The Weather
Forecast Fulr tonight uml Tins
lUy. Unit cluuit In tOllllMTH-
lure.
Temperatures
Highest yesterday ... OH
UmiK this morning fitt
Ptllr Twuy. fourth Yer.
Yittklj FUty-wttb Yer.
MEDFORD. OUIXiON. MONDAY. .Jl'LY !), 19'J).
No. 128.
The Woman Tempted Me.
Welcome Wheat Shortage
Servants of France.
Two Weeks in the Air.
2 SLAIN AS CONVICTS SHOOT WAY OUT
1
JNE
TodayPlj fj
By Arthur Brisbane a a btxui L
0 "ssa
)r
311 B !T"fn
i B Bn sum asm IsJ'
V
(Copyright by Klntc Features
Syndicate,' Jnc.)
Vrofessor Snook admits that
lie ''hammered Miss Theoia
Ifix until she was unconscious,
tlii'n cut her throat to end Ik
sufferings."
,Itis defense will lie that tl
lady induced him to taxe drugs
which made him wild. In fact,
she was responsible for her own
murder.
That lakes you far had: t'
the Liardeii of Kden, with the
snake looking on, and Adam
sa.vinr, ".Mullier me decepsit.''
The woman tempted me, and
I did eat, is an excuse that has
been used in every age and
every court.
jFarmers will he glad, gam
blers in wheat will lie delight
ed, to hear there is a real
wheat shortage. The estimated
vield for this country and Can-
ida is 4Sti,l)(KI bushels under
ast year's crop.
The government plans a gi-
lantic co-operative world-wide
larketing organization, with
l!0,non,()O0 back of it. The
krm board, and smaller agri-
Lltural co-operatives wouhl
erk together, and I'nele Sam
kild supply 'the capital.
serious effort to help the
ners is important to every-
xy. (ieiieral prosperity tie-
nas on tne larmer s anility
buy manufactured products.
Raymond7 l'oincare, having
ved his country for a life-
Ve, through war and peace,
retire ai last, asiting no re
d but the satisfaction of
nig worKeit welt tor r ranee.
riaiul will take l'oincare 's j
as premier, thus fillinir
(rent office for the tenth
lew of us ill America appre-
the hioli character and
M ability of the men that
le the French republic, or
erstand fully their passion-
devotion to I e beau rajs
France."
Saturda.v afternoon the St.
Louis Kobin had been thins:
continuously for mure than two
weeks. The tireless fliers, .lack,
son and O'Hrine, sa.v they in
tend to remain in the air an
other week.
- The endurance of the air
plane is remarkable, worthy of
praise.
0 ST. '
Tlicr' lot n fun tin' iTlticl-m
poked at ilc foN. hut you take
iuh lh f dcisMidcnr, or mohhi
jitt bnNikln even, nn' he's n Icwl
boaaVd - an) buddy jou'd enre to
. fi. inn iii nil . r ihtt nn inn
Ii, OTrr wttl In hr tlir qilillnll
ii C Whin ti lenve twiro nn' w luit
if Ihr IxHir.
lCOirishl Julin K. IHIIr i; I I
(Continued on I'iikc Four!
i
mm
1'J r7
,m
i
FT :
2
CRASHENDSjr
I I MA r
I Mil "I 1 1 W W II Ij
IQinilDAMPCiltf
v iiii ii in iiiiii
muuimnuL j
I Pantain P. p i p h t n n Killpfl.
Owen Hougland Injured
When Big Plane Falls On
Seventh Day of Soaring
Machine Unable to Gain
Altitude After Dropping
Note.
MINNKAPOI.IS, Minn.. July 20. )
.Vt The emlurnnft1 monoplane, i
"The Minnesota," crushed on Wold- j
Chnmberkun airport early today, j
killing Cnptain P. .1. CriKhiun and
perhaps' fatally injuring his ro-1
pilot, Owen Maimland. The fliers
were in their seventh day in the
air and at f:2 5 a. m., when the
hijr plane fell, they had passed 1;")4
hnui-8 mid 4 " minutes soaring in
the sliies.
The iraKic endinir of the endur
ance flit; ht came suddenly as L'apt.
Crk-hton, then at the controls, en
deavored to regain altitude after
he hurt swooped low over the air
port to drop a note, their lust, say
inn "nil was well." Pilot Ha up
land was sleeping on their impro
vised bed atop the gnu tank in the
fuselage, and was lifted uncon
scious from his pallet. t'HPt.
C r 1 c h t o n was dead when the
ground crew reached the wrecked
plane a few moments after it fell.
apmlronTiy1-" ha'!'1 ""'mo''' m""" i
in dropping ovit the airport, caus
ing l)u plan1 to sidi'slip nn he
startiM up aain. He Micepfilen in
leveling the plane hut lost more
speed, and the plane fell flat on
tile concrete automobile racetrack
,,,.. ..,,' ,,,,,, .,,.,.' ...,.
smashed. The motor fell hack on
the pilot, crushing him. !
Doctors later said HaiiKlanil had ' TACOMA, Wash., July 2fl. ('!
suffered a compound fracture of!- While his plane, the City of Ta
ttle skull and possible internal in-1 coma lay badly wrecked on the
juries.
They expressed doubt that
1 recover. j
he would recover.
ri-iiMl Six Times.
The ill-fated attempt, which al-1
most cost Pilot IlaiiKland his life, j
rnntnl Hi fiv vl- h,l
ed in failures caused hy motor
trouble. Captain t'richton's death -
ended his only attempt at an cn-i
,.... IX
land had tried four times with
'lene Shank, a Minneapolis com- j
merclal flier, and last month he '.
had tried again with Thorwald
i nunuer aonnson, Kn that at-
tempt he achieved 149 hours and
32 minutes in the air.
Dipping out of the skies this
morning to drop their note of instruction-
for supplies and refuel
ing. Captain Crichton dived io
within feet of the airport. The
refueling jdiip. Ace High, sislr
j ship of the Minnesota, was pre
1 paring to lake off with l"(i K;i-
lons of gas for the fliers when the
endurance plane was seen to side
slip. bprvers said it fall "like a
pancake."
Captain Crichton was a World
war veteran and a captain in the
army air corps reserves. lie was
employed at the Cnited States Vet
erans" hospital at Fort Snelling.
His age w.i given as 3.V Pilot
Haugland. 3H. owned and operated
an airport an, flying school at
Buffalo. Minn., his home.
Hail gland conceived the idea of
attempting to fitaliish a new en
durance mark soon after the army
plane Question Mark set its rec
ord. He tied up all hi property.
nYhrt gaging everything he could. o
purchase two cabin planes, one for
the endurance attempt and the
other for the refueling ship.
In addition to hi
aviation in-
, leresrs. naueiumi owned a caso
line filling station. lb- is n vet
j eran of the World war. having
i s'TVeil in the artillery. He he can
' fiying in 1 After completing
his morse, he started flying by
taking .Mrs. Haugland to a Marion,
S. I. hoptaI eoh week for treat
ment. Sit.- : p.n :ilv7( d
The Noted Dead
nni'Acn. in. juiv
H-nrv lt!.l. Kiilli"-. 7J, :iil!i
v's iimvcIh. V. ..1. rd'i
IM-" li'-l I.H"n RITI 1 WIT
i ni'-iiii-T tu j-nv.-ri litni.
rii;i-;. in, r.f Triniti'." Tli.
-Tim
-i'-n,"
Iint,.r," " i, i, ir,,( ..
:ili.l fvli.il U,u!,.i uf k,i iii
Disaster
'9!
1 J
4 11
I.
l.t. Ilarotil Iti'omlry (IcH) onllio stiirlitii; line of Ills nun-slop d isli rnr Tokyo. I'mirr riK'u: 'I'll"
City of Tufnitiii. mill (liiwrr) erowil iierluimiiiK him at the Wusliiiiloii niriiorl. 'I'lw pliine uns wns-k-eil
Siimlay in an nlteiniiUil Marl.
PACIFIC PLANE
Disaster Attends Sunday
Morning Hop for Tokyo
Backers Will Bebuild Ship
and Make New Try With
in Sixty Days.
Tacoma airport lust night. JJeu-
tenant Harold Kromlev was going
ahead with plans which he eS-
pe. ,s will send him on a second
attempt nf a non-stop flisht to
Th fir-.
trously early Sunday morning'
when the low slung monoplane
whirled Into a pround loop after
GROUND LOOPSIKLAMATH SEENiBY-PRODUCTSOF
Ofi TAKE-OFFBYO.-O. SURVEYjPROHl STATUTE
i i '.
' r, ; , ,h.for the surveying crew
Khh issuing from
tanks.
Following the crash yesterday
' special meeting of hackers of thi
lB'n Vi cuiifu which irsunrti
" a d.-rision to rebuild the City
f Tacoma immediately. The
wr
Iced plane will he crated up
today and sent tu the Lockheed ;
plant in Burhank. O.I.. whil e'
Tlw.v.tr.v lti-,,,,,1, hl,li..1f 1..-
southward hound, uccurding to
plans tutiight.
plane, which was1
The orange
to have winged i t h way
nearly
fiU'iO miles across the I'at-ifie ocean
to Japan had gone less than 1500
it veered sharply to the left Into
soft d,rt. tore olf the riKhl Wheel!
of the landlnK Rear, demolished
the right wing and stuck its sluli-
by nose into the dirt. )
An examination hy Lockheed
the
plant experts .showed that
the plane was not seriously d:im. ;
iged.
I FORMAT
I
KV YfHIK. .Inlv St. fPi
p(),.ni;,li(in (.f another huge invest
ment iriift. sponoied by the fiunk
of Amcrica-lllair corporation Itv
f erects, was reported to be undei
way in Wall st reet today. 'npf
taliratton of the new company. .
in understood, will eonsi-t of f Mt,-j
,ll,,N"lfl -''""'I Hto. k and a snb-j
"tantial block of no par common. -
with . neii. mill pi
!tmnedmt..v. K l; .
nor tire-ldent of th'
h
T ok
cim--'
: C i.-s coriioi at imi. K r"p"
h-k e (.'. n named n h id
in'W i "lup.iny
e. IO
nf the
Poy Kill-d on Roid
T''WA. M",ih.. - M'i
l'nnftri' nf an ;i'iMr':i' lijTur r:
H.'i'li v 1,'iiu. r;'H i"lo lh
I to
d
liv n v r ;i r p. T,t. ri'"''n
driv n liv Mr- . f-'Mn of Yem.
struck and l.ilb-d him.
Checks Trans-Pacific
WBftytl
mtiiiMmi
m :tv$4
GOOD ROUTE iOllRV. COBB CUES
t I
, Crew Completes Preliminary.
Work On Extension Pro-
ject On South Side Riverj
From Butte Falls Owen!
Finds Still. !
Reconnaissance work In connec-
tlnn with the proposed Owen-Ore-!
v,, ,1,' ' , , u-
Kl".S, 'l," '- lias
' ' ' 1 ng.o
11 V " , , , )WC"' ""'""'" "'"""Ke-"
w. , oiiiiiivi ninpiiii;, mite
t'ound a pood roiiti!."
Owen wl'l
IelUe 1,1 tlle coming U. go OVe
and the work
of actual surveying will start In
week or 111 days. He Raid tlmt sup.
:peg we belllR-iont t
Fall
the proposed route runs on the
south side of Kneite river out of
Butte Palls nnd extends In a south-
'tlsterly direction to the area tan-
. . . iif..t.... n ,
Spencer creek It runs exclii
,1 ''J "n
n ' "m u uy m
. . 1 V. "l, n"-'
A ? """.T J"nr'
""; MI..r 1 MIIN ini'llKI-V
to Inspect the nrellmlniiry survey
I He hectinie. lost In ihe wodds nnd
,lllloW,:, n ",,srnrfi traiI- At
, V " .iV i , V
...... ic. i-inii in oiei ill Mill. ,MI
I one was In sight hut the poiimt of a
(niiin running through the hrunh wh,
I.I1-M-.I
.... " ... ' ,
, 111 , ' heart
""' .V'";1"" "ecordlUK
in ui mi-ill ill I IIIUCI , IIUtMMiy Hill
ever find it."
"It took me the: entire afternoon
,n r'Knin "' arliiK8 nnd If I hail
he-
He I couid do II." Manaeer (Iwen
said.
cated on land owned by his com
pany.
I lireetors anil officials of the
Owen-Oregnn company will arrive
! here August 4. They will Inspect
the local plant, and will
information on the progresf
survey.
receive
of the
Baseball Scores
National
y
Mrcftklvn
f'(n,.nir) j
MVfltn(, u.hrrv
) ,
17 I
It
I"
' --"in t -.-1, 'i i; -j
I .-l.-i Mv. .luiiri. Canlwi-ll and
S:.(hriT. 1'il'v. .l.'lti. S'-vi-rnnlr.
Kn-miT ii n. I Hurt p iivi'i. Il.-nmli-y
!'
1
American
It M
h r 2
i; h
and He
Chfe.-irjo
I'H'.-ul l.diin
1'aber. I.V'Kis, Ci
1
c:
h
Iv'" n-ha , H Inn tjui nn inoj Co
uane.
Attempt
Noted Author Flays Amend-
ment in First Statement
As Head of Committee
Writers and Artists
Against Dry Law.
WASH IXdTO.N, July 211. (!)-
Irvin S. Cobb. In his first state-
" cnauiiia i , ...0 iiuuioi,
and urllsts comn.ll.ee o the Asso.
cm.ion Against tne i-ronimtlon
Amendment, exiiresses the opinion
illllll 11 ll IHIIIHIIIIII IK 11 IHINI1 t"X-
periment, then the San Francisco
fire and the (ialveston flood also
should he listed among the noble
exeiiments of our national his
tory." Asserting the right to agitate for
repeal or re-lnterpretatlon f pro
hibition hy congress, he Raid, "We
know that millions of otherwise or
derly citizens are engaged In con
stant violations of the 'letter und
spirit' nf the Volstead net."
1 Pe cited "corruption, bribery,
graft, hypocrisy, perjury, beer
wars, machine gun battleH, de
bauchery of minors and a grow
ing contempt for law and order"
as outstanding "by-products of this
general evasion of statutory regu
lations," nnd said:
"We have only to take the or
dinary experiences of the ordin
ary man, along with his personal
knowledge, and the dependable
hearsay terntimony which comes
to his ears, and the Indict ment
stands complete nnd perfected."
REPORT BIG FIRE
GRANTS PASS, Ore., July 29.
fPr-'KepoTtn of ii large lire in the
Klamath forest in Californln, Just
across the Oregon line.
ceived
ment
here today by the govern- !
forestry of I ice. Siskivou '
lookouts near Holep lake said they
could see the flameH. Tliev also i
reported a ffro on Horse. Sign creek i
In the Agness district and six for -I
jesters have been dispatched in j
fight the flames. i
IN TABERNACLE WtrtL.
WAHSAW, Ind . Jolv 2'. M'i
Thiet. women were suffocated to-
dnv when the gospel ta hi-rnu' le. i
! where they were rooming was
loriniiig - d by file. The ib-ad ai"
i Mrs Sarah ('lark. Tj. of Winotri '
fvike. Mis Dva Clark. 4'i, daugb-
iter (,f Mrs Claik. ftNo of Wlnoni
U.f ntid Mb l r.i Carper, of
' Til ie aitoe. Hid.
I COUNTRY ISlmERS MY IPRISONERS
PflRfHPn RVl fVI INflPPC I AT AIIRIIDM
I fll II II II I I I I I I I I I II til 1 1 Mil ft I Ml II II 111 I V
I I II IV 1 IB.&S LS V I bit 1LUIIU III I lULSUIll 1
HEAT WAVEi WEAKENEDlIN REVOLT
I ! i
Sections Suffer As Mercury
Continues at High Mark
Cities Deserted Over
Week-End Dry Spell
Alarms Farmers Do
minion Faces Fire Menace
PORTLAND. Ore., July 29.
Scorching temperatures nhot the
thermometer up to new marks for
the year in many Oregon cities
yesterday .and today threatened to
reach even higher marks. The
weather bureau gave- eastern Ore
gon some encouragement, however,
by predicting cooler weather to
morrow. The situation In western
Oregon was dismissed with the
words "not much chungo In tem
peraturo." Umatilla was the hottest place
in the state yesterday with nn
official tempera turn nf 101 de
grees. 1'endleton experienced Its
second hottest day of the. summer
when the mrcury touched (19 de
grees. The highest temperature
there this yenr was 102.
Medford and (irants Pnsa were
next In line, the temperature
reaching OS degrees In both cities.
It was the hottest day of the
year.
Brufch fires at royoto nnd jFnn
ther creek districts nnd nt Wil
liams, Ore., kept ranchent " nnd
rangers busy over the week-end.
There wan no material damage.
Itogne liiver. Ore., reported 108
degrees, unofficial reading.
At Hoseburg the temperature
rose to 93 degrees, eclipsing the
year's previous high record by on
degree.
In Kugene (lie mercury stood
nt the 92-degreo mark, the hot
test day since August, 1928.
Other temperatures were: Port
land 93, Salem 87, Albany 98.
Wolf Creek 99, Baker 85. Marsh
field 8, Walla Walla, Wash., 92.
MOW YOItK, July 29. (P)
The country lay gasping today un
der a hent wave.
In various sections Sunday tem
peratures approached the century
mark. The highest point for the
day was 98 degrees, which was re
ported from such widespread
points as Albany, N, Y., Baltimore,
Phoenix, Ariz., Ht, Louis nnd Wash
ington. The mercury stood at 92
in Montreal. Host on, Cleveland.
Cincinnati, Detroit. Philadelphia
and San Antonio, Tex.
New York City, where the tem
perature was Uli degrees, was de
serted by nbout 3,000,000 people
who sought comfort hy jamming
nearby benches nnd filling high
ways leaving the city. Seven per
sons were drowned In the metro
politan area.
Tim drought , which has been
virtually unbroken for a month,
gave further cause for alarm to
farmers nnd brought to Canada n
forest fire sit unt Ion which do
minion officials believe to be the
must serious since 1 !t23. While
crops were wilting throughout the
Atlantic seaboard slntcH nnd east
ern Canada, nnd the wheat crop of
western Canada was reported hope
lessly scorched, produce farmers
in the metropolitan district faced
ruin unless the drought endn speed
ily. CJIK'A(K), July 29. Ml The
mid-west waited hopefully todi.y
for the relief promised by govern
ment weather forecasters from the
torrid temperatures of the past few
days. ' The relief, however, wiih
expected to be slight and brief,
1 tenches nnd highways were
erowded over the week end by
hundreds of thousands of persons
seeking temporary respite from the
uncomfortable weather. Thirty
five men were overcome by the
heat while marching in nn Amer-
lean J-eglon parade nt Oeratur,
III Several of them were In n
serious condition today.
I-'ifteen denths while swimming
were repotted In Illinois nnd Wis
consin yesterday. Six death due
to automobile accident also were
July 29
A
I heavy rain h.is put
sudden nnd I
uneipected end to n long and
'V drought throughout Knglnnd.
The rain, which began yesterday
"d is expected to continue, broke
what has been the longest drought
ever experienced in London.
Thoiand of agriculturists nnd
'he wi.ter upily authorirle of the
Innumerable towns were relieved
from w eeks of anxiety.
St
Louis Robin Near 400
Hour Mark Motor Still
Turns at Good Speed, De
spite "Minor Defects
Huge Crowds Visit Field
to See Endurance Flight
Over Sunday.
ST. LOl'IS, July 29. fP) Oeorge
Lea Iamhert, 23. vice-president of
the Von Hoffman Aircraft com
pany and a son of Major Albert
Bond lumber I, official observer of
the St. Louis Kobin endurance
flight, unit Harold ( Jones, IK, of
New Vork City, a Von Hoffmnn
student, were killed today In a
crash of n biplane near ItlncUJack,
St. Louis county.
Lambert was killed outright and
Jones was found tu he dead when
he reached n St. Louis hospital.
ST. LOUIS, July 29. (flV-Dalo
(lied) Jackson und Forest O'Hrine.
fliers of the St. Louis Kobin, hnd
completed 391 hours in the air at
2:17 p. m4 today and hnd exceeded
the endurance record of the An-
goleno hy '145 hour, or Big full
tiays.
Shortly before noon the fliers
dropped a message for Ohnffee,
answering nn Impilry concerning
the condition of the motor. It
read :
"Dear Shorty: Our old motor
turns up just as much now r.s
when wo took off. We know we
have a couple (of cylinders) get
ting weak. Have been that wny
for t ho Inst 100 hou rs. N u m her
four und number six. Can tell
easiy at night, hut we still fly at
13 THi-1300 (revolutions per min
ute) easy, not using much gns, a
littto more oil. The gaskets on
the push rods are leaking. I was
sleeping up to (he time Ohle threw
nut the note (first one today).
Sure can sleep; Just go up nnd find
the temp (temperature) and saw
ft off. Hoping wo put-put for an
other week. Uegnrds. Ited."
Chafe turned the message over
to C Itny Wnssnl, pilot of the re
fueling plane, who remarked:
"That doesn't mean a thing.
They have hnd thnt condition for a
week hut the old motor keeps
turning over."
No Indication when the motor
will croon Its swan song was ap
parent to ground observers ns the
airmen went Into their seventeenth
day. According to Major William
H. Itobertson of the Ctirtlss-Koh.
ertson company, sponsoring t he
(Continued on lng Klgbt.)
The expectation of ltogue Hlver
valley fruit shippers, that the
1 !i 2 y fruit crop would move over
the AliuniH cut-off of the South
ern l'aclflc will not be realized,
It was nnnuunced today by rail
road officials. The Hue will he
operated lor fruit shipments In
mu.
The Alturas branch will be
reudy for business, August Ifi, hut
the roadbed will not be in shape
for fast freight. A few t ruins
ut the winter vtirleiies of pears,
may be hauled over the new lin,
but the main portion of the esti
mated fruit crop of 4000 tars will
be routed via Ha vis, Calif., as of
old.
The Southern rmific strove it
high i-eed to complete the mud
for this season, but were unable
to complete the Job. Beside
the
settling or the ballant, there was
the making of tariff rates nnd
running schedules, stilt underway.
Official of the Southern I'ncifL
nnd the i'nctfie Fruit Kprens will
meet this week, with shippers nnd
growers of the Itogu Itiver valley,
ru hiding tlie Crants I'nss sec-
tion to di.cus plans for tho com-
lug nhlpphiK season.
ALTURAS ROUTE
NOT READY FOR
1 929 PEAR HAUL
Fifty Long Term Convicts in
New York Prison Lead
Break for Liberty Two
Mutineers Killed Four
Guards Wounded Cap
ture Arsenal Set Fire to
Several Shops.
AUHL'UN, N. Y.. July $.
Fifty long-term convb'ts at Au
burn state prison vosterday, Ird
a revolt of the 1700 Inmates, cap
tured the prison arsenal, with Its
stock of npproxlmutely no rifles
nnd four r.inehine guns, storiiied
Ihe main tfntes; fired several
orison shops, with an estlmntf!
loss of Jf.00.000 and shot four
guards, one seriously.
Four convictH escaped from the
prison In tho first rush; two of
the mutineers were killed hy the
fire of the guards, and a third
was wounded seriously.
A mere handful of guards, two
thirds of the staff being off duty
because It wan Sunday, heat back
the first attack of the rioters,
then,' rotnforced by tho remaining"
guards, hastily recalled, and by
state troopers, they held a yelling,
surging mob of convicts at bay
until the outbreak spent Um force
and quiet was restored.
Tho four convicts who escuped.
were:
(leorge Small, serving a term of
12 years for robbery; Joseph Cap
rlro, serving a 20-yenr term for
robbery; Arthur Barry, serving
25 yearn for burglary, and Steve
1'nwlik, robber, serving life as a
fourth offender.
A chock-up today showed that,
with the exception of the sluin
convicts, one In a hospital, and
th four who escaped, every In
mnte of the prison was In a cell.
although the cells were crowded
been use of the damage to a cell
block by fire.
While most of the rifles stolen
from the prison arsenal hnd been
recovered, three machine guns
were missing.
Hr'son officials pointed to the
similarity between tho outbreak
nt Auburn yesterday nnd the re
volt of the prisoners at Clinton
prison. Pnnnemorn. a week ago.
News of such attempts to gain
freedom travels fast along th;i
"grapevine telegrnph" a myste
rious method of communication
known to the underworld.
IiirroMW Vlgllaiiiv.
Today v'Kllance at prisons was
even more keen, four mnenine
guns were plnced on the docks nt
Sing Sing prison, to guard the
fence that separates the prison
grounds from the Hudson river.
Sunday Is a day of recreation
nnd relaxation of strict disci) dine
(Continued on Pit ire Kltrht.)
Will Rogers Says:
SANTA MONICA, Oil.,
July L'O. As I t.iki' my pn
in luinrt to (1p .vou tlicsc
fi-w linen, lliose old boys in
S. I. o II I M
just won't
come (I n w n.
You know
tlicir .'rpiit
est danger
from now on
i h their
whiskers entehini; in the pro
peller, nnd don't compliment
them for slaying up in the
nir over St. Iiuis this hot
weiither. lSestow your grati
tude on the folks who have
to stay on the ;rouiid in St.
I .ti in in the summer time.
One thinsj about this war of
China's nnd Russia's, nobody
ean ever accuse either one of
them of tiring quick tem
pered. Yours,
Wlhh IlOdKIiS.