Medford Mail Tribune
WINNER
Pulitzer Award
FOR 1034
.Twenty-ninth Year
MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1934.
No. 69.
Ml
llViU
JEALOUSY CAUSE
Disorder Punctuates Quiz of Tugwell by Senators
The Weather
Forecast: Fair tonight and Tues
I day. Continued warm.
Temperature:
I Highest yesterday .. ST
j lowest this morning .. 57
M
By PAUL MALLON.
(Copyright, 1034, by Paul Mallon)
7 WASHINGTON. D. C, June 11.
The big point behind all the steel
strike menacing that has been going
on is wnetner mo
union can afford
to atrlke.
Employers as
sert the union
Is not strong
enough. Their
figures show only
10 per cent of
the 400,000 steel
workers are In
the A. P. of L.
union. Such fig
urea are too low.
Just as far out
nrittt t.hA
IACHUCU
Paul Mallon
truth la the union contention that
the Industry is 80 per cent organised.
, A certain non-partisan official
source has made a careiui cuca. u-
that the real figure
eomewhere between 30 and 40 per
cent. Roughly, a third or tne wor-
h.r. .tcrnpri tin with Amalgamated
(A. P. of L.) Another third can be
classed as company union men. i
last third Is unorganized.
v. vnn wmiin think these
Impartial figures prove that the
Amalgamated cannot conduct a first
class strike. There Is, however, an
other phase.
Th. union Ir sunnosed to be strong
est In the big mills, such aa the plant
of Carnegie bteei along iiw mouvu--,v,Ai.i
vur nnri iieveral of the largest
In West Virginia, Gary, East Chicago
and Indiana naroor.
fi. Affnnt. nf . strike, therefore
would certainly be concentrated In
these areas.
It might embarrass steel production
more than tne numoer oi uiuuu
ers would Indicate.
An -am mnrn Imnortflnt Union d6
lect has been noticeable in the back
. stage maneuvering.
tt-im. i-ahai-a nnvn an enthusiasm
. which Is not matched either by their
brilliance or experience, uist
ii.... mm mnr. mnnev and net'
ional unity. These are Inadequacies
from whlcn an union muremiuwi
rnnm nr less.
Employe can and do hire the beat
executive, legal and puoucny
Tor Instance, one of the large steel
.n-nnfotinn rerentiv emnloved a vice-
president at a salary aupposed to be
75,000 a year for the main purpose
of organizing the company unions.
Their publicity directors iiitui
a clock.
Th. nnlnn hnvft hart SO much trOU
ble with their early leadership that
their nominal leader (Mine ius"i
nttt inH vont back to Pitta-
burgh during the thick of the fight.
The quartet which took over the fight
is advised by a young newsman, whose
ealary la far from aro.uuu a year.
rht t a hlffhlv lmDOrtant technl
T i niA when vou consider that the
average citizen (who knows nothing
cf the menta ox tne sieei abriito tone,
,.rf.nt.nii whv nnvono would
strike with 0,000,000 people out of
work already.
The November census bill was a
little too rough politically, even tor
nnv of the democrata.
It was such a poorly disguised ef-
fort to dole out aa-a-oay joua
census takers that 44 Democrats voted
against the bill and 81 were absent,
mirnruLAlr. iTha Democratic
lesders persuaded 281 to atay and vote
4nr It V
What let the political polecat out
cf the bag la the fact tnat tne census
4.V.r. ATA not tO t the Jobs Until
after they vote In the congressional
elections,
whan von ffet 44 Democrata to op
pose, and 81 to remain away from a
' patronage bill if that kind, you know
It must be a rather brazen piece of
monkey business.
rhArA will be no third party move
ment. All the talk about It since
Henry Fletchers election aa head of
the R. N. C. Is only wistrui nopingi
MnAt of the Republican progressives
iiia RAnntnrn Borah and Nve. are wise
enough to keep boring from within
the Republican party. They will un
questionably conduct an Inner cam
paign to Install llberala aa county
end state chairmen, ineir aim wm
t. .a cant.iirA the Renubllean organl-
ratlon and take control of the next
Republican national convention away
from the Hlllca and Hoover clan.
That sort of a campaign has some
chance of success. A third party
movement naa none.
Fletcher's lob will be twofold (a)
to get some money and (bl to keep
peace In the Republican family. He
can got a better start than most peo
ple on the money end by going Into
ins own pocket. A tor the second.
lis enure rarerr has been devoted to
riirlomacv.
Many faltc claims are being made
nbut his proerei'Slvtsm. based on ni:
affiliation with Teddy Roosevelt
a Those who were on the Inside In those
r days sv Fletcher was affiliated wlin
Tr5eveU beuc tliev were friends
cf Rcv.f'.i Rider days :".d net berause
(Continued on Page Four)
Susanville Family Wiped
Out Suspect Found Hid
ing in Lumber Pile De
nies Knowledge of Crime
SUSANVILLE, Calif., Jun 11.
(API Five persons were stabbed to
death here during the night by a
maddened knife wlelder and Sheriff
James Leavltt said today the maaa
alaylngs might have been prompted
over Insane Jealousy of a young
woman.
The victims were Mr, and Mra. Joe
Fazio, their 22-year old daughter
Sadie, a aon, John, 26, and Mra, Anna
Amlstanl, 42.
Sheriff Leavltt announced that
Peter Dalosl, 48. a mill worker, had
been taken Into custody aa a suspect,
but Dalosl emphatically dented he
knew anything about the alaylngs.
Used Crude Knife
As Sheriff Leavltt reconstructed
the killings, the slayer, armed with a
crudely made knife, entered the Fazio
home In the Italian district last
night.
He apparently greeted the famuy,
Leavltt aald, and then called Fazio
into the bathroom. Pazlo, 48 years
old, was stabbed In the side, the
killer apparently muffling his at
tempted cries for help.
Then, Sheriff Leavltt stated, tne
killer quickly dismembered the body
and came out of the bathroom.
Encountering Mrs. Fazio, 45, he
slashed her to death with his weapon
and when the couple'a aon came to
his mother's aid he was attacked and
killed.
Screams Give Alarm
The daughter, three blocks away
(Continued on Page Five)
PLANS APPROVED
WASHINGTON, June 11. (AP)
President Roosevelt today approved
plana for the special committee on
conservation of wild life to provide
bird sanctuaries In Oregon, Arkansas
and North Carolina.
Senator Walcott (R-Conn) and
Representative Kelberg (D-Texas)
pointed out that bird flights converg
ed Into three routes north and south
across the country and they proposed
that the three statea would be the
most appropriate resting grounds for
the winged fowls.
Hope was expressed that sanctuar
ies could be provided before the
opening of the approaching hunting
season. The amount of money In
volved and the exact spots have not
been determined.
QUELL DISORDERS
IN RURAL FRANCE
PARIS. June 11. (AP) A violent
outburst of anti-government, "anti
fascist" disorders swept French pro.
vlnces over the week-end. One nun
dred persona were Injured
Cavalry troops, swinging carbine
butts at Grenoble and . camnrai,
charged Into manlfestatora and pro
duced scores of cracked heads among
communists and socialists,
The government used troops and
gendarmea freely to restore quiet and
warned It would not tolerate defiance
SAN FRANCISCO, June 11. (AP)
The Examiner today said life In
surance officials In San Francisco
claimed to have definite Information
that Lee Schleslnner, member of
widely known Pacific Coast depart'
ment store family, waa not killed
when hla automobile plunged Into
the Columbia river 17 months ago.
The paper said one Insurance of
flclal Interested In the case reported
reliable Information had been ob
talned that Schleslnger Is alive and
well, but refused to disclose the place
of his supposed residence.
SUPREME COURT HAS
ALL CASES DOCKETED
SALEM. Jun II. (AP. For the
first time In more than 25 year,
all aupreme court ca no at luu
have been placed on the docket to
be dispowd of be Tore July 13, on
ablinff the court to rocev for tin
summer with a clean slate. Arth ;i
S B?non, clerk at court, announced
today.
CAVES CITY FIRE
WIPES OUT MAIN
Mushroom. Growth of Red
wood Highway Town Re
ceives Setback $30,000
Loss Little Insurance
GRANTS PASS, June 11. (AP)
With Its main business block swept
by the most dlaaatroue fire In Its two
yeara1 existence. Caves City waa re
building today on the ashes of a
$30,000 fire.
Th community, situated near the
Junction of the Redwood and Oregon
Caves highway, SO mllea from nere.
has grown rapidly since lt beginning
little over two years ago. Ita claim
of being the most rapidly growing
community In the county la undis
puted.
Destroyed In the blaze wnicn etart
ed about midnight Saturday were:
Schumacher grocery store, Illinois
Valley Meat company store, Martin
Hardware atore, Caves City hotel,
State Liquor Agency, offlcea of Dr.
B. E. Brooke and Dr. R. Coleman, the
living quarters of Mr. and Mra. C. L.
Schumacher and three children, Dr.
and Mra. Brooka, Dr. and Mra. Cole
man, and Mr. and Mra. Elwood hus-
sey and two children.
The fire atarted In two separate
niBHi no fAAt anart on the outside
of an addition to the Schumacher
store. Possibility of a short circuit in
eleotrlo wires waa discounted.
At least one valuable Item was sal
vaged from the fire, a (300 diamond.
There waa little Insurance.
The Schumachers barely had time
tn fiAA fmm the bulldlna-. escaping
through the smoke-tilled rooms In
their nlghtclothlng. If the warning
had been given ten minutes later, It
was aald, they might have been trap
ped. Efforts to reach nearby Kerby by
telephone to summon aid from
Granta Pass were unavailing, as Mrs.
Hussey stayed with the telephone In
strument for an hour until flames
drove her from the building.
The hotel telephone was the only
one In Caves City, and this commu
nity was without telephone service
today.
Br the Associated Press
A week end of negotiations left
conditions on the far flung atrlke
front of American labor virtually un
changed today.
Representatives of steel industry
employes were adamant in their re
sistance to Recovery Administrator
Hugh S. Johnson's mediation plan
for averting the nation wide Bteei in
dustry atrlke scheduled for June 18 if
steel companies refuse to recognize
the Amalgamated Association of iron
Steel and Tin Workers.
The line of cleavage between con
servative leaders and the militant
rank and file Insurgents of the amal
gamated waa softened as Michael F.
Tlghe, president of the association,
Joined forces with the Insurgents
who laat week waged verbal war with
Johnson. Tlghe's opposition la based
partly on the Impracticability of
"finding men who would have utterly
no Interest In the steel Industry" to
serve on the board of mediation.
VIENNA. June 11. (AP) A series
of rail bombings in Austria contin
ued laat night, with approximately
30 acts of terrorism against federal
railways In the past three days re
ported throughout the country.
The latest bombings resulted In
only slight interruptions to regular
train schedules and minor property
damage.
DOCK STRIKE CLOSES
SALEM PAPER PLANT
SALEM, June 11 (AP, Announce
ment waa made at the plant of the
Oregon Pulp It Paper company here
today that the plant had closed down
Indefinitely due to" tieup caused by
the longshoremen's strike In Port
land, and also to conserve material In
event an emergency run Is needed.
I Six hundred employes were made Idle.
STRIKE CONDITION
UNCHANGED OVER
WEEK-END HOLIDAY
Brown Bachelor
Spider Unafraid
Of Black Widow
WALLA WALLA, Wash., June 11
(AP) It's tough on the black
widow when the brown bachelor
geta his clutches on her epeaklng
of spiders.
In recent weeks dozens of poi
sonous spiders have been caught In
this vicinity. Many have been put
In display In glass Jara.
A large brown spider, termed the
"brown bachelor," waa also caugbt
and placed In a Jar with alx or
eight of the widows. Someone
tipped the Jar upside down.
The widows clung to their webs,
but the "brown bachelor" was
tumbled about. Resenting It, he
sank his fanga Into the back of
one of the widows, killing It. Then
he returned .to his own web, to
sulk.
IS POLITICAL DOPE
PORTLAND, June 11. (AP) The
Journal said today that "Peter Zim
merman, . aenator from Yamhill
county, Is to be the Independent can
didate of the 'true progressives' for
governor, whether he likes It or not,
according to the pronouncement from
two meetings held In Portland."
The meetings were held here Sat
urday and Sunday,
"Zimmerman- Is holding back," the
paper aald, "but will put aside hla re
luctance and yield to a draft In the
event he should be put In nomina
tion, according to Information given
out by the apokesman for the meet
ings." The spokesman waa not Identi
fied. At out 30 of the leadera of the "true
proeresstve" group attended the meet
Inga here. Among them, It waa said,
waa Zimmerman, Charlea M. Thomas,
state utilities commissioner; Senator
W. E. Burke of Yamhill, Senator
James Hazlett of Hood Rlvef, and Dr.
Andrew C. Smith of Portland.
Charlea G. Adams' was elected tem
porary chairman, and J. W. Boyd was
named temporary secretary.
The leaders of the Independent
movement will concentrate In Roso
burg this week to attend the annual
convention of the Oregon State
Orange. It Is said they hope to
mobilize sufficient strength to pro
mote a state convention at Salem
within the next two weeks.
The Journal article aald the leaders
In the move "lean toward Thomas aa
their firat choice, hut he desires to
be shown they can deliver 'a large
block of votes to start with' before h.
will agree to give serious thought to
the problem."
WILLAMETTE FAILS
TO NAME
I0ENT
SALEM, June 11. (AP) An nil-
day meeting of the Willamette unl
veralty board of trustees Saturday
failed to bring forth the name of the
successor to President Carl Gregg
Doney, resigned, although board
membera stated that choice of a man
for the position had virtually been
agreed upon.
A special meeting of the board will
be called later In the month to pass
on recommendations of this Individ
ual.
2000 DEAD SEEN IN WAKE
SAN SALVADOR HURRICANE
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador, June
11, (AP) (Via Pan-American Air
ways wireless) Relief workers today
estimated 2000 persons were dead In
the vicinity of San Salvador alone
following laat weeks disastrous hur
ricane and rainstorm.
The Salvadorean air corps yesterday
sent up airplanes to suivey the na
tion. They returned to report death
and destruction everywhere.
L. C. Calloway, Pan-American Alr
waya airport manager, went along
aa an observer and made an unof
ficial report of hla findings.
He aald the government planes
dropped messages to all communities,
where life waa still observed, asking
them to report in to the capital Im
mediately as to the extent of casual
ties and loss In each village.
He eaw evidences that whole towns
had been destroyed by landslides
started down volcanoes as the result
of the rains.
In the Lempa river he eaw the fun.
nel of a river boat sticking out of the
water and bodies floating around It.
Plane Missing in Catskills
Since Saturday, Located
North Livingston Manor,
N. Y., by Private Flier
LIVINGSTON MANOR, N.
June 11 (AP) W. H. (Ted)
Hallock, the aviator who dis
covered from the air the wrecked
Newark-Chicago air liner In the
forests near here today, made his
way to the scene on foot, and re
ported the bodies of the seven
occupants, with one exception,
were burned beyond recognition.
JUNTO, Argentina. June 11. (AP)
Three persona were killed today when
a Pan-American Grace Airways plane
crashed In Mar Chlquita, a small lake
200 miles west of Buenos Aires.
NEWARK, June 11. (AP) The of
fice of the American Airlines received
word at noon today that the missing
airliner, lost In ths Catskills had been
found 12 miles north of Livingston
Manor, N. Y. The report aald the ahlp
had been destroyed by fire.
The report also aald that the four
passengers, pilot, co-pllot and stew
ardess were Inside the plane and had
been killed.
Earl P. Ward, general superinten
dent of the company controlling the
liner, announced receipt of the re
port, saying It had come from a man
named Helleck.
Ward placed the spot where the
plane was reported found aa 18 miles
north of Livingston Manor.. Ground
crews were dispatched to tha scene.
The plane, when It left Newark, en
route to Buffalo, carried:
Clyde Holbrook, 38, of Chicago,
pilot; John Barron, Jr., 33 of Chicago,
co-pllot and Mlaa Margaret Huckeby,
28, of Chicago, atewardeas, comprising
the crew, and the following passen
gers: Harry H. Plnaley of New York; W. B.
Bader of Buffalo, N. Y.: W. A. Cass
of Buffalo and H. O. Copplns, Buffalo.
A large fleet of planes had been en
gaged In the search yesterday and
today.
Halleck, It was said here, alghted
the missing plane, while cruising In
a private ahlp. He reported the dis
covery to Ward because he had talked
to Ward only last Monday about a
Job as pilot with ths airline.
LOCKED IN HEN COOP
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, Oaltf.,
June 11. (AP) Convicted on a
charge of cruelty to her seven-year
old daughter Mary, by starving her
and placing her In a chicken coop,
Mrs. Josle Ebarguarry, 31, today wia
sentenced to Jail for ISO daya by
Justice of the Pence John Landell.
The sentence waa Imposed after an
Insanity complaint filed against the
mother, who has seven other chil
dren, waa dismissed In superior court.
CZECHOSLOVAKIA AND
BELGIUM TO DEFAULT
WASHINGTON. June 11, (API
Belgium and Czechoslovakia have of
ficially Informed the United Statea
they Intend to default on the,ir war
debt Installments due June IS.
The coast from La Llbertad to La
Union was worse hit and the villages
there virtually destroyed.
The president of the republic has
Issued a decree that prices on food
stuffs must remain the same as be
fore the disaster.
He abolished all Import duties on
wheat, rice and other cereals for the
next three months, In order that the
people of El Balvador may be fed at
as low a cost aa possible.
Electric power waa restored over the
week-end In San Salvador.
The canltol city Is receiving drink
Ing water again although It Is only
issued two hours dally.
The work of burying the dead la
being carried on aa fast aa the army
can get rescue workers Into the
stricken settlements.
Thus far, only the locality around
the capital can be reported upon with
any exactness, but the Isolated vil
lagers are handling their own work
of covering up the ravagea of the 25'
lnchea-ln-24-hours rainfall of laat
.Wednesday.
G.O.P. LEADERS PICK NEW CHAIRMAN
mmn;, jamumJm'J J-1:
Leaders of tha republican party, of which some of the most promt
nent are Included In this group, met In Chicago to select a new national
committee chairman. Left to right, seated: J. Henry Roraback, Con
necticut; Charles D. Hitles, New York; George F. Getz. treasurer, Chl
eago. 8tandlng: George deB. Kolm, New Jersey, secretary, and Ralph
E. Williams. Portland, Ore. (Asaoclated Press Photo
PORTLAND IS HOST
TO CANADIAN VETS
PORTLAND, Ore., June 11. (AP)
Portland's 300,000 residents, some
B0O0 Canadians, Including members
of th Canadian Legion and their
families, and other thousands who
have Jammed hlghwaya and trains
Into the city for the past two days,
today were ready to begin four days
of pageantry, celebration and paradea
the 20th annual Portland rose fes
tival. A series of motor caravans and spe
cial trains one of which waa delayed
, (Continued on Page Five.)
F
PORTLAND, June 11. (AP)
Frank M. Troeh of the Portland Oun
club, one of the nation's beat trap
shooters, retained hla Oregon singles
title Sunday by breaking 100 targets.
Five Salem gunners won the tele
graphic ahoot title after a shoot-off
with the Corvallla team. The Capital
City Oun club won by the margin of
a single target.
The Salem and Corvallla teams tied
on the first 100 blue-rocks, but Salem
picked up one point on the playoff.
Eugene finished third In the regular
ahoot, one target behind the Salem
and Corvallla guns, and one bird ahead
of Medford, which was fourth.
Heppner-Pllot Rock was fifth,
Klamath alxth. Bend aeventh and
Aurora, eighth,
FOR SILVER MEASURE
WASHINGTON, June II. (AP)
In tha first teat vote on the silver
bill, the senate today rejected an
amendment by Senator Thomas (D
Okla), which ha contended would
make silver a "primary money."
The Thomas amendment provided
that In measuring silver for the pro
posed ratio of 25-79 with gold In
monetary atocka It should be valued
at cost Instead of the present 11.20
an ounce. This would have required
the purchase of more silver.
During debate Senator Adams (D-
Coto) told the senate that Prealdent
Roosevelt had promised to carry the
bill out "enthusiastically."
BASEL, Switzerland, June 11 (AP)
Leon Praser of New York, president
of the Bank of International Settle
ments, was empowered today to pro'
tect the Interests of the bank and of
certain other holders of Young and
Dawes loan bonds In the event Ger
many suspends payments.
f
WE18ER, Idaho, June 11 (API-
Private Robert Derbyshire of the
Weiser machine gun troops, Idaho
National Guard, who waa Injured
Saturday while preparing to leave for
the guard encampment at Boise, dien
at a hospital jiera Sunday of a frac
tured skujl.
THREE
SUSPECTS SLATED
HEARING TODAY
Informations charging Pearl Webb,
Bernlce Kennedy and Jonathan W.
Richardson, transient visitors to the
Jubilee with larceny from the person,
were filed this morning by tha dis
trict attorney's office. They are held
In the county Jail, ,
The complaints allege that the trio
stole (40 from Jeaee Johnston of
Jacksonville, while he waa visiting a
beer parlor on the North Pacific high
way near the city limits Saturday
night. The district attornoy said the
rellevoment of Johnston of his coin,
(Continued on Page Flva)
CHICAGO, June 11. (AP) The
great American drought, stimulating
trading in grain futures at the na
tion's markets, has been a contribut
ing factor In a crop price rise of bet
ter than 27 per cent In little moro
than a month.
Despite heavier buying and selling
of future contracts In anticipation
of the agricultural status at the end
of the 1034 growing aeaaon, there has
been no general revival of public par
ticipation in the market, tradora as
sert. AMI FANS SEE
PARIS, June 11. (UP) A throng
of 200.000 aviation enthusiasts was
horror-stricken Sunday when the
yeuthful captain of the Portuguese
team crashed while stunting low over
tha field at Vlncennes and waa killed.
Capt. Jose D'Abreu crashed at ter
rific speed aa he came out of a series
of low barrel rolle and prepared to
level off to a landing.
FALLS WITHIN CITY
ALTUS, Okla., June 11. (UP) A
home-made airplane crashed on the
courthouse lawn here late Sunday,
killing two of Its passengers and
critically Injuring the third. Tne
dead:
Ernest Simpson, 2, pilot a.id
builder of the plane.
Milton Oreeory, 25. filling elation
employe.
ST. JOHNS, Nfd June 11. (UP)
Capt. Martin Ford and four seamen
wre believed lost today when their
schooner, the Ethel Collett, waa sunk
In a collision wlin the refrigerator
steamer silver t l:v. 10 mllea from St.
John's, off Toiiwy,
ROOSEVELT AIMS
IN AAA DEFENDED
BY BRAIN TRUSTER
Big Crowd On Hand for
Questioning of Assistant
Secretary of Agriculture
Wheeler Hits Probers
By D. HAROLD OLIVER
WASHINGTON, June 11. (AP)
Rexford O. Tugwell determinedly de
fended administration efforts to have
congresa strengthen the agricultural
adjustment act at a seriate hearing
today, giving rise to dissension in ths
committee and disorder In the room.
Now assistant secretary of agricul
ture, he waa being examined in con
nection with the president having
nominated him to be Under-Secretary
at an Increase In salary from 97500
to (10,000 a year.
Senatora Smith and Byrd, South
Carolina and Virginia Democrata who
have objected to the promotion, led
the questioning. On hand waa the
biggest crowd at any aenate hearing
of the year, largely composed of
women.
Byrd Attacks Motives,
Citing the controversial bill to
amend the farm act, Byrd aald Tug
well had mlaled the committee by
saying they were merely "clarifying."
One of the amendments, he de
clared, would let tho department say
how many chlckena could be raised.
He aaked If that wore not an "enor-
moua Increase" In preaent AAA powers.
-mgweu aald he looked up the word
"clarifying" and It meant to "maka
clear and free from obacurlty."
"That la what the amendments an
Intended to. do,",, he asserted.
Remarks by Byrd led Senator
Wheeler (D., Mont.) to maintain that
the Investigation was being run as
"a political racket." He character.
Iced tha Virginian's criticism of ths
AAA amendment bill as a "atump
speech" and called for an orderly
hearing.
Cheer for Byrd.
"Hurrah for Byrd" had greeted
Byrd as hs concluded.
Tugwell," yelled another apectator
and Wheeler demanded auch demon
strators be thrown out.
Order waa restored by 'Chairman'
Smith.
(Continued on Page Fire)
1
Wants Wife Who
Can Assist Him
In Making Living
To the "lonesome women" of
Medford, who might be Interested
in supporting a husband, Georgs O.
Strand or 106 West. Shaw atreet,
Carlsbad, N. M., has appealed to
The 'Mall Tribune to assist him
In "decking a lite mate that can
aid me make a fair living which
I can not make here In this city
wth two trades,"
Strand saya that he Is willing
to marry on a short notice to party
he chooses, and atates "Here's
hoping your city holds my future
life mate."
WILL
ROGER?
'says:
HOLLYWOOD, Cal June 9.
This is the age of "new deals"
and miracles. The secretary of
the treasury informed all tha
treasury department people to
keep out of politics. Ther
wouldn't he any such luck as
to have that spread to all de
partments. A fow good' health notes in
today's press, the five girl
babies iu'0 gaining weight and
Max Bacr was reported out of
danger.
If that Wheeler-Howard In
dian bill don't pass there is no
justice. I think we got a rer.l
Indian agent in this man Col
lier. Tho Indian has just lost
100 years in his civilization,
and Collier is trying to get him
back. However, I still think
tho old rich Indian's wife de
served her shiire, but I don't
think that was Collier's depart
ment. . "i
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