Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1937)
The Weather Foreran: Fair tonight and Friday; hlrh temperature and decreaMnr humidity. Temperature: Wehet venterday K), Lowest thli morning.. 85 For the Beit Then art countless opportuni ties offered from day to day In tha classified columns of this newspaper to reap a real bene fit. Watch the ads closely for the best then act promptly. Tribune Medford full Associated Pres. . nil United Press Thirty-Second Year MEDFORD. OREGON. THURSDAY. JULY 1. 1937. No. 87. BE wir j " MB j I I GO1 By H. K. BALK HAG E (Copyright, 1937. by the North Amer ican Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) WASHINGTON, July 1. If there weren't any Hyde Park, the president would probably have Invented one this week-end. He was Just about Boy-Scouted out of town. With some 30.000 youngsters In .aborts encamped by the pellucid Po tomac, about every county In the country has been heard from up at 1600 Pennsylvania avenue. If the president had had 25 hours a day, ha probably could have used them all Inspecting this or that or taking part in something or other at the huge tent city or along the line of march. He had to get In line or get out. "I Just bad a very nice talk with the president," satd the senator, "and he assured me they were going to take care of that reclamation propo altlon." The cynic snickered. "Chalk up another vote for the court bill, boys," he shouted and retired behind a sprig of mint. "Well." said the senator, "noth ing was said about the court, but, you know, I'd sort of like to keep my Job here In Washington. So 1 decided to let the other boys be the statesmen. I'm Just going to look after the folks back home the beat I can." Speaking of Boy Scouts and speak ing always with the proper deference one of the Inconsistencies that arises to meet tha eye Is the fact their big party la called a Jamboree which Webster indelicately defines aa a noisy or unrestrained carousal or frolic;., a .spree. . r.. --..: The growing ahape fo labor casts a new shadow over government. Gov ernment departments, notably the treasury are continually being raided of their best legal talent by the com mercial world. Now that the demand for labor specialists has been greatly Increased, thanks to tha national labor rela tions act, the labor department will be the next to suffer. Washington law schools are finding new Interest In their courses on labor law. In the hulabaloo of New Deal proj ects, which range from plumbing In spectlon to Interpreting the delicate nuances of Shakespeare, another project, under an old deal agency, baa been overlooked. It la worth looking at U you get a chance, which you probably won t (Continued on Page Nine.) 24 NAVY PLANES HOP FOR SEATTLE SAN DIEGO, Calif., July 1. P) Twenty-four navy patrol planes took off at 7 a. m. today on a 1600-mile flight to Seattle. Aboard were 35 officers and 120 enlisted men. commanded by Lieu tensnt Commander Robert I. Fuller The planea will operate In tho Pu get sound area until mid-August, It la understood. Twelve of the same type planes flew non-stop from here to Psnama 3000 miles last week In approx Imately 27 hours. It wss expected that today'a flight wou'.d require about 12 houra. SIDE GLANCES by TRIBUNE REPORTERS JUT Beter being pleasantly sur prised by lesrnlng that a three-year-old note wss sbout to be paid, he immediately becoming scared tnat he wouldn't be able to find the promissory paper. Doc Ray Staub. the Portland ob stetrician and aviation baiiyhooer pilling hie customary stunt ot arousing Ah Banwell from his downy bed at 2:30 a.m. via the long dis tance phone. A! Lary giving the townfolk a .ample of his aerial clowning over trie airport. Mrs. Homer Mri deciding to al low her youngsters to stay up a lit tle later than usual becajse they could sleep aa lonr a they liked In the morning and then aiding that! he wished they wouja sierp insie.u of rising at the cra.-k .11 l vn to dis turb the entire nousehol !. a deplor tola habit ol toe very younaj. TO CRITICISMS ON Oregon Ranks 12th in Aver age Assistance to Aged, j Is Claim Age Limit Cut Waits Ability of Counties; PORTLAND. Ore., July 1. (API Governor Martin answered critics of his social security program today In an address prepared for delivery be fore the Willamette Democratic asso ciation by "nailing charges of nig gardliness to the mast.-' Asking If "these carping critics who term Oregon's old sge plan nig gardly" realise that Oregon ranks 12th of all states In the average amount of assistance paid, ha said, "we have no cause for shame in the manner in which we are tak ing care of our aged people." Oregon ranka 10th In the propor-.j tlon of persons aided to total popu lation. 21.27 Is Average "The average In Oregon is $21.27 a month for each pensioner." he ssld. "Compare this with S20.4B for our sister state to the north and 4.0S for Mississippi." He said the legislature made avail able for pensions during the current blennlum SI 1,188,800. half paid by the federal government and a quarter each by state and counties. He add ed he would like to reduce the age limit from 70 to 65 immediately, but poor financial condition of counties prevented this until 1938. Answering demands that a mini- (Continued on Page Ten.) mi-POIR COIN PACT TO CONTINUE DESPITE SITUATION IN F WASHINGTON. July I. (API Secretary Morgenthau announced to day that the trl-power monetary agreement will be continued, despite the financial crisis In Prance. Calling reportera to an early morning press conference, the treas ury secretary made public a commu nication to Georges Bonnet. Prencn finance minister, saying that this oofntry looks forward "to a continua tion of close cooperation between our treaauries under the trl-partlte dec laration." The monetary understanding, ef fected last September by Great Bri tain. Prance and the United States pledges participating nations to use stabilization funda to prevent sharp fluctuations In Internstlonal i change. PARIS, July 1. (API Prance's "floating franc." freed of the restric tions that kept It up, drifted at the close of today's open market trading to 26.06 franca to the dollar and 1.'8 93 to the British pound. (Thla makes the franc worth 3.837 centa In United Statea money, a de valuation of 16.23 per cent from the previous minimum permitted. YEAR IN PRISON FOR DESERTING FAMILY Tl ELOPE WITH NEIGHBOR ROSEBURO. Ore., July 1-UPi Merrill Richardson, who District At torney J. V. Long eald. deserted his wife and four children and quit a M a day Job to elope with a neighbor's wife to Bend, waa sentenced In cir cuit court today to one year In the state penitentiary. Richardson was arrested at Glen- dale, waived preliminary examination and went before Circuit Judge Carl E Wlmberly with a plea of guilty to a district attorney's Information charg ing non-support. The district attorney told the court that In August. 1936. Richardson quit a mill Job at Olendale, and was ac companied to Bend by a neighbor's wife. After a residence In Deschutes and Grant counties, the couple re cently went to the Grave creek dis trict in Josephine county. Upon Instructions from the Doug laa county relief committee, Mrs Richardson filed a non-support com plaint, the district attorney ssld. re sulting In the man'a arrest yesterday. Ashland, Gold Hill Couple Will Marry RENO. Nev.. July 1. 4V-Msrrle - I cemes included: Omar 8. wnur. 50. - 1 Ashland. Ore., and Nellie R. Cotton, 39. Oold Hill, Ora, Teamsters Balk At Hauling Beer With Red Labels PORTLAND, Ore., July 1. (AP) A number of teamster union truck drivers confronted with a federal court order to haul the disputed "red label" beer told em ploye today: "We'll quit first." "We've got other trucking busi ness besides beers. We can't afford to lose our drivers now." said one trucking operator. "We'll Just have to let the beer stay where It Is." Thus, despite court action re straining teamsters from Interfer ing with the delivery of brands carrying the brewery workers' un ion label, the Jurisdiction war be tween the two labor groups ap peared no nearer a settlement. F CLOSE TO CITY The hunt for Leo M. Schroder snd Leo P. Hicks, county Jail prisoners under prison sentence, who escaped Tuesday night, resolved Into watch ful waiting today, with no definite clues aa to their whereabouts. A guard was still maintained today over all southern Oregon roads. Schroder Is under a three-year prison sentence for forgery, and Hlcka has a two and one-half years sentence for grand larceny. The men escaped by going to the roof of the Jail and making their way to a trap door that enabled them to reach the atalrway outside the Jail. Both are ex-convlcts. according to the authorities. Schroder served time In Ssn Quentln for grand theft, and'waa paroled In 1936. He la now wanted at Bakerafleld, Vallejo, and Sacramento, Calif., on check charge. Hicks eved-imo In tho New Mexico penitentiary. Schroder was sentenced Tuesday morning, and escaped that afternoon. Hicks was sentenced two weeks ago. Schroder plead guilty to check forgeries here totaling 6160. Hicks admitted theft of a saddle and cowboy equipment from E. W. Kubll of the Applegate. Authorltlea believe the fugitives are hiding out In this vicinity until the excitement dies down, before taking to the hlghwsys. Neither had any money, as far as Is known, when they fled. Siskiyou county authorl tlea are keeping a watch for the pair. Sheriff Syd I. Brown ssld today roof air vents and trap doors would be barred as a result of the escape and hereafter prisoners under peni tentiary sentence would be kept In cells. BAD WEATHER DELAYS AMELIA'S LONGEST HOP ABOARD TJ. S. COAST GUARD CUTTER AT HOWL AND ISLAND, July 1. OPT Adverse weather condi tion forced Amelia Earn art to post pone the dangerous 3.570 mile hop from Lae, New Guinea, until tomor row. No airplane has ever flown the route from Lae to How land, the long' est single hop In Mlas Earhart's globe girdling journey. ALTURAS, Calif., July 1. ?Fi The prosecution asked the death penalty for Harry French In closing arguments to the Jury today while the defense branded the man he was accused of shooting, Claude L. McCracken. editor, aa a "menace" to the community. j Boy Scouts Hitting Hip ha" It trail l frim Is more than a (itiire or tor inre iwy Tu-nnm umiirrr,. ... Wa-hlnston. n. C. for the national Jamboree, thousands of boys filled their ramp mattrems alth straw be fore making ramp In the nstlotj'i capinL swrneT jasiitHBiaiBH SOVIET GUNBOATS SENT TO SENNUFU Tl Japanese Cabinet Declares Only Evacuation of Island and Other Disputed Spots Can Keep Far East Peace . TOKYO. July 1. (AP) Japanese reports said tonight that five more soviet gunboats had appeared today at Sennufu Island In the Amur river, where an alleged soviet "invasion" has led to an armed clash between the Russian river craft and Japanese Manchoukuoan border artillery. These advices, together with con tinued soviet occupation of the Island and what Japanese sources said was Moscow's failure to reply to Tokvo's protests on the "Inva sion," heightened official apprehen sion. The cabinet has declared that only the evacuation of Sennufu Island and other disputed border territory by soviet armed forces can bring a peaceful solution to the crisis. As It stands now. both Russia and JSan consider the other aggressor. Dispatches from Moscow to the newspaper Asaht, meanwhile, said the Japanese ambaassdor there made a passionate plea for peace to soviet officials, regardless of the technical question of ownership of the Amur islands. TOKYO. July 1. (AP) Sennufu Island, cause of the naval battle be tween Japan and Russia and the attendant far eastern crisis, was de. scribed today aa virtually unlnhablt. ed aandbank, which Is submerged at high tide. Bolshol, the other Island Involved In the boundary clash, also la a sandbank which usually disappears under summer flood-watcra. - PHOENIX, Arts., July I. (AP) Upton Close, author and lecturer on Oriental problems, today character ized the Japanese-Boviet dispute on the Amur river as a "smoke screen on the pert of both governments," but said the situation paranoica events leading to tha Russo-Japanese war of 1904. Government leaders In both soviet Russia and Japan, Close ssld, are stirring up a "bogey" to divert at tention from "serious Internal trou bles." K. F. FIREWORKS BOOTHS STAGE PRE-4TH DISPLAY KLAMATH FALLS, July 1. (AP Klamath county's list of unscheduled pro-Fourth of July fireworks displays was boosted to three today. Last night a fireworks stand at the south city limits caught fire, and. In the course of Its own destruction, sent a skyrocket rooming across the street to raze a rival establishment. At Chtloquln last week a similar business went up with colors flying. KLAMATH MAN TO PEN ON MANN ACT CHARGE PORTLAND, July 1. Federal Judge James A. Fee sentenced Joseph O. Wsahlngton of Klamath Falls to three years In a federal plntentlary when he pleaded guilty yesterday to violation of the Mann act. The grand Jury Indicted him for the alleged Illegal transportation of his wife, Rose Emily Washington, from Cali fornia to Klamath Falls. Bed Down at Jamboree Arrest Aged Man For Threatening F.D.R. In Letters BOSTON. Mass., July 1. (API Federal officers today arrested Morton D. Malnwrlght, 73. of Wln throp. and charged him with writ ing threatening letters to Presi dent Roosevelt. Text of the let ters whs not divulged, although officers said they threatened death to the president. The arrest was made by Alonro H. Rice, a secret service agent. The letters were written over a 16-mouth period, authority? aaid. Malnwrlght was formerly a dep uty U. 8. marshal at Srottlf, Wsh. His arralngment was set for later In thr day. FINED $25 EACH AFTER SIMPS Charged with reckless driving, fol lowing two accidents on the South Pacific highway less than two miles apart last night. Burt Haiti mack. 03. of S30 Bessie street, and Robert Bragg. 34, of Talent, were both fined 25 and M-fiO costs In Judge L. A. Roberts' Justice of the peace coirt in Ashland thla morning. St to po lice made both arrests. Hammack, driving an old modul Chalmers touring car north on the Pacific highway about two miles south of Talent At 11:20 p. m., struck a GMC pickup operated by William Wellington tlorton of Klamath Palla, state police reported. Traveling on the wrong side of the road, the Ham mack machine struck the pickup on the left front end, according to staae police. Inflicting considerable damage. Arriving on tha scene immediately following the crash, state police ar rested Hammack and, after straight ening out the tangle, proceeded smith with Hammack as a passenger. Ap proaching Jackaon Hot Springs, about two miles south of the first wreck, the officer came upon the second, which had occurred about 11:50 p. m. It Involved a Dodge truck driven by Fred Rose of Balcm, and loaded with huge rolls of paper, and a Bulck roadster operated by Robert Bragg of Talent. According to the state po lice report, Bragg was driving north, swerved to the WTong aide of the road and, when the truck, approach ing from the north, swung left to avoid the crash, Bragg then wheeled back onto his own side and the two machines smashed together. Bragg received a on?-Inch cut over his eye, while Rose was uninjured. Tho truck was knocxed over on Its right side, and recceived considerable damage, aa did the Bulck roadster. The rolls of paper were scattered all over the road, the officer reported. Bragg was arrested for reckless driving and, along with Hammack, was taken to Ashland and held until thla morning when the fines were meted out. Few Days Of Grace On Driving License . SALEM, July 1. (IP) It waa Illegal today to drive an automobile without a new driver's license, but police in dicated they would not start a drive on persona carrying old llcenaea for several days. Secretary of State Earl Snell aald he believed drlvera would be given a chance to get the new licenses for a few more dsya, at least until the rush of applicants dlmlnlshea. 10 STEEL First Trouble-Free Resump tion Seen Since Great Lakes Strike Launched May 26; Other Mills Busy EAST CHICAGO, Ind., July I. (AP) Inland ' Steel's plant here peacefully reopened today under a truce announced by Gov. M. Clif ford Townsend of Indiana. Thousands of workera, many wear ing freshly laundered overalla and all grinning happily, walked through the gates In the first trouble-free-reopening of a steel mill since the Oreat Lakea atrlke waa launched May 38. At 10 a.m. Jsmea 11. Walah, In land works manager, estimated 9500 men hsd. checked In, nearly double tha normal day force of .8000. He said many checked In to determine what departments to report to later on the 4 p.m. or midnight ahlfts. Mayor Andrew Rooney of East Chicago lifted a ban on sale of liquor, guna or other weapons effec tive at U a.m., because 'the situa tion haa calmed down so rapidly." The mllla of the Mahoning valley In Ohio hummed at what company officials said waa near capacity, but Ohio National Guardamen remained to see that there was no disorder. The Bessemer converters turned the night sky red over the Youngs town steel mill district early today for the first time since the strike waa launched agalnat four independ ent steel companies. The Issue is a demand of the ateel workera organ izing committee, C.I.O. affiliate, for signed labor contracts. Republic Steel corporation. Youngs. town Sheet and Tube, Inland and Bethlehem Steel are affected, Elsewhere the long strike front was quiet, FREE W'SliSPECTS IN ABDUCTION DEATH OF INGLEWOOD. Calif., July 1. (IP) Sheriff Eugene Btscallus announced today the kldnap-alayor of the three Inglewood school girls waa attll at liberty and all suspects arrested by authorities had been oleared. Luther Dow, the transient ex-con- vlct, and the other man, aclon of a prominent boa Angeles family, who had been under observation, have been eliminated from the Inquiry, the sheriff satd. A brown paper candy bag. bearing four blurred fingerprints, la a clue upon which authorities based some hope. It waa found beneath one of the bodlea In the gully at Baldwin hills, where the bodies were found Monday. The baa la almllar to those In which candy waa sold Saturday In a drug atore here. EAGLE PT. 10 HAVE EAOLE POINT, July 1. fSpl.) Work waa begun thla morning on construction of a planing mill on the outsklru of Eagto Point at a cost of 13000 by Prank Ohllders and Tom tvAcClraw of Eagle Point and Medford Pigging operations for foundation of the structure are under way on the eight Iota purchased by Chllders snd McOraw from Jackson county located near the Eagle Point depot and railroad. Operations are to be on a small pale at flrat, the co-owners state, but later expansion la planned. A box factory will probably be added to the establishment, It wu pointed out Machinery for the planing mill la expected to arrive within 30 days and tne mm wna ne in oper-mon in to dsya, it waa stated. Eagle Point resident report con siderable activity In timber trans ac tions in the area, Including the aale of a tract In the Butte Palla area recently by Lyle Van Scoy. Other si lea are pendli g. It la aald. The entire business outlook of the com riunlty continues favorable, corre Lpondents state. DYNAMITE BLAST KILLS K. F. ROAD JOB FOREMAN KLAMATH FALLS. July I. (Tj William Pete Barrts, 47, foreman of a road lob in northern Klamath county, was killed yesterday after. noon by the sudden eiploslon of dynsmlte blast bs hsd lighted. Same' body mangled by the bleat, One leg waa nearly Blown otr. ana NEW PLANING MILL which hurled him mora than 13 teei.ana turned on toe iiuhvo. Flier Sans Shirt Has Hard Time in Medford Landing Bernndtne Lewis King. Holly wood socialite and stunt flier, breezed over the Medford airport In ber "Mongrel" biplane Wednea dsy and flew around and around until her failure to land caused anxiety to ground crew members. The delay, she explained, hap pened thus: She llkea to take sun baths while flying, and she en countered rough air aa she neared the airport so she "had a devil of time wrestling with a tricky, bouncing plane with one hand and an eluslvo shirt with the other.'' "Tho dsrn ship won t fly Itself,' she laughed. Miss King was the first of the galaxy of experts In plain and fancy flying to arrive to take part In Oregon's touring air show, which open here Friday. LEAD HALF YEAR Indications that Medford was well on the way to enjoying Ha huskiest building boom In yeara were revealed today by City Building Inspector Prank Rogers when he released con struction cost figures for the flrat six month period of 1937. Total stated cost of permits Issued for tho construction of residences, business buildings and other projects amounted to $174,359 during the i first half of thla year, a gain of ap proximately 73 per cent over the same period In 1036 when permits having a stated cost of a 10 1.533 were Issued. Of that total, 101.600 was for the construction of now residences, 30. 700 for the construction of business buildings, (33,904 for re purs and al terations on business buildings, and $0,115 for repairs and alterations on residences. Mr. Rogers pointed out that the coft of the 37 new residences for the first six months of this year was almost as much as the entire coat of all construction over the same six months laat year. Juno of thla year ahowed a value of $34,704 In permits as compared with $21,005 In June, 1930. May of this year has bo far proved the best month, with permit issued having a stated construction cost of 141.030. Commenting on the tremendous in crease in construction of new resi dences, Mr. Rogers said that it proved people were getting ck to "home building," which has been slight for many years. "They are building new homes In stead of repairing and remodeling old ones,' he said. Cost of new home construction waa about 1100 per cent greater than money expended for re- moledlng and repairing during the six-month period. Another Indication of the excellent condition of bulsness In Medford at present was revealed when the build ing superintendent, quoting from government reports, stated that building In general over the United Statea waa up 30 per cent over laat year, as compared to this city's In crease of 73 per cent, more than twice the national gain. Building In the Pacific northwest was up 33 per cent, he quoted, making Med ford 'a figure look all tne more encouraging. Mr. Rogers explained tho fact that remodeling and repairing of bualneaa buildings waa 11 per cent greater than construction cost of new buildings by saying that the business district and firms were definitely established. and the trend was toward modern Irtng and keeping up to date Instead of erecting new buildings. . ROOSEVELT GETS SCOUTS IN MESSAGE WA8H1KOTON. July 1. AP) A mass campflre of 25.817 Boy Scouts set up a mighty cheer last night after hearing a greeting on behalf of President Roosevelt. "The Impressions which you will carry back to your homes will, 1 hope, be a permanent Influence in your liven." aald tha president's mes sage, read by Attorney General Cum in trigs. Desplta a steady drlule. every boy attending the national Jamboree marched to a huge arena at the foot of the Washington monument at dusk. About 12,000 aat in wooden bleachers. The others squatted on the graas. DRIVER DIES AT WHEEL; SUN KILLS LOAD OF PIGS nhwberci. July i. r William O. Hill, 73-year-old stock buyer, died of heart attack at the wheel of hta truck yesterday and the nine hogs he had purchased for a farmer near here perished after severe', houra uf HM.UM the un The vi-.tlin drove hie truck to the aide of tl.e highway PLANES FLOCK IN FOR FRIDAY SHOW Sixteen On Hand at Noon Public Inspection Opens at 8 A. M. Sky Show Scheduled 2 to 5 P. M. Program With all the principal perform ers expected here by nightfall, everything was lined up today for the sky show to he presented at 3 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at Medford municipal airport. The program follows: I Take-off by Dorothy Barden of Sacramento, famed parachute Jumper and licensed parachute rig ger since 1B3H. Miss Barden will leap from a speeding plane at an altitude of 6000 feet. 2 Demonstration of m Taylor cub. flivver plane, by A. W. Whit aker, Portland. a Demonstration by Cant. I. W. Carey of a Bunion plane used ny executives of the union Oil company. The ship waa bought only last week. Btunt flying by Bernadlna Lewie King of Hollywood. Miss King la a licensed transport pilot who took up stunt flying as a noon?, ana holds the world's rec ord for women, having flown from Agua oauente. Mexico, to Los An- galea In an Inverted plane. She win present her repertoire of dare devil stunts. o Demonstration of a Waco cabin plana by Ralph Johnson of Burbank, Calif., Waco factory rep resentatlve. B Demonstration ot a Cessna plana by A. W. Whltaker. 7 Surprise act by Al Lary of oan Francisco, tne aerial Clown, a Demonstration of a Palrchlld plane by Oeorge Armlstead, mem ber of the Aviation Country club, Loa Angelea. 9 Demonstration of an Arrow plana powered by a Ford V-8 en glne. 10 Takeoff for parachute Jump by Oeorge Cooke, who performs ror motion pictures In Hollywood Cooke will do his famoua break-: away leap at 8000 feet. U Takeoff by Tex Rankin, world'a champion acrobatlo pilot and former enairman or the Ore. gon state board of aeronautic, wno now performs for the movies, nankin win present tha same stunts that brought him the championship In St, Louis last month. 13 Finale. Thla Is held surprise act featuring a number of planes. The Rogue River valley buzzed with the hum of airplane engines today as stunt performers, private pilots, dem onstrators and aircraft owners con tinued to arrive for the big exposition and sky show at municipal airport tomorrow. By noon 19 ahtpa war her and mora were arriving hourly from up and down the coast. Attracted by the steady roar of whirring propellers , "erhead. many drove to tha airport to get a pre-show glimpse ot tha air caft and the performera. Tuning up their craft and getting the reel of Medford air currents. (Continued on Page Pour.) ' K. F. Rain sets Record KLAMATH FALLS, July 1. (AP) Rainfall In Klamath Fajla during June waa 496 per cent sbova normal. Precipitation for tha 30 days totalled 4.01 Inchea, aa compared by an aver age of Jl. The previous record for June wss In 1913. when 8 SO Inches i.f rain fell. American ( 11 1 ia ao Detroit Chicago . Poffenberger, Lawaon, QUI. Rowe and Tebbette; Kennedy, Brown, and Sewell. Boston . . 1 0 Washington . ' Wilson and Berg: Deihong and Ferrell. R. H. . New York .13 U 0 Philadelphia Ruffing. Makoeky. 1 It and Dickey; Roes. Turbevllle, Fink and Conroy. National. R. . a Philadelphia New York Waltera and Atwood: Melton, Coft man and Mancuso. Brooklyn , Itaaton Hoyl and Phelps; LennU. and i1!"" ' 1 RASFRA1! 1 1 viawuaaituaj'