ail Tribune
Paid-Up Circulation
Psopl who pay for their newspapers
iro the beet prospects lor the adver
tilers. A. B. Ow circulation Is paid
up circulation. This newspaper Is
. b. a
EDFORD
Twenty-Seventh Year
MEDFOKi), OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1932.
No. 208.
' The Weather
Forecast: Increasing cloudiness to
nijht, becoming unsettled Wednes
day. Moderate temperature.
Highest yesterdsy 50
Lowest this, morning- M
M
M
BBEB Ml BWIEHELT E1
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS.
GREEN BURKS, a negro, dies In a
JlUBfMlA. .U " J
bis death, ha tells attendants at the
hospital that he was a slave before
the civil war.
government, beyond all quee-
tlon, sanctions many things In
these days which should not be sanc
tioned. Some of these things are
humiliating.
But NOTHING that la sanctioned
by our government today can be as
humiliating as the Institution of
human slavery, which was formally
V rtmi. hv law In this country aa
late as 70 years ago.
The Institution of human slavery
was finally done away with, and so It
follows that these other things that
should not be will also be done away
with In the course of time, and as the
public attitude toward them becomes
more enlightened.
So let us not lose confidence In
our ability to Improve the conditions
under which ws live.
IAMBS VARECHA, er-lnmate of an
Illinois Institute for mental &f
fectlvea, Is arrested In Chicago and
subjected to 14 hours of questioning
by the police. He finally breaks down
and confesses to three slayinge,
robberies, several attacks on
women and seven unprovoked shoot
tags.
"But," he shouts at the police ai
he sums the confession, "I am Insane,
and you can't do anything to me!" '
OH yes we can "we" In this ln
stance referring to organized
clety. We can oonflne him again in
an institution for the criminal Insane
" whence he may escape at any mo
ment to resume his career of crime.
But that's about all we can do.
GRETA QARBO, back In Sweden
after a short trip to London and
Paris, complains that she was perse
euted while In those cities. Her life,
she says, was made a "misery." and
her holiday was ruined, by the way
people acted toward her.
IJOW did people act toward her
f - well, It seems that they wanted
to see her. and in satisfying this de
sire they Invaded her privacy to an
extent that appeara to have been
oulte distressing. They Just simply
WOULDN'T let her be alone,
npoo bad; quite too bad.
a But these seme people who Just
won't leave Greta alone have made
her one of the great ones of the
earth. They have made her services
so In demand, at high rates, that the
much-discussed depression mesns
practically nothing to her at least
as compared with millions of others
who have been affected by It.
If these millions of people, you
know, who are so much Interested In
Greta that they make her life
misery by denying her the privacy
she professes to crave, should LOSE
INTEREST In her, her earning power
would be gone and she would become
lust another person without a Job.
SO don't waste too much sympathy
on Oarbo. It Is terrible, of
course, to be deprived of privacy, but
it Is much mors terrible to be de
prived of a Job.
And If Greta should lose the hold
on the publlo which makes this same
public yeam to see her, so that It
i vnnv fnr Itself lust hOW BhS
looks out of her war paint and what
she weara and how she eats, and all
those other little details that Intrigue
us common ordinary persons , she
would also LOSS HER JOB,
She hssnt really quite as much to
complain about as she thinks she has,
THIS
aversion to "publicity"
1
rather badly overdone by a lot
of our famous people even Including
LIndy. who has had a lot to say about
It and who makes a rather good case
for himself.
If the public hadn't taken a tre
mendous Interest In htm. following
his astonishing flight across the At
lantic. Ltndy would still be Just an'
other pilot, with nothing much
look forward to.
to!
Publicity has taken away from him
his privacy, but it hsa auto given to," nt-r ingonomry.
him many things that are eminently
worth while.
The interest of the public, when
you look at it In a fair and right and
'reasonable way. is something that Is
quite worth having.
WAR DEBTS TOPIC
AT WHITE HOUSE
Victor and Vanquished Face
Each Other Across Table
in Red Room to Talk
Vast Sums Owed Country
WASHINGTON, Nov. 33. (AP)
Beneath the gleaming crystal chan
deliers of the red room at the White
House, President Hoover and Presi
dent-elect Roosevelt faced eaqh. other
In conference this afternoon- on the
tedious problem of war debts
While the results were awaited with
keenest Interest In world capital as
well as all over the United States,
the outgoing and Incoming execu
tive dealt In fabulous figures of the
more than eleven billion dollars
which are owed this country.
Secretary Mills stood with the pres
ident when he greeted the man w,ho
had vanquished him in the election
so shortly ago.
Advfeor at Hand
Mr Roosevelt was accompanied by
Professor Raymond Moley of Colum
bia university, who has been his ad
visor thraugh the recent tumultuous
months.
After the president-elect walked to
t,he entrance of the red room, he
was announced by Xsaao Hoover,
chief usher at the White House and
an aide there for 43 years.
'The Governor of New York, waa
the announcement.
Mr. 'Roosevelt stepped inside, ex
tending his hand to the president.
'Mr. President," said the president-
elect, as his hand met Mr. Hoover's.
"I am glad to see you, governor,'
the president replied. .
Mr. Roosevelt then Introduced Pro
fessor Moley and after a brief mo
ment of general talk the group, waa
seated around a small mahogany ta
ble which la part of the regular fur
nlshlngs of tbe room.
Smoke "Peace Pipe
Cigars and cigarettes were passed
around with Mr. Hoover choosing the
former and Mr Roosevelt the latter,
and the business at hand started.
They, with ' their aides, talked
through a slight haze of cigar and
cigarette smoke, warmed by the open
fire.
It was learned from associate of
Mr. Rosevelt, however, that he still
felt, aa he said in accepting the
president's invitation, that the deci
sions to be made now are decisions
for Mr. Hoover.
Would Avoid Entanglement
The nresldent-elect Indicated dur
ing his campaign thai he wanted to
remain free to deal with the whole
foreign situation as one piece. He
was quoted as telling those on his
train from New York today that he
still felt the same way about it.
, He had said In agreeing to confer
with the president
The immediate question raised by
the British, French and other notes
creates a responsibility which reBts
upon those now vested with execu
tive and legislative authority."
The Immediate question is the re
port from five nations for a contlnu
nace of the Hoover moratorium which
expires the middle of next month,
and asking debt revision.
RALLY
EUGENE. Ore., Nov. 22. (AP)
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Garnett of Med
ford. Injured near here In an auto
mobile accident Bunday evening,
were reported improved by hospital
authorities today. .
Mrs. Garnett sustained fractures
of the skull, Jawbones and ribs, while
Mr. Garnett sustained a fractured
hip. Both will be in the hospital
several days. .
Two-Gun School Ma'am
Shoots Chiloquin Buck
KLAMATH FALLS. Not. 22. (AP)
McKlnley George, Piute Indian, was
in a local hospital today for treat
ment of three wounds Inflicted by
the guns of Miss Lenora Johnson, 23
year old school teacher, who routed
George and several other Indians
from her living apartment at the
school yesterday morning.
Two of the bullets from Miss
Johnson's guns were Imbedded In the
bone of George's right leg and a third
tore through the flesh of his left leg.
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore., Nov. 22.
(AP) An awed, respectful peace per
meated the Klamath Indian reserva
tion today, the tribute tendered an
intrepid school ma'am who proved
jshe knows her trigzer fingers as well
Only yesterday it was that a bat
tery of blustering bucks boomed into
the school building aptrtment of Miss
1 Leona Johnson 23. apparently In
spired by the erects of firewster into
an a'tempt to taunt the girl.
They reckoned without the rugged -
nets ot their unwilling hostess, how
Outflys Husband
AMY JOHNSON, Britain's famous
woman pilot, who bettered the rec
ord of her husband, J. A. Molllson.
In a flight from London to Cape
town. (Associated Press Photo.) ..
COLLEGE BUDGETS
IT BY
EUGENE, Mot. 32. (AP) A reduc
tion of approximately 1335,000 per
annum In expendlturea during the
next blennlum to balance the budget
faces Oregon's higher educational sys
tem. Chancellor w. J. Kerr told ad
ministrative 'offfeers and'Tdeans of
the University, State College and nor.
mat schools at a meeting ben late
yesterday. -
The gathering brought officials of
the five higher schools here for the
first time.
The slash In expenses. Dr. Kerr said,
must be met from funds svallable to
the board of higher education, a
large part of which come from mlllage
tax and student fees, since the board
has sgreed not to ask for appropria
tions to supplement the present mlll
sge tax and present continuing sp
nmnTlattons. Csreful studies should be made to
eliminate unnecessary duplications, to
cut sdmlnlstratlve costs and to aa
sura full carrying loads for every in
dividual, the chancellor declared. He
reouested every possible saving De
made In the budgets slready allotted
for this year and auggested reductions
In laboratory supplies, In 11ns with
reduced enrollment.
4
E
BEND. Ore., Not. 32. (AP) Tt Is
only because Oscar B. Nelson, a mill
worker, gave second thought to bub
bles seen Issuing from trie cnuiy
waters of the Deschutes river, that
Dannie Chenewlth, four years old, Is
alive today.
On his way home for lunch yester
day, Nelson saw bubbles while cross
ing a pontoon bridge. He walked en
tirely across the span before deciding
to investigate. He returned and saw
the boy struggling in the water where
the bubbles had been seen before.
Dannie was revived by physicians.
He had taken off his shoes to wade
In the river and had slipped Into deep
water. .
ever. Her hands flew downward and
bobbed up with a pair of automatic
pistols. Bullets belched defiance at
the intruders and the abashed bucks
backed, hastily from the room, one of
them with three pellets in his leg as
a souvenir of the encounter,
Leona ft wo-gun) Johnson calmly
opened school ten minutes Ister. her
slightly pale face -the only give-away
of her wild west Interlude.
School authorities remembered that
when Miss Johnson, a graduate of
Belllnghsm Normal school, asked for
a school on the reservation, she said
she didn't mind rough living condl
tlona. They believe her now.
Sheriff Lloyd Low and State Police
Sergeant R- D. Davis, sent to invest!
gate the Incident, admitted there was
nothing they could add to the finale
flashed by Miss Johnson's guns to the
uprising.
And the bucks. Well, the bucks
undoubtedly would like today to offer
Miss Johnson the pipe of psce If
! they were sure it would be all right
lor a ladjr school teacher to sraok.
STATE SEEKING
CLOSE CONTROL'
FUNOSPENDING
Budget Board to Veto $380,
, 000 Requested by State
Aided Institutions Unless
. Supervision Is Obtained
SALEM, Nov. 22. (AP) Unless
legislation la enacted giving the state
board of control Jurisdiction over the
expenditure of funds for state-sided
Institutions, ths 380,000 requested
appropriations' for this purpose will
be disapproved by the budget de
partment, Is was snnounced here to
day. Henry M. Hanzen, director of
budget, addressed a letter to the three
member, of the board of control Bet
ting out the system under which
these funds sre used, and requested
proper legislation In order to ade
quately protect the atate In connec
tion with future appropriations.
In his letter Hanzen sets forth the
laws under which the state appro
priates funds for the 12 state-aided
Institutions, most of which are In
Portland and vicinity. He states the
law vests the 'child welfare commla
ston with authority to aupervlse these
Instructions; that ths board of con
trol audits the accounts arid approves
upon certificate the recommendations
of the commission, and that when
ever any child Is committed to any
of these Institutions by a court, such
Institution shall receive state aid for
the child.
"In other words." Hanzen Bays,
"this latter provision dlveats the child
welfare commission and the Btate
board of control of Jurisdiction over
children committed by a duly consti
tuted court snd psves the way for
ultimately divesting the commission
and the board of control of Jurisdic
tion over claims that may be sub
mitted by the child csrlng Institu
tions and agenclea for any and su
stats aid."
BEARS AT CRATER
Tl
Bears In Crater Lake national park
rare at It again to get their calories,
vitamins, fats and such before they
take themselves Into winter hiberna
tion, is the rtport from the lake to
day. They aren't going to sleep with
empty stomachs, not If they can
help it.' Mrs. Harry Harding, wife of
the caretaker at the lodge, writes.
Day time feedings are not suffici
ent, so night prowling has been
added to their programs. For days,
the bears have been coming to the
lodge to be fed by young Dorothy
Harding with meal, cakes and bread.
Four-thirty Is their favorite hour for
tea.
The last few daya they have sup
plemented the day feeding with night
raids, which brought them, upon two
occasions, fruit cake, cereal, tea and
flour. Heavy boards were torn from
the windows by the bears and ths
windows broken to make entry. The
boards hsve been replaced, but Mrs.
Harding says the bears still manage
to get in.
They are also congregating at Gov
ernment camp for food and the cook,
a few days ago, when carrying meat
from the store house to the mess
hall, waa forced to fight the hears
off with clubs.
Snow at the rim had reached a
depth of four feet first of the week.
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 22. (AP)
Theodore Gervlng of Vancouver,
Wash., a former ManneapoHs police
man, complained to police here to
day that two coin-matching buneo-
lsts took $400 from htm In a money
game late Monday. H ssled he met
the men at Vancouver, became In
terested In matching coins with
them, and finally drew the MOO from
ftle aafety deposit box In a Portland
bank. They took it
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 2 (AP)
With an estimated appreciation of
11,000.000 in value since the election,
the Ongon hop crop continues to
mske further gains in valuation.
Information here today was that
hop growers were advancing their
asking prices wieh each Increase In
bidding quotations, with dealers of
fering 29 cents In all Oregon dis-1
trlcts. Orowers' ideas are said to,
a proximate 30 cents a pound at this'
time. I
The trade here feels that $1 prj
pound for hops would not be a ml-'
raciilcm advance should the federal
laws be revised In the short session
q congress oert t&ootfe
ASSUAGE APPETITE MEDICS UNTANGLE
stta ssav sa. ,, aSk am
Mayor Proclaims
Thanksgiving Day
for Med ford Folk
To the Citizens of Medford:
Following the Thanksgiving
Proclamations of President Hoover
and Governor Meier, fixing Thurs
day, November 24, as a day of
thanksgiving, it is befitting that
the people of Medford should be
Impressed further to concentrate
their minds and activities towards
the observance of this day in rec
ognition of the manifold blessings
which Providence has surrounded
us.
Our nation, our state, and our
local community may be depressed,
but that depression la light when
we pause and reflect and observe
the burdens of others which over
shadow our own. Let us be thank
ful therefore that we can extend
to our lees fortunate fellowmen
the helping hand of encourage
ment and relief.
Let us observe this day In se
rious reflection and thanks for
the close friendships we have, for
the beauties and blessings of life,
and for the opportunities we have
to make our individual lives Into
accomplishments worthy of our ex.
lute nee.
B. M. WILSON.
Mayor.
HIDES NO .SECRET
IS WIFE'S BELIEF
ASHEVTiiLE, N. Not. 22.
Mrs. Raymond Robins, wife of the
prohibition advocate who for more
than two months roamed the west
ern North Carolina mountains ai
"Reynolds Rogers,' & strange bearded
oharacter, today described the scene
she said took place when her hus
band recognized Aet.yeaterday.,,.
Mrs. Robins said she opened the
conversation with Robins by asking
the social worker snout his home in
Florida. '
"Then," she said, "without any
process of reasoning, I went over
and held his hand. Slowly but stead
ily the change came until suddenly
he looked into my face and called
me 'Margaret
"He then turned to Doctor Griffin
(Continued on Page Seven)
COLUMBUS, O., Nor. 11 A
child whose spleen, appendix, part of
one kidney and a section of Intes
tine, had been lodged in 'the upper
left chest since birth, was restored
to relative "normalcy" today by an
unusual surgical operation.
Twenty physicians were spectators
ss Dr. Louts Mark of Columbus per
formed the operation on six-year-
old Rose Ardrey of Rushvltle, O. It
was necessary to cut away part of
two ribs In order to move the mis
placed organs to approximately their
proper location.
The child, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. 8. R. Ardrey, had been strange
ly 111 since birth. Her breathing was
painful, but the cause ot her Buffer
ing baffled physicians until recently
when a correct diagnosis was made,
Barring inter-abdominal Infection,
physicians said, the child will
cover.
WRECKAGE OF PLANE
SAN FRANCISCO, Not. 22. (AP)
Hope that Lieutenants Jefferson
Davis and Robert W. Merrick, army
reserve aviators, may havs escaped
the fog menace which cut them off
from their home field Sunday night,
faded here today after parts of an
airplane were found In San Francisco
bay.
The plane parts, consisting of
wreckage from wing structure, were
found by coast guard searchers.
spar, found in the bay, bore the
manufacturer's date of the plane In
which the two flyers were returning
from Vlsalla.
PORTLAND, Ore1, Nov. 22 ( AP)
a formal compalnt charging Sam 81
mone, AO, with attempting to defraud
an Insurance company by setting fire
to his .house, was filed today as po
lios continued their. Investigation of
the explosion and blast which early
yesterday took the life of an uni
dentified man and destroyed the res
idence. Ball was set at 13000.
NO PAPER -THANK SO! VINO DAY
In ord.r to permit enjoyment or
the holldsy by employes, and In
scrordanr with Inng-entabltshfd
ru'tom, there will be no lue of
The Mall Tribune Tbundsy,
Thank. giving dsy.
HI U INNARDS
LABORITES TOLD
T
ABLE IKE JOBS
Sen. James Davis Advocates
Sinking Fund to Provide
for Public Works in Pe
riods National Depression
CINCINNATI, O., Nov. 22. (fP)
Senator James J. Davis of Pennsyl
vania, told the American Federation
of Labor convention today that gov
ernments in themselves cannot cure
unemployment, and advocated crea
tion of a federal sinklg fund to pro
vide for publlo works In periods of
depression.
'Some people, he said, "seem to
think that the government, if it only
would, could give every man a Job.
This is one of the many delusions
that must be guarded against. No
government, not even the richest.
can perform the impossible.
Sinking Fund Needed.
Terming public works a stimulus to
business, and saying that "'the gov
ernment has done as much as it
could." he added that "I believe with
all my heart the creation of a sink
ing fund, to be used by the govern
ment In times of depression
providing for the erection of much
needed public works, is a modest pro
posal, but would do much to re
store business confidence and aid
labor."
In that way, he declared, the gov
ernment failed to emulate "the or
dinary prudence of the great corpor
ations.
"We must. he warned, "plan for
the future and plan adequately, and
(Continued on Page Seven)
ST. MARKS STARS
E
MORAGA, Cat.. Not. M. m
Angel Brovelll, sensational fullback,
and Mike Steponovlch, first string
guard of the St. Mary's college foot
ball team, were under temporary sus
pension today as the result of break
ing training rules.
Louis Lefevre, graduate manager,
declared that while Brovelll and
Steponovlch would be disciplined It
h ad not been deflnl tely decided
whether to keep them out ot the
Thanksgiving day game with Univer
sity of Oregon, in San Francisco.
The pair are mainstays of the team.
HITLER FRUSTRATED
IN POLITICAL HOPES
BERLIN, Not. 22. ) Adolf Hit
ler's bid for the German chancellor
ship has been frustrated once again,
It was generally thought today as the
contents of a letter to him from
President Von Hlndenburg leaked
out. '
It was understood ths president
bad reiterated that whoever gets the
Job must be sure of a safe and con
tinuous parliamentary majority. This
Is something that Hltleg cannot ob
tain, It appeared.
1
Protest Election
Klamath Mayor
KLAMATH FALLS. Not. 22. (AP)
R c, Groesbeck, local attorney, today
filed special proceedings in circuit
court here contesting the election of
W. E. Mahoney as mayor of Klamath
Falls. Groesbeck claims Mahoney
cannot qualify under residence quail
ftcatlona set out In the city charter.
Human Sacrificed On
Altar of
DETOOIT. Nov. S3. (AP) A fsn
tastlc picture of debased voodoo mys
ticism lay unfolded befors pollcs to
day aa they sought to lesrn how wide,
spread la ths cult that has claimed
ons bumi.i sacrifice and marked for
death Mayor Prank Murphy, two
JudgM snd a woman wslfars worker
to proprltlate strange "gods."
Specifically, detectives were investi
gating reports of an organisation that
sella the "right" to adopt favored mo
hammedan names to superstitious ne
groes, for Robert Harris, oonreaiiea
slayer of one "humsn sscrlflce." stylrd
himself "King of Warn" and enow
Oriental names for hla wife snd two
children, sged 13 snd .
Harris. 44-year-old negro. Insists.
police asld, that Jenva J. Smith, first
victim of his mvstlo rites, went
willingly to Als death Sunday. Pu
ture victims, he told pollcs lsst night.
were to havs ben Msyor Murphy, re
corders Judges Edward Jeffries and
Arthur F. Gordon and a welfare
s.KV Mi fvnM ths iMtYlNmlth rflr1 wllllnalv. ThtT BSld thftV
Golf Head Dies
ROBERT M. CUTTINO of Chicago,
whose death Sunday night followed
close upon Ills selection to succeed
Herbert Ramsay of New York
President of the United States Oolf
association. (Associated Press Photo )
PORTLAND POLICE
FEDERAL AGENTS
PORTLAND, Cm., Nov. tl.(JP)
Ths Journal said today that "oolii'
ddsnt with District Attomsy Lar
lay's announcsmsnt of grand Jury
Inquiry Into the Portland polios bu
reau, It now develops that for montha
federal agencies b,av had their sye
on ths operations, of ths bureau."
Ths paper said ths list of federal
agencies understood to havs evidence
bearing upon lajlty of law enforce
ment In certain dlvlslona of police
administration lnciudea:
The United States attorney of Ore
gon, George Neuner: the federsl dep.
uty administration of prohibition, w.
K. Newell: the united states mmv
nation Inspector. Eapheal P. Bon'
ham, and the Intelligence unit
ths Income tax division of ths In
ternal revenue service.
One of the government men
quoted by the Journal, which said
that he had no deslrs to be quoted
directly." The statement aald: "We
have found In Portland certain ave'
nues of law enforcement seeming!;
closed. These involve the laws that
have to do with gambling, decency
and, of course, boozs as well as nar
cotlcs.
IN DOPE SALES
PORTLAND, Ore., Not 22. (AP)
Dr. Homer Denman of Burns, Ore.
today entered a plea of not guilty
for violation of the Harrison nar
cotic act wften he appeared In fed
eral coudt to answer to the Indict
ment.
The Indictment, 80 pages In
length, charged Dr. Denman with
having sold
narcotics to H,
Schmaltz, United States commission
er at Burns, and to Pat H. Donegan,
an attorney there. The indictment
accused the physician of having
sued more than 250 prescription for
narcotics, ranging from 1AI grains
to 10014 grains. - He was. represented
In court by Be h malt?;, who has a prl
vate law practice fct Burns.
Voodoo Cult
Harris aald Smith, also a negro, first
declined to become a human sacri
fice to ths "OoU of Is turn," but that I
"when I showed him that he would
be the savior of the world and go
to heaven right away he said ail
right."
In detail, Harris described ths stage
setting for ths sacrifice. Present, he
said, were his wife and two children,
twelve 'disciples" and Smith.
"As ths hour of noon drew near,"
police quoted Harris as saying, "I
said, 'Smith, do you still want to be
killed?' because the command ordered
me not to kill anybody who didn't
want to be killed. Smith nodded his
head."
' Then promptly at noon. Harris said,
he stabbed and beat Smith to death
on an "aHar,'' Improvised from a
parking liox.
Pollcs said their Investigation ten
tatively had confirmed aaltent details
of Harris' confession, notably that
AXING BEER TO
E
IS
Speaker Says Revenue On
Drink and Cut in Expenses
Would Turn Trick Brit
ten, Hoover Talk Argued
WASHINGTON. Nov. 22. (AP)
Speaker Garner told newspapermen
today that In his opinion "the house
ui pass a beer bill at the short ses
sion," but refrained from any fore
cast as to the probable time.
Garner said also that with a beer
bill and reductions in ttovernment
expenses It might be possible to se
cure a balanced budget without pass
ing other forms of taxation.
Asked what per centage beer he fa
vored the Democratic vice-presidentelect
said "within the constitution,"
Limit On Content.
"About 2.75 or 3 per cent!" he was
asked.
"Somewhere around that," Garner
replied.
Ths speaker gave as a "guess' that
legalized beer for revenue would .
bring in (280,000,000 to 9300,000,000
annually.
Meanwhile, at the White House
aides to President Hoover said Presi
dent Hoover bad declined to discuss
(Continued on Page Six)
4
8
TREK A, Cal., Nov. 22. m Hght
Chinese drowned last nlght In the
Klamath river at McConnell Bar. 16
miles from here, while returning from
a day s labor on a bar In the stream.
The Chinese got into a small boat
used as a ferry and attached to a
cable. When the boat reached mid
stream the pulley Jammed and the
craft overturned In the swift current.
The men were swept downstream.
None of the bodies had been recov
ered today but one was sighted two
miles from the shore.
GEOLOGISTS KILLED
WHARTON. Tex., Nov. aa (AP)
An airplane crash hsre last night took
the lives of two geologists, B. 0. Tem
pleton of Los Angeles, snd W. O,
Osllagher of Beevllle, Tex. Temple
ton waa killed almost Instantly, but
Gallagher lived until this morning,
when he died In a Houston hospital.
C. P. Llenescb of Los Angeles, head
the aviation department of ths
Union Oil company of California, was
Injured.
WILL
ROGEHS
CORONA, Cal., Nov. 21.
"Hello, Governor Roosevelt.
Nice of you to come, knowing
your distaste for Washington."
"Hello, Mr. President. Nice
of you to make it possible for
mo to get to Washington. But
let's get right to business. Are
those foreigners going to pay,
Mr. Hoover!"
"Not unless they have to,
Mr. Roosevelt. No postpone
ments and no cancellation."
"Mine, too. What do yon
say, just for a novelty, that
both parties keep their cam
paign promises, Mr. Hoover!"
. "That's 0. K. with me. Stim-
son, bring us a cable blank.
" 'Dcar(!) Europe : Tour ap
plications of poverty to the
United States government for
extension on youf notes is re
spectfully denied, as the tax
payers at home whom we bor
rowed the money from are de
manding it. If we don't receive
it from you, we have no pos
sible way of refunding it to
them. We hope this ia quite
clear. Tours respectfully,
Hoover aud Roosevelt, repre
senting U. S. government.' "
I
' A .. a-w s.i .ll.s sat fV
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