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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1934)
Medford Mail Tribune WINNER V Pulitzer Award perature. Temperature Highest yesterday FOR 1934 Unest tlili morning Twenty-ninth Ytar MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, AUGUST 5, 1934 No. 115. The Weather forecast; Fair Sunday; normal tern. By PAUL MAM.OV WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 3. The t North Dakota authorities feel jure tnat ex-uovernor Linger win Change his abode to Leaven worm (by request) ihortly, and, In 1 1 probability, bla wife will be alected. governor. Outsiders will not be able to understand thaw man convicted of corruption by authorized court s t a n d a auch a good chance of being vindicated by voters. raul Mallon it I EV 4 ) 1 The answer la the farmers are mad. The word is used advisedly. Tbe courts which convicted Langer are those which upheld the farmers' irort.gages. The law which made it illegal for Langer to extract political -funds from federal relief workers also said It was Illegal for farmers Vto keep their homes if they could not pay their interest. The bald truth Is the farmers are not inclined to think much of the law or the courts. That makes the underlying situa tion far more important than the political force it seems to be. When respect for law and Justice dwindles among a majority of people in any community, the gravest political pos sibilities arise. It is alarming national Judicial authorities In the government. They cannot see their way clear to do much about it because, essentially, it is a state political matter. Their personal sympathies, however, are trongly against Langer and, if an opportunity offers they may do some thing. An entirely different .Inner attitude was taken at the outset of the con temporaneous political farce in New Orleans. The big democrats hava marked Huey Long down as a bluffer, and a smart one. They declined to take his 1 national guard siege of New Orleans as seriously as It appeared to be. They believed Huey was merely playlntf politics with guns, and he would make sure none of them went off. No one seemed to think much about the question of state and city rights Involved, because they knew the situation was alt Huey. The hullabaloo over George Harri son's whispered conference with Treasury Secretary Morgenthau gen erated new rumors about dollar de Taluatlon, stabilization. Inflation and whatever you can think of. The truth seems to be that Mr. Harrison was filling In Mr. Morgen tibau on Harrison's unofficial talks recently in Europe. ' As Mr. Harrison's talks do not seem o have been very productive the best Informed people here regard his meet ing with Mr. Morgenthau as similarly unimportant. There is a growing feeling among the wise money boys that the admin istration may have to create some fresh Inflationary talk sometime soon. It worked very well last year in a similar situation. When people be- ieve prices are going up, they may Woosen up and buy. The stagnation of money Is quite an Important problem now. There la plenty of money In the country, hut it is being hoarded in banks and else where. Talk of Inflation would un doubtedly encourage spending. At the same time, no officials In responsible positions here want to take any sincerely inflationary step, They might go for some pseudo-Infla tionary step, but not for straight-out money Inflation. They burned the Blue Eagle at the take very quietly In the commerce department building a few daya ago. A dozen huskies were employed to carry bundles of Blue Eagles from NRA headquarters down to the base ment. The furnace was used as the take. The explanation for thus roasting helr own bird Is that the NRA had a surplus of old Blue Eagles (now supplemented by code eagles) and wanted to destroy them so they would not fall Into Improper hands. The administration bought about 1,000,000 worth of sliver last month. rThat Is, the unfa'-homable treasury figures Indicate that Its holding In creased by that much. It may have bought more and sold some. At that rata, it would probably only take a couple of hundred yean to accumulate enough sliver to estab lish its proposed parity with gold. Montagu Norman, alias Professor Sitlnner, has been sought out by newsmen In all the dark alleys and treasury corridors, but there are good reasons for believing he will not come to Washington His presence here would encourage rumors of stabiliza tion between the dol'ar and the pound and neither side wants that Tft. (Continued on Page Six) Mcht Mnol 1 ratlin? BOSTON. Aug. 4. .VP", (U-S D A,) Fxtremely light tracing was re port fd throughout the Boston wool market during the pmt week. A few aa'es were Cosed on OhJo and similar fieeces at prlc about steady to slightly eaVfr tlian wnif wiirs of the pa.t U yrriu'-t on in nr-k;nc prices o.i in Hur o4 otaer red Km growa oo4i PRESIDENT VIEWS AIN'S WELFARE IN Dl PROJECTS Grand Coulee Speech Pic tures Northwest As Hope To Thousands And On Eve Of New Era, With Benefits To All. NEW YORK, Aug. 4. (AT) Arrangement have been made for President Roosevelt to deliver a 15-mlnutc (radio) address from Glacier park, Mont,, tomorrow night. Two national broadcasting net works and the Columbia broad casting system are to carry the address from 6:30 p. m., (Pacific Standard Time) to 0:45. EVRniTTU WITH PPITRTnENT ROOSEVELT TO WASHINGTON, D. u., Aug. . nf j rresiaem nouw velt traveled from the Columbia river basin tonight with a message that the public works program was going forward with particular Interest in Drovldlnnr welfare for more families in "this great northwest area." Kis special train moved across Washington state late In the after noon from the village of Ephrata wnere a stop was mane io permit n mntnr t.Hn tn tha nit Of the newlv commenced Grand Coulee power dam on tne uoiumma. With a smile breaking his dust cov- nrArH f nj th nrMlrlrifc tM the thousands standing on the hills of ifagebrush near the Coulee dam pro ject we are m tne process 01 mnii lng the American people dam-minded," and added more dams were go ing to be bunt as neeaea. R. (dinar In an onen car for the trip of more than 100 miles, the presi dent oDservea wun odvious interest the plans for the dam Just being built with aid of federal funds and the broad stretches of desolate sage brush territory which some day will be cultivated by aid of Irrigation frnm tha Ham Tonight his train aped along for 'nincler national Dark In the north west corner of Montana where the Sabbath day will be spnt on tne homeward trip to Washington. Bafnp. innnn rheorlnir rjersons who gathered at Coulee dam sltt, center or a 83,000,000 water ana power nmi.t. fnMtn.ri bv the zovemment. the chief executive said these fec'eral undertakings concerned not omy ne states directly involved dui. also w.o nntlon as a whole. Sees Cheap Toner wa sre eolnu to see. I believe, nmn .vh electrlcltv and power made so cheap that they will become a standard article 01 use, uu.. wi fnr wrlnultiire and manufactur. Ing, but also for every home within reach of an electric ngnt line.- mo the chief executive, it., .mac Mr. Roosevelt's second since returning to the continent yes terday from a sea vacation, waa on 11 .rta. h hnH been welcomed tumultously by assembled cltlMns of Idaho and Washington uo iic, ... had inspected the work already done on the big dnm. , This dam will control an upper section of the Columbia river and make Dosslble the reclamation of sur rounding land. As the day advanced, tne sun nut more Industriously and the spectators beesn to wish they had left their coats at home. Recalling that he had epoxen ' the opportunity for development of the Columbia basin In a Spokane address 14 years sgo, the president quoted a few sentences from It and Bald: Well, that Is tne text of what we are trying to do In this country to day." Vision Comes True "tt took 14 years for that prophecy to come true." he continued, "hut It la on Its way. And most of us here today sre going to be alive when thla dam Is finished and the Bonne-..m- iBm ono noo nrolect which he visited yesterday) Is finished and a lot of other dams are imineu. Mr. Roosevelt quoted an engineer as saving the eventusl completion of the Orand Coulee project wouin nib ble the potential power of every city In Ita distribution area. "It Is going to affect not omy tne Columbia river basin but It l going to affect U mountain states and the Pacific coast territory . . ." (Continued on Page Three) BLUElMTBOSS IS 52JTARS OLD CHICAOO, Aug. 4 ZAP) Genera! Hugh 8. Johnson "cracked down" on ,.- m blue eaele today. He ftta couple of them. They were done tn sugared bas-relief on a birthday cake presented to the NRA leader by a Chicago hotel. The general la 63 years old tomorrow. McAilno On Vacation VEW YORK. Aug 4. yp Senator William Oibbs MrAdoo of California esllfd todav with his diw;htcr-in-l i Mrs. Robert McAdoo. for a ill weew vacatlcn In Europe. CYfMirt Wheal td ! PORTLAND. Aug. 4 iKP) The -.r,rt; F.Tijnrt corporation today ,)id 62 cents a buihel for ft hlte i hrat for foreign on. very Vrster Ui' quoutwn wu B8 ceuu OusUel. President Roosevelt, at 'extreme epochal sea voyage. In the car, from Meier of Oregon, and the president. He reached Portland August 3 aboard sailed from Annapolis on July 1. (Associated Press Photo). L Action Taken Curbs Trouble Makers And 'Beat Up' Gangs By Employers And Union Leaders. PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 4. (AP) Hiring agencies declared today there were "more Jobs than men" available as work, was resumed on Portland's waterfront on the largest scale since long before the recent marine trades strike. Hiring of longshoremen was extremely heavy. The resumption of work on a full scale followed an agreement reached last night between representatives of the International Longshoremen's as sociation, the Waterfront Employers' association, and E. P. Marsh, labor concllator, for disciplining trouble makers among the workers. Early yesterday violence flared near a neutral hiring hall. Two men were severely Injured and others were cut ai;d bruised. Under the agreement, any long shoremen accused of an act of ag gression vill be brought before a board consisting of two representa tives of the union, two representa tives of employers, and one represen tative of the federal longshoremen's board. If found guilty he will be barred from work on the waterfront during the period of coastwlde arbi tration of differences between work ers and their employers. Marsh said union chiefs are as eager as the employers to end the epidemic of violence here since men returned to work. the L PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. i.tT) Within the next year the skies msy become literally infested with sturdy, light 00 horsepower airplanes selling below 91.000. Tex Rankin, Portland aviator, said tonight. The aeronautics bureau of the de partment of commerce discovered 30,000 potential buyers of such ma chines. The planes probably will be on the morket within six months, sa'd Rankin who has completed a cru'ao of eastern cities, "It will be as good or better than any of the $3,000 airplanes we have on the market within six months, aalJ Indications," he said. "Don't be mistaken about this air plane. The word 'light' does not mean that It will be a small or fllmsy-bullt plane. It will be a real airplane In every way. The low price will be made possible through quantity produc tion and quantity sales." LEN CARPENTER IS ROOSEVELT GUEST Leonard Carpenter of this city, manager of the Southern Oregon Sales company, and Curtis Bailey of Port land, manager of the Regional Agri cultural Credit corporation, both classmates of President Roosevelt at Harvard, were Invited by the presi dent to be guests at the family luncheon aboard the Houston Friday noon when It docked at Portland Dean W. A. Schoenfleld of Oregon State college, friend of the partici pant, reported the Incident. The president was greeted by his old claas- l mate from the shore, and recognla- ! lis tl.m InimwlltUIV frnm hlB DO- Uit.cn nn th bridge signaled them 1 aboard. The President Greets His right, waves greeting to thousands left: James, his son: Mnyor Carson of IN TALE OF Convict, Shaving And Ready For Parole. As Re ward For Tip To Warden, Stabbed In Back All Is Silence. McALESTER, Okla., Aug. 4. (1 -Revenge and death ride like twin witches on the keen blade of the pris on "shlv." ' Thus crime, locked up behind walls and bars, strides on. Oklahoma's prison Is situated here. On the docket of the next district court term In McAleser are murder charges against five Inmates an ac cusation of attempted murder agalmt a sixth. -In each case, th "shlv" did it. A "shlv" is s crude but effective dirk. Like Its name, it Is prison made. Any convict, quiet enough about It, can make a "shlv" from a file, a spoon or a piece of Iron by grinding It pains takingly on the concrete floor. "Shivs," say prison officers, are even bought, sold and traded by the con victs. Guards "screws" to the prisoners never stop looking for "shlvs". But tbe cunning of Imprlsoneo minds, brood ing in the dark, keeps apace of the searchers. With the approach of a "screw" the narrow daggers are flung, with in credible speed and accuracy, to an other cell. Or they are drawn swiftly between many bars at the end of a string. A flash the "shlv" la gone. It Is the "squealer" who usually gea a "shlv" in the back , by the time ne is found, there la nothing but alienee. Silence when the case comes to court la the defense of the accused "shivman." Paul Evans, convicted robber, was braver than the others. Now he's In the prison hospital a 'shlv" wound healing In his back. Evans talked about a plot for a wholesale break last May. He talked to the warden. Pistols were taken from two prlnn er "shlvs" from others. Fearing for Evans' life, prison of ficers guarded him In solitary con finement. Last week he got a parole. He wtnt to the sergeant's office to shaveand then walked out into the open air As he scrapped the bristles from his face a "shlv" flashed from the near by cell block. Evans crumpled, gasping. The war den said Grady Mlckle, a former cell mate, did It. Unless Evans dies and that's un likely there will be no charge, There's not much u Micle al ready has 90 years to serve. And al ienee is with him. LIKE WAVE TO FOE WASHINGTON. Au. 4. yp Plans for an invisible ship which would be revealed to an enemy submar'ne merely as a huge wave sweeping acrou w.e sea were sent the navy recently They call for a vessel covered w;th glass containers filled with sea water, but th navy la taking no steps to accumulate a glaas supply. In fact, the plans are destined to collect dust :n pigeonholes alongside counties ideas and suggestions which ambitUu inventors submitted. The novel offerings center particu larly around submarine safety devices Many come from individuals who never have seen undersea craft Four thousand suggestion cam In within two week arte- one aubmarin- tUsaster. Occasionally a useful Idtii. turns up, but the proportion It some' I UiJufl 1U oo In a hundred uouaauo. Nation at Portland, Ore., on his return from Portland; Mrs. Roosevelt, Governor the cruiser Houston, on whlrh he AUSTRIAN REVOLT JUST BEGUN NAZ Schuschnigg Regime Now In Control Declared Under Italian Dominated, And Likened To Ten Dillingers By WADE WERNER Assoc It aed Press Foreign Staff (Copyright, 1934, by the Associated Press) SOMEWHERE ON THE YUGOSLAV BORDER, Aug. 4. The rebellion In the Astrlan border has only begun, Konstantlne Kammerhofer, generalis simo of the defeated Nazi forces, told me thla afternoon at his headquarters Ivj a Yugoslav town where he Is sur rounded by his staff planning his next move. Approximately 3000 Nazi fighters, remnanta of the forco which for a time held sections of Styrla and Ca rlnthla, are interned In fugitives' camps, but the leaders, who crossed the border with them, still are foot loose. It was hot, and Kammerhofer, a stock built blond teuton with a mus cular chest, was at ease, his soft blue shirt open at the neck and his well croased gray trousers supported by suspenders. He looked as though he had come from tennis rather than a revolution. "We are not finished," he began explosively. (Continued on Page Three) TO VISIT VALLEY 13-15 PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 4. (AP) A tour of 16 counties will be started Monday by Congresman Charlea H. Mar' In, Democratic candidate for gov. ernor. Mrs. Martin will accompany him. No set addresses are on the sched ule, It was declared The tour has been arranged to enable the candi date to meet personally people of the state and to more thoroughly famil iarize himself with conditions In va rious sections. He will start down the lower Col umbia river district, continue down the Oregon coast, and arrive at North Bend and Marshfleld August 10, vis iting at least two dor.cn cities en route. On down the Oregon coast the ma jor general will "march" all the way to Oold Beach. On August 13 he wing back over the Redwood high way and reach Orants Pass He will remain In the Cave City overnight and reach Medford, via Oold Hill and Central Point, August 13. Jacksonville and Ashland art to bn vis ted August IS. Then the can didate will cross the Greensprlngs mountains to Klamath Falls and con tinue up The Dalles-California high way and back through Hood River. TO CHICAOO. Aug. 4. ( AP) Chicago bank clearing! thla week totaled 1225.300.000 compared with 208 000, 000 In the previoua week and jao.- 400,000 In the correapondlng week of 1933. CHICAOO, Aug. 4. (AP) Roy D, Chaptn, prealdent of the Hudson Mo tor Car Co., today announced do- mestlo sales totaled 40.083 for the yesr to date, eurpsviliig the total laales of 133 bjr 831 unite, GEN. MARTIN PLANS 8001 RELIEr ROLLS Further Loss To Crops And Livestock Now Totaling Hundred Millions, Unless Rain Comes Soon Fed eral Aid Operates. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 4. (AP) Approximately 800,000 persons a I number equal to the combined popu lation of the states of Idaho, Dela ware and Nevada are on relief rolls In the drought blighted western half of the United States, It was shown by a tabulation tonight from official records. As a result of the distress caused by the searing heat and prolonged dry spell, the government has desig nated, for relief purposes, more than 1350 counties In 23 states as emer gency or secondary drought counties. The loss to growing crops and live stock in the affected area has not been estimated officially, but unoffi cial estimates placed the total in the hundreds of millions of dollars. A further loss, through severe short age of winter feed for livestock, has been predicted by agricultural and relief officials unless substantial rain falls soon. Weather forecasts gave no sign of a break in the drought. Barren paoturea, shortage of water, and scarcity of fodder, have caused forced sale of thousands of head of cattle to the government to be can ned for distribution to the needy. A week ago, government purchases had totaled 1,737,596 head In IB states. Another 190,000 head had been con demned as unfit for consumption and killed on the ranges. Federal relief and farm adminis tration officials geared the cattle purchasing machinery to a possible load of 10,000,000 head. The bureau of agricultural econom ics in Washington described the sit uation confronting the sheep Indus try as well as that of other livestock, aa "the most serious ever known." Farm administration relief officials pushed plans to purchase 8,000,000 cheep. .Milk prices were Increased In some parts of the drought area, In some cases as much as 60 per cent In the price- of delivered milk. Burned pas ture land, shortage of forage and water, forced dairyman to decreasa the slM) of their herds, and to pur chase feed. The farm administration's milk section, In Washington, adopted a policy generally favorable to price Increases to prevent a possible deci mation of the dairy herds. j Scattered rains during the past; week lowered temperatures, but did not benefit crops except In a few sections. E VILLAIN, BATTLES EX-WIFE'S CUUM LOS ANGELES. Aug. 4. (AP) Saying "Edna O. Bancroft 1 not now my legal wife," Oeorge Bancroft, movie actor, filed an affidavit In auperlor court today disclaiming re sponsibility In her recent 'filed sep arate maintenance suit asking an allowance of 11,000 a month. In the affidavit Bancroft said "A ceremony purported to unlta the plaintiff and myself In marriage oc curred In Buffalo, N. T., April 7, 1013" and they separated n the fall of 1014. The actor said that soon after the separation he hired a theatrical law yer, Herman Roth, In New York to obtain a divorce. Soma time later. Roth handed him what appeared to be a legal document telling him he was divorced, Bancroft said. He said he had not been able to find a rec ord of the divorce, but had not heard from the flrat Mrs. Bancroft since the separation until this year. She charges he never obtained the di vorce. Bancroft and Octavla Broske, opera singer, were married In May, 1918. They live near here and now have a 17-year old daughter, Oeorgette. Another affidavit was filed In the case today In which Carolyns Mc Lean Goodhue, actress, awore she lived with Mrs. Edna Bancroft tn 1919 and 1020 and the latter told her sha was divorced from Bancroft "and had no claim on him of any kind." 4- UPSTATE, OUTLOOK Oregon : Fair aaat and aouth and un tettled and ahowery northweat por tion flundaj and Monday; normal temperature and humidity! moderate to fresh aouth wind nffahore. AflN PRANCiaCO, Aug. 4 (Pi The outlook for the coming week Is for fair weather and normal tempera ture in California and the plateiu region and occasionally unsettled else. where with light rains early the weel i over western Washington and nor'.a kveat Oregon. FAIR, WITH RAIN Black Bully Mobbed By Own Race For Negro Girl Insults BHHEVEPORT, La., Aug. 4. (AP) A negro was lynched laat night by members of his own race because, officers said today, he had insulted a negro gtrl. A group of about ten negroes tied Grafton Page. 30, to a tree limb near Bethany, 22 miles from here, stripped him and then beat him to death with pine knota, of ficers reported. Page, described ai a "bully" In the negro community at Bethany, was selred by the group after the automobile In which he was driv ing the girl away had collided with a truck, knocking the girl uncon scious. No arrests have been made. T FD'S TARIFF PACTS Cuban Treaty On Sugar To Be Yardstick For Dom inant Agricultural Group In Accepting Reciprocal Tariff Treaties. WASHINGTON, Aug. 4. (AP) The American farm bureau federation's attitude on reciprocal tariff treaties probably will be determined by the results of pending negotiations with Cuba. Cheater H. Gray, Washington rep resentative of the dominant farm group, today said all future recipro cal negotiations may be regarded with suspicion if American farming inter ests are not safeguarded in the Cuban treaty. "If we find," Gray said, "that American agriculture will suffer In expanding our foreign markets, we will have to arouse public sentiment against the whole Idea of executive reciprocal treaties doing any good for agriculture." He said he would oppose the treaty, In part at least, If It lifted seasonal tariff barriers against tropical fruits and winter vegetables, Gray also ad vocated higher tariffs on sugar, add ing the United States should develop a self-sufficiency In this production. "If we permit foreign fruits and vegetables eaay entry into our mar kets In the winter, It takes the bloom off the market for our own pro ducts," he said. "Furthermore we have a great under-glass agricultural industry developing here that Is cap able of supplying the domeatlo mar ket the year around." Gray said free trade with the Phil ippine Islands after Independence was "Impossible" becruMi all other na tions would Immediately invoke most favored nation treaty clauses to gain equal treatment, and that would "de stroy" the American producer. He said he foresaw no probability of food shortage In the United States because of the drouth, and approved In general farm adminis tration plans. Oray, however, added there were some tendencies that should he corrected. "There Is a danger," he said, "that If we voluntarily retire from foreign markets or accept insignificant ex port quotas, even temporarily, other nation will edge Into these markets and absorb them so that we can re gain !them only with difficulty. We will find lines of trade established elsewhere that will be difficult to break." SET FOR MONDAY WASHINGTON, Aug. 4. (AP) The war department announced today the board of englneera for rlvera and harbors will hold a publlo hearing here Auguat 0 on proposala for the Improvement of Crescent City harbor, California. The division engineer hna recom mended that the ealstlng project, be modified so aa to provide for exten alon of tha present breakwater to Round nock, construction of a aouth breakwater about 0300 feet long, and excavation to a depth of 30 feet be low mean lower low water of a harbor basin 3800 feet long from 500 to 3000 feet wide. The board, according to the war department announcement, la not convinced of the advisability or tne United States undertaking tha pro posed Improvement because It doubts that commerce handled through the port Justifies the expense. t BASEBALL Night Oame SEATTLE. Wash., Aug. 4 (AP) Before a yelling crowd of 13.000 fans which filled the park to overflowing, the Indiana won their fourth atralght game tontght from Oakland, 11 to ft. In the first gam of a double header. The win waa their tentji In the laat 11 games. H. H. H. Oakland ft S 8 Seattle .11 10 1 Walsh. Rego and RalmondU Vlncl land Tobin. CRESCENT HARBOR CHANGES HEARING HEARST CHARGES STORM TROOPERS PLOTTINGREVOLT California 'Silver Shirts' Gird To Rout Reds And Then Seize Government Solons Hear Evidence Plan To Oust All Jews From Office. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 4. Los Angeles Examiner in a story tn Ha Sunday edition w.. say that testimony has been given before the congressional committee on un American activities, now sitting in Los Angeles, "that armed men known as the Silver Shirts, with a secret auxiliary called storm trooper and avowedly organized to change th government of the United States" ars drilling In the neighborhood of San Diego. The testimony, the newspaper will say, was presented to the committee, presided over by Congressman Charlea Kramer of California, In & session held behind closed doors. While the testimony was being given before the committee, the news paper will aoy. It was learned that an "Investigation was being pressed vigorously by Intelligence officer of the army, navy and marine corps, a well aa by other government agencies" Into the activities of th Silver Shirts on the entire Pacific coast. The Silver Shirts, so the newspaper will say the committee has been in formed by various witnesses, display no swastikas, the emblems of the Nazi party, on their uniforms, but that the swastika emblem Is con spicuous In their homes. Captain William Hyne of the Lo Angeles police department antt-radl- cai squad said today the police hava been watching the Silver Shirts in Los Angeles for several months. He said he did not know what testimony had been given the congressional committee. Revelations made by the govern ment operatives disclosed that 3,000 rounds of .30 calibre ammunition was purchased for the Silver 8hlrts at the naval air station at North Island, San Diego," the newspaper will say. "It wa purchased from members of the United States armed forces on active duty at the time." ' Membership in the organization 1 secret, the members themselves not knowing, generally, the names of their comrades, the newspaper will say, Members of the United 8tate navy, United States marine corps, and the California National Guard are enrolled In the organization." the newspaper will say the committee was Informed. "An 'old man' supplies the San Diego organization with gold, and also supplies arm and ammunition, operating through 'fence' on Univer sity avenue. Bant Diego. A corporal of the United States marine corps In San Diego, assigned to Intelligence work to obtain In formation concerning the Silver Shirts, was 'on the spot' once, being target for mysterious shots, and again beln attached by five men. "The avowed purpose of the Sli ver Shirts and their auxiliary, Intel ligence officer reported, Is two fold: "First: They plan to ua their armed strength to overcome the com munists, because they believe tha communists will atage an uprising and will seize the government of the United States, and they In turn are planning to wrest it from tha com munist. "Second: They are planning to re move all Jew from public office, In cluding Henry Morgenthau, United States secretary of the treasury. HONOLULU, Aug. 3. With Dollfuss, tho conservative, gone and that fine lcvel-hcadcd old patriot, Von Hindcnburg, gone, it looks like it takes a radical to live. England saying that hor borders reached to the Rhine, was good news to these islands, for that means that ours at least reach our own possessions. The army and navy ought to bo flying this hop all the time. It's like carrying the mail. We ask 'cm to do something right now and then blame cm be cause they have had to prac tice. If we ever had to fly here we would have to ask 'cm to post pone the emergency till wo learned it. So don't blitmo the boys. They will have to wait now till commercial lines do it first. Yours, V