THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4. 1931 FREE TEXTS NOT FREE, CLAIM OF COUNTY COURTS Cripple Tortured and Buried Alive Found in Coffin In Deep Ditch CapitalJournal Salem, Oregon Established March 1, IBM An Independent Newspaper Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday at 136 S. Commercial Street Telephone 61. News 63 TO THE WOODSHED I PAGE FOUR GEORGE PUTNAM, SUBSCRIPTION RATES By carrier 10 cents a week: 15 cents a month: 65.04 a year In advance By raail In Marion, Polk, Llnn cents; 3 months $1.25: 6 months 62 montn; a months sa.75; 65.00 a year FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF TITE ASSOCIATED PRESS AND THE UNITED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively of all news dispatches credited to it or uu km xucai news puousnea Herein. "With or without offense to friends or foes I sketch your world exactly as it goes." Byron "The People be Damned" In November last the people of Oregon cast a majority vote against the closing of the lower Rogue river to commer cial fishing. The upper Rogue has been closed for 20 years. The lower Rogue has been closed to commercial fishing for steelhead for the same length of time. Seine fishing has long since been banned and the only fish taken are salmon. Yet to show their contempt for expressed will of the people, both houses of the legislature have voted the closure of the stream within three months of the date the people rendered their verdict. Salmon fishing provides the only large payroll at the mouth of the river. It's closure means a real hardship to the region. It also means the waste of a valuable Oregon food resource. But it again emphasizes the latent hostility to wards enterprise and industry that makes capital shy of Oregon investments lest to satisfy prejudice and hysteria they be confiscated. The defiant action of the legislature is due largely to log rolling and the fact that the people of the upper region have ten times the number of legislators and votes than those of the lower river possess. It is worthwhile noting those in both houses who voted in accordance with the popu lar vote. The roll call follows: In the Senate: For closure Bennett, Billlngsley, Carsncr, Crawford. Dunn, Eber hnrd, Eddy, Kiddle, Kuck, Miller, Moser, Scliulmerich, Staples, Upton, Wheeler, Woodward. ' Against Baliey, Brown, Burke. Dunne, Eisner, lYanciscovich, Hal!, Johnson, Jones, Mann, Spaulding, Strayer, Marks. In the House: For closure, ayes Allen, Bronough, Bynon, Chinnock. Day, DeLap. Deuel, Eckley, Fisher, Gill, Glass, Gouley, Hamilton, Howard, Jannsen. Lawrence, Lee, Lewis. Macpherson, Manning. McAllister, McCornack, McCourt, McGraw, McPhillips, Mott. Nichols, Oxman. Peters, Schaupp, Scott of Umatilla, Scott of Morrow, Smith of Hood River, Smith of Mar lon, Snell. Stockdale, Swift, Temple, Thornburgh, Tompkins, Weather ford, Wells, Yates, Lonergan 44. Noys Anderson. Andrews, Angell, Chindgren, Gordon, Hellberg. Hill, Johnson, Keasey, Knapp, Nash, Norton, Proctor, Stewart, Taylor, Wins low 16 It will be seen that many of these legislators voted not only against the expressed wishes of the majority of the people of the state, but against the clearly expressed wishes of the people of their own counties. Twenty-five of the thirty-six counties voted against the measure. It was nearly tied in three others. The counties voting against closure w'ere : Benton, Clackamas, Clatsop, Columbia, Coos. Crook. Curry, Gilliam, Grant, Jefferson, Lake, Lane, Lincoln. Linn. Malheur. Marlon, Morrow- Polk, Sherman, Tillamook, Wallowa, MIL It will be interesting to see any respect for the mandate of or whether he also joins the ranks of the people be damned crowd. Drift Towards Autocracy Numerous bills before the towards autocracy the old regime never dared to contenv plate. It features many of designed to concentrate all powers in the hands of the execi tive and give him as many portfolios in state government as fl'ussolmi holds in the Italian There is the bill to place trol of one man. appointed and Governor. There is the water power commission bill giving the executive control through his appointees of power devel opment. And there is the state diture of $1,003,000 and an army of officers to enforce pro hibition, traffic laws, fish and patrol all under the Governor. Then there are other bills ing judges of all courts and lot the Governor appoint the ju diciary from justice of the peace to supreme court thereby giving the executive branch of government full control of all the courts. And there is the bill already passed giving the Governor power to appoint legislators in case of vacancy, depriving the people of selection by election of their repre sentatives, a clear encroachment of the executive over the legislative branch. There is also a bill to remove the industrial accident commission and substitute a the Governor and numerous other measures tending towards increasing the absolutism of the Governor all this despite the fact the people voted overwhelmingly against such pro cedure when they defeated the cabinet form of government. The Demise of the "Erg" According to the electrical books an "erg" is the work represented by one C. G. S. which must mean Comical Genius Slaughter. The grange utility district bill, being the work of Dr. Slaughter, must, senate committee to which the "erg" was referred found that it was threatened with "electrolysis." Its "potential" i. e. electrical intensity, was great but its "solenoids" were "static". As soon as the committee found "watt" was "watt" it decided to remove its ''torque" and throw it out into the "magnetic field". So while they had the doctor hitched to a "binding post" Senator Bailey took "charge" of the "erg" and after carefully measuring its "Colombs", "Amperes", "Farads", "Henrys", "Joules" and "Ohms" decided that it had too much "resistance" so gave it a "short circuit". In Other words he told the doctor that his "insulator" needed oiling and his "battery" needed water. To make a long story short Pr. Slaughter' bill has been slaughtered by the committee and a substitute will be offer ed to the senate. This of course will not be pleasing to the doctor who has spent many long and weary months, with no assistance but the friendly cooperation of a preacher and a school teacher, in drafting the bill which was to provide cheap electricity "without cost to the taxpayers" thus mak ing the shecphcrders rich and the Grangers happy and con tent. 'Twas not to be, however, for his bill is gone where the "horse power" is free to wander in the "magnetic field" and watch the "armature" make love to the "kilowatt". Editor and Publisher and Yamhill counties, one month 50 25; 1 year 64.00. Elsewhere 50 cents a In advance. entitled to the use for publication not otherwise credited In tills piper Wasco, Washington, Wheeler, Yam whether Governor Meier has the people and vetoes the bill legislature indicate a drift the administration measures cabinet. public utilities under the coiv removed at pleasure by the police bill, entailing an expeiv game statutes and forest fire to deprive the people of elect single commissioner named by therefore, be an "erg". The Canines and Posies By V. A. Some Oregon folks raise posies and some raise dogs. Although ani mal and plant life do not readily hybridize, most dogs attempt it to the detriment of the posies. This causes neighborhood rows and inci dentally makes business for the leg islators. Our own legislature has tackled the problem of how to keep untarnished the petals of the posies and at the same time not unduly curb Towser's roving propensities. The time honored remedy for all disturbing conditions of iassing a law agin it" is again being applied in two bills now before the session. The first would protect the posies along the highways and by-ways by penalizing anyone who plucks, mu tilates, digs up or in any other way desecrates them. The penalties pro vide for heavy fines and Jail sen tences. Such dra.'tic "laws agin if will inevitably call for the establish ment of a special state cons;abulary of Posey Protectors officered by an Imperial Grand Portector and the urmal retinue of under-officers, each emuled to wear 'at state expense i a gorgeous uniform patterned doubtless, after the Kaiser's Imper ial Foresters and amply empowered to sieze and search all palpitating young lovers who may be concealing the torn petals of the daisy with which they have plighted their troth. The other bill provides for the regulation, control, care and social- welfare of the state's canines. To enforce this "law agin If we arc to get another set of constabulary having at its head the High Chief's favorite hound. Uniforms of course. and at state expense. One pattern already suggested Is grey-hound tan with spaniel fur cuffs, a brass collar for insignia and a tin whistle exhaust. One can easily conjure the vision of an Oregon landscape en- llveded with these gaudily capar isoned Protectors and Supervisors cavorting tltrough the glens redo lent with the tang of cedar and heavy with the periume of the dog wood bloom, while the hillsides re sound with the baying hounds, and the toots of tin whistles. I Oregon already has a distinguish ed galaxy of inspectors, supervisors. special agents and investigators. It will do no harm to add a few more Posey Protectors and Master of the Kennel to the present list of Bed- sheet and Privy inspector, enforce ment o.'iicers and kitchen snoops .smelling of the garbage cans. We have meat Inspectors and food ln- s;ectors, for both Jackasses and hu mans; seed exirts and fertilizer connoisseurs; oculists for the pota to eyes and dermatologists for the pear's skin; stock Inspectors looking for black-legs and chiropodists at the rest: beetle hunted roaming the pine forests, and weevil chasers rawllr.g tltrough the aualfa fields; b-e Inspectors solemnly contemplat ing the business end of a hornet while college youth and poultry ex perts vie In doing the same for the chickens. We have health nurses to! insect our children's teeth, tonsIL and 'tummies; college expert to tape our daughters' legs and pat , shapely backs in a wild search for the winner of the Golden Apple; medical experts to sort out the fee- i ble-mludcd a4 democrats from the : milling nerd, wniie irom tne leit- overs the colleges pick their athletes and the poor voter his nominees. All we need now is an Experi-i mental staff added to Department i Three of the new Agricultural Bu reau to seek methods for crossing a Shanghai rooster with a cotton-tall rabbit for the production of spotted Easter eggs and the o.d state is saved. Yes. once aeain Oregon is first In the nation, she proposes to protect her posies from ail flirtatious desecrations canine or human. Her dcs are to be supervised, exercised and trained in toilet manners by the gaudiest lot of uniformed specialists ever turned loose In the heather since Robin Hood's men camped in Sherwood Forest or Phil Met-vhan led the Shrtner'i parade It Phila delphia. - Arkansas farmers may starve; Ok J! iTTTC iff r CoorrtcM Prui PubilihlDt DELZELL lahoma have her food riots, banks in the middle states burst like gub- err.atorlal booms at an Oregon pri mary, timbermen may wall and hop growers talce Bankrurcy, but Ore gon cares for her own! For dogs and posies, uniforms and Insignia, tin whistles and oratory, travel allow ances and deficiency appropriations, Oregon Is In a class by herself. On with the dance, let joy be unrefin ed. The taxpayer pays the fiddler. Heres your match, Nero. BOY'S LIFE SAVED BY DOG'S CURIOSITY St. Helens,. Ore., (IP) Pearl Kobk, 12, son of a farmer, owes his life to the curiosity of his dog but It cost the life of the animal, As the lad was on his way to school he noticed sparks ehooting irom a barb wire fence with the glow of a Fourth of Julv celebra tion. Attracted by the display the dog trotted ahead, sniffed at the wire and was electrocuted. The sparks were caused by a high tension wire, which was torn down by a wind storm. The boy was about to Investigate when he aaw his dog fall. He sensed the danger, and stood crying In the road until linemen came to repair the break. They said he, too, would have been electrocuted if he had attempted to remove the dog's body. Scotta Mills Mr. and Mrs. T. I. Sutton and daughters. Elizabeth and Mary of New berg were recent guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McCracken. LAUNDRESS AND LADY TilESI dajrs, you can't telt where one begins an J the other leaves off. For most ladies launder their owa fine lingerie, and most laundresses have atne lingerie of their owe. And they have one other grea,' bond In common now they use White King Granulated Soap for the heaviest as well ai the most delicate washing jobs. White King it pmrt that's the reason. Made from vegetable and out oils good enough to eat, its fine quality makes Il safe for anything that water won't harm, and at the same time disposes effectively of (he heaviest woolens. White King Granulated washes tnrytbmg fabrics, dishes, silver, glass, floors, woodwork. And it's economical a teaspoonful is plenty for the wash basin, a cup ful ample for the washing ma chine, even in hard water. Put it oo your list for today. Your grocer has it. nft tt dft'tt a O'tf md lf'MlfM aU (Vtl Green Stamps Every Day Double Str.rr.ps Saturday Carson Pharmacy We Deliver Ml Ceart rhone tJJ Cocnpinr (Kw Tork Worts) 1931 'HEAVIEST RAIN IN YEARS FALLS AT LOS ANGELES Los Anje'.es (IP' One of the hea viest rain storms since 1914 swept southern California late Tuesday night and save every indication of continuing Wednesday. Rains of cloudburst proportions fell In outlying sections of the city, flooding streets, retarding lnter urban street C3r service, and under mining buildings. At Pasadena, 120 Inches of rain fell within an hour, and by mid night the total had reached 1.90 inches since early Tuesday after noon. Santa Monica and Venice, beach cities, had recorded 1.43 inch es duiir.g the same period, wlule Santa Barbara, 100 miles to the north, gave 120 Inches as its total for a 12-hour p-'riod to midnight. In Hollywood .78 of an inch de luged theity in one squall, which precipitated .46 inch in Los Angeles. Pacific electric interurban train service was Interrupted at various points. Sand washed from a hill near El Segundo, derailed a car; a bridge near Palms was weakened, neces sitating transferring of passengers. At least three persons were ser iously injured during the height of the storm. Motorcycle Officer Jo seph Waite of the state highway patrol was internally injured when his motorcycle skidded from under him. William R. Lillie. 34, received two broken legs when struck down by an automobile. Fred Schuller, 4. was i.iternally injured in a similar accident. Mt. Angel Engdbert Grimm re turned to Mt. Angel alter visiting for several weeks with Mrs. John Matter at Pe Ell. W&hiniton. 1 iiAMS Upsets rival brands with Sweeping Victory, in Ripley's latest Taste-Test They hclJ another "tea party" at Boston the other day. "Down with the tyranny of habit!" was the cry. "Let'a find out which cigarette really tastes the best." From Back-Bny to the Fish ing Docks, It was another Bos ton rebellion. Throw ing brand prejudice overboard . . . more than a thousand Boston smok ers compared the four lending cigarette, with the brand names hidden. They didn't know which was which. All they wanted was to OFFICIAL BOX. SCORE Aft audited bj Button Firm of Accountants '! hcrefry rrtflff that th frtllowtRt tt true anj compftt audit ol tha tnt of th four l-.1lnta dorrtttt, coaJwcted by Robert tuple?, la Biwton." OLD GOLD . 4 U II rand X 2t8 Wun And Company, Brand V Brand Z Accovatuta iij NOT A COUGH IN A CARLOAD The counlv courts of the state seem to be lined up against the free text book measure, from a cross- section of Information gained at a meeting of the legislative committee of the judges and commissioners as sociation here Tuesday with a num ber of other Judges and commis sioners present. County Commissioner Smith, member of the committee from this county, stated that it seemed to be the general opinion among the vis. iting officials that the text book bill should be defeated. "The bill would raise taxes half a mill," stated Commissioner Smith, -and the feeling among all the judg es and the commissioners is to re duce taxes, not raise them. At half a mill the bill would cost Marlon county taxpayers t.'S.OOO In round figures. ' The legislative committee was here Specifically to fight the bill ad vanced by the league of cities to give cities and towns 70 per cent of the county road money raised In their own limits instead of the 50 per cent now allowed them. Coun ties generally are opposed to the bill, including a solid county court from Clackamas county, the home of Chris Schuebel who Is directly sponsoring the measure. The Yam hill county court was also opposed to It and mayors of several cities appeared against it. Including the mayor of McMinnvllle, who declared that his city wanted to see the county roads developed as this was the most beneficial thing that could be done with the money for the advantage of the cities themselves. Commissioner Smith opposed the bill for Marion county. He pointed out how 2,Iarion county had aided cities and towns from county road funds in the market road program, including such tow-ns as Turner, Gen ats. Stayton. Aumsviile and in fact virtually all the smaller towns of the county. There seems to be no demand for the measure from Sa lem, which raises its own road funds. The commissioner stated that indi cations are the bill will meet with defeat. County Fruit Inspector Van Trump, who Tuesday went through the Sc:o and Lacombe strawberry sections to inspect strawberry plants on a number of plantings there, stated that all the plants he saw- were in wonderful condition and he found no trace of weevil whatever in plants raised for selling as plants. He visited six plantings in that sec tion and pronounced the plants not only clean but they are growing in fine shape and making wonderful crowns. "The soil east of Lacombe in the Downing section is very similar to the soil in the great strawoerry sec tion up around Silver Falls," he stated. "Indications point to a great strawberry year for the com- mg year and the plants are in fine conditio.n All I looked at were in he newer plantings and I didn't get into the older plantings, so can say nothing in regard to their con dition. But there are a number of new plantings scattered here and there in tnose strawberry sections which make wonderful showlng6." GOITER REMOVED Independence O. Osmundsen, a farmer south of town, was operated on for goiter at a Salem hospital Monday morning and last reports ho was resting easily. Osmundsen lias been quite a successful turkey raiser, marketing over a thousand birds this year. j Silverton Mr. ana Mrs. Dory Grace, their four sons, Milo, Merl, Elraer and Irl Ludwlg Meyers, Inez Lee and Luella Foreland, all of Sil verton, and Miss Mabel Hall of Aumsviile, all spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Grace's daughter Stella, Mrs. Hoyt Cupp, ar.d fam ily of Atimville. pick out the best tasting ciga rette. At Icilngton ... modern Minute Men needed hardly a minute to give O. C. a 2 to 1 victory. At Bunker Hill, OLD COLD'S cool, throat-easy quality completely routed the enemy. "So taxation without repre sentation" . . . said the Boston of long ago. "No throat-tat... and unlimited smoking Joy 'J says the Boston of today. (Signed) 229 Auditor Chicago (UP) George Wittbrod, 34, a crippled sales, man, was rescued Wednesday from a rough coffin in which he was placed by seven men who kidnaped him, beat him, let him hang for ail hour from cross ' in cemetery and then burled him alive. A farmer passing the cemetery at davbreak heard stifled moans and called police. Wittbrod's coffin was found in a deep ditch, where he had been tossed after a nlht or torture unequalled In the history of Chicago crime. He was suffering from cold, exposure, the beating and fright. Officials to whom Wittbrod con fided that he often had been the RUTH GARRISON NIGHT, BELIEF Seattle !LP) Ruth Garrison may known Wednesday night whether she must return to the state prison or may be given her freedom. That was the prediction of at tomeys and court followers Wed nesday after Prosecutor Robert Bur gunder had announced that he hod only five or six more witnesses to call, and Miss Garrison's attorneys had rested their case. The young woman, who is fight ing to prove that she is sane and should therefore be permitted to leave the state institution, made her greatest bid for liberty late Tuesday when she testified, for the first tune, tnat her former lover, Douglas Storrs, led her to poison Mrs. Grace Storrs, his wife. Storrs didn't teil her to kill his wife, but, according to Miss Garri son. he spoke of Mrs. Storrs' at tempts at suicide by lwisoning, and told Ruth that If she went to a certain drugstore, 'they would fix her up." Miss Garrison did not re veal that situation during her orig inal trial, when she did everything poilD.e to shield her lover. She has spent nearly 12 years In prison since she was adjudged not guilty of murder by reason of in sanity. Prosecutor Burgunder, launching a desperate fight to prevent her re lease, is basing his case on his be lief that Miss Garrison was sane when she entered prison, has not changed, and that it would be lav safe to permit her to mingle with society. He called three witnesses, all for mer prison employes, after Ruth had concluded her testimony and her attorney had rested their case Through them he tried to prove that her mental condition had not changed, and that she was a trouble-maker and bearer of false tales In prison. He was constantly block ed by Miss Garrison's attorneys, Ev erett J. Smith and Frank B. Sharp- stem, and it was the general belief that the case would hinge on the impression Ruth made on the Jury when she told of her life, tearfully spoke about the crime she had com mitted and sketched details of h.T life In prison. SON IS BOK.V Mill City Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Root are receiving congratulations upon the arrival of son born Feb ruary 2. Scotts Mills Mr. and Mrs. A. L Brougher and son Ira and Miss Mary Myers, motored to La Center, Wash., Sunday, where they visited old friends, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Beasley. Mt. Angel Mr. and Mrs. Bert Orth and children and Mrs. P. B. Roycroft of Portland Tislted Mrs. Orth recently. I'r"" " LT" PlZ V OF HABIT I" It was another Boston tebellion. Smokers picked O. C. tot throat-taw a ad smoothness. i ,,,,, vujbbw w yiuuu.iu jum-B uy nei ghborhood hoodlums, because of hi, affliction could hardly believe such an attack as tills had been Intend ed as a "Joke." Wittbrod said he knew the names of six of the seven kidnapers and police began a hunt for them. The salesman said he was on his way home from a poolroom late Tiusday nluht when the seven seized lilm hi an alley and knock ed him unconscious. When he awoke, he eaid, he was in an automobile with the men. They taunted him and told him they were toking him for a "ride." His feet and hands were tied. They took him to All Saints' ce metery. There, he said, he was dragged from the auotinobile and susiwnded on a high cross. He was left hanging there and as his body became numb from exposure, the hoodlums laughed. They were leaving, he told, when he managed to Jerk one hand free. One of the men saw his move and called the others back. Seeing the rough box nearby, the gang lead er susested they take Wittbrod down from the cross and bury him alive. He was cut down, placed In the box, his hands and feet retied and a burlap sack placed over his head. The lid of the box was nailed down and the box hoisted onto a conven ient wheelbarrow. Nearby was a half dug grave, which the grave-diggers had left unfinished Tuesday night. An at tempt was made to force the rough coffin Into the grave, but it would not fit when laid horizontal. It va.i stood on end in the grave while the men debated whether to get a shovel and dig the hole big ger. The men, wittbrod said, finally removed the box from the grave, fastened It to the back of their automobile, started away at a rapid pace and cut the box loose. The coffin rolled from the road way and into the ditch, where Wittbrod was found, face down ward in the box and half dead from the mistreatment he had re ceived. Mt. Angel Mr. and Mrs. JosepS Turner and Mrs. Harry Benton, of Portland, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kirsch were dinner guest at the Charles Ullr.:an home Sun day. I years SAME JgL price m torovtr IN BOSTON Y CREATOR OP BELIEVE ITor NOT PROVES IT 'if-?