Friday, March 10, 1939 The Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon Thru Legislature In Tough Tangle 01 Heavy Work Enmeshed In ft tangle of taxa tion, public power, old age assist ance and other vital legislation, the Oregon legislature sweated through Its 60th day yesterday, and today set a new record lor length of a session. The legislators have been working without pay since the 40th day, the technical expiration date of each biennial session. Although they were resigned to approximately another week of work, the lawmakers made every effort to speed the legislative ma chinery yesterday. The house hustled through a bill to change the date of the primary election from May to September and the senate followed suit and sent the measure to the governor. The change was opposed by the Grange, labor unions and the Ore gon Commonwealth Federation. Rep. Phil Brady (D.. Portland). called it a "rich man's bill" because a poor candidate could not cover the state in the shorter period. Pro ponents argued the present long interim between primary and final elections made campaigns too ex pensive. The people's utility bill passed by the senate Wednesday was sent to the house utilities committee which voted to reintroduce it as a substitute bill on the grounds that it might be construed as ft revenue measure. Revenue laws must or iginate in the house. At a hearing last night represen tatives of the state Orange and private utilities both attacked the measure which would permit dis tricts to issue revenue bonds. Ray Gill, State Grange master, complained it was not fair to tax PUDs unless municipal plants also were taxed but said he didn't think it was right to tax either. Allan Smith, Baker, attorney for seven private utilities, said "this bill Is almost as bad as Mr. GUI says it is, but for very different lessons." He said the tax provision would discriminate against private utilities because districts would not have to pay federal taxes as private companies are required to do. The bill as reintroduced in the house was minus the emergency clause Inasmuch as revenue mea sures may not carry such clauses. This would enable opponents to circulate petitions to put It on the ballot. The senate calendar was too crowded yesterday to permit consid eration of the bill revising the In come tax setup. The senate assess ments and taxation committee amended the measure to reduce ex emptions for single persons from $800 to $700 and for married per. sons from 11,500 to $1,300. The rate would be changed. After subtract ing the exemption and other deduc tions, the first $500 of net Income would be taxed 3 per cent and the second $500 at 3. At present the first $1,000 net Is taxed 2 per cent. Starting with the second $1,000, the present 3 per cent would be boost ed to 4 per cent, continuing In each bracket up to T. The new intangibles surtax was lowered by the senate from 3 to 2 per cent. The Income tax, includ ing the surtax, would not total more than 8 per cent in combina tion, however. It was thought the house would resist these changes. The senate approved a bill fixing the minimum monthly wage of school teachers in Oregon at $85. The present minimum Is $75. The house defeated a bill to pre vent state liquor control commission Inspectors from making arrests. The Joint ways and means com mi t tee introduced memorial to congress asking the federal govern ment to Increase its share of funds for aid to dependent children from one-third to one-half. Restoration of some degree of state control of bakeries was ap proved in the senate when a house bill providing chiefly for sanitary regulations was passed. A bill defining and tightening the restrictions on fortified wines was approved by the senate alcoholic traffic committee. It provided that such wines could not be sold within the state without the approval of the liquor control commission on age, blend and pur- ,ty' Further Purchase Of Ground Authorized , The state board of control was ' authorised to purchase property in four Salem city blocks under ft Mil passed by the house Thursday after noon and sent to the house. The blocks bounded by Center and Court streets, and Capitol and Win ter streets would be added to the capltol group. "If the opportunity arose to purchase them on the open market at a reasonable price," un er terms of the measure. The bill appropriates $100,000 for the purchases, but provides they must be made before January 1941. There were only three dissent ing votes. Northwest School Musicians to Play Aurora Selection of Gale Qulnn of Canby and Bill Kraus of Aurora, clarinet and French horn players, respectively, in the Canby high school band, as members of the all- northwest band was announced at student body assembly during the week. Chosen from all parts of the -northwest and Alaska, the band will play at the Northwest Music Edu cators' conference In Tacoma March 29 to April 1. The two will be accompanied to Tacoma by their band instructor, Walter Weathers. OEM rA To Appear In Show Here The young lady is Miss Eleanor Stewart who plays in "Blushing Bride" in covered America," a sound-picture honeymoon tour of the United States sponsored by the Greyhound Lines. Among the many interest ing places visited on the tour is New York City, shown here. This picture will be shown here soon to those securing free tickets from the local Greyhound Agent. Besides the interesting movie, Commander A. W. Scott (In circle) of the British Royal Naval Air Service, a well-known World-Tra veler and radio personality, will appear on the same program In person. He will relate his thrilling adventures and experiences In all parts of the world. Tills show will be given at the old high school auditorium Friday, March 10. 7:30 p.m. Tickets can be ob tained from the Chadwick Hotel company, local Greyhound agents, at the New Senator hotel. Razors Little Used By Former By C. K. togan In days of old when men were bold and the test of man hood was the quantity and ment, the house of representatives was, with the exception of three, very virile, according to photograph of the personnel of the 18th assembly which was held in 1895. Records do not reveal but the idea persists that a moustache cup was as necessary as an electric or safety razor is today. Among the members were three young men, two of them, in today's parlance, "kid" legislators. The trio Is again united at the 40th assem bly 44 years later but in contrast, all had, literally speaking, as much hair on their faces as they have on their heads today. The trio consisted of Senator W. E. Burke, of Yamhill, who was elec ted to one term In the house at the age of 28; Senator George W Dunn, Jackson county, who was 3i years old and the chief clerk of the house; Ralph Moody, who at pres ent Is legal advisor to the house, who also was in the legislature in 1899. Senator Dunn did not again enter politics until 1923 when he was elected to the senate from Jackson county, serving ever since, and Senator Burke, who came to the legislature from Yamhill county in 1931. What a contrast these three pre sented! Chief Clerk Moody had f full-fledged crop of luxurious side burns, extending downward and beneath the chin, of which he was ornately proud. Representative Burke's heavy moustache with drooping ends set off the fine head of curly (you can now see where it was) hair. And Representative Dunn he utilized the well-known handle-bar efffict, topped with high and bristly pompadour. His contribution resembled the present style adopted by one of the famous Marx brothers. Crm 1 rtnm TW Pi T he way its aged ' i makes a G. ex & ft G, ft o I .... . . :: M . iVl : .11 a"- -Tr - " . . " i : ' . -iftw. -"""aV ft Jt a a .a a fta. nmarhh p A frenr SrO.?:rJJk, JIJ.in..3l I hat s why Chester fields are milder l """"" M X tj. Lrt- J A S 1 1 1 llll TlSkJ I aifta vnti ntnro fhn,iro thnn nnv rian. I X """" w rrTTi UV'jvuvi retteyoueversmoked. fJIX beautiful j of MOM j r "They Dis Legislators quality of their hirsute adorn The story of the disappearance of these adornments is a sad one and derived at only through personal contact and considerable research. Accident, the modern trend and ill ness took their toll and once the hairy appendages disappeared, they never returned to proudly wave In the breeze. Moody's sideburns, alas, did not meet with the approval of his moth er who had the idea that a hairy face was not necessary to prove manhood. Like Delilah of old, she quietly clipped one side while the youthful Moody slumbered and of course, when he wakened, there was nothing else to do but to match It with the other side. His face has remained in "mourning" ever since. Then there was the dapper young Burke. He adopted the moustache because it was the current style. When the style changed the mous tache vanished, never to appear again. The vanishing act of his cranium was more gradual, but as potent, as examination today re veals. Illness overtook young Dunn. He lived but his facial decorations per ished. Personal inconvenience and necessity at the time caused the di vorce of Dunn and his halred-llp and he was forced to submit to an amputation. Like its contemporar ies, it was never ressurrected. With only three hairless mem bers of the 18th assembly, look over the streamlined models of the 40th with but five presenting even a semblance of an upper lip cover ing and there Is not sufficient growth among the quintet to pro vide an equal to one of the defunct moustaches. The present mous THIS VHUKFY 2 Yf AR-OI 17 UCC Outlines Program for Law Changes Portland, March 10 (flV-The Ore gon unemployment compensation commission outlined an eight-point program yesterday for changes in the law. The commission favored: A pooled fund into which all em ployer contributions would be paid, with provision all contributions j would be taken into consideration, in determining the employer's fu ture rate of contribution; Provision for a fixed base and a fixed benefit year for all claimants, with recommendation that benefits would be based upon the October 1 September 30 earnings of all claim ants and that the benefit year would be the calendar year; That claimants would be required to serve only one waiting period within a benefit year, after filing the first claim, and provision for no distinction would be made be tween weeks of partial and total unemployment in waiting week per iods; That eligibility, insofar as earn ings were concerned, would be de pendent upon earnings by the work ers of minimum wages In subject employment; Clarification of the law with re spect to right of workers to receive benefit where employment Is due to a strike, lockout or other labor dis pute; Clarification of the law with re spect to seasonal and Irregular em ployment; Permission for the state to col lect contributions from national banks and certain other fiscal ag encies of the federal government In event congress approves such col lections; A meeting of requirements of the railroad unemployment Insurance act and authorization of transfer of funds to the railroad retirement board on June 30. 1939. Weakened Sales Bill Goes to Governor The senate passed and sent to the governor Thursday a bill prohibiting sales below cost by wholesalers and retail food dealers, although Sen. Thomas Mahony rD., Portland) de clared "all the teeth have been taken out through amendments." Nearly 50,000 American motor ve hicles entered Argentina in the last year. tached members are Representa tives Walter Puhrer, J. F. Hosch, Walter Hempstead, Jr., C. C. Brad ley and Frank Delch, The word moustache" in this Instance Is used by courtesy only, for what would one of those sturdy members of 1895 have thought about the present generation? To beard or not to beard may have been a personal matter, and probably still is, but if attention is not given and the growth ne glected, there still remains time in this session to produce a crop that might equal that of the earlier days. Cop -risbt 199. UftcrrT ft Mvni Tosmxo i si ii is i . .i - sr rjm i i av. Ran Wilde At Kent. Fresh from a two-year swing of the entire nation during which his orchestra played repeat engagements at all the leading Stat ler hotels, plus a twelve-week stand at the Hotel New Yorker where he followed Jimmy Dorsey, Ran Wilde will bring his -sweet" band to Kent! hall Friday night under the spon sorship of the Salem 20-30 club. Wilde's appearance was temporar ily called off last week-end because of uncertainty over the date of the coast conference basketball play-offs in Eugene, but when It was learned the first game had been postponed, Wilde was definitely booked for Ken ti, according to Bill Depew, chair man. Music "styled by Wilde" has been heard at several spots in the north west during the past month, with a special appearance at McElroy's ballroom in Portland, where many other famous bands have played in the past, headlining his Oregon tour. Kenti's large, smooth floor and excellent acoustics will make it a good site for the Willamette valley's biggest dance attraction for several seasons, Depew said. One Witness in Winslow Case But one witness was put on and Uiat by the appellant in the appeal hearing before Judge Earl O. La tour ette yesterday afternoon from decision of the Salem civil service commission confirming the dis charge of Frank Winslow from 6a lem police force. Judge Latourctte took the case under advisement, the record before the civil service com mission to be the record from which he studies the case, other than the testimony of the solitary witness. The one witness was Asa Fisher, police sergeant, who testified that he had overheard A. H. Moore, civil service commissioner, say in effect that he had "at last got Winslow fired." Winslow's discharge by Chief of Police Frank Minto came after the arrest of William Stalllngs on Sep tember 18 on a charge of drunken ness. The chief discharged Wins low for alleged incompetency, bru tality and mental unfitness to be a noli re officer. Ce. Coast Editor Oi Monitor Here Tuesday Under the sponsorship of the 8a lem Junior Chamber of Commerce Lewis Bex Miller, Pac'flc coast edit or of the Christian Science Monitor, will. deliver an address Tuesday eve ning entitled "The World from the Press Gallery." The event will sup plant the regular noon-day meeting of the Junior group and will begin at 6:30 o'clock with a dinner. Mr. Miller, a former International correspondent, Is ft man of wide ed ucation and experience. He was gra duated from Harvard university, from which he was sent to Oxford university in London as i Rhodes scholar. He obtained his B.A. and M.A. degrees from the English In stitution. Upon his return to the United States Mr. Miller was grant ed a professorship at Harvard In International law, where he remain ed six years. His next post was that of representative of the United States Chamber of. Commerce in Australia. His newspaper career carried him rrom Australia to Europe where he became chief of staff of the Chris tian Science Monitor's offices In Paris and Geneva. In 1933 the Mon Itor returned him to the United States to become editor of its then proposed magazine section. This sec tlon has become a leading feature of the Monitor. Mr. Miller was ap pointed to his present position, with offices in San Francisco, In 1935. Mr. Miller's newspaper work has carried him through 29 countries, in five of which he maintained his residence. He Is personally acquaint ed with many of the governmental and diplomatic officials of most of the European countries and his con- tacts with these individuals have made him an authority in the field of International affairs. At the present time Mr. Miller is delivering a series of lectures in Portland on world affairs. With the exception of his Portland series and an appearance in Seattle, Mr, Mil ler's address in Salem will be his only public lecture during his present trip through the northwest. Due to the inability of the Cham bcr of Commerce facilities to handle a larRe "number of persons the meeting will be limited to 200. Res ervations for the affair must be phoned to the offices of the chamber before noon Monday. A nominal charge will be made for the dinner. There will be no other charge. Only those attending the dinner will be admitted to the lecture. Men's Brotherhoods Meet at Dallas A meeting of the Salem district Men's Brotherhood was held in the Dallas Methodist church Wednes day night with C. F. French, Salem district president, presiding. The program consisted of con gregational singing led by Paul Launer with Mrs. Clyde William son of Albany accompanying at the pinna Mrs. Williamson also cave that Satisfies with a Radio City's world-famous "Rockettes"t7w CHESTERFIELDS ...two can't-be-copied combinations Th ere's skill and .precision in rette you vocal solo accompanying herself on the accordion. The men's chor us from the Methodist church of Sheridan sang several numbers fol lowed by reports from the various Men's Brotherhoods. Dr. Bruce Baxter, president of Willamette university, gave an ad dress to the congregation. Dr. Louis IQ3Q ' JfioitPaAxu& W-fciilWJ I II. SADDLESI wlmv II moccasinsi ".P II II BARGEES! v STYLES 0 J in Bsmboo, White, Jm Blsck Tan and -( ' wLi,. --....Lyi II ndWhK.., ,mt g n i I j ADD 15c : w ft- Al'' the way the Rockettes dance and there's skill and precision in the way the mild ripe Chesterfield tobaccos are blended and proportioned to bring out the best in each. That's why Chesterfields are milder and taste better . . . that's why they'll give you more pleasure than any ciga ever smoked. HAPPY world's best Magin of Salem also gave an ad- dress in which he spoke of tha united conference soon to be held In Kansas City at which Urn the three branches of Methodism would reunite. He also spoke of plans for the district. The balance of the evening was spent In congregational singing. Capital u COMBINATION of the cigarette tobaccos