Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 08, 1936, Page 1, Image 1

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    6. S. C. Tr.;.16 PUCLANS 7 U.o'fC. Ci.'.13 CARDS .;.-., 14 - ST. MARYS 26 WILLAMETTE . .14 NAVY ... 3
W. S. C. 6 OREGON,.,.,..... 0 U. S. C ... 7 HUSKY .14 IDAHO 6 FRESNO STATE. 14 IRISH 0
FORDHAM ,.,.. 15 GOPHERS... .52 NORTHWEST. .... 26 YALE 14 PRINCETON ,.. .41 HOWARD 65 PITT. .34
PURDUE 0 IOWA 0 WISCONSIN ,,.,. .18 BROWN 6 . CORNELL ....... .....13 VIRGINIA 0 PENN. . ,. 7
The Weather
Forecast: Fair today, Increasing
cloudiness tomorrow. Little
change In temperature.
TEMPERATURE
Highest yesterday M
Lowest yesterday . W
Thirty-First Year
... By Paul Million
Copyright, 1936, by Paul Mai ton.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 7. The most
significant election comment was of-
feied off-the-reoord by a top -line
New Deal diplomatist. He thought
that the sweep
MitffM maxea Freshen.
greatest power In
the world for
peace. Not even
Mussolini and
Hitter can claim
any stronger un
animity of sup
port from their
people than the
president has
freely won from
bis.
That is highly
Important, because the dictators have
been running away with the Interna
tional show. The Influence of de
mocracies has been weakened In In
ternational councils. Rampant na
tionalistic autocrats, being able to
control popular opinion In their own
countries, have been able to stampede
the leaders of constitutional democ
racies, whose positions were Insecure.
Now, the peace cause of the democ
racies has a champion who can meet
the dictators with a firmer footing
than anyone else can offer. That will
make a deep Impression in Europe.
The preside at himself, as well 'as
his councilors, Is supposed to have
been thinking along this line. Devel
opments are expected.
The experts are already squabbling
over the question of whether Mr.
Roosevelt la going to turn to the
right and be more conservative, or to
the left and become more aggressive.
Be , probably will do neither. More
than one person who has talked to
him since election has a feeling that
he will go along just about as he has
been going, mindful of his Increased
responsibility as well as the onerous
load of his unmanageable majority.
As one Indication of what he will
do. his associates any his second In
augural speech will be modeled more
upon the tone of the Lincoln and
Jefferson second Inaugurals, rather
than upon the tone of the Madison
Square Garden campaign speech.
They expect the president to make
a strong effort, at the outset, to com
pose what little Ill-feeling may have
outlasted the campaign.
Hla line, they aay, will be Lincoln's:
"With malice towards none; with
eharlty for all."
All the Inner and outer signs In
Washington seem to point toward
highly encouraging business develop
ments from here In the Immediate
future. In fact, there la Increasing
talk of a big spring boom.
The extent of the president's sweep
wiped out any possibility of sharp
political bickering. An adjournment
of politics is In prospect for a year.
Furthermore, there arc no economic
cv political hangovers from the elec
tion. Mr. Roosevelt made na prom
Ires. The Republican Issues were
backed by possibly 18.000,000 voters,
tut not enough to Justify any mb
alantlal resistance to the Roosevelt
program In the next session of con
gress. Thus, everything is entirely up to
Mr. Roosevelt, ft will be a govern
ment of his own chooilng. He will
have to be hla own opposition.
Mi H71E g HUB I IBBt Itti
' i : : i
fa; v, m
While this may be a good el;n for
V. the Immediate future. It certainly Is
not for the long run. The best laws
are usually those hammered -ml on
the anvil of an alert opposition, seek
ing to eliminate defects and to pro
mote moderation.
For anoth-r thing. Mr. Roosevelt
can hardly be expected to keep the
support of all who voted for Mm.
Kls supporters ceme from diametri
cally opposite schools of thought and
they are certain to break up into fac
tions aa soon as they meet the first
Issue.
Responsibility, therefore, will rest
mere completely upon him then It
has in the past two years, and the
planning of his course of action may
I be more difficult than heretofore tf
rie happens to be in error, it will just
h too bad.
fistern Republican authorities or
ruher the few of them left are
apparently giving little thought to
rwMgsniMtion. Grumbling against
Cfcslrman Hamilton Is developing
a.nong ihem. of course, but not to
tr.e efnt of Indicating that a eon
tr' o-.cr his Job Is Imminent. The
r.t'venwnt for reo.-c.tnlrstl.-jn mil
(Cantiaued aa Page &x.)
M
EDFORD
Full Associated Press
OF YANKEE PEACE
DELEGATION SHIP
Alaska Coast Faces Winter
Food Shortage 'Set
Down' Tactics Abandoned
Federal Action Prob
lematical. Dy The Associated Tress)
Government conciliators today
sought to bring striking seamen and
employers together In a new peace
move aa the nationwide maritime
strike increased In Intensity on both
the Atlantic and Paclflo coasts.
In Ban Francisco, where the strike
started, a committee of the seamen's
union considered an offer of T. G.
Plant, ship owners' spokesman, to re
open negotiations provided the sea
men would not insist upon certain
conditions as a premise.
pnR.TT.ANlY NVw 7. t API Chief
nt PoHp Harrv Nllea said todav he
had received complaints from water
front employes not invoivea Dy tne
maritime strike that pickets had
ordered them to obtain "passes"
through tho line,
Th mammr BMri osaistnnt mana
ger of a private terminal and sev
eral employes of municipal terminal
No. 4 said tney were stoppea
the daily bulletin of the longshore
men announced:
.... "Remember No one tv to- pas
through picket lines without a. pass
signed and sealed officially."
Chief Nlles said that "from the
standpoint of constituted authority,
passes are only necessary where mar
tial law has been deciareo.
By the Associated Press
A nation-wide strike against Amer
ican shipping Increased In intensity
today (Sunday),
Secretary of State Oordell Hull and
the American delegation to the Inter
Amerlcan peace conference at Buenos
Aires were delayed in New York har
bor while eastern - strikers changed
their tactics from a "sit down, fold
ed arms" strike to active picketing.
Thus, after two weeks of spreading
strife from San Francisco to both
coasts, methods of strikers became
uniform but tha. shipping tie-up still
was most critical on the Pacific coast.
The paralysis of west coast shipping
caused by the strike of 37.000 union
workers spread to shipyard workers in
San Francisco 6,000 of them, union
leaders declared, but employers dis
puted this figure.
Secretary of Leber Frances Perkins
concentrated her efforts on seeking
relief of an emergency situation In
Alaska, where many towns depend
ent on sea commerce soon will be
Ice-bound and still have not received
winter supplies.
- Permit Food Ships
Relief for southeastern Alaska was
assured as maritime unions author
ized shipments by rail to Prince Ru
pert, Canada, and from there by mail
boats as far as Juneau, Alaska.
Violence was reported on Balti
more's waterfront where 11 men faced
disorderly cbarges and later two oth
ers were arrested on a charge of beat
ing a tvnmon but were dismissed.
The Munson liner American Lfglon.
with Secretary Hull. Assistant Secre
tary of state Welles, and other Argentina-bound
diplomats aboard, put
out from Its New York pier but was
forced to anchor off tho Statute of
Liberty by order of the United States
shipping commission. The ship was
found under-manned snd sis more
seamen were required before It could
put to sea.
Labor Secretary Irked
Joseph Curran. chairman of the In
surgent New York strike group which
overruled officers of the Internst'on-,
al Seamen's union in voting strike
action, estimated 16,000 ship workers
have walked out In mi If and Atlantic
ports outside New York. He claimed
three to four thousand strikers In
New York.
M:ss Perkins, calling Cumin's com
mittee a "rump" organization, ac
cused him of exaggerating the extent
of the east coast tie-up. Her observ
ers, she said, found the figures too
high.
She expressed confidence in Am 1st -srvd
Labor Secretary Edward F. Mc
Grady'a efforts to settle the west tfoast
controversy hut. aikcd If intervention
by the prcidnt would be necessary,
she said: "I don't know.
TltCant Hit
SAN FRANCIfiOO. Nov. 7. (UP,
Striken, domlnstd by the seven un
ions comprising the powerful mart
time federation of tho Pacific, were
costing tabor an estimated $250,000
daily payroll and industry an addi
tions: vsoo.ooo t dy today as walk
out and hutdovrts ontlnued to
spread on tne Pacific coast.
Rose City Twins
To Have Birthday,
Different Months
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 7.
(AP) A certificate filed with the
city, health bureau today showed
Mr. and Mrs. Macey Woody's
twin will observe their birthdays
in different months. One was
born at 0:19 pm.t Oct. SI, and the
other at 6:43 p.m., Nov. 1.
E
Murderer's Son Gives Vital
Clue In The Dalles Crime
Barn' Fired After
Killing. .
THE DALLES, Ore., Nov. 7. AP)
Davo Jones, Tygh Ridge rancher, has
confessed shooting his brother and
attempting to destroy the body by
setting fire to a barn, Sheriff Harold
Sexton, of Wasco, said tonight.
The brother, Owen Jones, 68, an of
ficer of the Columbia Warehouse
company here, was slain last Wednes
day as he worked In a ditch at the
ranch,, the-sheriff said. ,...-,
The sheriff said the statement des
cribed how Dave Jones dragged the
body 128 feet to a feed room adjoin
ing the barn, pitched his rifle Into
the bay loft and then set fire to the
building.
Only the torso remained when the
body was taken from the cooling
ashes. Dsve denied crushing or sev
ering his brother's head.
Dave commltteed tho act, the sher
iff recounted, because Owen blamed
him for neglecting work at the ranch.
The property was owned by the ware
bouse man who turned It over to his
brother to operate.
. Officers yesterday recovered char
red gun, used for shooting squirrels,
from where it had been buried near
the barn. Deputy Sheriff Eugene
Wright said Robert Jones, 16-year-old
son of Dave Jones, pointed out the
gun's btdlng place and quoted him
as saying hla father told htm he bur
led It so tbe Insurance company
would not think It responsible for the
fire.
T. Leland Brown, Wasco county
district attorney, was en route to
Portland tonight to consult a path
ologist to determine whether or not
rock and a hammer found near the
ruined barn were bloodstained.
CRUISER TIDIED
FOR F.D.RS JAUNT
NEW YORK, Nov. 7. UP) Bound
officially for "target practice, off
Cape Charles near Chesapeake bay,"
the 10,00d ton cruiser Indianapolis
ieft Brooklyn navy yard today for a
date with President Roosevelt in the
south.
Original sailing orders were for
"target practice,' but since then
president Rooserelt announced that
he would board the Indianapolis at
Charleston, s. C, Nov, 17 or 18, either
for a fishing trip In the Caribbean,
or a swift dash to Buenos Aires for
the opening of the peace conference
Dec. 1.
The Indianapolis, freshly painted
battleship gri7, and her bright work
gleaming like polished mirrors, car
ried a month's provisions.
SOCIAL AFFAIRS
WASHINGTON, Nov. 7. f AP)
; With four state dinners, three official
i receptions, an Inauguration and the
j pwidmit's birthday s'-hduled for
January, the White House today eeem
' ed In for such a social whirl as It has
j not knon In years,
j Mrs. prankUti D, Roosevelt an
I nounctd the an mm! official social
program at her first poet election
j press conference today, taking only
one long breath in between the
! crowded items.
i That hiaf.Uft. ahe explained, was due
j to the lnaueu;aUoa.
5IEDFORD, OREGON,
RELIEF EXPENSES
CHIEF FACTOR IN
E
President Starts Framing
Recommendations To
Congress Liberals May
Urge More Spending.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 7. JAP)
President Roosevelt and Daniel W.
Bell, acting director of the budget
studied today the intricate problem
of federal finances, as tho chief ex
ecutive began framing his budget
recommendations to congress.
Next year's budget end the knotty
question of whether It will be bal
anced will claim Mr, Roosevelt's at
tention tbrough most of next week in
a series of conferences with govern
ment fiscal experts and department
heads.
The president's recent statement he
would "try to balance the budget"
sharpened Interest in his fiscal con
ferences and centered attention on
the divergent Influences which may
be brought to bear on federal spend
ing policies in the next congress.
There waa widespread conjecture
over whether liberals might push for
a broadened and mors costly New
Deal program, while . conservatives
countered with a demand for sub
stantial scaling down of present ex
rjenditures.' .',
Well informed treasury sources In
dicated there may be , increases in
budget estimates for regular depart
ments, national defense, and tho so
cial security program. They said,
however, the question of whether next,
year's financial ledger will be written
In black or red Ink will depend large
ly upon th not yet estimated relief
burden.,
, Rising government revenues have
Increased the posslbllty the budget
may be balanced next year. But many
financial experts doubt this along
would suffice, without drastically cur
tailed expenditure.
TRAPPED BY G-MEN
FOR EXTORT PLOT
KLAMATH FALLS, Nov. 7. CAP)
G-men and a deputy sheriff hid in a
haystack near Mslln for two nlgbta
this week to trap Bennls Adamlc, 13.
accused of attempting to extort mon
ey from C. A, Paavar, Malln farmer.
on an arson threat.
Extortion notes lisd directed aP
var to leave 9100 at a spot near the
haystack. Last night the officers saw
Adamlo pass by herding cows. He left
the cows and peered around the
stack as if hunting for the money.
Later he waa arrested at a ranch
where he waa employed and brought
hero for questioning, resulting In an
alleged confession.
Comparison of handwriting first
brought suspicion on Adamlc. Thj
federal officers were brought Into tho
caw on the ground that the extortion
notes had been sent through the
mall.
Adamlc was bound over to the fed
eral grand Jury this morning under
96,000 bond.
FAIR AND COOLER
BAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 7. (AP)
Weekly outlook, tar western states,
November 8 to U; generally fair, ex
cept rains north Pacific state latter
part- of week; normal temperature,
except cold over plateau regions be
ginning of week,
OregonFair Sunday but becoming
rloudy In northwest portion; Monday
Increasing rtoudlnes wltb rain in
northwest portion; little change In
temperature; gentle changeable wind
off the coast.
Mi Rail Deaths
SALEM. Nov. fXobcr set
another record In fatalltiea when
Public Utilities Commissioner Frank
K. McCoUoch reported six deaths re
suited from railroad accident in
Oregon, while sight other persons
a. era Injur ad.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8,
Lone Quad Lives
Lea Earl Bridges, Ion survivor of
the quadruplets born In a Missouri
log cabin, sleeps In a Incubator In
which she la encased at a Memphis,
Tsnn., hospital. Tho other three
babies, born to Mrs. Pearl Bridges,
died. Associated Press Photo)
E
DENVER, Oolo., Nov. 7. (AP)
Although ths general condition of
Sanator Frederick Btalwer of Oregon
wa "described m "good," rtnyslclans
mlt an operation might ba necessary.
Tha senator, conInert here for aev
oral days, la suffering from a gall
blsdder disorder. , ' v
Tho senator's Portland office will
close, a secretary said today. Stolwer
will return to Washington when ho
Is able to leave a Denver hospital.
TO SAVE FARMER
&ALEM, Ore., Nov. 7. (UP) Ore
gon Commonwealth Federation today
filed articles of Incorporation with
the state.
The articles Included a "production
for use" clause, and appeared similar
to those of the Washington federa
tion. Officers named were Daniel Whe
don, Portland, president; Roy Hewitt,
Salem, vice president; Gall Bell,
Portland secretary. The officers, to
gether with Ben T. Osborne, Port
land, and Albert Slaughter, Portland,
constitute the executive committee.
, Hew 1m was formerly law profes
sor at Willamette university, Osborne
la executive secretary of the state
labor federation, and Slaughter has
been active In the state Grange,
Purpose of the organisation, ac
cording to articles filed, waa to "edu
cate farmers, industrial workers and
other workers relative to their eco
nomic, social and political interests:
to unite such persons In a political
organisation devoted to their eco
nomic and social Interest."
KLAMATH FA LI A, Nov, 7. (AP)
Mayor Willis B. Mshoney, defeated
Democratic candidate for the United
States senate, said today he had no
Intention of following suggestion
urging him to ssk a recount.
MshonPT waa defated by Senator
Charles MrNsry.
"Under no consideration will I ask
or Approve of a recount," he said.
have complete confidence In Oregon
election officials and In our election
machinery. That Is all there Is to It.'
Ex-Kaiser Publishes
Booh Upon 'Gorgons'
DOORN. THE NETHERLANDS. Nov.
7. (AP) Doom's Imperial exile em
erged oday aa Wllhelm HouTiroUern,
tho author.
The foruvr kaiser, at 71, has writ
ten a learned archa"ologicl work
about tha gorgons, those terrifying,
snaky-haired sister's of Orek myth
ology. Medusa, 0theno and Euryalc.
Called "Studlen Eur Oorgo," (stud
ies concerning the Oorgons). It Jus.
hsa been published, richly lllustraten.
by a Rvri.n house (Walter De uruyter
it C0,J
MAHONEY REFUSES
SENATE RECOUNT
Full United Press
1936
E
TO LASTREWARD
Pneumonia Claims Veteran
Entertainer, Who Made
Nation Laugh, By Rustic
, Roles.
HOLLYWOOD, Calif.. Nov. 7. (UP)
Charlea (Chic) Sale, SI, veteran
comedian of the sUige and screen,
also nationally famous as author of
the book 'The Specialist." died today
In Good Samaritan hospital of lobar
pneumonia.
He fought gamely for Ufo to the
end. He Improved nllghtly last night
after physlclsns resorted to every
meana to save blm. Including treat
ment under an oyxgen tent, hut to
day grew ateadlly worse.
His wife. Marie, and their twin
children, Charles, Jr., and Mary, were
at his bedside when the end came at
I p. m. The children flew here yes
terday, Mary from New York and
Charlea from Davis, Calif,, where ha
la a student In the college of agri
culture of the University of Califor
nia. "
Sale, who attained tame on the
atage four years ago aa a porurayer of
rustlo roles, had been In a critical
condition four daya. "
Years after Sale became famous as
an actor, he attained almost 'equal
fame i ti. an author. 'Jrie nation
rocked with laughtw at hla short
book, "Tbe Specialist." a rural car
penter's homely exposition on the art
of building that vanishing sdjunot
of farm life, tha outhouse.
Sale waa born In Huron, 8. D in
18BS, the son of Dr. P. O. Sale and
Llllle Bale. Dr. Sale was one of the
dentists of the Dakota territory and
organised the northwest' first dental
society. - - i ' ' ' -
Even as a boy, Ohio's gift of char.
acterleatlon made hlra popular aa an
entertainer. Wblle ha waa attending
business school, he waa frequently
called to the Sigma Nu bouse of tha
University of Illinois to help with en
tertainments. His first picture, "The Btar Wit
ness," established him as a screen
success.
HIGHER PRICE OR
TURKEY GROWER
L FACE L
SALT LAKE CITY, Nor. 7, (API-
Turkey produce face an "ln-the-
red" aesson untesa they hold for
higher prices, the Northwestern Tur
key drawers' aasoclstlon wsrned to
day. Herbert Deyera, general manager,
charged premature selling of a boun
teous production, coupled wltb a
flood of Inferior birds, dropped retail
prices S to 6 cents under last Thanka
glvlng'a. "We're not advocating a turkey
sellers' strike," said Beyers, hesd bf
tbe country'a.lrgeBt turkey co-operative,
"but believe that produce cer
talnly should not sell at a loss."
He conceded that production was
well above last year's, but contended
higher feeding costs and Increased
publlo purchasing power entitled the
growera to profitable returns,
Beyers said the aasoclstlon, whlcn
handled 6,000.000 pounds of turkeyt
last year, wanted a "'normal" market
J-wlth growers and Retailer, snaring
In profits.
SURGE KEEPS OP
NEW YORK, NOT. 7, (UP) The
soaring stock market which develop
ed after tho re-election of President
Roosevelt carried on wltb tremendous
vigor In the flnsl ses.lon of the
week today to bring pajer profits
for poat-electton trading of around
one billion dollars.
The dual session was tho most
spirited of the week. Trading vol
ume roeo to 1,749.380 shares, the
largest Saturday session since Feb
ruary 1, and In the final hour tho
volume of 1.120,000 shares was the
greatest for any single hour since
February 19. Prices rose 1 to 8 point
ith only the rail Issue lagging be-hiott.
i oa r rnnrn i
Roosevelt Popular
Vote 25 Million;
London 16 Million
(By tha Associated Press)
The popular vote for president.
In Tuesday's election, atlll In
complete, with 19 373 voting units
unreported, stood last night as
followa:
Roosevelt .2,810,M9
Landon 18.000.100
Lemke 895.813
Until the official canvass la
made In all atatea the complete
vote will not be available.
F
First Day Of Congress To
See Move For Money
Based On .Commodity
Price.
OKLAHOMA CITY, Not. 7. (UP)
U.S. Senator Elmer Thomas, cham
pion of a cheap dollar, tonight anr
nounced plana for a drive for the
"second phase of a llb.ral national
financial policy." . . . , , . .
"We have accomplished tha tint
phase of oer battle for a cheaper dol
lar," he said, "And our nait objeo.
the 1 to provide for a oonatantly
valued dollar, one that will not ba
Jumping In terms of tha ' average
prices of commodltlee." -Thomas
said that he haa tha gov.
amment drafting service preparing a
bill to be introduced the first day
of the next session of congress, em
bodying his ptsns.
The bill Is designed to "keep tha
dollar constant, usbig a commodity
Index of the average prices of cer
tain commodities, as a yardstick to
guage the dollar's value."
Under thla ayatem, Thomas' objec
tive will be to man tain the dollar at
100 cents V therms of avenge domes
tic commodity prices.
ST. PAUL, Not. 7. (AP) Lowest
temperatures of tha season wen el
porlenced In North Dakota and Min
nesota last night and early today.
Ml not waa coldest In North Dakota
with a mercury reading of 16 degrees
below zero. BenldJI, In northern Min
nesota, recorded a similar minimum
with the temperature at 14 below at
7 a.m. today. Below rero readings
are general In northern Minnesota,
with several other North Dakota
point reporting below or near-sero
temperaturoa.
IN
PORTLAND. NOT. 7. (AP) Twen
ty per cent of all person listed by
the national employment service an
skilled worksn, a survey showed to
day. '
Nine per cent are semi-skilled In
hand work and S t per cent In ma
chine use.
New registration hen for October
totalled 1848. Officials said 41 per
cent of the applicants wen from ths
drought area.
The atato listed 4a new registrar
tlons with mora thsn half of them
from the drought country.
Income Shares
Maryland fundi Bid. 810.78; asked.
811.73.
Quarterly Income: Bid, 8187; asked,
,3.08.
Wool Adtaneea
BOSTON. NOT. 7. (AP-U.8. Dept.
Agr. I Activity In th Boston wool
market during th put week waa
ctaaracterlred by sale of ilseabl
quantities of greasy shorn domestic
wool at advanced price and further
mark-up of quotation on many lost
In the market to a level abov tot
current Watt of buyer, r- .
Let
Mail Tribune
Classified Ads
Solve Your Problems.
Small Costl
No. 191.
DECISIVE BATTLE
E;
FLEE
Socialist Troops Mass For
Counter-Attack At Dawn
Today Rebels Shell City.
(By the Associate Press)
MADRID, Nov. 8. (Sunday) (AP)
Socialist militiamen, fighting off
fascist forces marching agalnat the
capital, massed tanks and guna today
to withstand an Insurgent counter-attack
expected at dawn. v
Thoussnda of refugee milled about
In their search for ha vena aa a num
ber of Insurgent sheila scored hlta on
their houses on the outskirts of the
capital,
Ths militiaman, girding themselves
tor the morning struggle, took heart
from the successful nslstanoe last
night to fascist onslaught at VUla
verde and El Campamento, north of
Carabanchel Alto and south of ma
drld. (This dlspatoh was sent from Ma
drid at a:25 a.m., Sunday, Madrid
time; t M p.m. Saturday, (Est.) ,
(Copyright, inn, by United
MADRID, Not. 7. (UP) A military
regime held Madrid against the on
rushing rebels tonight, while tha civil
government set up a new temporary
capital at Valencia. . : :, i.
General Joae Ml a a took charge, of
the Madrid military nil when tM
government ,ld by Premier Francisco
Largo Csballero withdraw to th Medi
terranean city. . ,
General Sebastian Poe, chief of
the government forcea In the center
of Spain, was understood to have
established hi base on th Important
railroad Junction at Alcazar D. San
Juan. , . . ,
Word of th departun of th civil
government authorities. Including all
of' the, new cabinet ministers, was
withheld from th general public la
Madrid.
Th city thus appeared quiet and
normal at 4 p-m. today, although ten
sion waa Increasing.
All th loyalist force bare bees
mobilised. Th many militarised
unit ordered their men to remain at
barrack for immediate duty.
whethar Madrid' martial regime
will undertake a street by street oe
f.nae In final effort to prevent can-.
tun I not known.
REVIVAL OF AAA
WASHINOTON, Not. 7, (CP)
Fanners' representatives, meeting to
discuss a federal crop Insurance pro
gram, shunted that question Into th
background today and adopted a res
olution which. In effect, demanded
re-enactment of th Invalidated ag
ricultural adjuetment act..
- Sponsored by Edward A. O'Neal,
hesd of th American Farm Bureau
Federation, who told the group the
AAA waa the only "damn thing" that
haa helped th farmer In 18 yean,
th resolution recommended sn af
fective means of controlling produc
tion and distribution of farm pro
duct and a system of surplus star,
sge and commodity loan.
A crop Insurance feature waa writ
ten Into th resolution but It ws
mad voluntary and hinged upon
casea where a practical program can
b devised.
.13
OOLD BEACH, Nov. 7, (AP) An
open hearing on th land classlftca-,
tlon and lands use study of Curry
county, now under way hen under
th direction of tha Oregon state
planning board, will be held In Oold
Beach, November 18.
The land use study was requested
by th state legislature at th special
session held In November. 1838. The
report la expected to Include data on
present land use and recommenda
tions for legislation that could bene
fit thla county.
At the hearing cltleena of Curry
county have been Invited to present
both written and oral data on tbe
needa and problems of the country.
Lumbermen, stock raiser, farmers and
other group an expected to be rep
resented, t , a .... , ,