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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1935)
Medford Mail Tribune AWARDED Pulitzer Prize FOR 1934 Thirtieth Year MEDFORD, OKEGOX, FRIDAY, MARCH 2d, 1035 Xo. 6. The Weather IiirrcaM: lair and colder wim froi-t or freezing temperatures to night; Saturday fair. Highest eMrrday Tt l.oneM this morning c. SEEK MMSO i i r mi n J i li J k n iu a J M) vM JUL . -A a 1 , yVgWs GOLD BEACH MEN Mm1 BEHIND MOVE FOR SBBEl VOTEONCLOSING yV By Paul Mallon Copyright. 1935, by Paul Mallon. WASHINGTON, March 29. Some Of those sharp -sigh ted Wall Street seers could use some new glasses. As they always se It, the only business In this country 1 making steel and the other durable goods. S t a 1 1 s tics of these Industries are stressed so much that you rarely ce any others played up or ade q u a t e 1 y considered. Con sequently, when steel started slip PAUL MALLON ft- : ping a few weeks ago, the stock market went down with ,it. and the general impression Is T broadcast that the whole national spring business rise has gone flooey. If you looS at a balanced chart of business statistic, you can see. with out any glasses, that such a viewpoint la slightly out of focus. The government's private chart of business shows that factory employ ment, wages, carloadings and depart ment store sales have shown a con stant extra-seasonal Improvement in the past three months. Even building contracts have improved Inconsequen tially and prlcca have remained stable. The only decline has been In In dustrial production, and this Is due to the decline in steel, more than anything else. If you average up all these factors, you will find the January index of business, seasonably adjusted, about 69.4 per cent of normal (1033-1925); February 69.7 and March 70. ' This could hardly be called going backward. It docs not mean the existing busi ness situation woud Justify asking the "kbo.s for a raise. Essentially, .wo are r today Just about at tho level of March, last year. The prospects for the next few months are not Inspir ing. In view of the bulge in produc tion at the turn of the year. This bulge will undoubtedly be taken out of the spring figures nnd may force a continued shrinkage in production generally. But it does mean that the averaged troubles of steel.'tnachlnery, transpor tat Ion, equipment, lumber, metals, glass, brick, autos, have obscured the fairly good averaged encouragements of textiles, tobacco, leather, shoes, food, paper, chemicals, rubber. Employment In the first group av eraged only 69.3 per cent of normal In the official February figures, while employment in the second group was 94.1. In other words, the non-durables are within 6 per cent of their employment during 1923-1925. You can figure out the general layout for yourself from the follow ing monthly fteures. The price Index Is based on 1926 as 100. but all the t others are ba.sed on 1923-19:25. All ' except payrolls and prices are ad justed for seasonal variations, which means that each figure is the actual estimated percentage of normal for the times stated. (Continued od Page fwelve) 4 U.S.I IN FAR EAST PACT IS (Copyright. Ivjs, by the Associated Press ) MOSCOW, Mnrch 29. With a plan for United Stntes' collaboration with other powers In the far cast re portedly under discussion. Captain Anthonv Eden. British lord privy seal, faced Joseph Stalin. Soviet chief. In the latters private oltlcc in the krem'tn today. A high source said that Foreign Commissar Maxim Lltvlnoff had sug gested to Eden the formulation ot a tar eastern pact to Include the United States. Orct Britain. Rus sia. Japan. China and France, and that Stalin, too. supported this sug gestion. The British envoy was accompa nied into Stalln s presence by Lord Chllston. the British ambsssador to Russia. "Hicre they encountered Vya chestalf Motoloff, president of the union council of the people's com missaries. Knrelen Commissar Maxim Lltvtnotf. and Ivan Malsky. the Rus sian ambassador to London. Tiilk Kuroitean situation. Thcv tmmediBte'.v began, with the s;d .f intr-prefrm. the d:ruM.on of :he Fiiri'iwin sit'iatlcn. ruptt r Frtrn spd the mnbfl:irlrt: entered he K'.emhn enclosure in an a.itom. bile, driving through the main entrance of the wall the Borofflts- 1 Continued od Pa:e rrtree) CiA-ve R'.iTimriV.e-d;?tir;- ,,""; of Lmted State. -ay t!.re urc 73 ha aks in the Signature of 10,232 Quali fied Voters Required to Place Question On Bal lot at Next Election SALEM. March 29 (Prelimin ary petitions for a referendum on house bill 416 of the 1935 ies.slature. the Rogue river closl rig hi i 1 , were filed at the secretary of stated office today. The petitions were signed ay P. B. Postcl, C. L. Wakeman ani owners, in cluding commercial flJaienrten and residents of Gold Beach in Curry county. Completed petitions must contain 10.232 signatures of qualified voters, the secretary's office vporied. In , case they are completed oy Tjne 11. the referendum would go on the bal- i lot at the next general elcctijn, No vember 3. 1936. In both 1930 and 1931 the question of closing the Rogue u cot. mere I al fishermen was placed before .he vot ers, and was defeated 'wtVi times. Word that action had been taken looking toward a referendum on the recently enacted law closing Rogue river to commercial fishing came as a great surprise to Medford sports men and others interested in main taining the stream as a tourist and sportsmen's attraction, it had been generally believed that the long bat tle over use of nets in the Rogue was finally settled at the last legis lature as there was no great opposi tion to the closing bill. Representative A. Moore Hamilton, who worked hard for the closing measure, when apprised of the refer endum move declared that upper riv er Interests should do a little refer ending on . their own hook and see if the lower river people could not be forced to operate the new coast highway bridges, under the toll sys tem as originally promised. JOINS SEA PARTY MIAMI. Fla., March 29. (AP) President Roosevelt looked forward today to some more fishing In the waters off the northern coast of Cuba. The yacht Nourmahal carrying the sun-burned president was In the vi cinity of Great Inagua Island off the northeastern tip of Cuba. A brief report last night from the yacht told of the arrival of James Roosevelt, eldest son of the president. from Puerto Rico, by regular Pan American plane and of a day of fish ing by the presidential party off Cayo Lobos. Apparently satisfied with the con- dltlon of his secretary, and friend Louis m Howe, who is ill in the White House at Washington. Mr Roosevelt Is circling southern waters on a schedule expected to keep him at tea mast of next week and possibly until early the following week. Honor's Tip linugllt Policy BL PASO. Tex. (UP Jerome Tri olo. bellboy at a hotel here, has be come a rugged Individualist. When former President Herbert Hoover visited here recently, he handed Je rome a dollar tip. Jerome said he used the money to help buy an in surance policy. Hoy scout Uarnrtl Aiitnit SAN FRANCISCO (UP, Boy Scouts arranged a dramatic lesson to reckless automobile drivers In a cere mony here. AM traffic was halted for a minute on a rushing downtown cor ner while taps were blown for four pedestrians killed at the intersection. ! ROOSEVELT'S SON Business Pushing Aside Obstacles Says Review NEW YORK, March 29. (AP) Dun land long-term planning as new fln & BradMrect in its weekly trade re-j"c, finally has shown slens of re . , . . vival. with new Issu running to the view declared today business Is push- j fw wy MnC(. the ling aside decisively the impediments , ry pBrt Qf 1933. which have been hindering Its pro- "With the allure of fresh stocks of grens. t the most appealing merchandise which The report sees the nation's trade ; has been assemblrd In many seasons. taking full trivnnuff of th nor- mal seasonal riae to provide momen - turn which will carry It beyond the reach of enervating extraneous Influ ent." 'Following the more or less static condition of the past four weks," r,-P"ri ."uur.. H- ra'ion.n arc beine completed for nc-r PnXh for the ysr to be reached in i "An a-tuil ned for a wid va April. whiie In distributive branches j rlety of merchandise is strontrly ap the spring seasnn Is off to an auspt- parent, and now thit the realisation ciovia start, with consumer buying j Is more Bnerally aecepted that no zmr.g assurance of Easter sales sur- prire reduction of slffnlflcanre will pTir.p the hitrh level of a year sro. -To t.rfrpn rrsr dcuMle i the irrenter confl- cjtcca cow Deux tuca 10 eipualoa Road Commission Post Looms F. L. Touvclle. county Judge of Jackson county from 1012 to Iff 1 8 who. 1 according to a Portland dispatch today. cccd Carl G, Mnslilnirnc of Eugene, L 1 !' VL PORTLAND. March 29. (AP) The liquor commission today ruled that dancing -and. serving, of beer or wine will no longer be permitted In the same building outside corporate limits of any city. Hereafter the dispensing of these beverages must be conducted In a building entirely separate from that In which dancing is permitted.-Nearly- every road house will be ef fected. The commission ruled, too, that it will be Justification for license revocation if - any dispenser sella wine without an accompanying meal. This regulation has been part of the Knox law. but has been gener ally disregarded In Portland. From now on observance will be insisted upon by restaurants and hotels. M. O. Bessonnette. manager of the Pine cone Inn. roadhousc Just north of the city limits of Medford. today stated thai he believed that the above ruling applies only to those "road houses" that can be classified as public dance halls. That is. a hall In which ppople pay to dance, and In which beer Is served. There is no charge Tor dancing at the Pine Cone, he stated. 1 It Is also his belief that the law is not retroactive docs not apply In any case to those house who have already obtained their licenses, but only to the applicants for new per mits. The district attorney's office here has received no notification on the ruling. in Vedic mythology, the .liranju garbhs was the- golden cag ft germ whence the universe devr.oD'd. mhonneni crowded the store In the i leading centers of attribution, push - Ing tail sales In nearly all districts hiaher than a week earlier, with the eain in some instances rising to 20jThe car was injured, to 30 per cent. The fire department was iM:n call- "Reiail -als for the week, tuking ! ed at 7 o'clorfc last night, when tr.e the country aa a whole. wre hlcher by 3 to 10 pr rent thin Tor the comparative period of I93V : appear durlnr the net tx months, th rra(.e of loiiK-lrrrfl order mv tax rtodllctlve capacity well Into ' Uaj." Is regarded as most llkcty to mic- on the state highway Commission. OF E MISSISSIPPI AREA JACKSON. Miss., March 2"). (P) Sheriff's poses and state troopers pur sued today two gun-toting peradocs one believed to be Ray Hamilton, the southwest'a No. 1 bad .nnn who terrorized south Mississippi yesterday with shootings, kldnaplngs and bank robbery. Two persons were wounded, others were kidnaped, and harassed peacj officers engaged In sporadic ff ..n ba tles as the pair careened nil day in an automobile over a zirf-zag cource within a radius of 50 mi lea o. Pren tiss. They were believed tod.iy still with in tho locality of Prentiss, a-herc they had held up the bank of Rmntville and escaped with 41.100, aftr lock Ing five persons In the vauit. Deputy Sheriff W. J. Leo M Jcffcr son Davis county, who swapped shots with them at one stae of thi chaw said he had tentatively Identified one of the men as Hamilton, fugit'e from Texas penitentiary. Two Klilmiped I iifonnd. Two of the persons kid:iiird were Rtill unaccounted for. Thy .vers M E Smith. Jefferson Davis cour.ty farm agent, and Ralph Ballls cf PrentlM. The others were released or escaped curing the spectacular wee tver coun ty highways. Mrs. Smith, alirost in hysterica, said she had revived no word from her huaband Mne his ab duction. Smith and Bailiff. nvmVrs of a posse of 15 all of whom v-f over , powered by the pair wuns tAken s hostages. Smith' car was cjmman tieered and Smith forced aiong as driver. Governor Conner ordered .he Ns- (Continued on Pag Nine) POLICEMAN'S AUTO RUTTED BY BLAZE r Ptre at S:fl last evenin.?. oelieved to have suirted from defective wirli-a in the DftSoto sedf.n of J. C. Biodgett. state poller off'.ccr, gnttM '-)ie ma chine, the fl:e spreading into tn upholstery, through the r-of of tn car, and 'jetting fire to the roof i f the gan-.c in which the c.ir w part- at 3 Quince street. The blare ." quelled by the Medford fire de- pertinent, alter considerable damage ;'-oth to the car and to the garage. 1 brake of a Consolidated tru-lt caiiitht fire nn North nivrMde avenue. Lit tie damAge was done PALL RIVER. MM., Mrrh 29 1 AP ) A 1 yce Ja ne Mr He nry t oda y made plans for greeting Jimmle Nell son. Ban Jose, Calif., boy who la i expected to arrive here Saturday undergo sn orK-ratlon Mmnar to '. A.vc. s to correct an upsioa oown istogifll. TOUVELLE SLATED FOR APPOINTMENT Former County Judge of Jackson County Has ln side Track Is Word Was Father Pacific Highway SALEM. March 29, f1. Changes In the personnel of the stata high way commission, which will leave but one of the present member In office, became more evident today, it was learned from sources close to Gov ernor Martin. Henry F. Cabell of Portland, life lon friend of the new executive and a staunch supporter of MirMn dur ing his congressional and guberna torial campaigns, was sister to suc ceed Chairman Leslie M. Scott, whose trm of office expire? at n dnlght March 31. F. L. TouVelle of Medford. county Judge of Jackson county from 1912 to 1918, was regarded as te most likely successor to Cirl Ci. Wash burne of Eugene, whose resl;nati j:i has been In the executive office foi several months. Alilrlch to Slay. The third member of the present commission, E. B. Aldrich of Pendle ton, editor of the Em Orcgonian, was expected to retain hiu position. Resignations of all three of the commissioners have bwii In tho hands of Governor Martin since nls Inaug uration, but Scott consented to re main through hla term and Woato- burne until such time as the legis lature had adjourned and the gov ernor had had an opportunity to gtvo hla attention to the selection of new commissioner from tho first cor.- gresslonal. district. Washburne asked to be relieved before Governor Julius Meier left office In order to give hl entire time to his bus. no in Eu gene, but .consented to renin unt the new governor could permanently reorganize the commission. Washburne'a successor mut come from the first coruirestilona! district according to the law. nnd Oovemor Martin has been besieged vith rec ommendations and applications for the appointment ever since if- became generally known that WMaburnq. whose term has a year to run, wished to retire. Iteitnics Decline. Among those who have been en dorsed and prominently mentioned us possibilities arc Hugh Kirkpatrlck. Lebanon automobile ova'er; A Ren- (Continued on Page Five I TINY GIRL BEATEN BY OLDER CHILD BEND. Ore., March 20. f AP) A brutal and unaccountable attack by a seven-year-old girl upon Christie Lcdahl, three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Lcdnhl of Bend was being Investigated today by Bend police and Deschutes county officers. Police said they were told the old er girl, whose name was withheld, clubbed the tot over the head and race and threw her into the cold Deschutes river. Other children who happened by dragged the stunned child from the swift current. The seven-year-old girl was said to be unable to account for the attack. She had not been quarreling with the smaller child. It was said, and was quoted aa having stated she was not mad." 1 U Effective April 1. several changes in the departure of Southern Pacific trains from Medford were announced loday by A. S. Roaenbnum, district agent. The new schedule will be as follows: No. 320, Portland to Ashland, leaves Medford at 8 25 a. m., the same as at present. No. 7, Shasta, southbound, leaves Medford at 0:58 p. m. Instead of at 8:52 p. m. No. 8, Shasta, northbound, leaves Medford at 8 58 a. m. Instead of at 6:58 a. m. No. 310. northbound, leaves Med ford tot 6.58 p. m. Instead of at 7:10 p. m. GIANT CLIPPER PLANE RESTS AT SAN DIEGO SAN DIEGO. March 20. (API At rent on San Diego bay after a npee '.aulrtr one. stop flight from Miami F1 the big Pan-American clipper Tor trans Pacific service today was being made ready for fllghta to Los Anne)e and San FTa.neM-o. The clipper la scheduled to leave tojhere about 8 a.m. tomorrow for nun I'edro. r.Turning nerr una mm taxing oil ounnay ior nan run- 'cuco. DRAFT NRA BILL IN ATTEMPT TO Sccretly Drafted Measure Hastily Introduced in Sen ate After Warning That Labor Troubles Coming By NATHAN WOBFRTSON Associated Press Stuff Writer. WASHINGTON, March 29. ( AP) A secretly drafted administration bill to extend NRA with some modifica tions was hastily Introduced tod a; by Chairman Harrison of the senate finance committee, after a warn ing in executive session from Donald Rlchberg, NKA head, that strikes were Impending in four big Indus tries. The NRA bill was along lines recommended by the administration, with codes confined to interstate commerce and the anti-trust laws partially restored. 1 Members of the committee said Rlchberg warned of the threaten ing labor situation In the steel, coal, automobile and textile Industries and urged It to speed up considera tion of NRA legislation. He advocated the Immediate intro duction of the bill which Harrison had In his pocket for several days. Ihiey to Advise Revolt, Meanwhile, Senntor Huey Long told the senate that as a result of the government's attempt to -withdraw the Belcher NRA case from the su preme court, he was going to tell his Louisiana constituents to Ignore the NRA. I Intend to tail them to pay the same attention to the NRA that the man from Alabama did, and I think we all ought to do that, because the department of Justice won't do any thing about It If they do violate the law,'! Long said. The "KlnRflHh" declared that "1 knew the NRA was unconstitutional (Continued .on Page Five ) PORTLAND STREET PORTLAND, Ore.. Mar. 30. ( AP) A hooded man who criminally at tacked a 14-year-old girl after he bad waylaid her at a brush-grown path last night was the object of an In tense police search hero today. Terrified, tho girl told police she was. walking home at 0:30 o'clock last night near 70th avenue and Powrell boulevard. A man, wearing a gunny sack fashioned Into a hood leaped from the edge of the path and dragged her Into the brush. When she screamed the degenerate threat ened to shoot her to death. She was freed from her bounds an hour and a half later. Police found the hood worn by tho nttacker but no trace of the man. FURTHER DELAY SEEN FOR WORK RELIEF BILL WASHINGTON. March 20. ( AP) Vigorous objections from administra tion officials to the final form of the 4,B80.000.000 work-relief bill today were reported to have delayed fur ther congressional action on the measure until next week in the hope that It can be modified. New Deal Foes Utilizing Napoleon Ruse-Johnson NEW VORK, March 29. (AP) The "old ruler" enemies of the new denl, ornernl Hugh Johnfton nnys, follow the Nipolconlc Mrategy of "divide and conquer split the friends of recot'ery Into small quar reling factions and then absorb each In detail." In his memoirs of hla public serv ice "The Blue EnBle from Ekr to Earth." published by Doubleday. Do-1 tlcea In 1928. let us recall exactly ran the former NRA administrator what those methods were." CTtteg; Some of them, Johnson concludes. "The friends of the new deal out-I were: number Its enemies by many thous- "They permitted child labor and ands to one. .But the few enemies reslmed change. have advantages. They aro powerful "They had a system which explolt and they do not scatter their shot. ed agriculture to the verge of ruin "They want Just one thing and j for the benefit of certain Industries they know exactly what they want land Industrial areas . to scuttle the recovery program, mske "They successfully prevented labor the blue eagle walk the plank, hoist j orgsnlrjitlon and collective bargain tile lollv rouer on the ship of stale. ! Ing on any but a limited front. and sail hack to the good old piracy that brought the crash of 1929 They will succeed, Johnson adds, If they "find a way to forca the vast mass or oeneiicianea or pha apart , oj ii.iiK pri j Will Preside ttt. n'polnn F. Slilrltls, pntor 01 tltr .Mrilford rri-sbytrrlilll churcn jfrnm mo:i to hug, win prodic at itnnlRltt' bnnntirt cclphnttlnj . tnc .loth annlYprMiry of tli rlmrrli The pli'turr of Hev. Milr-lds sIiohii nlnnp wus tnkrn In ttio.1. PROJECT ON LIST WASHINGTON, March 20. j (AP) More than $4,400,000 would be ex pended on construction of 66 public school buildings in Oregon and Washington under the new public works program If recommendations of school education are followed. Forty eight of the buildings, at a cost of $2,9124,000, would be in Wash ington state "while 18, costing $1,480,- 000 would be In Oregon. The list of projects received by the bureau were described aa being wor thy and profitable Investments under the new public works program. Whllo the total money which could be expended and the total number of projects, were given, the bureau's llRt was only partially complete, some of the projects being held Out because of a desire, of state and school offi cials to keep them secret at the pres ent time. Only eight of the 18 Oregon pro jects were made public aa follows: City Project Cost Baker - 1 $118,000 Dallas 3 Grants Pass 1 70,000 100,000 22,000 100,000 Medford 1 Newberg ........................ 3 School officials here today were unable to state which of the several projects submitted to the PWA board were Included In tho $22,000 men tioned above. Tho city schools sub mitted one plan, that for a new ath letic field, with supplementary equip ment, for the senior high school, at a cost of $10,000. The county schools submitted several projects, all of them for rural one and two room school houses, ranging In cost from $1,000 to $2,000. The total cost for all the plans submitted would run between $00,000 and $70,000, County Superintendent C. R. Bowman stated. It wait believed that the figure stipulated must either be an error, or Included only part of the total sub mlttcd. CODDING LEAVES FOR CRIME CONFERENCE Oeorge A. Codding, district attorney and president of the Southern Oregon Peace Officers' association, left lute yesterday to attend the Orivn state crime conference called by Gjvernr Charles H. Martin. District Attorney Codding waa named as a ner.iber of the reception committee. Assistant Attorney -General Ralph E. Moody, former local reticent, is on or the mo In speakers at the ses sion. In arranging these "enemies" of the new deal In one of the few parts of the book not previously published In magazine form Johnson says the frequent cry to "take off the brakes' means only "back to 102fl." "The country." he says, 'simply cannot do that. 1926 waa pregnant with 1929. before wo follow old leaders back to the methods prac- Thry permitted the operations of banking to become a racket . "They permitted tho operations of th stock and other exchangee to pro ceed like gaming table, and never turned a hand to warn our people that Invcstmenta there were Ilka bets .Kalual Ui tutu ol luadcd die." IREYNOLDSTOWN, A 25 10 1 SHOT, IS AINTREE WINNER Blue Prince Second, Tho mond Third Favorite Golden Miller Falls Four Americans Win Big Prizes NEW VORK. March 20. fAP When Reynoldstown won the Grand National at Alntree today, the vic tory meant that four American-own ed ticketa In the Irish hospital sweep- BLBKca won a total 01 $570,000. T.ie tlCAjets held on Reynoldstown were made out to: Ry Gold, the Bronx, New York; Ann Goldbergh, Philadelphia; Mabel Leltzelman, Olney, 111.; "5 Glasses," Philadelphia. Each of these ticketa paya 30.000 pounds about $142,500. The following five Americans won 15.000 (about $71,230) each 14 hold era of ticketa on Blue Prince second horee: A. B. Weiss, Bronx, N. V. Mae E. Smyle, Ozone Park, L. I. Carmelo Ural no. Brooklyn. "May ISth," Bridgeport, Conn. "Susie," L03 Angelea, Col. Three American ticketa were held on Thomond II, tho horse that cam third, and each of the ticketa paya approximately $47,500, a total of $142,500 for these three: J. Thomas Roszkl, New York; "Clear Sailing," New York; "Erin Go Brach." Buffalo, N. Y. AINTREE, Eng., March 20. (AP) Reynoldstown. a 25-to-l thot owned and ridden by Major Noel Furlong, today won the 07th running of the Grand National steeplechase. Blue (Continued on Page Seven) BY MONTREAL, March 20. (AP) Th hangman's noose decapitated Mrs. Thomaslna Theolla Sarao, 46, today a alie waa executed for murdering her husband, according to a witness who attended. Newspapermen were barred from the execution by the Quebec attorney-general's department. : , A few minutes before Mri. Sarao dropped through ' the trap, Leone Oagllardl. 30. and Angelo Donofrio, 10, were hanged on another scaffold for the same crime. The trio were convicted by a court of king' bench Jury of murdering the middle aged street cleaner for the sake of the $4500 Insurance on his life. Mrs. Sarao was In the plot but It was Oagllardl and Donofrio who bent Sarao to death with clubs in a field near Blue Bonnets race track In the north of the city last summer. Lured to the spot by Oagllardl on the pretext of helping the latter at some work. Sarao waa attacked by Oagllardl and Donofrio, who waa lying In watt. When he waa unconscious from the blows of their clubs, the pair finished Sarao off by battering his head with a large boulder. 4- Oregon Weather. Fair tonight and colder with froat or freezing temperature; Saturday fair; moderate northerly wind off the coast. UKVKRLY Illl.IiS, C'ul., Mar. -S. Have you boon reading this college woman argument! Secretary Perkins spoke to California university, but a .Miss Ijanis objeetcd two col umns worth. She held out for May West instead. She can't sec a Democrat even if it was Jane Addnms. Then through some curious turn of events .Mi s. Roosevelt stot into it. Well, I was going to remain neutral, but today, according to her mother, Miss Ijamg sleeps till afternoon. Well, I enu read ily sec how women like Miss 1'erkins mid Mrs. Roosevelt fwhn get up with the birds) would net in Limns' hair. So Ijams has either got to get her a husband or an alarm clock to cateh those two. Yours for the early birds.