Mail Tribune
Why Wait?
Ton are lo.lng time. Write that
Want Ad now and hare It ready tor
the nrxt luiie of the Mall Tribune.
Why keep jour fii.toniers Halting?
Thirtieth Year
MEDFORD. OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 193,-.
No. til.
V
It
ET"3
lixJ UU ILU u vJ tl
The Weather
Forecast : Fair tonight am Thui
(lav; high day temperature and lw
humldit.
Highest yesterday ... - ........... .101
Lowest this morning............ M
MEDFORD
By PAI L M.U.LON
(Copyright, 1035, by Paul Gallon.)
WASHINGTON, June 5. rresldent
Roosevelt has been receiving dally,
and sometimes hourly, secrrt report
Jon wc-cutting
and hour-lengthening
since the
NRA decision
These h:ve been
collected dv
gents o the la
bor department
out through t.io
country, wired to
headquar ter
here and shlppeJ
over to t'.i Whit?
House almot as
fast as the:;
come.
I'.MI GALLON
So far, they indicate the respon
sible leaders ot the country are show
ing some real business leadership o."
their own. During che f'.rs week
following the decision, no report win
received Indicating anything like a
general move to tear dor.Ti NRA
standard among major employers and
major industries. , The reports ful'7
bore out what the leading employer
have been saying publicly
But the little fellows generally we.t
not observing such restratr-t The
reports indicated about 600 cases of
wage cuts or hour-Iengthcn'ng from
New York City alone.
One milential senator gave out a
statement a few days after tne Nil K
decision, announcing that it did nut
affect the AAA program. A f?w hour.
later, ho oecided to correct thU state
ment, and Issued a substitute saying
It did.
He is the only one of the 530 con
gressmen who got out publicly on
both sides of the issue, but a gooi
many of the remaining 829 were even
more confused. '"' " .
i Very few among them read the de
cision. They relied upon what the?
heard ot'.iers saying, and n moar
cases, the others had not read It
either. Consequently, there was m
limit to the Imaginary possibilities
expressed among the bewtldred leg
islators a week after the decision
At least, a clear-cut cross-section of
opinion nmong them could not bs
obtained.
The nig noodles In PrtMiden;
President Roosevelt's alpha-bet souo
may be "urllng legally, but Dr. Tu
well's rural resettlement noodle is
being quietly nurtured aim!, un
damaged. Dr. Tu?well may be for
gotten, but he is not gone.
Unnoticed, he is organizing a head
quarters here which will ;each Its
maximum efficiency and emol.-.y 2.000
office workers within a year. He ex
perts to have 4.000 more employee
In the field by then.
His unit will purchase b- tveen 5"
md 100 million acres of land. Th'!
area. If consolidated, woukl cover
perhaps half the state of Texis With
in a few months he expects to begin
putting unestlmated thousands tc
I o:-x on this land, planting trrass aid
trees, terracing, ditching Vor pe--sons
In the areas will be "rattled."
It is nt a big enough pJect to
replsce the NRA. but It Is big.
A quiet organization Is being ef
fected In the Ftleral Housln.T Admin
istration and the new denrs ma
(Continued on Page Eight)
S!DE GLANCES
by
TRIBUNE REPORTERS
Members of the city council last
nizht rinding the task of government
to be it hot one. peeling off their
tier and coats accordingly, and every
thing proceeding cooly from then on.
Earl Foy retiring to his garden for
few minutes work, and discovering
to his dismay that the job will take
most of the summer.
Paul Sakraida relating the "bear"
. far'g and still pretty Jittery over !ast
- Mcht bruin slayln? episode.
Jaeques Matalque sticking the reg- j
tratton table squarely in the door I
st the art exhibit so that persons,
wouldn't miss it. and then stepping
rack to view the artistic effect, with
profound "Ah!" j
ENGLEHARDT SETTLES
ATTORNEY FEE CLffl
:-:pu!anon filed yesterday n
;"r"tn court netting forth that the
vr. of V A. C. Ahlf. a woman
'T-rnev of Grants Pass, against Pro!.
: C. EnelMiardt. Eagle Plnt district
'Ticiier for 9250 for legal sen ices
-s:ie.-ed had been settled for f!00
suit was for erv'.ce in the
r .'Art!-, clncr.e
B the frnw o: '. i -ip ; "
uit is dropped, and tne case
FIVE IN SOUGH!
FOR QUESTIONING
G-Men Mum On Details
Passing of Bank Note in
Eastern Oregon First Defi
nite Clue Clues Probed
SEATTLE. June 5. .'P. Six
King county deputy sheriffs firm
ed with sub-machine tuns mid
shotguns, hurried from the county-city
building this afterwon on
a "hot Hp" regarding locail-n of
the hideout of the kidnapers of
George Weyerhaeuser.
Before two cars left with depu
ties. O. K. Rmlla. chief cr'minal
deputy, said, "It looks hot; we're
not taking any chances. He
would iiot say where the party
was going.
Iepuiles have searched the Is
saquah district all week Tot the
hideout, believed near the lonely
road where George was r -leased
last week.
By l.EI.AND II ANN' I'M.
Associated Pres Stafr Writer.
TACOMA. Wash., June 5 AP)
Police of Portland. Ore., today named
five men as wanted for questioning
In the Weyerhaeuser kidnaping with
federal officers here, refusing com
ment, waited to strike swiftly at
the first serious slip by the snatch
gang.
Federal agents in charge of the
manhunt here refused to affirm or
deny whether the men named in
Portland were wanted by them, but
asked to be given their names.
Captain John Keegan of the Port
land detective bureau named the
men as Richard Pranzeen and Elliott
Kitchener. Indicted for the Denver
and Rio Grande railroad robbery
February 2; Jack Bailey of Portland:
Clarence Martin and Herbert Lester
Johnstone, alias 'Shadow."
Last Seen May 15.
The Portland officer said Bailey
had last been seen there May 15
and that Martin and Johnstone were
suspected of Implication In a $10,000
extortion plot against the mayor of
Olympia. Wash., several years ago.
Franzeen and Mlchener were last
seen In Salt Lake City several weeks
ago, Portland authorities said.
The usual "nothing to say" was
(Continued on Page Twelve)
Y
The Med ford post of the American
Legion will hold its regular meeting
Monday evening. June 10, at the
Eagles' hall. At that time nomina
tions will be In order for officers for
the ensuing year. Reports of stand
ing committees will be made.
The local post has been working
for some time on plans for acquisi
tion of a club house of its own in
Medford, and to raise money for the
venture has decided to establish an
"amusement center" In the building
formerly ocupled by the Marsh Gro
cery company. The organization Is
offering a $5 prize to the person who
submits the best name for the new
establishment, which is to be opened
in the near future.
Details may be had by calling Lee
Garlock. 312.
PACIFIC PETROLEUM
AGREEMENT CANCELLED
WASHIHOTON. June 5 (API
Cancellation of the Pacirlc eoat pe
troleum rellners agreement because
of the supreme court NRA decision
was announced today by Secretary
Ickee, the oil administrator.
Income Shares
Quarterly Income shares: tl.30 bid;
$1.43 asked.
Bear Makes
heading Ph
The temerity of a large black bear.,
no matter how hungry, in planning1
meal at the Sakraida ranch near,
Phoeni with one of the small Sa-
XraWJa pigs as the entree was too
much for that family last night. I
and after a two-hour chase the besr
was crippled by a home marie .U j
plsto:. and brought, down with a (
-lfle in t-.e hands of Dick Sakraida, ;
who posa-.bly owes his life to a small
b'.ack dotr.
la' r. eht as the family was out
u, ;-: r'r:..v: ' ;
fir.; t:.e vr.y Frk.- 1:! ' 1m,, j
,barn. Se cred out to wr family. I
Plan New Legislation to Replace Invalid Codes
SHELTERED KIDNAPED YOUNGSTER
:f&Svfm DEUNQUENCIES TO
H lftff 4 BE FORECLOSED ON
V? nlrnn , .1'-1 'fI
Louis Bonifas and his family became prominent in the news when
they fed nine-yearold George Weyerhaeuser and returned him to his
parents In Tacoma, Wash., after the kidnaped youngster was released
near Issaquah, Wash. George found the home after walking nearly
four hours from the place he was freed after the abductors had re
ceived $200,000 ransom. Betty gave her shoes to George after he had
gotten his feet wet walking down the old country road. The Bonifas
children are (left to right) Betty Lee, Walter Eldon, John Paul and
Lucille Lois. (Associated Press Photo l
CLOUDS UP AGAIN
IN SEATTLE AREA
SEATTLE. June 5. i,V The Pa
clflc northwest lumber strl. ltua
tion. brightened the first of the weec
by the l mlted resumption of opera
tions at numerous centers which sent
an estimated 8.000 men bick to woilt.
clouded up today as mills wire qu'e;
again here and at Longvlew.
Some 3.800 men had gone back to
work at Long view in the bt Weye.
haeuser and Long-Bell plants the first
of the Aeck. but operations were
stopped 'his morning when employes
refuseed to pass a picket line estab
lished by the Shingle Weaver' union
The Shingle Weavers. Hire the Saw
milt and Timber Workers ur.lon. ar?
an affiliate of the Carpenters am
Joiners of America, and have rejects-l
from the outset the "Longew set
tlement" of last week, by which thi
strike over the area was believed
ended.
Five Svittle plants which rd re
sumed operations on Monday were
quiet today, and no plats were
known, either, to reopen mills at
Tacoma. An Informal vote taktn
there among rfnlllworkers. by a com
mittee headed by Mayor G-orge A
Smitlcy. showed a vote of 7 to 1 r.
favor of -e turning to "work, nut em
ployers chowed no signs this morn
ing of resuming operations.
ASK HERRlOnO
SELECHABINET
(Copyright, IMS. by the Associated
Pres)
PARIS. France. June 5. (AP
President Lebrun. trying to reorgan
ise the French eovemment. today
designated Edouard Herrlot. three
time premier of France, to s-lect a
new cabinet and carry on in the face
of the nation's financial crisis.
The veteran government head, who
Is leader of the radical socialist party
and an advocate of France's payment
of her war debts to the United States,
was selected for the task after Pierre
Laval, foreign minister, had failed In
an rffort at rallying a new cabinet
around him.
Mistake of
oenix Ranch
and two of her sons. Dick and Leo.
sa'-e ehae on horseback, armed with
a rifle. T.ie animal fled towards tne
LoffT ran-h. streaking within a few
et of Warren Loffer who was sur
prise whl busy Irrigating a field,
and fled to the upper reaches of a
tree.
Loffer Joined the chase In a ten
moments, armed only with a shovel,
and as the pursuers raced across the
road and entered the Oregon orchard.
Pr?nk Schuler emerged from tits
froi.t dor with a rifle in time to
f - i r tiu'.f'K hots st the fast
(i.jne-.r.? h-,ci-o':.-rr of the
(Continued on Page rre.ve)
ft-- jr. I
E
SPACE AT PLANT
Construction ta now well under
way on the $100,000 cold storage
plant of the Pinnacle Packing Com
pany, Inc., on South Front street,
between Eleventh and Twelfth streets.
The basement has been completed
and building of the walls is under
way. The new structure will toe an
addition to the cold storage facilities
of the No. 4 plant or the company.
The combined cold storage plants
will have a capacity of 235,000 boxes
of fruit.
The new structure will be three
stories high, constructed of steel
and concrete, modern and flrcprool
throughout. It will be 70 by 100 feet
in dimensions. Excavating for the
work started three weeks ago.
The new cold storage plant addi-
(Contlnued on Page Twelve)
SHY GARBO SAILS
ALONE FOR HOI
NEW TORK, June B.(UPi Greta
Oarbo sailed for Sweden yesterday
aboard the Swedish-American liner
Kungaholm for her annual vacation.
Only a few newspapermen an!
photographers saw the shy actrests as
she detrained Rt Newark then sped by
taxi to her boat.
She was dressed In a gray eruemble
and was escorted by Carter Gibson,
studio executive.
Miss Oarbo wu travelling under
t the name of Karin Lund, as Is her
: custom. She sailed alone.
I Capt. Ele Ellsen. an old acquain
tance, welcomed the actress aboard
'ship and Invited her up on the bridge.
A little boy named Nils Hansen said
"I shook hands with her" after he
'wandered off the ship.
j Previously the actress showed her
surprise when told people were anxl-
! ous to see her,
"Why do they want to see me?" she
j asked. "What do they want me to
jsay? Id so like to see things and
shop."
T LIONS CONCLAVE
WILL BE IN NEWPORT
THE DALLES. Ore.. June 7. A'
Newport H1 re the a.t for he 19t
district i onverition of L:ons clubs, a
a result of the vote take:, at th
concluding eAion of this year's con
vention here yesterday
Office- named Include; fi-v Tim
othy Watson. Tgrd dtsftct gov
ernor, and O. F Tate dietrt ecr
tary.
SALT LAKE CITY. June 5. (UP)
When a truck came through a narrow
alley. Mrs. Mildred Wyatt squeezed
up ariiir..! the vill f.o 1": it p-sv
liT sq-jee, UKs-n't ei:ouzn. She ika
trra'etf t. a hospital for chest and
arm injuries.
pity issmm
Will I IUULVUI 1 1 L.I 1 I
I Council Orders Cleanup of
Old Consolidated Fund
Townsend Action Waits
Opinion of Attorneys
Immediate foreclosure of old con
solidated fund assessments in one
amount of approximately (6000 was
ordered last night at a regular meet
ing of the city council.
City officials pointed out that the
assessments have been delinquent fo
many years, and In following out a
program to clean up all delinquencies,
the council has found It necessary to
Insist upon Immediate payment.
After conaideration for several
weeks, J. F. Fliegel. chairman, reported
that the license committee Is not ad
vised as to whether or not the mat
ter of the city's approving the Town
send Old Age Pension plan comes
wtthin the province of the council.
Without approving or disapproving of
the plan, the committee recommend
ed that the matter be referred to the
city attorney for an opinion as to
whether or not the question Is such
as should be considered by the coun
cil. Request Studied
Chairman Fliegel reported that the
application, submitted by Mcdford
baseball
National.
fFlrst game) R. H. E.
New York S 1
Philadelphia 4 7 0
Batteries: Fltzslmmons. Chagnon
and Mancuso; Jorgens, Johnson and
Todd.
Second game:
New York
R. H. E.
7 19 2
Philadelphia 4 10 1
Hubbell and Mancuso; Walters. E.
Moore, Pezzulo and Wilson,
(First game) R. H. E.
Brooklyn 3 11 0
Boston 0 8 1
Batteries: Mungo and Lopez. Phelps;
Brandt, Betts and Hogsn, Spohrer.
(Second game) R. H. E.
Brooklyn .......... 2 7 1
Boston - 10 10 0
Batteries: Earnahsw. Bablch, Vance
and Phelps; Frank house and Spohrer.
St. Louis at Pittsburg postponed:
rain,
R. H. B
Cincinnati 2 ft u
Chicago ..., 3 6 0
Schott and Erlckson; Fivr.ch an 1
Odea.
American
R. H. E.
Philadelphia 0 11 l
New York ..: 7 12 0
Marcum. Caster. Wllshlre and Rich
ards, Berry; Tamulis, Murphy, Brown
and Dickey.
First R?me; K H- E
Cleveland 1 4 10 1
Detroit a 8 I
Hudlln and Pytlsk: Bruges and
Cochrane.
(10 Innings) R H. t,
Boston 4 10 A
Washington 5 S 1
Grove and R. Ferrell; Whitehill and
Bolton.
H. S
Chicago o 2 !
St. Louis 2 7 :
Whitehead and Sewell; Kntt an !
Hemsley.
STILL EFFECTIVE
SALEM. Ore., June fi.(UPi Labor
Commissioner Charles Gram warned
today that Invalidation of NRA has
no effect on Oregon"! minimum wat(e
laws for women employes. He said
there were Indications that vge cuts
and hour increases were contemplated
by employers of women In many sec
tions of the state.
"The minimum wage which can be
paid women workers Is 30 cents ar
hour." said Oram. "The maximum
work day la nine hours and the
maximum work week Is 40 hours.
These regulations were in effect be
fore the NRA anc. are still In opera
tion. Cannery workers on piece basl
must averaye 27;3 cents for at leait
per cent of the workers Women
on utralpht salary in canneries must
be paid the 30 cent oilnlmnm."
ALTERNATE SITES
Governor Tells Planners to
Submit New Location if
Old Grounds Found Too
Small Left to Solons
SALEM. June 5 (JP Governot
Charles H Martin today am.ou nc1
that he la Instructing the stite plar
ring commission In Its studies of the
new capltol building projec to pre
pare plana for a building to be lo
cated on the site of the structure
recently destroyed by fire, n adop
tion to any plana they may subm'.f
for another site if they dee'de that
the present grounds are too small to
be efficiently utilized
In the event the plannirg boa-xJ
should it-commend another :t f:
the new capltol the legislature, in
this manner, will have before it al
ternate proposals from wMlch tc
choose in passing final judgment up
on the final location, Oovcrnor Mar
tin pointed out.
Group Plan Advocated
At a recent meeting with he gov
ernor, the planning board postponed
final action upon selection of a site
to be recommended to the hoard oi
control and the legislature until It
had completed Its study of possible
locations. Some members of th
board, inclined toward construction
of a group of buildings ratner than
a single capltol structure, ''ontcnde'l
that. , tha. jjgesent grounds arc n.H
large enough to accommodate such s
group, and suggested that 'he avail
ability of larger sites be investigated
Objections by some of the leglsH
ture to the alleged extravagance 3t
(Continued on Page Twelve)
SALLEE ON STAND
DENIES
MP
CENTRAL PT. GIRL
Melvin Franklin Bailee, on trial be
fore an all-man Jury In circuit court,
on a charge Involving an elleged sta
tutory offense against a seven-year-
old Central Point girl, was on the
stand this morning for cross-examination
by Deputy District Attorney
George W. Nellson.
Sallec denied the accusation, and
Introduced testimony in an attempt
to prove an alibi, that he was not In
Central Point at the time of the com
mission of the alleged crime, but was
In this city at the corner of Main and
Central avenue, at "three minutes to
three," a time he fixed by looking at
the clock on the Jackson county
bank building. Salee was positive on
this point.
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Orr, cousins of
the defendant, testified that they had
(Continued on Page Twelve)
Lad Cremated In
Ranch House Fire
OREGON CITY. O-e.. Jure . !
Ernest Olle Cooper. Jr., a. burned to
death at the home of his parent.
and Mrs Ernest a. Cooper, vesterdej
afternoon. Mr. and Mra. Cooper, who
reside In the mountain oo.tntry t.
the south, were on other parte of fc.v:
rsnch when the fire started ,ind were
unable to effect entrance to save the
boy when th.y returned to find th
home In flames.
Army Offers Plan for
Spending Relief Money
WASHINGTON, June 5. APj
i Additional proposals for spending
work relief money at army post and
national cemeteries were put forward
today by the war department.
The d'-par'.ment filed apl.catior
for I27.4S7.390 to carry on 41 projects.
Moat of the money would go for br-
; rack, hospitals, shops, service clubs
and other Improvements at army sta
tion in Haws II and the Canal Zone.
The rest would be spent at various
points In 14 states.
Another batch of applications pre
sented by the department yesterday
aked 'i7.'i4 733 of work relief fund.
Official suited tie projects to be
! flnanred with th:s would b ivl
' liquidating ' because the government
f
Blue Eagle Dead
Along With Code
Practices of NRA
WASHINGTON, June 8. (AP)
The blue eagle now la official
ly dead.
It never was a statutory bird,
having been created by General
Hugh S. Johnson, first NRA boss.
In recent months Its use as a
compliance weapon slumped to
small proportions.
There was a possibility that
trade associations might attempt
the use of some sort of a label,
but it won't be NRA's blue eagle.
The bird was to have been
abandoned as an NRA symbol.
Dropping of code enforcement
killed It. '
F
STATE INFORMED
SALEM. Jun 5 IPi Tho wtin-
cate of apportionment of highway an
grade croaalng funda. of whl'.h Ore-
gon waa -Ulocatod, 3.4O0,0O0. taa mall
cd today from wnahtngton W. n
Lynch, c'.ilef of the feoeral bureau ot
publlo roada at Portland today ad
vised the atate highway commiaalon.
As soon as these funda are received
the allocations within the .tale chji
be made Yy the commission and wo t
started at once. The first letting
which would be about '.0C0.000.
could be' awarded wtthin a nonth. It
waa estimated.
The Information received t.y Lynch
stated the new regulations would be
on strict relief lsbor basis, tne regu
lations to follow ' 'limcd'ate'y after
the certificate. In the n.cantltm.
partial road programs could be pre
pared by the state for projects that
will use SO per cent labor from relief
rolla.
4
BILL BY HOUSE
WASHWQTON. June fl. f-T A djU
to authorize construction o half s
dozen key army air baaea t guard
Alaska, the Panama Canal, and the
nation's frontiers against any enemy
attacks was paased today by the house
and sent to the senate.
The measure recently wm the cen
ter of International reverberations
when It waa disclosed an officer ot
the army high command had told the
house military committee It contain
ed a camouflaged provision for a-,
air base on the Canadian b.vrder.
In establishing the new osses. tne
war department U directed to con
sider sites in the Atlantic uoUheast.
Atlantic southeast and Ciribbean.
southeastern states, Alaska, Pacific
northwest and Rocky Mountains.
WILSON ABSOLVED IN
DEATH YOUNG FRALEY
A not true bill waa returned yes
terday by the Jackson county grand
Jury against Jack Blakley. also known
aa Joe Wilson, chsrged with In
voluntary manslaughter as the result
of an auto accident on the Jackson
ville highway two weeks ago. when
Prancla rraley, 13. a boy bicyclist,
waa killed, after the auto driven by
Blakley had collided with an auto he
attempted to pass. A doren witnesses
were heard, and the grand Jury spent
three days Investigating the cane.
Following the returning of the
not true bill, the grand Jury recessed
subject to further call,
would save rent and heary mainten
ance costs.
Meanwhile, state highway depart
ments learned how much of the
MOO .000,000 already set aside for
highway construction and grade
crossing eliminations they will have
to spend. Secretary Wallace divided
this amount among the states yeatnr-
day. making half of It available for
streets and highways and half for
eliminating grade crossings. The state
highway departments must submit
1 detailed programs outlining what
they Intend to do with the money.
I Actual work can not begin, It was
said authoritatively, until proposal
i have been checked by Harry L. Hop
kins' works prog re division to deter
i mine whether they meet local relief
neds.
SKELETON SET-UP
TO BE MAINTAINED
FOR NRAFONCTION
Action Before End Present
Congress Session Roose
velt Aim Suggestions
Are Given to Law Expert
WASHINGTON. June . (API
Democratic leaders In congress said
todsy President Roosevelt wss plan
ning to submit additional legisla
tion, before the end of the present
session, to replace NRA 'a Invalidated
code structure.
Aside from the Immediate plana to
retain a skeleton NRA aetup with
extremely restricted functions, the
form of future legislation has yet to
be determined, however. The presi
dent Is personally studying the pos
sibilities. Chairman Doughton spoke of the
possibility of using the federal tax
ing power to devise a permanent aub
atltute for the fallen blue eagle: but
senate administration sources dis
counted the likelihood of that.
Volunteer Codes, .Icike
Senator Clark (D.. Mo ), author of
the senate bill extending NRA until
next April, said he was "perfectly
willing to retain a akcleton NRA or
ganization" and a voluntary code
system would be "a Joke."
"I'd be glad to establish a sys
tem of barring child labor and es
tablishing maximum hours and mini
mum wages, if It could be done," he
sam. -But i wouldn't want it as a
cover for all the monopolistic prac
(Continued on Pagi five)
HEAT OF TUESDAY
'24
A weather bureau reading, taken aft
3:45 this a f tern on. showed the mer
cury skyrocketing paat the centu-y
mark, standing at 100.3 dcyrecs, thi
hottest part of the day prohiMy st.U
to come.
The weatherman rolled up his sleeve
today and forecast fair weaher to
night and Thursday with h f h d
temperature and low humidity prom
ising no let-up In the unscnsonabl
warm spell that yesterday boosted tlv
mercury to 100 degrees, a re wrd sine
1D24 for weather prior to June d.
In the temperature reach 1
102 degrees on June I and 2. but
since then there has been no tem
perature f 100 degrees or above that
early In the spring. In ,19? how
ever, the mercury reached 104 d.
grecs on June 5, but Indications early
today were that that mark may b-e
eclipsed late thl afternoon
Yesterday's high mark was reache!
about 3:40, and thereafter .t became
slightly Moudy and the teroernturi
tapered off,
OCTOPUS ATTACKS MAN
GATHERING ABOLONES
RICHMOND. CaJ., June (UP)
While his wife and son watched. J. V.
Sargent, gathering abalonea In Anchor
bay. suddenly staggered and began
flailing at his anklrs. An octopus
had wound its tentacles about hie
legs. For half an hour Sargent bat
tled with the groping fish, finally
killing It with a blow to Its head. It
measured eight feet across the ten -tacles.
HOLLYWOOD, rnl.. .Tune 4.
Prance won't have to go off
the fold norv. Their new boat
broke the record so that mean
all Americans with nothing to
do when they get over thers
will want to go on the fastest
boat.
The U. ?. treasury says that
expenditures are running a bil
lion and a half under estimates.
That means more money than
schemes.
The baccalaureate addresses
sriven to uraduates don't offer
'em much encouragement out
side of ndvisiiiL' 'cm to vote the
straight nepublicnn ticket.
1 C l. MeNssaM Si.diciU. tea.