Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 30, 1937, Page 1, Image 1

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    When do we tart?
It you eottti restiw the nta
of elaaslfied advertising a
tnoH 6s who um It constantly,
yon alto would be a constant
user. A word to- the wis Is
sufficient. When do we atartt
The Weather
Forecast! Probably ahowers
tonight and Tuesday; slight lr
warmer tonltri cooler Tuesday.
Teiuiterature -
Highest yesterday 86
Lowest this morning .. 43
Tribune
full Associated Press
Full United Pre si
Thirtv-Seoond Year
MEDFORD. OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 1937.
No. 138.
to) MMiaraj.
MEBFORDfllI
' BY ffllffil
...
Behind
Washington
Headlines
By H.' R. Baukhage
Copyright 1937, by The
North American News
paper Alliance, Inc.
MENACING SHADOWS SEEN
ON INDUSTRIAL HORIZON
REPERCUSSIONS FEARED
OVER RISING MVING COSTS
"CONSUMER RKSISTANCE"
LOWERS PRODUCTION
FAR EAST WAR THREAT
ADDS TO UNEASINESS
WASHINGTON. Aug. 30. Month
end statistics on financial and in
dustrial conditions from government
as well as private sources are mis
leading, according to economists who
are looking beyond the immediate
horizon.
On the surface, the long-range bus
iness trend seems to be upward, and
farm income is expected to reach
this season the highest level since
.1620. bumper crops . . . general pros
perity. But that's only one part of
the picture, which, bright as it is,
reveals several shadows in the cor
ners. While official reports do not em
phasize the fact. It ts being privately
admitted that the high cost of living
is a growing menace, with political
as well as economic Implications.
There are a number of straws
which show which way the wind Is
blowing. Several manufacturers, re
porting reduced production, explain
lower demand as due to "consumer
resistance." Xn 1921, they called it
"buyers strike." ' - ' - "
Another shadow, of course, on the
business scene, is cast by the situa
tion in the Par East. While officials
are still pretty optimistic, each new
explosion in China has ita repercus
sions here, and certain moves on the
checker board of private finance are
undoubtedly being made with the
possibility of a maor war In the
background. This is evident in the
tendency toward liquidation of gov
ernment obligations.
Steps were taken during the past
week to offset this tendency by
means of an "easy money policy" on
the part of the government. The
rediscount rate of the federal reserve
banks wes brought downward until,
In New York, It reached the all-time
low of 1 per cent.
The heavy excess reserves are dis
tributed chiefly among country
banks, and not In the money cen
ters, where the big demands -for crop
loans, business expansion and com
merce In general exist.
In those centers where the pres
sure has been felt, member banks In
the system have had to reduce the
government holdings in their port
folios. Thare are, however, other unfavor
able factors, not so evident, back of
the general financial situation. They
involve the whole question of federal
(Contluned on Page Seven.)
1
Repairs Are Begun
On C-C Building
Work was begun this morning on
repair of the Jackson County Cham
ber of Commerce which was damaged
by fire August IS.
The damaged parts are to be re
paired, the whole building Is to be
painted and a few modest alterations
are to be made, officials stated. The
work will be completed in about ten
days, tt was estimated.
LAKEVIEW BOX FACTORY
IS DESTROYED BY BLAZE
LAKEVIEW. Aug. SO. (API Fire
of unknown cause destroyed the
Adams box factory last night with a
low etlmat! at 135,000. Robert
Adams. Sr.. owner. Mid be would
resume operations as soon ae repairs
could be msde.
Fir damaged the property less
than a year ago.
SIDE GLANCES
by
TRIBUNE REP0RTEE8
Barbara Bowermen selecting Vene
tian bllnos for the home she and
bubby Bill are building.
rAllce Ward magnanimously offer
ing the choice of her wardrobe to a
guest from Klamath and lesrnlnc
later to her dismay that the gown
rhneen was one she had laid out for
a dance.
B1U Orenbemer declining to tell a
frlerjd In the presence, of a reporter
how many fish he eauaht, the In
ference being the mtch was too small
to record In the public prints.
Fred Vndrraood avirrtna the rest
ful autumn atmosphere came hun
o last yeis of aonlMoa.
S. S. Hoover Mistaken
For Jap Troop Carrier;
Seven of Crew Injured
By JAMES A. MILLS
SHANGHAI, Aug. 30. AP) A swift fleet of four Chinese bombing
planes blasted the big American Dollar Liner President Hoover by mistake
In the China sea today, wounding seven of her seamen and halting Amer
ica's efforts to get United States women and children out of bloody
Shanghai.
The national government of China,
at Nanking, accepted full responsibil
ity for the "most regrettable, unfor
tunate mistake." It offered "the full
est redress."
"One pilot," the Chinese authori
ties said, "bombed the Hoover be
cause he thought it was one of ten
Japanese troopships." Japanese de
stroyers were In the victntty at the
time.
Four Bombers
Independent reports indicated there
were four bombers.
Japanese naval authorities an
nounced two of their seaplane had
shot down one of them, an American-
made plane, at an undisclosed place.
The President Hoover, steaming to
Sir ha! from Manila on a mission
of evacuation for 850 American na
tionals, was hit at 5:30 p. m.. outside
the lighthouse at the mouth of the
Yangtze, on the high seas 50 miles
from Shanghai.
Three passengers were shell-shock
ed as one bomb hit the boat deck and
steel fragments ripped 35 holes in
the liner's sides. Emergency opera
tions were performed to save the
Uvea of two seamen.
Protest Lodged
. International aspects of the Si no
Japanese conflict assumed an omin
ous note as United States Ambassa
dor Nelson T. Johnson rushed to the
Nanking foreign office to bring the
situation before the highest Chinese
officials. '.t-tj
The President Hoover, at 19 lenots,
steamed toward Kobe, Japan, on or
ders of United States naval author
ities, abandoning further evacuation
efforts. She ts due there at noon
Wednesday. She moved under her
own power.
Rushing to the Hoover s side ahead
of two United States warships, the
British cruiser Cumberland almost
bad been hit by other bombbs.
Her physician assisted the Hoover's
doctor in performing the operations
on the liner's wounded crewmen.
For the time being, at least, the
Dollar Line suspended plans to evac
uating the hundreds of Americans who
remain In Shanghai. Both the Hoover
and the President McKlnley, following
her, were ordered Into Kobe.
In Shanghai, Mayor O. K. Yul et-
(Continued on page Three.)
Russia as it Is Today
Uncensored Revelations in
Stalin's Blood Purge
By Webb Miller
United Press Staff Correspondent
Copyright 193T by United Press
MOSCOW, via London (uncensored), Aug. 30. (UP) (HFR) During
Josef Stalin's 'hlstorlo struggle with Leon Troteky 19 years ago the work
ers of Leningrad presented htm a steel broom. Toe broom waa a sym
bol of the necessity of "cleansing" the communist party.
Today Dictator Stalin la using it
with a vengeance.
The purge which began In the
soviet union three months ago haa
extended from generals of the red
army to dramatlsta and writers: from
chiefs of Industry to directors of
theaters and even the directors of
amusement psrks.
500 Executed
Information about the true extent
of the current "blood purge" Is hard
to get. but available compilations
Indicate that about 600 persona have
been executed by firing squads. Tens
of thousands have been arrested,
exiled or dismissed from their posts.
The chsrgea against them varied
greatly, but they had one common
focus that the accused. In thought
or deed, opposed the Stalinist leader
shin of the Soviet regime.
It should be kept in mind that
under the Bolshevik system (and
other dictatorial systems for that
matter), any opposition to or devla.
Hon from the "party line." after the
line once la laid down, constitutes a
deadly crime. To deviate la treason
able and automatically qualifies the
dissenter as an enemy of the people
or even a deadly enemy If the holdet
of the adverse opinion la In a position
of Importance and trust.
They Disappear
The following Incident Illustrates
the difficulty that certain element
have had In trying to keep up with
the bends and twists of communist
doctrines aa they are being applied In
the Soviet union.
On a previous visit to Moscow last
February, t dined one ntght with
members of the foreign office and a
few Journalists In the pslstlsl fweijn j
office guest house, formerly the j
, tern a Moaoa Bliltrnnejm, ftu.,
G
HOOVER BOMBING
WASHINGTON. Aug. 30. (AP)
Secretary Hull said today he had In
structed Ambassador Nelson T. John
son at Nanking to make a strong I
protest to the Chinese government
on the bombing of the liner Presi
dent Hoover.
The secretary aald he was under
the Impression that merchant vessels
of the United States would not call
at Shanghai,
"The bombing Is to be very much
deplored," Secretary Hill said. "It is
one of those not entirely unusual
incidents that occur in conditions
such as exist In that area.
Regarding American merchant ves
sel calls at Shanghai, Hull said Ad
miral Harry B. Yarnett, Asiatic fleet
commander, had directed the Presi
dent Hoover to go to Kobe, Japan,
but that no definite Instructions had
been given that other Dollar Line
ships avoid the war-torn port.
This raised the question of how
Americans remaining In the . city
would, be evacuated.
Between 5o6 and 300 Americans are
ready to leave the city, the secretary
said. t
GENEVA, Aug. 30. (AP) The Chi
nese delegation to the League of Na
tions told the Associated Press today
tt was filing with the league a pro
test against "Japan's aggression In
China."
The protest will be delivered to
night, the delegation aald. It does
not make an appeal under any spe
cific article of the league covenant.
but is "an informative communica
tion for members of the . league,
they explained.
PORTLAND. Ore., Aug. 30. (AP)
Police discovered the unidentified
body of a young man yesterday on
the railroad tracks at the outskirts
of the city. A train had severed both
legs and an arm.
Laplnaky, at that time foreign editor
of the newspaper Izvestla, the official
or (ran of the central executive com
mittee of the Soviet union, waa being
chafed about his pet cat, of which
he was Inordinately fond.
"Well, I should love that eat," La.
plnsky said finally, grinning. "The
other day he scratched one of my
manuscript, and I found that he
had saved me from a grievous devla.
tlon from the party line."
Laplnaky has disappeared now no
one knowa where. Apparently his cat
failed him at last.
There were six Bolsheviks at the
dinner table that evening In Pebni'
ary. Pour have disappeared In the
Isst two months and are believed
under arrest or In exile. One
transferred out of the country. One
Neymann. In the department of the
foreign office which deals wtth Amer
lean and western European affairs, a
man well known In Washington
where he waa previously attached to
tha embassy, disappeared In the
midst of negotiating the Soviet-
American trade treaty, an assignment
on which he waa working while
waa In Moscow,
Another official welt known to
many Americans, Jacob Doletaky
director of Tass, the official news
agency, also Is missing. All that hi,
frlenda can learn la that there are
rumors that he waa arrested and
tried to commit aulclde. But the
rumors an without confirmation
Heavy Casualties
Casualties In the present purge
have been especially heavy among of-
flcisla who deal wtth foreigners and
officials who had been long sbroad
Periodical "clesnn- rf the com.
jOPBUBued 9B -!
Three Seriously
PORTLAND MILLS
RESUME SUNG
IN LABOR TRUCE
2500 Return to Work for
First Time in Two Weeks
Building Trades Retain
Boycott On CIO Lumber
PORTLAND, Aug. 30 ( AP) Twen
ty-ftve hundred Portland sawmill
workers went back to work in the
rain today to start the machinery
at seven big plants for the first time
In two weeks.
The activity ended, for the time
being, at least, a costly shutdown
enforced by a Jurisdictional contro
versy between the AFL and CIO.
Mills began releasing lumber to the
building trades and sawdust and
wood fuel to Portland home Juat
as the chill autumn wet season set
in,
Although the scrap between the
two powerful labor forces apparently
has not reached & satisfactory set
tlement, the plants resumed opera
tion without difficulty. No pickets
appeared.
The building trades council,
AFl affiliate, Informed employers
the "boycott" still existed and would
affect all ClO-handled lumber re
gardless of the time It was cut.
. The central labor council, protest
ing that it did not give Its approval
to a truce negotiated by Charles W.
Hope, . regional Jabor relations -board
director from Seattle catted a spec
ial conference.
WHITE SLAVE TRAFFIC
IN THREE STATES HIT
BY G-l
TRENTON, N, J Aug, 30. (AP
"Two very important arrests" were
Imminent, federal authorities said
today, as they pushed the clean-up
in their tri-state drive against the
white slave traffic.
Assistant U. S. Attorney William
F, Smith, who disclosed the new
arrests were expected momentarily,
said the connection of the hunted
pair with the week-end vice raids
might be surprising." He decline.
to reveal the identity of the two
sought.
Smith worked with J. Edgar Hoover.
chief of the federal , bureau of In
vestigation, in two of the well-timed
raids In Atlantic City which wtth
simultaneous raids in Philadelphia
and Wilmington netted 13? persons.
Hoover said 37 of the prisoners
were "principals procurers ana maa-
smes" and 100 inmates and "maids.1
Seventeen alleged houses of in
fame were emptied at Atlantic City
by 40O-men led personally by Hoover.
MR. AND MRS. HAYS
INJURED IN SMASHUP
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Hays of 1016
Court street ere confined in Com
munity hospital today as a result
of an auto accident on the Jacksonville-A
pplegate highway early Bun
day morning. Mrs, Hays, according
to the attending physician. Is suf-
fertns from an Injured back, chest
and head, but ts expected to recover
Mr. Hays has a broken right forearm.
but no other Injuries.
Mr. Hays told the attending phy
sician that he was blinded by the
lights of an oncoming ear with the
result that his machine left the roao,
skidded into a ditch, and overturned
Six More Die In
Polio Outbreak
TORONTO. Aug, 30, (Canadian
Press) Six persons died of infantile
paralysis In Toronto over the week
end, health author it Set reported to
day,
These casualties Increased the
deaths in Toronto since the outbreak
of the epidemic several weeks ago to
15. There were 2d new case re
ported, raising the total under treat
mnt to 248.
Twn-yeer-old Helen MfMurray. one
of triplets, was among the Toronto
fatal it lea.
Rain ilsmages Crop
ASTORIA. Aug. iO OPi Heavy
rains today added fresh damage to
Clatsop county, rich bent grass
erop. It as the nrst time since -he
' I the harvest haa suffered from wet
in""r - ." w
tUat
FARM WIFE MS
6 CHILDREN, SELF
WITH EXHAUST GAS
Tube Carries Deadly Fumes
From Family Auto to Bed
roomNote Blames Hus
band's Drinking Habits
DENISON, la., Aug. 30. (AP)
Seven bodies -a mother and her six
children lay in a funeral home here
today, victims of a farm home trag
edy that Coroner John Oottburg
said was murder and suicide.
The dead werei
Mrs. Elsie Noll en. 30. Leona, 4,
Viola, a, orvtn, IU Wtlbert, 10,
Pauline, 7, Earl 8.
Leaving a suicide note which told
of marital unhappiness Mrs. Nollen
took, the lives of her children and
herself by sending deadly automobile
exhaust gas from the family car
Into a bedroom window of her home,
west of here.
H ribband Finds Bodies.
Her husband, Albert, 36, found
the bodies early yesterday when bo
returned borne.
"I have tried and tried to live a
decent life," Mrs. Kollen said In the
six-page, penciled note, "and raise
my kids up right so they would be
decent. .
"But they have a father that does
not care for them or either me. He
don't know any better . . .
"Albert was awfully good to me
when he -wasn't drinking. I eouldn'-v
ask for a better husband But, oh.
he sure was awful when he got
drunkl ,
"He bae beat me up lots of times
and I always forgot about that Just
because I loved him and wanted to
live with htm,
Now today he got drunk. I never
said much to htm because I knew
It would just be a fight again .
"Oh, my, such a life ...
1 am doing this because I can
see that this family la not going
to be raised up right and X think
it is a shame to let them grow up
and live such a life ...
Used Family Auto.
Nollen found the family car back
ed up under a bedroom window with
the motor running.
Sheriff C. A. Greene said Mrs.
Nollen had coupled a piece of fie
ible metal tubing used to carry off
the exhaust from a small gasoline
washing machine motor to the
haust pipe of the car, and ptaceo
It beneath the bedroom window.
The bodies of Mrs, Nollen, Leona
and Viola were found on a bed, he i
said. The other four children wore;
found in the adjoining room. I
BINGHAM SCOUTS
. RUPTURE REPORT
LONDON Aug. W. (AP The de
parture last week of Ambassador
Robert Worth Bingham lor tbe Unit
ed States waa the subject of specu
lation today in the British press.
Reynolds News declared informed
sources In both Washington and
London believed the envoy woutd be
replaced aa ambassador to the Court
of St. Jsniea by Joseph E. Davtes.
present ambassador to Soviet Ttue-
sls.
The shift wss aald to be scheduled
because Bingham had delayed re
porting last December's abdication
crisis to the slate department before
tt had developed to the most criti
cal stags. ,
BALTIMORE. Aug. 30. (AP) Rob.
ert W. Bingham, ambassador to Eng
land, satd today that stories he
would not return to London were
"nonsensical.'
"The whole report Is a complete
fabrication," h satd. 'I'm going to
be here two to three weesa, then I'll
go back to my pah
He said he would go to Washing
ton tomorrow.
CREWS MOPPING UP
ROGUE FORES! ARE
Crews today were mopping up the
Rogue river national foreat tins which
kpt 103 men busy over the week
end In a remote area on Halifax creek
about 30 mites east of Frospect.
The fire covered about 40 acres of
tlmbr land, It was discovered early
Saturday morning and brought under
romro, yea.ernay. n. v. uove. .-.-
.....,-.. .
I trot, went to the are thl moraine
ito survey lb Jos.
Hurt in
Ambassador
Jilr Hughe K natch bull-II urease.!, the British ambassador to China,
was seriously wounded when an auto tn which he was riding was spray
ed by marhlne-gun bullets from Japanese war planes. He Is shown with
Gen, Yu iian-Mour who U In charge of the defense of China's southern
eoast. ,
L ANE WALLERS
DENIED INJUNCTION
AGAINST SEIZURE
EUGENE, Aug, SO. (AP Holding
that a court of equity could not
properly restrain officials from acting
under criminal statutes, Circuit
Judge F. Skip worth today denied
petitions for a temporary Injunction
preventing Lane authorities from
seising pinball machines here on and
after September t , -
District Attorney L. L. Ray recently
ordered Sheriff 8. A. Swart to seize
all machines in operation after the
September 1 deadline and to make
arrests. Frank Dal ton, pinball oper
ator of this area, Saturday filed a
suit seeking to enjoin Lane officials
from acting under this order.
Stating that Lane authorities, in
proceeding against tha pinball ma
chines, wore acting under the Ore
gon criminal statute banning Jotter
tea. Judge Sklpworth declared that
tn his opinion a court of equity
could not properly Interfere with of
ficials In such cases and ha there
fore denied the petition for the In
junction.
The judge warned, however, that
machines seized should not be de
stroyed as that might violate the
general rule affecting rights of pri
vate property
Pointing to the difference of opin
ion regarding whether plnballs were
lotteries. Judge Sklpworth declared
this Issue should be settled and stated
that in his opinion the best way to
settle the matter was through arrest,
trial and appeal to the state su
preme court.
Attorneys for EMI ton, tn arguing
for the Injunction, stated operators
were going under the Oregon act of
ltKtft authorizing cities to license
pinbatt machines and that until the
supreme court had declared tha law
unconstitutional, the owners had a
right to presume It was constitutional.
Coast s Growing Wealth
Shown by Bank Summary
BAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 30 (API
Orowlng wealth of the Paclflo slope
stands out significantly tn today1
aummary of tha last month's econo
mic development seen through the
eyes of the statistical stalt at the
feedrat reserve bank of San Uranclaco
Tha report give unusual promi
nence to production of gooda. This
tin of economic activity shows note
worthy expansion.
Wlhouetted along. ids production of
recent yeara, the bulk of current out
put tower at several point. Just
now. for example, the canning in
dustry 1 at the height of Ita yearly
hustle. Lumber production and ehlp
ment have been at Pk level top.
ping showings or any Km eiiior
I 30. Farm production appear likely
I as ouMa aagt&S&c ia sweat rear,
Head - On Crash
Wounded
BASEBALL
' ' National '
HEW YORK, Aug. 30 (AP) The
Otsnts climbed 'into first place In
tha National league today for the
tint time since June M by nosing
out tha Cincinnati Reda to 3- be
hind the airtight relief pitching Carl
Hubbett.
Cincinnati a I
New York 4 10 1
Holllngaworth. Schott and Lombar
ds Melton, Coffman, Hubbell and
Danning. . ,
Amer leas
R.
e
T
Washington
Cleveland .
Weaver. Cohen and Perrell; Hud-
Un. Whttehtn. Oslehoun and Sulli
van. New Tort
Detroit
Oomez. Pearson and Dickey; Auker
arid York.
LOSSES AT CARNIVAL
CAUSE BOY'S SUICIDE
PENDLETON, Aug. 30. (P) Qrief
atrtcken over money losses at a car
nival here Saturday night were aald
today to have been a factor tn tha
death of a Pendleton youth who took
his own life Sunday.
Pat rolsom, Umatilla county coro
ner, returned a verdict of aulclde to
day in the death yesterday morning
of Arvtd c. Btom, 20. honor graduate
of Pendleton high school In 1936.
ma father, Frank O. Blam. satd that
the youth had been saving money to
finance a term at aviation th!a fait,
and that he waa grtet-strtcken at loss
of 'aomewhere between .15 and 50
at a carnival concession."
BERLIN, Aug. 30. (P Major Gen
era! Hans Buses, who during the
World war held tha east Prussian
: fortress of Boyen against Invading
Russians, died today at tha age of
The reserve bank reports "most
twelfth district crops are larger this
season than tn many yean, and
price received by grower, are gen
erally high."
Turning to the canning industry.
the bank pointed out the activities
in fish, fruit and vegetable canning
usually eapand at thl time of the
year, and th la year expanded mora
than usual. The pack of apricot la
reported larger than tn any year
since IBM. tlie Alssk salmon pact
1 fudged equal to the averag of the
last 10 yesrs.
In the Pacific sorlhweat, canning
of vegetables, principally pea, show
ed the turns season Increase. Utah
participated in thl gain also.
July lumber output waa higher
abut IB acf nuttH 9M Kr JS,
AJTEIP I TO PASS
THIRD CAR CAUSES
IWIASIUP
Brooklyn, U. Y Man and
' Los Angeles Couple Taken
to Hospital One Ma
cbine Thrown into Ditch
Threa person, were takes to Com
rrmnity hospital shortly before nooa
today following a hesdon automobile
collision about four miles north of
Central Point on the Pacific highway.
Extent of injuries waa not learned at
press time, but It waa believed that
all were seriously hurt.
Tha injured wen Mr. and Mrav
John A. Bterley of 10371 Woyten Way,
Loa Angeles, and Sydney Oreenberg.
of let Chester street, Brooklyn, N. T,
Thef were removed to tha hospital
by Deputy Coroner Herb Brows, wha
waa called, ts tha accident aces im
mediately after It happened.
Investigating state police- officer
said that Mr, and Mra. Bir.riey war
traveling south ts a Cadillac eoup
aoit that Oreenberg, in a Plymouth,
waa traveling north. The accident
occurred, police said, when one c
the oars attempted to pass anothev
vehicle moving in the same direction
and met the Gocom&g machine
head-on. .... ...
D. O. Moody, manager of a boos
binding ssrvtoa tn Portland, arrives
at tha scene shortly after It hap
pened. Ho stated that tha Bierlef
machine was battered into a dlteat
alongside the road and the Greeaberf
car waa standing across tha highway
BOlIIirctAiM
VICTORY IN LAND, All!
BATTLE AT BELCHITE
By the Associated Press
Both Insurgent and government
forces battling on the northeast Span
ish front claimed victory today la
severe land and air battle near Set
chit, 20 miles south of Zaragoza
Insurgent dispatches declared the
government offensive had bes
smashed by a thundering attack ed
ISO planes, including 40 hug bomb
era, which took off from the Insur
gent stronghold at Zaragcea,
The government reported, however,
that Belohlte was completely sur
rounded and that insurgent control:
of Zaragosa was menaced by further
government advances along the Ara
gon front,
Belchlte was apparently the gov
emment objective in an effort to score
important gains before Generalissimo
Francisco Franco could rush rein
forcements from the Biscayan front
near Santander.
Cardinal Bisleti
Called By Death
slOMB. Aug. 30. (AP Gaetano,
Cardinal Btalett, t, died tonight.
The venerable cardinal, wbo
dean of cardinal-deacon In. 1SXI
announced the electron of Pop Hue
XI from the balcony of St Peter.
had been ill for a long time.
abort time earlier, the bo if
father had sent him a special bless
ing and had granted absolution.
German Net Star
Win Doubles Title
PROOKLtNI. Mask Aug. 0 AP)
Baron Gottfried Von Cramm and
Keener Menket of Germany became
the first foreigner to win the na
tions! doubles tennis champtonthlp
stnos 1919 today when they dethron
ed the defending tttltsts, Don Budja
and Oene Mako, -4, T-, .
Longwood,
Hasson candidate,
SALEM, Aug. 80. (AP) Victor
Hasson, Portland, filed a declara
tion of candidacy today for th
Democratic nomination for sen
ator. right Service
A fast and accurate description
of the Louie-Parr title bout will
be gives over the Mail Tribune
public address system, tn front of
the newspape office on North ftr
street, starting not earlier thsai
4:15 p. m., Metfford time. The
blow-by-blow story a earned on
the United FT leased wire di
rect to the Mill Tribune new
room will be gives ft re
ceived. Because of bad weather
condition the main event, which
ta scheduled for 8 p. m., Medford
time, may be advanced.