G apitalJWoiimal
1L "mnflrrr
CITY EDITION
Oregon: Fair but with fogs on
coast tonight and Thursday; war
mer east portion; changeable winds.
Local: Max. 97; Mln. 50; rain 0;
river -2.8; clear, variable winds.
PRICE THREE CENTS SSJIVJS?
5th YEAR, No. 200 r.S
SALEM, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1933-
The Capital -N R. A,
Journal
Subscribes '
to President X 4r .
Roosevelt's 3Sgr'
Program P
WI DO oua PAJTT
FnfcDf?
?nfpulcirl?)
REHl
EAST SEABOARD
BEING RACKED
BY HURRICANE
Violent Storm Twisting
Up A 1 1 a n t i c Coast
Wrecking Shipping
Two SOS Calls Sent Out
By Liner Madison With
90 Aboard
Washington, Aug. 23 (Pi A vio
lent storm, described variously by
naval and weather bureau officials
as of "hurricane" or near hurri
cane intensity, was reported by the
bureau today to be sweeping in
land from the Virginia capes on a
generally northwesterly course.
Bureau officials estimated if the
storm, which weaved a sinuous,
shifting, snake like course as it
came up from the south, main
tained its present northwesterly di
rection It would pass over the na
tional capital before nightfall.
Although it left a trail of dis
tressed shipping in its wake, wea
ther bureau officials were of the
oDlnion that its force would be con
siderably dissipated when it moved
inland.
Nevertheless. R. H. Weightman,
weather bureau forecaster, said the
storm, which early today battered
against the Virginia coast, had done
the unusual for a disturbance orig
lnaUngmetropJlbystr (Concluded on pnge 8, column 7)
BOY SCOUTS TO
SEE ROOSEVELT
Hyde Park, N. Y., Aug. 23 (LP)
President Roosevelt took a recess
from his work on the International
disarmament situation and the do
mestic recovery program today and
visited a Boy Scout camp. He
planned to complete before dusk his
trip to the camp 80 miles from the
summer White House.
He will observe New York City
youths enjoying a camp life he him
self made possible.
Mr. Roosevelt, while head of the
New York state Boy Scout founda
tion, led the movement for the
establishment of recreational ac
tivities of the youths of crowded
cities. He planned to have lunch
con with the directors and deliver
a brief address to the personnel.
If time permits, the president was
expected to review his disarmament
discussions yesterday with Norman
H. Davis, chief of the American
delegation to the Geneva confer
ence. Davis came here to receive his
final instructions before returning
abroad to conduct negotiations pre
liminary to the reconvening of the
conference October 16.
MOTT WIRES FOR
CHEMAWA ACTION
In an effort to halt what appears
to be a series of "buck passing"
between the director of the bud
get and the secretary of Indian af
fairs, Congressman James W. Mott
Wednesday morning telegraphed
President Roosevelt asking for his
early favorable intercession in con
nection with the Salem Indian
school at Chemawa. Action is deem
ed necessary as the school Is sche
duled to open for tne'fall term In
about three weeks.
Continuation for the present on
the 300-student basis Is authorized,
U... --nn-rlfnn in a telPBrflm reCelV-
cd recently, the budget director has
rejected the proposal iur an
larged school. Congressman Mctt
... n,.tcaH thnt Rpcretarv Ickes
had taken the matter back to the
president, but no formal action nas
been forthcoming.
ATTEMPT TO UNIONIZE
FORD MOTOR PLANT
t-n.--b. w t Anir m UP) An at
tempt to unionize the Ford Motor
company plant at Edgewater was
launched today with at least partial
success indicated.
AftA- en son of the 2000 em
ployes at the plant had listened to
three American rrawawuu u
bor organizers here last night, it was
announced that about 75 percent
had signed union pledges.
Tribute was paid to the organiz
ing genius In industry of Henry Ford
who Is an open shop advocate.
The workers were reminded that
under section 7 of the NRA blanket
code, the right of employes to or
ganize without fear of losing their
Jobs Is recognized.
Good Evening!
Sips for Supper
By DON UPJOHN
"Astoria Plans $80,000 Brewery,"
says Capital Journal headline.
What, Just after being advised the
American Legion convention will be
held there next year?
Elk tags have been received by
the county clerk. A hunter is per
mitted to kill only one buck elk
with two points or more. A three
point two elk is just elk's milk.
MAYBE THE DIP WAS HIS WIFE
Stockton, Cal., (A1) Chief of Po
lice E. W. Gaddy of Turlock is con
vinced that pickpockets plied their
trade during the melon carnival in
Turlock. After many people had
complained of pocket thefts, officers
here were told, Chiei oaaciy visit
ed the carnival to make a personal
investigation. In one pocket he car
ried a bulgy wallet in which he
placed a note reading "Did you ever
get fooled?"
After spending an hour on the
grounds he returned to the office
with the wallet still in his pocket,
but his associates revealed that on
opening it he found a different note
saying: "Quit your maaing."
George Graves qualified for
champion straw hat roller yester
day afternoon. His straw hat blew
off near State and Liberty streets
and rolled fulh half a block on the
edge of its rim Deiore oemg scoop
ed up by a star infielder, name not
learned.
Rye advanced to a high point on
the Chicago market yesterday.
Bourbon is understood to have fol
lowed suit. Maybe a reaction to
returns from the election announc
ing that Whiskey Hill planned to
retain its name.
ThR Willamette Valllev Cherry
Growers association under Bob
Shinn has maintained a large force
of people pitting cherries in the
Espee warehouse and intends to
lrin tin t-.hn anoA work until the
first of the year. It seems the
cherries arc more to be pitted than
censurca.
Young Jimmy Nicholson, the
world's greatest junior ball player,
and the Woodburn junior giants
will turn loose again tomorrow at
Toreka. Listen, woodburn io.ks.
We'd rather see your team win that
ball game than get a whole crate
of the mammoth berries your Doc
Gerald Smith brines up to us every
year. Dogged if that isn't showing
an interest in your old ball game.
A couple of banty roosters out
in the yard about 4 a. m., ought
to help in curing these cases of
sleeping sicKness.
The NRA Is going into the movies.
We knew they'd have to drag the
old sex appeal into it somewhere.
IRELAND DECREES
BLUE SHIRT BAN
Dublin, Aug. 23 W) General Eoln
OTJuffy left the fate of his national
guard up to the "verdict of the peo
ple" today after the government had
banned the recently organized blue
shirts.
When proscrpitlon was first prom
ised because the guardsmen defied
a decree forbidding parades in uni
form, General O'Duffy said his mil
itary organization would not dis
solve, but when he learned last night
that It was proclaimed Illegal, he
declared:
"I have nothing to .say except that
the national guard awaits the ver
dict of the people."
Unless they resign, the blue shirts
will be liable to arraignment by a
military tribunal re-established by
the government to act under the
drastic public safety act. The tri
bunal can levy any punishment in
eluding the death sentence.
Drop Suit Against
Cannery For Polution
Of Willamette Water
Voluntary nonsuit has been taken by the plaintiff in the
$24,000 damage action of Eva Palmerton against Hunt broth
ers cannery and Judge Lcwellinff has signed an order of dis
missal based on the action 01 ine
Dlnlntiff.
The damage action was for al
leged pollution of the WiUamette
riTer by Hunt brothers cannery In
dumping its waste from the can
nery fruits and berries into the
river. The plaintiff operates a re
sort on the river at Spong's land
ing below the cannery and she de
clared In her complaint that this
made the river unfit for boating and
swimming and as a result she had
been materially damaged. In her
original complaint filed December
12. 1931 she charged $2,000 damages
and $10,000 In loss of profits from
the spring of 1930 until filing the
complaint. The case was set to
RADIO PRIEST
GRILLS HOOVER
BANK POLICE
Coughlin Says Gold Pour
ed In At Top, People
At Bottom Died
Attacks Philosophy. But
Not Personality of Ex
President Detroit, Aug. 23 (IP) The policies
of former President Hoover were
criticized by the Rev. Pr. Charles E.
Coughlin today before the grand
jury investigating Detroit bank
failures.
"There was corn for the pigs of
Arkansas," the radio priest shouted,
"but not one loaf of bread for the
starving people -of Michigan."
'The trouble with the Hoover
philosophy is that he tried to cure
the damnable depression by pouring
gold in at the top while people
died at the bottom."
Father Coughlin read at length
excerpts from an article- he said
was written by Mr. Hoover in 1912
for the Mining Magazine, an Eng
lish publication. It was entitled
ths "economies of a boom." The
article explained steps for organiz
ing a mining company capitalized
at $5,000,000. A half million dol
lars would be required to sink the
mine, $25,000 to organize a board of
directors and $75,000 to pay off
stock brokers. Then, the article
stated, the company was ready to
be capitalized for $5,000,000.
V 'lt is .quite possible,' Pr.
Coughlin read. " 'that the blank
(Concluded on page 8, column 8)
T
FILBERT CODE
With all elements of the filbert
industry at the state represented at
a meeting of growers and packers
here today a national stabilization
agreement for the industry was ap
proved for presentation to the sec
retary of agriculture. The code
drafted covers fair practices only
under the agricultural adjustment
act, explained Arthur A. Goldsmith,
co-oporativc attorney of Portland
who drafted the agreement, and in
no manner touches on labor claus
es or conditions of labor which
come under the industrial recovery
act.
Under the fair practices code
unanimously agreed to provision is
made for a control board to con
sist of two representatives of the
North Pacific Nut Growers Co-operative,
one representative of the
Oregon Nut Growers Co-operative,
one from the Eugene growers' as
sociation and one representing the
independent growers and packers.
One of the principal objects of
the control board, 'the attorney ex
plained, is to determine fair min
imum prices but it in line with the
code will also labor to eliminate
unfair practices within the industry.
The agreement adopted also will
contain a list of grades and packs
and the attorney stated when ap
proved will be binding on all pack
ers of filberts.
R. A. Duncan, executive vice pres
ident of the North Pacific Nut
Growers, presided at today's meet
ing. Inasmuch as Oregon Is consider
ed virtually the only filbert grow
ing section of importance in the
United States the code covers the
industry nationally.
come for trial in the next few days
and she filed a supplemental com
plaint recently in which she alleged
another $12,000 in damages on the
sam basis from the time of filing
the original complaint to the time
of filing the supplemental com
plaint. The cannery In its defense of the
case declared that its dumping of
waste In the river was reasonable,
that it and other canneries did
the same, that it had been doing it
since 1914 and had gained a lawful
use of the river for that purpose
by adverse user. It declnred it
would be impossible forjhe canner
"Conciudedonpagee, column 3j
Legion Team
Of Woodburn
Held In Kansas
Topeka. Kas Aug. 23 ft Youth
ful baseball players, composing six
teams which won their respective
regional championships, assembled
here today in preparation for the
western sectional tournament open
ing tomorrow, the winner of which
will meet the eastern champions
later at New Orleans for the na
tional American Legion baseball ti
tle. The six teams which will compete
for the western sectional title here
are those from Woodburn, Ore., Par-
go, N. D., Ada, Okla., Chicago, Lou
isville, Colo., and Stockton, Cal.
Drawings for the pairings are to
be made tonight. Two teams will
draw byes and will not play until
"(Concluded on pnge 8, column 7)
TO REPEL NAZI
(Copyright, 1933. by United Prcsi)
Vienna. Auir. 23 (LP) Austria pre
Dared an army of 1,000 picked
sharpshooters today which is to be
sent to the German frontier in fear
of an attack by exiled Nazis, work-
ins in cooperation with Hitler storm
troopers. The frontier already is
heavily guarded.
Military Intelligence reports that
the Nazis planned a series of bord
er raids, and perhaps an invasion
in force, earlv in September, caused
Chancellor Englebert Dollfuss to
order the new force of two battal
ions of the Hcimwehr to prepare
for action.
This development emphasized the
tension between Germany and Aus
tria over the Nazi or fascist problem
which lias brought increasingly bit
ter enmity between the governments
which were allies during the" World
war.
European powers were considering
the addition of 8,000 men to the mil
itary forces allowed Austria under
the St. Germain treaty.
It was hoped the men would be
ready to go to the border early in
September, after they have been
organized and instructed in special
duties.
Authorities want the new men to
serve a double purpose. In add!
tion to being frontier guardsmen,
they are intended to be a medium
for increasing the morale of the
present frontier forces, chiefly Ty
roleans and Salzburgians, by im
pressing upon them that they are
defending Austria as a whole in re
pelling Nazi attacks not the Tyrol
alone and hence that eastern and
southern Austria are ready to do
their shares of any fighting.
PRICE AT SALE
Portland, Aug. 23 (A1) Properties
of the Umpqua Mills and Timber
company in southern Oregon will
be re-advertised for sale, it was
said here today by Federal Judge
John H. McNary, who yesterday
ruled that the upset price of $800,-
000 fixed on the properties at the
time he ordered a decree of mort
gage foreclosure, will not be dis
turbed. Judge McNary denied a motion of
attorneys representing the Conti
nental National Bank & Trust com
pany of Chicago, holder of the
mortgage.
No bidders appeared at a recent
sale conducted in Roscburg by
Clarence Knox, deputy United
States marshal.
"Right now, when we are on the
upgrade," Judge McNary said, "It
would be a bad policy to change the
upset price. If we sold for the price
of the mortgage, unsecured credit
ors would recive nothing. The de
mand for lumber Is increasing daily
and there is more opportunity to
get a favorable bid now than there
was at the other sale."
J. O. Elrod, president of the Ump
qua Mills & Timber company, de
clared in an affidavit under this
mortgage has an actual value today
01 from $1,800,000 to $2,000,000, ap
proximately three times the amount
of indebtedness due the plainlifl."
LINDBERGHS HOP OFF
FOR FAROES ISLAND
Copenhagen, Aug. 23 CP) Col.
Charles A. Lindbergh and his wife
landed this evening at Tvcraa In the
Faroe Islands, completing a (light
from Iceland.
Eskifjord, Iceland, Aug. 23 (LP)
Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh
left at 7:40 a.m. E.D.T., today, on
the eastward route to Europe. Their
Immediate destination was the Far
oes Islands, north of the Shetland.!,
but their plans beyond that point
are Indefinite.
DRAFTING COAL
CODE ABSORBS
NRAENERG1ES
Roosevelt and Johnson
Keeping Tab on De
velopments Seamen Present Greiv-
ances Dress Industry
Hearings Begin
Washington, Aur. 23 UP) The ser
ious problem of shaping a final code
of fair practice for bituminous coal
again today overshadowed manifold
activities of the recovery adminis
tration, but the only word on pro
gress was that a "break might come
any time," and that not only admin
istrator Hugh S. Johnson but Pre
sident Roosevelt himself was keep
ing constant tab on developments.
This word came from deputy ad
ministrator Kenneth M. Simpson,
who handled the coal hearing.
While the coal conferences went
on privately between officials, oper
ators and labor leaders in separate
offices, factions of retail trade be
gan airing animosities In public
hearings, advocating suppression of
forms of competition denounced by
witnesses as unfair.
A group of se nen representing
the marine workers industrial union
and headed by A. H. uones of Balti
more, arrived at the office of John
son to present a demand for a code
for ship crews, long shoremen and
harbor workers. .
After consultation outside johif-
son's office, four spokesmen for
the 20 men who came presented
(Concluded on page 0, column 4)
UTILITY SLASHES
RATES
St. Louis, Aug. 23 (LP) The low
est electric light rate in the United
States was announced here today
for St. Louis and vicinity by the
Union Electric Light and Power
company which made a voluntary
rate reduction of (1,600,000.
Rate cuts as high as 35 per cent
for some users were included in
the new schedule while average re
duction for the city and county
was 17.5 per cent, company offi
cials said.
Of the company's 309,000 custom
ers, 289.000 of them will benefit by
the reduced rate.
St. Louis residents will receive
the first 32 kilowatt hours under
the new schedule at 5 cents an hour,
the next 168 hours at 2,5 cents and
all over 200 at 1.5 cents with a five
per cent reduction for prompt pay
ment.
Louis E. Hogan, president of the
company, said the reduction was
made on the prospect of increased
demand of electricity which the
company was confident will accom
pany the nation s economic recov
ery. CONTRACT CARRIERS
ONLY ONES EFFECTED
Circuit Judge Lcwelling here to
day from Albany stated he is pre
paring his decree in the case of
A. C. Anderson against C. M. Thom
as, public utilities commissioner,
and in the decree wculd set out
specifically the sections of the state
truck and bus law which he has de
clared Invalid and which the utili
ties commissioner will be enjoined
from enforcing. He expected to
have the decree prepared tonight
or tomorrow for filing.
While not stating what the de
cree would contain he intimated
from the reading of his memor
andum that invalidation of the act
would extend only to contract car
riers Involved in the timber indus
try. His recent memorandum opinion
overruled a demurrer interposed to
the complaint. Defendants refused
to plead further and consequently
the court is preparing his decree
from which appeal will probably
be taken.
Under his recent memorandum
opinion he held that there was no
factual difference between a con
tract carrier hauling a log or an
other hauling the same log cut Into
shingles, shooks or some other tim
ber product.
NO HEAT RELIEF
Portland, Aug. 23 P Continued
warm weather was forecast for the
Portland area today, and no hope
of immediate relief from the new
est hot spell was in sight. Tues
day's maximum of 92 degrees fol
lowed a pleasant 73 on Sunday.
EXTRA SESSION OF
LEGISLATURE HERE
APPEARS PROBABLE
Necessity of Providing
Upon by Governor and Advisers, But Peo
ple Must Show Willingness To Support
Method of Financing; Sales Tax Advocated
By HARRY N. CRAIN
If anS when Governor Julius L. Meier, his advisors, le
gislative leaders and relief officials can devise a plan for fi
nancing relief for the unemployed in Oregon that will have
some assurance of being acceptable to the electorate the gov
ernor will summon the legislature into extraordinary session
to enact sucn a program into law.
But (here will be no special ses-
slon if It appears that the people
will not stand behind the lawmak
ers, or that the program of emer
gency financing devised at such a
session is to be defeated at the polls.
Governor Meier made these points
distinctly clear at a conference with
state and federal relief officials,
public works administrators, NRA
directors, highway commission rep
resentatives and legislators held In
Portland yesterday afternoon. Obvi
ously disturbed by the prospect that
from 100,000 to 120,000 people In
Oregon will be dependent upon the
state and other agencies for food,
clothing and shelter during the
(Concluded on page 9, column 6)
T
AIDS STRIKERS
Philadelphia, Aug. 23 (LP) Strik
ers In the textile, radio, leather and
baking Industries were enlivened
today by the warning of Mrs. Glf-
ford Pinchot, wife of Pennsylvania's
governor, -that the --"nation would
be In a bad way If workers didn't
have nerve enough to fight for
their rights."
Hailed as a "red-coated champion
of labor," Mrs. Pinchot rushed from
one striking plant to another, and
also found time to address several
unions at their headquarters
well as the American Federation
of Pull Fashioned Hosiery Workers
in annual convention at the Kit
tenhouse hotel.
"The state has become conscious
of the fact that the burden of the
depression was being placed on the
shoulders of the workers," she told
the hosiery delegates. "I am glad
I had a part in making the psople
of the state conscious of sweatshop
conditions.
"We need employment Insurance
so that when a skilled worker loses
his job, through no fault of his
own, he may be guaranteed some
measure of help. When the pick-up
began, big business wanted to take
all the profits for itself. The NRA
has put the full power of the law
behind the workers.
PERSIAN LOVE NOTES
DEADLY WEAPONS
Los Angeles, Aug. 23 (LP) A Per
sion love letter written 4000 B.C.,
may have read, "Baby, you're the
light of my life," but it also served
a more utilitarian purpose.
The next time an unwelcome suit
or called, the writer's sweetheart
may have wedged the note firmly
about his ears, according to Prof
A. F. W. Jackson of Columbia uni
versity. Persian love letters were
written on soft clay and then baked
into tile, thus forming a lethal
weapon, Jackson caid.
Jackson, who made seven expe
ditions into Persia as a noted auth
ority on Indo-Iranian languages,
arrived here from New York by
steamer for a vacation.
Radio Dealers Adopt
Fair Trade Code Along
With Other Industries
Radio dealers of the city elected officers for a six months
term Tuesday night with Fred Kist, president; Louis Du
Buy, vice-president; Lloyd Rodgcrs, secretary and William
Garvin, treasurer. The ouicjai
name will be the Salem Radio
Trades association with a majority
of the local dealers represented. A
general code was adopted with min
or changes to be made by a special
committee. All dealers are urged
to attend another meeting at the
chamber of commerce rooms Friday
evening at 8 o'clock at which time
the proposed code will be discussed
and action taken.
Effective Wednesday morning the
Salem Box company Is operating
under the code, with a 7-hour day
except Saturday, when the hours
are reduced to five. A night crew
is being added due to an increase
In business with the payroll nearly
Belief Funds Agreed
Portland, Aug. 23 (Adoption
by the several Interests involved of
a wheat marketing code for the Pa
cific northwest, was announced here
today by Douglas Mclntyre of the
federal agricultural adjustment ad
ministration.
Producers, exporters, millers and
bankers, Mclntyre said, have en
dorsed the agreement under which
it is expected a forty million bushel
wheat surplus will be exported on a
federal subsidy plan.
Final drafting of the agreement
for signature by the various inter'
csts, preliminary to approval by the
secretary of agriculture, was under-
taken at once. The sub-committee
of four appointed by the general
executive committee yesterday,
worked into the early morning
hours ironing out differences and
adjusting terms. It was expected
that the code, as finally drafted,
would be -ready for presentation to
the lull committee late today.
The committee which brought the
agreement into its final form In
cluded F. B. Burke of Sperry Flour
ing mills, San Francisco; A. E. Sut
ton of Portland, representing ex
porters: F. J. Wilmer of Rosalie,
Wash., representing producers, and
Herbert V. Alward, manager of the
Portland branch of the Bank of
California, representing bankers.
23,522 SIGNERS
Fl
Portland, Aug. 23 (LP) Blue Eagle
code signers in the Oregon-Idaho
district numbered 23,522 today
Frank Messenger, department of
commerce district manager, an
nounced at Portland NRA head
quarters. Approximately 500 employers sign
the code daily, he said
"The total number of employes
affected by the blanket agreement
fixing wages and hours is 82,841
Messenger said, estimating thai at
least 20,000 u nem ployed have re
turned to work In the two states
since July 15.
Will Simon, chairman of the Ida
ho state recovery board, said to
day that a survey showed nearly
1,000 unemployed had secured work
in the Boise district within the past
10 days. Simon told Messenger that
10,000 additional men would go back
to work within two weeks in Idaho.
August 28 is the date set for NRA
forces In the two stntes to begin
their "deadline week" drive to place
blue eagles in every business house
and the consumer's blue eagle card
in every home.
Mass meetings have been sched
uled for Friday in Corvallis, Ore.
and for Monday, in The Dalles, to
promote the deadline week cam
paign.
doubled to take care of the work
According to John 8. Fricsen, man
ager, the change means a 37 per
cent increase in operating costs.
Demand for box shooks Is the cause
of the Increased business.
A fair competition code was
adopted Tuesday night by the 8a
lem Shoe Repairers' association, of
which V. E. Kuhn is president. AH
but one local shop has agreed to
its provisions, which sets a price
list, working hours and wages slm
ilar to that in effect In other north
western cities.
Regulations were explained to
group of real estate dealers, with
"(Concluded on pnge 0, column 7)
WILSON RIVER
BLAZE EXTENDS
FLAMING AREA
C.C.C. Camps Evacuated
As Men Escape to!
Safety
350 Square Miles of Ever
green Forests Burn
Loss Totals Millions
Portland, Ore., Aug. 23 (P) Roll
ing through millions of dollars
worth of Evergreen forests In un
controllable billows, the giant for
est fire in the north Oregon coast
sector burned savagely today while
2.000 men who have been waging
an unrelenting battle, could do lit
tle more than flee to safety.
The danger area today formed a
rough square with Cochran and
McMinnvllle at the north and south,
and Forest Grove and Tillamook at
the east and west sides.
In the north center or this 50-
mile square section of mountain
country about 350 square miles
was In the actual fire district.
The flames were stripping the finest
of the virgin timber. Dense smoke
and the extent of the burned wr
ests made it impossible for fire of
ficials to estimate the area ac
tually destroyed.
All outlvlnir civilian conservation
corps camps and other fire-fighters'
(Concluded on pnge 8, column 4)
SMITH PLEADS
N.R.A. PROGRAM
New York, Aug. 23 (P) Alfred
E. Smith Is In favor of full co
operation by the country In Presi
dent Roosevelt's NBA program.
He said in a speech last night
that If the plan cannot, In the na
ture ofthings, accomplish the mll
lenlum, "it has unquestionably re
sulted to date in the increasing ol
wages In many callings and in the
employment of a large number of
those who had become, or were
about to become through no fault
of their own, public charges."
"This accomplishment alone," he
said, "entitles the plan to further
trial and full cooperation."
"There are many," he said, "who
honcstlv believe in other remedies.
That Is not the point. There can be
only one curt at a time ana me
president must, like Luke In the
Bible, be the great physician."
Support of the program, he said,
'commits no one to a blanket ap
proval of objectionable methods
employed here and there In this
campaign," He said "threats, Inti
midation, compulsion, boycott,
Blacklist and suppression of opin
ion" have "no rightful place In th
picture."
HOME LOAN BANK
DIRECTOR COMING
Portland. Au. 23 W) Officials of
the federal home loan bank board
here, headquarters for Oregon,
Washington, Montana, Idaho. Utah
and Alaska, announced today mat
representatives from communities
in each suite will have an oppor
tunity to confer here Friday and
.Saturday with Prank A. Chase, di
rector of field service for the fed
eral organization.
A survey of possibilities for estaD
ILshiiie federal savings and loan as
sociations in the various cltis of the
five states and Alaska will be un
dertaken by Chase who will arrive
Friday from Washington, D. C.
Any community wincn neeas ad
equate homo financing may con
sult with Chase, the directors here
said. The government will match,
dollar for dollar, any subscription
offered bv any city, up to $100,000.
Subscriptions by the cities are
raised through investments by tho
residents of those cities in con
servative savings, installments
thrift and full-paid shares of the
federal savings and loan associa
tions. PLAY MONEY GETS
SENTENCE TO JAIL
Portland. Ore., Aug. 23 & Albert
Dale, 53, will have plenty of time
to figure out whether he had $10
worth of fun.
He was arrested on a vagrancy
charge after police said he had tried
to pass some imitation money at
the rooming house. One of the
"bills" was produced In court. It
was marked "play money good
for $10 In fun." Dale was senten
ced to 15 days in jail.