nrt The Weather Forecast: Cloudy tonight and Thurs day. No change In temperature. Temperature: Highest yesterday 4f Lowest this morning 3? Watch the TRIBINLS CLASSIFIED ADS . . Loti of good biifatm that mean genuine hi rings. 1EDF0RD MAIL 1 7 Twenfp-eialith Year LIMES SBPEKMSBBglWiKTCi I Nfcs I EDWARD R. MORRIS'l MONETARY BILL THREE AIRPORTS ,.!ENrE BANK QU R. 0. STEPHENSON IMk'd OF EUGENE RULES -JttSSi IS STARTED ON TO BE BUILT BY . i'i NEW COUNCILMAN L,. !yl4CflS! I RICA, Jan. 17. (AP) Two re- hi & x i f jf mSmL so. oregon region mmm , congress grind gwa is outlook w k tl from 1ST WARD iniiiini i.a.-fflp) The respectively 600 and fr.,' .;..!' f i 0 Sja4iW' 'far-:?. 'fH By TAIL MALLON ' (Copyright, 1934. by Paul Mallon.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 17. The best tip on the new money policy Is the fact that Jamea Warburg will be around the White House again very ihortly. Warburg la the presidential money Adviser who went out cussing several I months ago when the Warren gold price autoglro was started. He has not been back alone. He spent the intervening time campaigning against the Warren autoglro mode of eco nomic uplift. The return of the sounder money prodigal to the White House fold will confirm the recently growing sus picion that there will be more War burg and less Warren in the money policy hereafter. Mr. Roosevelt did not Jump Into his new money policy. Ho was pushed It Is a very touchy topic and no 1 one wants to talk about it, but there aeema to be good cause for Believing that the banker gave him the nudge which sent him overboard. They are practical men. when they aw his budget provided that they should handle ten billions of govern ment securities in the next six months, they began to make pertln nt inquiries about the future mone tary intention of the borrower. The answers they received about the government going to make a big profit out of devaluation sometime fn the future.did not satisfy them. What they really wanted wa de valuation and stabilization, a cessa tion of this tampering with money and establishment of a definite base somewhere that they could bank on. We are going into a period of an almost certain business upturn. The capital finance market Is dead. One cause, probably the main one, is mon ey uncertainty. Bankers would be fools to go out and finance business projects and the government on a grand ecale without reasonable assur ances a to what the dollar will be worth When collecting time comes around. Mr. Roosevelt compromised, with them. He gave them positive assur ances of devaluation and stabiliza tion at more than 60 cents and not less than 50 cent on the dollar. That should be assurance enough to per mit government financing, and pos sibly also encourage private financ ing. The expert are chuckling about the act that Mr. Roosevelt gave no more assurances than were necessary. "While he surrendered about three Inches, hi reserved a whole mile of new leeway behind him. There was a characteristic superb lndeflnlteneas as to his plans. Ha asked congress for 3.000,000,000 worth of chip to play poker on the foreign exchange table. He hinted that he was going to scare most 01 the players out of the game and force an international agreement that all poker playing be stopped herealter. He hinted slyly at bimetallism but promised nothing. He avoided any mention of the commodity dollar. The political atethoscoptlclans have a faint Idea what he has in mind. H la faint because he Is confiding In no one. They believe the move Is a decr shift from the old gold price theories. They figure he will now center on reaching better commodity price levcta through domestic means. With all the money tho government Is now pouring out and a natural business Improvement In prospec'. he should have little dlttlculty In reaching his 1926 price level within a reasonable time. That shift will permit him to han dle the International currency and gold problem with a view to restor ing stability, thereby opening the T way for a resumption of foreign trade. It sounds like a better plan than the last one. The long and the short of senatorial money matters re Senators Glass and McAdoo. They came out of the Presi dent's Sunday night conference to gether. McAdoo towering at least three feet above Glass. Olass wa pounding hi fist in his hand and telling McAdoo strongly: 'He didn't dahre dot It; he didn't dahre do It." Obviously Glass was Interring thst Mr. Roosevelt did not dre scire the federal reserve gold without congres sional authority. McAdoo nudgfd Glass and pointe.l to the newsmen surrounding them Both Immediately became circum spect. The house coinage committee got a lot out of Professor Sprague's lec ture on money, but not all of It. At on time Sprague concluded an intricate explanation of a specific po;nt. when a congressman t": "Now let me ask you a question. The contwmnn then proceeded to ask the same question which Sprague had Just answered. An observer leaned over to a friend . and said: "It remind me of the story of the colleee professor who had Just con cluded a long and comp.i-.'Med ex Headquarters to Be Made in Eugene Salary $3000 a Year Will Arrange for Liquor Stores and Agents PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 17. (AP, Edward R. Morris 'Of Eugene, Otto J. Runte of La Orande and Lauronce R. Hlckam of Portland were today named supervisors of the Oregon liquor control commission by George L. Sammia, administrator, and will at once take over their duties In the three distinct divisions of the state. The salary is 93000 a year. Morris will have charge of all of western and southern Oregon south of Eugene; Runte will supervise ope rations east of the Cascades, except In Klamath and Lake counties, and Hlckam will have charge of all west- ern Oregon north of Eugene. Eugene Headquarters, Morris will make his headquarters at Eugene, Runte at La Grande, and Hlckam at Salem. Morris was formerly an automobile dealer and president of the Eugene chamber of commerce and the Rotary club. Runte was for 20 years en gaged in commercial activities in eastern Oregon. Hlckam was for 10 yeara general ngssenger agent of the Spokane, Portland & Seattle railway. The first district will include Mult nomah, Columbia, Clatsop, Clacka mas, Washington. Yamhill, Tillamook, Marlon and Polk counties; the second. Linn, Benton, Lincoln, Lane, Douglas, Coos. Curry, Josephine, Jackson and Klamath. All eastern Oregon counties are in the third district. Arrange for Stores. The supervisors will have imme diate charge of the conduct of the commission's operations In their re spective districts,- reporting--to -the administrator. It will be their task to arrange for establishing liquor stores In such places as may be recommended by the administrator and the commission. The three also will Investigate and recommend appointments of agent to handle commission liquor where stores will not be installed. They will check on applicants for positions in their districts, to find the most avail able men. WASHINGTON. Jan. 17. (AP) R. L. John, formerly personal secretary to W. Irving Glover, second assistant postmaster general In the Hoover ad ministration, told senate Investigators today that all Glover's air mall flies were destroyed In January, 1933 on Glover s orders. iu. -,m n,.t h4 j. AIR HAIL FILES - ALL DESTROYED stroyed all correspondence taken from I land for instruction of the govern Glover s records from 1921 to IS25. 1 mrnt MmP at the Bonneville dam site when he was third assistant. This j whcn N"' were P''n1 n"e lst Tu"- was gathered up with the later corre spondence, he said. He testified that It was customary for copies of Brown's official corre spondence to be sent to Glover's of fice for filing. CHEAP DRUNK EVOLVED BY CALIFORNIA' HOBO SALINAS. Cal. (UP) How to cet a "cheap drunk" on a nickel was ex plained to police here by an unnamed itinerant. "It is simple." the hobo told Dep uty Sheriff D. P. McKlnnon. "First you buy a nickel bottle of soda pop. Then you attach a hose to a gas jet Turn the gas on and let It bubble through the bottle of pop. It will give you a beautiful 'bun.'" Police and health officers advised against the hobo's solution to the "high cost of drinking" problem. NIPPONESE PHOTOGRAPH BRIDGES, ARE ARRESTED KEARNY. N. J. Jan. 17. Kuraji Takahashl, secretary of tne Board of Tourist Industry of Japan, and the four Japanese engineer who were taken into custody with .:m when police found them photograph ing brldze structures in the Hackn 'ak medow-i. will return here from ; New York today to have their pa.v ports examined Although the five were questioned at length late yesterday and last nKht. Captain of Detectives Jhn Helmsley said the only question in vnlved was the regularity of the men's fry Into the United States 'V, "-v; . v , Slight Concession Made to Hillsboro, Enterprise and W fcW . iMtlli put "'th. new nd ,. Senator Glass-Gold Con- Chiloquin Favored for New I- 1 ?7 V? J Mr f j pan of tue tamou. cuiunan dia- fiscation Phase Is Held Projects Pendleton Will p : Jk - l vr ?f ? mond. t.'ie larerst known. Y J M y n'! Constitutional in Opinion Be New Terminal Poin1 "jr"s Z ' ' - -V P Fit III" rllrVllllI ll"N WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.-(AP)- Effort to brim; Mcdford increased 5. K. V fr JkW I I lLllUL I UllUU I I L.I1 gomo slight concessions to Senator fundi for airport Improvement thru ; f - jW, Jff. IXNCI V VI lass id.. Va), the nature of which ; the CWA have not been abandoned I . i !"' ' j WS N. 4 n BlinO Ollinm withheld for the tme, marked by Marshall C. Hoppln. regional 6u-1 ' g I t 1 KV A M U W the administration's new dollar legls. pervlsor, according to a letter r-1 Kmmmtmmxf f lwiiVWfl rr 3 Jl Villi IjH lUL Il latlon as It was started today celved today by City Superintendent I f J P '.TvTj? ?V 1 PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 17. (AP) Reputed "father" of the Pierce birth control bill now In process of hear ing In the house Judiciary commit tee. Congressman Walter M. Pierce of Oregon appeared to be Ve '"for gotten man" when press announce ments were released by Mrs. Margaret Sanger, according to a special dis patch to the Oregonlan from Wash ington, D. C. Mrs. Sanger, pioneer birth-control advocate, Is arranging a national convention to support the "Walter M. Pierce birth-control bill," the dis patch said, and she released a press notice of the meeting. "A three-page mimeograph an nouncement was issued," the article said, "enumerating the speakers at the convention and at the banquet." After the publicity had been prepared someone discovered that Pierce' name had been overlooked and he had been left off the program. WORKERS IS PLEA SALEM, Jan. 17. ( AP) A letter protesting highway crews working sans shlrta because the men were "so hairy that they looked like black bears or black npes,' will be read to the highway commission at its meet ing In Portland tomorrow. The letter, written by Mehitabel of Springfield, complimented the com mission upon Its order against use of liquor by highway department em ployes, but suggested It go further to force the men working along the roads to wear shirts. She stated they presented a disgusting sight. P PORTLAND. Jan. 17. A bid of $28,717. about 5,000 under the gov ernment estimate, was submitted by I tn George Waale company of Port- i nay oy army engineers, -mis was me lowest proposal submitted by 14 con tractors. The work Includes construction of 36 bunkhouses, two bathhouses, a kitchen and mess hall, graveling streets, building sidewalks, a sewage system and a lighting system. DECEMBER BY STATE SALEM, Jan. 17. iP) Seven hun dred and sixty-six arrests in general law enforcement, traffic violations and game law violations were report ed by the state police during De cember. It was announced today by Superintendent Chirlea P. Pray. The arresta resulted In 112.466 seated in fines and sentences meted out to a total of 124 years, Including one life sentence for a murder con viction, and collection of fees to the amount of 11.001. a license and using another person's license Captain Hcimsley said the men were photographing the Pulaski elevated highway, the Pennsylvania railroad structure, and that of the Lacka wanna railroad where they cross the meadows, when resident of Kearny spotted them and notified the police. Takahaahl was the only one to pro fess to a knowledge of the Engllm language. At first he presented a. Ne York driver's license and regn - tratlon card bearing the name of Yorlwo Yomamoto. 464 Riverside D-'ve. New York. Later he gave the TV:V ;. hi. and a. 4 he has. MEDFOHI), OREGON, "WEDNESDAY, JANUARY" was withheld for the tme, marked the administration's new dollar legis lation as it was started today through congress. WASHINGTON, Jan. 17. (AP) 1 Congress had a far-ahead glimpse Into ! the administration legislative program today, while setting out to dispatch the business more Immediately at hand, the extraordinary monetary bill. Rejoicing that it was given Juris diction, the house coinage committee put aside its dollar stabilization hearings to polish the Roosevelt dol lar bill. Senatorial doubters, mean while, had White House word that President Roosevelt obtained an af firmative opinion from Attorney General Cummings on the constitu tionality of his plan for the federal government to take over all mone tary gold before he put it into a recommendation for the legislation. To Ask More Funds. There also fluttered to the capitol from the other end of Pennsylvania avenue the news that the promised request for over $1,100,000,000 of ad ditional recovery program funds for this year will be along soon. Trailing behind a few weeks will be what Mr. Roosevelt has to say on stock ex change regulation, war debts, tariff reciprocity powers, railroad and general transportation questions and more government agency consolida tion. Out of the added money to be v4spent between -"now and " June;' the olvll works administration will be financed. Unmindful of national disputes for the moment, the senate took time to day for renewed consideration of the District of Columbia liquor legislation bill. The house busied itself with the Interior department appropria tions. Possibility of a banking com mittee contest against the coinage committee there for Jurlsdicton over the 60-60 per cent-gold dollar bill provided one long chnnce for fire works. 1Voii11 Halt Crop Reports, rhalrman Smith of the senate agrl- (Continued on Page Eight) OF HUNTS VILLE, Texas, Jan. 17. (AP) J. B. French, one of the five convicts who escaped when Clyde Barrow, Texas desperado, raided the Eastham state prison farm yesterday, ha been recaptured. Warden W. W. Waid said French was caught near the faru. late last night. French la serving 13 years for assault to murder, robbery and auto mobile theft in Hunt county. The phantom trail of Clyde Bar row, machine-gunning southwestern desperado, had vanished In the pine forest of east Texas today, after his spectacular prison delivery In an early morning fog. TRIO HELTfOHEA.RING Vagrancy charges were filed this morning by Chief of Police Clatous McCredle against Malcolm fitlne, mu sician; Tracy DeVlnney and Peggy Baker, local resident. The trio have been held for Inves tigation by the police and habeas cor pus proceedings were threatened as a means to procure their release. They are scheduled to be given a hearing late today In Justice court. The charge under which they stand arrested alleges "dissolute idleness" and "loitering about a questionable place late at night." FORMER POLAR CAMP ABOARD ADMIRAL BYRD'S FLAG SHIP AT SEA, en route to Little America, via Mackay Radio, Jan. 16. (AP uwiayecn , The nyrd Antarc tic expedition neared Little America today. At 4 p. m. the flagship was jlW miles north of her goal, I The crew has made ready all equip ment of the expedition for a speedy 1 tranfer from the hlp to the old Byrd camp at Little America which baa by Marshall C. Hoppln, regional su pervisor, according to a letter re ceived today by City Superintendent Fred Scheffel. Mr. Hoppln writes that he has roc ommended reconsideration of the J'; .p,r0,p00K,'re' w"neton and has telegraphed and written Mr, Wynne, chief airport advisor of the CWA regarding the matter. As the. situation now stands, he explained, voicing his regrets, the 917,000 pro- vided in the original allotment is all that will be available to Med ford PORTLAND, Jan. 17. ( AP ) The allotment of CWA funds for three new Oregon airports, and word that approval of an expenditure of $14,051 on the Pendleton airport Is expected immediately, was announced here to day by Lieut. Basil B. Smith, airport engineer of the aeronautic division, U. S. department of commerce. Hillsboro's application for an allot ment of $9684 to build an airport on 100 acres of land purchased by the city was approved, and 06 men will be employed. Construction of a field at Chiloquin to form a part of the alternate coast airway from The Dalles to Klamath Falls, was approved, and $5738 was allocated. More than 60 men will get work. Enterprise was granted $3038 for a field there. About 38 men will be employed and the field will provide another unit in the air route from Portland to, Lewiston, Idaho. ' Lieut. Smith" an id formal authoriza tion of funds for the Pendleton pro ject was merely a matter of signa ture today, and that city is assured of $14,051 of CWA funds to supple ment Improvement already under way. The CWA allotment will give work to 150 men. with 75 to be taken from CWA rosters, and the others from the city's unemployed. United Air Lines 1 Improving the field for a terminal point, and Is reported to be spending $60,000. The CWA funds will be used to rock a runway and cradc the rest of the field, and to fence it. The port will be seeded to grass. , Wnen United Air lines begins using Pendleton as a terminal point, re placing Pasco, Wash., Oregon will have three airline stops Portland, Med ford and Pendleton, Homer Merchant, district traffic manager here for United Air Lines, said formal opening of the Pendleton field la expected about February 6. The field Is 31! mile northwest or the city. EARTHQUAKE DEATH LIST GROWS CALCUTTA, Jan. 17. (AP) The estimate of India's earthquake dead leaped Into four figures today. Some observers said 2000 was a conservative estimate of those killed In Monday' catastrophe. The par alysis of communication lines made accurate information most difficult to obtain. Officiate were confining their state ments to the list of known dead atlll standing at 112; but reports frov avi ators flying over parts of the shaken area were much more horrifying. Hunrdeds were reported killed at Muzaffarpur. Some said the streets there were littered with corpse and that the town lay In ruin. WASHINGTON, Jan. 17. (AP) The public works administration today allotted $7,018,418 for M non-federal projects In 23 atatea which officials said would create 30,010 man-months of direct employment. A part of the remaining allot ments were on the loan and grant basis, the grants representing 30 per cent of the coat of labor and mate rial. The others were allotments of grant only, the remaining necessary for construction to be raised locally Allotment included: Klamath Fulls, Ore., loan and grant. flrm Ty, $71,000. ASTORIA. Ore., Jan. 17. J. C Wright, general agent for the SpO' kane, Portland it Seattle railroad, an nounced today that the proposed re duction in train service between 1 Portland. AMorla and Seaside to one ' ri Uav tch aay, ha beta Pt' KLAMATH GIVEN ARMORY MONEY 17, 1931. Edsel Ford (left), ton of Henry Ford, Is shown as he discussed the operation of the Michigan group of Guardian banks at the senate quiz in Washington. He Is talking with Senator James Couzens (center) of Michigan, and Ferdinand Pecora, counsel for the senate banking com mittee. (Associated Press Photo) AT CLAIMS LAWYER CRIMINAL COURTS BUILDING, CHICAGO, Jan. 17. (AP) W. W. Smith, defense attory, declared to day that Dr. Alice Lindsay Wyne koop's physician had said she "might die any minute." Dr. Catherine Wynekoop, daughter of the 62-year-old defendant, asserted Just before the afternoon session started, that she was afraid her mother would not be able to go on with -her trial. She Is charged with murder in the killing of her daughter-in-law, Rheta. "Mother's condition Is serious," said Catherine, "she I weaker than she wa yesterday. I am very much afraid for her." Attorney Smith, "who said his client's condition was graver than any previous time In the trial, said they would go on as usual with the afternoon session. After that, I don't know what we will be able to do," he said. More .of the gruesome detail of young nticta' death were recounted from the witness stand by Thomas J. Ahem, an indertaker, who was called to the Wynekoop home the night of November 31. Ahem said he anked Dr. Alice If she had notified police of Rhetn's. death, and the doctor replied, "No, I don't want any publicity." I replied, 'Madam, this Is a mur der." she testified, "and I then tele phoned the police." STEEL INDUSTRY RECOVERING FAST NEW YORK, Jan. 17. (AP) Steel production, says "Iron Age," Is mak ing a "more rapid recovery than had been expected following the heavy shipments that were made against expiring contracts In December." The national output average, as estimated by the publication, 1 33 per cent of capacity, up two points from last week. Part of the re bound Is accounted for by replenish ment of Inventories, since the heavy tonnage business the steel Industry expect from automobile manufactur ers, railroad and building has not reached the mills. PORTLAND POSTMASTER AGREED UPON, IS WORD PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 17. (AP) A special dispatch to the Journal to day from Washington, D. C, said Congressmsn Martin announced the selection of Bernhard L. Hagemann a postmaster at Portland to aucceed John M. Jonea, Republican incum bent, The dispatch said the an nouncement waa made "in agree ment with Postmaster General Parley." MAE GIVES COURT FANS EYE-FULL AS WITNESS LOS AN GELDS. Jan. 17. (fl Diamond Ltl, In all her glory, award ed with an eyeful those who came up to see her In court hern today. Royal purple wa the theme gorge ous of the Mae West attire that mark ed her return engagement to tell the Judge and Jury more about the man who done her wrong. Edward Friedman wa the man, and he la under trial on charge of rob btntr the platinum blonde of the un- dulet!n nik o' ' ' ,0u0 in diamonds CALL CUBA STRIKE Y TO HAVANA, Cuba, Jan. 17. (AP) Col. Pulgenclo Batista, commander of the Cuban army, replied to an oppo sition ultimatum today that he re algn ,hls post by moving 200 troops Into the capital and the opposition : "c" Bup, mayor wuson stated, ex answered with a general strlko which j plaining that he had endeavored dur paralyzed all government depart- lnft h' regime to give this Important menta. The United States consulate and navy officials conferred on plans to protest tho llfo and property of Unit ed States clllzons In case tho situa tion in Cuba grows worse. The "revolutionary general strike," which appeared spreading, was called by a "united front" consisting of the ABC secret society, the student directory, the federation of labor and Dr. Antonio Qulteras, former minis ter of war. The front demanded that BatlsU.. whom they protest as ft military dictator, resign before noon. When that hour arrived, the army commander rushed truckloads of sol-, dlers into the capital from Camp Col umbia. That was his only outward acknowledgement of the demnnd. F WASHINGTON, Jan. 17. (AP) Half a billion dollars of United States money tomorrow will havo a doubt ful value to holder. There Is approximately this amount of gold and gold certificates In cir culation, and after midnight tonight, whether it can be redeemed In other money will depend upon decision by the secretary of the treasury. A great part of thla money la con sidered non-recoverable by the treas ury because it has been lost, de stroyed or taken abroad. What re main ha a peculiar status. Treasury officials say tho gold and gold certificate still are legal tender. Merchants, legal advisers, believe, still may accept the gold certificate In payment for merchandise. But In do ing so t,hey may be taking a chance of loss. FOOCHOW, China, Jan. 17. (AP) Nationalist government Infantry, pouring into Poochow on the heel of retreating rebels, set about restor ing order today. . General Liu Ho-Tlng, commanding the fiflth division, said his troops would resume the pursuit southward a soon a they had recuperated. United State sailors, sent aihore to guard American Uvea and property, returned to the U, 8. S. gunboat Tulsa. Her ensemble today wa a purple blister crepe jacket and long skirt.' form fitting. Her hat wa purple, of the fall model. Slipper were the usual five-Inch heel, and glove white flable wa the fur, and the only or namental gem $ diamond clip. With her provocative walk, half- Awaagerlnff, half undulating, ane strolled to the wltnes atand for brief tvrimony which wa ch.eliy tech- No. 251. Lumberman Named As Suc cessor to Late W. M. Clemenson Other Ap pointments Announced. Ralph O. Stephenson of the Econ omy Lumber company was named Mcdford councilman from the first ward to succeed the late w. M. Clem enson at the regular meeting of the city council last night. He wss one of several candidates supported by residents of the ward and received the largest number of votes from the council. Numerous other appointments were made last night by Mayor E. M. Wil son, with the endorsement of the council. Fred L. Heath, Sr.. was re appointed to the water commission, and H. A. Thierolf appointed to fill the vacancy resulting from the resig nation of Trove Lumsden, who moved from this city to Hlllsboro. C. S. Buttorfleld, Larry Schade and A. B. Cunningham were reappointed to th, planning commission, and Dr. P. O. Thayor named the new member of that group. Prank Rogers, city building and light inspector, was named chairman of the plumbing board, with A. L. Vroman and E. M. Brown the othor members. Name Budget Committee. The new budget committee, which was also announced for the first time last night, la composed of an entirely work to representative citizen and to keep new men interested in the budget each year. The committee to map out the 1935 budget is composed or i. e. schuior, chairman; Jack Swem, Glenn O. Taylor, W. J. Warner, George Frey, Carl Fichtner, Elmer Child era and J. P. EricKson. Councilman Stephenson will be come chairman of the land appraisal and park committee, Mayor Wilson atated, with George Porter and Al Llttrell the other members. Coun cilman Porter. will take over the chair manship of the finance committee of which S. A. Kroschel and C. C. Furnas are the other members. Two ordinances, necessary to the straightening of East Main street, a CWA project, were passed by the council last night. The first author izes the mayor and city recorder to enter a contract with O. V. Myer and John W. Johnson for purchase of property needed for the widening. (Continued on Page Three) MARSH FIELD, Ore., Jan. 17. (AP) Senator McNary and Representative Martin came in for a large share of praise here laat night when J. M. De- vers, attorney for the state highway commission, described their efforts to aid the Oregon coast highway bridge program which resulted In allotment of $5,100,000 of public works funds for construction of five bridges to replace ferries. fill i . VV I a-i- ROGERS soys: HUVI.TM.V HTT.Ii?. Pn1 . .Tun. 16. I never thought the tima would conic when I thought I would be nblc to advise colleges' how to run their business, but in Cnlifornin Sunday we saw our first real professional foot ball played and 23,000 came away raving about it, especially the rules under which they piny, where you can pass from anywhere, any time. Now as football is not only the backbone but the gravy of college existence, you follows better open up your game, for this program waa just mado for an audience, no penalty every minute to keep an audi ence sore, nobody getting hurt every play, referees not in the way of the players. Colleges have dovclopcd the yelling but the pros have devel oped the game. Now you colleges wake up. I don't want to sec you huve to close up your doors. rwt.-.f-fl. 5