47: BUY NOWlI' " It's wise and smart to buy now. ' Prices hate ad "Med, wOl go higher. H0 -: business men urge action by consumers. - s. &:v .THEJWEATHEB . .:. y. Partly cloudy Sunday and Monday; morning fogs; no " change la temperature; Max. ' . Temp. Satardsy 44, Mia. 37; jdoody. NW wind, river -1.2. EIGHTY-THIRD YEAR Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, November 12, 1933 No. 198 t ... . ' . -- i " : M a p - FOUNDED 1Q51 . ; ; ; . . :w .f&4frg OREGON BEATS BiiEep-3 MD TOPS COAST 0. S. C. "Iron Men" Battle Bravely Against Webf eet; .. "Breaks" are Bad Oregon Only Unbeaten Team of Conference; Mikulak, Temple Aid Victory By FRANK G. GORRIE MULTNOMAH STADIUM, Port- State's famous; "iron men" foot ball machine was melted to scrap t o fy .whenL fiery, crushing University of Oregon team swept to a-13 to 3 Tictory, t& take an unchallenged position at the head of the Pacific Coast conference. The "Iron immortals" of Cor Tallis, who had previously played through three battles with only two substitutions, and who bad held the mighty Trojans to a scoreless tie with only 11 men. wilted under the relentless on slaught of the Webfooters and all were replaced in the fourth Quar ter. The defeat of previously unde feated Southern California team beaten Oregonians at the top of the conference standing. " A capacity crowd of more than 30.000 frensied spectators watch ed' the dlzsy battle which saw Adolph "Tar" Schwammel, giant tackle, kick a field goal for Ore gon State In the first period, and two smashing, whirlwind drives send the "Mighty" Mike Mikulak and "Roundup" Mark Temple, pkinging to touchdowns, the ft r mer In the second period and the latter In the fourth. "Stew" Mllll gan missed the first try for point from placement, and Temple booted his own to add the last digit of the contest. The score failc&to indicate the closeness of the Buttle as Ore gon State drove close to touch downs several times, and Oregon ploughed within striking distance on other rough shod trips. The longest run of the battle witnessed Johnny Biancone, Ore gon State sub halfback, headed for a certain score in the closing minutes of play, but a heart breaking' stumble over, one of his own men cut bim down. on Ore gon's 15 yard line. He had taken a pass from Acheson on his 21 yard line, and the Beaver back total gain of 84 yards. He tried to step around a Webfoot tack ier who had caught np with him and he stumbled over his own Interference partner. Oregon State tallied its field goal early In the first period when Norman "Red" Franklin, as slippery a back as the north west has seen In years, reeled off 18 yards around right end to reach Oregon's 20 yard line. When a pass failed and two "line smashes moved the Webfoot- era back only 8 yards, Schwam mel dropped back to the 25 yard line and booted a field goal straight and true. The early score failed to Im press the Lemon-Yl la W gridders and , they Tame .back la the sec ond period with a ripping, run ning attack from their own 29 (Tnm In Pin 9 fVil ) M SIM DEPT. x WASHIN6TON, Nor. 11. OF) Pleased, wits tne irena uu xar, state department officials and Maxim Utvlnorf, the Soviet's fere- most diplomat, today . continued their methodical work of building a foundation Jon which to estabr lish Russian recognition.- The meeting arranged for the afternoon In the office 01 unaer SecreUrr Phillips was the fourth at which the Soviet foreign minis ter and state department officials hr reviewed - the Questions on which there must be an uuder- . it.- kAfon Hilnntlnn nf nltW lomatie relations. The Soviet representative, un accompanied save for the usual detail of secret service men, ar rived at the state department shortly after 4 o'clock. He re mained In Phillips office only About 45 miantes. , --r- -7- Lindbergh Flies To Santdna, Spain MADRID, No 11. (flV-After a flicht from Geneva that Col onel Charles A. Lindbergh de scribed as "Bneventful" despite difficult flying eonditlons," he and Mrs. Lindbergh arrived today at Santona, 15 miles from San- under on; the By; of Biscay. Santona . city -officials greeted h American tllee and escorted ' them to the home of .Jose Albo, - A f the wealthiest men in i KArthen Snaln, where they plan- ' nd to spend the night before leaving for Lisbon early tomor mo n row. 'J Find Masterpiece in Convent lit ? v ! i -J; !;:: ?r" v ; I f One of the world's most famous work of the great Spaniard Murillo, in 1805, has been located la the galleries of the Vrsuline Convent and College In Santa Rosa, Cal. There are only three originals from the brush of Murillo la exist ence and the third has been missing more than a century. It was found In the Ursuline convent. The famous "Beggar Boy" painting is considered by art connolaswers to rival Murillo's famed paint ing of the Virgin. The Ursuline nuns were the first order of Cath olic Bans to establish themselves in America. The painting has been taken to San-Francisco-an locked in a vault for safe keeping. Ber nice O'Rourkc, a student at the college, is shown with the painting. Central Press Photo. - GERMAN PASTOR IS Ex - Submarine Captain is Ousted for; Opposing Anti-Semitism BERLIN, Nov. 11. (P Because he opposed anti-semitlsm in the church, the Rev. Martin Niemael ler. a former submarine captain and Ions a member of the nasi party, was summarily suspended from his pastorate today by the Rev. Joachim Hossenf elder, pres ident of the Nazi German Chris tian movement. The Rev. Mr. NIemaeller, who won the lrc4 Cross for bravery in the World war, urged members of his congregation every Sunday to vote "yes" in tomorrow's pie-, biscite on the government's for eign policy, but opposed aati-sem-Itlsm in the church on the grounds' that it is incompatible with the teachings of Christ. In his congregation are Count Schwerin Von Krosick and Pro fessor Julius Curtius, former min ister of foreign affairs. NIemaeller also was president of the Pastors' Emergency feder ation which comprises 3,000 min isters who endorsed the new- po litical regime but opposed at tempts of "the German Chris- tia? V tr "regiment" the church. His suspension comes at the very momeqt when, through the efforts of the Rev. S. McFarland of New York, Chancellor Hitler agreed to meet the leaders of those opposing the German Chris tians. Friends of the pastor believe his suspension is a move by Dr. Hoss enf elder to make Hitler's recep tion Impossible, as the chancellor cannot very , well receive a sus pended man, they said. Another popular pastor, E. F. Rabernau, who also belongs to the opposition group, was likewise suspended tonight. News of the removal of these two clergymen spread rapidly by telephone through the reich, and the possibility of a schism through the protectant church was envis aged In some quarters. OHM LA GRANDE, Ore., Nor. 11. Uf Raymond C. Griffin, 25, of La Grande was fatally Injured and four others were seriously hurt when a truck, traveling along the Old Oregon Trail highway six miles east of here today struck an automobile from behind, po lice said they were Informed, In a dense fog. Griffin, who was In the automo bile, suffered a fractured skull and died in a hospital here a few hours later. Jack Fariss Jr., man ager of a La Grande store (Mont gomery -Ward ic. company) and driver of the car, susta'ned inter nal injuries. Elsie Toombs and Mrs. Lyn Hannefield, both of La Grande, received leg fractures. Carl Stoddard, driver of the truck, suffered several fractured ribs. SUSPENDED IBM, f " ii;-'r - .? v: ; OiuiltB paintings, "The Melon Eaters, the CONTROL BY STATE IS Washington Committee Fa vors Canadian System Of Liquor Handling OLYMPIA, Wash., Nov. 11. CP) A comprehensive plan of vest ing exclusive control over strong and mild liquor in the hands of the state was revealed by Govern or Clarence D. Martin today as the advisory liquor control commis sion's answer to the problem left with the state by the death of na tional prohibition. The majority and minority re ports of the commission were made public by the governor with out comment, other than a state ment praising the commissioners for the thoroughness of -their study. The commission made no re commendation on the advisability of calling a special session of the legislature to enact a liquor con trol law. Although they were divided over one major and two minor questions, the seven members of the commission unanimously re commended adoption of a state control plan restricting the sale of neavy liquors, such as whisky, gin and fortified wines, In pack age form only, in state-owned and operated stores, and permitting wide licensed selling of beer and light wines. FOG RESPONSIBLE FOR PILOTS DEATH PASCO, Wash., Nov. 11. (JP) W. J. Fletcher, an oil company pi lot, of Seattle, was killed and Claude C. Van Fleet, his compan ion, was injured when their plane crashed in the Horse Heaven hills about eight miles south of Kenne wlck early tonight. An employe at the Pasco air port said the plane had not been scheduled to land there, but he understood Fletcher had decided to attempt it, after finding other northwest airports shrouded in fog. There was good visibility at Pasco, the airport said, but a heavy fog clung dose to the rug ged dry hills which skirt the Col umbia river south of Kennewiek. It was back In these hills where the plane crashed. ' Tan Fleet told rescuers that the plane had left Klamath Falls, Ore.y earier In the day for Seat tle, but finding the airport there fog-covered, they flew to Wen atchee and on to Spokane, but met with the same conditions. HURT TS ACCIDENT ; Miss Agnes Eckerlen, 'route nine, was brought to Salem Dea coness hospital last night, suffer ing from Injuries which, she was rtpo-iel to have recelvedaa the r.riult of an automobile accident. Hospital, attendants said her con dition was not serious. Details of the accident were unobtainable at a late hour. . - RECOMMENDED WALLACE ASKS SSPPDBT Secretary Tells Home Folks Corn-Hog Deal Will Bring Money to Corn Belt Farm Strike Fails to Cut Off Supplies; Wisconsin Coun ty Calls Off Strike DES MOINES, la., Nov. 11. () Secretary of Agriculture Wal lace tonight pleaded with a re sponsive home-state audience for support of the administration's corn-hog program and predicted such support would mean higher farm income. Greeted before the start of his address in the coliseum, with the singing of Iowa's "corn song" by the crowd . whjeh. included dele, gatlons ,dirt !4rmersrt,: legis lators, and business men,' the cab inet member was accorded fre quent applause throughout his formal speech and another out burst of handclapplng as he fin ished. ' Asserting that the administra tion's program for wheat and cot ton states had provided -farmers with "money to spend for the first time In many months," and start ed "the circuit flow of prosper ity," Secretary Wallace said: "Two or three months from now I believe It will be possible to say the same things about the corn country, if the people here wish it to be so." "The farmers cannot be defeat ed In this program unless they de feat- themselves," he continued. "If we do not make the corn and hog program succeed, we are in for worse times than we bare ever seen." The corn-hog program, Wallace said, "will bring $350,000,000 in benefit paymenta into the corn belt about $75,000,000 in Iowa alone between January 1, 1834, and the spring of 1935." The corn-hog program, coupled with the president's monetary pol icy, offers the way for the corn belt farmer to enjoy increased farm income, he asserted. DES MOINES, la., Nov. 11. (K) Although s p o r a d lc disorders were reported as pickets in the national farm strike sought to prevent movement of farm pro duce to market, little diminution of receipts was noticed as the third week of the Farmers Nation al Holiday association strike end ed tonight. Outside Iowa, Nebraska and Wisconsin, where the association's strength was most noticeable. livestock, produce, and dairy re ceipts were reported "about nor mal." In the three states where the strike has attained most mo mentum, no serious shortage of foodstuffs was reported. Farmers in Bureau county, Wis consin, at a meeting, voted to call off the strike entirely. UP AT MONTEVIDEO (Copyright 1933, by the Asso ciated Press) NEW YORK, Nov. 11. (P) Through diplomatic channels came 01 A 1 DAI PROBLEMS word today that a proposal to j prayer service at the First Bap link the federal reserve bank of (tist church at :-30 o'clock led the United States with the na tional banks of Latin American nations is nnder consideration as Secretary of State Hull sails for Montevideo to the Pan American conference. ' From these sources it was learned that the establishment of an inter-American Investment bu reau to solve the economic prob lems of the Americas was under going an intense study In Latin America and that, apparently, the project had sympathetic support of the administration in Wash ington. NEW YORK, Nov. 11. Arowing a "good neighbor pol icy" for all nations of the new world continents. Secretary of State Hull and other members of the American delegation sailed today for the seventh Pan-American conference at Montevi deo, Uruguay. Under Instructions from the White House to avoid at this time any discussion on economic questions, the secretary of state declared: ' "If at Montevideo ' we can deal sosndly with some of the basic problems of good relations, we shall be laying the groundwork for permanent achievement, We shall attempt, therefore, to do ths things that can most Intelli gently be done la a .time of an settled conditions. In , this way, we hope to build tor the future." OXK CHIMXEY,, FIRE v t Ity firemen .spent ''Armistice day lolling about their, stations Their only call of the day was to put out a chimney fire at Ca. tol and Oak streets last night. Gov. Meier Endorses R. C. Drive Workers in the Red Cross roll call in Salem and Marion county will start out Monday morning on their intensive membership drive with the support of Governor Jul ius L. Meier, who has issued a proclamation calling for their sup port, and of J. N. Chambers, who as chairman of the Marion coun ty relief committee, has been in close contact with work of the Willamette Red Cross chapter here the past year. Governor Meier's proclamation reads: "To the people of Oregon: "The annual nation-wide roll call of the American Red Cross will be conducted this year from Armistice day to Thanksgiving day. "During the past years when widespread unemployment has brought hardship and suffering in its wake, the Red Cross has met greatly Increased demands and re sponsibility with cheerful cour age and efficiency. "I hope that every citizen of Oregon who can possibly do so will respond to this annual ap peal, knowing that every dollar invested in Red Cress -membership will' yield a large return in service." Mr. Chambers praised the Red Cross' work in the following state ment: "The efficient handling of re lief in Marion county is in large measure due to the fine co-operation of the trained personnel of the Red Cross chapter in this county. "The amount of flour and cloth ing furnished by the national Red Cross when figured in dollars and cents far exceeds the amount of m ney raised in this county for Red Cross relief. In other words. for every dollar - subscribed, the national association has more than matched our offerings." GIDEONS TO CLOSE CONVENTION TODAY The Oregon State Gideons will close their three-day convention here today with religious services at the First Baptist and First Methodist churches and at the state penitentiary. Satisfaction with the convention program was expressed generally at the ban quet held at the Argo hotel Isst night, attended by over 130 per sons and for which Dr. E. W. Pettlcord, pastor of the First Evangelical church here, was the main speaker. Dan Schirman of Salem was elected at the late afternoon ses sion as president of the state or ganization succeeding R. C. Doty of Beaverton. Qther officers nam ed were L. Van Delinder, Salem, vice-president; W. M. Thome, Sa lem, secretary - treasurer; T. P. Eastland, Portland, Bible secre tary, and E. A. Weir, Portland, chaplain. The state auxiliary reelected Mrs. Dale Matthews of Portland as president, and chose Mrs. Dan Sc&irmsn for vice president and Mrs. W. M. Thome for secretary treasurer. Today's convention program will consist of a prayer service at the First Baptist church at 8:30 a. m. led by Harry A. West of Portland; special Gideon ser vice there at 11 o'clock with Britton Ross, pastor, preaching "Life's Greatest Questions"; ser vices by a special group at the penitentiary at 12:30 p. m.; mass meeting at the First Methodist church at 3 o'clock with E. Toms of Everett, Wash., speaking on "The Triumph of the Cross": by S. E. Hill of Tacoma. and con eluding service there at 7:10 with Jack Mitchell of Portland preach ing on "The Challenge of the Day." Free Lutherans Hold Conference SILVERTON. Not. ll.Rev. Martin J. Olsen of Portland was elected president of the Oregon circuit of Free Lutheran churches at Its annual business meeting nere today. K. O. Rue, Silverton. is newly elected treasurer of the church body while Rev. A. Oft edal, Spokane, and Rev. John Lo- land. Astoria, were elected vice president and secretary respect lveiy. The conference, which opened Wednesday la the Calvary Luth eran church here, has had an ave rage attendance of 200 persona at Its various meetings' Services are scheduled. for morning,' afternoon and evening tomorrow, conclud es uay, wim kbv. uiteaai preach' lng In the morning. Outstanding musical contribu tions have been given by the Cal vary male Quartet and by Mrs. M. J. Olsen, Mrs. John Loland and Esther Rue, vocalists. RACE CAR KILLS MAX LIBERAL, Kas., Nov. 11. (JP) A car in an Armistice day motor race here- today plnnged into crowd lining the road, killing Long Jackson, a spectator, and injuring four other persons. The car left the road upon striking an other machine In the race. , IGKE5 RULING S E Coast Bridges Out in Cold if Secretary Withholds PWA Funds Marshall Dana Asks Ickes to Clarify Statement on Oregon Participation WASHINGTON, Nov 11. UP) The outlook tonight was that Oregon would have no coastal highway connected - with bridges If it awaited public works funds to carry on the construction. While representatives of the Pacific coast and Rocky mountain states hoped Public Works Ad ministrator Ickes had not entire ly turned his back upon their recommendations, his positive statement jthat j Oregon :wiH not get ! any more puuic woras iunas until other states' n e e d c have been cared for seemed to block their efforts for the time being at least His assertion pushed five bridges, estimated to cost 'more than $5,000,000 into the back ground and left the Oregon coastal highway In a secondary position as. compared with - other north- south ' thoroughfares be tween the Pacific northwest and California. 'Although the bridges are big items in the requests of that state, it was said ' here that the greatest objections to Ickes' rul ings will come in the combined voices of the smaller communi ties which have small projects averaging a few thousand dol lars pending before the public works board. The only comment of Senator Bone (D.-Wash.) was that Ickes is inclined to believe the tar western states have received more public works funds than their population deserves. Senator Pope (D.-Idaho) con tinued plans to press- for action before Ickes, the reclamation bu reau and the R. F. C. on projects totalling close to $12,000,000. The administrator was not quoted as picking any state ex cept Oregon as an example of having received more than its quota if allotments were made on the basis of population, but Rep resentative Martin (D.-Ore.) said Ickes told-him both California and Washington were far above the "amount they deserve." Martin quoted Ickes as say In r the populous centers of the east were complaining about the pour ing of money into the west. It was the general opinion of (Turn to Page 3, Col. 1) WASHINGTON, Nov. 11. Pi Although the comptroller general of the United States today held Henry Ford eligible for govern ment contracts, all Indications were that the motor manufactur er would get none until the ques tion Is talked over next week at President Roosevelt's council ta ble. The ruling was that the auto mobile code is law: that Ford therefore must comply with it; that no evidence shows he is not complying, and in the absence of such evidence it must be assumed that he Is. Hugh S. Johnson, the NRA ex ecutive, from Fort Worth, Texas, expressed disagreement with the comptroller's ruling voicing a be lief that this official, J. R. Mc Carl, had misinterpreted the Pres ident's orders on the subject of giving government contracts only to NRA cooperators. Other of ficials here kept silence. Johnson, will be back Tuesday, and the President's executive council will meet the same day. Directors of the emergency units of the government join cabinet members In the council. SAN JOSE, Calif.. Nov. 11. OR Varying theories today compli cated the bunt for the supposedly kidnaped Brooke Hart, 22, son of a wealthy San Jose merchant. A search of the liner Lurline at San Pedro by a swarm of San Francisco and Los Angeles police failed to develop the clue that turned up In San Francisco last night with the finding of young Hart's wallet on the guard rail of an oil tanker that had been along side the passenger ship a few hours before it sailed for the southern metropolis. Chief of Police J. N. Black of San -Jose, it was learned, was checking a report that young Bart had Incurred debts of which other members of his family did not know. Officers said there was no verification of the report but it would be ran dowa. IKE OUTLOOK BAD FOR OR 1 JOHnSON SNIPES IT I MM THEORIES III HINT MY BlMlORAH ARMISTICE DA President Roosevelt Places Wreath at Tomb of Unknown, Soldier; French Premier Urges Vigilance and Deputies Brand Germany "an Infernal Machine": Anti-War Groups are Active Capital Post Carries Out Program in Salem With Parade And Address by Harold Warner, State Commander of American Legion, Who Denounces Tyranny and Re minds Hearers of Disabled Vets The days of '17 and 18 were recounted, the tunes chanted anew and that fellowship born of being shoulder to shoulder through gun fire and suffering revivified by scores of World war veterans who gathered at the American Legion "dugout" down town last night to close a day that brought marching once again to martial airs, and solemn commemoration of that 11th hour on the 11th November day in 1818. The celebration arranged by Capital Post No. 9 was. worth the effort, Commander Claude Mc Kenney declared. The perpetual peace and growth of democracy envisioned tor the world following that 1918 day are lacking today,. Harold J. War ner of Pendleton, state com mander of the Legion, declared at the exercises at the armory yesterday morning. Warner de picted a world in which demo cracy is being displaced by dic tatorships, a world in which the league of nations, political em bodiment of those 1918 ideals, has "deteriorated into i debating society and has not settled one world problem." "Today we are confronted," Warner asserted, "not by auto cracy but by tyranny, the form of government most peculiar, dan gerous and antagonistic to demo cracy." In addition to paying tribute to soldiers sacrificed in the World war, Warner called attention to the thousands of veterans still ly ing in hospitals throughout the land, "for whom the war is not and never will be ended." Warner cited the American Le gion as an organization standing for preparedness and the pre amble of its constitution as one of the greatest documents of Its kind. He declared its members should not be regarded as trea sury raiders but as peace-time as well as war-time defenders of the nation. Heading the parade yesterday was the Salem drum corps, mak ing Its second public appearance nere since Its return from the Chicago convention. The corps and the national champion trio and quartet of the Capital Unit auxiliary provided musical num bers for the armory program. MUM IT 61E PORTLAND, Nov. 11. (In terested but neutral spectators at today's football game between the University of Oregon and Oregon State, which Oregon won 13 to 3, were Dr. W. J. Kerr, state chan cellor of . higher education, and Willard Marks of Albany, vice president of the state board of higher education and acting head of the board since the resignation this week of Roscoe C. Nelson of Portland as president. Dr. Kerr and Marks sat side by ! side at the game, but so far as could be learned they did not dis cuss the involved affairs of high- er education in Oregon. A report that board members in Portland for the game might meet Infor mally to disease what action they would take at their next meeting toward reorganization apparently failed to materialize. The chancellor left tonight for Chicago where he will attend edu cational organisation meetings. BIG MAX DRUNK One of those big Portland po licemen. It may. have been, was dragged, into police headquarters here last night and locked in the "cage" in the jail, there to cool off from an overdraft of strong drmka. C.ty officers said the man claimed to , be . Portland police ma:, and refused to give his-trite name.' He was booked as D. HrU lng. It required two: Salem offi cers, to take him to the station from a downtown confectionery 4n rhich he was arrested : H (By the Associated Press) Solemn ceremony, riotous dis orders, and fears of an impending conflict mingled Saturday as the world remembered those who died in the world war. At Cambridge university, Eng- by a student anti-war group; in Paris, warnings of war sounded amid a plea for peace; In a cold gray fog Londoners paid tribute to the empire's fallen; Americans paid silent tribute at 11 o'clock to heroes of the conflict that ended 15 years ago. WASHINGTON. President : Roosevelt and a distinguished au dience stood with bowed and bared heads at the tomb of the unknown soldier ' at Arlington to symbolize the respect of the na tion for the man who gave his life in France. Chrysanthemums were placed on the tomb by the president's na val aide and by Mrs. Roosevelt; taps were blown, and the brief ceremony was over. . WELLESLEY. Mass. A group of Wellesley college girls carried anti-war placards at the annual i Armistice day services on Welles- ley green. American Legion offi cials expressed Indignation. - Commander Frank O'Gilvie of the Wellesley Legion post said that the students violated a town ordinance by parading without a permit and that he and other citi zens looked with disapproval upon the appearance of the girls at the ceremony. PARIS. Premier Albert Sar raut raised the voice of peace amid the blare of bugles, the tramp of soldiers, the thnnder of cannon and the echo of parlia ment's warnings of war. The premier, dedicating a sta tue of ex-Premier Briand, sounded a call for "peace through Euro pean understanding'' and for vig ilance at the same time. The nation discussed assertions in the-chamber of deputies that Germany is "an Infernal machine, menacing Europe." and that Ger many allegedly is rearming "an invisible army." ' General John J. Pershing made a pilgrimage to the graves of Am erica's war dead and then sailed quietly for Washington. French troops marched to sa lute the grave of the unknown sol died under the Arc de Trlomphe. LONDON. A cold gray fog draped the Cenotaph as a mighty gathering of Britons, led by the Prince of Wales, paid tribute to the empire's war dead. King George, whose grave ill ness in 1928 was traced to just such weather as that of today, ob served a period of jBllence in his private apartments at Bucking- ham palace., Queen Mary watched the ceremony from her window, as her eldest Son deposited his . father's wreath of poppies at the memorial. , 1 After the ceremony at the Ceno-i taph many Britons visited West mtnatpr AMt Where a memorial service was conducted. "75 LEIPZIG, Germany. - German intellectual leaders appealed" ' to the world for a better understand ing of Germany and toft, iforta; peace. CAT BERLIN. Fifty exchange stu- -dents from the United States ob served Armistice day by deposit ing a wreath at the memorial to Prussia's war dead. The act was probably the first observance of the anniversary In Germany since Germans regard the day as commemorating the reieh's humiliation. Heters YoUr Bag, WhafsYour Hurry To the retiring members from the gang is the Inscription on the placard hanging above three tine leather lined traveling bags stand lng together la the hack room of " the postofflce building. The hags, gifts from other postofflce em ployes here to Arthur Welch, saia to oe in Keeping - wnn 1 tne , pisas - oi ue inxee men xor uo " o Retired November 1 under; the combined pension and ' economy' system of the ' civil service, the three are planning trips. Baker to California and 'Welch and - Rider to 'destinations yet unknown by their former "huddles. v ; :7