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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1929)
4 The Weather JEDFO Temperature HighoBi yesterday , 0 lowest this morning M Forecast Fair tonight ami Wed ncs4tav. 1Vnn'ramre above nor : mul Wednesday. Dilly Twmy-foiirth Yr. MEDFORD, OlJliGOX. TFKSDAV. A I'd I ST ti. !!):!. No. :!(;. 1 Today By Arthur Brisbane Almost England. You Ought to Get This. No Prohibition. But It Works. & 7 (Copyright liy Klni; KeaUlrea Syndicate, Inc.) !;yiCTORIA, B. V., Am-. 4. Seattle is about :0f H( miles from New York , 4'2iii miles, nautical, from Toluo, and less than I'mir hours from real British terri tory via Canadian Pacific limits to tliis capital of British Col umn in. .This plaee is as British as Bssinsjstroke, and as heautil'nl, in scenery, luxuriant rrowtli of flowers and peaceful ipiict as any plaee on earth. ,, With time enoutfh to see only one Canadian city, Vancouver was selected, hut American friends remonstrated, "Vancou ver? Thai is simply a .junior Setroil, another hustling Anier ilia it city, (lo to Victoria and you will see how Britishers live and do business." r They are not doing business today. It is Sunday. But they live happily every day. Here men on $4000 a year look pros perous and contented' instead of looking dyspeptic and wor ried on $100,000 a year, as we do in "The States." " They have time to live;; their faces are pink, no deep lines running from the eyes toward the chin, such as you see on United States faces, reminding of Wall Street, running from Trinity down to the Kasl River docks. ' " i; In good times and bad, Amer ; ican investors pay high prices for stock in the Canadian Pa cific railroad. They are wise ' The Canadian Pacific knows ' how to run railroads, steani ; boats and hotels. It can't help i succeeding. And for the "fer ' ry" running here from Seattle, j it builds boats that cost 1 ,riH, . 00(1 each. That shows intelli gence. I 'Victoria, in proportion to her ; population, bought more bonds than any other city in the Brit ; ish empire. B. O. Nicholas, edi tor of the able Victoria Times iWd (ieorge I. Warren of Vic toria's chamber of eopimerce, lell you that proudly. - This place is prosperous. tjMiiny from Far r'ast China. India and from Kngland come licre to live and bring their ; money with I hem. They gel a great deal for it. ; At the edge of the water, looking over Puget Sound, you Continued on Pase Fonrl ?Tel n nkley'H rtniw tint took tlili imtruiu' at 7:ir, headin' iln wwt, nn' after smvewfiilly charlti' the mud puddle In front the eimrtliriiM, landed wtfljo n beil o' pet unlaw under the window o the enmity re cder' office. Well, hnw do like your lce, fuwy or du. d? ( opyright John F. Dille Co.) i imnnrc m LLnULHU IU 8. fc flDf M Qfl flM "fl IffefJvIU JLX ? ; LA V PA N.! MIoM $tmmk&. i r ti. n i tin t 1 i une-1 nira or benaie iviusi , Stand For Re-election ' Next Year Republicans j Already at Work Demo-j ...I. (-U.. IT! ulcus oee onatiue rui Five or Six Seats in Close Slates. ! By RAYMOND Z. HENLE Associated Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Auk. ti.(P) party leaders have begun to think seriously of the .senatorial cam paigns next year in which one-third of the senate membership 19 lie publicans and 111 Democrats must si ami lor re-election if t hey desire to remain in office. The Republicans already have se lected a special commitiee to help .senators in t heir party seeking re election, and l he I emocrats have been discussing their chances of capturing five or six seats in slates where party lines aie closely di vided. Senator Moses of New Hampshire has been selected to head the He publican senatorial camimign com mittee. Senator Ty dings of Mary land is the chairman of the Demo cratic committee and, while next year's organization lias not been perfected, a number of his col leagues favor his reappointment." The states in which the Demo crats believe they have the best chance to capture seats from Re publicans are Massachusetts, West Virginia, Delaware, Rhode Island, Okluhoma and Kentucky. The Re publican leaders express confidence that they will retain most if not all of the seats now credited to their party and gain a Heat in Iowa. They also expect to make n hard bid for seats in New Mexico, Ten nessee and possibly Virginia. . RICHMOND, Va., Aug. G. iP) Virginia's embattled Democratic hosts were choosing a champion to day to lead them in uu effort to drive the Republicans beyond the Potomac. Factional differences, character istic of southern states in which Democratic nomination is equiva lent to election, was conspicuous by its absence in the Democrat! : primary campaign that, closed last night, the three candidates for the nomination for governor calling upon the voters to participate in today's primary regardless of their choice for party nominee. John Garland Pollard, a William and Mary professor; C, Walter Mapp, a former state senator, and Hoswell Page, a brother of the laM Thomas Nelson Page, were the can didates for the gubernatorial nomi nation. James II.. Price, for lieu tenant governor, ami John It. Saun ders, for renotnination as attorney general, had no opposition. While Democratic leaders de clared a somewhat general apathy would prevent the primaiy becom ing a test of Democratic strength, local elections in several sections were expected lo aid in bringing out a vote of close to laiUiuo The anti-Smith Democrats, who refused support of the party'Aut: tlonal ticket last year, made a viV ornus effort to keep last year's unli Smith Democrats from enter ing the primaiy so they might be uiomlly free to support in the gen eral election Dr. William Moseley Hrown, nominated for governor by both anti-Smith Democrats and Re publicans. E SA I, KM. Ore.. Aug. II. oPj W. A. Jones, head of t he Marion comity ii-tnge, won his suit In circuit court to keep the 102!) legislators from receiving the a ibij addi tional expene money which they voted themselves shortly before adjournment when Judge L, 11. AlcMiiluin Tuesday afternoon sign ed the decree declaring their a ei Inn to te "unconstitut ioiiii 1. illeKiil and void, and of no fon-e or et t''i t whatever." Hill i;. H"s. secretary of --rate, and T M. Kay. Mute treasm-i de fendants in i he net ton. or a ny of their Mi herd jtia 1 " lire forever e Mriined from inakli.w (be p;inien1 of the $ :( ji lay expense money, according to the de ree. The pi;iin- i ,1 I. .lolu-s. i ilKi. i veil cnM ill the ciimv The ea.-e will pi ..i.nMy a p pea!"d to I he Mipl em.- our . Tdlamook -Consl met I'm of da.ne ball and slock show town Ul ap pioaching completion. UPHOLD GRIG IN IN ON PAY SOLONS EDISON SCHOLARSHIP CANDIDATES GATHEK Forty-nine boys from each of N. J., for the Thomas A. Edison Beautiful "Tears of St.1 Lawrence" To Visit Earth j Between Midnight and; Dawn Astronomers See. No Danger To Globe. j By HOWARD W. 3LAKESLEE Associated Press Science Editor PHILADELPHIA, ' Pa., Aug. Ii. OP) The beautiful "Tears of St. Lawrence," as the perseid meteor showers sometimes are called, are due for their annual visitation 'to earth Sunday night, August U. The best time to look for them is between 'midnight and dawn, in the direction of the Constellation Perseus. The name "Tears of St. Law rence" was given them by Irish peasantry more than u century ago. Astronomical records identify them first about 1 1 00 years ago. "Of all annual showers they are the most certain to return with av erage richness," said Dr. Charles P. Oliver, professor of astronomy at the University of Pennsylvania and president ol the American Me teor society. "Also, as they come in August, whan nights are still comfortably warm, they furnish the most excellent opportunity for a person casually interested in me teors to see a good shower." Met oi s which have come to earth are composed of stone, stony iron and iron. A few of these have weighed U0 to 40 tons, but most of them have been small. Striking the earth is so rare that astrono mers do not consider a Bhootintr star shower dangerous. Most me teors are consumed in the atmos phere GO miles or more up. In iare cases a large one may enter neai'L' horizontally and escape. The scientilic consensus of the fiery trails, which sometimes linger for many minutes, is that, instead of being white-hot fragments, some of them at least are a glow in the air, perhaps electrically inducted, like the Aurora. There Ih evidence that a few of these trails have bee i great, hollow tubes of light. TI NANKINO. China. Aug. fi. The foreign office of the National ist government announced today there was a deadlock at the con ference between Russia and China, over seizure of the Cb inesp Kri sf - j ern railway, which has been in I progress at .Mancnuii, Aiauctiurtn. UKRLIN. Aug. (JD Phnng- hnit dispatches to the newspaper j ManlaUsgabe today said telegraphic eonimtinication between I'rga, I Mongolia, and Kalgan, Chihli prov inces, had been broken today to I the consternation of Chinese circles I who feared It meant Invasion of china by ouier Mongolian tribes. I Russian influence is dominant in outer Mongolia, j Wire Report on the Pear Market CHICAOO, Aim. fi. (I S. I. A.) Today's pear market: H California, 1 Washington, arrived ; 2 cars on track; 1 7 cars sold. California standard hoxe Rart letts. X ."".! hnxes. S.2r. to -1.20; av erage U 7.. T'-xas l!artIe1l-. T.dt boxes, J3 o 1 3'.: nverage f3.3n. Ni;W Vof'K Aug. C, II. H. I). 1- Nt w Yori; pear ait' liun; 2 A I. tin ma, '. California, arrived: r: ( i iifio riia and others iirilo;rL etl i'l California nri on track. hoxev CahfornlH HmHett 1. be-t :i :t I 4d; few t.-i;,-4 or dinary it ti.-.T.:;; rfimmnn $3 .'( 3.T.O; few low n. J.I; "crae J3 Iqtad QuhuociunMCM cunm&T wpirfnn! limn ,i in til ii in) ii ii ,tiii i n tit IDUE ON ANNUAL!ORGANIZE FIGHTSOON ADVICEON! IRETURNSUNDAY IN DRY PROTESTiBARTLETT CROPS ! ! I y Associated I reus I'hoto the states and the District of Columbia gathered at East Orange, scholarship tests. They are shawn on the roof of their hotel. Appeal Is Made By Woman Anti-Prohibition Leader j W. C. T. U. Don't Repre-j sent All of American i Womanhood Is Claim. ! SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. C (JP) An appeal to the women of Amer ica to organize in protest against prohibition, was made here last night by Mrs. John It. Casserly, vice chairman of the Women'w Organization for National Prohibi tion reform, in an address before the Women's Deniuei a tic Council of t'ulifornia. "At sessions where prohibition had been discussed in tile past it has always been the wont or some W. C. T. U, women to stand and declare: 'I represent the women of America,'" said Mrs. Casserly. "I for one am ready lo pnotest. Wo need 2,iK)0,000 women to make an organized protest against condi tions as they are today. We want to hold a convention at Cleveland with at least 1 nuO women present representing In all 2.000,000. "We don't know just what has happened since prohibition, but we do know that the present younger generations have no stan dards to help them stop drinking the stuff which their young bodies cannot stand. We know that the alcoholic death rate has increased u mazing 1y, as have commitments to penitentiaries and asylums, over and above the regular percentage of increase. "We cannot blame prohibition for the whole crime wave but we do hold that it has greatly In creased erini". Wo must appeal as mothers of families for a cure." Baseball Scores XKW YORK, Aug. ti. (JP) Rnbe Ruth hit his 2(ith and 27th home-runs in the h e c o n d New York -Washington game here to day. The Ha bo hit his 27 th in the srxenth inning with Gehrig on base, shaking off both Lou tlelirk and Jimmy Foxx in the American leauue derby. Murke was still in the Iwix for the Senators. Ani'-rlcau R. II. K. St. Louis S 1 2 0 Philadelphia 3 H 1 Crowder and Schang; Shores, Yerkes. ami Cochrane, Perkins. Second game. , H. 10. St, Louis 3 11 2 Philadelphia 1 113 2 ogden, Coffmun and Ferrell; Rommel and Cochrane. It. 11. K. Washington Li M 1 New York .'. 0 11 2 Had ley null Spencer; Wells, Sberid. Nekola. Moore and Dickey. Second ga me. Washington it. ii. i:. n 3 o j New York Ji 7 0 j Ruike, Savidge and Rttel; llelm- m il and liengough, It. 11. K. Detroit r, in a ( 'b veland t) H 2 Sorrell, Whitehill and liar- greaves; Hud lit), Ferrell and L. Sewell. Myatl, .Nadoual It. II. Iv lirooklyn ftll a Chicago 4 10 0 Moss, Morrison mid Deberry; Mabote, I'emter and Taylor. j New York T, 1 2 ! I 'ii I du rg to 2 i Walkoi atot o F.iut II; I'etty mid . Heob y, KriMoll-St . LolllH pcl polled, WCl gi oundt. U A S If 1 N ( ; T O N . Aug. fi OP) Th t.ai iff on autoniobiiew wnf i e ilun-il li (he a.-m.t.. ririitm-o ' committee republican today from , 1. to I n per cent ad valorem. The hoiiT hill made no change in the ;T r-r cent duty. Harvest Should Not Start Before Week of Aug. 19 Say Experts Quality This Year Is High Prices $2.75 to $325. j Harvesting of the Bartlett pear ; crop of ihc Rogue River valley should not. start lief ore the week j of August 1!. shippers and fruit j specialists advised today, to secure j the best market results, and to j forestall premature picking. Some i of the growers planned to start I picking i de end of ( IiIh week, or j the first uf next Week. Hart letts picked before August Iflth will 1 ha ve to go into cold storage. It was also pointed otil that Rartletts gathered the week of August litth will reach eastern markets as t ho California shipments, now at their ludtf ljivv ebbed,. Tile opening price for Rogue River valley pears In variously estimated at from S2.75 lo $3.25 j per box. I The Rartletts of this section, will be of high ipjiilfty, size and color, I and bavv developed fully under J ideal weather conditions. They j will reach final development with jin the next two weeks, j J. K. Edmlston made a tour of severul of the orchards yesterday land reported the Rartletts in ex cellent condition, and holds tnat ; the. sole worry of the grow and j shipper now is too early picking, and a visitation of ball and wind. ( 'ounty lOnglneer Rynnlng yes terday dispatched maintenance i crews to repair ami smooth roads leading from orchard districts. The I crew is now working in the Table i Rock district, and taking the rough Pilots out of the Middle road. I All roads subjected to fruit truck hauling wilt be repaired be fore the opening "f the fruit sea son. Formal approval by tho depart ment of commerce, aviation suction of the. estimates for the installation of power lines to beacon slles Tor night air mall flying, between Delta, Cal., nnd Drain, Ore., has been received by the California Oregon Rower company. Then; are :!0 sites to b served and one prl valely operated beacon on the sum mit of the Hisiilyous. Ry a recent department order none of the bea cons will be gasoline lighted, as joriKiually intended, i Tho beacons arc scheduled to be ready for operation by October I, fnext. It Is understood that thu ben . runs' will be furnished by an Omaha, Neb.f firm. Construction of the power lines has started but will not lie in Hill swing until all the rights of way for iownr lines have been secured. This phase of the work Is expected to be completed within the next lo days. No date has been officially hp for the opening of the air mail night flying, but i h not likely to come to phsh until beacons have been Installed from Loh Angeles. Cal , to Seattle, Wnsh. M KM I'll IS, Tenn. hVt A million dolln aiipMi, built on a IMin-iiere Iract within two tollew f.f Memphl r ity MmitK, hut riKen from the dieanis and planw of MeniphiM a iation enthiiwlaMtH. j Three b inraix will hoiie 40 to i :,n i-tim-K each for the city, the f mi t i n Flyintt Nervice, and the Cniverflty Avlalion rorpnt ntlon. j The field Itself If big enoil!:i to I all.' niimiltaneou" landing and! taking nrf of four T.nge iri-motor I plane", BEACON POWER INSTALLATION IS SANCTIONED I COAS 10 SEE ZEP World Tour Will Start Soon After Return To Home Hangar Graf Taking Fuel For Flight East Wed nesday Passengers Signed Up Freight and Mail Are Ready. LAKKIICRST, X. J.. Aug. 6. P) AVork of refueling and replenishing the Oernian trans-Atlantic dirigible !raf ep)elin went forward today in prepa rat ion for her departure at midnight tomorrow on the first leg of a globe-circling air voyage. I r. 1 1 ugo Kckener, her com mander, will head his giant air liner back to her home port. Frlcd- l rii'hshafeii, dermnny, from whence she arrived Sunday. From tile re 'the airship will continue eastward a rou ml the world, Willi stops at Tokyo and Los AiiKeles, Lakehnrst, and back to Germany, a total of 22.0I10 miles. On the flight to Frieilrichshafen, the Graf Zeppelin has booked 1 S passengers, some of whom have made reservations for the world tour. She also will carry freight and mail. Three passengers havo been booked for the trip around the world by the Hamburg-American line in New York, American agents for the Zeppelin. They are Jat chim Kleknrd. n writer of Rroclc ton, Mass., who was a passenger on the westbound trip; Otto HlltU. a photographer of LKit'rty, N, J., and a person whose name was noi disclosed. ' As a result of a golf bet that he lost, Nfitlian Wexler will pay his own passage and thai of William Welter, at least as far as Fried -richshafen. , .They are both New Vork hotel owners. They have not decided whether to make the world tour. Oilier passengers listed to make the trip to Germany Include Morris Shu m of sky of itridgeport, Conn.. Lady Drummond May, Dr. Kisser Klep of Merlin find Dr. Walter II. Splcss, German minister of trnns portatlon. The last two were pas sengers on the trip over. .Malls Cloned. Mails for the Zeppelin were or dered closed at 2 o'clock today oy the post office department. The freight for tho return trip, whill not as heavy as on the west ward trip, Includes two automo bile tires, two packages of films, a typewriter, a book, a case of advertising material from a Cleve land firm, a case of scientific in struments nnd a case of fly pow der. The pay load for tho world trip Is expected to bring $500,000, half the cost, of the airship's construc tion. Of this, 18 passengers pay ing ?0,000 each will hrlng IU12, ooo, while mail and freight, which Dr. Kckener said are more profit able, will bring iwlce as much. While more than 100,000 per sons t loc iced to the naval slatloV here to view the Inure nlr vifdtoifl a forlorn German halter boy sal in the emigrat Inn detention qtufi ters at Gloucester, N, J., and de clared he was dhrough with air ships, lie in Albert RuseJikn, the Zeppelin stowaway, now awaiting deportation. No) MlKtrcaled. "The trip was wonderful. I wr.s not mistreated but was properly fed, although I didn't get much to drink. I missed the shower bol h to which I a in accustomed. Mut the thrill Is all over and I don't want to go through It again," he said. Dr. Kckener said on the voyage around the world, I he greatest ild nger was from famine, in case the ship was unable lo land before her provisions were exhausted, He said the worst part of the trip would be the first part oT the flight from Frledrlehshafen to To kyo, as they might encounter clouds and rain while crossing the mountains of Siberia. Dr. Kckener superintended the pumping of TaO.oMO r.uhlc feet ofj gas into ( be fuel storage of the j Zeppelin and 530,000 cubic feet of nyorogen gas into the balloonettes which furnish the lifting power. Tile ship a iso took on 3.IV00 gal loon of gasoline with which to stait her five motors, and 1,100 gallons of lubricating nil. Sailors patched and painted the few rents torn In the fabric of the "skin" by the winds on the west ward trip and replaced some wire struts, in the framework, which were broken on the flight over. 1IOHDKAUX, France, Auff. !, Lieutenant Monnot oi the French army, selected by lb" ministry of nlr to pilot the French j entry In tho coming Hchnelder cup race fit Calshot, Kngland, j whs k 1 II ti this ii Her noon when t tie alt -phi no In which he was training for t he speed tent was u reekeit n leaving the airfield , here, I'.onnot wan .tiie holder of the world wpfcrt record for la nd airplanes. I MAG 1 j- i I V Hearing I J i i m Mil, In. 1 Km, II. I WalK i' .1 Fluke, PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. fi. -(.-?) Waller Finke, Jr., slayer of Her bert lieeni. IN. Ills schoolboy rival for the affections of a I ti -year-old girl, waived preliminary hearing In municipal court here yesterday and was ordered held for the grand jury. Finke shot and killed Meem last May Ji, in the corridor of a hUrli school here, as nearly 1 00 students were pressing into the hall on their way to classes. Thirty Thousand Acres Swept In Montana, Idaho, Washington Lack of Rain Hinders Efforts Planes Spot New Fires. HroKANK. Wash., Aug. C A fatigued army today was fighting doggedly to stem a three, sided attack of flames that had swi'pt like a plague over up wards of 30,000 ncres In Mon tana, Idaho and Washington. The nrmy fully 1000 strong and being augmented as rapidly as recruits could be found re ported varying successes, but all observers insisted that the con tinued lack of rain and low hu midity, which was as low as 12 In some placeH, was making thin one of the most dangerous seasons in history. Federal air patrols, working out of Spokane yesterday, report ed that dozens of new fires, none of them large, but all potential conflagralloiiH, had been started III a dozen national forests by lightning storms which descended without the usual accompaniment of rain. i In Montana at least 12 new fires wero reported and many crews, wearied by weeks of work, wen? fighting a discouraging battle. Fedenil forest patrols, timber protective associations and private citizens joined In the work. In north Idaho the largest fire was (he old blaze on I'ack river In t he extreme panhandle sec tion. The Salmon river fire in south Ida ho wus roaring anew, and fighters were sent across I be Montana line to check It. High winds were blowing and th hu midity was far below the danger point. The Chelan fire In Wasblngloh today was covering six front, and nearly r00 men were fighting It. It was started hy lightning Fri day night and had burned over nearly I Ji.OOO acres. WASHINGTON, Aim. 6. M') The I 'nlted States forest set' Vice today received a report from Its district headquarters at Portland, Oregon, that Imhtnlutr had set 'KI fires In the nort hern Cascade nnd Itlue mountains during the first five days of August. These fires, the report said, are now under control t-vervwhere toil in the Chelan and Italnlcr forests. I'olncare lingreis slow PAKIH, Aug. II. rtt Although ph wbtii n 1 1 til a v found t he recu peratioTi of former Premier Potn c;ir" from tits recent operation wa-.- proceeding normally, there was an undercurrent of anxiety among M. I'oincare's friends at the sIowiicsm of his progress. t FATIGUED ARMY rim iTitin ri rkrn ON THREE SIDES ONG WA CAUSED BY Renewed Outbreak Believed Result of Rice Liquor Racket Drugs Also Seen As Motive More Deaths Occur In New York Leaders Are Warned Against Violence. NttW YORK, Aug. C. (P) Prospects of one of the bloodies: lontj wa rn In yeai'H were seen to day by additional killings, both in tbs city and Most on, bringing the dead lo five in two days in addition to several wounded. A few hours after U. At torney Charles II. Tattle and Samuel Suiik Voting. Chinese con sul Keiieral, hud warned long lead, eis here that no violence would be tolerated pending a peace con ference today, a Harlem laundry man was shot and k illed at hU ironing hoard. Similarly in Itoston two Chinese were shot and killed within a few hours after tong leaders had as sured the police there would be no tong warfare in that city. Police officials said it was the first time tong leaders had de liberately deceived I hem unci ex pressed the belief the killings would result in the bloodiest tong war ever seen in new Kngland. In Chicago and Newark, N. .., iv he re the killing started with one. death each on Sunday, a tense on let' prevailed. Police maintain ed (dose watch on the Chines) sections hut no attempts at vio- l lenep occurred. . ' One theory of thp renewed tong outbreak upon which New Vork' police were working was that it was over the rice ' Ibiuor trade which .WW- 'd U have. hMsonu fill lie profitable with the lioterlor-' a ting quality of other bootleg liquor. At Newark it was thought ; the war might be over the opium trade, $.10,000 worth of the drug having been seized in that city Saturday. Deportation Threatened After a conference yesterday . with Voting and representatives of the rival tongs, Mr. Tuttle let it be known that If the warfare was not stopped In New Vork at once wholesale, deportations of Chinese would result. In a statement he said his pur pose In calling a meeting of tong officers was to offer the good offices of Young and himself to settle any differences that may have arisen and restore the pence agreed upon after the last tong outbreak several yenrs ago. "I hove .stated to representa tives of both tongs that It Is the hitentlon of tho American gov ernment to take nil steps neces sary to prsvunt an mil break of organized murder," he said. MOKTON. Aug. fi. (P) Two Chinese were shot and killed here last night in what police describ ed ns a renewal of tong wari'ar. The victims were Chin Hing, rl), said lo have been n IPp Sing, who was shot down' at a brllllantlv lighted street corner In the Chines o.uartei, and Lee Wah, laundry man nnd supposed member of Ihc Leong tong, slain as ho lay on a couch In the rear of his shop in the same district. Lee H ug, 30,-of 15 Pell street. ("CnnMniiM on PfitTw RIt Will Rogers Says: UliVKIiLY lUU.S, fill,. A ii fr. (i. Tlio liest lliini; in tlm papi'i's t ixliiy wns tin' story of :I0C(I0 liny Smuts from O (Mi ff r e n t tui tions stmiit int! in t li v rain in I'lir IiiiiiI v i t Ii linri'd henilfl, nn, I forgive ness nnd 'iiiiil will to all in llicir lii'iirts. Tliat Mmlon-. I'oivcll .jiiNt iilioiil formed one of t tie finest organiza tions ever eoneeived. I still e In i in the Zeppelin 'k ureat trip was due to t lie nli senee of slownwnys. To make us oipml with Knuland in cruisers we need n, and LM to he even with lapan. No wonder they want to lidd a eonferenee and everyhody remain as is Yours, wrr.n roorrs. 1 TRADE