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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 1934)
The Weather Forecast: larlly t-Ioudy tonight anil Friday. Moderate temperature. Temperature: Highest yesterday 80 Lowest tills morning 37 M edford Mail Tribune j Watch th TRIBUNE'S IB A 1 CLASSIFIED ADS . . C?iri l.oti of good barcalm that mean genuine r& tarlntl. Twenty-eighth Year MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1934. No. 285. to) Mnrn ELIF m IM1 mm mm. II re By PAIL MALLOS Copyright, 1931, By rnul Mallon Roots WASHINGTON. Feb. 33. Nation may step on each other's toes and settle the matter with dlmplomattc bows, but when one nation steps on another's pocketbook they wheel out the guns. Even the political eruption In Aus tria had hidden International luses rooted In commerce and trade. On the' surface the fighting ap peared to be entirely political. Fas cists, nazls and socialists and Catho lics died for wat their orators be lieve to be great causes. The blood of those patriots can also be measured In the marts of trade In good old coin of the realm of ad joining nations. Seaports 1 Control of the central European markets and outlets to the sea were two of the main underlying fuses. Hitler wanta them. So docs Musso- Both Austria and Czecho-Slovakla are using the Italian port of Trieste. That Is the old Austrian port taken by Italy after the world war. If Hitler gets .his hands on Aus tria, that nation and Czecho-Slova-kla will use the German ports ' Bremen and Hamburg. Likewise there Is a matter of Ital ian trade throughout central Europe. Mussolini has been trying to expand It He can dominate the sltutalon only as long as he can keep the nazls out of Austria. It is no wonder that he sent two Italian divisions recently to the Aus trian border. ' Winner The Half-Pint Chancellor Dolltuss lost his fight with the socialists, even though his guns came off triumph ant. One more victory like that and he Is through. The nazls were strengthened polit ically While their two hated ad versaries atrugglcd In the streets, they sat and ponci tnclr UM Whatever Dolltuss and the socialists did to each other left that much less for the Nazis to do when they take on the winner. Our shrewd official observers be lieve the trouble has only started, confidentially they think the nazls are going to get control of Austria, sooner or later, and nothing can stop them. Geese The nazls believe that also.. That Is wjy they arc playing such a cagey game. Hitler knows he would bring down on himself the condemnation of Eng land, France and Italy If he should unleash the 15,000 Austrian nazls Just across the border In Germany and permit them to go Into Vienna after Dolltuss. He will not attack. He bellevea all he has to do la wait, and Austria will come to him. As one of the Hitler expressionists puts It: "If we bide our time, tho Austrian goose will come flying Into our mouths, well cooked and seasoned." So you may see Dolltuss soon of fer Vie first wing of the goose to Hitler by permitting the nazls to have representation In his govern ment. If Hitler gets his teeth on ope wing. It will not be long before he get to the drumstick. 1,01 1 on Mr. Roosevelt heard those rumors about certain southern congressmen; weakening toward the Bankhead cot- ton compulsion bill That is why he suddenly made up his mind to demand action on the legislation, nus ""'""" ' last Tuesday as the result of being the whole outlook "'Kerning the , 7 basketball, bill. Until then ngressmen had halt a notion to let I d e on the vlne . . mon They saw the ,dn, nl.nratlon b,o wing hot and cold on I.'ie measure. Now .,., , thev will have to put It through, 'he boy. who w as student In .ne "The ! hrCV'aome' g. ! ported. He la survived by hi. par of complaint since he spoke, but hi. -nts nd a .mall .later. ;Tlrl "'" wm prob' EIGHT DROWNED WHEN There are many Indication, that! BIG RESERVOIR BURSTS u. m.irt rwoiilftttnn bin will las PALMAS. Canary Islands. Feb. be softened measurably and enacted 22. (AP) E1g.ht persona drowned and east approach of the Burnslde bridge by congress before adjournment. 1 great property damage resulted today have been awarded Oeorge H. Buck Chairman Fletcher of the senate j when a huge reservoir burst. I ler company or Portland. It waa an committee la beginning to say the Many Inhabitants, terror etrlrken. nminced today by the General bill la not considered sacred! that ' sought refuce from the watera by Grocery company. The building will many protesta have been received and climbing trees. I be completed early In August. that there Is no reason wny me om should not be altered. In the end, you probably will get a fairly good bill which will elimi nate the worst speculative forces and result In a market protected for the public along the lines of the London exchange. Hours The administration has been quiet ly looking Into t'ie possibilities of startlr.5 a drive for a 32-hour week under the NRA code... Those who are investigating the matter believe the government should k for 32 hours. wlt.'i a view to compromising at 36. That would be one sy to aree'.rrMe the private ab- orpti n of workers heing dropped from the CW.V The matter is yet to be decided. Note Hitler sent a ropy of his latest sta aneech to every newsman in Wa-'huicmii. clirert trom fie urn e-nn:rnt printing offy R-rlin Ccauiuea tUom Pe l IS SOON AFTER PAL TAKENJBY POLICE Man Held for Attempt to Take Publisher in Chicago Hotel, Uses Verne San key's System to Beat Law CHICAGO, Fob. 22 ' (p) Twelve hours after h confessed Aft abortive plot to kidnap Emanuel Philip Ad'.er of Davenport, la., Fred Mayo of Birm ingham, Ala., alias Charles Phillips, hanged himself In a Marquette police' station cell. j He died soon after police found him suspended by his necktie from the oell bars. They called to take him before Jack Lacey, alias Wyma.i, his alleged confederate, arrested to day. He was rushed to the county hos pital m hopes of resuscitating him. but tt was futile, tfe had taken on himself the capital punishment he had feared the state of Illinois would inflict for kidnaping. He emulated the method used by Verne Sankey, notorious kldnnper, m Sioux Falls re cently. .The man he had named last night as his accomplice in the plot to truss the Davenport newspaper publisher and carry him out of the Morrison hotel In a huge trunk, had been cap tured only a few moments before Mayo was found lifeless. AS OP KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., Feb. 22. (AP) Horace M. Manning, a coun sel for the defense for 30 years, to day waa the defendants in a first degree murder Indictment. The Klam ath county grand jury returned a true bill against the veteran, trial attorney late yesterday afternoon. Manning Is charged with the mur der of his former law partner, Ralph Horan, a young member of the house of representatives. Horan was shot to death in Manning's private offices on Main street Just ten days ago. Fourteen witnesses were called into the grand Jury chambers. Many of these were believed to be Investigat ing officers and others were persons who claimed to have heard four shots coming from the lawyer's office. The Jury deliberated nine hours before It reached a decision. Judge William M. Duncan, follow ing a conference wit,1! state attor neys, set the arraignment for next Monday morning. Defense attorneys, reluctant to make any statements, have only said they will advance a self defense the ory. The state hopes to establish that Manning fired the two shots from his own gun as well as the two from the revolver found in Ho ran's left hand. If either Vie defense or prosecu tion has discovered a motive for the slaying. It has been kept quiet. Basketball BloW r , i r r . i tatal tOr J OUtn ROSEBURO. Feb. 2J. P) Injured Farewell of Washington Crowded Off First Page lly the Amk laird Prr i tions of the first president, away from Georce Washington was born 202 ; communism or fascism. ' -vllM1. ,, nlH rr ,v" ' " today. He was a general, a atates- man inJ f!rst president of the United j;,.;,, Tody is a legal holiday in fier, pta'e. territory ar.d povemn. one, ana n was iwo asya iair. i.ywu.y. President Roosevelt intended to Another deiver Into record. In 8e visit Mount Vernon. Vs.. the Wash-1 tt. found that it was a Kentucky 'nirion home and tomb The senate gentlemen who caused the selection and house remained In session, but e5)inRl on their -hedul- S-retary of War Drn srldrrMfd t ;,,!?.. b of i.Vr:?t;f- s-vie;., in t rpp:tiil and said that f?.-viv-:t hao tiie ccijau; ba.k to inc traai- Sleds on Wheels May Be Required For Dog Racers ASHTON, Idaho, Feb. 22. (AP The unusual prospect of racing their sled teams over snowless stretches faced 30 or so of the na tion's best known mushers as they waited the start here today of the 18th annual American dog derby. Little snow has fallen this win ter, one of the mildest In the memory of old timers, and unless snow falls generously today the Bleds will be mounted on wheels for the race. T WASHINGTON, Feb. 22. (IP) Representative Fish (R.. S. Y.). told the house today that requir ing the army to fly the airmail without special training was' "legalized murder." Fish went on to say that prlvnte airmail con trurts hart been cancelled "In a hlgh-hamlcd, arbitrary, dictatorial manner." CLEVELAND, O.. Feb. 22. (Pj Fog, snow and a low celling played havoc with the army airmail acnedule In the mid-west early today, bringing death to one flier and sending two others into emergency lanolngs. Lieut. D. O. Lowry. out of Chicago for Cleveland, nosed into a woods near Deshler, O., 80 miles south of Toledo, and was killed. An unidentified mall pilot was re ported forced down In the vicinity of Goshen. Ind., without serious mis hap, and the mail was forwarded by train. Lieut. C. P. Hollstein, out of Cleve land for Washington, was forced down near Unlontown. Pa., in a heavy fog Hla Diane waa damaged. He suffered minor injuries. The mall was saved DENISON, Tex., Feb. 22. UP) Lieutenant r. F. Patrick, 80, Barks dale field pilot of Shreveport, La., was killed when his pursuit plane crashed Into a plowed field one mile irom Denison today. Patrick's motor "cut out" while he flew at an altitude of about 200 feet. The plane dipped and nosed Into a field on the outskirts of the city Several men and boys working in a field rushed to the plane and ex tricated the flier's body from the wreckage. Ho died shortly after be inc removed from the plane. The filer circled Denison, his home town, three times in an apparent a. tempt to land safely. The plane did not burn. 101 ON ICE FLOE EACE NEW PERIL MOSCOW. Feb. 3J.(AP) Crumb ling Ice and a raging gale carried today a grav threat of death to 101 shipwreck victim marooned on a drifting Ice floe In Bering 'atralt. The stranded party Including eight women and two small children comprised Professor Otto Schmldfa i Wrangcl Island scientific expedition. They took refuge on the Ice wnen their stamer. the Chelluskln. sank fhe returning from the Island Feb- ruary 13. First real fears for their safety were aroused when the government rescue commission at Moscow nounced that storms had blocked all effort to reach them. PLAN GROCERY PLANT FOR PORTLAND TRACT PORTLAND. Feb. 23. (AP) Con tracts for construction a 2S0.000 3 story grocery warehouse and food products factory on a lH-acre mater- front tract immediately south of the Somebody in pnuaanpma oug up an old newspaper and louna inai wn.n Washington announced ! fsrewell as president, patent medicine j advertisement crowded It off page of Washington as the name of the ! state. They were going to name the territory Columbia. The Kentucky . irmlenmn id he wanted to Me a -nvrreign mm named after the father .oj jm countrj. DAY-LONG RUES, Albert I Laid to Rest in Church Crypt Near Lae- ken Castle Religious, , Military Services Impress By AMIPKT W. WILSON Associated Pre Foreign Staff (Copyright, lf34, by tho Associated Press) BRUSSELC, Feb. 22. (AP) King Albert I was buried today In the crypt of a little gray church near the royal castle at Laeken. He waa laid to rest beside the bod ies of his predecessors, Leopold 1 and II. after one of the most Impressive funerals given a national leader in modern times. Eight hours of military processions and religious rites in two churches were ended at 3 p. m., with the burial after a brief, private benediction be fore the royal family. Tens of thousands of persons took part In the processions and hundreds of thousands witnessed the pageant ry, under overcast skies. Rain fell slightly for about nan an hour while services were held In the Thirteenth Century cathedral of St. Oudule. The rain stopped again when the mourners resumed their march toward Laeken. One of the most spectacular scenes of the day was a demonstration by detachments of the allies and the Belgian army In front of Laeken church. Visiting royalty, princes and diplo mats witnessed the maneuvers from a dais. American Legion posts from Brussels and Paris Joined In the dem onstration with the other paraders. The Grand Duchess of Luxem bourg, a cousin of King Albert, was the only woman of royalty to witness this review. Queen Elizabeth and her daughtor-ln-law, tho Princess Astrid, who to morrow will be queen of the Bel gians, attended the services In St. Oudule cathedral. All were so .heavily veiled in black that It was impossible to distinguish their features at a distance of 20 feet. ' L IN LOIR HOUSE WASHINGTON, Feb. 22. (AP) Dissatisfied with the milk policy of the fBrm administration, a group of house members set out today to draft Its own Ideas of how stability should be brought about In the dairy In dustry. The group, numbering about 100, after hearing charges last night that the farm administration was con trolled by "communists." "theorists," and "dreamers." adopted a resolution condemning the milk program. They voted: 1. To oppose the milk policy of fixing producer price, without regard to local conditions and without re spect to the cost of production or the parity price. 2. To seek a change in policy vu : lnmTe Mcn producer parity price for fluid milk; the new policy to dis courage over-production through ; qw pr(cc fQf Burp,ug mVn. thus pre venting such surplus milk irom op pressing the price of butter, cheese and other dairy products. (3) To produce a reasonable mini mum price for the retail sale of milk In all areas where the producer-distributor handles a large part of milk production. (4) To set up a committee to pre sent this program to officials of the farm administration, "and if necea ; t0 the president:" and to set up a second committee to nrait amendments to the agricultural ad justment act. In an open forum preceding adop Mcn of the resolution Representative Eagle (D.. Tex.) charged that "com munist' held the upper hand In the farm administration. TELEPHONE DECLARES QUARTERLY DIVIDEND KBW YORK. Feb. 22 '41 Direc tors of the A.vrfrlcen Telephone and Telegraph company today declared the regular quarterly dividend of 12 25 share, payable April 1 f stockhold ers of record March 15. payment of the regular dividend for the first quarter of the year car ries the company. Into 1014 with an unbroken record of payments. PORTLAND, Ore. Feb. 22 (APl This being a l"?al holiday In the United States, all grain exchanges at home were cloned but there was little activity suggested abroad. Winnipeg. Buenos Aires and Liver pool as well as continental exchange were open, but early tr.w1!ng laliea i to miKsresi the slift'iUat qhatige In itcnuaicnt. Succeeds King y Crown Prince Leopold (above) of Belgium will be crowned King Leopold 111 when he succeeds to the throne left vacant by his fath er's accidental death. (Associated Press Photo) EX-POSTAL HEAD ASSERTS HOOVER APPROVED DEEDS WASHINGTON, Feb. 22. (AP) Walter F. Brown, former postmaster general, told senate Investigators he had always acted within the law "and with the approval of the presi dent,' in his airmail contract deal ings. Brown made the statement during questioning by Senator Austin ( R. Vt.), who seized the reins of t,he senate committee Inquiry to compare the 1930 Washington airmail oper- tors' conference with one purportedly called during tne present administra tion by William M. Howes, first as sistant postmaster general. Austin read from Howe's testimony before a house appropriations sub committee that the pos toff ice de partment had called a meeting of mail contract holders to tell them It would be necessary to work out a plan for trimming payments under an appropratlons cut. Brown previously had testified t'.at .him to all regions of the country. Andrew W. Mellon, while secretary ! state PWA representatives from Ore of the treasury, as well as W. L. and ' gon, Washington, Idaho and Mon ti. K. Mellon, had written him in , 19.10 In the interest of a contract for Pittsburgh Aviation Industries, Inc., in which tho Pittsburgh family was Interested. The committee also delved Into ; the details of Brown's- stock and ; grain market dealings while he was ; postal oMef, using cherk stubs of the' late Joseph Bngicy, Brown's stock i market partner, to Miow profits made by crash. Brown before the market JOSEPH ADMIRERS PORTLAND. Feb. 22 t', From the ranks of the scattered force of the Oeorge W. Joseph' following, t new political unit Is being formed. "True Progressives," they call them selves, and recruited from all corners of the state, they were called tog.! t her here today In confidential conference with the expectation that they could1 agreed on a "really progressive" can- NEW YORK. Feb. 32. (AP) Bubur- 'storm king. He blew down telephone didate for the governshlp of Or- 'ta New yorkers, who had found the piled now eight and ten feet Bon . ! high on railroad trscks and roads and millr mnA th mftrnln niner on their' . It was expected as many as ioo delegates to the conference wou'd meet today. Once each week for se - eral months meeting have been he:d here by delegations selected at com- munity gathering in tT.ls vicinity. There appeared to be more than a auspKJon. it was said by those 'n knowWicrable c!r-a today, that ;he attention of the "true progressive" may become centered on Rufus C Holman. atne treasurer. flrernn Weal her Partly rioudv we.t and occasional nn r mm in et norlion tonight anrt FMdv: mo-lerate tempr-ature. treMIe to mAlera'e southeast wind offhra. 10 MEAT PACKERS COMBINED TO RULE IS Secy. Wallace Files Com plaint Against Big Cor porations Unfair Acts Claimed On Many Counts WASHINGTON. Feb, 22. ( AP) Secretary Wallace filed a complaint against 10 meat packing companies today, charging they acted In combi nation to control retail meat prices. The companies named were: Armour and company, Swift and company. Wilson and company, Mor ris and company, the St. Louis Inde-! pendent Packing company, Abraham Brothers Packing company, Cudahy Packing company, Jacob Dold Pack ing company, John Morrell and com- pany and the Memphis Packing cor- j poratlon. j The charge was filed by the secre-, tary under authority of the packers and stockyards act prohibiting unfair trade practices, which also gives the secretary power to institute proceed ings and compel packers to submit evidence. Tho hearing was called to begin j April 9, at the federal building in 1 Jackson, Miss. The companies have been allowed until March 24 to file answers. The complaint charged that each of tho ten packers furnished to the others advance Information on prices of meat and meat food products. It also charged they apportioned sales, and sought to keep out competition. Tills practice, the complaint stated, was to enable inese companies k give unreasonable preference to cer tain purchasers of meat and meat products, to give preferences to cer tain localities, to discriminate un justly between certain persons, and to manipulate prices. Beth Thomas, solicitor for the de partment of .agriculture, said the ac tion concerned the activities of the packers named In southern states, chiefly In the region south of Mem phis, Tenn. He added that complaints of similar practices had been received from pointa as far north as Pennsyl vania but that evidence from the north did not warrant action against the packers' activities there. STATE AIDES TOLD PORTLAND. Ore.. Feb. 33. (API Declaring emphatically that "we want action." Colonel Henry M. Walte, deputy administrator for PWA. atat- ed here today that "unlesa nubile already approved by worka projects the PWA are started Immediately, a Including Baail f ine uwi i o.ng great many of them are going to 'hart, held as a Touhy gangster and be rescinded" charged himself with the kidnaping. Colonel Wslte arrived today from I Washington, D. C, on a trip taking tana were here for conferences with him. "The purpose of the PWA Is to get people back to work." he said, "and there are approximately 7000 appll- cations on hand. In Washington that have not been approved. Unless we can get going on those for whlah funds have been allotted, we had better transfer the funds to districts that csn a'iow some action." He said that, while the Pacific rrr.1 "rvhr"ote':e"niv.r:i the less has been sufficient speed. NKW YORK, Feb. 33. f AP) Chas. W. Storm, 40. financial wizard and editor, died In a tsxlrab yesterday while on his way to the city from Yonkera, N. Y. He was believed to have been the victim of a heart attack. Blizzard Brings Hardsh ip To Coddled " " r ' j aoorswps ior so long xnvj cunw ito accept such convenience as an , .'art oI ood," today were atill digging j their way out of the "worst bit ward ;Bne 1BB8" with a dard look on tnr faces. The flrat shock came Tuesday mor - nlng when they pushed doors open to find neither papers nor milk In the nnw drifts outaide. Bv the time a wild. windy day had ended they were atill "taking If but beginning to like It. All the conveniences of metropoll tn life, accepted matter of ouw thre manv years, were taken lawey by the prolonged blast ol the Blanket of Allah Awes Dwellers In Southern Bengazi BENOAZI. Ctrenaica. Africa. Feb. 22 (AP) Hordes of awe-struck natives formed caravans from the lowlands today to see "the blanket of Allsh,"' which covered the hin terland of the plateau of South Bengazi for the first time In the recollection of the oldest inhabi tant. It was a snowfall, one-and-one-half feet deep on the level and deeply banked on broken, land. Many of the natives prostrated themselves in the fleecy drifts, in subjection to Allah's will. L REBEL OF NICARAGUA. SLAIN MANAGUA, Nicaragua, Feb. 22. fp) General Augusto C. Sand! no, 40, fam ous rebel, was killed with his brother, Socrates Sandlno, and two friends, by national guardsmen at midnight, on the outskirts of Managua, a gov ernment communique Indicated. The government statement read: "The government officially states that the action of the Guardla Ni- clonal In killing Sandlno was con trary to the Instructions of Presi dent fiacasta to guarantee the lives of Sandlno and his followers while they were In Managua. "The president severely reproves these acts of some individual guards men and has ordered an Immediate Investigation and Is requesting con gress to give him the necessary fa cilities to maintain public order.'? All outgoing messages were cen sored. Reported slain with Sandlno were his former generals, Uman2or nd Estrada. By the terms of the peace pact signed by President Sacaaa and Gen eral Aandino. February, 1933, the ln ter laid down his arm with the ex ception of keeping 100 former fol lowers who were to retain their arms for one year. With these 100 men he was engaged in cooperative farming on the Rio Coco. Sandlno came to Managua from his Rio Coco colony last week to termin ate arrangements 'or the final dis arming of hla follower. He was reported to have declared privately and to have intimated to the press that the national guard was unconstitutional and this act appar ently irritaed members of the Guardla Naclonal. TOUHY DEFENSE ISIS CHICAGO, Feb. 33. (API The de fense In the trial of Ronor Touhy and two others for the kidnaping of I John ractor reawa us cano vuia - ! ternoon after hearing five witnesses, under cross examination, tmnai.arv admitted that he was one or tne men wno anempfcca w tunci;. n "vuu 150,000 In ransom money from Fac tor. GIANT SHARK STRIKES TERROR ALONG BEACH COQUIMBO. Chile, Feb. 23. (API A giant shark struck terror to beaches today and was believed to have devoured a soldier who fell Into the sea accidentally and disappeared. Stories were spread that the l I gentle fish had attacked several boats. sheep shearers to ASK 11 CENTS HEAD PENDLETON, Feb 2X Pi Sheep shearers and operators or shearing plants, at a meetln? here last night, decided to ask II cent a head and board for sheering in Oregon this year. They said woolgrowers In Washington have areed to this scale City Livers ; nippei wun icy gicc av tun u fingers, One little Irishman, as much of and by New York as At Smith, wrap ped himself In newspapers, burlap bags and his wife's fur coat, sallied fnrth Into hla vard and chonned donn ! a tree for fuel when electricity went ! of f end shut down his "crl bolner." ! He waa Indignant at such a stat 1 of affairs and an attempted explana- j lion that the one thing man hasn't been able to lick old Mother Nature was responsinie ror me iamirv ini on deaf ears. Moat auhuroanltes, suddenlv trans- former into irowirrsmen, iooa it, m good humor, however. DEBATE ON SALES TAX IS HEARD BY Honors Evenly Divided As Brockway and Gill Give Enlightening Discussions of Proposed Legislation By IRVA FF.WF.IX. Jackson county was well repre sented at the debate in the Madford armory last evening between State Grange Master Ray Gill of Portland and State Representative A. E. Brock way of Medford, Master OiU received much applause during his presenta tion, while Representative Brockway was applauded on almost every point presented In his rebuttal. The debate question, that the sales tax should be sustained, was pre sented affirmatively by Representa tive Brockway, who was Introduced as "a dirt farmer, and master of the Jacksonville Grange. ' In his opening remarks, Brockway said that the ac cusation had been made by the press and otherwise, that the legislature had failed In its trust, and was a disgrace to the state. He attempted to show why the legislature passed the measure. Exception! Cited. The sales tax. as psssed by the legis lature at Its special session, la a 1V4 per cent gross tax on retail receipts of tangibles and utility service. As an example, of exceptions, Mr. Brock way said that should a farmer sell a horse, or his household furniture, he would not be assessed under the sales tax. Five exemptions made under the sales tax were named by him as fol lows: In matters that would be In conflict with the constitutions of the United States or the state of Oregon; on materials used in government works on contracts signed prior to the date of the tax; motor vehicle (continued on page nine) T TO MEET FRIDAY PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 32, (AP) " State and Portland groups of "Uni versity of Oregon Mothers" will meet here Friday night to honor Dr. 0. V. Boyer, new acting president of the university. W. Lair Thompson, preside J of the "Oregon Dads," will extend g.ee tings and Dr. Boyer will speak. Dr. Victor P. Morris, professor of economics at the university, will dis cuss "A University In a Changing World." Mrs. Arthur M. Dibble, state presi dent of the Oregon Mothers, will preside. BRISBANE ADVOCATES AN ARMED ISOLATION ATHENS, Oa., Ieb. 23. P) Arthur Brisbane, columnist, today advocated prcparednesa for war and an isolation policy for the United states, speaking at a session of the Georgia Press In stitute. WILL ROGER? NEW YORK, Kcb. 21 After ri.ving niriiitflit, got in here Bt 3 a. m. riulit in the wildest of what even California would call iimiMiiil weather. Plane itnck in the snow after it land ed. An army flier came brcer hip in, in an open cockpit, who had made the name run from Cleveland, these being the only two planes to land in Newark all day. So give a big hand to Lieu tenant Waekwitz of the U. S. army. Not forgetting (just be cause lie is used to doing such tilings after years of service) Mr. Maurice Mars, pilot of the t'nited passenger plane I was on. It was so eidd yesterday that or an hour in the morning they didn't roll the dice on the New York exchange. When those erap shooters' hands can't roll 'em it's cold. eitll MaHisf l irnslssis, ta