Medford Mail Tribune AWARDED Pulitzer Prize FOR 1934 Thirtieth Year MEDFORD, ORKGOX, SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 1935. No. 1. The Weather t ureat : Fair Sunday and Mon day; tin change In temperature. Temperature: HiplieM jeaterday 53 . lowri eMerriay 33 By PAl L MALLON e (Copyright, 1935, by Paul Mallon) jf WASHINGTON. March 23. A per gonal understanding ta supposed to exist between Postmaster General Parley and the b o a a, whereby Sunny Jim will relinquish t h a postmaster gen eralship to han dle the Roosevelt campaign tor re election next year. The agreement la supposed to have been made casually and un officially months PAUL MALLON - ago. No tlrrve was sel lor me cnange. It certntnly will not be made at any time when Farley la under fire, even such pop-gun lire as Huey Long has been offering In the aenate. That much la certain. In fact, for the aake of appearances. It may be necessary for both Farley and the White House to deny any auch move Is contemplated. After Long adjourns for the summer, they may come out with H. The general assumption In Mr. Far ley's inner circle la that he will not Jump until fall at the earliest and , next spring at the latest. This explains why President Roose Telt has delayed so long in applying hla pollMcal-offlclal aegrcgatlon rule to his political manager. You may recall that, months ago, he ordered all holders of party Jobs and official government positions to sever one connection or the other. Amid si lence at the White House and the postoffice, Farley has continued both Jobs. A ft. Vtarlnv thmlrht he WOtlld relinquish the national chairmanship and remain In the cabinet. His pals ay he lilted the official life. Later he discovered the postoffice was dull. It operates In a routine way. He could live In the FIJI islands and It would make little or no difference In the functioning of the malls. Also, whatever patronage changes he could effect from his official po sition already have been affected. He cannot even give a stamp to a friend now. Apparently this would prevent Far ' ley from realizing any secret ambl 'tlons he may have had to run tor gov ernor of New York in '36. He cannot run for governor and conduct the presidential campaign at the same time. It l generally understood Mr. Roosevelt does not want to ruin Far ley's governorship chances. But there la noone else to run the presidential campaign. The old talk about Commerce Secretary Roper being switched to the postmaster generalship Is being re vived. No one else la being mention ed at least not where anyone can hear It yet. Who will get Roper's Job also seems to be undecided. A new place to hold private confer ences has been discovered by Mr. Far ley and RFC Chairman Jesse Jones. It Is the lad place you would think of In a closed automobile at the curb on busy Pennsylvania avenue, outside Jones' office. No place could be more public and at the same time more private. No one could listen in. The choice ot such an unusual spot by the two eminent New Dealers one morning this week has spurred con siderable speculation as to what they were conferring about. Until Jones tells. you will never , .. 1.V.I.H ! not encouraslnii. be- ' . na...r tiu nnvthlna. If cause juiivo ...... t ,h. nt.i.mn on the root of the car heard aright, Farley will not want to tell. Farley always line.-. patronage matters to hlnw-elf. especi ally when h!s friends are Involved. Mr. Morcenthau s new silver buying program means nothing new except that he has at last been able to find two nallona to cooperate In a trade balancing UUa he has had for months. He buys their silver and pays them In sold theoretically, but not actually. Thev keep the gold on deposit here and' use It'to pay for goods bought from us. It Is merely a device lor equalizing their unfavorable trade balances by selling sliver to us for goods. It would be highly important If the amount involved were not so small. (The Mexican deal aiiioulited to $1. 120.000 and Guatemala to ,35.000.) Also It would be Imprewlvely signifi cant If It could be worked with other larger nations. However, those which hase the unfavorable trade balances do not have the -liver and vice versa. No other negotiations are pending. There was nothing subtle about At lantic City's bid for the democratic national convention. It merely shott ed Atlantic City to the world acs'n before the start of the bathing reason. The New Deal press acent system may have Become good recently, but At lantic City's always was good. The decision on the convention site will be made a year from now. No one has glv.n he mauter any consid- iCoiuimiro on Page Eight) wli Italin lor lall PENDLETON. March 23 I API EKvklnc dnmnKc-n of 20 000 b'rausc of Injuries suffered in a fall down the stairs of the Bond building here. R. E. Whlteman has filed suit In circuit court aaalnst Charlfs H. Rey nolds, receiver of the First Inland National ri,ntc nf Pnul Ir ".nil. O'Ailfl of the building Whiten-.an claims his Injuries to be permanent. l m 't- S'' SENATE APPROVES RELIEF AC! WITH RIDER Democratic Leaders Swing 'Big Stick' Filibuster Thwarted Largest Ap propriation in History Wins, 65 to 18. WASHINGTON, March 23. AP) A senate torn and weary from eight weeks of tussling with the largest single legislative appropriation In world history, today capitulated to big stock pressure from democratic leaders and passed the administra tion 14.880,000,000 relief bill. The measure, carrying a mild sil ver Inflation rider, was speeded to a conference with the house for a set tlement of differences by the decisive margin of 68 to 16. The $375,000,000 silver rider, ad vanced by Senator Thomas (D.. I Okla.), was accepted only aa a par liamentary move to prevent a fili buster. Leaders expect It to he strick en out in the senate-house confer ence. Decisively, the senate defeated before a final vote a proposed amendment for a M.000,000,000 green back Issue to pay for the whole pro gram. Designed to provide work for 3, 500.000 employables now on relief rolls after the 9880.000,000 for direct aid In exhausted, the big measure on final roll call drew the support of 55 democrats, 11 republicans, and the two farmer-labor and progressive sen ators. Only six democrats and ten repub licans answered a meek "no" when Vice President Garner, put the final question. First Indications that strong-nrm methods would be employed to choke off an Incipient filibuster came Just as the senate convened, an hour earlier than customary. Senator Robinson, the majority chteftan, moved to table a rider by Senator Thomas providing for a broad mandatory silver Inflation to make money more plentiful and help pay the relief bill. This parliamen tary club Is even more drastic than cloture for It automatically shuts off further debate. The tabling motion carried 40 to 33. after which Thomas was permit ted to put In a milder silver amend ment for the sate of checking fur ther delaying tactics and with the ultimate view of having the provis ion eliminated In conference. CONSUMER APT ALSO ABSORB NEW OREGON BEER TAX PORTLAND, Ore., March 23. (AP) Will the person who absorbed the beer have to absorb the additional tax imposed on the amber suds by the Oregon legislature? If so It may mean a 10-ounce In stead of a 12-ounce glass for a dime. It was revealed by the Oregon food and beverage dispensers' group which haa a headache from the beer prob lem. Both "jrcwers-dlstrlbutors and re tntlers refused to pay the additional 68 cents t barrel tax, Virgil Bennett, business manager for the dispensers' group announced. He revealed the problem has perplexed the Industry for two weeks. He said brewers-distributors claim the tax payment -would result In a 16-cent loss on each barrel. On the other hand dispensers can't pay expenses out of beer pro fits without the added tax and the public won't go for 10 -ounce beer for a dime, Bennett said. Bennett said members of his group, representing 1790 of the state's 5200 retailers was all set to make future purchases from distributors who have agreed to absorb the tax. But today the dispensers were not ified that the teamsters' union had served' notice that, during a "mora torlu m " that has been d ec 1 ared by the union, wholesalers were not to take any new accounts under penalty of losing their union drivers. Al Rosser, business agent for the union, declined to comment on the union's action other than to state the "moratorium'' was atrreed upon under the union Jurisdictions! fight and doesn't concern the retailer wholesaler fight over the new beer taxation. DIVE OVER CLIFF PENDLETON, Ore.. March 23 (AP)A broken leif and other Injur ies were suffered by A. J. Shepperd. 50, of Portland yesterday when a rear tire blo-vout pent his car hurt Una over a 125 -root embankment of Umatilla river 17 miles west of Pen- dleton. The rar came to reAt azninst a tree with Rhrpperd pinned beneath the I wreckage. ' Mate police and M; Olive Whit 1,. k, ru.ini". iMr'. t-imer'd lir.st Hid and bhepperd a sent to Port-Hand. STORM MOVES Western Kansas and adjacent storm. This picture was taken aa Kaa. (Associated Press Photo! OKLAHOMA CITY. March 23. (AP) Electrical storms squelched the danger of further dust storms in all except the extreme northwest ern part of Oklahoma tonight and added Immeasurably to wheat crop prospects. One death was laid to the storm and hall In some sections caused much damage. Tom Hall, about 45. a Mannford horse trader, waa kl'.led near Brlstow by a lightning bolt. DENVER. Colo.. March 23. (AP) A 95 per cent loss of Baca county's fall wheat crop was attributed today to this weeks deluge of dust In southeastern Colorado, but Investi gators colncldentatly discounted the effect of the black blizzard on hu mans and livestock. As the swirling storm subsided In the Isolated region, which borders Kansas, Oklahoma and New Mexico,, county health authorities Inclined to the belief that four deaths n Spring field and two in Lamar, Colo., were unrelated cases of pneumonia In fluenced only slightly, if at all, the dust Irritation. by TO SAVE PARTY BUFFALO. K. T., March 23. (AP) Despite a warning from Norman Thomas that Huey Long or the Rev. Charles E. Coughlln "will capture the movement If we don't," the national committee of the socialist party to day voted to withhold Its support of a farmer-labor-unemployed party coalition. A subcommittee was named to de termine sentiment In favor of such a party throughout the country, thereby Indicating the decision was not definite. Thomas, 1932 candidate for presi dent, asserted: "Huey Long or Father Coughlln will capture the movement, which Is coming anyway, aa the spiritual or actual leaders, if we don't." E E LOS ANGELES. March 23. l AP) Little America, the land that Ilea at "the bottom of the world." came here today on the Upa of eight men. the first of 74 to return from more (han a year's stay In the strange, unwanted continent at the South Pole. They were the vsngusrd of Admlrsl Richard E. Byrd's expedition, the first to reach the mainland. Orecon: Fair south and unsettled with occasional rain north portion Sunday and Monday; no change In temperature: strong southwest wind off the coast. SAN FRANCISCO. March 23. (APi Outlook for far western statea from March 25 to 30. Generally unettled. Chanceable weather with temperatures below normal. Rains and snows In north Pacific s'.ate. snriniui sniii BUFFALO. N. Y., March 23. ( APM Member of the national executive TO SOCIALISTS GIRD committee of the socialist party, within my own time. New genera wideiy unlit In their views, todav de- tions are comlm; on and elen'e and cided airalnat immediste orpani7atlon of h nt.oi.Jil farm-labor nartv despite the ursine of Norman I'homaa. Dres- 1 idcntial candidate La Ui2. TOP SOIL AROUND : ; 1 states were digging out from under a cloud of fine particles of sand and GASSAWAY PLANS TO SHOW HUEY UP; 'CLEAN HIS PLOW WASHINGTON, March 23. (API Oklahoma's cowboy congressman leaned back In his swivel chair today and announced that he would go to the house floor within a few days "to clean Huey Long's plow and show him up for the kind of he really Is." so-and-so "I'm flxltit; to burn him down," said Representative P. L. Gassaway (O.. Okla., puffing at a cigarette, "and I'm going to use hla own book to do It." On the desk of the south westerner, who Is proud of hla boots and shoe string necktie he wears, lay a copy of "Every Man a King." The book In which Senator Long describes his own life and expounds hla share -the-wealth program. "Huey In this book I think it's on page six, says that 'From my earliest recollection- I hated farm work'," Gassaway said. "Then he goes ahead and says he wa under compulsion to go to church i He tell , 7 .. . 8.. . ""- and mother and ran away. "And he adds that he went to work for a produce fellow and sold a car load of potatoes he didn't have. "He unwittingly shows himself up as the type that revolts against any authority, and would go to any limit to do that. "The communist and fascists that people are talking about don't amount to a threat. Any time we want to get rid of them, all we've got to do la to send the army after them. "It's the guys who have crawled Into office on false pretenses to the Illiterate, ignorant, or trusting peo ple, who are playing hell with the country.- Gassaway remarked that Long had "promised every man In the country 5,000. when he knows he can't make good." DETROIT MEET TO DETROIT. March 23. (AP) Cir cuit Judge Robert M. Toms Issued an Injunction today rorblddlng Inter ference with Mrs. Anna Hauptmann's plan to appear In the Detroit naval armory Sunday night In furtherance of her erfort to raise funds for an appeal by her husband. Bruna Rich ard Hauptmann. Hauptmann la un der death sentence for the murder of the the kidnaped Lindbergh baby. The injunction was obtained by Arnold Weber, adviser of Mrs. Haupt mann after Lieut.-Commander M. R. Wortley, of he Michigan naval forces had announced use of the armory had been refused. Judge Toms upheld Weber's claim that two members of the army board of control had en tered into a contract with him. PITTSBURG. March 23. MP) To Andrew W. Mellon, active and opti mistic at 60, America's flnnmial up heaval of the past few years is Just "a bad quarter of an hour." The former secretary of the treas ury and builder of one of the great Industrial empires will be 80 years old tomorrow. While denying that with his age he had acquired any "gift of proph ecy." the noted banker aald: "America Is going through a bsa quarter of an hour, but present conditions, however d 1st rwi nsr. e pecislly In trrm of human suffer' nR. (reflect onlv a passing phase In our history. Look forward to seeing a re i turn n normal conditions attain new Inventions and the advance In human lntejliiine will ol many .problems that now seem Insurmount - Uble." IN MIDWEST dust deposited during a sever earth approached Garden City, E PERKI SOCIAL SECURITY PROTEST SHUNTED WASHINGTON, March 23. (API President Roosevelt today passed over protests of one of his own cabinet members Secretary Perkins and told the house Democratic ways and means committee leaders to go ahead and perfect their own social security bill. Secretary Perkins had made fre quent protests at a number of changes In the bill. One, made on the recom m end allon of S"ec re t a ry Morgenthau without her direct ap proval, stepped up the tax rate pro posed for compulsory, contributory old age annuities which the com mittee now haa classified aa- "old age benefits." The labor aecretary, however, was particularly worried by changes the committee made when It decided that the social Insurance board, which will handle much of the ma chinery set up under the broad plan, should be an independent agency I, nofc undm. tw departm(mt miss Perklna had wanted to have some control over the board, but the committee decided against her. E KILLS SERGEANT HAMILTON FIELD. Marin County, Calif., March 23. (AP) Struck down by an empty plane, which Jumped Its blocks as the motor warmed. Staff Sergeant Samuel M, Woolard of Hamilton field was killed today, and four planes were dam aged as an army pursuit squadron of 34 planes were lined up to start a mass flight to their base at River side. Woolard's neck was broken and his skull fractured. He died within a few minutes. The thirty remaining planes, de layed only a short time by the tragedy, took off for the south planned, while a board of Inquiry at once began Investigation of the accident. f In Congress fBy the AsuiMatcd Pre) After eight weeks of battling, the senate passed the 4 880,000,000 work- relief bill, 68 to 16, and returned It to the house. Herbert Hoover's call for republi cans to fight "new deal" spur capi tal political gossip on 10.16 possibili ties. A drive for new taxes pressed ad ministration leaders with outcome In doubt, President Roohevelt signed docu ment for Philippine home rule. Administration and organized la bor apparently got on more friendly terms. Senate and house conferres agreed on Increase In army to 165,000 enlist ed men. Secretary Wallace announced loans on cotton to be continued for IBSfi crop without stating poundage rate. House leaders prepared for quirk action Monday on a new airmail bill to permit Increased rates to contract ors. Henri Tare f'halr WHITE PLAINS. N. Y., March 21. (API Albert H. Fish, who escaped detection for more than six years af ter the "ritual" killing of little Oracc Bnrid. was headed toward the elec tric chair today si the result of his convlr tion for murder. AtHiifcitn lol lei) TOKYO, March 21. (APi Police, today prevented an apparent at tempt to aHMna' Baron KItokuro Ikkl, president of the privy council, arrest in? a member of a patriotic ork:HiiIjUon who atu mp'.td to forrr , his way Into lkkl home armed with i dagger. iTAXL JNI WITH La Follette Bloc Plans In come Tax Boosts "Pink Slip' Repeal Storm Center to Break Monday. WASHINGTON, March 23. AP) A drive for new and huge taxes, In volving In some degree the thorny bonus Issue, hung threateningly to day over administration leaders In con press. Looking ahead, they gathered their forces to repel an attempt In the senate next week at upward revision of the Income tax rates schedule that will accompany debat on re pealing the "pink slip" publicity feature of the present law. Meanwhile, the Chamber of Com merce of the United Statea warned that a aenate "drive" Is forming to force consideration of drastic Income tax Increases, particularly corporate. It also held up the possibility that new taxes will be needed to finance payment of the bonus, if that la passed over President Roose velt's veto. Supporters of the Patman plan to pay the bonus In newly Issued cur reney, approved yesterday by the house, denied that It called for any such action. In the matter of new taxes, ad ministration leaders had planned to postpone such legislation until late In the session when estimated outgo and Income can be more definitely compared. The senate's liberal bloc however, haa taken steps to bring the question up almost at once. The "pink slip" Issue. Involving re peal of present provisions making In come tax returns open to public in spectton, may be taken up on Mon day. Then Senator La Follette (P.. Wis.), plans to demand revision of the tax schedules. The chamber warned that La Fol- lette's proposal calls for an Increase from four to six per cent In normal Income tax rates, a reduction In married man's exemption from 2,- 500 to 92.000, and a decrease In a single person's exemption from $1,000 to $B00. Although encouraged by the fact the Income tax receipts are running more than 33 per cent above last year, -Administration leaders aald to day that could hardly be taken as promising no new taxation. T PAST WEEK GAINS (By Associated Press) SAN FRANCISCO Pacific coast business banged along at about the best pace In two years. Retail sales were a bit better and wholesale trade Improved with moderate gaina shown In freight traffic, electric power output, lumber and oil pro duction, and industrial employment. Despite a dust choked mid-west, business and Industry stepped for ward last week Into the promised land of spring trade. Hand In hand as leaders of the week's statistics were automobile and production and bank clearings. Motor makers produced 100,065 units last week, as estimated by Cram's, the first time since 1030 that the 100.000-mark has been passed. The rise from the previous week was a little leas than 3.000 units. Bank clearings for the week ended Wednesday were the highest this year, and some analysts Interpreted this to mean the general public had started Its long-delayed spring buy ing In anticipation of this year's late Etuiter, although income tax pay ments undoubtedly were a potent factor In swelling the total. FEDERAL RESERVE LOANS DECLINE WA8H.KGTON. March 23. (AP) Despite administration pleaa, loans by member banka of the federal re serve system were shown today to have decreased i800.0OO.000 during 1034 aa compared to the previous year. This report was made today by the federal reserve board In Its monthly bulletin, along with figures that member bank deposit rose 6,700. 000.000 In 10:t4. 'G-! FILM HERO ROLE WASHINGTON. March 23 fAP) A requeat by Hollywood to r ake mo tion pictures preentlng special agents of the department of Justice appeared likely today to be rejected. Word to that effect was ulven out In authoritative quart-era simultan eously with Issuance of a statement by the department that It "has ap proved no motion picture scenario or production purporting to deal with Its work" Find Slot Machine Jackpot Sewed up, A 300 For 8 Shot VANCOITVER. Wash . March 23. (APt Heay hammers amasl-ed through the metal caes and in tricate cadgets of a collection of nlot machines here today as dep uty sheriffs discussed what they regarded aa a "new high" In dis honest operation of the machines. Deputy Sheriff Tom McKesg re lated that he dropped 300 slugs Into the slot of one machine and all he got out of it was a return of eight slugs and a sore shoulder. In snother machine, he aald, the jack-pot, alluringly full of coins, whs soldered In a closed poalilon. ITALY HITLER European Nations Agree to 'Unity of Purpose' in Arms Parley Troops Move Nearer Rhine More Men to Colors. Ily Alexander H. Lhl (Copyright, 1935. by the Associated Press) PARIS. March 23. France. Italy and England agreed today to stand together "In complete unity of pur pose" In dealing with the German arms crisis. At Britain's Insistence, the tri power parley held here to prepare the way for Anglo-Oerman conver sation In Berlin Monday and Tues day agreed to proceed cautiously and survey the ground thoroughly before forcing the Issue before the League of Nations. rnt. Anthonv Eden, -who will ac company foreign minister. Sir John Simon, to Berlin tomorrow, spoke for CI rent Britain; Foreign Minister Pierre Laval, who vesterdav demand ed "re-grouplng of the allies" against Germany, represented rrance; unarr sccretary of state, Fulvio Suvtch, was Italy's spokesman. Even aa the three met over the luncheon table and the council tables at the Qual D'Orsay. the French general staff announced transfer of aome 30.000 troops to garrisons nearer the Rhine. Italy, through Premier Benito Mussolini, summoned 220.000 more men to the colors. The official communique which announced the tripartite parley's "unity of purpose" confirmed Si mon's statement before the British house of common that hla -and Eden's conferences with Adolf Hit ler would be "purely exploratory." PITTSBURG, March 23. (AP) Dr. Charlea A. Beard, chronicler of American history, looked upon the international situation today and voiced hla belief that the will to war la afloat once more In Oormeny. The author of "The Rise of Ameri can Civilisation" said he sees Eu rope, "where the tension Is greater than 1014." not far from armed con flict. As for the United States Dr. Beard said that although "President Roose velt will want to keep out of It," the reaction of Americana "when they get a smell of the war proflta" can not be predicted. RELIEF LAUNCHED PORTLAND. March 23. MP) At room 207. Oregon building, the com mittee investigating the adminis tration of the state relief setup in Oregon got down to business today. Everyone with a grievance was asked to make an affidavit. Gov ernor Martin had Instructed that there be no "whitewashing!" that because of complslnts. largely from organizations of the unemployed, a complete and thorough Investiga tion be conducted. No public hearings will be held but delegations of from three to five persons representing organlr-a tlons may visit the rather restricted quarters In the Oregon building Chairman EI win A. McCornack of the Investigating committee aald any written complaint must be In such form as will permit it being used aa an affidavit. RULE ACT SIGNED WASHINGTON. March 23. f API- Surrounded by beaming Filipinos, President Roosevelt today signed the document which provide for home rute for the far away Islands in the 10-year period that must elapse be fore complete Independence becomes effective. With members of the Philippine delegation and Secretaries Hull and Dern looking on, Mr. Roosevelt ap proved In the cabinet room at the White House the constitution which goes far toward carrying out the promise ,f freedom for the Islands made 37 years ago. I IN COMMENT ON I NEW DEAL POLICY i .Declares 'Propogandized Millenium' Docs Not Work Money Tinkering Held Check on Recovery First Gun of '36 Campaign SACRAMENTO, Calif., March 28. (AP) Caustic criticisms of the na tional administration and vibrant calls for a rebirth of the Republican party were sounded here today by former President Herbert Hoover and Col. Theodore Roosevelt. Both said the Democratic Roose velt regime wa pointing the country toward bankruptcy. They called upoa the nation to reject the administra tion brand of "bureaucracy and regi mentation." Whether the Hoover pronounce ment signified preparation for his active appearance In the 1P36 politi cal arena was the subject of varying opinions, he himself, left one clue, however, when he said : ' . . . Rebirth of the Republican party transcends any personal Inter est or the selfish Interest of any group." Col. Roosevelt charged the ad ministration with "hampering re covery by an Insensate mass of regu lations Imposed on farming and mislnem bv a narrow. Inexperienced, political bureaucracy." Some of the highlights of the message follow: The theories or this administra tion do not work. They are no longer a propagandixed mtllenlum; they are self -exposed. We stand on the threshold of a great forward economic movement. If only the paralyzing effects of mis taken governmental policies and activities may be removed. The present conception of a na tional economy based upon scarcity must In all common sense be re versed to an economy based upon production. The Republican party has the greateat responsibility that haa come to It alnce the daya of Abraham Lincoln. Hiat responsibility la to raise the standard In defense of fundamental American principles. Effective reform of abuses In buat- neas and finance must be undertaken through regulation and not through bureaucratic dictation or government ope rat ton. The American people have directly before them the Issue of maintain ing and perfecting our system of orderly Individual liberty under con stitutionally conducted government, or of rejecting It In favor of the newly created system of regimenta tion and bureaucratic domination. stifling uncertainties of currency manipulation must be removed. The objective- of American life must be to upbuild and protect the family and the home. A score of economic and social questions mutt be solved . . . but their solution will not be found In violation of the foundations of hu man liberty. E WASHINGTON. March 33. (AP) The reciprocal trade act was describ ed by Representative Mott (R., Ore.), today as "wrong In principle and un constitutional." The Oregon representative, whlla criticising the proposed reciprocal trade agreement with Canada, declar ed there " la no way possible to make a mutually advantageous agreement." One or the other of the coun tries Involved Is made to suffer and "In this case It will be the United States for we have the widespread markets Canada desires while aha haa little to offer our Industries In any markets.' BEVERLY HILLS, Cal., Mar. 22. I don't know wlint all your different states legislntuves are dointr. G ueng tliey are figuring out schemes to slip up on the tax paper with a blackjack, but ours worked a week on finding out bow lone a freielit train ouv'iit to be. They finally com promised on 74 cars. Now that we pot that settled I don't sea anything can hold its back from reenvery. 1 know the railroads will feel proud of the compliment and will start immediately to (ret 71 empties ready. Why don't they pass a bill as to how long a bus enn be. It takes two minutes for one to pass a given point. lliiTafiKauHlVallMU. tat, r,' I A'