- some 2000 young Britons to this country , for preliminary training as! combat fliers. " The war department ' and the British embassy,, it was revealed Tuesday, have the project under discussion and, it was under Stood, are about to come to a final decision upon it ; , As the plan for training BritisK fliers was unfolded, the men would be assigned to six schools understood to be situated In Calf. fornia, Florida, Texas, Oklahoma and Georgia. I Darlan Report Awaited VICHY, France. Mav 1-IJPU. The French cabinet wDl meet at 111 ajn. Wednesday to discuss terms brought back from Germany by Vice Premier Admiral yM Darlan it : Was announced late Tuesday night after Darlan had hastened home from a significant conference with Adolf Hitler on the whole subject of German French collaboration, t , : 1 . . Lumber Group Will Reprint i The Northwest Lumbermen's association Tuesday asked nr. htaion of The Oreron KtitM- to reproduce a .featura. ttory on the West Salem Ears?- Workshop, r pnbUshed Sonday, . May 4. - - , - ' According to James Elevens. bead of the crgzrlza'Joa's putli city and laformaiioa bnreaa. , mimeographed . ccples. alone 7 with photo mats, wU! be mailed ' to aU northwest newspapers and ,) Inmber publications. ;