Medford Mail T
MAIL TRIBUNE
BARGAIN DAYS
begin MONDAY, SEPT.
11th. Mark your calen
dar . , , Just 4 mote
days!
T7NE
IRi
Lonet thtt morning
43
Twenty-eighth Year
MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 1933
The Weather
Forecast: Fair tonight and Friday.
Rising temperature Friday.
In teinperuiitir.
Richest yesterdav - aft
rib
o 1
f No. 144.
irass
i
IBIEI-TI um
. . 1
Comment
on the
Day's News
Bt FRANK JENKINS
LAKEVIEW on Lbor DJ. Town
gaily decorated and crowded with
peopl,. occasion: Lakevlew's 14th
annus! Round-up.
Attendance tor the three daj.
breaks all records for the 1 yesrs.
Buianess reslly looking up over In
this country.
People not alrald to have a good
time.
THE Lakevlew Round-up Is South
ern Oregon's modest rival of the
big Pendleton show. But it la no
Imitator of Pendleton. It has a fla
vor all Its own.
Pendleton 1 a big spectacle, mar
velously staged; worth coming clear
across the country to see. Just as a
spectacle. It Is participated In ex
tensively oy professionals, and has a
distinctively professional atmosphere.
Lawvlew is- closer to the grass
roots. There are few professionals
here. The show Is put. on by the
boys from the surrounding ranches.
M
AT PENDLETON, horses aa well as
riders run largely to profession
als. They have long strings of edu
cated buckere that do their stuff and
do it well. The same horses appear
year after year.
. Here at Lakevlew there are no such
trimmings. The stock, horses and
cattle alike, la run In raw off the
range and t.e desert. It la a real
Wild West show.
THI3 year a iotoV7he horses came
in from the high desert country
off to the southeast, down where
Oregon, Idaho and Nevada come to
gether. They are real wild horses,
many of them never having seen a
man before at least at close range.
They were captured In traps
wire fonces opening out like a fun
nel tnJ leading down to corrals at
the end.
And listen to this: The wild horses
were hazed Into these traps with
AIRPLANES.
Beat that If you can!
THEY worked It like this:
The traps were built, with their
long fer.cea extending out Into the
desert, and cowboys were concealed
around the ends of these fences.
Then the planes started circling.
They circled over the sagebrush,
awooplng low whenever a band of
horses was sighted. The roar of the
planes and the amazing spectacle of
these huge birds threw the wild
horses Into a panlo and of course
they ran for all they were worth.
Tin pilots skilfully guided them
Into the mouth of the trap, and as
soon as they entered It the cowboys
closed in from behind, chivvying
them into the corral.
THEY tell this fate?
One big stallion, guarding his
harem of mares, raced along behind,
looking up from time to time, wltti
mingled fear and hatred In his eyes,
at the pursuing plane.
The pilot, wanting a good look
at him, swooped low. As he did so,
the stallion reared on his hind legs,
his nostrils flaring red with anger
and his teeth anapplng. and struck
at the plane with his hoofs.
There's life In the raw for you.
M
AND here'a another tale they tell:
The circling planes, searching
the desert floor for csndldates for
the bucking arena, caught a cream
colored flash In the sage and on
dropping near sighted a stallion and
his bsnd of maree.
Now llaten to this: Every mem
ber of the band. If the tale Is to be
believed, was a PERFECT PALO
MINO. A PALOMINO, you know, la a
cream-colored horse with a
white msne and tall.
The stallion, they say, was clean
Hmbtyl and beautiful, with unmis
takable marks of breeding, and bis
mares and colts showed the same
clean outlines.
Tell that one to the atory writers.
THE bucking horses at Pendleton,
at already stated. Include many
profe.sional. whose attitude Is strict
ly th- professional attitude. They
put on a good show.
But when the rider learea the sad
dle the show. Is over and these pro
fessional buckera calm down and
permit themselves to be caught as
tarn?' as a plow horse.
No; o with the wild buckers.
(Continued from Page Six)
HEM AMERICAN
FORCE GATHERED
Sixteen Additional Destroy
ers Dispatched to Scene
of Revolution Interven
tion by U. S. Is Debated
MARINE BARRACKS, Quantlci,
Va., Sftt. 7. (Pt A squadron of
marine corps planes at Brown
Field here was ordered this after
noon to make ready to take off
"at any minute" for the south In
connection with the Cuban situ
ation. The squadron was composed of
13 two-plnce observation planes
and several auxiliary planes.
When the orders came down to
the hangars for the squadron to
make full preparations, mechan
ics Immediately began to mount
machine guns on the upper
wings and In the. rear cockpits.
Motors were gone over and equip
ment assembled. Pilots went to
their quarters to assemble per
sonal effects.
By F. O. VO.SBI'RGII
Associated Press Staff Writer
WASHINGTON . Sept. 7. (AP)
With the dispatch of 19 ' deatroyera
bringing to 30 the armada of Ameri
can war vessels to border Cuba, the
American government stood ready to
day to land marines and bluejacketa
on tho first genuine threat to Amer
ican citizens.
At the same time there was reso
lution against the momentuos step
of taking over the Island's govern
ment by armed Intervention.
Effect Noticed
Already tho psychological effect of
American fighting vessels In sight off
the coast was seen aa aiding in hold
ing tho ltd on Vie cauldron which
Cuba has become.
Orders In the hands of the com
maniers' of the destroyers, -cruisers
and the one big battleship either en
route to Cuban waters or already
there were guarded closely, but It
was understood the administration
would not hesitate a moment In put
ting armed men ashore to guard
Americana and their property.
Ample Precedent
For such a course there was ample
precedent. On several occasions In
the last two decades small American
forces have been landed when aud
den revolt flared and Americana on
their sugar properties or in their
homes were placed In Jeopardy.
In each Instance they were with
drawn promptly when matters had
settled down. Action of this type
prompt and definite though It may
be. Is regarded here as nothing like
armed Intervention In which thou
sands of marlnea or aoldlers are
massed upon the Island to control
It from tip to tip, -maintain order
and administer' every governmental
function.
Government Must Act
If a government capable of pro
tecting life and property. Including
the billion of American Investments
la ever eatsbllshed by the Cuban
people; nothing hinting of Interven
Hon win be Invoked.
Elglit navy and eight coast guard
destroyers were ordered todBy from
off tin east coast to Cuba. In addi
tion, the Indianapolis was bearing
Secretary Swanson there, and last
night the destroyer Overton was sent
from the Psnsma Canal rone to the
Isle of Pines off the south Cuban
coast to protect American lives there
If necessary. Many wealthy Ameri
cana have winter residences In the
Isle of pines.
(Continued on page Se7en)
DEATHMYSCOTTY
LOSES A FINGER AFTER
LE
TONOPAH. Ner., Sept. 7. (UP)
Walter ("Death Valley Scotty") Scott,
world famous desert eccentric, lost a
finger today after a tussle with a
wild "Qreaser broke" pack mule.
And the mule didn't bite off the
finger, Scotty was eager to explain.
Scotty was brought to Tonopsh hos
pital late today from Death Valley,
Calif. The Index finger of his left
hand was msngled badly, necessitat
ing amputation.
The famous desert character, who
claims to have discovered fsbulously
rich gold deposits In the alkali wastes
of death valley, said the injury was
; inflicted while on a trip in the valley
with five "greaser-broke" mules and
a saddle horse.
He was hsndling a wild mule when
his finger csught in a chain ss the
i animal reared and ran.
Asked by the United Press whst
, he wss doing In the valley. Scotty
i said "It's reported. In the valley
that army prospectors are coming Into
I the region. I thought It best to De
em gathering up the rich gold I have
"rled nee snd there In the valley "
B-st authorities claim Scotty's "rich
gold" deposit are a myth.
Hope Dims for
BASEBALL I
American.
R. H. E.
St. Loula I 13 3
New York . 13 IS 3
Braxton, Stiles, Hebert, Knott and
Hemsley; uhle, Allen and Dickey.
R. H. E.
Cleveland 0 a 1
Philadelphia 0 0
. Pearson. Conally and Pytlak; Mar
cum and Cochrane.-
R. H. E.
Chicago ................ I S 0
Washington 0 8 0
Jones and Orube; Weaver and Sew
ell. National.
R. H. E.
New York 3 10 1
Pittsburgh . - U 14 1
Parmelee. Luque. Clark. Salveson and
-Mancuso, Richards; Melne and Grace,
Finney.
R. H. E.
Brooklyn 3 11 1
Cincinnati 0 8 0
Beck and Lopez; Lucas -and Lom
bardl. . R. H. B.
Boston ... 16 1
Chicago 3 7 0
, Brandt and Hogan; Warneke and
Hartnett.
BY
Pinal instructions for opening of
the consumer pledge drive under the
National Recovery Act program here
were given, out this afternoon, when
women from air parts of the city mfjt
at the court house auditorium, pre
paratory to a canvass, aimed to ac
complish a 100 percent support of
all firms, complying with the Recov
ery act and President Roosevelt's
Emergency Wage agreement.
Attorney Don Newbury was the
speaker of the afternoon and In stir
ring language encouraged all women
to get behind the drive, to work rap
idly, and make thtlr reports to head
quarters as soon as possible.
President Roosevelt and Adminis
trator Johnson, he Informed the
enthusiastic gathering from the fem
inine ranks, are anxious to obtain
definite result from the National
Recovery program, and are eager to
see those results realised before the
winter seta in. It la therefore the
patriotic duty of every woman to
lend her support to the program.
Immediate action Is necessary In
each angle of the program, In order
that the results of the whole may be
come known, Attorney Newbury de
clared. The purposes of the National Re
covery act were outlined again today
by the speaker, who sent workers out
last week on the employers drive, in
which early and pleasing results were
reported.
Out of the 125,000,000 people in
the United States there were 13,000,
000 unemployed last March 1, Mr.
Newbury continued to draw a picture,
which he declared must undergo
changes before this coming winter
arrives.
"If unemployment Is not checked",
he added, "It will be a local, as well
aa a national calamity, instead of
going down to defeat la numerous,
separate, disorganized groups, let us
go on to victory in one well organ
ized army," he advised the women
workers, "and aocompllsh the alma
of the. National Recovery act.".
E
ROSBBT7RO, Ore., Sept. 7. (Pf
Mrs. A. w. Shipley and daughter
Mabel of Santa Crua, Cel., were
brought to the local hospital this
afternoon suffering from Injuries
caused by an automobile accident
south of Myrtle Creek. Mrs. Shipley
suffered deep face and scalp wounds,
and the daughter la believed to have
a fractured leg.
The accident, according to state
polios officers, occurred while Shipley
was endeavoring to pass a car on an
upgrade and was suddenly confront
ed by an auto coming from the op
posite direction. He awerved Into a
car driven by Charles B. Smith of
the Sslvatlon Army corps at Marsh
field, the officers report, ditching
Smith's car and throwing his own
machine out of control.
The Shipley car. It was reported,
skidded and rolled 300 feet along the
highway before It went off the road
Occupant of the Smith car were not
hurt.
Opera Singer files
VITTEL, France. Sept. 7 (AP)
Marcel Journet, an operstlc basso
a'lov rame Is world wide. Is dead.
, He ruccumbed last night at the age
lot 85.
FAMILY STRIFE
BEF0I1ESLA1&
State's Contentions of Sub
terfuge to Evade Advances
Are Refuted by Publisher
From Witness Stand
SAN JOSE, Ca!.. Sept. 7. (AP)
Prosecution contentions that Mrs.
David A. Lam son used subterfuge to
evade amorous advances by her hus
band and that he killed her with an
Iron pipe because of marital discord
were contradicted by Lamson on the
witness stand .here today In his trial
on murder charges.
The denials were made after Dep
uty District Attorney A. P. Lindsay
had completed his long cross exami
nation of the accused man. and Lam
son had been turned over to his at
torney, E. M. Rea, for redirect ques
tioning. Subterfuge Denied
Questioning Lamson about exhibits
which the state Intimated were evi
dence of subterfuge, Rea brought out
that Mrs Lamson .had not used them
for that purpose.
Tho accused man contradicted the
atory of Frank Taylor, an associate,
who had quoted Lamson as saying
there was discord in his Stanford
university campus home and that he
"did not care what happened." Lam
son tcetlfied he had talked to Taylor
about family affairs; had told him
their Jlttlo daughter, Allene, was in
need of mountain surroundings and
that tho possibility of Mrs. Lamson
getting work In a mountain resort
and taking the baby with her had
been discussed.
Discrepancy Claimed
The prosecution- -had - sought to
show a discrepancy In Lamson 's story
about what he did In his home the
morning of May 30 Just before he
emerged with the cry that his wife
had been murdered. Lindsay asked
him if he told Chief of Police H. A.
Ztnk ho had first taken his sleeping
clothes to a bed room before pass
ing the bath room door and finding
the body. Lamson said he had not
told Zlnk that. In hta direct story
Lamson said he found the body on
his wa.7 to the bed room.
Again Lindsay led the witness over
the story of finding the body, ask
ing for more details. The witness .
again pleaded hla memory of the
tragic hour was hazy and many
times he said he did not remember
or could not recall doing things
suggested by the prosecution.
Doctor Called
The brief redirect examination
ended Lamson 's siege on the stand
and the defence called Dr. Charles
M. Richards. Rea asked him If all
the fractures on Mrs. Lamson'a hesd
could have been caused by one fall.
The btate objected.
Judge H. R. Syer said there was
a question of whether a witness
could be allowed to answer a query
which ml&ht be only within the pro
vince of the Jury for an answer. A
long legal argument followed, it waa
not settled at the noon recess.
PARIS. France. Bept. 7. (AP)
Henri Cochet, France's leading tennis
star, announced today he would play
against Big Bill Tllden. American
professional, In a Franco-American
series In Paris starting September 23
buv that he would not accept money
for hla play.
"I ll play against Tllden." Cochet
declared, "but aa an amateur. My
share of the gate receipts will be
split oetween the sport writers' pen
sion fund and the Lyons football
club. I'm a business man and I'll
remain a business man."
PEACE OFFICERS PLAN
BEND MEET SEPI. 16
BEND, Ore.. Sept. 7. p Peace of
ficers of Oregon, representing asso
ciations in the western, southern and
eastern part of the atat. with a com
bined membership of 300. will hold a
Joint meeting here Saturday. Septem
ber 10. Sheriff Claude McCauley of
Deschutes county announced today.
STOCK EXCHANGE MAY
BE OPENED SATURDAY
NEW YORK. Sept. 7. (AP IV- i
cause the governors of the New York !
stock exchange have taken no artlon j
on an extension of the Saturday holl- J
daya. Wall Street today expected that
the market would be open Saturday
cf this week, unless the official
should dec Ida otherwise in the mean-1
Urn.
Trio Lost on Mountain
ROOSEVELT VISITS TREE CAMP
Surrounded by a group of cheering "tree troopers" President Roose
velt received a cake baked In hla honor when he visited the conserva
tion camp at Bear Mountain, New York. (Associated Press Photo)
F
FOUR PROJECTS
PORTLAND, Sept. 7. ( AP) Bids
for the construction of four forest
highway projects, three In Oregon
and one In Washington, were opened
today by Tr7. H. Lynch, district engi
neer here for the bureau of public
roads. Low bids on the four Jobs
totaled aiao.nno.
Oregon projects are:
Erection of a 185-foot steel deck
bridge with concrete approachea over
Diamond creek on the Tiller-Trail
highway In Douglas county; low bid,
J. F. Johnson. Newberg, 921,793
Construction of two 100-foot spana
over Salt creek and a 200-foot span
over Salmon creek on the Willamette
highway In Klamath county; low
bidder, Kuckenberg Si Wlttman, of
Portland. ,88.373.
, Seventy-four acres of clearing on
the North Santlam highway In Mar
lon county from Whitewater creek
south; low bidder, Beck Si Ortnrod,
Portland, $34,124.
$51,000 ALLOTTED
L
WASHINGTON, Sept. 7. F The
public work board today allotted $2,
279,474 to national parka for build
Infra and ottw Improvement.
The allotments Included Grand
Canyon national park In Arizona.
1428,000 for rosd surfacing and con
struction . of parking spaces; Hot
Spring national park In Arkansas.
$210,000 for paving and construction,
227.000 for roads and car trails and
$291,650 for building reconditioning,
electrical and fire equipment, and
water systems work In various Cali
fornia parka, and $280,000 for im
provements, construction and decon
dltlonlng in various national parks
In Wyoming.
The public work administrator to
day alloted $1. Ml. 945 for coast guard
work in 18 states. Including $1,000,
170 for new construction and $214.
700 for reconditioning project.
for physical improvement other
than road and trails:
- Oregon, $51,000 for boat landing.
Beverage at Cratar Lake national
park.
LAID TO CHIEF
NEWARK, N. J., Sept. 7. yp Eric
Ross, labor union official, charges
violations of the N. R. A. at the local
la Fabrics Inc., factory, of which
Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, N. R. A. ad
ministrator, la president, in telegrsms
sent today to President Roosevelt,
Oen. Johnson. Secretary of Labor
Perkins and the lVr board of the
N. R. A.
Ross, secretary and treasurer of
the International Carpet Workers'
union, said the la firm has cut the
workln week of it employes from
46 to 40 hours without Increasing
their hourly watte ( which is 40 cent.
This, he said, reduces weekly wages
from $19 20 to $16 0L
He also charges tha tHerbert
"'ry. en emc-Irye. mh r."?hard
from ths Im fietory for attempting
to organize $ unJoa.
LEVY IN MEDFORD
IN NEXT TAX YEAR
The general levy for the city or
Medford will be slightly lower this
year than laat, la the forecast of the
city budget committee, working stead
ily this month to have recommenda
tion ready for a Joint session with
the council October 3, E. H. Janney,
committee chairman, announced to
day, '
The grand total of the general levy
last year was $167,000. It will prob
ably be $161,000 this year. This de
crease la made possible by elimina
tion of the emergency fund, Includ- I
ed in laat year's budget and by the
Important reductions accomplished
during the past several months in all !
departments of city government in
d alary cuts and purchase of supplies.
The emergency fund Included in the j
budget last yesr waa In excess of
$2000.
There will be no Important trim
ming made this year, the committee
believes, due to the fact that all de
partments have adopted great econo
mies. To maintain efficiency In city
government, it would not be advisable
to make any additional cut In the
various departments.
The budRet committee feels, Mr.
Janney stated today, that the depart
ment are all anxious to keep down
the cost of government and are
spending money only where it la
found absolutely necessary. Should
any extra money be delegated to a
department, he further explained, the
committee 1 confident it would not
he spent If the necessity failed to
arise.
The budget committee, he added,
will undoubtedly have its work com
pleted within the next two weeka
and be ready to make recommenda
tions to the council.
F
R08EBURG. Ore., Sept. 7. (AP)
The Wolf Creek CCO camp, located
on Little River, 85 mile east of Rose
burg, which recently won the highest
honors among CCO camps of the 9th
corps area, will remain practically In
tact throughout the winter, it waa
announced here today. Of the 228
men In the camp, all except 34 have
signified their Intention of re-enllst-tng
for the ensuing six months.
Other CCO camps of the Roseburg
district are anticipating about a 60
per cent re-enllstment. The Wolf
Creek camp is composed entirely of
World War veterans.
4
WASHINGTON. Sept. 7. (AP)
President Roosevelt today assured
Rlchrrt E. Byrd of the government's
support of his new expedition to the
South Pole, whlrh Byrd. announced
today would start September 25.
The explorer, who flew over the
South Pole In 1929. outlined hi plana
frr 1! lot her expedition to the Antarc
tic continent after a night spent at
tha White Houm.
E
E
Urgent Call for More Search
ers Sent Out From Mount
Jefferson Use of Air
plane Held Impractical
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 7. (AP)
An urgent call for additional search-
era and word that high winds were ;
still whirling new snow around the ;
summit of Mount Jefferson dimmed ;
the hope here today that three Port
land men. missing on the treacherous
mountainside since last Monday,
would ever be found alive.
New snow, the gale-like gust and
heavy fog made climbing conditions
hazardous, the party of eight experi
enced mountain climbers who left
hero Tuesday night reported, and
prevented them from climbing high
er than 9000 feet yesterday. At that
height they were still several hun
dred feet from the summit.
Any tracks Davla McCamant, John
Thomas and Don Burkhsrt, the laat
trio all of Portland, may have left,
were burled by fresh snow that fell
during the blizzard that shrieked
over the mountain late Monday and
Tuesday. In the area the searchers
were able to cover, no trace of the
missing Portlanders was found.
More Join Search
In quick, response to the call for
more searchers, a second party of 12
experienced climbers, many of them
familiar with the Mount Jefferson
area, left Portland Immediately,
speeding by automobile toward Ol-
lalle lake. They had been standing
by since early this morning, pro-
pared in any event to leave by 1 p. m
The party planned to hike In from
the lake to Jefferson Park, where the
first searching group has established
tta camp.
Ray A. Atkeson, a member of the
first party, .hiked from the park ten
miles to the lake and the nearest
phon to convey to Portland the first
news oi the search.
Snow Slows Travel
' "Wo found eight to fifteen Inches
of new enow on the mountain," he
said, "making travel slow and requir
ing some step cutting. We looked
Into all crevasses below the north
rldg and proceeded on to the great
Bergschrund below the 667-atep
slope." That alope la a anow wall
Immediately beneath the pinnacle of
Motint Jefferson on the east side.
"Moie men and food are urgently
needed," he 'aald, "aa we have food
only for through today. Weather"
today la promising. Send in experi
enced men, fully equipped for diffi
cult mountain climbing.
"Today we are searching White
water glacier with two parties, one
high, making for the summit, and,
one on the lower part of the glacier."
Atkeson advised against any at
tempt to acan the area by airplane.
Besides the hazard of sudden storms,
he said, such a search would be Im
practical, because new snow covers
all objects above timber! lne, and If
the mlASlng'men are lost in the tim
ber they would not be visible from
the air.
EINSTEIN'S LIFE
T
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Sept. 7 (AP)
Oreat anxiety haa prevailed at Villa
La Savoyarde, Professor Albert Ein
stein Blankenbergb residence, since
a report was received aaylng a secret
Nszi organization set a price of about
$455 on the famoua physicist's head.
Mrs. Einstein haa been particularly
alarmed, as her husband continues
hta habit of taking early morning
walks and occasional strolla across
the down.
Police are keeping a watch In the
neighborhood of the villa, and body
guards precede and follow the profes
sor on the walks.
All Oermana spending 'holidays In
the vicinity are carefully Investigat
ed. Professor Einstein aald he plana
eventually to leave Belgium and live
either in England or the United
State.
BEN SELLING ESTATE
TO
8AI.RM. Ore., St-A- 7. (UP) The
1 1, 130.000 estate ol tha lata Ben Sell
ing will go to relatives and none to
employes of hu store, tha Oregon
supreme court ruled today.
Employes declared Selling had
promised to leave hla store to them
a a reward for their faithful eerv
Ires. Tne court ruled Selling's will,
giving his property to relatives, was
valid.
SABOTAGE SEEN
First Faint Smudge of Back
fire Laid by Die-Hards of
Big Business Are Scented
by Administrator Johnson
By r.KOROF. iu:rno
(Copyrighted by McClure Newspaper
Syndicate.)
WASHINGTON. Sept. 7. The first
faint smudges from powerful back
fire against President Roosevelt's re
covery program are beginning- to ap
pear over the horizon.
Alt evidence point to their having
been surreptitiously ignited by die
hard element in the realm of big
business and high finance. Fortun
ately these subterranean acts of so
cial and economic sabotage are NOT
being Inspired by a majority. The
men heading America' biggest cor
porations realize the nation must sink
or ewlm with Mr. Roosevelt revolu
tionary experiment.
Unfortunately the financial strength
of those behind this sniping la suf
ficient to make Itself-felt to some
degree.
General Hugh Johnson, boss of N.
R. A., ever sensitive to the smell of
kindling charged with dynamite, was
quick to detect this under cover de
fection. He I resorting to the time
honored custom of fighting fire with
fire.
The President haa oast the die.
Johnson Intends to gamble boldly '
until we win our way out or he
won't admit this possibility we lose
badly.
Even in some sections of the preu
Johnson haa noted a trend that would
Indicate the honeymoon Is over and
he will flRht vigorously to gain each
forward step.
One of the most Influential met
ropolitan newspapers In the east re- ,
cently editorially attacked tt. R. A. 'a
proposal to boycott tradesmen who
didn't display the Blue Eagle. On
top of this came an editorial pro
nouncement In a chain of papers
that Johnson might better abandon
his 'hard-boiled" tactics with poten
tial but reluctant code-signers.
And finally, formal Instruction
went out from New York headquar
ters of one of tha largest newa serr-
(Condnued on Psge Two)
IS
AGREEMENT HINT
DETROIT. Sept. 7. (AP) The
utter absence of any outward indl
catlona of concern among Ford Mo
tor company executives over the NRA
controversy Is adding strength to a
growing belief that some kind of an
agreement la expected, to bring Henry
Ford under the blue eagle's banner.
There waa, however, no hint of a
formal announcement of policy, and
no certainty that one would be forth
coming when Ford returns, probably
the last of the week, from hla Huron
mountain camp where he haa re
mained secluded for three weeka.
Edsel Ford, president of the oom
pany, already was back from hla va
cation spent at Seal Harbor, Me., but
hla return developed nothing to
clarify the situation.
WILL
ROGERS
BEVERLY HILLS, Cal., Sept.
6. See some of the papers are
kinder excited over "What
will Nonry Ford doJ"
Well that's the least thing we '
got to worry about nowadays.
He will do better by labcr than
anybody else, so that's good ,
enough.
There is only one drawback
to this "buying in September";
women with charge accounts
and sending stuff on approval.
They will do a lot of Septem
ber buying but Lord help Octo
ber when they start to return
ing the clothes because they
didn't look good at the party.
They say there is a hurricane
down in Texas and Florida.
Think I saw a little squib about
it in sino California paper.
tl!l MaMlutM frndleate, live.