THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1934 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM. OREGON BECK ASSAILS NEW DEAL AT BAR MEETING Milwauktc, Aug. 30 (IP) The na tion's leading lawyers were ap pealed to today to defend the con stitution against "serious ' under mining" brought about by centrali sation of power In the federal gov ernment, A number of committee reports received at the 57th annual conven tion of the American Bar associa tion criticized a tendency to usurp powers constitutionally delegated to the states. "The problem which should con cern every American lawyer Is whether the tendency towards an unprecedented centralization of power shall continue unchecked," snid a report of the committee on American citizenship headed by Rep. James M. Beck of Pennsyl vania. Beck, one of the most outspoken critics against the Roosevelt New Deal, was more caustic In his crit icisms In an interview. "The N.R.A. is absolutely uncon stitutional," he said. "It Is a flag rant interference with the Individ ual liberties guaranteed by the American constitution. I have fre quently so declared before the House of Representatives. "It has Immensely retarded re covery, destroyed confidence and initiative and scared business." Arainst the criticism stood out a finding by the committee on com merce, headed by Rush C. Butler, that "whether the national recov ery legislation is sustained or de clared unconstitutional, this com mittee Is of the opinon that gov ernment regulation of business will continue on an Increasing scale." Dean Roscoe Pound of the Har vard law school replied to attacks on the New Deal with a statement that the tendency to give wider powers to the executive branch of the government Is "a natural ad justment to our economically unl lled Industrial urban society." BIG OVERWATER SPAN HURRIED Ban Francisco (LP) Eleven and ene-half million dollars were spent In construction of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay bridge world's largest overwater span during its first year of construction, Earl Lee Kelly, state director of Public Works, reported today. The work has progressed speed ily and the $77,200,000 structure may be opened to traffic six months ahead of schedule, or In July, 1930, rather than in January, 1937, Kelly said. Kelly, In a report to Gov. Frank F. Merriam, reported that for the first time In three years, there Is a demand for scrap iron in California as result of bridge operations. Thir ty thousand tons of reinforcing steel alone, were used during the first year's construction. Other materials to be used In the bridge construction include: 152,000 tons of structural steel. 18,500 tons of cable wire, or 70, 000 miles of piano wire, the dia meter of a lead pencil. 1,000,000 cubic yards of concrete, containing 1,300,000 barrels of ce ment. 30,000,000 board feet of timber. 200,000 gallons of paint. Construction of tho bridge was begun July 9, 1933. Waterfront strike conditions caused a tempo rary suspension of work, but all work has been resumed and Is pro ceeding at a faster pace than had been expected. Legion Meeting To Be Postponed Bilverton Kenneth O. Hansen, commander of Delbert Reeves post No. 7 of the American Legion, has announced that the regular meet ing of Monday evening will be post poned until Tuesday night on ac count of so many desiring to be away over Labor day. Questions of Importance to come before the members will be the elec tion of officers and reports from the state convention held last week at Astoria to be given by the regu lar delegates. ELD RIDGE ILL Woodburn Horace Eldridge of Balem, driver of the Matson bakery wagon, suffered a heart attack Wednesday morning while delivering goods at the West Woodburn store. Dr. Gerald Smith was called and gave assistance and the young man recovered sufficiently to be removed to his home. His employer came from Calcm and took the wagon on Its usual route. 5,773 GOT JOBS St. Louis (LP) The Missouri State Employment service office here has lound Jobs for 5,773 persons so far this year. TONSILS OUT Silverton Robert Leonard, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. T. Leonard, and Geneva Jordan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Jordan, submitted to ton sil operations Tuesday forenoon at the General hospital. Both are rc ported as progressing satisfactorily. HEAR Evangelist IRMA WEST Beginning Sunday Sept. 2nd At the Foursquare Gos pel Tent, Corner of Com mercial and Oak Sts, Prophecy, and the Com ing Tribulation, The Anti Christ, The Rap ture and The Revelation. God's power to heal all manner of sickness. ALL SET FOR wis " EI r. I Boy Tico of Ventura, Calif., champion bronco buster, who will be seen in action at the Independence rodeo which starts this Friday through Sunday.. Tico is a champion goat roper of Mexico. INDIAN SENDS A MESSAGE NORTH Houston, Tex. (LP) Henry Horton, born in a wifjwam in the Oklahoma Indian Territory the year after Texas joined the Union, at 88 has asked aid in getting his claim for an Indian allotment established. As Indian as the head on an old fashioned penny, Horton, half Cherokee, told this story: "My grandfather was Jeff Moss, a full-blooded Cherokee. My grand mother also was a Cherokee. "Their daughter, Minnie, mar ried my father, a white trader named Jeff Anthony Horton, and I was born May 17, 1846. "My mother died when I was a baby, and my father joined an other trader named J. W. Flnglee. We went to about where Paris, Tex., now Is. When I was five years old my father died." Froni that time on, Horton said, he drifted here and there, working In a store for $2 per week and board, In a planing mill, as a pump repair man on a railroad, and in a sawmill. A friend wrote to the Department of Interior, Division of Indian Claims. An answer received said the "citizenship rolls of the Chero kee tribe are closed." "Horton's name does not appear on the final rolls of the Cherokee nation," the form letter from John Collier, commissioner, said, "and only those persons who are enrolled can receive tribal benefits." "It looks as thoimh I flfn cut off Hop-Pickers SpeciaMSchool Days Specials Friday Saturday Tuesday I NowIsTheTimeToPrepare Yourself At the State Fair You Can Look Your Best In Our ClotheS--Give Yourself A Treat! And Buy Here. Dresses, Coats, Suits, shoes, Priced Low! Hop-Pickers Leather Wrist or Gauntlet Styles Hop-Pickers Overalls Ladies' or Girls' Pant cut Hop-Pickers Sweater Coats .,. . . . Just the thing for a cool morning Hop-Pickers Waterproof Jackets QQ Zipper Front J3J)8 JA7U Hop-Pickers Leather Jackets . .CC QQ Zipper front $0.98 W70 Hop-Pickers Fleece - Extra heavy quality Hop-Pickers Outing Shoes . .-.-.Cl JO "Star Brand" I 9 Hop-Pickers Moleskin Pants ...t.Ci 4R Regular $1.98 for . . Saturdays Open to 8:30 BIG RODEO AT INDEPENDENCE amwwm from my rights because X cannot read or write" Horton said. '1 only want a little to take care of me In my last days." "Did the relatives of the late mil lionaire Indian, Jefferson Burnette, ever get their claims settled?" Hor ton asked. The Houston Social Service pro vides him food. WEDDING NIGHT IS SPENT IN H00SG0W Pocatello, Ida., Aug. 30 IP Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bleckmore of Poca tello, Ida., today are honeymoon ing, surfeited with bliss but firmly convinced Pocatello traffic officers are not cupids. Two hours after they were mar ried, their speeding car was stop ped by a surly officer who believed in enforcing the law romance or no romance. Bleckmore was charged with speeding; plead guilty; was unable to pay a $10 fine. He spent the night in jail alone. , Then came the dawn after his "wedding night". The court relent ed, allowed him to pay (5 on ac count, and depart with his bride after promising to pay the balance later. CAMPAIGNS IN BUGGY East Palestine, O. (LP) Harry Gosney, democratic candidate for nomination as sheriff, is campaign ing Columbiana county in an old buggy, painted In varied colors, muie-drawn, smothered in Gosney banners. Gloves ..... . AQa I1 for ... ... QG WV Lined Coats Bloch's Golden Eule Store Salem, Oregon HOPKINS FAVORS UPTON SINCLAIR Washington, Aug. 30 VP Harry L. Hopkins, the relief administra tor, said at his press conference to day that the nomination of Upton Sinclair as the democratic candi date for governor of California was "great business" and that he felt certain Sinclair would win. Hopkins said Sinclair's relief plans for California were very in teresting and that parts of them appeared "very good." "I certainly do want to see Sin clair elected," the relief adminis trator declared In response to ques tions. "He's on our aide." "You mean the democratic side?" asked a newsman. "I mean our side," Hopkins re plied with a laugh. "I'd like to see everybody on our side win." Asked If he considered Sinclair a socialist, the administrator leaned back in his chair and drawled: "New he's a good democrat." Hopkins said he believed demo cratic leaders were "tickled to death" at the nomination. GROUP INVITED SUverton Mrs. C. J. Rosheim had as afternoon guests at her home on East hill Wednesday afternoon, Miss Olive Stevens, her houseguest from Seattle, Mrs. Dorothy Ashton and Mrs. F. M. Powell. Her two daugh ters, Miss Sophia Rosheim and Mrs. Lillian Senter, Miss Haroldine Leach and Marvin Senter were also present. All Wool School Skirts Plain shades All Leather Suede Jackets ...... . CC.Qfi Real heavy quality Brushed Wool Zipper. 2 Oft to Cl.Qg Sweaters, Cossack or Coat Stylo W All Wool Zipper Jackets For girls Wool Sport Dresses Dne or 2-plcce Sport Coats in Plain Fancy materials or Oregon Made Swagger Suits . .C1fi.48 Pull length coats finest woolens School Frocks, Washable $l.Qft & $2. In stripes, plaids, look like silk " " 220 to 226 N. Liberty EAGLE'S WIFE TELLS HER TALE FOR MAGAZINE Washington, Aug. 30 (IF Anno Morrow Lindbergh dips her pen In thrills and color to tell In Septem ber's Natlonnl Geographic maga zine how It feels to go globe-trotting with the world's loremost air man. Making her debut as author of vivid travelogue, Mrs. Lindbergh tells about the 1933 flight around the North Atlantic, on which she handled the wireless key. She makes her travels live again: Missionary outposts of Canada: the country dances of Greenland; Ice land, where giant conquered uie lend; Leningrad, "a beautiful city gone a trifle shoddy"; Moscow, "amazing combination of old and new." Her longest dissertation on her own clothes could hardly be called a fashion note it was over the Greenland Ice cap: . "I was wearing, in addition to woolen underwear, one thin wool shirt, one thick wool shirt, one wool sweater, wool riding trousers, sev eral pah's of wool stockings, fur lined kamiks and helmet, and over everything the hooded white blan ket Parka designed for us by Dr. Stefansson. I was quite warm ex cept for my feet, which I sat on, and. my hands, on which I put an other pair of mittens." The radio key simply signs through her story: "Being assured by radio of a safe anchorage while one is still over icy wastes Is a miracle to which there is no parallel. The comfort of It is rather like walking through a dark room, always keeping one's eyes on the light beyond in the hall." And for pure exultation, there's this passage on the hopoff from the becalmed African coast: "We're off? No spank spank spank but almost I held my breath. We're off. No more spanks. Yes we're off we're rising. The engine smoothed off into a long sigh, like a person breathing easily, almost like someone singing, ecstatically. We turned from the lights of the city. The plane seemed exultant then, even arrogant. We did it we did it!" BAD MEN GET OUT OF INSANE WARD RalciKh. N. C. Auir. 30 OK Seven men, three of them convicted of murder, overpowered guards and escaped yesterday from the crimi nally insane ward of the state hos pital here. State prison officials and hospital attaches reported none of the fugi tives had been recaptured several hours after the break. None of the guards was Injured In the escape. The seven men took their keys and calmly walked out of the main gate. Included in the group was Ed Beaver, convicted of slaying an aged neighbor In an argument over a watermelon, saved irom tne elec tric chair on a plea of insanity. Judge Allows Man' To Get His Breath Rockland, Me. (IP) Arraigned In court on a drunkenness charge, Ena Maninen was Indignant when the complaining policeman described how he downed the defendant with a flying tackle. "I went down because I was all out of breath," Maninen protested. Maninen now has 60 days in which to recover his breath. Belchertown, Mass. (IP) An al hinn phinnlnir snurrnw. ncrharjs the only one of its kind, was discovered in its nest hv Howard W. Knight. 'it is snow-white. $1.98 $4.98 $4.48 $10.98 Saturdays Open to 8:30 Residents Of Hills Return From Resort Silverton Hills Among folk of this community who have recently returned from vacations at the var ious Oregon coast resorts are Mr. and Mrs. Ed S. Porter and Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Pratt. Accompanying the silverton Hills group were Mrs. Webb Haskins and children, Donald and Corlna of Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hall, Evelyn and Raymond, their children, and Miss Pauline Mcintosh of Salem re turned the first of the week from an overnight visit with Mrs. Hall's great aunt, Mrs. Lizzie Scott at Grand Ronde and with other rela tives at Pacific City. They also spent some time at Newport, Neskowln ana Tan. One housing project to be started in Edinburgh, Scotland, will cost $4.200,000. NEW TIP-N-DRAIM KETTLE No more steam burnsl Drains even peaa or rice. Ideal for pot roasting; 4-quart utility size. Introduc tory Price PERCOLATORS A great coffee discovery in these beautiful new Perks and Drips. Triple-tested- Good Housekeep ing Institute approved. Percolators Drip Pots 4-cup j 6-cup also other sizes THE SMILING TRIO Treat yourself to three clean new saucepans. Jigg CoversG9c I for the met of three MADE OF EXTRA HARD, THICK SHEET ALUMINUM On Sale Sept. 1st AT RAY L. FARMER HDW. CO. 204 N, Commercial St. $169 DRIP POTS 5211 $215 rig. lie Mr. Kropp, an outstanding ladies haircutling stylist, will be in Salem to fill ap pointments on and after Tuesday, Sept. 4 and will feature THE VAN METHOD OF IHDIVIDUAL COMTOUES S w-BwaF7, JHT"1 For women who care Also our regular haircuts at 50c MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENTS EARLY AND AVOID Complete FACIAL Shampoos All Materials Guaranteed to be Genuine as Advertised ONLY LICENSED COSMETICIANS EMPLOYED Rapid Paidav multi-drying system, also Individual dryers In each booth for 'hose desiring privacy Open Evenings Until 8 For Your Convenience RO 251 NO. LIBERTY EGLESTON NAMED ATHLETIC COACH Monmouth Clay Egleston, former resident of Monmouth, replaces J. A. cox, resigned, as science teacher and athletic coach for Monmouth high school. He Is a graduate of all the local schools, Oregon Normal, and was a member of the '34 class of Willamette. University During the HEAR 1 Judge HALE . Famous Poultry Judge at 1 Chamber of : I ROOMS FRIDAY EVENING 8 P. M. Judge Hale will be in charge of the poultry judging at jj the Oreogn State Fair all next week ;j that will do so you run the home lot to the young folks, they'll appreciate it! The Pacific Telephone And Telegraph Company Business Office 740 DISAPPOINTMENT SPECIALS Regular $3.50 Crogulqnole Tru-Art Steam Oil PERM. $ WAVE Complete Hollywood Spiral PERM. $ WAVE .50 for lonp, brittle, very fine or un usually difficult hair to wave. summer he was enrolled at the Stat. college lor the six weeks course. HI has had five years of teachlnn arid coaching experience at Welser, Ida no, ana stayton, ore. SAVED MOTHER Cadiz, Ohio (IP) An 11-year old girl's nerve saved her mother front death by a bull. The girl, Marx Walligura, shouted at the animal to attract attention and slipped under a fence as the animal charge ed her. Her mother crept to safety, Commerce : catmt -if they want a telephone : m w m n a The friendly, ready instrument dl much to help will mean a too. And 4V r State St. Phone 3101 D U A R T, NATIONAL, and SHELTON'S TULIP OIL PERM. WAVES at POPULAR PRICES Finger Waves Manicures i'r.nt,or OBktlHC Arch PHONE 3921