CI apitaJJUoiimail
Nearing the End'
Weather
Fair tonight and Thursday, local
mommj fogt, slightly warmer Thurs
day. Gentle northwest wind.
Yesterday: Max. 61, min. 3S. Rain
0. River -4.1 ft. Partly eloudy, south
west wind.
Only t few daya la ft to take ad-
vantage of the Capital Journal's
Bargain offer to mail subscriber in
Central Willamette Valley.
AQU, VU A R M Bntered a. aeoond cleie
SALEM, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1936
2
PRICE THREE CENTS
matter at Salem, Oregon
iitmn o I" n
wmm
NEW ENGLAND
APPEALED TO
BY ROOSEVELT
t? President Tells Provi
dence People More Im
portant Than Machines
Material Resources
Should Serve Human
Interests of America
Boston. Oct. 21 (LP) Speaking on
historic Boston common today. Pres
ident Roosevelt declared that "in a
world which in many places has
tone undemocratic, we have gone
more democratic" and that this "is
a bad sign for those who believe that
the American people can be swept off
their feet by rabble -rousers this
year.
"The American mind today Is
above the rabble level," he said. "Two
wteks from today, the day after elec
tion, the American air will be cleaner
and American democracy will be
safer.
Mr. Roosevelt, making his first
campaign thrust into New England,
which Landon supporters have re
garded as certain territory, motored
here after making brief talks in Pro
(Concluded on page 7, column 1)
CONQUEST WILL
GET GERMAN OK
Berlin. Oct. 21 (LW An Italian of
ficial spokesman said today that
Germany was "most likely to be
come the first nation to recognize
Rome's conquest of Ethiopia. He
intimated Germany might receive
economic favors in Ethiopia.
Foreign Minister Gaelezzo Ciano
f Italy and Foreign Minister Kon
atantin von Neurath of Germany
began their widely-heralded diplo
matic conversations today. The
were expected, in addition to dis
cussing the Ethiopian question, to
plan an aggressive campaign against
the spread of communism In Eu
rope. Both are alarmed by Soviet
Russia's threat to aid the Spanish
loyalists.
The Italian spokesman appeared
convinced Germany would recog-
ni Ethiopia. His hint about eco
nomic concessions to Germany was
vajnie He said it was jumping to
, conclusions to say ny country
would receive special favors in Eth
iopia, but did not preclude the pos
sibility the Reich might profit from
taking the lead among nations in
approving Italy's conquest.
CIANO PROMOTED
TO GENERAL'S RANK
om, Oct. 21 Wi Count Galea
o Ciano. Premier Mussolini's son-
in-law. was promoted to the rank of
general in the fascist militia on the
eve of his departure for Berlin on a
diplomatic mission.
Newa of the elevation of Italy's
foreign minister leaked out when
photographs showing Clano's arrival
in the German capital reached here
today, disclosing him In the uniform
of a fascist general, with a cold eagle
on his military cap and gold epau
lettes on his shoulders.
AMY MOLLISON
CRASHES IN ENGLAND
Orpington. England. Oct. 21 (IP)
Mrs. Amy Mollison, famous British
flier, crashed and was slightly in
lured near here today while cn
route from Paris to London.
She landed In a field where hornet
were being built. Her plane caugni
In a rut and turned over on its back
Mrs. Mollison was bruised and shak
en but not seriously hurt.
She was taken to a doctor's hou.se
by truck and given first aid. altei
which she continued to Croydon
field, outside London, by automo
bile CLIPPER AT WAKE
Wake Island. Oct. 21 U The
China Clipper, carrying Miss Doro
thy Kilsallen and Leo Kieran on
their la.,t over-?ter Irg of a round-she-world
flight, and a group of
press association corespondent, ar
rived here today at I 31 p. m. 12 36
s. m, PST.)
Good Evening!
Sips for Supper
By DON UPJOHN
Up-to-date we have heard of no
special casualties among farmers
caused by pheasant hunters. Which
shows a decadent spirit in the pres
ent hunting generation for if a
pheasant hunter can't hit a farmer
how in heck does he ever expect to
get his sights down to hitting a
pheasant? Deer hunters seem feo
have a much better aim. for while a
lot of them can't hit the broad side
of a deer they're generally able to
spot a man through 500 yards of
brush and bring him down unerr
ingly.
Objections to compulsory military
training at the higher educational
institutions are like most such ob
jections, they kick about something
but leave nothing to take its place
when it is wiped out. Students
should have some sort of compuls
ory activity to keep discipline If
nothing else. We'd have been glad
to come forward with hearty sup
port for the non-compulsory mili
tary training bill, if a si&ter or
brother bill had been placed on the
ballot making it compulsory for the
students to spend an hour or two
a day splitting and stacking the
higher educational woodpiles. If
this had been put on as a rider to
the non-compulsory bill there would
have arisen a great surge of patri
otic demand among students in par
ticular to keep the military training
and let the woodpile go the chips
falling as they might.
Some compulsory floor scrubbing
and dish washing among the female
students also might tend to broaden
their educational vision when they
step out of tne cap and gown into
the tram and veil.
We'd like to see a eity ordinance
passed here requiring compulsory
attendance on part of Salem business
men at the weekly morning sessions
of the Salem Breakfast club. If It
did not more than introduce some
of the business men to the sharp
tang of our early morning but late
October fogs It would serve a good
purpose. We hope at least the six
who attended the session last Fri
day will turn out this coming Fri
day to greet Harry Lever from Lin-
field and give him the glad hand.
Harry, you observe, is the coach who
says his boys will pass over, under
and around the Bearcats and when
they get tired of doing that will
trot around their ends. It would
be well to turn out Friday morning
to give Mr. Lever the once over
while he's still smiling, happy and
cocky, instead of observing him aft'
er the game Friday night.
The Eugene Register-Guard !
bels the race for coroner in that
county as the "undertakers' derby"
which is a well chosen and fitting
appelatlon quite applicable to some
other counties we could name.
Football guessing pools an now
abroad in every office and every
incomer la Invited to participate In
same to the extent of from a dime
to a dollar, according to his own
credulity as to his prowe&s as
football score guesser. Such pools
might be branded illegal under the
fortune telling law which forbids
telling the future for a profit. Most
guesses are about as accurate as
fortunes told by professional for
tune tellers.
"Money is of no value aside from
the value of the material It is made
of." says Rufe Harris in his latest
magazine to save the world. But
most folks are suie how. for the
material.
Reorganization Plans
Of Spaulding Company
Have Court Approval
The amended plan for reorganization of the Charles K.
Spaulding Logging company
court under an order by Jam
ed yesterday and full resumption
of plant operations is presaged in
this long awaited court order.
Under the amended plan the De
troit Trust company of Detroit
Mich., is appointed depositary to
handle the first mortgage per
cent bonds dated October 1. 192S of
which 850.000 were Issued and
1155.00(1 were retired, leaving 1695.
000 unpaid. The bonds fell due Oc
tober 1. 1935 These were original
ly secured t a first mortgage detd
of trust to the Detroit Trust com
pany covering timberlandi in Polk
and Benton counties, loggint roadi
and spun, logging and railroad.
LANDON FEARS
OVERTHROW OF
BILL OF RIGHTS
Candidate Says Defeat of
Roosevelt Necessary
To Preserve Liberty
Greeted by Great Crowd
At Los Angeles and
Starts for Home
Aboard Landon special m route
to Phoenix, Ariz., Oct. 21 P Gov.
Alf M. Landon turned his presiden
tial campaign eastward across the
continent today after an address
asserting the new deal threatened
to destroy the bill of rights and a
statement that the administration
was "throwing the ball around wild
ly attempting to score."
"If we are to preserve our
American form of government, this
administration must be defeated,
the republican nominee told a
cheering throng that Police Cap
tain H. C. Brawster estimated at
75,000 in the huge Los Angeles coli
seum last night.
In a 40-minute radio speech, the
longest of his campaign thus far,
Landon said "planned society, which
is the alternative to representative
government, " has destroyed
freedom of speech, freedom of the
press, freedom of religion."
Landon criticized "abuse of the
(Concluded on page 7, column g)
PEACE MOVE
FOR P-l FAILS
Washington. D. C, Oct. 21 (IP)
Attempts by the American Federa
tion of Labor to negotiate settlement
ol the American Newspaper Guild's
strike against the Seattle Post-In
telligencer have collapsed. John P.
Prey, head of the metal trades de
partment of the A. F. of L., who
acted as chairman of mediation
conferences, said no agreement
could be reached.
Representatives of the Guild is
sued a statement saying the dispute
had not been settled. Conferences
have been held for more than a week
under Prey s supervision between
representatives of William Randolph
Hearst, owner of the paper, the
Guild, and the Seattle central labor
council, which placed the newspaper
upon its unfair labor list.
DWELLINGS REPLACE
TENTS AT BANDON
Bandon. Ore., OoL 21 IPI Plans
for the Immediate construction oi
30 light dwellings, replacing a tent
colony, were announced today by J
W. Richardson, director oi disaster
relief here for the American Rea
Cross.
Plans call for the dwellings to be
ready for occupation within three
weeks' time. Richard Oordonl, field
director from Fort Lewis, Wash., Is
now making drawings and plana for
the work.
The temporary Red Cross budget
allows from $10,000 to H1S.0O0 for
the program. Floors of the tent arc
now In the emcrcency colony will
be used for the buildings, with pos'
sibly the addition of kitchen room.
has been approved in federal
Alger ree, district judge, dat
equipment and the sawmill plants
at Newberg and Balem.
Based on estimated stumpagr
some 110.000.000 feet of timber has
been cut leaving 73S.0O0000 feet
still under the mortgage. The
company also owns numerous prop.
erties In addition . to those listed
above. Unpaid taxes of about 1127,
000 also constitute an unpaid Hen
against the mortgaged and unmort
gaged properties. The companv al'o
owed 200000 on unsecured demand
notes held by United States Na
tional bank of Portland and Ladd &
(Concluded oa page 4. aoluma U
Remove Nail
From Lung of
Oregon Child
Philadelphia, Oct. 21 (LP) Ameri
can College of Surgeons delegates
watched the removal ol a two-inch
nail from the lung of a boy in Tem
ple university hospital's broncho
scopic clinic today.
The boy, Benjamin Mouchette, J,
of (Hendale, Ore., had been brought
here by airplane for the operation.
It was the first time most of the
surgeons, in convention here, had
witnessed an operation of a bron
choscope in conjunction with a bi
plane fluoroscope.
Dr. Chevalier Jackson, in charge
of the clinic, pushed the small tube
(Concluded on page 10. column 6)
$2 MILLION FIRE
AT SAN DIEGO
San Diego, Calif., Oct. 1 (& A
spectacular skyline fire, sweeping
through a downtown business block
with damage unofficially estimated
at $2,000,000. was brought under
control today.
Thousands of persons watched
200 firemen and volunteers win a
slow battle against the flames,
which broke out shortly after mid
night in the Whitney department
store and leaned to the full height
of the 11-story Watts office building
in the same block.
Street car and utility service was
cut off in the area as firemen mop
ped up the blaze.
Two men were critically injured.
A fireman, Eddie Baum, suffered a
possible skull fracture when the
nozzle of a high-pressure hose broke.
V. SKczepanski, 21, seaman attached
to the destroyer Dale sustained"
head injury that naval hospital at
taches said would claim his life, when
he fell through the poof of the
burning National Dollar store while
handling another fire hose.
The three-story Whitney store
was completely gutted bv the flames.
only the blackened walls remained
standing. The National Dollar store
likewise was a total loss.
Guilford Whitney, president and
owner of Whitney's estimated his
concern's lose at $1,500,000 Including
$750,000 stock. He said this was
covered by insurance.
EGG BARRAGE
HALTS BROWDER
Terre Haute, Ind., Oct. 21 (VP,
Driven to cover in his hotel by a
belligerent crowd's rotten egg and
tomato barrage, Earl Browder. com
munist candidate for president, con
sidered in silence today any possi
ble future plans for delisting his.
twice-thwarted campaign address
in this city.
He was prevented from entering
radio station WBOW where he was
scheduled to speak last night and ai
least three persons were injured in
fist fights as a crowd ol several
hundred persons, surrounding the
studio building, forced him to re'
treat in his taxicab, with rut speech
undelivered.
Browder had just stepped from
the cab and moved toward the
building when the crowd closed in
on him. He faced them for a mo-
ment as eggs and tomatoes thrown
at close range splattered over his
clothing. Then he withdrew to the
cab and returned to his hotel.
Browder said later a protest would
be sent to President Roosevelt. He
naid the affair was "a good thing
for the civil rights of the people
of Terre Haute and a bad thing for
the so-called law and order league.
Browder lost a court decision to
day when Judse Albert Owens de
nied his petition for an injunction
tr retrain loral authorities from
interference with his speaking en
gagement here.
The injunction petition was filed
last week but action on It did not
come until several hours after the
time Browder had planned to broad
cast his appeal for votes.
SENATOR COUZENS
REPORTED BETTER
Detroit. Oct. 21 (LP) Senator
James Couzens was reported "a lit
tle better today" by his personal
physician who is treating him for
a complication of ailment.
His condition was sufficiently
Improved to allow Mrs. Conens and
other members of the faimlr to
pnt the nteht at home.
Coining rallied late yesterday af
ter suffering a relapse described a
flnous. This morning. Dr. Hugo
Freud said, the senator had nearly
, recovered from a irimtl condition.
PROPOSED ON
WATERFRONT
Extension Present Con
tract and Agreements
Proposed by Hamlet
Employes and Employers
Appealed to and Fav
orable to Plan
San Francisco, Oct. 21 MP) A
year's extension oi present working
contracts and agreements between
maritime groups and employers ap
peared likely today as Rear Admiral
Harry O. Hamlet conferred with
representatives of both factions in
efforts to settle labor disagree
ments. Associates of Admiral Hamlet,
member of the maritime commis
sion, said he had appealed to em
ployers and employes to extend the
contracts and continue negotiations.
A spokesman said the employers
nere favorable to an indefinite ex
tension and the longshoremen al
ready have expressed their willing
ness to continue under the 1934
award.
Admiral Hamlet, associates said
appeared to favor wage increases
for seamen but not union control
of the hiring halls from which
workers are sent to jobs.
The employers, through T. O.
Plant, chairman of the coast com
mittee, previously refuted the re
quest 4or increased wawea and pro-
(Concluded on pge 9. column 8)
ANARCHY RULES
SPANISH TOWNS
Paris, Oct. 21 Tales of spread
ining anarchy, borne by refuges
streaming into France from Spain,
today spurred secret conversations
between Premier Leon Blum and the
Argentine foreign minister. Carlos
Saavedra Lamas, on the possibility
of evacuating the refugees by air.
With report indicating the last
days of the socialist Madrid regime
may be at hand, Saavedra Lamas,
whose country has been influential
in freeing Spanish political hostages,
conferred repeatedly with tht French
premier.
Officials maintained a careful si
lence concerning the conversations,
but authoritative sources indicated
the chances of brincing endangered
persons into France by airplane were
discussed.
It recently was announced the air
line, "Air France," has re-established
direct contact with Madrid, but since
the use of it planes to rescue per
sons in official positions might ln
volve delicate political repercussions,
it was believed any proposal for such
action would require the most careful
study.
Refugees were pouring into France
in large numbers through Catalonia,
ont of the last avenues of escape for
government supporters from the fas
cist encirclement of Madrid.
WARMER WEATHER
DUEMJHURSDAY
Portland. Oct. 21 OP) The temp
erature skidded downward today,
just as it did a year aso today when
the unseasonable October free?
brought Portland its earliest snowfall
in history.
Here the official minimum was re
corded at 43 dearees but at hmh le
vels It was several degrees lower
Bend had a minimum of 26 drgref;
as did Wolf Creek in southern Ore
gon. Salem Just missed a freeze witii
a low of 33 degrees.
Another night of frosts in aextcrn
valleys and freezing tempTaturcs
eat of the Cascades was forecast
Somewhat warmer weather was fore
cast for tomorrow. The fire hazard
situation was not bad with humidity
generally high, although the weather
forecasters believed it would be
slhrhtly lower tomorrow.
Portland minimum October 21,
1935, was also 43 degrees, but on Oc
tober 30 and 31 the minimum was 2t
and the maximum only 37 and 35
respectively.
MRS. RAYWARD Hl'RT
Eugene. Ore., Oct. 21 Mra.
H. Hayward, wife of the University
of Oreona veteran track coach and
football team trainer, received ser
ious injuries yesterday whn knocked
down by an automobile.
GIFTS OF EDWARD
TO WALL1E INCLUDE
$125,000 NECKLACE
Big Black Sedan Also
Mrs. Simpson Not Visitor to Buckingham;
King Back at Sandringham; Cumberland
Terrace Patrolled as Property of Crown
London, Oct. 21 U.R King Edward ha given Mrs. Wal
li Simpson a $125,000 emerald necklace, it
day. There have been other gifts, but it was understood
that they have not nearly reached thp total nf si nnn nnn
ascribed to them by some reports. One gift was believed to
have been a big black sedan. The .
King ordered two and only one was
delivered to him. Mrs. Simpson
has been seen many time in an
identical car.
It was established today that
Mrs. Simpson has not been a visitor
to Buckingham palace since the
king moved there.
Speculation started today wheth
er Mrs Simpson will attend the
state opening o( parliament Novem
ber 3, when the king will read the
usual speech from the throne of
the house of lords. She could at
tend in the distinguished strangers'
gallery. As for the coronation next
May, she could view it In the gal
lery reserved for members "of the
(Concluded on page 11. column 7)
INSURGENTS TO
BE REORGANIZED
Rome. Oct. 21 (P) Italy and Ger
many will recognize the insurgent
government of Spain almost imme
diately after the fascist armies oc
cupy Madrid, well-informed sources
declared today.
Agreement on policy was said to
be one of four important issues on
which tht nations reached accord
after foreign Minister Count Gai-
eazzo Cianos first conversation
with Baron Konstanlin von Neu
rath, Germany's foreign minister,
in Berlin.
The other three were reported as
to their stands on the League ol Na
tions, the Locarno treaty and cen
tral Europe.
Authoritative sources said Ger
many had agreed not to return to
Geneva until the League oi Nations
was reorganized on lines of the Ital
ian plan for a directorate of the
great powers, and until Article 16 ol
the league covenant, on sanctions
was stricken.
Germany and Italy, the report
said, want a new Locarno treaty
based on the old pact and both re
ject the British idea of splitting it
into two treaties one for northern
Europe and one for the south.
Rome and Berlin were reported
to have agreed to divide the Dnu
bian region into zones of commer
cial Influence.
NOME ISOLATED BY
ICE UNTIL JUNE
Nome. Ala.ska, Oct. 21 IP Except
for airplane travel and communica
tion by radio, Nome was isolated to
day from the rest of the world until
next June
The 8.S. Victoria, last commercial
vessel of the season, was already at
.sea with a capacity passenger list
and some gold and bullion. The Alas
ka Line- ship sailed Tuesday alter
noon. Ice will soon fill the harbor
and shipping will be Impossible.
Winter will bring the social seas
on to the metropolis of the Seward
peninsula, (or outside work will be
virtually Impossible.
Landon and
Exchange
Charges of Socialism
Washington, Oct. 21 (IP) An exrhmipe of campaiRn
blows, in which Secretary Ickcs called Governor Landon a
former "state socialist" and the Kansas governor replied that
the new deal was "like a losine team
throwing the bull around wildly at-
tempting to score," IntenMlied the
presidential battling today.
Questioning Landon's "sincerity."
the interior secretary declared in a
radio sddrctsN last night that in
1934 and 1935 Landon w a state
socialist advocating state owned
telephones and natural gas distribu
tion Ay stems but that recently he
became a "rugged individualist"
over night.
Landon came bark with a state
ment that new dealers had been
charging he was a "pupuet ot
busineM" but now sa ht is a so
Presented, Says Rumor;
HULL ISSUES
LANDON REPLY
Washington, Oct. 31 (Pi Defend
ing the reciprocal trade agreements
made with foreign nations, Secretary
of State Hull said in & statement
published today that Governor Alf
M. Landon "would have the farmer
shut his eyes" to vast Improvement
in his welfare and base his vote on
"wild misrepresentations."
Hull replied to the republican can
didate's recent speech in New Mexi
co after he had conferred yesterday
with President Roosevelt. He said the
governor "hopelessly misstates, con
fuses and Jumbles the entire question
pertaining to reciprocal trade poli
cies and peace."
"The simple story of the courst of
American agriculture is that during
the administration prior to 1933 pric
es of such staple commodities as
wheat, corn, hogs, dairy products,
oats, rye slumped to the lowest level
within living memory; that farm in
come fell almost vertically; and
that farm vaJuts suffered a similar
decline.
"In striking contrast, the cash in
come ol the American farmer was,
in 1935, more than $2,000,000,000 hi
gher than the depression level of
1932, while the prices of wheat, corn,
hog products, dairy products, oats
and most other farm commodities
doubled or trebled. In 1936, with the
trade agreements in operation, farm
income is increasing still further at
the annual rate ol about $1,000,000,-000-
On all of this Governor Landon
is as silent as the grave."
oregInsaTs
for atlantic
Portland, Oct. 21 (Pi The steam
er Oregon, with a full cargo of
grain for the Atlantic coast, sailed
out of Portland harbor late last
night after a week's delay because
ol a labor dispute.
The Sailors' Union of the Pacl
lic. withdrawing a previous decision
and accepting the judgment of fed
eral investigators that the Oregon
was both sanitary and seaworthy,
supplied a full crew.
Sailing was held up last week
when six men refused to sign, de
manding ch rinses In the living quar
tern and asking transportation back
to Portland if the vessel was tied
up on the eastern coast.
George B. Milnor, Portland rep-n-MMHHllve
of the Bulk Carriers
corporation, Maid the owners had
agreed to make whHtnver changes
were possible without putting the
ship into drydock. Further changan
wore promised at the next, regular
dryriorking. he said
Milnor Mated that no concessions
had been made on Hie transporta
tion request.
Ickcs
Thrusts on
cialist and the enemy of big busi
neM " Lnndon declared this wa.
"typical of the confuMon " of thr
Roosevelt, administration.
On Frb. 7. 1935, Irkes said. Lan
don wrote to him simsesting loan
to atates for "public state-wide tele
phone systems." He added that lf
December. 1934, that William Allen
While, Kansas editor, was sent to
Wavninaton wttn a Landon propos
al for the construction of a neutral
pas pipe line as a state enterprise.
"Enjoining greet wrecV because
the governor o( Kansas did not
want bis cot'eipiies u t'ie oil
tConcluded on p 4. column
REBELS LAUNCH
FINAL DRIVE TO
TAKECAPITAL
Artillery Bombardment
Followed by Charge of
Cavalry
Britain, France and Latin
America Move to Res
cue Non-Combatants
Lisbon, Portugal, Oct. 21 (A) A
terrific battle has been raging on
all fronts around Madrid since day
light, dispatches to Diario Lisboa
said tonight,
Fascist artillery before the Span
ish capital opened a violent bom
bardment of government lines
south, southwest, west and north
west of Madrid.
At high noon, cavalrymen on 41
fronts began a charging advance.
Navalcarnero, 18 miles from Mad
rid on the Maqueda highway to the
southwest, was encircled.
The town itself was resisting des
perately. A vast number of Insurgent air
planes filled the skies, cooperating
in the ground advance and giving
government aircraft no chance
aid the hard-pressed militia.
A government captive balloon,
breaking adrift over insurgent lines,
Hiconcluded on page t. column Si
BECKER JAILED
AS RACKETEER
San Francisco, Oct. 21 U George
Becker, who was involved tn Chi
cago's famous (350,000 Dearborn
station robbery in 1921 and who has
made a luxurious living since then
playing a confidence game, will be
brought here from Los Angeles for
arraignment, postal authorities said
today.
Becker, who is char&ed with work
ing his mail fraud scheme in Los
Angeles, Beverly Hills, Seattle, Reno
and the San Francisco bay region,
was arrested at a party In Holly
wood by postofflce inspectors C. B.
Lowe and E- D. Chance.
Postofflce Inspector W. E. Ma
deira of San Francisco said Becker,
also known as Hecker and Brad
ford, has collected $90,000 through
his alleged rackets In the past three
years.
Madeira said Becker's racket was
to pose as a "consulting busincu
engineer, organizer and financial
director," olter to promote a busi
ness and obtHin financial backing
for fees of $100 to 1150 a week, col
lect it in advance and vanish.
ROOSEVELT AND
M'NARY FAVORED
Portland, Oct. Jl VP The Port
land central labor council threw its
mi p port today lor the November
election behind President Roosevelt
and Senalor Charles McNary.
Announcing a slate of Candida to
whom it would support, the council
also named state Treasurer Rufti
C. Holman but declined to designate
candidates seekmg the congrcwon
al seat in the third district or attorney-general.
The council also de
cided to withhold comment on the
eight state measures on the ballot,
taying it did not want to interfere
with the legislative program of the
late Federation of Labor.
A motion which would have or
dered council officers to participate
in a Roosevelt-Garner parade here
Saturday was voted down the coun
cil saying that such participation
should be voluntary.
BOARD OF CONTROL
TO INSPECT BANOON
Menibcra of the atate board of
control, ktate budjet director and
purchasing aaent, will visit the fire
swept city of Bandon next Tues
day, Oct. 27. to make an official in
snection and meet with city offlcialf
there.
The decuion to acquaint thorn
wives with conditiona on the around
waa made at a board meeting tndav
alter receiving tnvitattona from
Mavor Ed Capps and other leaden
to vwt.
Governor Martin aaie) tha parijr
expected to arrive at Bandon about
two o'clock TuatdaT afternoon and
would leave thai vtninf.