Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 28, 1935, Page 1, Image 1

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    Medford Mail Tfibun
It's Vacation Time
Flare the Mall Tribune follow you
on your summer racatlon. Better
than a letter from home. Telephone
T5 or drop postal giving jour old
and new address.
Thirtieth Year
(Eighteen Pages Two Sections)
MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE '2$, 15)33
No. 84.
OTILOT
The Weather
J Forecast: rioudy tonight and atur- j
day; cooler tonight. j
Temperature:
Highest yesterday .,, -, -,-, 89 J
Lowen this morning 5t '
j
U d L
1 . i
I Vows I POWERFUL, DARING
'BSBnd
By PAIL MALLON
(opyrlght, 1935, by Paul Mellon.)
WASHINGTON. June 28. When the
Blue Eagle blew up. the business field
traa supposed to be blasted with price
cuts and strewn
with unemploy
ment and wage
cuts. If you sur
vey the effects
In the govern
; ment'a own reg
ular business fig
ure you will find
very little evi
dence that there
has been ah ex
plosion. The price av
erage of o o n
farm - food prod
MALLON
ucts for the week before the supreme
court decision (May 25) was 77.8.
The average for the last available
week (June 15) was 77.9, virtually
unchanged.
Both employment and payrolls have
decreased possibly 3 per cent, but this
seems to be due at least partly to
eaaonal slack.
Industrial production Is unchanged:
freight loadings and department
store sales have shown abnormal sea
sonal Improvement.
The price figure?, however, are not
conclusive. They are collected by the
bureau of labor statistics from list
prices. It la quite likely that some
private price cutting has been done
behind these Hat prices. This Is a
common business custom.
Furthermore, the employment and
payroll ftgurea cover only factories,
and do not Include the service trades,
hotels, restaurants, very small fac
tories, where the wage efects of the
decision are supposed to have been
most heavily felt.
Nevertheless, the conclusion la Jus
tified that nothing sufficiently im
portant to show up in the govern
j ment business chart has happened
lnce the court edict.
The broad picture may.be survey
ed In the following monthly chart.
Each figure represents the percent
age of normality exi.sting at the times
mentioned, as each is adjusted for
seasonal variations. All except prices
re based on 1923-25 as 100 per cent.
JPrleea are baaed on 1926.
(Continued on Page Ten)
SSDE GLANCES
by
TRIBUNE REPORTERS
Chet Silliman trying to select an
ffecttve trout fly "I don't want that
one. It doesn't even make me hungry,
so why should a fish want It?"
Fete Belrnstro, after the Les Wolfe
battle "Whooey, Is that guy tough!
I kicked him hard enough to kill a
eow, and they Just bounced off him."
Jerry Trill , and Dick Lewis waltz
ing on haymarket square to the rmi
aic of a car radio.
A workman putting gold leaf on
the new wine store windows with a
paintbrush, of all things!
Two young men outside the M-M
window, paying they'd like to meet
the girl that posed for one of the
mannequins.
The sight of a spmi-nude damsel
en a cigarette ad apparently so
aroused t he Ire of some local cru
sader, that he. or she. wrote "shame"
In large letters clear across the thing.
PRESIDENT SIGNS
NUISANCE TAX BILL
PALL
WASHINGTON, June 28. (AP
President Roosevelt today tinned the
resolution extending the 500.000.000
In "nuisance" taxes for a two-year
period.
I Otherwise these would have ex
pired on Sunday nlcht.
The Imposts, principally excise
tuxes on commodities, such as gaso
line, furs, chewine gum, automo
biles other than trucks, tires and
tubes, refrigerators, also include con
tinuance of 3-cent postage and taxes
on telegrams and security transfers.
The signing was with a minimum
of formality minutes after the resolu
tion was received from the capltol.
SINCLAIR WILL LECTURE
IN PORTLAND JULY 7TH
PORTLAND. Or--. June 28 fUP
Upton Sinclair, California Hheia!
and author of the Epic plan, will ad
drew a mass nv:ing here July 7 in
Multnomah stadium. It wt;i oe S:n
northwet tour.
chair's forst major address of his
Carole Ann C"il.rr of Temple
t Trx.. has f'.ur Lr'a,-;r.-.r.c'.:r.othrr.:.
four prsn.-I-i-a "::'. a:id numerous
.'tat aunts and uncles.
FORCES FIGHTING
IS
Administration Leaders in
House Battle for Bill's
Retention of Provisions
Desired by President
WASHINGTON. June 38 (API
President Roosevelt today severely
condemned what he termed the lobby
charged with fighting the utility
holding company legislation and
called for house approval of the sen
ate bill containing a provision for
abolishing "unnecessary" holding com-
I pantes In seven years.
I This came while administration
leaders In the house were seeking
to retain In the bill the provision de
sired by the president.
The senate approved mandatory
abolition by a one-man vote margin
the house Interstate commerce com
mittee voted to give the securities
commission the discretionary power.
Talking at his regular press con
ference, the president said the most
powerful and daring lobby ever cre
ated by any organization was fighting
the holding company bill.
The president said he was stronger
now for the legislation than ever.
Noting talk about the so-called
"death sentence" clause, he said the
trouble with that argument was that
the timing was wrong.
Emphasi74ng that he was referring
to large utility companies spread over
wide territories, he said the stock
holders In these were and are under
death sentences and that this bill
Is actually an emancipation procla
mation for them.
He said the legislation la going to
give the stockholders a chance to
live instead of going to the death
house where, he added, they are
headed. He asserted their dollars
must be saved.
In tha large spread eagle holding
companies he said there were a lot
of parasitic Intermediate companies
taking away the money and the divi
dends. By a simple process under the sen
ate bill, he contended this could be
eliminated and there would be more
dividends and equities to the regular
operating companies and their stock
holders. Also, he said the bill will restore
to separate localities some rights to
control thlr own utilities, and would
take away the power, political and
otherwise, exerted on state legisla
tures and congress.
He said he did not believe very
many people were being deceived by
the arguments against the legisla
tion. IADE PRECE
EAGLESJEETING
A lance parade will be held tonight
at 7:30, by the Fraternal Order of
Eagles, preceding the regular meeting
at 8 o'clock. It was announced by
officers thla morning. The parade
will be headed by the recently or
ganized Southern Oregon band, and
will be followed by the state cham
pionship mixed drill team, members
of the order, and the auxiliary.
Members of both drill teams are
esked to be at the Eagles mil at 7
o'clock. Jack Hurston announced. It
is expected that the meeting tonight
will be the be.t attended for many
weeks, due to the fact that it is the
last one 'before the atate convention
which opens in Grant pa July 3.
Many Important matters will be
brought up at the meeting, and for
that reason there will be no soc'al
evening afterwards. All members are
requested to be at the hall at 7:30
to take part In the parade.
Oregon Weather
Cloudy tonight and Saturday; prob
ably light showers in northwest por
tion and on coast: cooler interior to
night and In east portion Saturday;
moderate west winds off the coast.
Aviation Committee of
Chamber Is Busy Branch
With aviation making such rapid
strides In the United States cf Amer
ica, the aviation committee of the
Jackson County Chamber of Com
merce has to keep abreast of the
times, officials of the organization
said today. While it Is recognized
that Medford Is an air-minded city,
having established the first airport
in the state of Oregon and Its cut
?rns are all Interested In aviation de
velopment, nevertheless, the com
mittee has to carry out many duties
which can only be handled by a
i small group.
I Mot of the membra of the com-
mittee arc aviators themselves, and
therefore are In a position to give
expert recommendations to the board
of directors from time to time. Mem
' tyr? of this committee topethT with
? Pacini r.ri::o:iii dc.'rnvr cjinmi"' c
orziinird !ftf-t vrar nin'le a tuoro';.'
"survey of the needs of Oregon Irom
Jailed For Pet Cruelty
-.o- ar
"v" -
Mrs. A. Ley (above) of Mill Val
ley, Calif., preferred a Jail sentence
of 25 daya to a fine for cruelty to
her dog. She was convicted of drag
ging her pet dog for three miles
behind her oar, (Associated Press
Photo)
10 REPLACE N.R. A.
L
WASHINGTON, June 38 (AP) The
American Federation of Labor today
proposed to President Roosevelt a
federal licensing of industry to main
tain principles of the former NRA.
The president reserved any ' deci
sion whether to seek new and per
manent NRA legislation at this ses
sion. Under the A. F. of L. plan, the
Government, through licensing power,
would require business In Interstate
commerce to abolish child labor,
maintain minimum wages and maxi
mum hours of work and respect "fair
trade practices."
The substitute for the dead NRA
code structure was presented by Wil
liam Green, president of the federa
tion, and George Berry, assistant ad
ministrator of NRA.
"We expressed the belief," said
Green later, "that the needs of the
countrv require new NRA legislation
at this session If In the range of
possibility."
The labor loaders said Mr. Roose'
velt took the proposal under advise
ment. together with several other
suggestions before him.
IS SHORT LIVED
(Copyright, 1935, by the Associated
Press)
PEIPIN, June 28. ( AP) Two un
identified secretaries from the United
States embassy ran a blockade of mu
nitions soldlera today to rescue a
number of Americans marooned out.
lde the walls of Pelplng.
The mutiny Itself lasted only about
12 hours and. despite artillery and
machine gunfire, only one person, a
Chinese civilian, was reported killed.
but the excitement was Intense.
A group of mutinous Chinese seized
an armored train at the south gates
of the 16-mfles-long city wall last
night and began bombarding the en
trance with a three-Inch gun at a
range of 200 yards.
Loyal troops drove them off and
the train retired In the direction of
Fengtai, but later returned to the at
tack at Peiping.
a national defense standpoint and
most of their recommendations as a
result of that survey were along the
lines of aviation.
Anticipating that probably lighter
than air ships would be an Impor
tant factor In the future of aviation.
j this community recommended to
i congressional delegatea that n moor
I lug matt for the Macon be establish
I ed In Medford. This recommendation
1 also was made by Tlrtue of the fact
i that Medford is exactly mid-way be
1 tnecn the masts at Tacoma and Sun
1 nyvale. This recommendation was
j placed before the war department and
action was hoped for until the dts
! ater which overtook the Macon some
j months ago.
The aviation committee haa taken
a very active part In the establishing
of an air mnil route on the coat ana
j (Continued oa Pag Nine;
OP
Lumber Being Cut at One
Portland Plant Picket
ing Remains Peaceful
Officers Remain Alert
PORTLAND. June 28. vT) Pacific
northwest lumber operators today
continued to spurn mediation and
outside influences and sought to end
the lumber strike by operating with
non-union help. !
About 110 employes were at work
In five Portland mills, but lumber
was being cut at only one plane.
Operations at the remainder of the
companies were still confined to the
yards.
Three mills remained closed, and
one, the Johnson Lumber company,
la continuing to operate under the
union agreement negotiated several
weeks ego.
Picketing remained peaceful, and
the Portland situation in general was
unchanged.
Fear iMcfcet Force.
At Vancouver. Wash., today, oper
ations st the Dubols-Matlack Lumber
company, employing around 35 men,
were halted when employes were un
willing to pas8 through h-avy picket
lines. There was no violence.
The Plywood company In Vancou
ver, with which the union signed an
agreement yesterday, was estimated
to have about 150 men at work. The
plant normally employs around 500
men and women.
City, county and state officers were
alert both In Tacoma and Portland
to stamp out Isolated cast of intim
idation and violence, and In Tacoma
national guard troops, ordered otit
by Governor Clarenco Martin, con
tinued their bayoneted vigil.
Ten Tacoma operators announced
with satisfaction - that another 100
men were returned to work yester
day, bringing the total to 700.
Union Sees "Fizzle."
William Wedel. president of the
Portland local of the striking saw
null and timber workers, declared the
reopening attempt here was a "fir
zle." "The owners extravagant claims
last week that they had 1500 men
ready to go to work blew up like a
kite," he said.
A. W. Muir, executive vice-president
of the Brotherhood of Carpen
ters and Joiners and chief spokes
man of the striking union, said he
had consummated another agreement
with a mill operator and workers
would vote tonight on ratification.
He did not name the plant.
Tacoma operators in a Joint state
ment rejected the suggestion of
Mayor Oeorge A. Smltley that the op
erators and strikers meet at the city
hall there. The invitation was ac-
t Continued on Page Eight)
'OLE MISS' KEEPS
GRINDING IN SKY
MERIDIAN, Miss., June 28. (AP)
The airplane, "Ole Miss," with her
weary pilots. Al and Fred Key. brother
world endurance flight record hold
ers, was still aloft at 2:13 p. m. today.
24 days after they went up and 2.1
hours after they had bettered the
five year old mark of John Kenneth
Hunter.
At that hour, Al and Fred had been
In the air a total of 577 hours and
42 minutes as against the record of
533:41:30 which was set by the Hun
ters In 1930 and officially recognized.
The Ole Miss motor was still firing
away smoothly and the fliers said
they expected to remain In the air
until Monday at least when they hope
to surpass the unofficial mark of
647 hours attained by Dale Jackson
and rorst O'Brien over St. Louis In
July and August, 1030.
OOLE RECEIVERS
E
DUNCAN, Okls., June 28. (AP)
Asserting that "any person who would
make a good employe would not ac
cept the dole." Erie P. Halliburton,
owner of an oil well cementing com
pany, tonight Issued orders banning
relief clients from employee ranks of
the company.
The company operates In Txas
California. Oklahoma and Kansas.
The order also affects applicants
for Jobs in Halliburton's ho.n.
"We will not employ anyone who
has secp;d relief or employment
from the relief administration, as an
executive or otherwise," he announc
ed.
"If nil Industry do that," he
1 addrd, "it would break up the gov
t srnment's relief problem.'
Public Depends
On Advertising
Avers Britisher
PARIS. June 28. ( AP) Lord
Luke. British Industrialist, told
the International chamber of com
merce today:
"Advertising Is one of the most
economical as well as one of the
most effective means of obtaining
adequate distribution."
He declared that Great Britain
spends 70.000,000 pounds about
yo0,000,000 annually on adver
tising, a sum which he estimated
to be 3 per cent of the total re
tail trade and considerably less
than 10 per cent of the total cost
of distribution.
"The public," stated Lord Luke,
"has come to realize that the ad
vertising of a product Is the guar
antee of Us quality."
OF CHIEF JUSTICE
DETROIT. June 28. (l) Police- in
vestigating the slaying here of How
ard Carter Dickinson, New York at
torney, Intensified their search to
day for William Lee Ferrlf, reported
to have told an acquaintance that
he was going out with "a lawyer
named Dickinson a guy with plenty
of money.
A drive was In progress simultane
ously for a woman who checked the
slain attorney's brief case at his ho
tel 12 hours after his body was found
In a Detroit park.
Police said Ferris had been miss
ing since he checked out of his hotel
at 11 a. m. yesterday, shortly before
Dickinson's body was identified.
Ferris had lived there three weeks,
they said.
New York and Ohio officers were
SAked to aid In the search for Ferris
when police said they learned from
Andrew Swygen he had 'an vngnge
ment with Ferris Wednesday night,
but that Ferria broke It because he
was going out with a lawyer from the
Book-Cadllac (hotel) named Dickin
son "a guy with plenty of money."
Dickinson was believed to bo carry
ing several thousand dollars when he
left his hotel. His wife. In a -telephone
conversation with Detroit po
lice, said Dickinson had Informed
her he had ''several thousand dol
lars with him."
The New York counsellor, whose
mother's sister was married to Chief
Justice Hughes, came here Monday
on business, reliably reported to be
In connection with the estate of the
late William H. Yawkey, one ttme
lumberman and sportsman who once
owned an interest In the Detroit
baseball club.
F
BLIND EUGENE TOT
FTJOENT5. June 28. (ft) Jessie
Beebe. small daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jark Turnbull. Eugene. Buffered the
probable loss of an eye late yester
day when an unidentified man tossed
a giant firecracker Into a group of
children playing In the street. She
also suffered a badly lacerated arm.
Police said the man. believed to
have been Intoxicated, fled after toss
ing the lighted firecracker at the
children. Police were searching for
the man today, but lack of an ade
quate description hampered their ef
forts, f
BASEBALL
National.
(Ten innings.) R. h. E.
Philadelphia 4 11 1
Boston 3 10 0
Walters. Johnson and Wilson;
Frankhouse. fimlth and Hogan,
Spohrer.
R. H. E.
St. Louis 2 8 0
Cincinnati 4 10 0
Haines, Hallahan and Delanccy;
Derringer and Lombsrdl.
R. H. K.
Pittsburgh 0 1 0
Chicago 8 12 0
Weaver; Bikofer, Brown and Pad
den; Htnshaw and Hartnett.
R. FT. E.
New York 11 14 l
Brooklyn 7 10 8
(Ten innings).
Parmlee. Stout. Smith and Man
cuo. Danning, Clark, Vance, Benge
and Lopes.
American.
R H E
Chiaco 5 10 1
Cleveland 5 9 0
Whitehead. Wyatt and Sewell; H11
debrand. Harder and Phillips.
R. H. E
Detroit 10 11 0
St. Louis 1 4 1
A'tkr and Cochrane; Cain. Hansen.
Colfman and Hemsley, Healo.
PRESIDENT PEAVY
0E0.S. CIS SUED
BY SONSJX-WIFE
False Arrest Charge Asks
$25,000 Squabble Over
Children Basis of Action
Filed in Federal Court
PORTLAND, Ore., June 28. (AP)
George W. Peavy. president of Oregon
State college, and Mrs. Pcavy, were
named defendants today In a $25,000
suit charging false arest. filed In fed
eral court by Pauline Peavy, their
former daughter-in-law.
Mrs. Pauline Peavy charged,
through her attorney, William J.
Brewster, who filed the complaint,
that she was arrested on July 2. 1033.
at Eugene, at the Instigation of the
elder Peavys and was Informally
charged with kidnaping her own
children. Brewster said the arrest was
made In an attempt to obtain custody
of two minor grandchildren of the el
der Peavys.
Brewster said Mrs. Peavy was at one
time married to Bradley Peavy, son of
the state college president, that her
divorce action against him was pen
ding at the time of the reputed ar
rest and that the final decree was
obtained in California last April.
While the divorce case was pend
ing the plaintiff had temporary cus
tody of the children, the complaint
stated, and related that she was kept
prisoner for 16 hours after her ar
rest. TAKE FIRST STEPS
CALLANDER, Ont June 38. (ZD
Two of the Dlonne quintuplets,
Yvonne and Cecil e, graduated from
the creeping stage and stood up for
the first time today. Just 13 month
after their birth.
While Annette, Emllle and Marie
grasped the sides of their play pen
lp vain attempts to Imitate their sis
ters, nurses predicted It would not
be long before they would be taking
their first steps
Yvonne and Ceclle were none too
steady on their legs and often Join
ed their sisters on the floor be fere
they finally figured out they couldn't
rail If they held on to the pen rail
ing. Their physician, Dr. Allan Roy
Da foe. looking the five famous chil
dren over. Just a month after their
first birthday, pronounced them In
"great health 'and said It would not
be long before they would be play
ing outside in the yard.
OF
SALEM, June 28. P The body of
Joseph Hamman. 58, Salem-MUl City
stage operator who was drowned In
the North Santlam river yesterday,
was recovered during the afternoon
with grappling hooks.
Hamman was drowned when he
slipped from a rock while fishing
near Niagara, and his body was re
covered from 18 feet of water. The
coroner brought the body to flalem.
The aclcdent victim, a veteran
stage operator In this district. Is sur
vived by five children.
Income Shares
Maryland fund, bid 115.86; asked,
917.15.
Quarterly Income shares, bid 11.34;
asked, 41.48.
England Suffers Setback
In Role as Peacemaker
Br KOf.KR P. GREENE
(Copyright, 1035, by the Associated
Press)
LONDON, June 28 On this 31st
anniversary of the assassination of
Archduke Frants Ferdinand at Sara
jevo the shot which precipitated the
world war Great Britain suffered
setback on her role as peacemaker.
Her traveling salesman of peace.
Captain Anthony Eden, was back
from his continental tour today,
bearing a report on the avowed In
tention of Premier Benito Mussolini
of Italy to war against Ethiopia in
East Africa.
Before reporting to the cabinet
meeting, the only comment of the
young secretary for League of Na
tions affairs concerning further se
curity negotiation was:
"It Is on the knees of the gods."
Althoiifth the lialo-Ethtoplau cri-
lis related other questions of Euro
!
i
Jap War Lord
.1 v.
Is ' . s. til
Completing a tour of Mancnoukuo
War Minister Senjuro Hayahl
(above), of Japan, said his country
could not reduce its armed forces
there because of tha proximity ol
Russian troops. Meanwhile tension
between China and Japan Increased.
BURY OFFICE IN
CALL FOR CARDS
SALEM. June 28. P) With 357,
000 Oregon operators' licenses all ex
piring on the same day, Storetary of
State Earl Snell today called atten
tion to the fact that It wtis abso
lutely unavoidable that many resi
dents of the atate who have sent In
their remlttancea will be forced to
wait from 10 days to two weeks for
their licenses.
Handicapped In the beginning by
the state capltol fire resulting In de
layed delivery of special forms used,
and by crowded quarters, a large
crew of checkers, proofreaders and
typists ftuw hnve fiiiwi all of the
regular office apace of tho operators'
division and also two basement rooms.
In addition, night shifts of checkers
have been provided and a second
night shift will probably be organis
ed by the first of the week,
"Never In the history of the office
has the mall been as heavy as at
the present time," Snell said today.
"The work of Issuing operators' li
censes la proceeding as rapidly a
possible. To acknowledge receipt of
every one of the thousands of re
mittances coming In dally would only
delay issuance of the actual licenses
and coat many thousands of dollars.
Every effort Is being made, however,
to give prompt service."
E
SAN RAFAEL, June 28. (AP)
Mra. Albert Ley, ordered to pay a 150
fine or spend 25 daya In Jail follow
ing conviction on charges of treating
a pet dog with undue cruelty, chose
the Jail aentence. She was found
guilty of draining the dog almost two
miles after It fell from a riding-perch
on her automobile.
"Ml show my husband how much
work I do around the house," she
said, explaining her choice.
Today, second of his wife's term,
the husband paid the fine, and Mrs.
Ley was back home tending to the
20 goats and 200 chickens the couple
own.
loggers at Work
BELLINGHAM, Wash,. June 28.
(AP) Five hundred loggers were
working today In the Clallam county
camps of the Bloedel Donovan lum
ber mills. Monday 200 men will re
turn to work In the Sf.xon camp.
pean security to the background,
the Brutish diplomats discussed four
other prospective moves on the
chessboard of world peace.
These were for an eaatern Euro
pean pact, a Danublan treaty, an
air Locarno and land disarmament.
Concerning his attempts to dis
suade II Dues from sn African cam
paign it was understood Captain
Eden would tell his colleagues:
1. Mussolini stood adament against
any other solution of the Italo
Ethloplan dispute than conquest of
th East African empire.
2. Any attempt at Geneva to Inter
fere with that plan would lead to
a prompt withdrawal by Italy from
the League of Nations.
Captain Eden was understood to
have outlined Mussolini's reputed
plan of action thua.
(Continued on Pag Seven)
1
i x v
ROGUE PEAR CROP
5 PER CENT LESS
THAN LAST YEAR
Traffic Association Esti
mates 1,569,125 Boxes
All Varieties Apple Crop
to Exceed Last Year
The 1S3S pear crop, for the Med
ford district of the Rogue River val
ley. Will ShOW M S ner r.nf. rf.,...
compared with last year, and the
applecrop win show a 30 per cent In
crease, according to estimates pre
Dared bv thi, Rnpn. niir.. Tm,
aoctatlon. The estimates are based on
figures reported by various members
of the Traffic association, and com
piled Dy secretary W. j Looker.
The 1935 cron of Man .11 ..!.-
ties, is figured at 1.569.135 boxes.
mst year s crop was 1.040,683 boxes.
Tha npnr Nffiirn. .hnn, tt. ...411
be a larger crop of D'AnJous this
year man inst, out less of other va-
(Continued on Page Seven)
T
IN SUICIDE PACT
BROWNSVILLE, Tex., June 38.
(UP) Authorltlea Investigating the
double suicide of Lawrence S. Mon
son of San Diego, Calif., and his
alster-ln-law. Miss Carol Mlckelson,
decided today that the "eternal tri
angle" was the cause of the tragedy.
The bodies of Monson and his
sister-in-law were found late yester
day In an automobile parked on tha
beach near here. The couple appar
ently had committed suicide by In
haling the ' fumes from the car's
exhaust.
San Diego authorities said thst
Monson, father of two children, hsd
separated from his wife because of
Miss Mlckelson. Monson and his
alster-ln-law left San Dlcgo together
In April, California authorities said.
EUGENE GIRL TO WED
EUGENE, Ore., June S8. (P) The
marriage of Mlaa Dorothy Belle Endl
cott. elder daughter of Dr. and Mra.
S. C. Endlcott of Eugene, to Adolph
B. Spreckela of Seattle and San Fran
cisco, will be solemnlred at a quiet
ceremony the coming Sunday morn
ing at 10 o'clock, at the residence
nf the bride's parents. Only the mem
bers of the family will attend the
wedding. Miss Delilah Endlcott, sta
ter of the bride, and Alan Peyser of
Seattle, will attend the couple. The
lowing their wedding, planning to
couple will leave for the south fol
make their home In San Francisco.
The bride-elect Is a graduate of the
University of Oregon and a, member
of Delta Gamma sorority there.
I .
Hurt In Hmashup
SALEM, Ore., June 28. (AP) Ralph
Mill, 8, and sister. Thelma, 14, of
Longvlew. Wash, suffered lacerations
and bruises that required hospital
treatment in a truck-automobile col
lision south of here on the Paclfle
highway late yesterdr.y.
BEVKKLY HILLS, Calif.,
June 27. The first buttle of the
next war was fought in New
York City Tuesday night. Big
Italy met Little Abyssinia and
Mussolini's first spring drive
was halted in its tracks. General
Joe Louis, head of tho Ethiopian
forces, met II Duce's Camera
(the biggest Roman of them all)
and treated him like a Christian
of gladiatorial days. Now there
is a movement to send "Lion"
Louis to Abyssinia to meet Mus
solini's whole army.
His trip is being gladly paid
for by several American philan
thropists (new friends of Abys
sinian liberty), a Mr. Braddock,
a Mr. Bner (not Bugs) and even
a German, a Mr. Sohmelling, has
contributed to make Mr. Louis'
trip to Africa more permanent.
Yours,
t Itil. KcNauaat ajadlcela, to.
eft