apiiBlJMbiDiraal
Comics
Ita I tact, then art mora real
hearty laughs to square Inch to
the "Henry" strip th,n to ,ny
other comic. Bead It dally along
with others on the feature page of
tha Capital Journal
Weather
Fair tonight and Sunday but clou
dy on coast. Moderate changeable
wind. Friday: Max. 83.2. mln. 48.
Rain 0, River -33 IL Northwest wind.
Clear.
49th YEAR, No. 199 ZZS
SALEM, OREGON, SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1937
Two Sections 18 pages PRICE THREE CENTS aSS-? cEI.
WAR AND FIRE
LAY WASTE TO
CHINESE CITY
Eleven Square Miles of
World's Sixth Largest
Port Destroyed
Naval Board Inquires Into
Killing of American
Seaman
r iCoprrtiht, 191T. by United Presi)
Shanghai, Sunday, Aug. 22 (U.R)
Japanese lines on the Whangpoo
river were severed by desperate
Chinese assault for the first time
early today.
Nipponese strategists responded
instantly with a concerted attack by
air, water and land.
Every Japanese warship except a
gunboat anchored off the Bund
and a destroyer off Hunt's wharf,
hastily cleared for action and
steamed down the Whangpoo, guns
blazing against Chinese shore for
ces. Shanghai, Aug. 21 (P War and
fire continued to lay waste In
Shanghai today, with foreign police
estimates that about 11 square miles
(Concluded en page 14, column 1)
LUMBER PLANT
LOSS $250,000
Glendale, Ore., Aug. 21 m Weary
firemen still fought this morning to
keep in check flames which last
night raged through the Ingham
Lumber company plant here, caus
ing damage roughly estimated at
$290,000. The flames, which cast a
glare visible for more than 30 miles,
swept through five dry kilns, de
stroyed the large planing mil! and
consumed more than four million
feet of lumber.
Hundreds of men, ''engaged in
fighting the blaze shortly after its
discovery at 7:10 o'clock last night,
drove the fire back from the main
portion of the mill and saved that
1300.000 plant. The fire fighters were
aided by the wind, which was blow
ing away from the mill proper.
Lacking equipment sufficient for
the needs, men engaged in combat
ting the blaze stomped out live em
bers with their feet and tore away
burning material with their hands
as they worked on the mill roof and
(Concluded on pane 11, column 7)
RED NAPOLEON MAY
MOVE ON MONGOLIA
Tokyo, Aug. 31 W) Dome! (Jap
anese) News Agency reported from
Korea today that Michael Slavutsky,
new Soviet ambassador to Japan,
was "Inclined to believe" reports that
Marshal Bluecher, "Red Napoleon"
of Russia, was on his way to Mon
golia. Bluecher commands an estimated
400,000 men in eastern Siberia.
The new ambassador, en route
here by way of Korea, was reported
as refusing to comment on the Slno
Japanese struggle other than to say
that both Japan and Russia should
"reflect deeply" on their present re
Young Nurse Slain in
Brutal Crime Series
That Baffles Police
Chicago, Aug. 21 (IP) Miss Anna Kuchta, 18, a student
nurse at the Chicago hospital, on the south side, was raped
and slain. Police Captain John B. Prendergast said, by a man
who crushed her skull with a brick
early today.
Detectives said the slaying was
similar to those of other women tn
Chicago In the last two years.
The partly clad, bruised and
bloody body of the attractive and
brilliant atudent lay on the floor
near her bed. At her side was her
crumpled uniform.
Three other women have been
slain by the same brutal methods tn
the last two years. Two killings have
been solved, one negro rapist died
in the electric chair and another
was sent to prison for M years. Two
women have been assaulted by a
Good Evening!
Sips for Supper
By DON UPJOHN
The whole town was electrified at
news that Leo "Frisco" Edwards had
been granted a leave of absence for
a week as public enemy No. 1 um
pire in the Western International
league to come back to the old home
town next week and act as head
officiator at the state Softball tour
nament. For customer interest this
will be equivalent to putting a third
Salem team into the contest while
incidentally it is expected to ac
celerate sale of pop bottles by at
least 50 per cent. But, no foolin'
the return of Leo to the scene of
his former umpiring triumphs will
mean the big ovation of trje year.
But we hope that Frisco in liv
ing around hotels as- a big league
umpire didn't leave his room un
locked a la Warren Jones and let
somebody sneak in and steal his
false teeth. Toothless umplrln' may
be all right during the regular sea
son but it's not up to snuff for a
state tourney.
It seems that in this Chinese
Japanese war airplanes always zoom
and Chinese always move in hordes,
according to headlines.
Portland police have intercepted a
shipment of tear gas bombs said
to have been billed to a Chinese at
Brooks. Maybe getting ready for the
onion harvest on Labish.
Steady customers will remember
the Little Lady from Nebraska who
wrote us such thrilling notes a coupla
years ago and then went home leav.
tag us stranded. Well, who should
pop up here last evening but the
same little lady on her honeymoon,
accompanied by a big, tall and
brawny cornhusker which precludes
our column from resuming Its flir
tatious air toward said little visi
tor.. ... - -, '
Progress In person and not a mo
tion picture will parade In Salem
tomorrow with those seeing the
show elsewhere saying it's one you
can't afford to miss especially at
the price which is nothing at all.
A Chinese or Japanese shell
landed on an American naval ves
sel, killed an officer and wounded 18
men. And this makes Interesting
rumination again as to whether this
very shell might not have been
concocted from some of the Junk
sold from Salem back yards last
summer. But then, the Junk was
bringing high prices at it was being
bought for the very purpose it
brought about to kill and maim
folks, whether Americans or other,
wise.
From Russell D. Davenport. 1785
N. Capital, comes an answer to our
challenge for somebody to trot out
a ball park for use of Biddy Bishop
and his team next year. He says
he's got the best site in the city for
a ball park and while not in a post'
tion to make a downright gift will
practically give it away for the pur
pose mentioned. He says he'll be
glad to show It to anyone interested
and so anyone with the interest and
wherewithal to develop a ball park
for Biddy can call on Mr. Daven
port and be shown. Let's hope the
right parties get together.
Ten Acres of Wheat
Destroyed by Fire
Sllverton, Ore, Aug. 21 Ten acres
of wheat in the shock were burned
at noon today on the Henry Leichty
place in the Central Howell district.
As there was no fire in the vicinity,
It is supposed the blaze was started
by a cigarette. The Sllverton volun
teer fire department spent the noon
hour in preventing further spread
of the fire.
negro armed with a brick in their
hotel rooms here in the last two
weeks, and police believed him to
be the nurse's slayer.
The killer, police said, fled
through a fire escape window when
Miss Florence Palmo f ki. it, an
other nurse, opened the door of the
room to call Miss Kuchta after
rest period.
Miss Palmowskl found the body
on the floor near a cot. It was clad
only with stockings and white shoes.
Detectives said the killer had
stuffed part of a pillow down the
(Concluded en page 12, column )
THOUSANDS IN
MANILA SEEK
AIDJNPARKS
Collapse of Church Roof
Occurs Just After
Worshippers Leave
Damage from Earth
quake Reaches Inter
ior Points of Island
Manila, Aug. 21 m War in China
and earthquakes here made Manila
a city of refugees today as authorities
cleared away the debris of nature's
destruction and prepared for more
unfortunates from b a 1 1 1 e-torn
Shanghai.
Thousands of Manila's nearly 400,
000 residents took temporary sta
tions in parks, where they spent last
night after two severe earthquakes
rocked the city, toppled masonry,
cracked buildings and plunged the
metropolis into darkness.
For 376 American refugees who
had just arrived from Shanghai, the
quakes, 24 minutes apart late last
night, were an added terror to the
shot and shell through wnlch they
fled.
A vista of widespread damage was
revealed with daylight, although
there were no official estimates of the
amount of damage. There were no
fatalities reported from quake In
juries. Reports from outlying provinces
(Concluded on page 14, column S)
BUDGEBEATS
ROBERTRIGGS
Newport, R. I., Aug. 21 (U.B Don
Budge of Oakland, Calif., top tennis
amateur of the world, defeated Rob.
ert L. Rlggs of Los Angeles, 8-4, 6-8,
8-1, 6-2, in the finals of the 57th
annual Newport Casino mens sin
gles tennis tournament today.
For two sets, Rlggs forced Budge to
play to the limit of the game. He
matched his court coverage and
steadiness with Budge'a deep drives
and blazing overheads. At 2-all.
three games, breaking Rlggs' service
Budge lashed out to win the next
twice along the way. Rlggs came
back to smash through Budges ser
vice at love, and take a tive-tlmes
deuced ninth game to come up to
5-3. Budge then took a love service
for the set.
Riggs played the set of his entire
tournament season in the second,
Down 3-1, he fought up to 3-all. A-
gain Budge went out Into what
seemed a commanding lead, 5-3. only
to see the black-haired Rlggs fight
him off and draw up to 5-all. Rlggs'
answer to Budge's smashing attack
was a series of high lobs which forced
the red-head to retreat from his an
nihllatlng position at the net.
Forest Hills, N. Y.. Aug. 21 U.R
The United States made a success
ful defense of the Wlghtman cup,
emblematic of women's tennis su
premacy, today when Helen Jacobs
of Berkeley. Calif., defeated Ruth
Mary Hardwick of England, 2-8, 6-4,
6-2.
Miss Jacobs' victory was tne fourth
scored in the best-of-seven series,
the United States having won the
two singles matches and the dou
bles contests yesterday.
Today's victory was the seventh
straight scored by America.
PRESIDENT SIGNS
BONNEVILLE BILL
Washington, Aug. 21 (U.B Presi
dent Roosevelt today signed the
Mansfield bill to administer the
175,000,000 Bonneville hydro-electric,
navigation and flood control
project on the Columbia river.
The bill calls for the appointment
of an administrator at tlO.000 per
year to sell and distribute the pow
er after It leavea the central
"switchboard." The administrator
would be appointed by the secre
tary of interior.
The army engineers would have
charge of the flood control and
navigation facilities together with
generation of electric power up to
the 'switchboard.'"
Proponents of the legislation in
both houses pushed the bill to fin
al action vigorously since the power
wiU be ready for distribution about
January 1 and heavy losses would
have occurred unless there was a
set-up to administer It, .
Mrs. Becknell
Leaves Prison
After 26 Days
Medford, Aug. 31 (AV-Florhannah
Mae Becknell, Medford matron, was
freed from the county jail early
this morning after serving 26 days
of a 30-day sentence, imposed by
Justice of the Peace William R.
Coleman for non-possession of an
auto driver's license. She was sen
tenced July 25 and was allowed four
days off her sentence for good be
havior.
The jailer reported Mrs. Becknell
had been a model prisoner, and "was
in fine spirits when she left."
Friends reported Mrs. Becknell
will not apply Immediately for a
new auto driver's license, "but wants
to think the matter over for a
while." The 1931 license under
which Mrs. Becknell has been driv
ing her auto has been declared void
and turned over to the secretary of
(Concluded on page 14, column 2)
TUCSON WINS
PORTLAND 5-4
Okemah, Ok la., Aug. 21 0J.fi) Capt.
Harold Franco's triple in the 11th
Inning today gave Tucson a 5-4 vic
tory over Portland and advanced the
Arizona team to the sectional finals
of the American Legion Junior base
ball tournament.
With two men out In the 11th and
Catcher Frank Terrazas on first,
Franco met one of Signor's pitches
solidly and drove it deep into the
outfield. Terrazas scored easily.
Johnnie Bubalo, Portland third
baseman, accounted for three of his
team's runs with two home runs. He
hit one in the fourth and one in the
eighth with one man on. Portland
had scored one man previously in
the eighth, so that Bubalo's smash
sent the game into extra innings.
Franco was the batting star of the
Arizona team. Besides driving In the
winning run, he figured In the re
mainder of his team's scoring in the
seventh inning. He came up with the
bases loaded and hit a triple. He
scored a short time later himself on
McB ride's single.
The score:
Tucson 000 000 400 015 7 0
Portland ....000 100 030 004 4
Plana and Donning, Terrazas; Fre
dericks, Signor and Erautt.
7000 PRISONERS
WILL BE FREED
Shanghai, Aug. 22 (Sunday) OP)
Authorities of Shanghai's battle-
fringed International Settlement
today decided to empty the Ward
Road Jail, believed to be the world's
largest prison, and free its 7,000
inmates.
The jail for three days has been
in the middle of the Slno-Japanese
battlefield in northeastern Shanghai
and the Settlement authorities de
cided they could no longer be re
sponsible for Its administration.
Beginning today its inmates will
be freed at the rate of 600 to 1.000
daily. They will be taken to the
western borders of the Settlement
and turned loose to meet any fate
that awaits in this tone of war.
Murderers, kidnapers, narcotics
dealers and addicts are included in
the derelicts thus to be thrown on
the world. Nearly all are Chinese,
but many nationalities are among
them.
Three American prisoners were
rescued from the Jail Friday. Two
of them, women, are to be paroled
For You and Your:
ENTERTAINMENT
The Capital Journal has added a four-page weekly colored
comic section featuring Mutt & Jeff, Out Our Way, Major
Hoople. Tailsptn Tommy, Captain and the Kids, The Nebbs
and other nationally known cartoon characters.
On Monday. August 30. the serial antics of CAPTAIN AND
THE KIDS will be added to the Capital Journal's dally page
of comic strips.
ENLIGHTENMENT
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL TODAY PRESENTS ITS THIRD
WEEKLY "WORLD THIS WEEK" PAGE A SPARKLING,
INFORMATIVE AND CONDENSED REVIEW OF CURRENT
' NEWS EVENTS ON PAGE T.
INFORMATION
The Capital Journal will continue to add new features and
departments from time to time in conformity with Ita policy
of Riving the people of the Willamette Valley the best news
paper possible.
RIFT IN PARTY
SPREAD WIDER
DY DEMOCRATS
Guffey Asks for Defeat of
All Who Opposed Court
Program
Senator Calls Names
And Demands Heads in
Radio Speech -
Washington, Aug. 21 (P) A threat
of retaliation for opposition to the
administration's court reorganiza
tion plan turned the senate's closing
session today into a fierce political
battle over democratic party regu
larity. The threat was voiced by Senator
Guffey (D.-Pa.) in a radio speech
predicting defeat at the polls of
Senators O'Mahoney (D.-Wyo.) and
Burke (D.-Neb.); questioning the
re-election possibilities of Senator
Wheeler (D.-Mont.); and belittling
Senator Holt (D.-W.Vr.).
The session was hardly open be
fore the attacked quartet arose one
after another to heap angry, emotion-choked
response to the Penn
sylvanlan, who sat, little ruffled,, in
his accustomed seat.
O'Mahoney said It would be well
for the democratic contingent In the
senate to remove Guffey from the
leadership of the democratic sena
torial campaign committee.
Wheeler said that Guffey had not
written the speech he delivered on
(Concluded on pnge ii, column 7)
MURDER HINTED
IN DUNBAR CASE
Bremerton, Wash., Aug. 21 (U.R)
Sheriff Rush Blankenship invest!'
gated the possibility of murder to
day in the death of Mrs. Jeanette
Dunbar, about 38, housekeeper for
Fred Miller, wealthy retired Sea.
beck man.
Mrs. Dunbar was found dead last
night, slumped down in a chair in
her bedroom in Miller's pretentious
home where she had worked as a
housekeeper for eight years.
She had been shot once with
.30-0 calibre rifle a little below
the heart, the bullet entering at an
angle and shattering the liver.
The gun had been put away in
a clothes closet. There was evi
dence the woman had been lying
on a bed before sitting in the chair
in which she was found.
Dr. H. A. Barner. autopsy sur
geon, said he believed it would have
been Impossible for the woman to
have put the gun away after sur
fering such a wound if she had
shot herself and then rested on
her bed and then moved to a chair.
Officers thought the woman had
been lying on the bed after she was
shot.
Officers questioned Miller but
made no arrests Immediately. Mill
er said he left the house yesterday
at 10:30 a. m- and returned at 5
p. m., to find Mrs. Dunbar dead
He said she had a son who had left
home a year ago and that she had
been despondent since then. Mill
er did not know the son's name.
Deputy Coroner William Steltz
said he thought the woman had
been dead seven hours when her
body was found.
ORDER TO PREVENT
PINBALL SEIZURES
REFUSED BY COURT
-
Judge Norton Declares
out Authority to Enjoin Enforcement of
Criminal Laws; Trial of Offenders Held
Proper Procedure
Grants Pass. Aue. 21 (Ft Judge H. D. Norton, after
listening to two and one-half hours of argument in a suit to
restrain the district attorney and sheriff of Josephine county
from enforcing their ban on pinball machines, today refused
jurisdiction. It is not the place of a court of equity, he said.
to prevent enforcement of a law. He
said that the proper time to sit in
Judgment on the case would be when
violation of the law was charged
and the accused brought to trial.
Denall of the order indicated
similar action in Jackson county,
where another suit is scheduled to
be brought before Judge Norton,
Earl Bush of Marshfield filed the
complaint Monday against District
Attorney Orval J. Millard and
Sheriff B. H. Lister. Machines have
been barred in Josephine county
since August IS.
Walter L. Tooze of Portland and
O. M. Roberts and William McCal
llster of Medford represented Bush.
Millard was assisted by counsel from
the office of the state's attorney
general.
BATTLE RAGES
HAND TO HAND
(Copyright by United Prtu) '
Shanghai, Aug. 21 U.R Chinese
troops and Japanese sailors fought
hand to hand today with bayonets,
trench knife and f let amid the blis
tering flanes of fires racing through
an tne Hongkew area.
British business men, trying to
make a preliminary estimate of
fire damage, said they believed that
It amounted to 500,000,000 Shanghai
dollars 9150,000,000 American al
ready.
And through these flames, raging
more and more fiercely in the
Hongkew area, the Japanese and
Chinese fought today.
The flower of the Chinese army
smashed Its way Into tha Japanese
lines from the land side. A suicide
squad of 30 Chinese volunteers poled
its way across the Whangpoo in a
sampan, effected a landing, mount
ed a machine gun and began pour
ing a deadly fire into the Japanese
from the docks.
The volunteers, wearing plain
clothes, made their daring landing
on the dock of the British owned
"New Engineering and Shipbuilding
Works."
The Japanese asked British au
thorities for permission to storm
the dock.
Early tonight, a second daring
party of Chinese volunteers, all
sharpshooters, crossed In a small
boat and landed at the British own
ed Shanghai water works.
Japanese stormed the building,
using hand grenades, and wiped
them out.
RUSSIA MAY HELP
CHINESE FORCES
McMinnvllle, Aug. 21 m If
China's armies falter, Russia may
come to her aid in the struggle
against Japan, Dr. Elam J. Ander
son, president of Linfleld college,
believes.
Home after a tour of the Orient,
Dr. Anderson said he foresaw a
possibility of Russia entering the
war in the fact that Japan Is mov
ing as many troops to northern
Manchurlan borders as are being
sent to Shanghai.
Dr. Anderson said that while the
Chinese have progressed In the past
two yean as much as they did In
the preceding IS years they are still
handicapped by lack of adequate
armaments.
200 BATTLE FIRE
!N IMNAHA AREA
Portland, Aug. 21 VP) A sleeper
lightning fire In the Wallowa na
tional forest near Imnaha blew Into
a 940 acre blaze today, bringing 200
men on to fire lines. Prom the La
Grande and Baker areas another
117 CCC enrollees were en route
The fire was burning In what the
U. 8. forest service dtacrtbed as a
"Jungle" and was out of control.
The weather was reported "not too
favorable."
Eight miles from a road and In a
mountainous territory, the fire was
I difficult to reach but the forest
service said It hoped to have it un
Jder nnntrol soon.
Court of Equity With
WILL ROGERS
BILL IS VETOED
Washington, Aug. 21 VP) Presi
dent Roosevelt vetoed today a house
bill authorizing a 1500,000 appropria
tion for federal cooperation with the
state of Oklahoma in construction
of a permanent memorial to Will Ro
gers, the humorist.
The president pointed out the
measure failed to provide for the
type of memorial and suggested
congress at the next session recon
sider the form it "should properly
assume.
I am sure, as one who knew the
depth of Will Rogers' love for his
fellow man, that he would have de
sired a living memorial something
that would carry Joy and gladness
into the hearts of those he left be
hind," the president said.
"With these thoughts in mind
cannot forebear to mention WiU
Rogers' deep love of children. You
and I who knew him through the
years are well aware of his devotion
to childhood. He contributed gener
ously to the care of handicapped
children and In providing education
for boys and girls who could not
afford ItT
FLIERS SET UP
BASE IN ARCTIC
Point Barrow, Alaska, Aug. 21 (U.R)
Drums of gasoline stood on a sand
spit today as fliers of three nations
set up an emergency airport as a
base for a search over Arctic wastes
for six Russian airmen missing eight
days on a trans-Polar flight from
Moscow.
A government tractor moved the
searching planes around and lined
them up for take-offs.
Jimmy Mattern, around-the-world
flier, J. S. Jones, navigator, and
John Stump, radio operator, landed
here from Fairbanks after flying 200
miles north of the coast without
sighting the missing Russian mono
plane. Heavy fog even obscured the Rus
sian ice-breaker Krassln from Mat
tern's view. The searchers had to
fly by instruments most of the way.
Pilot Bob Randall of Mackenzie
Airways waited for instructions from
Edmonton before continuing his
search. He made a trial take-off
yesterday from a lagoon aa did a
Russian plane piloted by Vaslli Za
dukov. The Russians flew from Si
beria to Join the search.
In Fairbanks, Joe Crosson. famed
"1.46:8 Filer." said he believed the
missing filers were nearer the north
pole than the Alaskan coast. The
Russian plane, piloted by Slglsmund
Levanevsky, "Lindbergh of Russia."
was lost after It passed over the
pole a week ago Friday.
Buzzards of Battle Due
To Supplant Peace Doves
At Democrats' Gathering
By HARRY N. CRAIN
The buzzards of war promise to supplant the doves of
peace in what hovering is done over and around the annual
love feast of Oregon democrats at Oaks park, Portland, to
morrow. From hither and yon all-
over the state the faithful are
scheduled to gather for what Is bill
ed aa a "picnic." and there is every
Indication that It will turn out to
be Just that.
All of the party big-wigs, both
actual and, self-acclaimed, will be
there with the exception of Govern
or Charles H. Martin, whose name
significantly does not appear on the
official program.
National Committeeman Howard
Latourette Is billed as the toast
master and general chairman. Willis
Mahoney Is down for t speech, as
GRIST OF WORK
POSTPONED TO
NEXTMEETING
Some Members Expect
President to Call Fall
Session '
Approval Given Housing
Bill; Deficiency Mea
sure Agreed On
Washington, Aug. 21 (U.R) The
senate late today recessed subject
to call of the chair and sent the
leaders of both parties to "wait on
the president to determine whe
ther he has any message to trans
mit before adjournment.
Washington, Aug. 21 VP) The
senate sent to the White House to
day the revised version of the Wag-ner-Steagall
housing bill, leaving
final action on the third deficiency
appropriation bill as the last ma
jor barrier to adjournment.
Congressional action on the $526,
000,000 housing measure was com
pleted when the senate approved a
conference committee compromise
of senate-house differences. The
bouse standing vote was 128 to 38.
The legislation was one of the
major points in President Roose
velt's program for this session.
Washington, Aug. 21 VP A weary
(Concluded on psse 11, column 4)
JOBLESS HERE
WAIT ON M MY
A committee of representatives of
unemployed organizations confer
red here today with Senator Char
les L. McNary regarding federal re
lief appropriations and recent lay
offs in WPA.
Attending the conference were
representatives of the Salem Cen
tral Trades and Labor Councils,
Oregon Commonwealth Federation
and workers recently laid off WPA
sewing projects.
The conference agreed that the
(1,900,000,000 relief appropriation
could be expended at any time prior
to January 1, 1938, rather than paid
out in budgeted amounts.
Senator McNary referred the
delegates to State Relief Adminis
trator Elmer Goudy, State PWA di
rector E. J. Griffith and national
WPA Administrator Harry Hopkins.
These men, McNary told the dele
gation, were the proper officers to
hear their complaints.
The committee tendered to Sena
tor McNary a petition urging pass
age of the Schwellenbach-Allen
resolution for continuance of WPA,
signed by 32 city and county offi
cials, officers of labor organizations
and representatives of unemployed.
Two Injured When
Motor Cars Collide
Grants Pass, Aug. 21 VP) Thomas
R. Campbell, Klamath agency In
dian, suffered a cut elbow and Mrs.
Mary Frances Jean Morgan of the
Murphy stage route received head
Injuries last night when their cars
were badly damaged In colliding at
the Fort Vannoy bridge. State of
ficer Oene Reed said it appeared
both cars were crowding the center
line.
are Mayor Joe Carson. Mrs. Emily
F. Ed son, national commltteewom
an: Congressman Walter M. Pierce
and Congresswoman Nan Wood
Honeyman (both delayed In Wash
ington), Hon. Claude McColloch.
newly appointed federal district
Judge, and Victor Myers, lieutenant
governor of Washington, who Is to
be the keynoter.
But the fireworks will not be In
spired by the slliht accorded Gov
ernor Martin, although that may
hsve its echoes.
(Concluded on pais IU column 8)
I