Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 25, 1929, Page 5, Image 5

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    MmwoehMml Tribune
Weather Year Ago f
HUthmt year 0 today . 47
l-owcst yea niRO today Sit
Daily Twntr fourth Year.
Wkly Klfty-wwnlh Year.
MEDFORD. OREGON,' -MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1929
The Weather
Forecast ' Cloudy tonight anil
Tuesday, with rnln.
Ilhthcst yesterday 01
lxiwest this morning 113
84 tirn. prot-iltiitloii to 5 a. tn... V.
.
' No. , '
Today
: By Arthur Brisbane
Hoover's Home Economy
89 Years, 89 Millions. ;
Kahn Loses Titta.
Jews As Immigrants.
(Copyright by Klnff Features
Syndicate, Inc.)
President Hoover, . believing
Unit econoiny should begin nt
home, will. put the presidential
yacht Mayflower out of com
mission. The President will do
his yatching in a rowhoat, when
fishing. The country will save
.$.'100,000 a year, and 148 sail
ors that have wasted their time
on the Mayflower will be as
signed to new naval vessels;
: 4
Tlio Mayflower has beep add
ed to the cost of maintaining
a President ever since the days
of Theodore Roosevelt, and
President Hoover's determina
tion to dixeont inne a thorough
ly undemocratic arrangement
will be generally appreciated.
The people would not grudge
a good President any comfort,
or , luxury. . But a $:100,000
yacht, tacked, on to $75,000
salary, seems fantastic.
' Xext Wednesday, George F.
Baker, dean of American bank
ers, ruler of the gigantic First
National of.Xew York, 'which
is one of his minor possessions,
will celebrate his 89th birth
day.
For every year that he has
lived, Mr. Baker' has given. at
least a million dollars to edu
cation and other gojnd purposes.
' KxcVy'holy..w'iKhcii;'His'"innny
more years to get and give.
Since the people do not' yet
know enough to develop their
own resources and supply what
they need, it is fortunate that
they have such men as Baker,
Rockefeller, and others, to
ihow them how.
ntti IT Vnlin nrnfnetor ot
grand opera, learns that his
enemy is the talking moving
picture. That must surprise i
him, as much as it surprised the
70-foot dinosaurs when the
rats ate them.
Mc'tro-Goldwyn-Miiyer have
taken Titta Kutfo from Mr.
ICalm's jretronolitnn opera to
s'iiir for the movies, and it wasi,
ns simple ;"ns taking candy
from a child."'
Mr. Titta sings ten times hc-
fore a recording machine and
is paid 50,000, or irll.'i.OOO for
eacli short sinking period. ,
Even the Metropolitan's dia
mond horse shoe cannot com
pete with that.
f ' ,
Young Indies njid gentlemen,
cultivate your voices and learn
to speak intelligently and not
through your noses.
Discouraged teachers of elo
cution, take courage. Your
time has come around again.
Tlio President! 'onalnst his will
and judgment, solely because the
law compels It, has proclaimed tlio
new "origins" act, limiting Immi
gration and tracing the wouliljbe
immigr-dt to his national origin.
That act. which President Hoo
ver deplores, was drawn and in
tended 1n diminish the number of
Jewish immigranis and Immigra
tion from southern Kurope, where
live the people described by W ood;
low Wilson as "the baser sort
Arehmtdes once lived In that neigh
hnrhood, also Caesar. Michael An
gelo, Dante, and some others able
to hold their own. Some, perhaps,
the mental eiiunls of Woodrow II
son. ..n'
As to tho desire to prevent Jew
ish Immigration, by no means lim
ited to tho K. K. K., It is well for
sensible Americans to bear mind
certain historical facts.
Spain and Portugal drove out the
Jews, inspired by religious super
stllion and hatred. ' Holland rose
to great power and wealth. Portu
gal and Spain went to the devil,
commercially and otherwise, and
are still there.
England excluded Jews, and per
secuted tho few on Knfllsh soil, be
fore Cromwe:!. Cromwell admitted
XCoptinued on Vug Four).
St
ORM AND CONSIDER
f 1000 T
TOLL OF 49
Kentucky and Tennessee Hit
. By Freshets Over Week
End 37 Lives Lost
Tornadoes Spread Death
Over Four Other States
Rapid Rise of Streams
Traps Victims.
i LOUISVILLE, Ky., Mar. 25. UP)
Floods rushing clown from the
Cumberland mountain watersheds
took a toll of 37 Uvea in south
eastern Kentucky and. northeast
ern Tennessee over the week end.
while tornadoes and storms spread j
ARE
death over four other southern "la now before the commission,
states, bringing the south's death I Among those for whom numer
toll to 41) and possibly more. I ous rceomm'cndalinns - have been
' Tennrwwo was the hardest hit j
with 31 known deaths. Kentucky j
had six. Alabama had five negro (
children killed in a tornado. Two
negroes wore .killed in Georgia by Another who is widely recoin
a tornado nnd a white man by ( mended in Portland is Guy R. Har
lightning. Three negroes were kill- j per, who Is tax man for the firm
cd in Mississippi In a storm. A boy! of Lybran, Ross Brothers & Mont
was killed In North Carolina by a 1 gomery.
storm. .' Most of the county Assessors of
Mountain streams irt eastern j Eastern Oregon have united in
Kentucky and Tennessee receded as support of August A. Anderson of
rapidly as they -rose and trapped Bend, Deschutes county assessor,
their victims. Twenty persons, ! other county assessors who are
mostly .women and children, were j recommended nro C. L. Tallman
lost when the Emery river at Har- i of Benton county, Andrew M. ra-
riman, Tenn., left its banks at 3
o'clock yesterday morning. . Seven !
Boy Scouts nnd their scoutmaster ommendatlons for the latter, how
were swept Into AVhlto creek and ! ever, appear to bo contingent on
drowned tm they slept. They on- j whether the attorney general holds
copied a cottage on the creek bai.k i that Representative John H. Car
dura 5 a, week end hike, inreejkin of Medford Is eligible to serve.
m e m b o r 8 of one . family we'e
drowned nt Webster, Tenn. . Bodies
of nix Boy KcoutB, their sewt
master and two others, have been
recovered. :
Kcntue.lcy's dentil toll wjis.Jiejivl
est in Know und Bell countled.
whero tive Uvea were taken by tlio
sudden freshet. Three were drown-
ed near Barbourvllle, and two near ,
Plnevllle. - One was drowned In ,
Perry county.
CHICAGO, Mnr. 20. OT Tho
Mississippi nnd Missouri rivers still
threaten to batter down levees and
overrun their banks today as pa
trolmen and apprehensive residents
watched eagerly for signs of relief.
Kcports from Keokuk, Iowa, that
the river had fallen six Inches were
gratefully received by leveo patrol
men, especially In the Oregory, Mo.,
district, whero the fight Imd been
almost given up as hopeless yes
terday. '
Canton, Mo., was also threaten
ed by the exceedingly high stage
of the riven
Members of the nntlonnl guard
and naval militia patroled tho
flooded Indian Grave district near
Quincy to prevent looting when the
water recedes, and to assist the
families driven from their homes.
The first fatality from that section
occurred nt Henrslown when a
youth fell from a dike nnd was
drowned.
F
WHEN PILOT IS
LOST IN MIST
MOUNT GRETNA. Pa.. Mnr. 25.
(P) Four persons were killed when
a Ryan monoplane struck a tree
ns it was flying low attempting to
nscertnln i!s position While over
the nntlonnl guard encampment
ground near hero lodny.
, The pilot had a card in his pock
et rending "John I.. Cnmplon. east
ern fnctory representative of tho
Mahoney-Hynn Aircraft corpora
tion. St. Louis."
Another victim had a card benr
Ina the name of Harold W. I.loy."
Worlhington. Ohio.
The accident occurred a half
mile from Colebrook. on land ad
joining the national guard reser
vation.
The pilot apparently hod lost his
way In the mist and fog and wus
flying low in an effort to regain
his hearings.
Flying over a "l covered by
woods, part of a wing of tho plnne
was torn off by a tree. The pilot
tried to gain altitude, started up
ward and then turned over, crash
ing to earth ngnlnst a tree stump.
The mnchinc was wrecked.
The bodies wero badly mangled.
All the men were well dressed nnd
the pilot had evidently been giving
a riemontratlon.
The plane was n'silver nnd blue
j monoplane, manufactured by the I
M.'ihoney-Kyan company, si. i-ouis.
Coroner J. Herbert Manheck of
Lebanon, took the bodies to 1h.
nmtn, whf-re furtherlnvtlgatlon
wnn to be made In an effort to as-
certain their Identity.
R
MANGLED
LONG LIS!
IN TAX 8
J. B. Coleman Is Mentioned
if Carkin Eligibility Ques
tion Interferes Recom
mendations Pour in for
Many F. W. Skiff and
Guy Harper, Portland,
Have Backing.
; SALEM, Ore., Mar. 25. (&)
Recommendations In behalf of per
sons proposed for uppointment to
the new state tax commission cre
ated by the 11)29 legislature are
reaching the state board of con
trol daily and a lone; list of names
received is Frederick V. Skiff of
Portland, who for 1! years was tax
expert for the firm of Olds, Wort-
man & King. Skiff Js now retired.;
ham of Malheur county and J. B. (
Coleman of Jackson county. Rec-1
. lien P. West ot Salem, former
assessor pf Marlon county, is un
derstood to' be an applicant for
one of the two appointment.-
A. nqniljpr . of recommendations
have cornein for. OeorKO I'almiter
of Ho'od'Mrveiv. waster of the state
CVanKe. Palmiier was in Salem
throughout the lORislatlve 'Session
and took an Important part in the
tax lobby.
Representative Carkin of Med
ford Ik known to he in a' receptive
mood. The question of his eligi
bility hinges on tho constitutional
provision that no member of the
legislature shall be eligible for
appointment, during the term of j
his membership, to an office ere-1
ated by the session in which he
snt, or an office the salary of
which was increased by such ses
sion. '
.Carkin's friends use the argu
ment that In providing for the new
salaried tax commission the legis
lature did not create a new office,
but merely removed the governor,
secretary of state and state treas
urer as ex-offlclo members and
providing for two other members
to sit in their places along with
the existing snlarled commissioner,
who at the present time is Earl
Fisher.'
-
Medford Airport
Outstanding One,
Says Oil Official
'
W. H. Cotrel. Of the Hich-
f eld Oil Co., writing tho air-
port publicity committee, un- 4
der date of March 5, 1029,
snys: ,
"We appreciate tho fact 4
that the new Medford air-
port. If nuthoriwd by the
4- people, will be -an outstanding 9
one in tho state of Oregon,
4 because of the plans and de-
4 velopments as outlined by 4
4 your community.
"You nnd tho city of Med- 4
4 ford ore to be congratulated
4 on making tho rnp'.d strides 4
4 you nro for aiding aviation 4
4 eo thoroughly." 4
4 4 4 44 4
L
HOME. March 25. (JP) Tho rllr
igible Graf Zeppelin, on a 6000
mile flight over tho Mediterranean
and central Kurope, arrived over
Rome at 3 o'clock this afternoon.
It I'ircled the city three times and
twertH minutes later left in a
southerly dirertlon.
BelMoerent Beauty
NEW YORK. March iil. 6D
Worn ont by the exe tlon of sbat-
terlng three umbrellas over the
manners heads. Keena Blettel,
beauty prize winner, called a po
; licenian when 8 fourth accosted
her. She tnlthe judge she was
too tired to bit aim.
Bryant Faces
Mnr Troxell (lefl) will Ik one of the chief wii losses Tor the Mate
when Lanw Itryunt, EO, t right)- goes in trial totlny for morlnlly Klnli
hliiff Itvls "Hip" Dlckerson -(Insei). The affray wvurml In I'orvul
11m, when Dlckcrson, Oregon Slate fo4dlr:ill cimcli, was escorting Miss
Tro.velt liomt. ' .
R. R. JOHNSON FREAK WEATHER
DIES OF HEART HITS COLORADO
ATTACK SUNDAY ANO CALIFORNIA
Local Dentist Stricken After
Round of Golf In Good!
. . .... ... i
Health During Morning j
Burial in Montana On
Friday. .
As tho result of n sudden heart
attack, Dr. Richard Roy Johnson,
well known Medford dentist, died
yesterday afternoon at his home,
10 Keene way. - He had Just return
ed from the Rogue Valley golf
coitise and was preparing for din
ner when death overtook hint. He
was born September 25, 18T4, and
had followed dentistry ill Medford
since 1923, with offices in the Med
ford Center building.
Yesterday morning he remarked
to his wife that he was feeling es
pecially well,- preparatory to leav
ing with three friends to lilay IS
holes or golf. He returned at 1:30,
declared he enjoyod a good game,
and went to his loom to prepare
for company expected to arrive nt
3 o'clock. Dr. and Mrs. 'Johnson
conversed with each other through
different rooms, but aflttr a few
minutes he failed to answer, t'pon
entering his room. Mrs.' Johnson
found him outstretched on the bed,
having apparently fallen from a sit-
ff!nntlniierf on Pare TOfvht.
Medford Can Become a
Main Link Coast Airways
C. Etifrciie Johnson, operations niiiniisrer for tho 1'imifie
Air Transport, csjinplinionts Medfortl on i1s rndcnvni' to keep
pace with aerial progress, as follows : 1
Oakland, Cal., March 11, 1929.
Wc.-wish to compliment Medford on their .foresight in the
proposed rf-talilishniont of it first class airport. Many cities
have, shelved airport negotiations for the present, feeling the
time was not yet ripe for such action on the part of munici
palities. Those cities now on regularly cstahlished mail and
passenger routes have been favored with a closcnp view of
what is to conic ii) tho irtalter of air transportation, and for
tho most part are rapidly roundiiif? into shape splendid air.
port programs.
There can be no question in the minds of those close to
aviation as to its ultimate development.- The rapid strides of
the industry 'in Hie. past couple of years should convince the
skeptical that the possibilities are limitless. Coast travel and
enrso movement, via air has a definite future. Medfor is
fortunately situated in this picture in having: so strategic a
location. It. is virtually a "key city" and we can see no
reason for anything otherwise, evtn from a most pessimistic
viewpoint,
To (to ahead as Medford has outlined on their airport
program will play n bit,' part in hastening airways develop
ment on the const, because, strange as it may seem, airplanes
cannot be efficiently operated without adequate, airways.
Kor instance, at the present time, our plans call for certain
developments on our coast line, bi'Qsume cannot and will
not be fulfilled until airway facilities aid complete.
Medford should be proud to be considered one of the
main links in the coist airway chain, and the future unques
tionably will prove the wiscness of the decision of the city
to provide an adoouate airport.
PACIFIC MU TKAXSPOKT,
O. Ku(cnfl Johnson, Operations Manager.
Murder Tiial
Mountain Area Buried Under
Deep Snow Towns Iso
lated By Slides Cali
fornia Citrus Belt Feels
v .- Low Temperature.
DENVER. March 2C T) The
mountainous area of southwestern
Colorado today was burled under
another deep, snow following yes
tetrday's storm that dropped tem
peratures as far west as Cali
fornia, whero . the southwest en-
j joyed spring weather.
., Sllyerton, famous mining town
atop the . continental divide was
blocked for the- tli rd time this
J winter by avnlanches that burled
; tho only railroad track to tle town
t from ; JJurango. Cumhres, ninny
times storm-lldden In the Inst few
I mouths und Lizard Head Puss, also
were lrtolated.. ' ,
California had tricky woathor.
which; Included hall, snow, h gh
winds and occassional showers. Tho
temperature dropped to 30 degrees
Irt the citrus belt and fruit grow
ers were prepared for smudging
should tho mercury, drop much
lower.
A temperature of 1)2-2 degrees
tPnnrlnued nn Pacta Rlrht.)
SlSONTOvfENmii
MEET CHIEF
Mew Secretary of State Due
,, in Washington Tomorrow
. Will Be White House
; Guest During Week
Kellogg Remains On Duty
Until Friday, Then Takes
European Trip.
Tty James It. West,
; (Associated I'rcss Stuff Writer.)
'.WASHINGTON. Mar. 2!.. W')
President Hoover and his new sec
retary of state will have their first
meeting tomorrow Willi the arrival
of Henry L,. Ktimson after his lonir
trip from Manila by way ot Wan
Krant-Lsco and Xew York. Mr,
Ktimson found that ho would bo
unable to como to tho capital until
tomorrow afternoon.
The chief executivo ' and Mr.
Stimson have a host of subjects to
discuss and in order that they may
facilitate tho work ahead, . the new
offlcinl will bo a Whlto . House
truest for tho remainder of the
week.
Tho Root formula for 'American
adherence to the world court, tho
Mexican situation, and Kuropenn
HENV c. STlMSON
repartitions nre some of the ques
tions facing Mr.rtitlmson. but per
haps tho foremast is tho reorganiz
ation of the diplomatic corps nnd
the selection of new hlKh officials
of tho state department. , .
Krank 11. KoIIukk, who has ro
malned In his post at tho urgent
request of President Hoover, will
Mr. Btimson takes tho oath of of-'
flee, but he will remain hero until
Friday, on which data ho sails for
Kurope where ho will 'spend sev
eral weeks on a vacation tour.
The new and retlrhiK secretaries
will meet dully so that Mr. Ktim
son can be acquainted with inti
mate details of the problems pend
ing before the department and the
nf.ions that Jiavo been taken in
such current affairs as the Mexican
rebellion and the preparations for!
tho preliminary nrniH conference
to ho held at (leneva next month.
Hugh 8. Gibson, ambassador to
Belgium, who Is chairman of the
American delegation to this con
ference,, also Is a White House
guest and ho nnd tho new secre
tary thus will huvo opportunity
for extensive con versat inns con
cerning the meeting and the atti
tude of tho United States with ra
sped to the several proposals that
will come up for consideration at
Geneva.
WASHINGTON.. Mnr. 25. IIP)
flecrelary KoIIork will represent
President Hoover nt services for
Marshal Foch to bo conductod hero
tomorrow at Bt. Patrick's cathed
ral, nt tho same hour that flinernl
services nro held In Paris for tho
Kcncrullxsjmo of tho nlllcd armies.
PRICE OF STOCKS
NKW YORK, March 27.(p)
An nrute scarcity of call money,
sendhiK tho rate to 14 per cent,
caused, a sharp break on the New
York Htock ICxchanKO today. Tlila
h the highest rate that stock mar
ket funds have commanded since
J illy 1, liHiO, and prices nf scores
of stock dropped " to $13, to new
low pr:'tMi for lit-'H. A. M. Hyers
fell $13, while nnch Issues an Johns
fnnvllle, Green Cunanea Copper,
naeondn Copper, and American
Hallway Kx press IohL from $7,50 to
$10X0. .
The ticker fell about 25 minutes
behind the market In the rush to
sell (hiring the last hour of trad
ing. I'tiilfd Htales Hteel and Gen
eral Motors were each depreHjted
more thua yl a sliutu.
ON TUESDAY
SAMUEL RE A
PIHI.ADKl.riHA. .March 85.
(P) Samuel Ilea, who rfife from
ehalnmail in a Pennsylvania rail
road enKlnecr corps to tho ttresl
dency of the fvroat railway system
is dead.
' With hi wife ( nnd duufthter
nt bis bedside, he died yesterday
at his home near Ardmore. a su
burb, of heart d'seaso. He was
"3 yooiM old.' Kunerul services
will be held tomorrow.
Mr. Ilea retired from the presi
dency of the Pennsylvania in 1H2:i.
after M years of almost continu
ous servl e and nine days after
he bail celebrated his 70th birth
day anniversary.
Ono of his outstandins ach'eve
ments was the construction of the
Pennsylvania tunnels under the
Hudson and K.ist rivers at New
York. Kor this work lite rnlver
sity of Pennsylvania, Princeton
und Ijifnyottc college, Ktive him
honorary dCKrees.
SILENT THRONG
PASSES COFFIN
Remains -of - Foch ' Rest -in
Cathedral ot Notre Dame
Today 25,000 View Bier
in Six Hours Prepare
for Funeral.
PARIS, Mar. 25. yP) The peo
ple of Paris again todny for rix
solid riours passed heforo the bier
of tho Into Marshal Foch which
during tho night had been con-"
voyod from the Arc de Trlompho to
tho Cathedral of Notre Dome.
When the doors of the great edi
fice opened for the first mnss of tho
day nt 0 o'clock this morning, there
was a line of people waiting to pass
by the coffin of the allied gonernl
isslmo. At noon tho doors were
closed ngnln so that workmen
might prepare the cathedral for
tho natlonnl funeral services to
morrow. In the six hours that the doors
wero opeh this morning, 25,000
persons filed in an orderly and
silent column past tho black nnd
silver mortuary chapel where tho
famous soldier lay guarded by two
priests and two Hoy Scout.
The priests who took turns
standing guard ovor the flag
draped bier wero nil soldiers at tho
front during the war. Tho liny
Scouts, who wero relieved at fre
quent Intervals, were stationed
there nt a wlch once expressed by
Marshal Koch that tho young gen
eration might do honor to the old.
Only once during the morning
was there a paiine in the slow nnd
steady rhythm of the passing col
umn of pilgrims. This was at 10
o'clock when tho marshal's widow
came to pray a few moments be
fore tho body of her devout ami
Illustrious husband.
Meanwhile tho French govern
ment wa.n preparing for tomor
row's national funernl a procession
of such solemn pomp ns even Paris
has seldom witnessed. From Ku
rnpean capitals, near and far, rep
resentatives of sovereigns and gov
ernments nro on their way hore to
take pail In the religious nnd secu
lar ceremony.
PAUIH. Mar. 2.1. M Marshal
Joffro Is suffering from a sprained
knee and will bo llnnble to be one
of the honorary pallbearers at the
funernl tomorrow of Marshal Foch.
Tho marshal hod hoped to ren
der this last sen-Ice to his old com
rado, hut his doctor decided bis
knee would not stand Ihe strain of
marching In tho cortene. .
The Noted Dead
TOPKKA, Knns.. Mnr. 25. -(Ti
W. H. Htuhhs, governor of Kansas
from J '.Kill to ) 9 1 S. died here today,
following an extended Illness, He
was 70 yenrs old.
Miners Die tn Hide.
LAKK CITY. Colo.. Mar. 25. (T)
Four miners wero killed when they
wero caught In a huge snow slldo
that crashed down upon thorn yes
turduy ul Ilunscn crci-k.
WARRIOR
SLAYER OF
DICKERSON
Lanza Bryant Faces First
Degree Murder Charge at
Corvallis Today Trial;
Expected to Last Through5
Week F o o t b a 1 1 Star!
Stabbed December 17.''
i
COUVAM-IS. Ore, Mar. 2 5. .(P)
I.unzu Urynnt, 20, went on trial for
bin lir horc today, ehsirfioo" with'
first (U'Krpo murder In connection'
with the futal HtnhhiriK of Lewls
tlllp) DU'kcrvon, senior . student:
nnd former football stnr nt Oreson
State college, : ;
Sheriff 10. J. Newton of lnton
county' yoHterday brought Urynnt
from Diillus to the new lientijjn
county Jul! here. He had heen held
in F'olK county while the new Jnll
was under contruction. ,T
The prOHecuilon expects the trlnlf
to lust mast of the week. -t
Ulckerson wax stabbed early ,in
the morning of December 17 an hef
was escorting; Misa Mae TroxulU
CorvatllK waitress, to her home. Ho'
died five days later. "" f
Uryunt piended not sullty to'-aj
churne of first dopfee murder. ' j
Selection of a jury started thin
ninrnhiR after a new UdlctinfiU
clinrKinK Urynnt with flint deKiWi
murder hud been retnrnert by the!
Lenton county grand jti.y. ,- i'
Kied MoHenry, district n"tforney,
auhmltted the case the second time:
heranHo of a. tochnlcal qtieHltoh oft
IftKallly found in the firm true bill.!
Thn reindictment wuh to caune no
delay In the trial; T r ' j
MEXICO CITY. March 25. IB
Three hundred federal soldiers un
der General Armentu were report,
ed todny in a precarious position
ut Miituchlc, near the Honora-Chl-hnaJnia
border. A government bul
letin said these loyal troops, who
were without food or adequate am
munition, would be captured by
rebels disguised as federals If mes
sengers from the -federal army dH
not reach them In time.
The bulletin declared that Gen
eral Armenia was not aware that
General Caiaveo, ex-governor ot
Chihuahua, had Joined the Insur
gents and had asked Cnraveo for
food, ammunition and clothes after
his troops had made a forced march
to Matachlo. Caraveo had wired
congratulations to Armenia for hU
loyalty to the federals, promised
him supplies and was about to
make prisoners of his lorces, huh-,
gry and ragged after their march.'
. t ' : ,
' ! Oregon Weather. '. ri i
. Orogon: Hnin In west and snnW4
and rains onst tonljtht nnd Tnes '
day, normal temperature.' leresK
to strong southerly winds on conKU
Will Rogers Saytt
NKW YORK, March 2.'i.r
M'r. Hoover is not RoiriR to
use the Mayflower. After
bciiiH nil full on these big
battleships, getting, onto the
Mayflower would be like
Rliiinininr. Besides, Mr.' Hop'
ver in all his
travels h n tj
had to ride
on too many
boots t o get
to s o m "3
'pi nee w i t h
out wanting
to go nowhere purposclyi
Mr.-Coolidge used to get ft
kick out of taking'those seu;
ntors on it, and watelt 'em
get sick. I guess they will
be selling it iiow, nnd some
hody will buy it for a nnji
runner. They ought to keep
it nnd send our delegations
to disarmament conferences
on, for in two more confer
ences wo will have to borrow
a bont to get there. .
Yours,
:, ',. wrr,L kooers.-."
. : .
IcSI
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