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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1929)
The Weather c-orftiist: ' ol1' '""'K'" ""'I Thi s ,!,. V Miner Tu--ilay. Temperatures Highest yciionlny ft" 1owost this morning dtf DT.lf -ruurth Yfir. MEDFORD, ()i;K(!ON. MONDAY. AHil'ST VX 1!-JI), N.i. 1 1!). HtOil Today r By Arthur Brisbane MiCTWifWB Map, Tr.frttnf, . TT -I o .Signs of Civilization. Monet, Renoir, Some Others. Do You Know Nebraska. Hear Mayor Dahlman. (Copyright by King Feature Syndicate, Inc.) - CinOAfiO, 11!., Au- 1S Shipwrockdl in " 11 cniwliii"; flslioiv, "l the middle ii pes, see . jnu' three skeletons swiiiiriiip in j chii i us, excliiimed, "Tliiink (iiul, wo have reached civilization." i Shipwrecked men, in jiamiii Greece, tluinked .ens that they had reached civilization, when tliey saw, traced mi the sand.j (wo rit-'ht aiifrles, followed hy a j trimiult1. Ynn are aware that I the angles in any li'iiiimle nrej e'ljiiivalent to two right angles j ' Landing in Cliicimo this niorniii!; from the "('. li. & y.,''yu meet various evidences of civilization. "( 'liiciigii liriile of two wi cks found ilrowned in Wisconsin lake. I'olice hunt lor hnsliand." That 's one. 'Miraf Zeppelin Hears Japan est border." That headline in Hearst's Chicago Kxaniiner is another, better proof of civili sation. Yon go to Chicago's art inn si'tiiu, and sec the paintings hy Claude Monet and Angnste lic nnir. lent by Martin A. Kycr son, public spirited Chicago cit izen. TO sl.(. rill It's WOHTII. A Tliir ClIICAtiO from Alaska to Kenoir's iorti'ail ol' a little s I in white and the two paining of chrysanthemums and fruit. Look nt the last two, for len niinutes, ami ynn may learn more about livint; color than you ever knew before. You will not leave, of course. without a visit to Colleoni and Oiiilanielata, Italy's two preat fighters, of the fifteenth cen tury, sittini: silent on their liusre war horses. Even the hnitalily of venal war could be made magnificent by the penius of Verrnechio and Bonatello. One cneouranhifr proof of civ ilization is Mr. Hycrson's gener osity, pud insr bis priceless Iiiintiii;;.s where all Clueauo may see them, instead of keep inu them for his own pleasure. . . The Chicai.'o Journal, jrivin1-; a partial imitation of Alice s Cheshire Cat, will shrink from John Kastman's full size to a tabloid. The Chicago Daily Aews. nromotiim this nieiamoi- nliosis. should read l.a Foil -I A ' fConlinued on t'apfi I'our) The pii-loffiiv ilcparlnicnt I- r iln- wn IH-Iiinit an' I doo't -co mi) inn out of ll ccpt to promote Ihp siilK-rliilciHleiK o' niiiclbn.T n teoeral nlniHlwu-r. I a-(.iOi i ii- r Al Snillli it HilHn' hi- lite ' f.-r 2 n wont, uml' noliuddv pver iitiw lihn " " lelnil niilll. Copyrinht John F. Pille l'i 1 DIRIGIBLE IN JAP HANGAR i LATE TODAY One Hundred Hour Hop On Second Lap of World i , Tour Ended at 7:07 P. WI. Covered 6880 Miles Over Dangerous Terrain ! Next Goal Is Los Ange- j les, 5470 Miles. j TOKYO. Japan. Aiik. is. i,1) I Willi a journey ol' i'.smi miles across ! two contineiils officially limbed, the I ureal Cei-inan air liner (Iral Zeppe- lin was safely housed in tin bulbar ; ;al KasniuiKuriia naval air station i jat 7:li7 p. in.. Japanese time lfi:0 j ill. in. 10. S. Tl., today utter u run ! of tut' hours and 5o minutes from, j Friedriehsliafen. Five hiilidred Japanese bluejack- i 1 1 ts bruiiiiht down the silver queen j of the air oil Kasuinimiura field at : (i:27 a. m. Forty niinutes later they j I towed liere safely away until the start of her flight of afliil miles I I across the Facific ocean to l.os An- itjeles, next stai;e of tier flight '. j around the world. j I The (Iraf will probably start for Ithe Pacific coast of America on; j Thursday. J ; This flisht over the waste t stretches of the Pacific, never yet ; 1 traversed by an airship, marks the ( third slaKe of the Klobe-circliiiK j idiaf's journey. Together with the J i nil across the American continent 1 iiinni l.os Aniseles lo l.ukehursl, the iZoppclin mind slill fly nearly soon miles to ht-r noal'oll the New .ler-'; Isey air field from which she set j lout on August 7. j I A round of entertainments and ! il'estivities In the lavish tradition j of Japanese hospitality bemin for j I the -0 passcuiiers and the -In of ; ficers and men of the (iraf as soon j 'as the last lope had been coiled I and the last Inspection Kiven to j the enidnes in the Kasuininaiira I hangar. I ! While linmelise crowds of excited i i Japanese broke asain and anain : throtiKh police and military cor I ilons. Iir. Ilimo Kckener anil Ad-J I niiral Takarable, Japanese lninistei i jot the navy, exchanged formal I'e-I llicitatiolis on the field. Pansenoera Well I The passeiiKers. all ol w hom were I well and in Komi spirits, went through a bilef customs inspection and then boarded a train for To kyo. 40 miles away. I lie Japanese ceremonial meal, traditionally ex tended to visitors, was served by airport and Kovernnient officials lie- fore they IHl. It eollSISU'U in um-u ,'liHxtnuts. dried inttlefish ami sakl. the national alcoholic bever laiie fermented from rice. I The ofllcfis and crew of the Uiraf were distracted from Hie strain jot lour days and six hours of con stant strain anil responsioiniy over the wilds of Silieiia by an enter tainment Hivetl by the commandant in the airport- They relaxed from the tension or the I'liuhl from Fried liehslial'eii by diuiim and watclii lit .he danclllK of Relshn Kills, pro fessional Japanese entertainers. .Meanwhile, the staff of Ameri can. Cel'inan and Japanese enai liners who had been wait inn to s over the Oral's engines and n-plen-ish her stores silently i:o lo work lo prepare for her Irans-I'acilii, fliulii. Ilefore landillK al Kasiltni;auru Paekinc plants ol the city anil field, the Oral made a courtesy valley marked linieloilay prepara flii;llt over Tokyo and Yokohama to ; ,nI V u tu. slnppini; rush w hieb salisly the curiosity ol the people. win s,iirt mmnv. Must uf the It was a spectacle never before ,,,.),., t . h ,,r the valley sinned witnessed in the Orient, not even t kilo,- tins moinitiK, both for in Japan where modernization has (.asIPI Ii nni northwest eanbery been so rapid since the middle of shipment. All of the Hartleit tlie last century. No airship as blK as the Oral has ever eruised Hie skies of the Umpire of the ltislnn Mm. ' nice navy bllllips are tl wrest an- primation to her ever ...en in Ja pan. Hy a trick of fale tile (iraf was stowed away In a haliuar built from Herman reparations payments. Ill-, lluuo Kike ll er probably will make another fliuht across Tokyo beloie st.lllini: !HTOs Hie The Hi i man etnhasy expe P.u i i if. ted him to nas over the twoli old bridge whiih marks the imperial palace a nuance to tin a gesture of RHJNELAND SEPT.1ST Jlt(lte lo 111" empei il. BRITISHVaLL LEAVE rnK h : k thm ii;it - aiinnti t T -1 - t T 'b-,! ,!' hei:m avntu the umber 1. -An-, in id'.' Pliiti' l.n:i on I MAMER TAKES ON Rwnnnlnn out of the north Mills Field while 250 gallons of gasoline were transferred from The in a projected non-stop round trip across the country. SPOKANE PLANE LOUISE THADEN RA1L DISASTER ENROUTE WESTFIRST AVIATRIXKILLS THIRTEEN IN endurance Sun God Ahead of Schedule: at St. Paul Cruises Overj Twin Cities Over Hour! Before Heading for Wlis-j soula, Montana. ST. I'Al'l., Aim. ahead of schedule, plane. Sun io1. ill. M'l -- Far the endurance cruised over! more than an! the twin cities lor hour this afternoon before iiitoln ' nosini; westward in her ci oss- eoiintry non-stop flight. ! Arriving here at 1:25 p. m.. Ill" plane, piloted by Nick Malner and j Alt Walker, circled over tile city, until thetlel'uellnt; ship, the Apple! HlessHlii. went aloft. After tak- .111; aboard i'.n gallons of uaso- line, in gallons of oil ami ihieken ilinners. the eraft bead we.-lwar.l f.o- Missoula. Mont.. Just before It . 111. urehal Us (if lb lleywill be llck - inK i,y v,.dnesday noon j -pi, ,i,.;ik of the local llnrtletl son will he r.'aehe.l l.y Hie wi'ek of Augut 'J The picking of . ep- i Howell I cheduled to start tcmber 1. The price for Merlford Ilartletts is slill uncertain, there beinK so few shipment.-. Local shippers to day def.cilb.-d the marKet an hav-; ing an "optimistic tone." The I opening lr ptedllted at flolll 1 . 7 , to a box. The Ciihfoiniai crop, now In lis final stages, will I off the eastern mai kei b.-fote! i tie lieu in- Itiver valley Hart let is J start arriving in train load lots. j Li -poi ts Ii dim orchards indicate ; that the l!scs and Cornice and I l A u jo u peals a i e In need shai'. ' and aitainiiur -ie fa?-t under pres.; ilher ciiiidltioii'. These aie uml'T the Mime s'-a- h lay as Lie iSaitletts. They m eiybt to ten il.au at . I'lf (;in id i ip s Is il He l'i st tl t t be i Seplernoer. behind W Itllet M' ond 'ol Hand built. 1 1 i.oioi tin "e.-toi y t t ment build tot; ORCHARDS OPEN1 PIRKINR SFAJinN I iwi 111 IM .ww . rim ii nrtnn i UN tAKLY rtAKo; FUEL SUPPLY ABOVE at dawn, N. 8. Mamer, pilot of the phoe Pittsburg Woman Leads Air, Derby Into Second Lap, Port Amelia Earhart; Has Trouble in Yuma Landing, Is Unhurt. j I PllOF.NIX. Ariz., Auk. 1!). Louise Thaden of IMIIsliuiKh. Pa. was the first to complete the sec olid lap of Hie Simla Monica-Clev land women's air derby landed at SUy Harbor, nix airport, nt 1 :(H : ill p. lain time, today. when Hhe I the incline Y T M A, Ariz.. Auk- 1 fl. (Vl After leiidiiiK the other fliers her.' in the Suntu Muiihti-Clevelaiifl wo men'M air (leihy. Amelia Karharf, truiiH-AUanlir riier, oviMshol tin laiulinK fh'hl nil mounded in n dune. KiiniMhiiiK a propellor. The pilot wuh not hurt ami she x pected to take orr some time toilay. MOXTKKALU), Cul., An. Mary Van Mack, a coutfstant in the Santa Monica-Clcvelanrl wo men's nir derby, who landed here' when she became, confused alter the Htart of the race yesterday, took off at 10: -1ft a. m. for San Jiermir dino, Cal., the first Htop. CALKXK'O, Cal., Auk. 10. f1t- d by Miss Marvel Crosson. I. filers in the Santa Monicai'leve land women's air derby passed over here about S a. m. today in their tliiiht to I'loenix, Ail.., via Yum.. Ariz.. A ship Mown by Claire I'uhv of Iaw Angeles was forceil down by a leaky gasoline tank. Mis. I'ah said she would leave as soon av repairs could he made. SAN r,F.lt.AItlINO, f'al Am- Hi. I a') KiKhteen k til aviator con- ..u,.nfU in Hoi nit I limn I Women's H; ((,rl)y w,,, n ,,. ai,. , a. 111. today, off on Hie second lee, of their race to Cleveland, which stalled at Clover Field, S.inia .Monica. Cal., Sunday. The hop will take Hieni to Yuma, Ariz.. flU'MI officials in Cleveland haviui; irr.'int ed Hie fair fliers the concession of only flying over Calexico that Ho-i, plane nnmliers tuiuht he led, lliste; ou.-ly id of landing tin scheduled. 'iil.I'Ml!!'? It" Heni v bearing o .1 foi lo . AtlL'. .4 1 I 1 1 c .'Mill f I". Stm I TUT1L :V ll! ill IM ' t I -f h -ii Ing today a eonl uiu.i to e lib d rrK'V tn w hi ti t h y had bien gjvn to pi ' pan- f'.i lii" SAN FRANCISCO nalfJ t'rrn hovered over Spokane Sun God Californian in his first refueling Boiler Explodes When Train Strikes Open Switch Engineer. Fireman tinCl Eleven Negroes Scalded to Death. 1 1 KN'ltY KTTA, Okla., Ann. Ifl. ! IP) Thirteen persons were killed and seven others were injured, two I dangerously, when a St. l.ouis San Franclsi.ir passeiiKer train .(irmlt an oneii switch on the out - Phoe-jskirts of Memyeita yesterday. . I W. A. Wolfe, engineer, and 11. a. Ilryan. fireman, both of Sherman, Texas, ami eleven neKroes ridiriK in a chair car, were scalded to death when the boiler of the locomotive exploded as the train plunged down an embankment. Of the injured. Mrs. J. I. Tay lor f .loplin. Mo., and Kuel Hen fro, baggageman of Tuha, dkla., were in a m-rious eondition. The other Injured were negroeH. It. .'. (iooeh, an extra brakeman, and a negro porter escaped from tlie chair car by breaking the glass In a window. Approximately r.ni) feet of track was torn up. Officials began an investigation today to fix responsibility for the wreck. Harry Webb, a section hand, said he had closed and locked the switch Saturday after noon. Baseball Scores It. .1 . K. 1 1 and N' w York chic-mo Hherid and Do ners. It. H. K. r. ;t 3 7 3 Miller, Ibd M n 1 1. j W.ishlntltoll , i 'h-vela ml 1 .Jones ami Spenc i loway a nd L. Sewa 1 I I let 'i i M. dl . Oaslon and I largl ;ivf. 1 -hill ibriy; Whit ' a ml I I . n. i: .11 . ; M i Sweloilb M t il ll w Pittsburg .... Phihidclph.a liattei les: and Hiii'urea Smythe anil I'.llv, Hill vm; Itcnue. Lerafn. Second tame: 1 Hif-Minr Philadelphia P.Uttei jew, K 1 e ill c.i Ino s a nd H'-m-b ; Mcfiraw and l..vls. i: 1 St. LoiiU at Pt .d;K n. f'hiciig" ostpMiifd : " d.-,." tomorrow M-.i I lit r HHI tl a i ,ll NIXSEVEN INJURED !3 ACCUSE mm ATTACK Former Usherettes Give Dis- i trict Attorney Affidavits ' Alleging Treatment Simi-j lar to Pringle Girl's :J Never Went Back, Says;t One Deponent, As Knew Job Gone. I.ttS AN'til'M.KS, A UK- !!' ('Tl Alexamlei- I'anlaKes. i4 year dd t heat i leal magnate, was arraiKnd in HUperior iMiitrt loitay anil was granted a delay ill his plea to ehares uf eriinlnally attaekliiK 17 year dd Kunie I'rumle, a dancer, until August Tile motion, made hy runtimes' at turneys, said silfti ett'nt lime had not heen permiited in setting the dale m- arraignment to allow a study of the. pUH'ved inKs. l.os a.:i:i.i;s. Aug. ?i The district attorney's office today had three new accusations, in the form of affidavits hy young wom en, against Alexander I'antages, f4 year old theater magnate, who Is) charged with a statutory offense. and by fmvc and violence, against 1 Kuulce I'riugle. 17 year old dancer. ! Tlie affidavits, one a I IHl page j deposition, were offered volnn tarily, IHstrict Attorney Huron j Kills stated, by girls who formerly j w e r e usherettes I r i Pautages' theater. I The principal deposition, which j Kilts said named other uliis as having reeulved nttenthms similar to llloso uf'i'ledly forotid 'Upoif .Miss I'riugle tiy rantages, was made hy an usherette who slated i the attempted attack upon her ' occurred about a year ago'. The deposition was dictated by the. Igirl. whose name I'Mtls declined to 'disclose, in the presence of himself ,Wn "f niH deputies, Harold i.Iouesaud Klaney .Matthews. , l ied orriiv j 'Hie usherette was quoted as re I Jat ing t hat, while employed by j Pontages, she was summoned to his "private office" , for iiiiestlon inf. After asking Iter about her work, the girt ituoted, the theater j magnate made a point blank pro posal which "set her rage, aflame." The deposit Ion cont in tied that 1 'anl ages used Insulting language to her and then attempted to em ploy force. The usherette related that she escaped, fleeing from tlie office and the building. "1 never went hack there," she was quoted as saying. "I knew 1 wouldn't havo a job." It was Indicated that the district attorney would question other girts named in the deposition to check the statements. I'a nt ages. who Is at liberty under $ lis'., mho bond, was due to be arraigned this morning for the set ting of his trial dale. William .lobleman, puhll city man for I'autages, who in answers to questions upheld his employer's claim of a "frametip" the night of his arrest, ami who later switched his version of the affair. Is to go before the county gra ml Jury to day. ! AEIERJECESS 1 WASIIIXOToN, Aug. 1!!. ffV The senate reconvened at noon to rlay after a two months summcr , recess wit h only a few members ion hand for the opening session. The senate was not ready to work ami tonight will begin a series of briefer leresseH until Sep tember 4 to await the tariff bill. i Mily a few more than the weary j IH members of the finance com- ' millee who have laboied through out tlie summer revision 'he hollse I taiiff measuie were fOl hand fori Dm formal opening. ; The gentlemen's agree m e p 1 ! reached bet ween the it e publican j and 1 ocralle leaders whereby i I bree ilay reci-s-f-es w ill be la ken lllltll the rillalice CiOlllllitti e has ' the tariff bill ready for coiisl.lcra - j I ion, was lb;- M U, Hill keepltiK most of the membership at their vaca- I not t ii All Ii. online i-XU.l s ats. nds Ho- appear satisfied lu.ilnlnn das of lb to the ill. .po.M bin of i iff bill I oils, ipoiit i" i Hoit to take up s is expeetod lill log ei ks. ' V'XHIC t li'lle Ol or bm-iio FEW SENATORS . ANSWER ROLL Songs Make Dog Trench Hero Shed Real Tears 4.4.4,4 i J fllli'AC-O-(V) Mrs. WutltT Kyruin iclLs (his ovy a1mit : CnltllMTK. 13-yisir-ihl war ' ilon. tttiunilt'tt in tlif Ai'- Kinint1; i "Vh.-nrvtr In- hears war snns im thi raii' ht frhs. 4 ami hill l'ars mil tl"vn his rheeks. CdI.IImmk sinmls al ' 4 aftiMiiiitii w n ihf "Star Spunkh'tl ItiiniH-r' Is played.'" 1 v The aniiual was with hat- ' levy It. 1 '2 '2 ml ailltiery. lit m . 1 Mihu-l and the AiR'mne. lie 1 Wilfv Wiiliniteil : I II t Utsseil. seV- eral ImtUltes" risUInK their lives to diim him in. The -KitVernmehl t;.ie (inlilhei ill) linnoraMe disehai'Ke. litihtherK lii'W spends limsl 1 t.f his lime doziim and when j 1H rutd. lose In a stove. Young Aviators Leave Por tugal Early Today Strive for Landfall at Halifax to Refuel Take- .... in r i rl Off Cheered By CrOWd . German Ship Sights Plane West of Lisbon. MOIITA, The Azores. Am. HI. The iili-iliine In which two ii,ik Swiss iiviiilors uro ultetiipthiir ll Iriins-Allailllo lllKliI flrelMl over the vllliuto of I'nila Victoria, oil the Island of Tercelni, lit 0:00 p. U. M. T.. (1:1111 p. 111., . !:. S. T.) AfC Ircllnic, II eonlloueil Its lllKhl with no Inilienlloii that, the crew bail e.icrleuis'il any (rouble. MHHON. rurlilipil, Auk'. HI. Wl A Wireless inessaae from the (lernian steamer W'errli this after noon reported slahliim the Swls a I r p I a ll e "Yihiiik Switzerland" about 17! miles due west of Lis bon beaded towards the west. The steamer. Iiouiid lor llrn.il from I'oprto, dlil not nice the lime, bin stated the position as latlllld' :H.4K norlh and loliKllude ll.: west. LIHItnN, Poriuii.il, Aug. lib t" ; Two youthful Swiss aviators, s car Kill-car and Kurt Lucsche.-. took off from .1 tincal, near here, at " :3M a. in. t I ::i" a. in.. K. S. T ) in mi attempt to mako a westward crossing of the Atlantic to New York. They, considered U doubtful they could reach the American me- tropoll w I t Ii o u t refueling find idanmil to strike first for Halifax, f Nova Scotia, probably stopping there for moii- petrol. It was I their Intention to fly by the Aore not attempting to land but relum ing to I'ortugal If their fuel i on siimptloil was too Inavy. The plane was a larman mono plane of K r e n c p construction, bearing on Ms fuselage mar Its :tu horsepower motor the name ".lungsch wciei'iand." or " Vounu Swllerlaml." Il was similar to that used by the r'renchmet;, Pa illy and Hew from I Indo China. The fleers tie send-off Kai liel ed al watch their Itt'Kiiiensi, recently iris to Saigon, l'ietn!i received an ent husias I rout a crowd which the lonely spot to departure, Contrary to fen is that tin ha ve t rouble in cause of Us heavy plane miliht eltlng Up he load. It made iplondid red frii takeoff ami view .'o minute dlsa p i later. pea Wire Report on the Pear Market CHIC , :, :ia c AUK. I!t. -ti:.s O.A. lifornla. 1 Ceorgia. 1 Texas arrived ; l!t 1 .i slpp! i track: -I sold. rnla Itaribdis: (il box--. ( 'a IKo L'.'i to :i.HM; average 3.2: I lardy '..: Larlletts, S.M.'t: New Mexico rlb-tis. K.MM: S.:.-!" to J-J.'O. m:w vi:k, Aug m. tc s.i. , -'e:, is: um California. 1 Ala b: ina atiived; 7." California. I Alt ba ma unloaded : :i Ca lifornia. J Alabama on track: " L 1 L" Pai'leils l, to t.l i. SWISS Pnl ESSAY HOP 10 AMERICA CHINA SEES sMENAGE OF RED KIA Nationalist Govt. Orders Mobilization of 100,000 More Troops Crisis Viewed Serious Soviet 1 Seeks Alienate Provinces ! Is Charge -Take Firm Stand. SHANGHAI. Auk- i - "I'' Th. Chinese nationalist government lias ordered mohill.ittioii ol i ) atbii tboial hi iuad.-s ot Manchnr an troops, totaling no,iiM men and now views "the Sino-Uusian crisis as increasingly serious." The br gades will be assigned to duty on I he nort hern frontier. Six brigades will be drawn from Kengtiee province, two from Kirin, and remaining two from Heiiunk U ng. s:tld an official announce ment published by Kuomin. of ficial Chinese news agency. Oeneral Ho Chen Chun, personal repi emulative of President Chi ang Kai Shek. was said to be en route from Pelp.ng to .Mukden with orders from the nationalist government to assume command j of the entire military forces In j Manchuria after conferring with MJovernor Ch mm llsueh Liang, j f'. T. Wang, nationi. list prime j minister, was quoted as saying Moscow was trying to alienate I the loyalty or the three pro- vllu,.s l)f Manchuria to tin- na tional st govern mt;nt and i barged thrrt eor.lpmml!dh!f nposals had ' been marie to Chiang Huseli Liang. (i. T. Wang, nationalist prime niinlslei't was quoted as saylnff Moscow wad try'nff to alienate thj lovatty of the three province of Manchuria to the nationalist gov ernment mid charged i hat coin--romfsfug proposals had been made to Chiang Hu?eh Liang.' M. Wang's statement ended "the gov ernment Is compelled to take a firm stand lest communism aga n nlnys havoc In China. We have had sufficient experience with communist outrages. The nation alist must either take a firm si and or again fall into the clutches of the communists." Ta fch ung, semi -official nation alist government pew's 'agency. Is sued a dispatch purport ng to be from Harbin, rlallng: "In View of the se verily of soviet gunfire at strategic points along the Man churia)! border the Manchuria n authorities have decided to mo ld live the entire provincial army for duly along the Slno-HljVrlal front h-r." The dispatch vaU further I Ch tiese don't believe the "Th,. soviet will declare war an. Hunt them, hut rather think It will cominue bor der host 11 it les In :ncreastng pro portions hoping to frighten Chl-ne.-.e Into negotfat oiis in aceord ance wilh niviet conditions." The dispatch coni in ued : "M-w. cow Is unable to send an army cap ib'e of cnnuneiing the entit e Manchiirlan army, lot a 11 fug ap proximately Mi. (ino men, the ma fority of whom have seen in'liv" servlci' In t he past few years." Will Rogers Says: HOLLYWOOD, Cnl.. Amr. 1!). .Inst conip from tin field nt Santa Monica, where Sinn,' coiilil t II v fcniiili and ! to flying 's o u t of town. Tin slie tl c r Ii v cot i,IT tin v; i 1 1 1 n I n n i iiwiiv ill t In- nir, iiikI wli.it ix liiinioroiisly rel'eircil to ns the stioilrjcr ,ex went liucli to tlie kitchen .ink an. I the rmlio. Tlie litis IiiiihIm left liy motor lo ,,i iilieml ninl irepnre iiriiier I'ooil lor their wives in encli town. I tried to find inillier in the mi I fit. Thcr was so ninny Mrs. I tlmiiuM I miulil find '"(' wiiywiird soul. Itnt nil loid hail no time for iniiterniil worries, they lite I (riven their lives tn the ciil'linretoi s. Yours, Wll.li K'lMjr.liS. uu! what we