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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1933)
V Medford Mail Tribune The Weather Forecast: r'alr Sunday, no much change in temperature. temperature Highest jeaterday .... Lowest yesterday 4h To City Subscribers in case your earrlax falls to leave a paper, phone 75 Dcfore p m. office closing time. A paper will be sent out by Soec'al Delivery. Twenty-eighth Year. MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1933. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS fHERE will the money com from with which to finance. Oregon unemployment relief program this winter? That question U causing lot of worry. Money, for ANY purpose, Is hard to find this year. HERB Is one answer that has been suggested: Take over the sale of liquor aa a state monopoly, much aa they do in Canada, with atate liquor atorea and buyers' permits, the state taking all the profit then la In the business and applying It to relief of the un employed. THAT would produce revenue, but not IMMEDIATELY and the need for unemployment relief la Im mediate. In order to produce Immediate rev enue. It la urged, we might base an Issue' of. state bonds on the state's liquor monopoly, retiring Interest and principal out of anticipated pro fits. , Such a bond issue would be aelf llquldatlng, and might sell. At least. It might be taken by the RFC. THUS immediate revenue would be provided, to meet the decidedly Immediate needs In the way of un employment relief. THE Idea, you see, la to make the liquor business provide the mon ey with which to alleviate the pov erty arising out of unemployment Well, there would at least be a certain element of poetic Justice In that. Liquor has certainly CREATED enough poverty. It would be only fair for It to re lleve some of It. w HATEVER the method. It la this writer's Judgment that It will be better to borrow the money for unemployment relief this winter. If possible, than to attempt to raise it by means of a tax. Relief money will be needed at once. Tax money, even If voted and all new taxes, you know, have to be voted by the people of Ore gonwill come In alowly. . The need, in all probability, would have passed before the money would be available. BESIDES, if business improvement continues, the atate of Oregon la going to have PLENTY of money In a few years. Payment of delin quent taxea and the proceeds of ex ceedingly high Income and excise taxes will take care of that. If business Improvement DOESN'T continue, nothing much will mat ter. THAT brings up this question again: WILL business Improvement con tinue? Will unemployment djmlnlah and Jobs increase In number? Will volume of business expand, enab ling employers to go on hiring more people and paying more wages? In brief, will HRA work? IT O in OUGHT to. It has everything Its favor. Remember that by last aprlng de flation had about run It course Prices were low. Surpluses of manu factured goods had been pretty .well consumed.. A lot of debt had been paid. The water soaked up by busi ness during the boom period had been pretty well squeezed out. Business had hit bottom, and was about ready to start back up. The trouble was that there was no cour age, no confidence, no enthusiasm as to the future. NRA supplied these. IF N1TA had been launched two years ago, or even a year ago, it WOULDN'T have worked. Deflation, then, hadn't proceeded far enough. The fever hadn't yet run its course. But now condltlona are ripe for recovery. NRA 1a floating with the economic current not trying to swim against It. So it has every chance to aucoeed JEXASlDlS L FORT WORTH. Texan. Sept. 3. (API T. B. Barlow, 40, Dallas, ad ntltted communist, and once candl date for lieutenant governor of Texas, was taken unconscious from the county Jail at 7 p. m. tonnht and died hah" an .hour later In the city rounty hopltal. Hla death waa caused from head Injurlea. according to physiriana. who made a preliminary examination. Every prisoner on the fifth floor of the Jail, where Barlow was held on charges of unlawful aa scmbly. waa being questioned. RRIGAT10N VOTE FRIDAY TO BACK RFC LOAN PLEA Authorization Refund Bond Issuance Sought, if and When Needed to Procure Loan Benefits Recited An election. In the Medford Irriga tion district, haa been called by the board of directors for Friday, Septem ber 8. to authorize the Issuance ot M60.000 of the refunding bonds ot the district for the purpose of refund. Ing and retiring tne auutanuiug bonds of the district In the total amount of M.150.000 and accrued In terest since January 1, 1031. The dlrectora of the Medford Irri gation district have made applica tion to Reconstruction finance cor poration for a loan In the amount 01 H460.000 for this purpose and It la sought to authorize the proposed bonds for the purpose of issuing them to Reconstruction Finance corpora tion tn case thla application for the loan la granted. The law under which the new bonds are to be Issued provides for a lim ited liability on the part of the lands of the district. ' No tract of land can be taxed for more than lt pro rata share of the amount necessary to pay these bonds, except for a small emer gency assessment which can be lev led, if necessary, in the event of heavy delinquencies in tax payment In addition to this any tract of land in the district can be taken out from under the bonded debt and relieved from all further liability for assess ments for the payment of bond prin cipal and Interest (with the excep tion of the emergency assessment above referred to) by surrendering bonds or paying cash In the amounts of such tract pro rata share of the debt. The board la of the opinion that the proposed arrangement, if It can be carried out, will result in great advantage to the land owners and bondholders aa well. It will mean that the maximum assessment of the district In the future, for all purposes, can be kept well under $7 per acre per year and under normal condltlona that these assessments should average around $6 per acre per year. On the other hand the board la strongly of the opinion that more money can be realised for the bondholders by thia method than in any other way. A full vote at the election may prove substantial aa slstance to the board In its endeavors to carry through the proposed solu tlon of the district's financial prob lems. If the district should not be successful In obtaining the loan from Reconstruction Finance corporation, which has been applied for, none of these bonds will ever be Issued, but the board will endeavor to work out some other plan of refunding which will again be referred to the land' owners for their approval. Those whose lands lie In the dta trlct north of Barneberg rosd and east or Bear creek will vote In the Hlllcreat packing house; those who live south of Medford between Barne burg road and Kings highway, will vote at the Ever Shady Auto camp: those whose landa He west of Kings highway and Bear creek will rote at the Oak Grove school house. 1 : F TO FOR KIDNAP ROLE KANSAS CITY. Sept. 3. (API- Walter H. McGee. ex-Oregon convict, today was sentenced to be hanged October 18 for the kidnaping of Mary McElroy, daughter of the city man ager. Judge Allen C. Southern overruled Mr Ore's motion for a new trial. Ralph T. Harding, counsel for McOee, waa granted an application for appeal to the state supreme court, which likely will delay the execution. McOee's motion to be permitted to appeal .as a pauper was taken under advisement. Judge Southern allowed Harding until November 11, the last day of the court term, to file a bill of ex ceptions. "I don't believe I should have been sentenced to death." McGee said when the Judas asked him to step forward before sentence waa pronounced. TRENTON, N. J.. Sept. 3 (AP) Kidnaping for ransom now la pun ishable In New Jersey by death. Governor A. Harry Moore signed today the Richards bill Imposing the extreme penalty on convicted ransom kidnapers unless the Jury recom mends leniency, in which event the punishment would be 30 yeara to life. Where no ransom la demanded the lesser penalty would be Imposed. Under existing statutes life Imprison ment 1 the maximum penalty for abduction. PORTLAND, Ore.. Sept. 3 (AP) The federal bureau of public roads announced today that bids will be opened here September 30 for the grading of 4 5 miles on the Willam ette highway In Lane county from McCredie Springs westward. Con' struct tin is expected to start early next month. LAMSON DEFENSE 10 ON 'OTHER WOMAN' SAN JOSE. Cal., Sept. J (API Furrows of fear and worry. Imbedded in hts features by the ry of mur- dercr as the state pieced together Its case of circumstantial evidence sup- nortlnz ita charge that he beat to death his pretty wife, were replaced with confidence today aa David A. Lamson prepared to battle for his life. In hla cell today aa he conferred with attorney briefly, he said: "I'm tickled. I think the case Is already won.. The state ahowed I had no connection with the case." Lamson. who the state charged. grabbed the hair of his attractive and popular wife. Allene Thorpe Lamson. Jerked her head down and crushed her skull with a short piece of Iron pipe, will take the atand, probably late next week, to deny he knew how the Y. W. C. A. secretary came to her death. An attempt to defeat the "other woman" angle In the defendant's life will occupy the defense almost from the start aa It opens It case next Tuesday. . Carroll Ray. sister ot Eld ridse Ray, atate highway department employee, who testified for the atate he had seen Lamson visit Mrs. Kel ley, will be called. She was staying with her brother during the spring months of this year, when the ata,e saya Lamson left Stanford to go to Sacramento on hla numerous visits. Miss Ray alept in Mrs. Kelley'a apart ment, adjoining that of the Ray's. Also Included among the early wit nesses will be Mrs. Kelley, who calls herself "the dizzy blonde In this case," and who aays there was noth ing but a business relationship be tween her. and Lamson. SLEEPING PLAGUE ST. LOUIS, Sept. (AP) En couraged bv an , Indication that "sleeping sickness" la caused by. J filterable virus, health officials to- night pressed their attempts to learn more of the . dread disease which has brought death to 59 per sons here alnce July 30. Credit for the first real progress In a study of the mysterious enceph alitis, about which science knows I virtually nothing, waa given to Dr. I Margaret G. Smith, assistant proles-1 sor of pathology in Washington unl-l veralty. Miss Smith la one of a core of experts who have been working almost unceasingly since the current outbreak firet occurred here. Today, a few hour after disclosure of her discovery of a virus common to sleeping sickness victims, she de clined to discuss her findings. Dr. Howard A. McCordock, patho logist at a central laboratory set up to study the outbreak, defined a virus as "an agent which can be demonstrated only by Its ability to produce disease." A virus, he ex plained further, contains no germ visible under the microscope. Two deaths from sleeping sickness occurred in St. Louis today. Three persons died yesterday. A total of 453 patients have been reported in greater St. Louis. -4 Y FUGITIVE READY FOR CELL KANSAS CITY, Sept. 3. (API A tall man entered the office of Wil liam H. Davenport, head of the fed eral secret service here, towed sev eral counterfeit 15 bills on Daven port's desk today and said: "I'm hungry, ready to go to prison for the winter or even longer." He said he was Carl P. Freeman former assistant chief clerk of the Missouri penitentiary, and had been sought on a fugitive warrant alnce April. 1931, by federal stents In Los Angeles, who arrested hla companion In counterfeiting. He waived preliminary hearing on a counterfeiting charge and bond was fixed at 93000. "I'm through," he said as he was sent to Jail. rfcnnic WASHINGTON. Sept. 3. (AP) Awaiting the approval of President Roosevelt, a tentative plan for pour ing out some of the reconstruction corporation's millions to aid willing but financially disabled employers who are trying to operate under the NRA tonight was nearlng completion. The rugged out 1 1 nes, as d isclosed today, embrace mortgage corporations formed by business men In various communities to receive funds from the RFC and In' turn lend them to buMneu firms to supply money for the lnri'aed payrolls incidental to the recovery program. L Flaming Death for Flier At Take-Off for Sea Hop r " t s ,-. Associated Press Photo. Francesco rlr Plnedo, noted Italian filer. shown at the control of the plane In whlt-h lie was cremated early Saturday when attempt In jr. a take-off for Persia from Flojd Bennett field. New York. NEW YORK. Sept. 3. (AP) Mar-, quia General Francesco de P:nedoj died In the flames or hla blazing j monoplane today as he attempted to take off on a non-stop solo flight to Bagdad that was Intended to dis pel the cloud of obscurity surround ing his brilliant career In aviation. His heavily-loaded plane, a "flying gas tank" containing, 1037 gallons of fuel, wobbled off the concrete run way at Floyd Bennett field, skidded Into the dirt and plunged Into an iron fence near the administration bufldtng at 6:20 a. m., E. 8. T. In split seconds It wax a pyre for the 43-year-old twice conqueror ot the Atlantic, who wan planning a record-breaking distance hop for the glory of Benito Mussolini, who forced de Plnedo Into retirement and ob scurity. Several spectators, grouped near the administration building, nar rowly escaped death or injury from the Plnedo's oncoming plane, The Ulier applied screeching .brakes in time to avoid hitting the group, T WASHINGTON, Sept. 3. (AP) The commerce department announc ed today that exports to every ma jor country except Australia were larger In July than a year ago, and imports were greater In value from alt big nations Total American exports Jumped from 106.B30,440 In July 1032, to 144.197,334 In July of this year, while Imports increased from 79. 420,718 to $142,991,638. To Japan, which took $15,046,473 Qf American goods as compared with $5,707,270. Australia's purchases dropped from $3,376,752 to $2,257,005. The United Kingdom and the Phil ippines ahowed the biggest Jump In sales to the United States. The formers rose from $4,278,909 to $12, 577.079, while the Islands sent $13. 409,228 worth of goods this year as compared with $5,527,027 last. FUSSI MINNEAPOLIS. Minn., .dept. 3 (AP) Prospect of a reconciliation between Mrs. Aimee Semple Mcpher son Hutton and her husband, David, appeared tonight. Hutton, who left Seattle for Min neapolis, was not on the train when it arrived here one hour late tonight He had left the train at Glencoe, Minn., the conductor said, and plan ned to motor to Minneapolis His wife, reticent and cautious In answering questions concerning the whereabouts of Mr. Hutton, refused to deny that she had any communi cation with h'vii todav or nteht Previously she nad emphatically de nied that she had heard from Hut ton alnce hla departure from the west coast. 4 COPENHAGEN. Sept. 3,-(AP) Cot. Charles A. Lindbergh went to examine hla sen plane today and Mrs. Lind bergh accompanied him to have a look at the wireless apparatus. After wards they were guests of the sta tion's naval officers. Although Col. Lindbergh had an nounced no plans, rumors were cur rent that he Dlrnnrd o Hy to Eng land in a dav -r o. ih-n board liner for the United Slaves. White faced and speechless, more than 200 friends and associates of the famous former ace of the royal Italian air force, saw the dramatic climax of de Flnedo's "beau geste, For the flier's determination to add to the glory of his homeland and re-establish himself In the esteem of Mussolini was well known to hla In timates here. "This writ probably be de Plncdo'a lat big flight." one friend said re cently while the filer waa preparing for hla takeoff. "He wants above all to regain his place In the sun." Entwined too. in the emotional background' of the flight waa the oft- heard rumor that the flier, a bache lor whose fortune was estimated at about (4,000,000 once waa engaged to the former Princess Glovanna Eliza beth, daughter of King Victor Eman uel of Italy, the rumor never was confirmed. Effort to pull de Plnedo out oi hla wrecked plane was balked by the flames. The Marquis, aclon of an old honored Italian family, was burned 1 beyond recognition. MARSHPIELD, Ore., Sept. 3. (AP) Members of the Naswrene church here were reported to be the only re fusals received by NflA consumer pledge solicitors, as the campaign ended tonight. Stating they wcro in accord with President Roosevelt's re covery act, their reluctance to sign vb based on chapter 13 of revela tions, verses 16 to 18, which refers to "the mark of the beast." S SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 2. (AP) A plan of reorganization drawn up by tho board of di-tors of the West ern Loan and Building company which waa recently placed In the hands of the Utah State Banking de partment, was taken under advise ment today by John A. Mails. Utah banking commissioner. Mr. Mnlia will leave here tomorrow for San Francisco to attend a confer ence with California and Nevada building and loan commissioners with a view to working out problems ot tho $26,000,000 Institution, which haa stockholders In eight western states, Meanwhile. H. L. Mulllncr, attorney for Mr. Mails, will leave tomorrow for Boise, Idaho, and Salem. Ore., to confer with atate officials of Idaho and Oregon relative to reorganization of the firm. TOTSIMEU TO MOTHER, FALL BUTTE, Mont.. -pt. J.(AP) leaning out of a thlrtf story window Of A RllftA hnt.l aHII t h.u aV,M,,tat uood-hy. to their mother. James and Robert Rouah, two and four years old, tumbled 7ft feet to a cement sidewalk tonight. Hospital attend ant said condition of the children, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Roush, of ! Lima, Mont., is dangerous, but they may live. The family was visiting in Butte for the day. The motheT had started shopping preparatory to leaving with her family on the evening train for home. The father was in the room. Mrlkf ( o.Ht ST. LOUIS. Sent. 3. -I API Drest loa of about aio.MO.OO'J worth of busln-aa aa a result of tha atrlkear being reported aa taking refuse lounrhed almost a month ao, Hoe- In Curry county, believed to be the ti.-d !':'-,:.. at-.orney for ti sr- remit of the forest fires along the Mattl gsrj iiit industries 'Louii, stated tonight. of Ot, FREE E 0 AS OPENING hvehRS Panic Makes School Foes Vocal, and Final Decision Up- to People Soon Handicaps Are Outlined WASHINGTON. Sept. 3 (API- September, calling the children back to the school, meant more and deep er wrinkles for educators who think thla country'" free education system Is threatened. If not doomed. There is a very serious question to whether our free education system can continue," Belmont Far ley of the National Educational as sociatton publication division, said today. "The schoola have something more to fight than the economic crisis. Opponents of free education have become so vocal in their demands that parents pay at least for high school education that the people of the country may be compelled to a definite decision soon. Only 55 per cent of those eligible for 'high school education were In the schools last year, though high school enrollment was fast rising Elimination of child labor under the codes will this year send It shooting higher. "Education costa must Increase one-third or one-half In the next decade, or the system go by the boards. "Certainly there Is no Immediate prospect of Increase. The recovery program of the schools, tax-support ed Institutions, will Inevitably lag two or three years behind recovery in private Industry." An "emergency in education" ex lata and a Joint commission of the National Educational association and the department of superintendents Farley said, is nearlng the close of an extended study on financing d ucatton, and soon will announce its findings and recommendations, "The whole sltuatlop Just about simmers down to this?' Parley said. "The country Itself Is going to have decide whether the free educa tional ideal of our founding fore fathers -can go on. t ,, . Fifteen thousand fewer school teachers than last year, Farley said, thla September will start teaching perhaps 300.000 mora schodl children than last year. They will do it, he emphasised, on lower salaries, fewer supplies, and with deteriorating plant equipment, under the discouragement of having personally to pay higher prices for what they buy. Please don't misinterpret ma," he said. "Teachers are patriotic. 1 and will do everything in their power to further the recovery program of the N. R. A. But their own Incomes are re duced, and they have no chance to have thelm raised thla year perhaps not for two years or more. At the same time prices are boosted, and they are Inevitably pinched between upper and nether millstone. "If this New Deal works and pros perity returns, .bringing better wagca In industry, ambitious teachers will, of course, desert their profession for industry. That happened during the World war." Harry Hopkins, the relief admin istrator, recently announced 33 states had reported 80.000 unemployed teachers, a figure which Farley call ed "too low" In view of reports reach ing N. E. A. headquarters. On the school plant situation, Far ley gave ths following figures Four thousand badly needed rural school buildings have not been con structed. Eighteen thousand school district have not been able to make the minor repairs necessary to keep buildings in operation. Two hundred fifty thousand chil dren last year attended school part time for lack of school room. Fifteen thousand children were housed In temporary buildings. PORTLAND, ept. 3. (AP) Ore gon Is laying plans to beat the gun man to the draw. A meeting will be 4ld here Wed nesday at which all law enforcement agencies of the federal, state and county governments will be repre sented, to discuss proposals and per fect plana for combatting any pos- "i"1'"1 .n P f criminal element, The meeting waa called today ,by Carl C- DonauRh, United States at torney for Oregon. E FLOCK TO CURRY ooijj nr.fkcn. ore. sept, a (ad ; Thousands of tiny golden eanarlea north Oregon coast. Port Orford re- ported thousands In the town limits, LAKLY P.U'LK MONDAY The Mall Tribune will go to press about noon Monday, Labor day. In order to permit observ auce of the holiday by news and mechanical departments. VOLUNTEER ARMY OF BLUE EAGLE NEAR OBJECTIVE Drive to Place Every Em ployer and Every Family of Nation On R. N. A. Lists Shows Favorable Progress A volunteer army 250 strong is engaged in Medford and Jackson county thia week In a war such aa never lias been waged before In any country. Tills army comprises the local volunteer workers in tho Blue Eagle campaign. Each member of the army Is wearing a button by way of Identification upon which will bo , found the word "Volunteer." j We are making a thorough Job of It." said "General" B. E. Harder in command of the local sector of the Blue Eagle battle front yesterday while giving directions for lost min ute preparations. "By the enti of the week we hope to hava our can vassers call at every home In Med ford and Immediate vicinity. The ob ject of thia house to house canvass, which Includes also all places of em ployment In the city, Is to see that every employer la on the dotted Una for the Blue Eagle and that every family in Jackson county signs the consumer's agreement with the presi dent and displays the insignia. These canvassers also are checking on com pliance with the president's agree ment and reporting violations to our local headquartera. "Many questions are being asked or (Continued on Page Eight) Theodore Crandall, about 40, who operates the Dr. I. D. Phlpps ranch in the Snowy Butte district was sev erely injured about 6:30 o'clock Sat urday night when gored by an In- urlated bull at the ianch. Cran dall suffered a broken right leg, and several broken ribs, also on the right side. He was successful In making his escape without assistance, and Dr. E. A. Dodson was called to the ranch. Crandall was brought to the Sac red Heart hospital by ths Perl am bulance, where treatment was given the Injured man. Dr. Dodson re ported later In the evening that al though Crandall' Injuries were ser ious, he would probably recover. Tha bull, which charged at Cran dall, is a prize possession of Dr. Phlpps, and la valued at $1000. The animal Is a four-year old and weighs 1800 pounds. SHORTAGE LOOMS WASHINGTON. Spt. 3 (AP) Four and a half million gallons to slake a pre-prohlbltlon 167 million gallon thirst that roughly is the situation America will face If pro hibition is repealed in the next few months. The bonded warehouses now hold considerably more than 18.000.000 ga I Ions of wh Iskey , a nd the stock grows dally. But there is a law which saya distilled spirits must be aged four years before they may be placed on the market. . I E SALEM, ept. 3. (AP) The bop harvest proceeded orderly today In thia section, following disturbances In (wo yards yesterday. Some 300 to 500 employees return ed to work today at the McLaugh lin yard, after stopping yesterday when they heard that no hops would be received at the checking station unless picked absolutely clean from leaves and stems. Superintendent P. B Gwlnn Informed pickers that cara ful work and not perfect work was all that waa expected of them. . 4 Oang Rnund('p. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 3 (API Three men from New York state and one claiming to be of Hollyocd, wer held In Jail by police today aa rob bery suspects and for Investigation into the deatha of Harry Mackley and Fred Koller, alias Fred Kitty, shot down by three men In a fashionable Hollywood restaurant last Monday night. UNION CLAUSE IN CODE IRKS FORD; MAY BATTLE NRA Auto King Plans to Carry Campaign to Public and Restore $5 Minimum Pay Scale to Defend Position DETROIT, Sept. 3. (AP) With Henry Ford's vacation of silence neor Its close and hts long-awaited declara tion of policy on his failure as yet to sign the NRA automobile code ap parently near, first repercussions came today from the code's collective bargaining provision, one of the fea tures to which Ford's associates say he objects. While the 70-ycar-old motor manu facturer, atlll maintaining silence on his NRA plans, apparently prepared to return to Detroit to launch what observers believe will be a spectacu lar "go It alone" campaign, denial came from the Chevrolet Motor com pany here It la discriminating against . union employes In the traditionally open shop automotive industry. Simultaneously, the Chevrolet com pany announced details of a plan for "company union," In which em ployes might deal collectively with the firm In accordance wth NRA pro- visions, but emphasized carefully that membership in the organization, to be known as tho Chevrolet Employes' assoclatlnn, la voluntary. Although Ford has made no public statement, associates, refusing tha - use of their names, have said tha collective bargaining provision of tha NRA code la one of the major objec tions he finds to the agreement. "Mr. Ford." said one associate, "will not recognize labor unions and ha will not accede to any law or emer gen ry arrangements whereby his ri vals can get access to other manufac turers' figures. He holds that these should be inviolate. This, the associates, say is a lead ing reason why the motor manufac turer, according to all present Indi cations, will not sign the NRA code, will let the deadline for signing next Tuesday slip paat, and will launch forth on a campaign on carrying hla case to the public in a firm battle with the NRA. Ford, the associates believe, " la going "fsr beyond the NRA" provis ions, in hla forthcoming plana. He may even announce a return to the famous $0 a day minimum wage, they say. His employes now receive a minimum of $4 a day, for an eight hour, five-day week. , The NRA code provides 43 cents an hour for a 35 hour week. Oil Code Tested. WASHINGTON, Sept. a. (API A thorough teat of the etfect on urlcea of bringing America's oil production in accord with market neods was called for today by Secretary fekes as the flrat move In foderal auper vision of the petroleum Industry under Itn NBA trade code. For the time being. Ickea vetoed tha appeala of a wide section of the 13. 000,000,000 business and suggestions from members of its own planning and co-ordination committee that the government embark upon full price regulation promptly. Tnis decision made, the Interior secretary, who also la oil adminis trator, set the national dally produce tlon at 2400,700 barrels, prohibiting net wlthdrawala from storage except with hla conaent, and limiting Im port to about 80,000 barrels dally. The Heather. (Forecast for Sunday and Monday) Oregon: Generally fair Sunday and Monday, but unsettled in northwest portion; slightly cooler Monday; slowly incresslng humidity; moderata changeable winds offshore. WILL- ROGERS SANTA MONICA, Cal., Sept. 1. Well, like a lot of my big idpiis, they just don't seem to work out. There must be a bit oi college professor in me somewhere. You remember couple of days ago 1 wanted to have the home folks meet their senators. Now that sound ed practical, but you would ba surprised at the amount of re sentment that lins come to my roll-top desk.. My idea was as "wet" as the state of Washington. They all claini they don't want to see their senator. That's why they elected him, to get rid of him. If they had wanted him at home they would have kept him at home, so there goes an other big Rogers idea in the ash can. QlUI attNluiM lyaalnte, Ina,