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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1928)
tn'fcer order, vHU still have to go back, f71 "P come, to assist in building up a new creed by which man can live. John Moriey. . The Kind Tammany Wants AL SMITH'S plea for increased immigration and a change in the basis of the present law has got him into a lot of trouble, especially from the Legion and D. A. R. and other patriotic organizations and some of the labor organizations, u,t Koor, firhtinff for restricted immigration. The Smith plea was popular in his centers composea largely i ummSiui rope. Al's proposal would increase the number of Europeans who would come to America; and especially the proportion of undesirable ones wv;.Vi ic what Tnmmanv wants; The present law limits the 4r r. nor, nf tViP number Some ratio had to be devised. We tried a law with a three per cent ratio with the 1910 census as a basis and the south ern Europe influx was not abated. From 1820 to 1883 about 90 per cent of our immigrants came from northern Europe and the British Isles. Alter TVi WorlH war migrants came in 1920, and in rvT ortfitVim Furor per cent ratio on the 1910 census did not check the influx much, for 700,000 immigrants came in mat yi. The present law lets in 400,000 a year, but reduces the number of Latin undesirables , And this Al has promised to have changed. The promise is greeted with glee in Latin quarters of the big eastern cities where the riffraff settles and breeds. There is rejoic " ing in the Italian press, but the newspapers of the west and the patriotic organizations of the country have had no kind words for Al s proposal, Everett Wants FIVERETT, Washington, which has tried the manager form rwppjib petition with 2000 signatures asking to vote on the proposition of returning to the old mayor and council form. 1 An exchange commenting on this says : The whole trouble with all city government is that it is somebody else's business. The only thing that's worse is municipal owner ship- . I That is flippant, and it is not true in all cases, by any means. The manager form of city government is like a king dom. It is the best form of government, presupposing a per fectly just, wie and good king; and one who, could transmit his wisdom, justice and goodness, which is impossible u against the rules of human frailty and of heredity. The .la, of Mendel is against it. I The most .popular form of city government may not be the best; but it is the best that can be had and with any cer tainty maintained ! So, for Salem, this writer advocates a corporation form; the councilmen standing for the board of directors, the mayor for the president, and the city with or without the consent oi tne counciimen. mat Kim would go over in Salem. We need a new charter. A manager form would be both cheaper and better; more efficient. ' Why not try to get what we can get ? The people of Salem would certainly bury under an ava lanche of adverse votes the proposed charter that was somt time since before the service clubs. He JWould Be T AM opposed to Al Smith and JL support they get him. Every lawbreaker is in full sjsm pathy with him. Every criminal who has abandoned decency and follows his criminal inclinations is whole-heartedly foi Al. While many very fine people are supporting him, if they could see the army of criminals of every known cast and de scription who are on his side they would leave him instanter. In fact, if Al himself could visualize his wet supporters all in one srroup he would be ashamed of his company. The United States can enforce fairly well any law it de sires to enforce. Violators of the prohibition laws do so foi money. Why don't they counterfeit instead? It's quickei and much" less trouble. There was a time when counterfeit ing was a "great indoor sport," but Uncle Sam decided to stop it and he has almost succeeded. No "wet" will ever be president of this nation. O. S. Whiteman, Indianapolis, Ind., Kellogg Returns SECRETARY KELLOGG is back in Washington with a document accepted by 49 nations as a renunciation of war as an instrument bf national policy. It is a common sense recognition upon the part of civilized nations that war is too fearful a thing to be used to achieve the petty things for which they have struggled in the past. It is significant of the new conditions-brought into in ternational relations by modern inventions that Mr. Kellogg was enabled to attend a great international conference in Paris on August 27, make some diplomatic visits, including one to Ireland, and be back at his desk in Washington on Sep tember 10. When our first treaties with European powers were made it took three weeks to cross the Atlantic. An envoy had to go with full instructions because there could be no practicable means of communication with his home govern ment and if he reached a deadlock he had to give up or risk his government's displeasure and break his instructions. Modern communications are driving the nations of the world into a working relation of which the Kellogg peace pact is a favorable manifestation. . ' One of the vitally important things to Be discussed by the Episcopal national convention in Washington next month is whether or not to eliminate the word "obey" and the other joke, "with all my wordly goods I thee endow" from the mar riage service. An exenange tnings people take senously. "Smith About Ready for carried Dy a contemporary it The Statesman's A Progressive Program To Which This Newspaper Is Dedicated "1. A greater Salem great 4V OOfOA 8. Industrial expaa&toa and CiicaJUural development . of the Willamette .valley. 3. Efficient republican gov ernment for Mation, ataio Monty and city. 4. Clean news, Jnst opinion and fair practice. &. Upbuilding of Oregon's young linen industry. C A modern city charter for Salens, adopted after ma ture consideration by all 7. Helpful encouragement to beet; sugar growers- sad other pioneers In agricul- . turn! enterprise. 8. Park and playground .i, hna tirrnmnlvthed all her triumphs own citjr and other big eastern influx of the scum of Europe of such Deople here in 1890. IRS came norues rAo . stooDed them, but 430,000 im the following year 805,000; The 1924 law with the three to Go Back manager chosen by the mayor Ashamed his "wet ideas because of the in Liberty Magazine. remarks that it is queer the Hot Campaign" is headline is well for he will surely get it. 'Fourteen Points' velopment for nil people. 9. Centralization within the capital city urea of nil state , offices and tnrfttutlows 10. Comprehenalve plan for the arelopuMui of the Oregon State Fan-. - 4 ' 11. Quau atiun of for the public 12. Superior, acbool fncHlUe, i encouragement of teachers j and active cooperation wkh 1 Willamette university. IS. Fraternal and social - ganlxation of 'the i possible number of , per- 14. Winning to Marlon roun . ty fertile lands the Ugh. 4 est type of. dtiaenahip. : Bits for By R. J. Is business good? S There Is a political dispute ibout this. V s s But the hard headed men of Wall street think it is good. Here s what the "owls of Wall street. Menry Clews Co.. say in their urrent weekly bulletin: "It seems wrfectly clear that business is pro ending satisfactorily and looks to ho future with confident eyOi.. Taking the situation all in all. in dustry and trade are doing well -jad face the autumn and winter in i cheerful frame of mind." V V The same authority, which is ne of the most conserratiTe in .he country, makes a long analysis if the business situation in this untry, and gives out the most' cheerful and encouraging conclu ions arrived at by these people 'or a long time. There is no question about the bright prospects for business and -apid growth in Salem and this . action, if the increased industrial ictivity keeps on keeping on; and this is about as certain as anything ran be. Thomas A. Edison gives in: the "ewest number of words the rea son why Hoover will be elected resident: "Because he stands for he things the majority of the eopIe are in favor of." Yea; he will be elected because he will jet the most electoral votes. - Sentor Curtis, republican can iidate for vico president, will be -he guest of honor at the powwow f the plains Indians on the Great gpux reservation, at Rosebud. A New Yorker at Large! ssmw IUKK Commntinir private yacht from country home on Long Island Sound to offices in wail street is the dally custom of aozens or New York's men of means. But tho other morning a vssei roae down East River to ward the Battery so gleaming white and so majestic with its pennants flying in the sun that even the waterfront workers ac customed to such sights paused to ase. The proud craft slowed its pace, ind onto the lower deck came the captain, pompous and splendid In a gold-braided uniform. He sur reyed the labors of the' crew as it set afloat beside the steam-driven mother ship a trim little motor tender. The smaller boat w.c drawn up alongside the yacht, the crew stepped to attenUon. the can tain preened. After such a display, the v lookers expected to witness the emergence of nothine short dosen admirals or a dowager em press. Instead dismounted nnob- irusrreiy into the tender a slight and stooped man dressed In a con servative business suit and carry ing a brief case under his arm Stepping out at the nearest dock aown a dinrv M tr8t toward lower BmH... looking for all the world like an accouatant's clerk dashing to his oes iron a Delated States Island lerryi Speed Without Profit The haste of the New Yorker Is proverbial, bat as often as not it is pointless. In the subway men and women spurn the vacant seats or local trains to stand uncom fortably In crowded expresses even wnen they are going but 25 blocks, and will gain but a min ute or two by taking the faster train.-:- . v .;v. .. .. The conductor of a Fifth ave Jump If You3 re Gonna!" Breakfast Hendricks South Dakota, on next Tuesday. Sept. 20th; celebrating the 50th anniversary of the founding of the reservation. Senator Curtis has a trace of Indian blood In his veins, started his childhood on a reser vation, and knows how to mix with the Indians. "W We confess to being more or less partisan, but we promise nev er to go to the limits now being reached by some of the leaders among the democrats in Oregon. Os West is the only one who has! stood by his principles. The rest have all swallowed their crow, and now pretend to like it. Here Is Milt Miller, friend and admirer of Bryan and Wilson, 'making a speech in Portland the other day in which he said "Al Smith stands for the best things in govern ment." If he does, then so does hell and Mr. Miller knows it. Corvallls Gazette-Times. Editor White objects to emotionalism." How he Al's must adore Calvin. Exchange. m The first killing frost is sched uled for a certain Tuesday in No vember. S S The lady who yearns to be kiss ed as it is done on the screen shouldn't blame her escort. He might do it if she resembled the lady on the screen. S n There's one nice thing about buying overalls. The clerk doesn't use a little French to make them seem more attractive. Every traffic cop knows at least one driver who always glares at him as though he had stopped a paraoe. nue bus is puszled, too, by another instance or breathlessness. To help carry the five o'clock rush-hour crowd home, the bus comDanv starts three extra vehicles from midtown points northward tv. first goes to 155th street, the s-inunte, d Tamper and wil do! ond to 168th, the third to 181st. anything under his Dower to kn! ine crowd elbowa ft wav the first two buses and the third often sets out half emty. But at I55th and 162th streets, passen fjers transfer to it in numbers from preceding buses to get northward to their destinations. If they hac waited a few minutes In midtown they might have gotten home Just as soon and without transferring but they Just must hurry. Faulty Appraisal A financier who never hs been distinguished for the attenUon he paid to his clothes walked down Park avenue one afternoon lately and paused .casually beside a hew apartment house a sign on which announced that several suites were scant. Approaching the doorman, who was still new enough at his post to glory in his uniform, the stroller remarked: "I see you have some apartments here." The doorman sized up his ac eoster and was unimpressed. "Well." said the dignitary haughtily, "the only thing we hare is 14 rooms-r-" "Oh. heavens, that won't do!" interrupted the pedestrian. "I have 25 rooms now and must have more space to hang my 'pictures." Ring Loot Six Years HARRISON, Me. Rains and freshets of six rears failed to dis turb a ting lost on the bank of Crooked rtver. The girl who lost it la 1922 has recovered the ring at the spot where It disappeared. They Say Salem, Sept. 12. To the Editor of the Statesman: In nearly 3 0 years of experience in the woods of the northwest as a layman I have formed the opin ton that forest fires are due to the following causes: 1. Lightning will set more fires than any other cause. I have ob served a dozen fires started by lightning in an afternoon and for tunately for the forest service most of them are put out by the showers that follow, but some of the largest blazes are due to light, ning. 2. The burning of slashings by the logging companies is the sec ond largest cause of fires in the green timber. 3. Incenderism fires started by the cattle men to improve the grazing or individual spite work constitute a great menace to the standing timber. 4. Hunters and campers cause the smallest percentage of all. It is true that grass fires along the highways are often produced by careless smokers but in the deep woods men are careful; pri marily because the average woods man does not want the outfit burned and secondarily because he has a healthy respect for a forest fire, and is a natural lover of the trees and the beauty of the camp sites. He may leave his camp fire burning, but it is usually in a safe place surrounded by rocks or on a barren spot where the danger is slight and with our excellent pa- trot service only slight danger arises rrom the campers fire. In the last few weeks, or, I might say, the last few years the hunters and campers have been asked unwillingly to shoulder the burden as the greatest of "fire menaces" and have been deliber ately ordered out of the timber by the forest service. This consti. tutes what I claim is one of the greatest comedies that have been thrust upon the nature loving pub lic in the memory of the oldest citizen. It has been said that the fores, try department vras influenced to do this thing by the "timber inter, ests." Now, as a great many peo ple know, the average lumberman nas aosoiutely no love for tho ythinr nnder hi. !.'. I. tbese Deoole nt r h tm. Their interests are only in the deJgoes republican when, only a few sirucuon oi timber and not at all are they interested In reforesting or in tne conservation of that fast diminishing supply of stand ing timber, while the camper and hunter will do anything in their power to prevent the destruction of the woods and to preserve our natural resources. Any one who has witnessed the total destruction o'f nature on the mountain side after a logging crew have passed overit Will state that a "no man's land" it is absolutely perfect. An incident will illustrate the total disregard for the nature lov ing public by the average man In the lumber Industry: A promi nent timber man, a ranger and myself were discussing tf beautiful waterfall of great height located in the deep timber about five miles off the forest trail. The ranger stated how much the pub lic would appreciate the beauty of that scene if the forest service would only cut a trail over to it so that It anight he seen by those who love scenery. - The timber man said "That waterfall Is better off right where It Is." In other words, the public be damned. A party of campers asked for a permit to build a camp fire Jn the Umpqua forest reserve at four o'clock September 8. .They were instructed b the ranger In charge that there was absolutely no ob jection to their: camping in the mounains until the opening of the deer season. He stated that the governor had closed the hnntlnr .season until It rained, but as far as the forest service was con- cerned they could stay m camp and do as they pleased wider the usual regulation. A peker was secured at a prtce of fllO and their outfit started Into the hUIs. After traveling hard for about 20 miles they arrived at their pro posed camp site and were met by a patrol man from tie other side who stated that everybody was to be ordered oat of the forests be cause of the fire hazard. These people were tojd to turn right back and head for the river and were not even allowed to camp over night at ihe end of a hard day's Journey. The packer has three or four other parties in the deep timber several miles farther back and it would take two ds each trip to carry them all oat. These people were instructed to walk out 25 miles and leave their outfits in the timber for the pack er to bring down later. They were not even allowed to camp on the river where they might wait for their equipment. They were apparently expected to fly to their homes hundreds of miles away and let their equipment get home the best way it could. Lf they were not out of the woods by noon of that day they would be subject to arrest. Arrest for what? What kind of law are people breaking when they o into the mountains to enjoy the scenery and to get a vacation when they do so under the strict regulation of the forestry depart ment -"if the protection of the rangers who patrol the woods in a very efficient manner and prevent Forest fires? This is certainly evidence of great comedy on the part of officials who hold four year jobs, sit at glass top desks and give orders which bring great discomfort to hundreds of people who have planned vacations for months back and who go to con siderable expense in equipment. packers fees, without mentioning rhe tonri-t- frm nirhw! the tourists from neighboring i states who travel thousands- of miles coming to Oregon every year, to hunt and enoy our natural re sources, paying a non-residence li cense for the privilege only to be turned back after getting located on a camp site. When the deer hunting season opened on August 20 the woods were dry and the fire hazard great and yet very few fires were caused by the campers. The season was justly moved to September 10 in order to eliminate that feature. and has undoubtedly resulted in better hunting and an increase in I the number of game. Everyone knows that hunting is very poor when the days are hot and the woods are dry and noisy, but what about these new efforts to clamp down regulations to inconvenience campers and hunters? Public opinion should be aroused to the real truth regarding the absolute lack of danger of fires from this source in the face of our adequate forest patrol to prevent such it things. Our grandfathers came to Ore gon as pioneers and enjoyed the Cascade mountain scenery without the modern restriction and red tape and so have we of the pres ent generation up until the last few years, this year in particular. But what of the next generation? When our boy asks for a permit to fish he will have to inquire where he lean go to catch a fish and the natural camp grounds will all be gone; not because they have been burned off but because they have probably been cut. LABAN A. STEEVES. M. D. What Salem ought to have is a city manager, not a czar. Vic MacKenzie's plan for using flax souvenirs to advertise Salem when the Legion drum corps goes to San Antonio is excellent. That boy. knows his flax. Ex-governor Sweet, of Colorado, a democrat, will not support Al Smith. It seems a paradox that Sweet should be dry. Arizona democrats apparently mean to elect G. W. P. Hunt gov ernor again for a seventh term. That man Is no governor; he's an institution. Fall Fashion Week opened with a bang, all right. We hazard a guess that the state's inquiry into Portland's power companies will develop the fact thai conditions are "shock ing." " " amusing to near ine aemo- erais gaome mat Maine always days ago, Al Smith's eastern friends were predicting a party victory there. Jdhn Coolidge has a Job as a railway clerk. Thai's a good start; anyway. Iba Saud, sultan of Nejf and king of Hedjas, Is miffed because he wasn't invited to sign the Kel logg peace pact. If he had t&ld someone how to find those 'places maybe he would have received a bid. X The skidding season is on. Now Is the time to try out your old tires and brakes on smooth, wet highway. Portland's weather man actual ly predicted the rain. For once the Oregon climate agrees with him. The New Statesman suggests that cut-over lands be turned in to golf courses. There seem to be golfers enough. , Failure to register means loss of your vote. That man who paid a fine rath We wish someone would invent a non-skid handkerchief. It would fill a real want these sniffly tall days. , . ., CLICKS ask any ooy or gin in saiemiout for the frshmn tm mi. what will happen September 2 4.1 And we don't refer to the opening! A Washington Bystander -By Kirk WASHINGTON Two snowy headed veterans who gave gal lant service to the flag at the threshold of manhood still hold high place in active duty under that flag in Washington, although far past their allotted three score years and ten. As it happens, both went through the grim battle days of '!- 5 in Massachusetts regi ments and born won high hon ors for courage. Both, also, have toiled for more than .a qu alter ten tury. each in his chosen field of civil fife, un der the great dome of the capitol. And both wear the flowing mus Laches, whitened by the marching decades, that date them back to the brave old days and a genera tion all but vanished in the shad owy mists of time.. Holmes and Warren The senior of this pair of old warriors whose heads are still unbowed by the years is Oliver Wendell Holmes, associate justice of the supreme court of the Unit ed States, now in his eighty- eighth year; the junior, Francis Emroy Warren, senior senator from Wyoming, three years younger. Warren wears the blue, white starred button of the Medal of Honor, won as an enlisted man I at the seige of Port Hudson Holmes, a youngster lieutenant "l ."T, . thrice breveted for gallantry and i a . a t t .a x ti4 - carries the scars of serious wounds received at Balls Bluff, at Antietam and at Maryes Heights. There is a fine flavor of the older days about bdth these Mass achusetts lads who were tried and tempered in the furnace of war as their first test of manhood. Their pathways far diverged as the struggle ended. Holmes turn ed at once to the scholarly tastes' bequeathed by the poet father whose name he bears to become a profound student of law. War. ..... . . . , ' ed before the frontier and life in the rough called him to the Da kota territory and a leading polit ical place in the making of the state of Wyoming. Not a decade r Old Oregon's Yesterdays Town Talk From the Statesman Our Fathers Read September IS, 1003 Announcement has been made in this city of the marriage of Miss Georgeianna Gwynne, which took place in Anaconda, Montana, September 9. Word comes from Chemawa that arrangements have been completed for the Chemawa In dians will go to California for a match game of football with the Stanford University eleven. Margaritta Fischer, the IS year old favorite and her own tal ented company will appear at the Grand Opera House for one week beginning Monday. Miss Fischer is a Salem girl having spent most of hex life hare. She will probably be remembered by most Salem people as Babe Fischer. E. J. Swafford was a passen ger on yestreday morning's over land passenger train. Miss Carrie Wyatt of Forest Grove is a guest of Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Byrd for a Salem visit. Dr. C. S. White returned to his home yesterday morning after at tending the meeting of the Mar lon County Medical society held in this city Friday evening. E. H. Kuhr of Albany, the Ore gon representative of the Interna tional Correspondence schools of Scranton. Pa. arrived in Salem yesterday to remain until, after the state fair. Hon. and Mrs. Frank Davy ar rived in this city from Portland last evening and will remain un- City's Building Activity Grows With first Rain Wet weather brought a rush of applicants for building permits to the city recorder's office, six .being issued Wednesday. Whether this meant the opening of a building "boom" or hurried preparations to get in out of the rain. Recorder Mark Poulsen could not say. Per mits were issued as follows: TaKii t Vf ti r-nfi v 1wttlnv mi I 2245 North Front street. fl700; Jen i"roctioa of the kind r Eraest Solle. contractor. ' "comJ."y ,tn artlc,e! I fMe s Is il a W a. aw .n rt w M. D. Ellis, renairs on dwell- ing at 2560 Cherry avenue.f 250. B. D. Bedee, dwelling at 1835 South Church' street, $2500; An dersen and Martin, contractors... Rose W. Chamberlain, garage at 1255 Lee street. 2125. Minnie A. Evans, repairs on dwelling at 1014 M1U street. $1, OOt. Mrs.- D. Leonard, repairs oa dwelling at 1162 Walker street. 1200. Father to Coach 7 Son Oh Gridiron NEW YORK. Sept. 12. (AP) Father is to teach sou football at Fordnam. tmv rir.n.n. i. father. Frank w.-ln hA oo.rii He played end. So does the vann! L. Shnjawn- after the guns had ceased to mut ter, his foot was on the ladder of political advancement; while Holmes, then and now. looked out on life by preference through his study windows. Fighter and Scholar They show their history as they sit now with their reepectlTe col leagues In Washington. Warren, heavily erect still and with shoulders wide as a barn door, shows a face seamed with the lines etched there by the lusty, hard fourht life .he has led; Holmes, in the solemn Black robes of his office, reveals scarcely a trace of these furrows of time, for his has been the kingdom' of a trained, thoughtul mind with lit tle ot harsh contacts with life. Yet there is about Holmes as dean of the highest court, as War ren is dean of the senate, some thing that sets him apart rom ts. nrosaie man of the law his life might have made hkn. There is an air of courtly, old world manner and charm despite his aloofness. Many years ago, he called at the post office for a mis directed book, a bulky parcel which the girl clerk promptly of fered to have sent to his home. "Madam," he said in smiling re fusal as he gathered up the big book, "the French have a say ing that a gentleman may carry three things on his arm: a sword, a book or a woman. Surprise Party Given Pomeroys At Indeoendence INDEPENDENCE, Ore.. Sept. 12 (Special) Mr. and Mrs. Dole Pomeroy were pleasantly surprised at their home Monday evening, when a number of their friends dropped in for a social evening. The occasion being their 15th wedding anniversary. The evening was spent in con versation after which refresh ments the guest brought with them were served. The Pomeroys were presented with a large beautiful mirror. Those present were Dr. and Mrs. Wiprud. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Jensen, Mr. and Mrs. Orover Maltison. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Butt, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Mix. Mr. and Mrs. K. I. Williams. Mr and Mrs. R. E Rus sel. Mr.' and Mrs. Hiltebrand and Mr. and Mrs. Pomeroy. til after the fair week. Mr. Davy will fill the position of clerk of the race board during the fair. Miss Margaret Bozworth of Port land arrived in this city yester day for a visit with her sister. Miss Inez Bosworth. T. R. Wilson, the -bookkeeper at the penitentiary is now the proud possessor of one of tha fastest harness horses in the Northwest and he Intends in the future to take the dust from. be hind nobody's rig in these parts. Yesterday the deal was complet ed where by Mr. .Wilson became the owner of Will Dane, a mani ficant gelding from the atabLes of W. A. Clarke Jr.. of Butte. Mon tana. Miss Edith Alderson departei yesterday morning for Baker where she has been engaged teach In the public schools. to POSTALLAWBEIHG 1 According to announcement made by Postmaster John H. Far rar, tests made recently at a se lected postoffice disclosed that at leist 0 per cent of the parcels handled as third and fourth class matter contained letters or per-, sonal notes subject to first class rates. Third assistant postmaster general R. S. Jtegas made the test. This high percentage is caused by the failure of some postmasters BROKEN FR 1UEWTLY to exercise proper care to jrevent " the acceptance for at lees than first class rate of postage of pack ages containing- oaroer s loots, fountain pens. Jewelry, machinery or. other articles together with in structions. Indicated by written words or by check marks, for re pairs to be made or work to be done In connection with the. ar ticles.' Such instructions subject the packages to postage at first class rate two cents for each ounce or friction thereof.; Parcels containing letters, per sonal notes or other written mat ter should go under the first class rate. When it Is desired to hare writ- t ""r ran i postage It can be done In the man ner-set forth J nsecUon 455 Postal laws and regulations which show the condition under which a com municatian prepared at the first class rate may be attached to a parcel of third or fourth cia rate Is prepaid. 2 Nation Hockey Women Will Clash , " - : GREENWICH; R, t, Sept. 12 . 4 (AP) There Is to be an interna tional women's polo match s.-p- t ember 28. A team is coming fromX Alberta to play an American team, places on which are sought by Becky and Sally Lanier, Miss Mary Leary and Mm Jimes Hew- lett Ctnong others. - Jp