Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 02, 1935, Page 1, Image 1

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    edford Mail T
There Is A Place
No matter what you have to Ktl,
want to trnd?, or n1sh to bur, them
li a place In Mull Tribune classified
for jour Ad. Ise these Adi and tet
result Ju.t as your neighbor Is dolnr.
Thirtieth Year
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 1935.
No. 61.
The Weather j
Forecast: Cloudy tonight and Satur- j
day; moderate temperature.
Temperature:
Highest jesterday W .
Lowest tht, morning - j
M
RIBUNE
EflSTO
M M
1 i --
aws I SPEEDING SEDAN
Bfijpd WITH 6 SUSPECTS
mmk is surrounded:
By PAUL MAI.LON.
(Copyright. 1935, by Paul Mallon)
WASHINGTON, June 1. The NRA
decision struck President Roosevelt
harder than published accounts have
Indicated.
Immedl ately
after it swept
away the basic
legal ground on
which his new
.deal stood, his
''associates now
agree, he was
person ally as
confused as were
all his lawyers.
He did not say
or do anything
for that almule
reason.
At'l MALlO
Within twenty-four hours, how
ever, his silence developed a pur
pose. A reaction in the country be
gan to be evident. The president
then decided to fight to preserve
more than the semblance of his busi
ness reform program. He continued
to remain silent in order to permit
the full scope of the reaction to de
velop. He wanted the wind of public
opinion to fill his sails and deter
mine his course; which, his counsel
lors seem to agree, was wise strat
egy. Presidential lawyers explored all the
possibilities which have been printed
and some which have not. A leading
White House counsellor gave ao off-the-record
analysis of the situation
as he saw it, which offers an indi
cation of the fundamental depths of
government which were probed. Said
he:
"This country has gone through
a revolution, whether It knows It or
not. Future historians will realize it
better than wo do. The revolution Is
over, or rather tt was over until the
supreme court -spoke,
"The prosperity of butslness is not
a local stato matter. Everyone now
recognizes that, no matter what the
supreme court says,
' "The national government nas
been accepting that fact as settled,
because the public agreed. It has
taken extra-constitutional steps to
provide an orderly, bloodless, govern
mental revolution, furnishing central
authority which business needs for
cooperative effort.
"If the supreme court says it can
not be done because of the consti
tution, and the people want to do It,
the constitution will be changed.
The only other thing possible is a
dictatorship, and we do not want
that."
These are sharp words for a presi
dential counsellor, but they were
mild In camparison to those offered
by some less conservative authori
ties. The most favorable phase of the
decision was the reaction to it. For
weeks before, business men (U. S.
Chamber of Commerce, et al) were
complaining publicly that the new
deal should let them alone so they
could go ahead. If very man of them
went ahead, it was not apparent.
The depression in the stock market
was unexpected and remarkable.
Some business men explain this
by saying that they could not atirf.
a" bull movement In and out of the
market because they did not know
what the president was going to do.
This is entirely true. The inflationary
or deflationary results rested enttre.y
with, whatever decision he made.
But most authorities also suspect
ed that. If nature were permitted to
take its course, a deflationary period
of prtce-cuttlnK and wage-cutting
would set in. which would more than
offpet any business hallelujahs at be
ing released from covernment re
straints. What is driving lawyers mad is the j
fact that the supreme court did not i
really lay down any fixed policy of
restrain against the government In
Its NRA decision.
For instance, the court said the,
rerall poultry business In New York
City Is interstate commerce as far as ;
federal anti-trust law Is concerned.'
but not as far as the NRA provision j
of wages and hours Is concerned. I
In other words, for one federal j
law. the business is Interstate com- i
merce and rubject to federal rcgula- :
tion. but. for the other, it Is not.,
This definition w evidently o
muddy that the court ItjMf added:
"The precis line can be dram only
a individual ca.ers arise."
; V.
Influential busine men have
been making a subtle drive on Unc.e
Dan Ropor, the comn.erce secretary.
By telephone and tclecraph thy
have been advising him lately to con
duct his department for the bene-'
fit of buMr.ec. in the same sptnt .
in which the labor department is
i-ondueteti for Ip.bor. They did not
;! him so directly, but their penil
hint- were bar-eri on the teehnc that
Mr. R.?per ppjiti'-al nfl'-kimmid rnr
'iijsed inn to lay iindii" sties on
r?n pha.e j
Th drive is not trended to r.'t
him out of the cabinet, but to por-'"ir-"?.?
h:m to i e-or. that ' p.ere ..-
iCOitjUiaed, XfCA -a
Mystery Car Hemmed in by
Armed Men Near Hold
man Road to South Of
fers Escape Evade High
way Patrol.
PENDLETON, Ore., June 1. P)
A tan sedan speeding nearly 100
miles an hour tonight turned ttw
search for the Weyerhaeuser kidnap
er to northeastern Oregon' wheat
land where. William Edward "The
Fox" Hickman who kidnaped ana
butchered little Marian Parker of
Los Angeles was traced to the ground
in 1927.
The tan sedan late today roared
past two deputy sheriffs crulslru;
eastward on the- UmatllU-Walluta
highway, less than 35 miles from the
place former Sheriff Tom Gurdaoc
and his deputy Buck Lucllan cap
tured "The Fox."
The deputies from the Umatilln
eounty sheriffs office spurred their
car to 91 mile an hour but the tar.
sedan was travelling ao fast they
didn't even see what make of car it
was or what type of license It ca--rled.
But it was almost definitely es
tablished that the sedan turned
southward probably at Cold Spring
and headed toward Holdman and roads
guarded by county and state officers
A check of main routes indicated
the oar was in a 45-mile areH ringed
with officer prepared to shoot to kill,
if necessary.
Hickman waa fox enough to allp
right out of an aroused Ixm Angela
but met his doom when he turned
his i?reen Hudson car onto UmatUL)
county highway. He waa captured
near Eoho, Ore., on the Umatilla
Pendleton road and returned to death
on the fallows in California.
With the broad Columbia river
hemming them on the north, the only
alternative route for the five or alt
men reported seen in the tan sedan
would be southward.
At the little road marker called
Holdman there is only one telephone
and the ranchers living there aa'd
they had been in the back of the
house earlier in the evening and
would not have known if the sed.a
sped past in the twilight
They took positions at the front cT
the house after advised the men wl.c
collected $200,000 ran.-om and releas
ed little George Weyerhaeuser of Ta
coma this morning mlgh be In the
area.
Two deputies took a station on Uie
Holdman -Pendleton road, about tw.i
miles north of Holdman. Besides the
road south from Holdman to Pen
dleton waa a little-used canyon road
from Holdman to Helix, on the east.
A road eastward from Helix connects
with Athena, which Is on tne main
highway from Pendleton to Walla
Walla. Two state police guarded the
Athena section of the road from Hel
ix and Holdman.
Other deputies were scatterei
throughout the area and city offloe.'a
watched approaches to Pendleton.
State police, who were ordered to
day from Salem headquarters to
stand ready for emergency action in
the kidnap pursuit, radiated fanwlse
north of Pendleton tonight.
Two deputy sheriffs were stationed
on the Cold' Springs-Pendleton road
near Holdman. and state police under
Sergeant Staata of Pendleton and
Captain Hoe of Baker took strategic
posts on connecting roads. The
strongest concentration wag to the
eastward of Athena on the Pendleton-Walla
Walla highway.
Should the sedan approach Walla
Walla It would find the roads guard
ed by city officers there. Sheriff's
deputies in Washington were watch
ing roads west as far as Wallula.
Even before Washington highway
patrol headquarters at Olympla re
quested aid of Oregon atat police
today, descriptions of the suspects
were supplied all officers.
When the word was flashed that
the $300,000 ransom waa paid and
little George Weyerhaeuser safe
home, the state police had no delu
sions as to the deperatene of the
kidnapers and were ready. If not
willing, to shoot it out.
State Police Captain Mason t
Salem, acting in the absence of the
superintendent, took Information
supplied by the Associated Press and
ordered all central and eastern Ore
gon state police to be ready to actu
ally Join the case and keep advised
of developments.
Eight or nine state police officers
were in northeastern Orepon to aid
deputy sheriffs In the search tn the
notorious tan sdn.
Hot r hie I nlloned
.SEATTLE. June I T- Rjnnitw
do-n a "'.ioi tip'' that three nen. on
of them Vc-v Davis canstr name.
In the George WTerheuar k'dnaf
:nc h3d charred c of a hwl he
i 4 a rr. this r;.or;:i:z S-r-eff W
:::r. B Se er'.':'," srd ;i Cl"P'.ltiv:
i.vk fingerprints Irm the room to-
Drouth
Diary Of George
Weyerhauser'a Stay
With Kidnapers
(Copyright. 1836. by tb. Asaociawd
Press and Seattle Times)
"I'm awfully glad to gt back.
"A man grabbed me and put n!
hand over my mouth and pulled me
Into the tan sedan.
"He put me down in the back and
covered me with this blanket. It
certainly Is dirty. Isn't It? And then
we drove and drove and drove. They
told me I wouldn't be hurt If I
didn't yell out, and I didn't want
to be hurt ao I kept my mouth
shut.
"I signed my name three time.
Once on that envelope, once on the
ransom note, and once at the bottom
of the blank paper.
"The men told me there were an
In the kidnaping, but I only saw
three. They called one another Bill.
Hnrry and Allen.
"They always gave me all I could
eat. Ves sir. they treated me fine.
"They only hurt me once. T.iat
was when one of them lifted me out
of the car. I said. 'Bay. don't you
hurt mi.' And he said. 'Young man,
you're too valuable to hurt.'
"Tliey always kept telling me they
would turn me bark to my father.
"They used to put me in the
closet at night. It wasn't bad. They
always put a mattreaa against the
door and one man always laid on
it.
"You know they put sharkles on
me? Aw, the.y didn't hurt. They
didn't put them on that tight. Hand
cuffs? I don't know handcuffs.
T rode the trunk In the car. Sure
it had holes In it. How could I
have gotten any air? My legs were
bent a little but they didn't hurt
after X walked around a little.
"They always took the blindfold
off my eyes and I could eee things
In the house. They always wore
masks. They looked funny and 1
laughed at them at first.
"My uncle. Mr. Tltcomb, brought
the money to them.
"About 10 o'clock last night one
of them aald, 'We are going to put
you In the road. You Just keep on
walking. Pretty soon your father will
come along and give you a ride
home. I walked four miles or more.
I wasn't afraid. I came to a house,
went to the door and knocked, and
then I said 'I am the little kidnaped
boy'."
G
10 1
WASHINGTON. June 1. (AP) All
the crime fighting forces of the de
partment of Justice were unleashed
today after the kidnapers of George
Weyerhaeuser, nine-year-old Tacoma,
Wash., heir as soon as the child had
been released safely on the payment
of $200,000 ransom.
"Our long grind In the hunt for
the kidnapers is Just started." waa
the grim statement of J. Edgar Hoov
er, close-mouthed director of the fed
eral bureau of inveatigation. He ex
pressed confidence bis "O" men would
(get the kidnapers but declined to
hazard an estimate of bow long It
I would take.
I The signal for the start of the man
; hunt was given by Hoover to his
j Tacoma agents by telephone Immedl
I ately after he had been informed of
I the lad's return.
I He had held his men In restraint
pending safe delivery of the abducted
lad under the bureau's policy of mak
ing no move that might Imperil the
I life of a kidnaped victim.
j During the eight days the boy was
in the hsnds of the mysterious
j "Egoist." however, they have not been
idle.
i It it known they have studied csre-
fully the typewritten ransom note
mailed, by special delivery, to the
family Immediately after the abduc
, tion, but whether the bureau's ex
pert have found significant finger
prints or other Identifying marks
pointing to a known gangster or other
criminal is an official secret.
It was learned also that federal op
eratives here slresdy have prepsred a
lift of the serial numbers on the ran- ;
torn bills. Day ind nijht since !
i Thursday a special crew has been
busy on the uppr floors of the J'J- ;
tic department building tabulating .
and printing tbem.
This fact Indicated the family has ;
cooperated clorely with federal agents!
p'nee 'he boy was klo'naped and that 1
tne ran-orn -nne prooaDly a pud ;
;a. Titeisv. on the filth day men- j
Area States Ravaged by Flood and Wind
Kidnaped Boy and Where Freed
tX 1 f .Him-
VANCOUVER &-jgg fA
t island S ffl jS8$at$ PI
tes mi mifo Mi
E
(CopyrlRht, Ifm. by the Assoclntrd
' Press)
QUETTA. India, June 2. Sunday)
Fires flaring in the ruina of this
city of death, devastated by earth
quakes at a loss of life estimated at
30.000, bunted themselves out today,
but authorities feared an outbreak of
cholera.
Doctors, nurses and medical equip
ment were being rushed here by air
planes after mosffof the fear-stricken,
scantily-clad survivors spent another
night under the open sky, shying
away from shelters erected by sol
diers. Floods accompanied the fires which
raced through the devaatated area
last night, threatening to swell still
further the roll of dead and injured.
QUETTA, India. June 1. ;p) Thj
number of dead in this eanhquak--itrlcken
area was unofficially esti
mated at 30.000 today as relief work
went forward under martial law, pro
claimed to facilitate rescue ot the
injured nd burial of the victims.
The bodies of those who died tn
the catastrophe were burned or bur
led as soon a they were rew vered U
avoid the risk of an outbreak of dis
ease. One of the disaster's most tragic
Incidents was the razing of the ger
eral hospital, killing 200 to 300 pj
tlents. Floods outside the city added ix
the horror within.
Water gushing from fissures caused
by the quake in some places flooded
to a depth of several feet.
FLEET STARTS ON
TACTICAL DRILLS
ABOARD TJ. 0. S. PENNSYLVANIA
IN MANEUVERS AT SEA. June I.
iff Ninety-two combat ships of the
United Mates fleet were started to
day by its commander in cief. Ad
miral Joseph M. Reeves, upon a
series of the moat intense tacticai
drill attempted In the annual ma
neuvers. The exercises were marred shortly
after noon by the nosing over cf
three of 38 seaplanes as the flyiru
machlnei were alighting on the rou;h
seas.
No one wa hurt and the three
planes were quickly picked up by a
crash boat from one of the dread
naughta. Oregon: Pair Sunday and Monday;
rising temperature and falling hu
midity; fresh west to north wm wind
off the coast.
SAN FP.ANCISCO, June l(APl
Weekly outlook for period June 8 to
8. Inclusive:
Far western states: Normal tem
perature and fair veathT. but con-
aiderabl cloudiness mid. a times, j
unsettled weather west ol the Cas i
ttll ffi9ua tains,
FAIR ANDNORMAL,
WITH CLOUDINESS
0. s. c.
OF
ATTACK' ON KERR
Resolution- Holds Report of
"University Professors"
Biased and Unworthy
Citizens Weary of Strife
CORVALL1S, Ore., June 1. (AP)-f-A
resolution denouncing the Ameri
can Association of University Pro
fessors' committee report on Oregon
higher education as biased and an
"unwarranted attack on the state
board of higher edupatton" was pars
ed today by the Oregon State Col
lege Alumni association.
Alumni and friends of the Insti
tutions were urged to unite in dis
couraging such "disturbing influ
ences." The action was taken at the
association's annual meetings held In
connection with commencement
week-end.
Full discussion of Issues involved
waa held before the resolution wat
presented and passed unanimously,
alumni- officers reported. Copies were
ordered sent to all members of the
state board of higher education.
The text:
'"The disturbing Influence on
higher education caused by the bias
ed report of three members of the
American Association of University
Professors and distributed by two
University of Oregon raculty mem
bers is deplored by the Alumni As
sociation of Oregon State college.
"As already pointed out by the
press of the state, the release of the
report serves no useful purpose. It
Is an unwarranted attack upon the
state board of higher education and
tends to continue turmoil and strife
after substantial progress has been
made toward attainment of harmony.
"The report disregards the funda
mental purposes of higher education
(Continued on Page Six)
441 BLUE EAGLE
CASES WIPED OUT
WASHINGTON, June 1 ryp Ap
parently throwing off the last vest -ges
of restraint imposed by NRA
now dewl wage-hour and fair tra'e
practice piorUions. President Roose
velt todiy dismUsed 441 court cas
involving violations of olue eag
rules. Thi wholesale action, coupled
with an announcement that other
legal actions contemplated would nu;
be Initiated, followed close after th
dropping of hints In high quart-
that the president would propose .
stop-gap NRA legislation. And if any
permanent plan was reedy for sub
miwlon. congressional leaders, a
least, lacked any Inkling of It.
Mr. Roosevelt cruised on Chesi
pMke bay aboard the Yacht Segno1,,
tonight while the capital (ondero1
without answer the course the ad
ministration will take. The most uni
form speculation of observers
tint further sounding of the ni
tion's re-itlr.n to the overthrow M
NRA would precede any definite a:
Woo.
R.A,
LAIN
SOUGHT BY G. 0. P.
P.y T. HAROLD OLIVER
AHtneliitpri rre.ns Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, June L AP)
Swift passage of some voluntary In
dustrtal regulatory measure to replace
NRA waa demanded of the adminis
tration today by senate Republican
spokesmen.
Seeking legislation at the present
session, they predicted "keen and bit
ter strife" If an attempt were made
to amend the constitution to provide
federal control of the nation's eco
nomic and social structure, regardless
of state lines.
"Iet's not get gun-shy of the con
stitution because of this en cm"
said Senator McNary of Oregon, the
minority floor leader, "Everyone has
suffered from the shell shock of the
supreme court's decision, of course,
but we ought to do something of a
voluntary nature."
Interpreting President Roosevelt's
press conference statement and Dem
ocratic talk of an all-summer con
gress ion al session as part of a plan
to build up popular sentiment for a
constitutional amendment, McNary
and other Republicans aaw a tough
political scrap ahead for 1030.
While the Oregon senator would
not attempt to say what the Repub
lican attitude would be If the presi
dent made a constitutional revision
the prime issue. Senator Vandonberg
of Michigan, who also has been men
tioned as a candlate for the Repub
lican nomination, registered a strong
protest.
"The president set the stakes for
the 10:16 campaign yesterday," Van
denberg aald. "He Is not simply ask
ing for federal control but for na
tionalization. If under any other flag
but ours that would be fascism or
communism. It Isn't the length, but
the direction of the step.
"What he asked for yesterday waa
not merely for America to decide
whether one section of the consti
tution Is Inadequate, but whether we
should tear up the old conception
and embrace the new. That inevitably
is the 1030 campaign Issue."
Terming the president's ststement
that thi: supreme court decision had
sent America back to the "horse and
buggy" age as a "gross and malig
nant exaggeration," Vanderberg de
clared that lr the simile were Justi
fied "the Democratic platform of
1932 was a horse and buggy plat
form." Senator Stelwer of Oregon agreed tt
was better to amend the constitution
than to "gradually usurp" Its powers,
but aald whether such an amend
ment would be the outstanding issue
next year depended on Ha nature. He
added:
"If It Is proposed to make Washing
ton Into a Moscow then it will be an
Issue of outstanding Importance."
PORTLAND, Ore., June I (AP)
Bridges across the Columbia river and
all principal highways In Oregon were
under heavy guard today as the state
police, upon request from Olympla.
laid In wsit for two sedans reported
to be carrying six men Involved In
the Weyerhaeuser kidnaping at Ta
coma. DENVER. June 1, ( AP) An sir-
plane dragging a rope ladder flew
low over the flood waters near Mc-
Cook, Nb., today and rescued two
men from a boat bobblnb about tn
a blark stream filled with floating
logs and bits of houses that thre.it
end destruction, a message received
I by witcIcm revealed.
EDIATE N.
WOODCUTTER TOLD
FREED YOUTH NOT
'TO BOTHER
'Go Away; Don' Fool Me
Was Warning When Boy
Rapped at His Window
Early Saturday Morning
ISSAQUAH. Wash., June 1. (AP)
When a small frightened boy knocked
on his bedroom window this morning
and Louts Spiers, 45. Tiger Mountain
woodcutter, said, "do away, don't fool
mo," he refused to hear an oppor
tunity to enter the hall of fame.
The wet, bedraggled little boy was
0-year-old George Weyerhaeuser, kid
naped May 24 and safely returned to
his family today after payment of a
200.000 ransom.
Realizing he was not wanted, the
little fellow picked up two blankets
his abductors had given him when
he was released and walked down the
road to the Oeorge Bonlfas home,
where he was given a welcome by
Bonlfas, hla wife and children.
"My goodness!" said Splera when
to'.d he had turned away a boy sought
for eight days and for whom $200,000
in ransom had been paid.
"I have been fooled so much lately
by boys coming up here that I
thought I was being fooled again," he
said.
(Copyright, 1036, by the Associated
press)
TACOMA. June 1. (AP) Ran
somed for $200,000 little Oeorge
Weynrhauscr was freed by his kid
napers today while a spreading hunt
for his abductors closed around a
mystery automobile speeding through
northeastern Oregon tonight.
While hysterical parents lavished
attention on the curly-haired youth.
(Continued on Page Twelve)
FANATIC TRIES
WIN WIFE'S LOVE
HIGH POINT. N. C, June 1. (VP)"
R. J. Rt,7gs, 30-year-old fining sta
tion operator, was found nailed to a
cross near here early today and offi
cers, terming him a "religious fanat
ic," quoted him as saying he had h'.j
young son "crucify" him in hop nf
regaining his estranged wife's affe-
tlons.
Riggs was found nailed through
the flesh between thumbs and Ind'.x
fingers of each hand and throng n
the flesh of hi heels to a crude
wooden cross which lay by the road
side near his filling station. He was
taken to a hospital where attaches
said hi injuries were painful but not
serious.
He first told a story of three me a
having broken Into hi home witr.
the cry "you've been so good we're
going to nail you to a cross" but
Solicitor Gaston A. Johnson, tald ttttt
under questioning he confessed hs
had Donald Rigga. hla 15-year-old sot
by e former wife, spike him to t ie
crossed boards with ten penny nails
"He admitted he made tte croii
himself, got the nails and every
thing," Johnson said.
IN KARPIS CHASE
SALEM. Ore.. June 1. (AP) All
Oregon state police mere put on the
lookout for the kidnapers of Oeorge
Weyerhaeuser, 9, by orders of Cha'lc
P. Pray, state superintendent, today.
Descriptions ot the men suspected
of the kidnaping and descriptions of
the automobiles they were alleged to
have operated, were received at police
headquarters here early today and
were promptly relayed to all state
troopers.
"My men have been Instructed to
do everything possible to assist In
the capture of these bandits," Pray
declared.
Ride roads will be watched closely
and all persona resembling the kid
napers will be questioned. Pray said.
Prsy said his department was In
cloe touch with the federal govcrn-
i ment authorities working on the
; esse. Pray himself was at one time a
federal senU
6-FOOT WALL OF
Republican River Valley in
Nebraska Inundated
Death List Placed at 250
Special Train Rushes
Boats Six States Hit
McCOOK, Neb., June I. (p, A new
menace, a six-foot wall of water,
rushed down the already flod swol
len Republican river valley in south
ern Nebraska tonight aft, rellf
workers had estimated disaster fatal
ities In the region might wich 350
Sixteen persons were known deid
In floods and tornadoes which wert
southern Nebraska, Inundating thou
sands of acres of Dundy. Chase, Hay
es. mwjicocK. ned willow, Frontier
Furnas. Harlan. Franklin, Webster
and Nuc'colls counties.
The flooded territory was mor
than 200 miles long and at some
points the river, normally a small
stream, was- two and a half mites
wide.
Property damngw was estimated af
ter first surveys of thu havoc at aev.
eral million dollars. McCook and Ox
ford alone counted their loss at H,
500.000. Army authorities rushed large boa's
to Oxford by special train to eld In
rescue work.
A telephone; official at Holbroofc,
about 20 miles down river from Mc
Cook aald the wall or water, bettered
to come from a broken dam near
Parksone of two adjacent Tillages
washed eff the map Friday with a
known loss of 8 lives was nearim
that town and would probabty sweep
Into Oxford early Sunday morning.
Tf we don't reach the itrandcl
persons tonight, they'll probably b
deai tomorrow," Nissen said.
The riood surged Into Red Cloud,
70 miles down the Republican's
course from McCook, late today and
soon had swept away all low land
houses into it floatsam o de-br'a
from earlier ravages. The Republican
was two miles wide and the wati?
five feet deep in the Burlington nail
road station there tonight.
(By the Associated press)
Floods, oloudburats and tornadoes
In six western states heart of the
1 0.14's historic drouth area caused
62 known deaths last night, destroyed
millions of dollars In property and
(Continued from page six.)
E
WASHINGTON, June 1. (Ft Presi
dent Roosevelt today completed a
statement on NRA and then repartU
for an overnight cruise on the Chesa
peake bay without giving any further
Indication of his views on the future
of the recovery act.
He left the capital amid Indications
given by high sources close to the
White House that he was likely
reject all plans for stop-gap legisla
tion for the present and to await t.te
country's reaction.
SAYS'
SANTA .MONICA, Cal., May
31. Our state assembly is hav
ing a torriblo fight. There is
27 "Kpics" (eliminate poverty
in California), the Sinclair
ticket. That's out of a mem
bership of 80 in the lower house.
Well, the fight is just among
these It's a bill to stop all
these unemployed that's flock
inc into the state (it passed the
In.vop linnsel. Some Knies say
they can eliminate the poverty
in the state, but tney can i
eliminate all the poverty that
eomes in. Others say that one
state can't bar people of other
itatcs.
All of which pets back to my
plan, that is of beine able to
wive the supreme court and ask
them. They reply with a niv;ht
lctter. and the whole thin? i
settled once and for all.
flCiL
, e UcM.uat SyadlcaM, ta.