The Weather
Forecast: Fair tonight and
Tuetdav bat with morning
cloudiness. Slightly warmer
Tuesday.
TEMPERATIRE
Highest yesterday 72
Lowest thli morning .. 46
You Will Find
There IS a way to find a buy
er. The most satisfactory WAV
la through the Classified Ada
In thlt newspaper. You will
rind the cost small and a
pleasing response.
Medford
TRIBUNE
Full Associated Press
Full United Press
Thirty-Second Year
MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 1937.
No. 132,
lira TIL MPS n rtJEII HUME
Behind
Washington
Headlines
By H. R. Baukhage
Copyright 1937, by The
North American News
paper Alliance, Inc.
EARLY PBKPAHKS TO
QC1T ROOSEVELT
PLANS TO ENTER
PIBI.IC1TY FIELD
130 BILLS INCREASE
CONGRESS'S PATRONAGE
WORKERS' ALLIANCE
STRIVES FOR MARTYRDOM
WASHINGTON. Aug. 28. Waiting
only for the consent of his "boss,"
Stephen Early la about to leave what
waa once the tight little triangle
that made up the White House sec
retarlat.
Secretary Early, director of those
most delicate of relations, relational
with the public, will make no final !
decision until the president gives i
the word, or while matters which)
might concern a prospective employer :
or business colleague still pass under
his official scrutiny.
However, when he does decide,
friends of Carl Byotr, of Carl Byolr
and associates, publicity firm of New
York, are confident that the organi
sation will have another associate.
And that before the snow files.
The first break In the secretarial
trinity of Howe, Mclntyre and Early
waa when Louis Howe went and be
left hla "boss" (that's what they all
call the presidenti only at the com
mand of the one higher authority he
recognized.. Even in his last fading
moments, Louis Howe still made
pitiful and sometimes embarrassin
efforts to serve, like a mounded ar
tillery horse struggling In Mb tan
gled traces.
Now Early prepares to leave in his
prime.
politics played no role in the men's
servlcea, except In the sense that the
president's politics waa theirs.
Secretary Early, knock-about news
paperman, A. E. F. machine gunner
nd ex-artlllery captain. Is hardly a
Democrat, since he has lived his life
In voteless Washington four of the
less than five decades of his life.
He has been a close friend of
Franklin Roosevelt since the latter
was a slim young assistant secretary
of the navy and Steve covered his
department for the Associated Press.
That tie Is the one thing that now
keeps the loyal secretary to his desk
But a family and a graying thatch
are reminders of his economic needs.
Otherwise it is doubtful If he would
erer change bosses.
When (and If for there might be
another "emergency") Mr. Early Joins
his friend, Carl Byolr. It will be ft
congenial connection. First, there is
the long-time personal acquaintance;
necond. the fact that among the or
ganisation's activities are the Infan
tile paralysis "birthday balls," and
lastly It might permit this confirmed
Washlngtonlan to remain in his na
tive haunts.
Steve Early's long newspaper ser
vice hero has made his Job at the
White House both easier and harder.
Be has had to sit "on the other
side of the desk' and face a lot of
former fellow-reporters. Frequently,
one of those particularly Impertinent
questions that reporters have to ask
would bring a flare-up from the sec
retary. Then suddenly his face would
change and you could see that he
(Continued on Page Four.)
WHALE SCHOOL SPORTS
OFF GOLD BEACH SHORE
OOLD BEACH. Aug. 23. 7P The
unexpected appearance of nearly 100
whales near the beach ft few miles
north of here provided unscheduled
entertainment Tor hundreds of res
idents and visitors Saturday after
noon. SIDE GLANCES
by
TRIBUNE REPORTERS
Jack Murray puffing with pride
upon being told of his close re
semblance to the celebrated Bobby
Jones.
Wild Man Zlm wandering erouod
in his ecu n tie and finding Medlord
more metropolitan than Klmatn
Palls where the long-haired racier
wm pinched for shocking the sensi
tive cltipen.
Photographer Blanche LeClerc in
dustriously clicking the bigwigs at
the Egan memorial dedication cere
mony. And Sam Houston adding nis
"snush" to the silence chorus about
the ffeens a the golf stars per-
13 FIRE FIGHTERS
TRAPPED, BURNED
IN SHOSHONI AREA
Gale-Whipped Conflagration
- Attacks Dense Timber
, Near Yellowstone Park
Victims Mostly CCC Boys
CODY, Wyo.. Aug. 23. (AP) The
Shonshonl national forest fire claimed
Its 13th victim today with the death
in a hospital here of William Whit
lock, CCC enrol lee at the Tenaleep,
Wyo., camp from Austin, Texas.
Whit lock's death occurred Just
after a hunt through smouldering
ruins of the charred mountain for
est had failed to yield up any addi
tional bodies.
CODY. Wyo., Aug. 33. (AP)
Grimy rescue workers hunted through
smouldering ruins of a mountain
forest today, seeking more victims
of a gale-whipped fire which burned
12 of their companions to death.
Two score others were Injured 25
so seriously they required hospital
treatment.
Trapped by Fire.
All the victims, many of them CCC
enrol lees from Texas, were fire fight
ers, trapped while battling the blaze
in the Shoehoni national forest In
northwest Wyoming.
The blaze, which broke out Fri
day from an undetermined cause,
was about 35 miles northwest of
Cody and approximately the same
distance east of Yellowstone park.
It blackened 1500 to 2000 acres ol
dense timber In the Absaroka moun
tains.
As the flames subsided slightly
under a drizzling rain the searchers
ed ged f orwa rd toda y .
"We don't know whether there are
more men out there or not." said
John Bieker, superintendent of the
forest and leader of the drive against
the flames in which 500 CCC mem
bera, rangers and bureau of public
roads employes were participating.
Little Hope Held.
"If there are. it seems impossible
they could be alive."
Eight of the bodies were recovered
yesterday. Three others were found
last night among the smouldering
trees.
The first person to die In a hos
pital was Roy Sevens, civilian con
servation corps en roll re from Smith
vllle, Tex., who had gasped out,
"God, how lucky I am to be alive,"
after he wa carried from the in
ferno.
Identification of the charred bodies
waa a laborious process. CCC officers,
forest service rangers and bureau
of public roads officials all took
turns viewing the bodies In a Cody
morgue.
The official list of dead released
(Continued on Page Five.)
4 STATES UNITE
GRANTS PASS. Aug. 2'
Permanent o ...nlration of fc.i.r
state aivcinim was oomr.lt-u here
Saturday when Northwest tllad
lolua sfrsocla'ioi elected officers,
adopted a price schedule, mi voted
to hold th.fce meetings yearlv. h at
least one each Yf,r here.
L, E. Wei of Falem ws elecfd
president; Frank H. Rcum. Mulford.
vie -president; us. R. M, Pcnln
Port'wd. secjeia'v-treasurer.
Direct on 1:cVm the officers an 1
Ben R. Bones. Everett Robin m, nud
P. A. Jerome of . Tsnta Pass; .V,I!m
Warner, MedfordJ Ralph J. tmmert.
Pacific, Wash., and A. D. Kendall,
Troutdale. Ore.
The association Includes Oregon.
Washington, Idaho, and Montana. An
Invitation waa extended the Califor
nia association to Join the group.
- ' -
Dickinson Fruit Co.
Sale Is Announced
PORTLAND, Aug. 23. p Walter
M. Dickinson announced the sale of
the Dickinson Fruit Packing com
pany to the Oregon Fruit Produce,
Inc., today.
The new firm, organized by eastern
finance and represented by Arthur
S. Rudd of Chicago. all! expand to
distribute canned Oregon prune Juice
throughout thi Unitd States Dick
inson will remain aft president aiid
production manager.
TRACKS TELL STORY OF
FATAL AUTO ACCIDENT
ALBANY. Aug. 23. (APt Tracks
told the story of the overt u mi ng
motor car that claimed the life Sun
day of Walter W. Lawrence. eJO, of
Lebanon, whose body was found by
passing motorists on the Springfield
read In northern Benton county.
T.ic trak? 'howed, off'-er ld.
that th car, In which he was riding
Hone, had akidded la loose gravel.
400 Die as Shell Hits
U. S. S. Augusta Hit In Whangpoo, One Dead
i1 'wj.A'jJuw..mm.i .
FOR LOST FLIERS
BARROW. Alaska. Aug. 23. (AP)
Reports from Moscow that radio sig
nals on the wave length ot Slgls
mund Levaneff sky's mission trans
polar plane had been heard spurred
rescue fliers, grounded yesterday by
fog. to prepare to take to the air
again today in search for the six lost
aerial adventurers.
The signals, heard yesterday, could
not be interpreted but Soviet offi
cials asked northern Russian stations
to broadcast rescue plans In an effort
to encourage the filers If they are
stranded In some Isolated Arctic
point.
In this far northern outpost belief
began to grow today the missing
ship will be found "somewhere In
Alaska." Pilot BUI Knox, of Pacific
Alaska Airways, said Ala-.ka filers
firmly believed the plane had landed
on Alaskan soil.
SMALL CROP OF
ROSEBURG BARTS
ROSEBIRO, Ore., Aug. 24. (AP)
The Bartlett pear harvest will be In
full swing in. the Umpqua valley this
week with an unusually light crop In
prospect, growers report. Yield esti
mates are from 1.000 to 1.500 tons,
as compared with a normal of about
3.500 tons. Dry weather Iniie fall,
unseasonable cold during the winter
months, and rains during pollination
combined to cut down the slEe of the
crop, growers state.
The fruit, however, will run to
large sires and good quality. It is
reported. The greater part of the
crop has been contracted to canneries
at 125 per ton for first grade and 115
for second.
Roosevelt's Mother
Has Own Fish Story
INNSBRUCK, Austria. Aug. 23.
(APt Mrs. Jams Roosevelt, the
prridenti mother will have an au
thf-nti" fish story to tell her fisher
man son when she returns to the
United States from her European
trip.
While motoring near here today,
Mrs. Roosevelt was persuaded to try
br luck in the Haldensee. A two
and one-half round pickerel grabbed
ivr lure and w:ille t.rr Airman rom
puni -ns cheered she landed it unaided.
Seaman Freddie John Kalgnut (helow) of Rnreland. Iji., was killed
when an anti-aircraft shell hurst In the nfterdeck of the U. S. S. Au
gusta (above) as she lay at anchor In the Nhunguoo off Shanghai. Eigh
teen sailor were wounded. (A. P. Photo).
MOTHER BRUTALLY SLAIN
SMILING SON CONFESSES
PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 23. (AP)
Calmly and with an occasional smile.
Howard Filiate ad, 27, unemployed
draftsman, told Portland police how
he ended- an argument with his
mother laBt night by knocking her
unconscious with hla fist, choking
her with his knee and beating her
to death with a heavy set-screw from
a bench vise.
The young man, left a partial
cripple by Infantile paralysis, had at
tended church Sunday morning and
attended a picnic in the afternoon.
Returning home about 6 p. m., he
found his mother, Mrs. Gurlne Fin
steed, 65, eating dinner alone In the
kitchen. A Norwegian Bible lay
open beside her plate. At her other
elbow waa a church pamphlet under
a bowl of string beans. She had
HAMPERED BY RAIN
PORTLAND, Aug. 23. (AP) Rain
spared no one. not even the scores
of golfers competing for the national
amateur championship, at Portland
today.
Sparse patches of blue sky disap
peared with heavy showers.
A low pressure area spilled nearly
half an Inch of rain Sunday in half
an hour. Lightning ard thunder
accompanied the downpour. The
storm blew out a transformer and for
a time crippled special wire facilities
from the Alderwood country club
where the tourney Is underway.
TO
REJECI CIO PROPOSAL
MADISON, Wis.. Aug. 23. (API
Henry Ohl. Jr., president of the Wis
consin State Federation of Labor, ad
vised the American Federation of
Teachers today to reject proposals
for affiliation with the Committee
for Industrial Organization.
Ohl charged the Wisconsin CIO
with "treachery, disruption, perfidy
and treeson." He declared any group
that secedes from the AFL must be
subject to the charge of helping to
prolong disunion.
The veteran labor leader spoke at
the first seaslon of the tea:h"rs' na
tional convention, emphasizing a topic
wblfh the agenda committee had set
for discussion late this week.
STOICAL INDIAN GIRL
NEGLECTS BROKEN LEG
CORVALLTS. Aug. 23.,- te
Wtshlngton, youn Indian Ionian.
mi for two dare in an auomobile
with a broken leg wlthotit medical
Attention, city police said tV dis
covered when they arrested her com
panion n a drunken driving cnarge.
Offlrers sld trr pair Md htitw
for Chenewa to seek m'd:-e. aid
when the car broke down. inJ the
driver be-me Involved with the law
II Hie In Train CollMon
GENOA, Italy, Aug. 23. (AP)
Ten Italian sailors and a trainman
were killed and 40 aallora were In
jured today In a head -on collision of
their excursion train and a freight
train. The ten sailors and the
freight trtin engineer died on their
way to hospital, or at tha hospital.
written a note, presumably for her
sons: "I went back to church."
Detective Walter Peterson quoted
Flnstead aa saying he got into an
argument with his mother when he
returned. He indicated It concerned
his lack of employment.
Peterson said the young man
talked freely, sftytng he had wanted
all summer to kill his mother be
cause of her "domineering" attitude,
and "for the rest of the family; I
thought it would be for their good."
After the killing, police related,
Flnstead wont to the home of Homer
G re n well, a neighbor, and asked
him to return with him. Green well
called the police, at Finstead's sug
gestion. Officers found Mrs. Flnstead lying
hair In and half out of the kitchen
door, her head In a pool of- blood.
SADDLE MOUNTAIN FIRE1
EYED BY AUTHORITIES
FOREST GROVE, Aug. 23. (AP)
Officials of the Stlmson Lumber
company -and of Washington county
Investigated today the origin of a
forest fire which covered 200 acres on
company holdings near Saddle
mountain Saturday night.
Harold Miller, company manager,
said the fact that the fire broke out
In a number of places, all easily
accessible to where the crews had
left the operations made It appear
"mighty mysterious."
The company mill here has been
the focal point of a controversy be
tween rival A.F.L. and C.I.O. labor
groups.
Moody Divorce Up
At Closed Hearing
RENO, Nev., Aug. 33.-M Holen
Wllto Moody Arranged to go Into court
At Carson Cltj today to secure a dl
vorce from Frederick J. Moody, Jr.,
her attorney, Robert M. Price an
nounced. Moody will be represented
by Harlan Hevcard.
The case will be heard by Judge
Clark J. Qulld behind closed doors.
Mrs. Moody will charge oruelty of a
mental nature In her complaint.
Newspapers Show
Advertising Gain
CH1CAOO, Aug. 33. (AP) Adver
tising Age said today retail display
advertising carried In newspapers In
78 cities tor the year through Aug. M
was 33,139.118 lines or 6.3 percent
greater than the same period of 1030.
For the week ended Aug. 14 these
newspapers gained 338.068 lines or
1.4 percent over the same week In
IP39.
RAIN AND FOG HEMS
NORTH POLE REGION
SOVIET NORTH POLE CAMP (By
Wireless to Mmcow), Aug. 23. (APj
A drizzling rain and fog kept vis
ibility to 1000 feet at the North
Pole today. Temperature was 32 de
gree Fahrenheit. The barometer
reading was 20.80 Inches.
hcrlppt ML
HONOLULU, Aug. 23, (AP) Rob
ert P. Scripps, chairman of the board
of directors of the Scrlpps-Howard
newspapers, waa reported gravely III
today with internal hemorrhages
Mr. S-Tl;jpj as Uken to a boepltnl
Saturday night.
Crowded
LOOK TO F. D. R. FOR:
FUTURE STRATEGY;
!
Two Courses Seen Open to j
President in Party Strife
Speaking Trip to Coast
Is Seen As Possibility
WASHINGTON. Aug. 23. (API
Democratic lenders, worried by the
strife within their party, predicted
today that before congress reconvenes
President Roosevelt must choose one
of these far-reaching courses of
strategy:
1. Reconciliation, at the cost of
abandoning some of hla most cher
ished objectives, with the party fac
tions which have refused to support
all of hla program.
2. A new campaign to rally pub-
lie support and hammer through his
controversial Issues, risking disrup
tion of the party beyond all repair.
Walt Public Trend
One of the New Deal's most trusted
strategists said privately today that
Mr. Roosevelt will base his decision
on the trend of public opinion within
the next few weeks.
He described as "trial balloons" two
contradictory speeches made almost
simultaneously last week by men of
ten regarded as White House spokes
men Postmaster General Farley and
Senator annoy (D Pa.)
In a savagely-worded radio speech
aurrcy predicted that the "rebel"
senators notably Wheeler (D.. Mont.)
Burke (D., Neb.) and O'Mahoney (D.
Wyo.) would be driven from the
party.
Reaction to these pronouncements,
Democrats predicted, will guide. In
large measure, the president's future
strategy.
Rebels Defiant '
' Tha first reaction was promptly
supplied by the thre senators Guffey
had denounced. In their last major
(Continued on Pft. Three.)
1
E
PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 23. (AP)
Mill employers denied a mass peti
tion from CIO lumber workers to
open seven closed plants In the Port
land district today.
The CIO men, out of Jobs since
laat week when mills shut down with
the appenrance of AFL pickets, were
on hand at company doors this morn
ing to resume their old stations but
they turned away again when they
failed to gain admittance.
"Every one of our men showed up
to go back to work." said Harold
Prltchett, president of the CIO In
ternational Woodworkers of America,
"but none of the mills la opened
yet."
Spanish Air Bombs
Miss British Ships
PORT VENDRES. France. Aug. 23.
(p) The British freighter. Noeml
Julla, arrived here today undamaged
by bombs launched at her by two
mysterious airplanes In the western
Mediterranean, near Spanish civil
war waters.
The captain said the planes began
dropping the .bombs without warning.
Ho was headed for Barcelona, Spain,
and at the time was Just off AJacclo,
the capital of Corsica.
Chandler Egan Eulogized
At Memorial Dedication
Beneath spreading oaks at the
Rogue Valley golf clubhouse yester
day afternoon, notables of the golf
ing world and friends gathered to
pay tribute to the late II. Chandler
Egan. leading figure In the growth
and development of golf In this
country.
Dedicated to hla memory wa a
granite blork drinking fountain bear
ing a simple bronre likeness of the
beloved sportsman. Hundreds of lis
teners, many of them personal Irlends
of the Medford man. heaTd simple
expression of respect and admira
tion from speakers, who Included
Robert T. "Bobby" Jones.
C. J. Semon. president of the Med
ford club, Introduced the speakers.
Opening the ceremonies waa Leon
ard Carpenter, long-time friend ol
Ean, who reviewed the prominent
sportsman's golfing career of over 40
j-cara. Carpenter spoke of agan s
arhievementa which rsnged from
wins la major tournaments to rec
Shanghai Store
Gasoline Sales
During July Set
New State Mark
SALEM. Aug, 23. (AP) Gaso
line sales set an all-time high
mark In July of 23.702.506 gallons,
on which a tax of 1. 185.125 was
paid. Becretary of State Earl Snell
said today.
The gnllonage increase over July,
1936. waa 1311,205.
The Increase for the first seven
months this year over the same
period last year was 7,062.487 gal
lons, while 8308,124 more In taxes
was collected.
Snell said he expected the Au
gust Rates to exceed those of July.
LEADS QUALIFIERS
By tmiAN nr.LL
ALDERWOOD COUNTRY CLUB.
PORTLAND. Ore.. Aug. 23. (API
Arthur L. Doerlng, Jr of Chicago
and No. t man of the Stanford uni
versity golf team Jumped tnto the
lead In the first qualifying round
of the national amateur golf
championship by firing a score of 71.
one under par, at his 177 rivals for
medalist honors.
Doerlng's performance waa sensa
tional In the circumstances, aa In
termittent showers and one short
but severe downpour made the course
heavy.
Hot Coming Home
The Stanford Indian save no sug
gestion in the first nine holes that
he was about to take the course
apart coming home for he went out
In 38, one over par. Gathering mo
mentum aa he turned the corner he
galloped In with an expenditure of
only 33 strokes, two under . perfect
flgurea. A deuce at the 169 four
teenth was accomplished through
the medium of a 15-foot putt and a
10-foot putt at the long fifteenth
netted another birdie.
Chunky Eddie Hogan of Portland,
former Pacific northwest champion,
turned In a sparkling par 72 to take
the second place at the moment,
while Bob Coffey. 21-year-old Fort
Worth student, and Jimmy McHale,
23 -year-old Los Angeles motor car
salesman, tied at 73.
Rain Hampers Play.
The sudden change In weather
conditions made scoring difficult
and caused revised estimates of the
score needed to qualify for match
play beginning Wednesday when only
the low 64 may continue. Before
the storm clouds gathered and soak
ed the course soon after the start
of play today the experts thought
152 or 153 might be needed to qual
ify. Later predictions were freely
(Continued on Page Five.)
TALKS ASSESSMENT
MILWAUKEE. We.. Aug 38. P
A proposal for s 35 cent s month spe
cial nJ-Kssment oo each member of
the Automobile Workers of America
to finance the international union's
campaign to organize the Ford Motor
company workers came before the an
nual convention today.
Local No 3 of Detroit. Mich , sug
gested the assessment In a resolution
submitted before 1.000 delegatos rop
roscnvnii 300 locals throughout the
United States.
ognition as one of the leading golf
architects In the country.
He also discussed Egan'a close as
sociation with the local club alnce
Its beginning In 1011 and reviewed
Incidents of hli connection with the
organisation.
Bobby Jones, long a persona) friend
of Egan. spoke briefly of his deep
and sincere rerpect and liking for
Egan aa a friend and aa a sports
men, declaring that no one could
be of greater credit to any game
tnnn Egan was to golf. He attributed
to Egan a high place aa a sports
man, player and designer and
pressed the belief that his death waa
a great loss to the game.
Speaking of Egan as "one of the
finest gentlemen I have ever known,1
Grantland Rice, top American sports
writer, paid tribute to the man he
knew for over 30 years and expressed
his plessure at being able to be
J Continued on r Ibr4
THREE AMERICANS
BY HEAVY BLAST
Second Shell Hits U.S. Naval
Warehouse in Shanghai
Americans Hurry Evac
uation in Heavy Fighting
By Morris J, nnnis
SHANGHAI. Aug. 23. (AP) An
estimated 400 peruona were killed and
perh a pa 1 ,000 wou nded . lncl udlng
three Americans, by a heavy artillery
shell that smashed Into a crowd e4
department store section of the
International settlement today.
Scores of Americans marvelously
escaped death when a second projec
tile pierced the six-story United
States naval warehouse and crashed
through to the bottom, but failed to
explode.
The wounded Americans were An
thony BUllngham. staff correspon
dent for the New York Times, Hallett
Abend, chief of staff for the New
York Times In China, and Blanche
Henney, Shanghai-born American.
Shell's Origin Unknown
Police said they were unable to
eat t mate accurately the toll of In
jured and killed, but I counted 200
bodies and know there must have
been as many more.
Origin of the department store
shell waa unknown. Some military
experts said it may have been a 120
pound eight-Inch .shell which Japa
nese warships off Woosung were fir
ing to protect . landing of reinforce
menta. The shell struck Nanking road at
the busiest corner of Shanghai. On
one aide of the Intersection, the huge
seven-story building of the Sincere
Co. Ltd.. department store waa
crowded with shoppers.
Across the street the newly opened
(Continued on Page Eight.)
PRISONERS REVEAL
E
WITH IN8UROENT8, Approaching
Santander. Aug. 23. ( AP) Youths
who had never pulled a trigger be
fore they were conscripted to defend
Santander now prisoners of Insur
gent Generalissimo Francisco Fran
co's southern armies told today of
their city's desperation.
They said every store In the starr
ing port, the last Important government-held
harbor on the Bay of Bis
cay, has been shut and boarded for
days.
They said their officers hid when
Franco's armies drove across their
fortifications and when their com
manders deserted "we hid and wait
ed for our first chance to surrender.
At one concentration camp, near
Sonet I lo, 10.000 government prisoners
were captured within the past nine
days.
The Insurgents virtually unresist
ed advance sped on today with about
90,000 troops converging close to
Santander In three columns.
ALL PEAR PLANTS
NOW IN OPERATION
AU packing plants of the Rogue
river valley are now Id operation, the
laat starting thla afternoon, and the
picking and packing of Bartlett will
be in full swing by mid-week, furn
ishing employment for close to 1,000
persons.
Frank Isaacs, of the Pinnacle Pack
ing plant, reports a large number of
workers, with many from the middle
west. He described the labor situation
aa the best In map years. Majority
of those employed workers are local
people.
There was no change In the Bart
lett cannery price over the week-end
from 927.30 per ton for 24 alsea and
larger, with not many offerings. It
la estimated that 6.000 tone ot B art
let U have been told to canneries.
22 STUDENTS GRADUATE
IN SONS SUMMER CLASS
ASHLAND, Aug. 33. (IP) Close Ot
the Bummer season at Southern Ore
gon Normal school brought gradua
tion to 93 students.
The group Included: Arna Qeer,
O rant. Pass, and Jeanne Loldler,
Medlord.