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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1934)
The Weather Forecast: Cloudy with occasional rain tonight and Friday; not much cha'nge In temperature. Highest Tester day ... 45 I .o weft t tits morning ...... 40 M edford Mail Tribune WINNER Pulitzer Award FOR 1934 Twcuty-uiuth Year MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1934. No. 226. - m . I Afofc I FAIR ENFORCEMENT , L5lHfcrf INEAR IMPOSSIBLE . fliwrno ni i mini hi I ts By PAUL MAIXOX (Copyright. 1934, by Paul Mallon) WASHINGTON, Dec. 13. Pol'.tl- clana always think a long way ahead. Already there has been talk, serious talk, In the clois tered Inner circle, about who will be President Roose velt's running mate In '36 and who will be the ?rown prince in o. The only con elusion about the crown prince phase Is that there la now no one In the New Deal big enough Roosevelt's Job. i (m. i (Jiax.su- Paul Mallon to take over Mr. Many names have been discussed privately. Most of them are unsatisfactory. None seems to be a perfect choice. There have been rumors that Mr. Roosevelt was grooming Donald Rich- berg to . be the heir apparent. These are based solely on the obvious fact that Mr. Richberg comes closer to measuring up to the ' requirements than most of the others. He might be built up. The main point at this moment Is Mat several eligtbles (not Mr. Rich berg) are beginning to hear their names mentioned and are conducting themselves accordingly. Compliance With Wage and Hour Provisions Will Be Retained, Is View Child Labor Ban . Is Continued The big minds of New Deal politics seem to accept it as a fact that Vice President Garner will not be a can dldate for re-election. He has said as much in private. Sessions of con gress are a great Inconvenience to his fiahlng and hunting schedule. Until recently, most of the boys have believed that Mr. Garner would ultimately be talked Into running again. Now they seem to think a younger man is needed, although Mr. Garner is still spry enough to be In charge of handling congress for Mr. Roosevelt. They have drawn a line around the north central states and have con cluded that Mr. Roosevelt's next, run ning mate must come from that ter ritory, preferably from Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky. Missouri, Nebraska. Iowa or Kansas. They say this ts the area In which the administration now Is weakest politically. They want a man who will give It strength there. Three names have entered Into their casual discussion of possibilities, Senator Barklcy of Kentucky, the new Senator Burke of Nebraska, and Senator Clark of Missouri. NEW YORK, Dee. 13. (AP) Clay Williams, chairman of the Industrial recovery board, predicted today price- fixing would be eliminated from the new NRA. Sketching for a business luncheon meeting his Ideas on what the new NRA would be. Williams foresaw that it would continue: 1. Minimum wages and maximum hours. 3. The ban on child labor. 3. The collective bargaining guar antee. 4. Provisions against certain un fair trade practices. Full compliance with wage and hour provisions, Williams said, would largely eliminate the need for prlce flxlng. ''I am not unaware of the Im portance In which some groups still hold the provisions of their codes that were designed, inserted and Insisted upon as necessary to their chance of prosperity," he explained. "And yet. I raise before you the question whether the problem of compliance with wage provisions and the problem of price maintenance provisions are In fact two separate problems requiring two separate ans wers or whether on the other hand the two problems are not so closely inter-related that the- answer to the first automatically solves the second for most Industries and businesses as to great an extent as it can never be solved In any other way." He said "in many Instances the enforcement of price-fixing provis ions with fairness to all concerned has been found to be all but impossible.- The exact form of the new NRA act. Williams said, "la not so Im portant." 'The important thing Is that pub lic opinion in this country has moved definitely forward to where PAIR SOUGHT IN ABDUCTION CASE 1 ' . & :- ft $ J DENT HAUPTMANN HUGE PROFITS FOR INFORMATION ON MUNITION MAKERS r.icrtin Hogan (left) and Jamei M. Mitchell (right) were being hunted along with Ernest Wallace after a Jail delivery In Ellensburg, Wash., and the kidnaping of Clarence Farrell, theatre man. Farrell wai releaeed the day following hit abduction. Authorltiea aald Wallace effected the releate of Hogan from Jail and Mitchell waa believed to have loined the nalr. (Associated Press Phots) STATE'S CHARGESiEXPOSED IN PROBE Court Declines to Order Prosecution Tell Theory of Crime Whether Slay ing of Child Done Alone Returns As High As 362 Per Cent for Manufacturer Claimed Investigator Names Leading Figures The vague cable stories coming out of Singapore lately about Japanese spies have a very Interesting back ground, If our diplomatic grapevine advnecs are to be trtistcd. You will not hear very much about the spy situation because the British governor, Sir Shenton Thomas, Is supposed to have issued an nppcal to British newsmen to go easy on it in the Interests of the king and empire. That appeal never falls to bring co operation, which really is voluntary censorship. The grapevine says that the Brit ish Intelligence police have raided Japanese homes; summoned one prominent Japanese resident Into headquarters only to have him fall dead on the floor; deported all sus pected spies (mostly Japanese) Just before naval maneuvers were to start, and then conducted the Important part of the maneuvers at night. These maneuvers are supposed to be the most spectacular yet under taken at Singapore. The British have a curtained $250,000,000 naval base there which they are hastening to completion. Ovir people hear that more than 10.000 laborers are at work on the project and that It will be finished by the end of next year, in stead of 1039. as originally planned The base will have two airports, ens at sea and one on land. These will accommodate about 1000 fight ing planes and the one on land will have a fortified underground section a to store planes and munitions. I It Is something worth spying on. (Continued on Page Three) REAMES MAY GET 28 IN -HOTEL FIRE; CONTINUE -HUNT LANSING, Mich., Dec. 13. P) Al the sorrowful task of probing the ruins of fire-swept Hotel Kerns went forward today, state police listed 28 "known dead," with 23 bodies recov ered, 16 of them Identified. Eleven bodies, of which the con suming flames left little more than skeletons, had been taken from the Ice -sheeted debris of what once was one of the state capital's popular meeting places. All were beyond Identification, except for a few per sonal effects, such as rings or other trinkets found with some of them. The mortality list among the guests who sought escape from the flames by Jumping from upper windows to the street or into the Grand rive., which flows at the rear of the hos telry, was Increased by one as State Representative D. Knox Hanna of Tuscola county died of his Injuries. He was the seventh member of the state legislature to die, six of them representatives and one a senator. At least three bodies were found In the ruins this morning, and mov ed to a temporary morgue set up In a nearby warehouse. Most estimates of the probable to tal dead ran around 35. -safe? ci Our ambassador to Rome. Breckin ridge Long, privately brought to Mr. Roosevelt a few days ago evidence of an Italian plot against Klnir Cotton. His evidence was a sample of a new synthetic product, manufactured by Milan textile mills from wood fibre. Enthusiasts assert it la caDable of replacing 80 per cent of Italy's cot ton consumption. Germany Is devel oping a similar product. Mr. Roosevelt considered it Impor tant enough to order a study of the sample by scientists of the agricul ture department. Their report will be made privately to the White Hems. STE1WER BELIEVES WASHINGTON, Dec. 13. (Spl ) Oregon may still have a fair chance to fill the vacancy on the United States bench for the ninth clrdult Senator Stclwer said yesterday after a call at the White House. He learned that the president would welcome suggestion of a candidate from Oregon. Stelwer explained thx; he did not wish to take up the mat ter If the president had already set tled upon his oholce. He lnfcrrr-1 that the president Is unlikely to re submit the name of District Jude Prank H. Norcross of Nevada, who .Vd appointed during the last session of congress but not confirmed. Oregon Is apparently united for Evan Rcames of Medford. who wr-s Indorsed by both senators, by Rep resentatlve Walter M. Pierce, Demo cratic national committeeman, and by numerous members of the bar and persona In political and business lire Stelwer said he would not person l.y submit Roames' name but his Indorse ment Is on record and he will c operate with Senator MrNary and others to win the appointment f' Oregon. Clarence Farrell, Ellensburg. Wash., theatre man, was released by two men. believed to have been Martin Hogan and Ernest Wallace, who abducted him after a Jail detiv ery. Farrell was found at a ranch near Sunnvalde. (Associated Press T FIRST OBJECTIVE OF L FLEMINGTON. N. J., Dec. 13. (V, Supreme Court Justice Thomas W Trenchard today denied II defense requests for particulars on the mur der indictment against Bruno Rich ard Hauptmann, Lindbergh kldn&p alaylng suspect, but directed the stay. to fulfill the defense demand for tht prosecution theory on how young Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr.. met his death. In an hour-long hearing in the presence of the defendant Haupt mann, the Justice told the atato that five days after the service of a de fense request It might supply all the information It can "with reasonable certainty" give on lt theory of tie cause of the young child's death. The court declined to order vhc state to specify whether it would pro ceed against Hauptmann on t'.ie theory that he murdered the child with premeditation, or whether It would contend that the baby was killed In the commission of a felony He likewise refused a request tc have the prosecution state whether, It would proceed against Hauptmann aa a, criminal who perpetrated t.tv crime single-handed, or as the mem ber of a gang. The defense met further reversal In Its efforts to have Trenchard order the ransom notes from the kidnaper to Col. Charles A. Lind bergh Impounded. State experts have said the notea were written by Haupt mann, In refuting this request Trenchard said he thought that Attorney Gen eral David T. WUcntTS, chief of the state's forces In the Hauptmann case, would grant defense attorneys per mission to examine the notes as much as necessary. Defense requests for Information whether the state contended all the ransom notes were written in the same hand, and byHauptmann, were held by Trenchard to "call for evi dence, and that the state Is not re quired to give." Wolf at the Door Merely Girl's Pet Police Discover LOS ANGELES. Dec. 13. (A." "Help." screamed a woman over the telephone, "there's a wolf t my door I" Police rushed to the address and sure enough a big gray tim ber wolf sst on the front porch, howling dismally. A sergeant ad vanced to lasso th. animal. It trotted out to meet him. The sergeant retreated. Then Miss Jean Talbot appeared. "Oh, I'm ao glad you found him," she sighed, and calmly toolt her pet wolf home. HELD OVER HEADS SOUGHT By POLICE Local authorities have spread search throughout the entire state for a Medford woman, whose name was withheld, wanted for the theft of a pocketbook from a local room ing house Tuesday night, and theft of an automobile belonging to F. A. Hubbard, of Fort Klamath. The purse contained a Jackson county bank billfold with 130 in cash, and waa said by city police to belong to Elnore Reed, of the Model Rooms. 320 East Main street. The woman believed to have made the robbery sometime after midnight Tuesday, - was housekeeper at the rooming house, and authorities have been given a complete description of her. She Is alleged to have taken the car from the rear of the rooming house. It ts a Chevrolet 1031 sport roadster, license number 162.212. The housekeeper la also said to have taken some clothing belonging, to Miss Reed. WASHINGTON, Dec. 13. OR The American Federation of Labor, listing its objectives in the next congress, places the 30-hour week first. Only a cut in work hours, Presi dent William Green said in present ing the A. F. of L. program, cm assure a "decent living" to millions now idle. Other proposals by the labor union; Extension of the National Recovery Act, with Ite collective bargaining guarantee. Equal representation of labor with Industry on code authorities, and In the administration of NRA. An Industrial disputes act, declared necessary because the decisions of the national labor relations board have been "flouted and denied." Unemployment Insurance and old age pensions. Complete restoration of the cuts in salaries of federal employes. CHIEF OF POLICE Assembling con a regional leader?, hare ranvaAd the new conpirss and have reported to the administration that It will eo wild on the bonus bill but will ho l.mie otherwise. The h'st N"' L-1 piita.ar maker futt off ihf record the other day: "If we d-n"l shorten xhorr brenn hm we'll be in them our.vef soon " f M:j. Ro'"'"!''? .'..!:-: r'c;,I .'ir'y at- nlerice:! to wn-v a'vn;; iiir ( Cou tain uea ju Pw Eia t HERTNGTON, Kas.. Dee. 13. fAP) Two men who kidnaped Art Calkins, chief of police, here today were fought throughout central Kansas while authorities here speculated on the possibility the pair were those who terrorized Belleville. Kas., rest dents early today after their compan ion waa killed In a motor accident. P. H. Knuth, drucclst who witness ed the abduction of Calkins, said the men were driving a small dark car into mhleh they hurtled the police chief after he had stopped one of them for questioning. Officers point ed out that the marked men who fled from Belleville about 6 ovior Mils morning were driving a dark blue Nph sedan stolen from Peter Oorpeni,. Joe E Lynch, city attorney, aald that a cl-.e description of the men na not obtained, making a check 'n the B'llrviue ansle difficult r'D .o.lie is about 00 miles north- FAR OVERLAST WEEK NEW YORK. Dec. 13 fT) Load ings of revenue freight by railroads during the current week, to be pub lished tomorrow by the Association of American Railroads, are estimated at 555.000 ears, an Increase of IS pr cent over the preceding week which Included the Tnanlmglving day ho'i day, and 83 per cent ahead of the same week last year. WALTERPTERCETAKES L DEHORN ADDICTS WILL HELP IN CONVICTIONS PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 13. (AP) While officials pieced together evi dence for the prosecution of two druggists charged with involuntary manslaughter as the result of 22 deaths from poisoned alcohol, 19 men were booked as material witnesses. Among the 19, police said, are de natured alcohol drinkers who will testify as to where and under what conditions the Illegal drinks were purchased. PORTLAND LUMBER FIRM DEPRIVED OF BLUE EAGLE WASHINGTON, Dec. 13. (AP) The Southeast Portland Lumber company of Portland, Ore., today was deprived of Its blue eagle hy NRA for failure to comply with a labor relations board decision that tf. W. Martin and O. K. Beers be reemploy ed. The board found that Martin and Beers were discharged for union activities. Br NATHAN ROBERTSON WASHINGTON, Dec. 13. ( AP) Huge war-tlmo profits ranging as I high as 800 per cent for a mining I company and 362 per cent for a I manufacturer of war material were disclosed today by the senate muni tions committee. Earnings of the Bethlehem Load ing company in 1918 were given as 151.018, or 362 per cent. Those of the Calumet and Hecla Mining com pany In 1917 were listed as ag.soo. 000. or 800 per cent. This was developed shortly after President Roosevelt had suggested close cooperation between his group to formulate legislation to take the profits out of war and the senate In vestigators. irritations Lessened This apparently lessened the irri tation displayed by committee mem bers yesterday because the president had gone ahead before they had com pleted their Inquiry. Investigators placed before the committee figures from the Internal revenue bureau showing proflta for scores of companies ran from 20 per cent of invested capital to 383 per cent. Alger C. Hiss, committee Investi gator who conducted the Inquiry, developed that In many cases the profits were made on cost plus con- tracts and that In slme Instances cash was advanced to the companies by' the government to finance their production. Aa the names of many of the na tion's leading figures and most of the big companies were poured into the commltteo record, Pierre 8. Du Pont, on tho witness stand, protested that the profits were misleading. Many Leaders Named He said the government got back POLICE CONSIDER T Oklahoma Underworld Sends Warning to Four As Grand Jury Opens Probe Ransom Money Possession SWN BY CHINESE SHANOHAI, Dec. 13. (fl) The deaths of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Stam, American missionaries, were reported to the China Inland mission office today in a cryptic telegram from Its Wuhu office: The message, read: "St a mi' bodies found 15 miles frm Tslngteh." Further details were not Included In the message from Wuhu and the mission Office here was extending every .effort to obtain more Informa tion. Since no mention was made In the telegram of the two-months -old baby of the young missionary couple, the mission authorities did not know whether the baby's body likewise hi1 been found or whether the kidnapers who captured the Stams In southern Anhwel province several days ago might still be holding the child. SCHLESINGER'S WIFE BLAMES MONEY LOSS LOS ANGELES, Dec. 13. ( AP) Lee Schleslnger, department store executive, drove his auttsr.obile into the Columbia river near Portland. Ore., and fled to South America two vesrs ago because of financial re- verses in the opinion of his wife expressed in a copyrttntrfl interview published tortay in the Los Angeles Mo., ! PORTLAND. Ore., Dec. 13. fAP) A special dispatch to the Journal to- , nay said Congressman Walter M Pierce ent to a hospital yesterday t Kxumlner, I for a few davs' ret after having auf- . .-.- fered a trrlnr ttJ.rlt. He mwU to toula II. Goodson of LlbertT, : resume his duties early next week, student at the University of Missouri. The pierce office waa reopened Mon-' attends the alma mater of hia psr ' 1av noon the arrKai of the cong- 'erts, two grandpsrenta. MMer. broth- , rramn and Mrs. Vierce from Ore- er. four uncles, lour couilus, aunt Happel was taken to police hcadqusr gun. and peat iuav, ura tor qucmvuujjj. S PAROLE TO WAIT According to word from Salem to day Gordon L- Schermerhorn's name will not be on the list to be const d ered by the state parole board as Its next meeting, slated for Wednesday or Thursday of next week. Schermer horn, former Jackson county sheriff, new serving a prison sentence for complicity In ballot theft, has not served sufficient time for parole con sideration, it was said In Salem. (Continued on Page Ituee) KLAMATH RELIEF KLAMATH PALLS, Dec. 13. (AP) Irked because of the county's fail ure to authorize a dole, pickets were placed at all SERA projects here to day In an effort to call a strike among relief workers. Pew had Joined the movement satd by county authorities to have started In a minority group from the relief lists. No trouble -was anticipated. A formal demand for 7500 Christ mas bonus has been referred to state relief officers. The demand asks that all persons or relief receive a nego tiable check for $5 before December 22 ktnd that all heads of families re ceive 810 plus one dollar for every dependent. PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 13. (AP) Although robbery was the apparent motive, Investigators today consider ed many theories as they sought the slayer of Simon Miah. retired furni ture dealer and Jovial host who dreaded the solitude of his home. His asoo diamond ring, the watch he carried and what cash he kept at his home were taken by an Intruder who bashed In Mlsh's head and left his body In a fish pond In the yard Investigators aald Mlsh had visit ors earlv Tuesday evening, and the slaying evidently occurred between 11 d. m. and 6 a. m. yesterday morning. Late In the morning his body and the body of hts dog were found in the pond by the gardener, With a large staff of investigators working on the case, Detective cap. tain Jack Keegan said H was learned Mlsh invited many guests to his house for poker tests and always bought the drinks. ! Since hla wife died five years ago, Mlsh often said he was "afraid liv ing alone In this bouse.'? U . was learned. Two persons who were believed to have been in Mlsh's house on the eve of the slaying were sought for ques tioning. - John A. Gunderson, who three years ago filed suit against Mlsh for alien ation of hla wife' affections, told state police at Medford today he hsi not talked with Mlsh since the law suit. He formerly worked In Mih' furniture store. Dr. Warren Hunter, pathologist of the University of Oregon medical school, said today Mlsh waa alive when his body was thrown Into the fish pond-. Death was due to two specific causes, he said the blow on the head, and drowning. The dog had drowned and no bruise marks were discovered. OKLAHOMA CITY, Dec. 13. (AP Threats of death by the underworld harrassed four federal prisoners as they prepared to testify before a grand Jury today In the latest chap ter of the Urschel kidnaping case. The four Edward Feldman, Clara Pel d man, Alvln H. Scott, and Mar garet Hurtlenne. brought here from Oregon after the discovery of addi tional portions of the 8200.000 ran som paid by Charles P. Urschel. Okla homa City oil millionaire were be ing guarded by federal officers. Agents who disclosed the threats would not say whether they came from friends of kidnapers already -convicted, or from members of the abduction gang who so far have evaded Justice. A report of a local "master mind." tho "finger man" who arranged de tails or the kidnaping, gained cre dence as the word went out that the grand Jury would search deeply Into this phase of the investigation. It waa learned that Felriman. 32 year old stepson of Albert Bates, one or the convicted members of the gang. Is booked at the Jail under an assumed name, and has been spirited out for questioning several times since hla arrival here. M'ADOO TAKEN ILL ON ARRIVAL PANAY ISLE MANILA, Dec. 13. (AP) Senator William Glbbs McAdoo of California was taken 111 today at Do Ilo, Panay Island, after arrival by army amphib ian plane from Manila. An unconfirmed report said that Mr. McAdoo waa threatened with ap pendicitis, but Dr. Ollbert Cullen. American quarantine physician, an nounced: "There la nothing to worry about. He needs rest." HEAVY RAIn'rEMOVES KLAMATH FALLS SNOW KLAMATH FALLS, Dec. 13. P) A week of clear, sub-freezing weather was ended In Klamath Falls tod-iv with one of the heaviest rainfalls of the season. Snow from a recent stor-n wsa quickly melted. SUSPECT IN EAST ST. liOIrtS, Mo, Dee. 13 (AP) John Hsppel. sought for the "trunk murder" of his wife In Los Angele recently, was arrested here today, Happel, a former at. Iou.an. was arrested as he rame to St. Louis on a bus. A nation-wide search had ben conducted for him since hts wife's dismembered body waa found In a trunk in Los Angeles on December 8 1' Eleven Children Since 1926 Give Stork Prize Lead TORONTO, DM. 13. P Mrs. Matthew Kenny held wide l.d 1ajr In the Chnrles Vanc Millar 500.000 "Stork Biwp,lm." after siring birth to her eleventh child since 1929, last nlht. The birth of a babjr lrl put Mrs. Krnny two up on her nearest rlvsl In the contt for the prlre Miliar, millionaire aporUman-lawyer. of. frrrd for the Toronto tomm who should have the nvwt children "n the 10 ye.ra followlnn hie dra'.h in I9S" Provision for the pne waa eanta)n4 in Millar's will . Mm. Krnny'a nearest competitor la Mrs. Or see Bsnato. who es-pi-cM this to give birth to her nlnih rhllrt sin- 102". CHRISTMAS HOURS TO BE DISCUSSED Due to a difference of opinion among Medford merchanta relative to closing hours at Chriatmaa time. meeting of all merchants will be held In the Chamber of Oommerc to morrow. Friday, at 4 p. m.. It wsa announced this morning by W. T. Issacs, chairman of the retail mer chants committee of the Jackson County Chsmber of Commerce. A tentative eurvey made laat week would lndlcat that a majority of stores wished to close early, but since that time It has developed that there la a strong sentiment against this. In order thst an amicable arrange ment can be made, aatUfactory to everyone, the meeting has been callid by Mr. Isaaos ao that every merchant may eapress hla opinion. All mer chants In Medford era urged to at tend so that whatever arrangements completed tomorrow afternoon will be agreeable to everyone. BELOW SUM LABOR ON RELIEF SEATTLE, Dec. 13. (fF) Prof. O. B. Thornton of Wahlngton State col lece presented figures to the second Paciflv Northwest Regional Planning conference here today show 1 tig tasc "even In the semi -prosperous year of , 1930, the average Washington farmer ' received leas per month than the a7 erage Individual laborer on relief." Prof. Thornton asserted that "what. Is true of Washington, In most cases Is true of all states of the region." The cure, he asserted, Is for the pacific northwest to become "self centercd" In developing industries and home markets for Its present products, too. "The state of California," he told the conference's Industry and com merce committee, "has practically cornered the orange market of the country, simply through advertising that California oranges contain mora vitamins than oranges from other localities. i "Why cannot the same thing bs aald for Washington apples? If, through advertising, the majority of the people In the United States couM be Induced to eat an apple each even ing and drink a glass of hot water In the morning, three things wouid be accomplished: Increase of ap?l production, increase of fuel consump tion and increase of the health of the people CONVICT WILSON SLAYING WIDOW i th PASO. Tel., Dec. 13. (API- Arthur C. Wilson was convicted 01 murder for th. desert slsylng of Mrs. jlrena DeBolt. Ohio widow, today, by la Jury which filed his penslty at IH. imprisonment. nrfar. a courtroom crowded w!tn women, the Jury of l men. which ibejan Ita deliberation at S:S8 P m (MHTI yesterday, brought In a writ ten verdict. I Wilson waa obviously nervous as the Jury entered, but smiled at nis attorneys. i Mrs. OeBolt wsa found slsln west of Van Horn. Tel.. November 7. ID", her hody stripped of clothes and !) in currency and her automo bile mlsaing. The prosecution aald Wilson, uer companion on an automobile trip westward from Cleveland, had beaten and atranglcd her to desth for her moae When Senator Robert R. Reynolds of North Carolina visited Ambassador Josephue Daniels In Mexico, D, F., recently, he went native In dress. dnnning tne garb of a don of old Mexico. BKVKRLY Illl.t.f?, Cnl., Dec. 12. The liitfifst news in flic impcrs toilay whs furnished by Hie Japanese ambassador. It was pretty strong mcdinine. He just snid that if Kiit'lnnd and America made Japan mad ennuuh they would go and take all of North China. In other words, if Max Haer, tho world's eluimpion, dne anything to me, f am goiiiR to jump onto little Shirley Temple and (,'ivo her a ','nnd spank in i;. Well, if America is just even half smart diplomatically they will lauch the whftlo thins off and stall thinv's nlonif till Rus sia in ready and just say: "Sio 'em Tipe, he is your meat." fix