CIRCULATION
Dally average distribution for the
Month ol June, 1933
CITY EDITION
Local: Fair tonight, Saturday and
Sunday; no change In temperature;
northwest Rinds.
9,609
Average daily net paid 9,177
Member Audit Bureau of Circulation
Max., 84; Mln 45; rain, 0; river,
-1 foot; clear; variable winds. .
45th YEAR, No. 172
Entered as second clasa
matter at Salem, Oregon
SALEM, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1933
PRICE THREE CENTS
ON TRAINS AND NEWS
STANDS FIVE CENTO
(ft
pa
iSiuaqn own
mm
XL "li
MI
F
11
EAST
VOTING LIGHT
IN SALEM AND
GVER OREGON
Only 15 Percent of Qual
ified Electors Vote Up
To Noon Here
Not More Than Half of
Voters Expected. To
Visit Polls Today
Election Returns
With the cooperation of
Louis duBuy, Radio Head
quarters, returns of today's
election will be announced at
the Capital Journal office
through a special broadcast
ing device commencing at 8
o'clock tonight.
State, county and city re
turns will be gathered and
compiled as rapidly as the
count progresses by the Asso
ciated Press and a special
staff of Capital Journal cor
respondents and reporters.
Telephone information as
to the progress of the count
may be had by calling 4882, or
4681 after the polls close at
8 p. m.
Early reports from Portland vot
ing precincts today indicated a
heavier voting trend than had been
expected for forenoon, and an av
erage of 10 per cent of the registra
tion Ijad been cast at mid-morning,
according to information from scat
tered precincts.
There was no day counting of
votes in Multnomah county's ' '540
precincts, except at 27 polling
places. At the 27 precincts the
count began at 1 p. m. At the oth
ers it was to start at 8 p. m-, when
the polls closed.
Indications at noon were that less
than 50 per cent of the 12,737 reg
istered voters in Salem would exer
cise their right to ballot at the spe
cial election today.
A check of the 24 precincts made
by the Capital Journal during the
noon hour revealed that only ia
(Concluded on pngo 8, column 1)
BY TENNE
(Copyright by Associated Press)
Tennessee became today the 19th
state to approve repeal of the 18th
Amendment as Oregon proceeded
to ballot on the problem.
The margin of victory for antl-
prohlbltionlsts ' in Tenessee was
smaller than In any of the other
states which have held popular
elections on the proposed consti
tutional change.
As returns from yesterday's elec
tion neared completion today, the
repeal lead was approximately 10,-
000. Tennessee, the third soutnern
state to vote on and approve repeal,
had been dry for years, the legis
lature having passed a dry law in
1909. This year 3.2 beer was legal
ized.
Nashville, Tenn. July 21 (P)
Charging that "the grossest possible
fraud" was perpetrated In Memphis
and Nashville in yesterday's refer
endum on the eighteenth amend
ment, John F. Baggctt, chairman of
the prohibition campaign, said in
a statement today that the vote is
being "very carefully studied with
a view to contesting the election.
Baggett said "all right-thinking
people regardless of whether they
were for or against repeal know we
deserve and have won" and added:
"We have the city machines 6f
Nashville and Memphis to thank
for the very narrow margin which
the wets are claiming."
Pointing to the fact a number of
precincts are unreported, he said
it was possible the repeal ists' mar
gin will be overcome when complete
reports are in.
HORSE RACING AT
GRESHAM TRACK
Portland, July 21 (VP) An Oregon
grandstand today echoed to the
roar "they're off!" as legalized horse
racing came to this state for the
first time since 1906.
The 26 day meeting under the
promotion of William P. Kyne open
ed at the Gresham track near Port
land with eight races on the pro
gram and the hlghes class of thor
oughbreds ever stabled in this sec
tion listed for action over the new
flre-eighths mile oval.
Good Evening!
Sips for Supper
By DON UPJOHN
m " s
' Col. Baldwin got out-' his dress
suit, plug hat and whisk broom
today to doll himself up in readiness
for announcing election returns. At
the Capital Journal at 8 p. m.
"Hear ye, Hear- ye, Hear ye!
The umpty-ump voting precinct of
Marlon county is now open for
business." So shouted 79 chairmen
of election boards at 79 poling places
at 8 o clock this morning, how
do we know? Because we heard
one at 8 a. m. making similar noises
irom the courthouse steps, while
we were the only one standing by
yet it started off the election just
the same in the good old fashioned
way.
All of which merely leads up to
the remark if you haven t voted by
the time this comes out you'd better
shinny over and vote no matter how
you stand. Remember this isn't a
duty it's a privilege.
We expect that Rev. Mr. Close
will be glad when his Close shave
becomes a Closed Incident,
The Hollywood Itch which finds
a whole, flock of motes in every
body's eyes but its own, might lay
off the outside world for a- week
or two and clean up the double
parking nuisance in its own front
yard. Every evening the Pacific
highway thereabouts is congested
with cars parked two or three deep
causing interference and danger to
through traffic.
The other day coming in from
Rlverdale park on the river road
south we picked up a small country
lad about 10 years old who was
just returning from swimming.
"Maybe it , would be better for
you to walk than ride, we remark
ed.
"O, I enough walking," said
the little lad. "I shock the hay
cultivate the corn, go after the
cows, hoe thistles, go to the store
af tur groceries, round up the horses,
go out and feed the pigs besides
having to run errands."
"And walk to swimming now and
then," we interjected.
"Yeah," said the boy.
We remarked to the lad we sup
posed that he . had to tease his
father to let him cultivate the corn,
go after the cows, et cetera and
that when the father wanted him to
go swimming he probably had to
take a club to the boy to do it,
"O, no," said the lad looking at
us in wonderment, 'Its Just the
other way around."
A team of caddies out at th:
Salem Golf club took a beating
yesterday from a team from the
Statesman force which included
Ralph Kletzing and Ralph Curtis.
The only moral to which seems to
be that the caddies around here
ain't, what they used to be.
"Truckmen in Germany have a
better sense of the eternal fitness
of things," says the Corvallis Gazette-Times.
"One of them caused
an accident there the other day
and pulled out a revolver and killed
himself." Most of the truckmen
around here will do that without an
accident if the new truck law isn't
repealed.
Schermerhorn Asks
For Second Trial
Medford, July 21 (JP) Attorneys
for Gordon L. Schermerhorn, form
er sheriff who was convicted Sun.
day for complicity in the ballot
theft case here, late yesterday filed
motion for a new tnal.
The lawyers alleged the Jury was
drawn in an illegal manner, that
evidence was insurncient to war
rant a conviction, that the verdict
was contrary to law and that cer
tain jurors hod expressed the opln.
ion before they were drawn as Jur
ors, that Schermerhorn was guilty.
Grain Exchanges Close
To Catch Breath After
Big Crash Of Thursday
(By the Associated Press)
The grain trade drew a long breath and retaxed as trad
ing was suspended at all the principal American exchanges
to allow rest from the violent sessions which culminated
yesterday in the worst price col-
lapse in many years.
Following the action of the Chi
cago board of trade In suspending
dealings for the day, Kansas City.
Minea polls, St. Louis and Duluth
were quick to fall in line and take
a holiday. When trading is resumed
tomorrow there will be limits on
dally fluctuations.
The action taken by directors of
the Chicago board of trade late
last night caused but little surprise.
The reason given for the suspension
of trading was that tired employes
needed some rest, but veteran ob
servers saw it as a means of check
ing the frenzy which character
ized transactions late yesterday.
SEEK TO ENLIST
ENTIRE NATION
FOR RECOVERY
Campaign Underway To
Swing Employers Into
Movement
Hearings Pushed On Four
Separate Industries
Submitting Codes
Washington, July 21 (JP) Hugh
S. Johnson, recovery administrator,
set swiftly in motion today the na
tionwide campaign to swing every
employer into the wage raising
movement.
. He telegraphed to chamber of
commerce presidents in all cities
over ten thousand, asking them to
create local committtes which will
run the community end of the re
employment drive.
While Johnson acted. President
Roosevelt kept close watch on the
movement, alert for public reac
tion to the program he approved
only last night.
Meantime, deputies pushed ahead
hearings on four separate industries
which have stepped forward with
codes for self regulation and labor
betterment.
These were the shipbuilding, lum
ber, electrical manufacturing and
women's cloak and suit industries.
Labor's demands for better wage
and hour terms than offered by
the employers dominated the pro
ceedings. Slmultaneosly the presses at the
government printing office were
roaring away on production of mil
lions of copies of the president's
emergency - reemployment agree
ments, which employers, beginning
(Concluded on pnge 7, column 3)
BALBO CHEERED
New York, July 21 (LP) A cheer
ing throng jammed along the side
walks and leaning from skyscraper
windows gave a tumultous recep
tion today to General Italo Balbo
and his flying companions as they
rode up Broadway through a storm
of ticker tape and torn paper to
receive the formal greeting the city
reserves for its heroes.
From the battery to city hall
hundreds of thousands viewed the
triumphal procession and at the
squat century-old scat of city gov
ernment additional thousands had
massed solidly to acclaim the flyers
as Mayor John P. O Brien presented
their commander with a medal of
valor.
The flyers composed the largest
al welcome from the city since the
battery of heroes to receive a form-
return of the soldiers 14 years ago
Forty automobiles carried the 96
aviators through the streets es
corted by detachments of police,
soldiers and sailors.
On many buildings the Italian
flag waved side by side with the
stars and stripes and the shouted
greetings of Italians rang in the
ears of the flyers.
At city hall Mayor O'Brien hailed
the aviators as the direct descend
ants of Columbus and the great
naval explorers of past ages.
ABIQTJA TEAM BEATEN
Silverton Hills The Silverton Hill
Billies baseball team played their
last game of the season Sunday, and
outscorcd the Abiqua nine, 19 to 18
on the home diamond.
Then wheat dropped upwards of
17 cents, rye 26 and other grains In
proportion.
Although H was a holiday In the
pits, hundreds of traders circled
uneasily around the vast trading
floor of the Chicago exchange with
huge crowds in the gallery watch
ing curiously The comparative
quiet of the trading floor was In
strange contrast with the uproar
that usually prevails. Brokers clerks
worked many hours checking their
records.
A few transactolns were taktn
care of in the cash market, mainly
business that had to be cleared on
(Concluded on page 4, column 8) "
Leading Recovery
Gen. Hugh 8. Johnson, energetic
administrator of the national recov
ery act, la shown her- In a charac
teristic speaking pose. (Associated
Press Photo)
ELLIOTT TO WED
RUTH SATURDAY
Burlington, Iowa, July 21 (I1) El
liott Roosevelt, son of the president
and Miss Ruth Coogins of Fort
Worth, Texas, will be married here
tomorrow under present arrange
ments, the Associated Press learned
from an unimpeachable source to
day.
Young Roosevelt will arrive here
by plane today, accompanied by his
sister, Mrs. Anna Curtis Da 11. Mrs
Dall will be Miss Coogins' only at
tendant. Only immediate members of the
two families will be present at the
wedding in the home of George C.
Swiler, brother of Mrs. J. B. coo
gins, mother of the bride to be.
The hour for the wedding has not
yet been set, the Associated Press
was told. No formal statement will
be Issued until after the wedding
and the couple has departed for a
honeymoon "in the west," it was as
serted. Washington, July 21 (IF) Presi
dent Roosevelt contemplates on ac
tion regarding the stock echange
where prices have dropped consid
erably in the last few days.
Informed today by newspapermen
at the regular press conference
about reports on the exchange re
garding his health, the tanned pres
ident smiled and replied:
"Look at me."
It was made clear that the admin
istration is focusing its full atten
tion on the recovery drive and in
official quarters the opinion was ex
pressed that If speculators and in
vestors are silly enough to bid up
stocks far above their value they are
very apt to lose their money.
In official quarters the view also
was expressed that many people at
tach undue importance to fluctua
tions in stock prices.
President Roosevelt was said to be
concerned more in improving the
general purchasing power of the
workers and he is not concerned
over stock market girations affect
ing Ills campaign.
PORTLANDGROGERS
ADOPT LABOR CODE
Portland, July 21 (IP) A code
which proposes the closing of Port
land grocery stores on Sunday and
holidays and regulates hours of op
eration from 7:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
was adopted at a meeting here last
night of the Grocers' and Merchants'
association. This organization mem
bership does not include chain
stores or similar non-delivery units.
The minimum wage for women
was set at $15 a week or $2.50 a day.
The maximum working week will be
48 hours, and a maximum of 8 hours
a day was established.
For men the week maximum was
set at 48 hours, and the day at 10,
with a minimum of $18 a week or
$3 a day.
Store managers would receive
minimum of $30 a week of 54 hours,
or $5 a day for nine hours. Appren
tices would be paid not less than
$12 a week or $2 a day for 0 hours.
The apprentice payroll could not ex.
ceed 25 percent of the working help,
STOCKS CRASH
DEMORALIZING
TO ENTIRE LIST
Prices Break From 4 to
13 Points In Record
Turnover Since 1929
Third Day of Slump Sees
Half of Gains This Year
Wiped Out
New York, July 21 (IP) Stock
market prices were smashed drastic,
ally today for the third day in suc
cession, at a trading pace of 9,570,
000 shares, the greatest trading since
October 30, 1929.
Some relief from the terrific pa
per losses declines which at the
lows at 2:30 p.m., meant more than
$4,000,000,000 in losses to the traders
was given In the lost few minutes
when, on rapidly rising prices, more
than half the losses were eliminated
in many instances.
It was a frenzied session. 'Early
irregularity gave way to strength.
Strength gave way to slow weakness
andn then suddenly the great burst
of selling dropped on the market.
Tickers could not keep pace run
ning behind the markets as much as
30 minutes. The floor of the ex
change was a bedlam as traders
sought to execute their orders. And
as suddenly as the drastic decline
started, the rise came In and stocks
jumped in some Instances as much
as 5 points in five minute intervals.
The tremendous trading day, fifth
largest in history of the exchange,
meant more night work for the wea
ry brokerage clerks and stock ex
change employes. All specialists, or
(Concluded on page 8, column's
NEED TO CLOSE
London, July 21 (IP) If President
Roosevelt wants to save the world,
he will close the New York stock
exchange. Premier R. B. Bennett
of Canada said today on emerging
from a meeting of wheat confer
ence delegates.
Bennett previously Indicated prl
vately he approved the closing of
trading in grain futures in Chicago"
He declined to elaborate his re
mark about the New York stock ex
change, but it was taken to mean
he felt a halt in speculation was
necessary, and in closing the ex
change would be the best way to
accomplish It.
Wheat negotiators, unable to
reach agreement to control produc.
tion, had heard reports that they
were responsible in part for the
drastic declines in wheat prices on
the Chicago and Kansas City ex
changes.
PRESIDENT HOLDS
CABINET MEETING
Washington, July 21 (JP) The
status of the administration re
covery program engaged President
Roosevelt and his cabinet in a meet
ing at the White House offices this
afternoon, after the chief executive
had spent a busy morning in the
mansion proper.
Full recovered from his slight in
disposition, the president also ar
ranged for his regular semi-weekly
interview with newspapermen.
Before entertaining at a state
luncheon the special representative
of Ethiopia, Mr. Roosevelt went over
the public works program with
Secretary Ickes and took under ad
visement a list of regional admin
istrators to carry out the gigantic
public Improvement plan.
He also conferred with Lewis
Douglas, the budget director, and
gave his attention to various aspects
of the industrial control program.
"HUNGER-MARCHERS
MAY COME TO SALEM
Portland, July 21 M1) Signs here
today indicated that Salem may
again be the unwilling host to a
platoon of "hunger marchers."
Dirk De Jonge, communist candi
date for mayor here at the Novem
ber election, Is said to be the moving
spirit behind the new onslaught on
the state capitol.
A pamphlet was being circulated
here declaring that the "march" Is
being organized under the direction
of the Oregon state unemployed
councils and the leadership of Dc
Jonce.
"Demands" will be presented Au
gust 15. Preliminary meetings are
planned In Salem August 13 and 14
to formulate these "demands."
Mattern At Nome
Describes Flight As
Most Thrilling Yet
Nome, Alaska, July 21 (fP) Jimmie Mattern, luckless
round the world flier, offered
he could to aid Wiley Post, when he heard that Post had
disabled his plane in landing at Flat, Alaska, after being
"lost" sevan hours. "I'm sorry to hear he suffered such a
misfortune," Mattern said "If there- :
Is anything I can do, I'll put forth
every effort to help him get going
again, so that he can break the
round-the-world record."
During the afternoon, Mattern
had arrived from Anadyr, Siberia, In
a Soviet seaplane, to be greeted by
his relief expedition. In a plane
flown by Pilot Levanosvky, the flight
was made here from Asia, arriving
at 1:10 p. m. (7:10 p. m. E.S.T.).
Mattern had crashed on June 14,
near Anadyr.
"If Post s plane is out of commis
sion," Mattern said, "I'll offer him
the ship flown by my relief expe
dition."
Mattern described his flight from
Anadyr in the Soviet plane as filled
(Concluded on pnge 8, column 3j
WHEAT CONTROL
PROPOSAL FAILS
London, July 21 (JP) Stanley M.
Bricc, Australian delegate, told the
world economic conference today
that his country certainly would not
associate itself with any scheme for
the restriction of wheat production
as a solution for world difficulties
"Australia has not at this mom
ent subscribed to any such scheme,"
Bruce declared.
This declaration appeared to make
more remote the chances for con
clusion of an agreement for restric
tion of wheat production, which has
been sought by representatives of the
United States, Canada, Argentina
and Australia.
Bruce was making an attack upon
all sorts of projects for restricting
production of commodities but what
he said appeared particularly ap
plicable to wheat for control of
which negotiations hda been going
on by the big four producers for
more than two months.
The Australian spokesman was
considered in some quarters to have
left the door open for further treat
ment of the wheat question howev
er, when he said that he recognized
that in some cases because of ex
traordinary surpluses and other
conditions, limltatidh as a remedy
mignt improve conditions.
Washington, July 21 JP) William
Green, president of the American
Federation of Labor today denounc
ed the wage code proposed by the
lumoer industry as insufficient.
"The wages imposed in this code
do not conform with the spirit or
letter of the recovery act," he pro
tested at the hearing on the code
"The lumber industry must org
anize as the law permits it to organ,
ize and as a result receive a decent
price for Its product so that it can
pay a decent wage and put its hours
oi worn at a point at which it can
absorb its Idle workers."
Wages proposed by the code range
from $10.80 in the south to $20.40
per week in the northwest, with
hours from 40 to 48.
Green objected that such wages
would not provide the purchasing
power which is the purpose of the
law and contended the hours were
much too long.
Green objected to the differentials.
Essential Points Of
Agreement Employers
Requested To Sign
Washington, July 21 (I3) Here are the essential points
of the "president's re-employment agreement" which employ
ers will be asked by President Roosevelt to sign: The volun
tary agremeent will be in force un-
til the last day of this year or un
til a code to which the signer is
subject takes effect.
It prohibits manufacturing or
mechanical employment of children
under 16, and otherwise permits
them to work only three hours
daily, not conflicting with day
school, and between 7 a. m. and 7
p. m.
Sets a 40 hour week limit for
clerical, service and sales employes,
with store or service operation hour
kept up to 52 a week unless now be
low that limit, when they may not
be reduced at all.
Fixes an absolute maximum eight
late last night to do "anything
j
FLAN5IUUUKB
SPECULATION
Washington, July 21 (IP) Presi
dent Roosevelt and his recovery ad
ministration today were preparing
for two-fisted action if necessary to
restore order in the commodity and
security markets.
While there were no official Indi
cations that the administration in
fluenced the decision of grain mar
kets to suspend future trading, the
government's determination to check
the violent fluctuations due to ex
cessive speculation was plainly in
dicated. As a preliminary regulatory move,
the president directed Secretary of
Agriculture Wallace to order reports
from the grain pits on all traders
committed beyond a certain limit
for the Chicago board of trade the
figure was set at 500,000 bushels.
If this does not tend to check
speculation sufficiently, the govern
ment has power under the farm act
to license all grain traders and en
force on them whatever regulations
it deems necessary.
The administration wants a mar
ket as free as possible, but reflecting
more accurately the laws of supply
and demand.
Secretary Wallace said the dive of
grain prices was a natural reaction
from "speculative frenzy" in which
the general public was widely in
volved. He had no sympathy for
traders, big or little, who went into
the market in hopes of making
"killing" and then were cuught In
the collapse.
AT WINNIPEG
Winnipeg, July 21 (JP) The larg
est export business in several weeks
andn firmer Liverpool cnbics than
had been expected, combined to
steady wheat futures on the local
grain exchange today after two days
ol plunging quotations and the mar,
ket closed easy, unchanged to one
cent lower.
In comparison with Thursday's
panicky session the market present
ed a quiet appearance. Late In the
session traders were reporting an
export business of close to 2.000.000
bushels. Everything offered over
night was quickly taken by imiwrt
crs and more was sold during the
morning.
Chicago traders, with their own
market closed, continued liquidation
of their Winnipeg accounts and were
the most noticeable selicrs. Weather
and crop news played a small part
in operations, though only slight
precipitation over widely scattered
points was confirmed.
Cash grains trading was dormant,
A wild drop o f22 cents in flax at
one time featured coarse grains.
Further declines were recorded in
other grains but values recovered a
little Hiid were fairly firm through
out. Wheat closed: July 78 '.ft, October
80 3-8; Dec. 82',. Cash: No. 1 nor
thern 78, No. 2 northern 757a, No.
3 northern 73!6.
hour day for factory and mechani
cal workers, on a 35-hour work week
with leeway for six 40 hour weeks
in the psriod from now to December
31, 1033.
Exempts from these limits estab
lishments with loss than three work
ers in towns under 2500 population
unless part of a large trade area;
also registered pharmacists and pro
fessional people, managers and- ex
ecutives drawing now more than $35
a week; emergency workers and
highly skilled persons employed on
continuous processes. The latter
must receive at least time and onc-
(Conciudcd oh page 4, column 4)
FLIER HOPS OFF
AFTER GETTING
PLANE REPAIRS
Refuels At Fairbanks In
Rain With Edmonton
Next Stop
Post Loses Propeller In
Crash at Flat But Gets
New One
Fairbanks, Alaska, June 21 IIP)
Wiley Post. Oklahoma flier, circling
the world by air, landed here at
10:42 a. m. today (3:42 p. m. E. S.
T.) It was raining and there was
poor visibility.
Guided by Joe Crosson, pioneer
Alaska flier, Post-left Flat, 375 miles
away at 1:28 a. m. (12:28 p. m.
E.S.T.). The flight took three hours
and 14 minutes.
Post was to refuel here for his
1450 mile flight to Edmonton. Hien
he has 2200 more miles to go to
complete the first solo airplane
mgnt around the world.
Crosson had brought a new pro
peller to Flat to replace the broken
one when Post nosed over in a
cross" wind at 3:30 p. m. yesterday
after being in the air 22 hours and
32 minutes on his flight from Kha-
oarovsk, Siberia.
Pint. Alnclrn .Tnlu 01 IB U7i1a
Post, Oklahoma filer, resumed his
(Concluded on pturc 8. column 5)
HULL PRESENTS
London, July 21 (LP) Secretary of
State Cordell Hull presented to the
expiring world economic conference
today the draft of an international
truce against restrictions of trade,
supplementing the so-called tariff
"truce."
A letter accompanying Hull's
proposal pointed out that although
the chief portion of its work is
incomplete, the conference is about
to enter a recess.
"During and after the recess, it
is to be hoped the governments will
carry out the fundamental purpose
of the conference," he said.
A letter accompanying Hull's pro
posal, which would prolong as well
as .supplement the tariff agreement,
was read at a public meeting of the
economic commission in a small,
sweltering committee room by Hen
drikus Colijn of Holland.
Colijn said he understood It was
not proposed to open discussion of
Hull's proposal and here therefore
suggested that it merely be attached
to the committee's report.
NO RANSOM PAID
FOR O'CONNELL BOY
Albany, N. Y., July 21 (P) Break
ing his silence for the first time
Ed O Connell, uncle of John J. O'
Connell, Jr., today sid a ransom
had not been paid for the kidnaped
boy.
The elder O'Connell, democratic
power up state, since the youth wai
kidnaped two weeks ago has re
fused to discuss the case with eithel
authorities or the press.
Today he answered a series of
questions.
He said the family had had no
contact with the kidnapers beyond
advertisements in Albany and New
York papers. He believed the boy
was sufe but that was based on
"just a feeling."
The present status of the abduc
tion case, he declared, was one oi
"waiting for news.'" 1
LINDBERGHS OFF
FOR GREENLAND
Halifax, N. S., July 21 UP) Slight
ly more than two hours after they
had taken off from Cartwright,
Labrador, for Juliune-Haab, Green
land, Col. and Mrs. Charles Lind
bergh landed their plane at Hope
dale, about 150 miles from Cart-"
wright. A wireless from Belle Is
land to the marine department here
said they turned back because of
fog.
Cartwright, Labrador, July 21 (IP)
Colonel and Mrs. Charles A.
Lindbergh left here at 10:22 a. m.
EDT., today, continuing their route
mapping flight in the north.
Their destination was understood
to be Naln, 300 miles away. Thej
had been held here since last weeJ
by unfavorable weather.
Lindbergh did not give out de
inite information about his de
tination.
One report said he planned ;
head straight for Greenland wife
out stopping at Nam.