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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1938)
' ! ' ' ' ... '!' ' - mm- Late Ncvrt A late prrsn hoar enabled The Orrgo: SUInmai te carry first aewi of the dis appearance Friday atoning of the Hawaii Clipper. The Weather Partly cloudy today tmd Sunday with little change in. temperature or ' hnmidity. Max. Temp. Friday 78, Min. 50. Hirer 3.4 feet. ' POUNDSO 1651 EIGHTY-EIGHTH YEAR Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning:, July SO, 1938 "Prica 2e; Newsstands 6c No. 107 (C(0e sum- i . ' - 4 : ' : " J . Clipper Still. - : : I ; -i ' Mis t On Mill Operation May Mart by September 1st Opening Depends Largely on Market Condition, ..-. .'(.,.. . N Reports Martin ' " '-' ' : . Reconstruction Work Is Almost Comnlete on - Spaulding Plant ' With reconstruction of the Spaulding sawmill here nearing completion, opening of steady commercial -operations will de pend largely upon market condi tions, r Ralph W. . Martin, vice president and manager of tbe Charles K. Spaulding logging company, reported yesterday. "I hope market conditions will Justify starting up about Septem ber 1." Martin said. ine mill saws nave oeen amri ed up about once a week for the last two months to cut material going Into the rebuilding of the old plant, which closed down in 1931. . Changes Made For Efficiency Four major changes directed, at efficiency bare been made in the plans of the mill. Most import ant, Martin pointed out, is con struction of a 200-foot long sort ing chain table, located where the planer division once was operated. Between the table and the old mill proper a new structure has been erected to contain the resaw unit, with a merry-go-round chain transfer system to give the sys tem flexibility, and an edger unit for special work. The new planing mill is being set np in w h a t was once the Spaulding box factory, adjoining the old planer section on the north. A new blower system is being put in to handle sawdust from the sash and -door factory as well at the units of the recondi tioned mill.' II age Crane set cp . ; A stiff-legged crane, with 80 foot boom, has been brought from the New berg mill and set up at tbe 'plant here to handle heavy timbers on the truck and freight car loading doeks. With the exception of scattered control units whose operation by steam power Is considered more satisfactory, the mill will be run entirely by electricity. The plant was converted from steam to elec tric power a short time before the depression shutdown. In full operation the mill will turn out from 125,000 to 150,000 board feet of lumber a day and, including the sash and door crew, employ approximately 200 men. Logging has been going on steadily at the company's Camp Walker this side of Valsetx In preparation for the mill reopen ing and the firm now has approxi mately two million feet of logs in the river ready to cut. Certification Rule Made on WPA Job PORTLAND, Jaly 2.-fl-To protect counties besieged by per sons applying for WPA employ ment the state -relief committee established, a certification rule today. "For the purpose of certifica tion, need shall be said to exist when, the resources of the fam ily or of the unattached individ ual are Insufficient to provide a reasonable subsistence compatible with decency and health," a reso lution said. . ' Elmer Goudy, administrator, said the pressure upon county relief groups for certification was as great now as during the win ter employment lag. Assistance was extended 29. 504 eases in Oregon in June. Total expenditure was $603.6(1. Corrigan Departs Ireland for Home DUBLIN, July IS.-iSVDouglaa O. (east is west) Corrigan bade a railway station farewell to thou- sands of his Irish admirers to night and took a train for Cobh ' where he will board the New York-bound U. S. liner Manhat- . tan. "Good bye and don't take the wrong train." Lord Mayor MAlfie' Byrne sang out to the young American aviator who landed here July IS after a surprise night from New York. ."Yon can take a wrong turn and still get to the -right place,' Corrigan yelled to the big crowd which gathered- to see him off. Drowns in Gales Creek TtlLLSBOIlO. July 29-m-Clen hay, 29, Fern HUL drowned while swimming in Gales creea last night. BritislJSom ff Willi Violent Blows at Spain Policy Labor Members Draw Chamberlain Into Debate Over Spanish Policy and British Ship Bombing, . Then Cheer US Refugee Cooperation LONDON, July 28. (AP) House of commons ad journed for a three-month vacation today after a turbulent session in which angry clashes were precipitated by renewed labor criticism of Britain's policy on the Spanish civil ;war. After breaking off acrimonious debate, started by an exchange over the bombing of British ships in Spanish i -o waters, house members cheered T 1 . T J LOVallStS 113112 Oil To Ebro District Insurgents Make Counter Attack and Open Dams but in Vain i HENDAYE, France-(At the Spanish Frontier)-July 29.-(JP)-The Spanish government "people's army clung close to Gandesa tonight despite counter attacks by land and air and man made flood in the Ebro rirer valley designed to sever supply lines and cut off retreat. Government forces .withstood severe counter-thrusts and the pounding of bombs to consolidate earlier gains in their five-day offensive in south Catalonia. Barcelona dispatches belittled the strategy of the insurgents in opening all dams on the Noguera Pallareea and Segre rivers, north ern tributaries of the Ebro, in sisting that the flood hurt Gen. Francisco Franco's forces more than the government's. These reports said the Ebro rose from three to five feet but that pontoon bridges carrying re inforcements and. supplies merely rose wlth-the river. - f . i On the other hand, government aerial scouts reported the flood had washed out many of the in surgents own wooden bridges for myes south of the dams in the Pyrenees foothills.' Four divisions of government troopa. under a former stone mason. Col. Enrique Lister, were reported to have turned Gandesa, Franco's south ; Catalonia divi sional headquarters,' into a sort of no-man b land. er Passenger Is Portland Man PORTLAND, Ore., July 29- -Major Howard C. French. aboard the missing Hawaiian Clipper, was' senior air reserve of ficer in this area and was a na tional aviation authority. He was state aeronautics inspector under tbe late Governor Julius Meier and was vice-president of the Aero club of Oregon. He entered the army during the Mexican border uprising, leav ing Washington State college. While with the 50th squadron in the world war he was twice shot down. He received the croIx de guerre from the French govern ment, j - After the war ho commanded the S 2 1st ! observation squadron ith headquarters at Pearson field, Vancouver, Wash. He lived here with his mother and sister and has been . in tbe automobile business for a number of years. , - :.-. Rands Is Adviser For O & C Setup WASHINGTON. July 29-(iP)- Ernest P. Rands, , district -cadastral engineer, has b e e n named advisor for the Oregon and Cali fornia land grant administration. Secretary of the Interior Ickes announced today. . Rand has been la charge of ad ministering revested grant lands and has had supervision of the classification and sale of the Ore gon and California lands since 1117. . i . Clipp May Vndertake Final I' Effort' To1 Obtain Grant Extension A final "though not greatly, hopeful effort to secure the ex tension - of time Marlon county needs for acceptance ef a PWA grant for construction of a new courthouse may be- undertaken as a result of a conference between C. C. Hockley, regional PWA ad ministrator, and the county court here yesterday afternoon. Hockley came to Salem saying he still was Interested in seeing the courthouse project kept alive and asking for further Informa Uon as to the need for delay. He said advices received by Senator Charles L., McNary's office In Washington! regarding negotia tions tor : n extension of . time were somewhat encouraging de mbns Ends tbe United States for her co- operation on the Jewish refugee problem Loud applause greeted Earl Winterton, British delegate to the Evian-Les-Bains refugee confer ence instigated by President Roosevelt, when he declared: ! "I think we should recognize the intense Interest not merely by the president of the government, but also the" people of the United States in the matter." Prime Minister Neville Cham berlain was drawn into debate, on Spanish war policy when Richard Austen Butler, parliamentary under-secretary for foreign i af fairs, declared sinking of the British ship Kellwyn during a Spanish Insurgent raid on Valen cia harbor yesterday appeared to be deliberate. ; Clement R. Attlee, laborite leader of the opposition, referred to the fact a Danish non-intervention observer was killed aboard the Kellwyn and pressed a series of questions regarding protection for such officers. lightning Revives Menace of Blazes !' (By the Associated Press), ; ' Lightning revived the f forest fire menace fn Oregon yesterday (Friday) Just as western Wash ington's fire fighters were re joicing at abatement of the haz ard there. I T : Spot fires Iwere set in f many Oregon areas by lightning which followed rains, of Wednesday. An uncontrolled fire of 160 acres , on the Nehalem river In Tillamook county threatened Markham and Callow logging op erations. Three i donkey, engine were destroyed. fA force of 200 men were fighting the blaze. Foresters reported 27 - small fires in the Umpqua forest, In cluding one 40-acre blaze at tributed to Incendiarism. 2 Navy Fliers Die In Dive Into Bay SAN DIEGO, Calif., July 29. -(P) Two navy fliers were killed, and a third escaped unhurt to day when their torpedo ' plane crashed into San Diego bay about 25 yards off the naval training station. ( The dead were: i ! Naval Aviation Pilot Jf d. Rose, 27, and Radioman J. K iPyffer, 22. of New Cumberland. Pa. The body of Rose, who Is be lieved to have attempted to para chute - to safety, was "recovered shortly after the crash,; and " sal vage crews found Pyffer's body several hours later after the wreckage was raised. l Insurgent Planes Devastate Village BARCELONA," July 29.-flV Ten Spanish insurgent warplanes today virtually destroyed - the town of Falset, east of the Ebro river behind the lines of the gov ernment offensive in Catalonia. The planes roared - over the town ; five times in successive raids, dropping more than 200 bombs. First reports said 25 dead and 3 injured had been found. spite the fact Hockley's office has received official notice that the county's request for-isora " time has been denied. ' The result of the conference, depending upon a visit Hockley planned to make to the senator at his Fir Cone farm home, was expected by the court to he a renewed application for more time backed by more detailed ex planations. The court told Hock ley It was too late to' call a special election and, as before, that If an election were to be held it would be on the same day as the November general election. The court can not and would not ac cept the grant without the voters' approval. " ': -' " Expect Battle From Ford on NLRB Decision Labor Examiner Declares Motor Firm Guilty pf - 'Anti-Unionism : Labor Spying Is Charged at Buffalo Assembly ' Plant of Ford WASHINGTON, July 29-iflV rne x ora Motor company is ex pected to fight a decision by a la bor board examiner that it was guilty of labor spying and other anti-union activity at its Buffalo, NY,-assembly plant. Reporting, among other things. that the company circulated anti union literature and was respon sible for tearing down a nnion banner, the examiner recom mended today that the board re quire Ford to rehire 50 CIO work ers end cease "interfering" with union organization. . Examiner Francis M. Shea, bas ing his recommendations on a 12 day public hearing in Buffalo last winter, said the 60 men ordered reinstated with back pay, either were discharged, or refused re employment after a lay-off be cause of their membership in the CIO auto workers union. Says Literature Attacks Unions Shea said the management dis tributed to its workers literature attempting to identify unionism with "communism" and "rack ets." - The report on the literature in troduced a new fictional charac ter Into labor board records "Smoke Stack Joe." One of the circulated pamph lets. Shea said, purported to be the "musings of Smoke Stack Joe" on labor organization. His "homespun" philosophy, the- ex aminer's report disclosed, was that union dues went to pay for "big cars, airplanes, swell offices and big salaries" of union execu tives. The examiner ruled that the circulation of the pamphlets con stituted "a direct appeal to the working men to avoid labor or ganization and a threat that tbe consequences of organization will be that their wage level will de cline." The management was given 10 days within which to comply with Shea's recommendations, or file exceptions and arrange for oral argument before the board. Fail ure to do either will result in Is suance of a board order. If that were not observed the fight could he taken to the courts. Strikers to Sue Portland Hotels PORTLAND, July 29.-Apy-Strlking employes of eight ma jor Portland hotels brought court action against the hostelries to day. The suit was Instituted by T. H. Magill, president, and Gert rude Sweet, secretary, of the joint executive board of the hotel and restaurant employes. A circuit court decree was asked requiring the defendants to "specifically perform the terms and conditions of agreements and. to recognize tbe executive board and the various locals represented by It as the exclusive bargaining agencies for the hotel employes." The plaintiffs , claim the hotels refused to live np to unexpired agreements with the board and the unions. Nelson Indicted On Murder Count TOLEDO. Ore , July 29.HEV Henry Nelson, 33. Portland sales man, was Indicted for murder by a Lincoln county grand jury to day. Nelson Is accused of the fatal Shooting of Richard C. Earl, 38, excursion boat .owner,1 last July 18. Nelson's defense attorney Inter posed a motion for an . Insanity G. F. Skipworth denied it on the examination, but Circuit. Judge grounds sufficient time for ex amination existed before the Sep tember court term. Permission to seek a hearing later -was granted. The defense asked until August 4 before entering a plea. Police Quell Mobs In Burmese Qasn RANGOON, Burma, July 29 (A3) Military police opened fire on rioting mobs In four different parts of Rangoon tonight, killing four persons and wounding IS in efforts to quell clashes of Mos lems and Buddhists. In four days of fighting through barricaded streets of this city a total of 50 persons have been killed and 350 Injured. SEARCH PACIFIC FOR GIANT CLIPPER r . .... . -. . . . . ; " .... 1 ' - ' - - 1 ' 111 iiliniwi..i'iiiiiup m . I. ''"" i",Tr!WI...iWI..'iwWiiwwi.ii il M HIH,JI!HHW"'"-'""H""" W" i' 1 ", m r IsjsjM hv, . ftta .... v-. , , i . .. r . - .. z. . ;. ' .. ' - - .. Sought by destrojrtrs and other craft in the Pacific ocean arcs near the Philippines where it was last" re ported, the giant Hawaii clipper was still ruisein g early today. Fifteen persons are aboard the big airship, last berd from when it was 50O miles out of Manila Thursday night at 8 o'clock (PST). Chinese Struggle To Check Advance Heavy Battle Is Reported at Susung as Chinese Contact Flank SHANGHAI, July 29 - - A fierce struggle between Chinese troops and an overland Japanese force, at Susung, was reported to night as Hankow's defenders strove desperately to check the right wing ofthe Yangtze valley offensive. Susung Is in Anhwei province, about 25 miles north northeast of Kiukiang, the river port which fell to Japanese marine assault on Tuesday. It lies near the border of Hupeh province. - The $ Japanese force threaded its way through mountain passes to reach the town which must be taken if the invaders are to exe cute a flanking movement for a rearguard attack on the northern extreme of the Chinese . Yangtze valley line. The principal target of this column was Wusueh to the south west, site of a submerged river barrier and center of the Chinese defenses on the north bank. Japanese warplanes were high ly active during the day, bom barding Chinese positions all along the-Yangtze line. Northern Lights Phenomenon Seen Northern lights again played for Salem residents last night, a very clear view being obtained by many observers in hills re moved from the city's illumina Uon. B. L. "Buck" Bradley, Sa lem astronomer, reported he wit nessed the - phenomena through his telescope at his Waldo avenue home,, starting at 10:30. ' A bright green arc was seen with perpendicular streamers of violet and red forming on the east side of the arc and moving in a westward direction. The In tensity of the, light was enough to cause fainter stars to fade out. Motion of the streamers was quite rapid. ... . ,;- . - - ... , Another Aurora . Borealls - was visible here June 1S,.193. ' . Ickeg Heads West WASHINGTON, July 29-P-Secretary and Mrs. Ickes left the capital today for Chicago en route to Seattle, Wash. They will embark at Seattle August 3 for a vacation toiur of Alaska. i Late Sports ' LOS ANGELES, July 29.-ff5-First Night game: Portland , , , . 0 5 ' 1 Los Angeles 2 1 - Radonlts and Cronln; Prim and Collins. LOS ANGELES. July M.-fP-Second night game: Portland . ' " S 12 . 2 Los Angeles ...3 I 2 Liska and Dickey; Lieber, Bush and Sueme. OAKLAND. Calif., July 29.-(AP) -Second night game: - v San Francisco ..... ... .,t t 0 Oakland " , ; 1 ,'-1 0 Konpal and Sprlnz; Bittner, Tan Fleet, Lindell and Raimondi. SACRAMENTO, Calif., July 29. -iip-Nlght game: SeatUe : 1 12 0 Sacramento 2 C 0 Turpin and Splndel; ,Freitas and Franks. . -SAN DIEGO, Calif.,. July 29. KJP)-Score: - HoUywood' .. ; ., , .1 8 1 San Diego 3 10 0 . OS borne and Brenzel; Craghead and Hogan. Ji- ,A --il m"mi "'rl' Simnvside up Or Scrambled , A La Highway BATON ROUGE,. La., July 2&-(Jpy A track driver sudden ly fonnd himself In the middle of a huge omelet on the high way near here today. - His track was crowded off the road spilling 150 cases each containing 850 eggs. All 52,500 eggs were rained. They oooked thoroughly on the steaming concrete highway. Two Die in Train Blasted by Rebels Mexico cfrY, J n l y 29-(ffV-Two persons were killed today In a San Luis PotosI state train ex plosion railway officials blamed on Cedillo rebels. , A number -of persons suffered slight injuries in the blast, which wrecked a second class coach of a Mexican National Railways train on the San xLuis Potosi-Tampico division. 1 The explosion occurred within, a mile of the spot where followers of O e n . Saturnlno Cedillo, who launched an ; unsuccessful revolt May 20, had ! dynamited another train two months ago. Govern ment forces thus far hare failed to capture the rebel chieftain. "Babs knd Count Arrange Divorce LONDON, July 2-CP)-The bit ter marital troubles of Count and Countess Haugwitz - RevenUow have been ended "amicably" with a deed -of separation as a prelude to a Danish divorce. The countess, the former Bar bara Hutton, American-born heir ess to 340,000,000 of the Wool worth dime store fortune, settled an nndlvulged sum n p o n their two-year-old son Lace, solicitors for the cocple- said in a statement today announcing the separation. Unemployment Drops ' J NEW Y6RK, July 29.-()-The latest estimates of the national industrial conference board, made public; today,! showed a decline in . . unemployment from " May . to June of 388,000 persons, making the June total of unemployed 10,981,000 persons. Tillamook Judge Dies , - ' , .. t .- -- - , :'' : : ' TILLAMOOK, Ore., July 29-P) -Tillamook County Judge Hud son H. Rosenberg, J 4, died today. He formerly ,Was In the mercan tile business at Aberdeen, Wash. Movement for Senate Action On Third Ternt ls Initiated f'' - y '." ".- - -, '. ': -.t -, ... ' WASHINGTON, July 29-(ff)-A movement to place the senate on record next year against a third term for, the president got under way today.'' i ' ' . . . "V e ; Senator Holt (D-WVs) a fre quent critic of the administration, started it, and Senator Vanden berg (R-Mich), predicted that re publicans would join In. .. , , Holt said he would introduce a resolution similar to the one the senate adopted, 66 to 20, when Calvin , Coolidge , was presidents ; The 1928 resolution said that the retirement of president after their second term had become a part of the United States' republi can form of government "by uni versal concurrence." It declared & departure from that precedent w o n 1 d be "unwise, unpatriotic. - - 1 - - 0- -v- . ' 7 il1"1"" 1 ... w : -.., - Metaxas Smashes Cretan Revolution Greek , Dictator Wastes no Time in Ending Qnickie Revolt ATHENS, July 2 9-53)G reeee's plump little Prussian-trained die tator. Gen. John Metaxas, was re ported to have smashed with lightning speed t o d a y an antl fascist revolt on the fable island of Crete. Within four hours after an nouncing the insurgents had seiz ed ' Crete's capital city of Canea, the fascist government in Athens said it was all over. . "The . Cretan revolt, has been suppressed a n d all government property 'seized has now been . re captured," said a message to Premier Metaxas from the gover nor of -Crete. The leaders of the uprising were reported - arrested, while government forces here pressed measures designed to- prevent a further -outbreak. The bespectacled ..Metaxas, known as "Little John," bad dis patched army, naval,' and air forces as soon as word of the re bellion reached the mainland. The revolt, which broke out last night, was headed by M. Mit sotaki, a nephew. of Greece's one time premier, the late Eleutheriog yenlzelos, who In 1936 led one of the fiercest revolts in modern his tory of Greece, seizing several warships. ' - Physician Charged Narcotic - Violator PORTLAND, July 29.-(ff-TJnlted States , District Attorney Carl C. Donaugh said today that Dr. J. W. Huff, Baker physician, had been indicted on 12 counts by the federal grand ' jury, for alleged violation of the Harrison narcotics law. - A deputy marshal was dis patched to Baker to bring the physician here. His bond was set at 83,000. ' - " - ? The Indictment charged that Huff . prescribed narcotic for John L. Grier, alias Ed Anderson; not In the course of his profes sional practice nor In good faith. The indictment also stated that prescriptions totaled "2 50 half grams extending over a 'year. w Donaugh said his office and narcotics control agents had made an extensive Investigation before presenting the case to the grand Jury. Wood Named Treasurer PORTLAND, July 2 9 -(-Members of the wine council of Ore gon, i at their annual meeting here yesterday, elected Joseph Schuss, Portland, president, G. E. Wood, Salem, treasurer. and fraught with peril to our free institutions." Twenty-two of the EC senators who voted for the La Follette res olution still are in the senate, and only - senators .Walsh; (D-Mass) and McNary (R-Ore) remain of those .who opposed .it. Walsh said at the Ume that he opposed third terms, but was against. the resolution because it would re flect upon the good faith of President Coolidge's famotis state ment that be did not. choose to run. " . - -' ' ' " .' Meanwhile, the republican na tional committee issued a pamph let of quotations from the presi dent's "public papers" and news paper statements, and : charged that "intellectual dishonesty per meates the entire fabric of the president's philosophy." , Aircraft Scan Of Lost Plane Navy Destroyers SearcK t Sea While Bombers Soar Over Area r llteen Aboard biff bhin i Missing Since 8 p. m. - Thursday - Night i MANILA, July 30-(Saturday)- (JPf-Ar and surface craft scanned the sea In vain today for traces of the . 26-ton Hawaii clipper, which vanished yesterday with 15 persons in the ocean stretches approximately 565 miles east of here. Army and navy searching forces coursed back and forth over tbe water where the huge flying boat mysteriously, disappeared, paused briefly to report non-success, and then doggedly resumed the hunt. Tbe army transport Meigs, which was but 87 miles from the clipper's last reported position. A. .11 MtU. .. the plane's course, splitting the night blackness with searchlights and sending up signal flares. She continued the search by daylight. Six heavy army bombers soar ed out over the area in excellent weather conditions, but after hours of flying, they messaged:' "Found nothing." The Pan American trans-Pacific . plane last reported at 8:09 p. m. Thursday (Pacific Standard Time), saying sh was 565 miles of Manila on a regular flight here from Guam. (Manila time is II hours ahead of Pacific Standard. Time). - -Plane Heard Over Island (In San Francisco, airways officials were- notified a Philip pine . Long Distance Telephone Co. employe heard a plane- three hours later over Luhuy island, in . the San Bernardino Straits, at tbe southern tip of Luzon Island. (The plane, which was not dis cernable above clouds, was pro ceeding west on the course flown by the clippers, the airways de clared. Luhuy Island Is approxi mately 250 miles southeast of Manila.) - The army bombers expected to cover an area extending 160 miles north and south and 600 miles east and west in the region when the clipper last reported her position. 1 With six passengers and nine crew members the clipper left Guam at 11:39 a.m. (PST) yes terday,, for a 1580-mile jump to Manila, terminus of her regular 8200 miles route from California. Radio listeners spread the alarm when four hours passed without a routine report from the plane, which usually gave its po sition and flying conditions every 30 minutes. , - Fourteen warships sped out ef IkTamtla ta trt 4n(n t Vi hunt Hit army bombers left Fort Stotsen berg, near Manila, to scan tbe Philippine coast and the typhoon -area of the Pacific to tbe east of the islands.- Four amphibians pre pared to follow. Radio Silence Foreboding The plane's, radio silence car ried forebodings to the searchers. She was equipped to send and re- . surface,- and, barring the possi-. ; Jsility of a high dive into the Pa cific, was considered as seaworthy iht smalt vsvrht. a . r From her log as made publis by Pan American Airways, op erators of the transpacific air line, there was an Inkling also that the big clipper was heading into unfavorable weather. The last message mentioned rain. For several hundred miles she had been speeding through a mod erately rough wind. , Reaching the vicinity of the plane's last reported position, the Meigs began sweeping the sea with her searchlights, while zig zagging along the course. At 12:45 a. m. today (Manila time ha rennrtftd Irhtlnr nnthinr. f' r 9 The Meigs burned flares and sent up rockets at intervals. The sea was calm but. rain was falling. Despite the negative - result from the Initial searching. Past American Airways officials re mained optimistic. The clipper was in charge ef Leo Terletzky, ace Pan American pilot, and K. A. Kennedy, a divi sion traffic manager of the com pany, was among the passengers. Portland Man Passenger - The other passengers were Ma jor Howard C. French of Port land, Ore.; Dr. Earle B. lie Kin ley. i notd authority on leprosy, and Dr. Fred C. Meier, principal path ologist of the department of agri culture, b o t h of Washington, D. C; E. E. Wyman, Curtiss Wright aircraft official of New York City, and Wah Sung Choy. Chinese restauranteur of Jersey City, N.'J. Ii Terletzky's crew were Fir Officer M. A. Walker; Secon 3 C (Turn to Page 2, CoL 1) -.