Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, October 21, 1935, Page 1, Image 1

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    G apit alAJoiiraal
it nnwitr
Circulation
Dally average distribution for the
Month of September, 1935
10,611
Average daily net paid 8604
Member Audit Bureau of
Circulations
Weather
Mr but with Kmi foe, tonight
and Tuesday, high frost tonight.
Northwest winds.
Yesterday: Max. 91, mln. 36. Rain
.16 in, River 3.9 ft. Cloudy, southerly
wind.
y(7f li VTi1 A T Mn OKI Entered ea eecond clau
SALEM, OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1935
PRICE THREE CENTS
ON TRAINS AND NEWS
STANDS FIVE CENTS
"u. matter at S.lem. Oreaon
1
III)
OH
OS
SUMS
mam
ITALIAN ARMY
STARTS DRIVE
IN SOUTHEAST
Big Push from Somaliland
Underway for Capture
Of Harar
Rich Oases Captured and
Fortress of Dagnerrei
Stormed
(Associated Tress 8t(t Writer)
i a5cit uaiys "Dig pusn in Gin
lopia has started.
Prom Italian Somaliland, the
army of General Rudolf o Graziani
was driving today toward Gorrahei.
the heart of Ogadcn province in
southeast Ethiopia.
In the north, the main Italian
army, massed from Aduwa to Adt
grat, awaited Ihe "zero hour" for
the drive on Makale, strategic gate
way to the mountainous interior.
The apparent principal objective
of the Gorrahei campaign was Ha
rar, the metropolis of eastern Eth
lopia. Emperor Haile Selassie's principal
defense forces were midway between
Makale and Hnrar, on the plateau
about Dessye. The emperor dis
patched 8,000 of his European
"(Concluded oh pRg3, column 3)'
GUMPSlUTHOR
Chicago, Oct. 21 fF) Si dney
Smith, 58, creator of the nationally
syndicated cartoon strip, "The
Gumps" is dead the victim of an
automobile accident.
The first comtc artist to get a
million dollar contract. Smith was
killed yesterday en. route to his 2200
acre farm between Rockford, 111.,
and Bcloit, Wis. He was alone in a
small sedan.
The driver of the second car, also
riding alone was Wendell Martin,
of Watseka, III. He was reported suf
fering from a broken hip, a fractur
ed jaw and possible internal Injuries.
They collided head-on, Smith's car
careening across a ditch and into a
telephone pole. No witnesses to the
accident have been found.
Arthur Crawford, syndicate repre
sentative, said the cartoon would be
continued by a staff, trained by the
originator, under the editorial di
rection of Joseph Medill Patterson,
president of the syndicate and pub
lisher of the New York Daily News.
$25,000 ALLOTTED
FOR SILETZ SCHOOL
Washington, Oct. 21 u) The
federal Indian office today an
nounced detailed plans for spend
ing $1,337,500 old public works ad
ministration funds for improving
Indian schools and educational fa
cilities on reservations throughout
the country:
The allocations included:
Oregon Silctz, day school and
community center, $25,000; Wam
Springs, new school, $75,000.
Nebbs Join
The Family
Rudy Nebb, his good wife
Fanny, Junior Nebb and the
rest of the tribe concerned
with the fates and fortunes
of the Nebbs today join the
Capital Journal family of pen
characters and tonight ac
company Little Orphan Annie,
Andy and Mln, Regular Fellers
and Tallspin Tommy into your
home.
Rudy is introduced just after
he secured some stock in the
Lame Creek Mine and then
got cold feet and sold it, only
to learn too late that the mine
had begun to 'produce. His
ego will not permit him to ad
mit he sold the stock as worth
less, and the mental strain
over his fumbled chance to
become a rich man causes him
to fall desperately HI. Fanny la
unable to handle him and calls
in a pretty nurse.
From there on the story con
tinues on page 11.
Good Evening!
Sips for Supper
By DON UPJOHN
Elbert Bcde from Cottage Grove
is back in town with the current
special legislative session and at
tractive waitresses, stenographers
and other pulchritudinous parties
over town are preparing themselves
to get hugged. Reports from up val
ley say that Bedc's advancing age
has resulted in no dlmunition in his
capacity as the champion universal
hugger.
In fact so widespread has Bedc's
reputation become in this particular
our favorite waitress advised us this
a. m. if Bede tries it on her she'll
"pop him in the face." We hope to
be standing by for the occasion.
Loren Basler, College of Idaho
coach, at the alumni banquet before
the game Saturday evening made a
speech in which he remarked that
winning or losing football teams
wasn't the all Important thing but
it was the education uplift the par
ticipants received from a football
contest which counted. It seems the
visiting Idaho boys got a whole four
year course in one game Saturday
night.
It was a mighty Interesting game
to watch. The first half with the
first team playing Willamette play
ed Speckeenular ball and the second
half with the second team playing,
they played spectacular ball.
Spec Keenc's warriors came out
of the hospital and proceeded to
work the visitors over to a point
where hospital space around here
was at a premium. If Spec's men
have to go back to the hospital it
looks like the Idaho boys will have
to look for accommodations at the
Deaconess,
We expect the upshot of this sit
uation will be that other coaches in
the conference will be looking around
to try to find out the factory where
Spec buys crutches for his men.
Speaking of football we gob a
glimpse of a letter received by a
friend from Don Mills, the Greek
god half back who covered so much
ground for Willamette last year.
Don, according to recent report, was
In an elevator accident in New York
and it was feared amputation of both
legs would result. However, it seems,
he's only going to lose a bone out
of a big toe. "The accident occurred,"
he wrote, "on an overcrowded ele
vator. I was pushed up against the
gate and my big feet protruded under
said gate of course when the ele
vator started to go up my feet, or
rather my shoes, caught on one of
the floor doors, the shoes were rip
ped off my Jl't and my toes were
lacerated and fractured. I yelled to
the best of my ability and the op
erator immediately stopped the car.
I was taken to the hospital and oper
ated upon immediately. My right foot
is the most seriously injured. The
big toe has a piece of bone cut out
of it. I believe I have Almighty God
to thank that amputation was not
necessary, ft will be quite a few,
weeks before I'll be able to get
around normally and even then my I
toes will not be those of a ballet I
dancer." '
We understand over at Silverton
they call it the 1936 Fjord. J
We met a courthouse employe
going up In the elevator 15 minutes I
late to work this a. m. "I'm in a
tough spot," he declared. "As a court
house employe, I'm glad to be able
to sneak in a few minutes late, butj
being a taxpayer it darn near breaks
(CtohcTudedohPB-e 3, eolu mn 2 )
Northern Italian Army
Ready for Advance into
An Unmapped Region
fCoprrl.ht, IMS. br United Pretil
Aduwa, Ethiopia, Oct. 20 (Via Asmara, Eritrea. Oct.
21 (U.R) The Italian army on
at the given signal to start a
largest unexplored region in me
world,
It will be an advance unique In
warfare, In which baby tanks co
operating with airplanes will lead
an advance Into a country unmap
ped, unknown, whose mysteries In
clude a race of black Jews whose
origin no one knows.
It will cover great tracts of coun
try where people have never seen a
white man, never heard of the
World war, who, if thev have heard
of such countries as Prance, Great
Britain and the United States, be
lieve that their names stand or
tribes. ,
BRITISH APPLY
HAGUE LAWS
OF NEUTRALS
Colonies and Egyptian
Sudan to Permit Italian
Ships 24 Hours in Port
Hague Convention Applied
In "Friendly Fashion"
Only in Africa
London, Oct. 21 P High au
thoritative sources revealed today
that British crown colonies and the
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan had decided
to apply against Italy the neutrality
rules laid down by the Hague con
vention of 1907.
It was understood the Egyptian
government has made the same de
clslon.
This means that no Italian vessels
of war or Italian vessels carrying
provisions or arms for the Italian
troops In cast Africa will hereafter
be permitted to remain In British
ports more than 24 hours or will
be allowed to take on more than
enough fuel and supplies to reach
the next Italian port.
It was understood this decision had
(Concluded on pnge 3, column 3)
STEAMER CREW
LOST IN STORM
London, Oct. 21 (P) Eight ships
searched today for 37 men feared
lost after abandoning a foundering
freighter In a raging storm which
killed 13 and Injured scores in the
British Isles.
The crew of the 5735 ton freight
er Vardulia took to their lifeboats
in tempestuous seas 400 miles west
of the Hebrides after sending SOS
calls Saturday.
Since then there has been no
trace of the storm lashed crew or of
the ship.
The crew of the freighter Pen
dennis, wireless messages related,
was luckier. Before the Pendennis
sank in the North Sea, whipped by
the same storm, the Norwegian
steamer Iris reached her and took
off 22 men. The stricken ship was
heavily laden with coal.
The first fury of the storm along
the British Isles was believed abat
ing today, but hundreds of craft
which had fought to reach the
nearest shelter still hugged the
harbors.
FLORIDA TO ESCAPE
TROPICAL STORM
Havana, Oct. 21 (P) The Belen
observatory announced today the
present tropical storm was not like
ly to imperil Florida.
The observatory stated: "There Is
no danger to Florida but some dan
ger to the extreme eastern tip of
Cuba.
"The disturbance, which Is one
small diameter, was south of Point
Morant, Jamaica, at 11 a. m., today
and moving northeast.
"Storm warnings have been post
ed from Cape Cruz to Punta Maisl,
Cuba."
the northern front is ready
wide, deep advance into the
There Is no activity on the fron
tier at present, such as fighting or
advancing.
The army Is on the Aksum-Aduwa.
Entlsclo-Adlgrat line from west to
cast. Within the last few days the
area of occupation has been ex
tended out southward from the line
for strategic reasons, giving the
positions of the soldiers greater
strength.
Reconnaissance flights of airplanes
have revealed onlv a few scattered
assemblages of Ethiopian troops In
the Blcutnn-Temblcn-Makale regions
(Concludedba pag. laTeoluma i
Security Bill
Introduced by
Allan Bynon
The first social security bill was
thrown into the senate hopper today
by Senator Allan Bynon, who de
clared he would follow it with an
other soon. Bynon stated, however,
these were his own bills and were
not administration measures.
The first bill, to be known as SB2
will reduce the old age pension qual
ification from 70 years to 65 years.
This is to be followed by one which
would shift the burden of matching
the old age pension fund of the
federal government from the coun
ties to the state.
Under the federal provision iLs
contribution for old age pensions is
to be matched fity percent, of which
the state law requires 25 percent to
be paid by the counties and 25 by
the state. Bynon's bill will provide
(Concluded on pago 3; column 1)
FRESH QUAKES
ROCK HELENA
Helena, Mont., Oct. 21 (P) Win
dows were shattered by a fresh ser
ies of earth shocks which tore today
at the taut nerves of this capital
city of 12,000 persons beset by ten
days of tremors and damage of mil-1
lion dollar proportions.
At 9 a. m. the total number of
tremors since last Friday night had '
reached 264 and the grand total,1
since October 12, was 323.
As reconstruction finance corpor
ation representatives announced
plans for loans for rehabilitation of
damage to property display windows
crashed with recurrent jolts some
of which were of two seconds' du
ration. No casualties and no major
damage was reported.
Additional discomfort was suf
fered by the 400 to 500 refugeei
camped in national guard tents on
the military grounds west of the
city as temperatures dropped
sharply.
The city council hurried plans for
ordering destruction of heavily
damaged structures and control
weakened buildings.
Windows along Jackson adjacent
to the Montana Record-Herald were
broken by a shock at 3:33 a. m.
At 6:22 a. m. came the latest se
vere disturbance with others of
lighter intensity following.
BRAIN TRUSTER
VISITS PORTLAND
Portland, Oct. 21 (" Smiling and
affable Rexford O. Tugwell, under
secretary of agriculture and promi
nent "brain-truster," visited in Port
land today, expressed confidence
President Roosevelt would be re
elected and politely parried questions
as to the continuance of the new
deal policies by asking "did you ever
hear of the supreme court?"
Tugwell arrived yesterday from
San Francisco after a trip to Mexi
co City and said he would leave hers
tomorrow night for southern Cali
fornia. In commenting on a question as
to the permanence of present execu
tive policies, Tugwell in a pre
arranged press conference said:
"There are some things outside the
control of the new deal. Did you
ever hear of the supreme court. . .
We are acting under an executive
emergency order that may be taken
away from us tomorrow. , , No one
can commit congress, you know.
Tugwell said he was making his
present trip merely to establish def
inite and friendly relations with the
11 regional re-settlement offices and
conferred here with Walter A. Duf
fy, regional administrator for Ore
gon, Washington and Idaho. .
In commenting on the new deal
program, Tugwell said farm income
had nearly doubled in recent years,
contended that effort!) of the ad
ministration had gone a long way
toward "eliminating the disparity
between farm and urban buying
power" and declared that the pro
gram for the decentralization of the
re-scttlcmcnt administration had
now been completed with the estab
lishment of the 11 offices.
FLEET WITHDRAWAL
SEEMS PROBABILITY
Rome, Oct. 21 (JPt Joint with
drawal of British battleships from
the Mediterranean and Italian
troops from Libya were envisaged to
day in conversations between Sir
Erie Drummond, British ambassa
dor to Rome, and Fulvio Suvich, It
alian under-secretary for foreign af
fair.
GERMANY OUT
OF LEAGUE, TO
STAYNEUTRAL
Naziland Only Bound to
Terms of Locarno
Policy a Mystery
Gratification Expressed
In Delivery from "Fet
ters of Geneva"
Berlin, Oct. 21 (LP) Germany,
Mystery nation of Europe, ceased
today to be a member of the League
of Nations and became a diplomatic
free agent whose policy no one
knows.
Adolf Hitler, with the nation be
hind him, has ripped the hated Ver
sailles treaty to shreds. Now, with
Germany out of the League which
it always regarded with suspicion,
It is bound only by the Locarno
treaty in which Germany, Great
Britain, France, Belgium and Italy
promised to aid anyone of the five
attacked by another signatory. Hit
ler has affirmed his loyalty to this
treaty.
On a dramatic Saturday at Ge
neva, October 14, 1933, Germany's
delegation left the world disarma
ment conference in anger over al
leged unfairness. Germany was
asked to remain weak yet other na
tions were not keeping their prom
ise to disarm to Its level.
The official resignation , giving
the necessary two years' notice, took
effect at midnight last night ac
cording to the German computa
fConclu"dcdonnbjrgo 3."column 1 )
COURTSPEEDSUP
AAA LAWSUIT
Washington, Oct. 21 (LP) The new
deal's troubles were speeded up in
supreme court today when the tn-
bunal directed the government to
show cause on Armistice day why
Gov. Eugene Talmadge of Georgia,
should not be allowed to test con
stl tut tonality of the Bankhead cot'
ton act.
Talmadge, bitter opponent of tho
administration and a possible pres-
idential candidate, Is expected to
force one of the most Important
court tests of the Roosevelt pro
gram.
Another Important court action
today was a request by attorneys for
Thomas J. Mooney that the court
reconsider its decision of last week
refusing to Intervene at present in
the California habeas corpus pro
ceedings for release of Mooney from
prison.
In connection with the Talmadge
suit, It was pointed out that some
officials fear it might lead to
similar challenge of the Kerr-Smith
Tobacco Act.
Both the Kerr-Smith and the
Bankhead acts are designed to add
teeth to voluntary crop control
agreements initiated by the AAA,
The government also will be
watching closely the suit of Lee
Moore, Texas cotton grower, to test
the constitutionality of the same
law. The Moore case should come
up for argument at about the same
time as the order granted Talmadge
$11 BILLIONS FOR
GRADE CROSSINGS
Washington, Oct. 31 (Ti Presi
dential allotment of $11,512,(197 of
work relief funds for. highway and
grade crossing construction work in
six states was announced today by
the WPA.
Allotment Included B 243 897 for
highways and $3,269,000 for grade
crossings.
Highways allotments Included:
Washington, tl. 042,700.
Simultaneously, Aubrey Williams,
acting relief and works progress
administrator, allotted 188.676,000
to 37 states to continue rehabilita
tion of physically handicapped
needy now receiving vocational
training "pending a final decision
upon this relief phase."
Crania Included:
California. 19.375; Idaho, 800;
Oregon, 11,500; Washington, (1,200.
STORl" SLACKS
Hamburg, Germany, Oct. 21 MV
Arsging storm which crippled ship
ping in the North and Baltic sen;
during the weekend slackened today.
OXMAN'S REPUTE
FOR VERACITY BAD
STATE NEIGHBORS
Mooney Hearing Continued in Portland and
Eastern Oregon Cattlemen Testify; Anoth
er Witness Testifies
Money"
Portland, Ore., Oct. 21 (Testimony that his reputa
tion for truth and veracity was "bad" was given today by
two men who knew the late Frank C. Oxman, principal prose
cution witness against Tom Moonev in the San FrannVn
Preparedness day bombing case. A father and son answered
wun me one wora -oaa, when the.
question of Oxman's reputation was
put to them in a continuation of the
Mooney habeas corpus hearing.
They were Frederick L. Shaw, 71.
Durkee, Ore., cattleman, and Leo
nard A. Shaw, 31, dairyman of that
region. Oxman was for many years
stockraiser in the Durkee district.
George T. Davis of San Francisco,
one of counsel for Mooney, asked
each witness: "What was Oxman's
reputation for truth and veracity?1
Each time, Referee A. E. Shaw of
San Francisco advised the witness
"there is only one answer to make
good or bad." And In both Instan
ces the one word reply was given
"bad."
The testimony of another witness,
James A. Tate, 76, of Durkee, met
(Concluded on page o. column 4"f
NAZI OLYMPIC
GAME ATTACKED
New York, Oct. 21 OP) Reiter
ating his attacks on the nazi re
gime and his opposition to holding
the Olympic games in Germany,
Jeremiah T. Mahoney, national
president of the amateur Athletic
Union, has called on Dr. Theodore
Lewald to resign as president of the
Germany Olympic committee so
that he no longer would be "used
as a screen to conceal his govern
ment's most flagrant violations of
the Olympic ideal of fair play to
all."
Mahoney challenged Dr. Lewald's
authority to make promises that
Germany would not discriminate
against any athletes on the scoie of
race or creed and expressed the
hope "all Americans will join with
me in opposing American partici
pation In the Olympic games and
will aid In having them transferred
to some other country."
"If you are not a hostage of your
government,1 said Mahoney In a
letter to Dr. Lewald made public
last night, "I counsel you, my dear
Mr. Lewald, to formally and public
ly resign your office In the Olympic
committee in respect to those ideals
of sportsmanship to which your
whole life has hitherto been dedi
cated. $6,303,030 FOR
OREGON WPA JOBS
Washington, Oct. 21 WPI The
treasury today released an addition
al (70.852.130 for works progress ad
ministration projects.
Approval of the allotments by
Comptroller General J. R. McCarl
brought to $966,024,489, the total
available to WPA for Immediate ex
penditure, compared with $1,181,
746,151 allotted by President Roose
velt. Funds released for WPA projects,
which are to be chosen by state ad
ministrators. Include:
Oregon, (6,303,030.
Adolphus W. Greely,
Noted Explorer And
Soldier Passes At 91
Washington. Oct. 21 (fP) Major General Adolphus W.
Greely, Arctic explorer and holder of the congressional medal
of honor, is dead at the age of 91. The end came yesterday
after an Illness of two weeks In
Waller Reed hospital. His tena
cious hold in life during that per
iod amazed his physicians, but
Greely always had been known for
his tenacity. With six of his men
he lived for four years in the Arc
tic until a relief expedition rescued
them In 16B4.
On March 27 of this year con
gress voted him the congressional
medal of honor.
Greely is survived by his two sons
and four daughters. He was born
in Newburyport, Mass., In 1844.
Greely led the "farthest north"
expedition of 1881. From that expe
as to Offer of "Blood
AIRWAYS GET
MAIL CONTRACT
Washington, Oct. 21 ("") The Pan
American Airways company was the
only bidder today for the mail con
tract for airmail service from San
Francisco to Canton, China,
The company bid maximum rates
allowed under the law for the route
$2 per mile for the specified load of
800 pounds and $1 per 1000 miles for
each additional pound of mail car
ried. Pan-American officials Indi
cated privately they might be ready
to start service by November 15.
The 8000-mile route will carry mail
and passengers from San Francis
co to China by way of Honolulu and
Manila.
The company is completing Its
fourth survey flight to Guam. Al
though It has not flown over all
parts of the proposed route, airline
officials said they had already made
survey flights over "the hardest part
of the route."
The Pan-American bid was hand
cd to Postmaster-General Farley i
few seconds before a postoffice buzz-
er signaled twelve noon, the hour
for opening the bids.
Juan T. Tripp is president of the
Pan-American.
WPA PROJECTS
BEING HELD UP
Washington, Oct. 21 (LP) The
$4,000,000,000 work-relief program
encountered new difficulty today
when officials abandoned hope of
complying with President Roosc
vclt's order that alt employment
projects be under way or ready for
contractors' bids by tomorrow.
The ruling was made primarily
for Harry L. Hopkins' works prog
ress administration. WPA intends
to make Jobs for 2,250,000 of the
3,500,000 relief roll needy with Its
$1,157,183,490 allocation.
WPA now has 640,427 persons at
work. Hopkins' aides blamed admin
istrative delay In Comptroller-Gen
eral John R. McCarl's office for
their failure to have employment
near the 2,000,000 -mark at the pre;
ent time.
McCarl, they said, had made only
$824,814,140 of their $1,157,188,400
actually available. They pointed our
that, until last week, he had signed
only $500,000,000 in treasury war
rants for their projects.
However, sources close fo the re
publican holdover who holds thi
purse strings to the whole workb
fund said his task had been made
"almost impossible" by WPA's pro
cedure in filing applications.
Hopkins gained Mr. Roosevelt'h
approval of $2,521,672,500 worth cf
projects although he had only about
half that much to spend.
dition of 25 men seven returned,
found by the third of a scries of re
lief expedition after being ma
rooned four years in the Arctic near
latitude 83 decrees, 24 minutes
and then "farthest north.'' Their
Polar ship had been crushed In the
ice.
Overlapping Grcely's activity as
an explorer was an army career
that saw him wounded In the Civil
war and carried him through to the
closing campaigns against western
Indians In 1007.
As an officer of the signal corps,
(Concluded on pam 10, eolumn 0)
LEGISLATURE'S
ORGANIZATION
BEING HELD UP
Credentials Committees
Wrangle over Contests
For Vacated Seats
Reports Expected to Pre
cipitate Long and
Heated Debates
After the senate and house had
assembled in a Joint Informal ses
sion and the galleries were filled
with spectators to hear the gover
nor's address, an attorney general's
opinion halted what would hava
been an unprecedented procedure.
The governor's address was to
have been given unolficially before
the house complcteo organization,
but Attorney General T. H. Van Win
kle ruled that the assembly was not
official until both houses had or
ganized and that therefore the governor-could
not officially give hit
address.
The message will be delayed until
the house of representatives organ
izes. The contest over two seats In
the lower house will probably delay
the organization until far Into the
afternoon. It could not be stated
when the legislature aould be ready
to hear the governor's message.
The Joint meeting was of neces
sity informal, as under the law the
legislature Is not official until both
houses have completed organization.
In past years the governor's ad
dress was usually given early in the
afternoon, but there have been
times his speech was delayed one
day or longer. But never had he
addressed an informal gathering for
the purpose of presenting his mess
age. Legislative leaders, headed by
Concluded on pnge 8, column a
ROOSEVELT SHIP
IN STORM PATH
Jacksonville, Fla., Oct. 21 W)
A tropical storm roared through
the western Caribbean sea today
leaving considerable damage to crops
and communications in Jamaica.
The center of the storm was be
lieved to be passing to the eastward
of Kingston, Jamaican capital, and
heading toward eastern Cuba and
the Island of Haiti.
Far ahead of the slowly moving
storm center sped the cruiser Hous
ton bearing home President Roose
velt from his voyage to southern
waters. The vessel was In deaf
weather today.
The morning storm advisory plae
ed the center south of Kingston,
capital of the British island of Ja
maica, moving north -northeastward,
but lator advices indicated to the
bureau the storm may be moving
more to the northeast.
If the latter course is true the dis
turbance would hit somewhere in
Haiti or Santo Domingo. The center
was said to be progressing rather
slowly. The usual rate of movement
is from 8 to 12 miles an hour.
FBAZIER-LEMKEAGT
DECLARED ILLEGAL
Peoria, III., Oct. 21 (P) The
amended Frazier-Lcmke farm debt
relief law was held unconstitutional
today by Judges Charles P. Brigglr.
and J. Earl Major of the United
States district court.
The ruling was given on pdition
of William W. Young, Fulton county
farmer, who sought to come Into
court under the amended law, pass
ed by congress after the Unitcj
States supreme court held the ord
inal measure unconstitutional.
THIRD PARALYSIS
DEATH IN KENO
Klamath Falls, Ore.. Oct. 21 (An
nie third Infantile onralysls death
within the last ten days was report
cd to the county heal'h office today.
The victim was Noil Gtfford, 12,
of Keno. where an epidemic of the
dread disease Is raging The child
died Sunday morning.
Schools at Keno aim nearby Wy
erhacuser camp hava been shut In
definitely. .