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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1938)
The Weather Cloud j- and at timet on settled today and tomorrow; cooler. Temperature Highest yesterday .68 Lowest yesterday....... .40 Take Thi Tip Take plenty of time thta mom- I Medford T7iIBUNE Vf&nr tlmea there are aurnriMS that put Dollar in ona'a pocket. Take thta tip: Act quickly when you find what you want. Full Associated Press ' Full United Press Thirty-Third Year MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 1938 No. 28. GOVERNOR FLOUTS CITLdS URGED TO DEMAND EARLY lg tMIIWIW tJS River Tragedy New Phone Executive ILL AT CAPITAL PROFIT TAX PUTS E TO VOTERS compromise The Capital Parade By Joseph Alsop and ' Robert Kintner LABOR TERRORISM AND DEMAGOGUES Copyright 1937, by The North American News paper Alliance, Inc. BBRLE SEEK SIDINO WITH CONSERVATIVES ASSISTANT SECRETARY DESERTS EX-ASSOCIATES EARLY "BRAIN TRUSTER'S" OPINIONS RESPECTED AID HELD ADVANTAGE TO HILL. MOROENTHAV OROIT WASHINGTON, April 23 Two tubs stand side by side In the principal bathroom of Adolf Augustus Berle, Jr., the newest assistant secretary of state. The second Is probably the most Impressive among many monu ments to Mr. Berles Intellectual bril liance. The atory of the second bathtub Is quite simple. When Mr. Borle went to work as Mayor P. H. LaQuardla'a Naw York City chamberlain, he was so busy that Mrs. Berle felt deprived of her dally share of the Berle conversation. Fortunately. Mr. Berlo glitters In his most coruscating fash ion during the unholy hour before breakfast. And so Mr. Berle Installed the second tub In order not to waste a moment or miss a word. The Berle brilliance Is important at this moment because, In the few weeks since his arrival here to take up his atate department duties, he seems to have become the prlvato brain trust of the administration's conservatives. Just how completely Mr. Berle Is In the corner of Secretary of State Oordell Hull. Chairman Jesse H. Jones of the RFC, Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau. Jr., and their friends, only time can tell. But recently ha has been keeping com pany with them, and his former associates, the new deal left-wingers, would prefer broiled Berle glr.r.ard to almcat any other breakfast dish. Tho' Berle brilliance Is the kind that hurts your eyes a trifle. He started life as an Infant prodigy, and he haa kept up the same dread ful pace ever since. He Is an expert on corporate finance, stock market liquidity, municipal finance, transit unification In New York City, labor arbitration and Central and South America. When he Is' not thinking about one of these weighty subjects, or writing someone else a speech about them, or saying something bright himself, he relaxes his mind by reading the Latin poets for n couple of hours. If the underworld had not already pre-empted the term to describe Its legal advisers, one would be Inclined to call Mr. Berle. quite simply, "the brain." "Modern Corporations and Private Property," the book he wrote with Gardiner C. Means. Is the stand ard authority on corporate structures. His city flnsnclng and tmnslt-unl-tying work In New York waa memo rably Intelligent, and his opinions on South American affairs are re spected by no less an expert than Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles. Indeed, there can be no doubt of the solidity of Mr. Berle's achieve ments. Mr. Berle himself never doubts It. On one occasion, during his New York period, he ran Into Secretary of Labor Frances PerklnB lunching with a friend. Miss Per kins was bewailing the new deal's slow Journey toward Its objectives She attributed tlie delay to the scarc ity of intelligent men who would work for the government. "Well." said Mr. Berle. "you can t expect me to be In New York and Washington at the same time." The first Adolf Augustus Berle is a clergyman of some distinction, a mtn of greBt learning, and an Inti mate of Justice Brandels. He It was who made little Adolf both a prodigy and a liberal. The elder Berle had the knack of stuffing his little ones' hesds with welghtv matters. From their earliest years, he bred them up to wisdom, and. when most children would have been worrying about Old Mother West-Wind, little Adolf was uttering prettv cries of aympsthy over the plight of Dido, as set forth by Virgil As for the first Berle lesson In lib eralism, the story of that Is honestly stirring. In the summers, the Berle family used to go to New Hampshire, for the cool country air. Near their house was one of the many New England mill towns, and. In the mill, children worked. The elder Berle possessed a fine capacity lor righteous Indignation, and p.ie morning, when his son was still very small, he roused the boy and took him out to see the children go to work In the dewy morning. As they watched th' children passing through the dark IContinued on Page SUght ) PULASKI. N. Y. April 33 (API Police betsn today an Investigation Into the discovery of the nude torso and lees of a woman on Lake On tario shore near Grindstone creek. BEIRUT. Svrla. April 23 (API Seve:i persons today were reported killed snd many Injured In clashes between Christiana and Mos'.ema In n DJeaireh region of eastern Syria, Champion Of Workers, But Not Union Racketeers False Leaders Seek Vengeance For Clean-up. PENDLETON. April 38. (AP) Got. Ch Aries H. afar-tin, here to attend the state oon vent ton of Young Democratic Clubs of Oregon, de scribed himself today at a noon luncheon meeting as liking to think of himself as a champion of the laboring man. He pointed out that opponents had "charged me with bludgeoning the working man." "That Is not true," ha declared. "I am bludgeoning the gangsters and racketeers so that they will get off the working man's back." He stated that "up to this time 104 of them have been indicted by grand Juries In six different counties and 48 of them hare pleaded guilty. There was not an honest bona fide working man In the lot. Many of them were ex-pugillsts hired to beat up working men. Nine of them were former convicts. They burned a mil! In Salem and threw 80 men out of their Jobs." The governor said one alleged labor leader had been given $35,000 for hi own personal use, and with this he bought a new home, raca horses, new cars and "obtained a new wife, giv ing his former wife 16,000." He said that the recent campaign "had freed the working man from ruthless and selfish control." "He can now resume control . of his union," Martin declared. He said his greatest opposition came from "false and unsound lead ers who have sworn their vengeance upon me." PENDLETON, Ore., April 33. (UP) Gov, Charlea H. Martin tonight pleaded for unity within the ranks of the Democratic party In Oregon, as main speaker before the Young Democrat convention here. "I am confident you will not be hoodwinked or 4egullcd by the siren song of some who would betray our party Into the ways of selfishness and direct Its destiny to forward the designs and schemes of certain cliques whose aim la diametrically opposed' to the welfare of our people," the governor said. "The Democratic party," he added, "can only retain Its power and its Influence for good only so long as It rigidly adheres to the fundamental principles that have made the party great. This principle Is government for, of and by all of the people not control of powerful organized and selfish minorities." Urge Radical Curb. SEATTLE. April 33. P) Sen Gor don Klemgard (D.-Pullman). chair man of the senate Interim commit tee, proposed today elimination of "Irresponsible radicals" in the 1938 elections to the atate senate, with out regard to partisan politics. Klemgard aaid his organisation, composed of 16 holdover senators, In cludes four Republicans. "Experience during the last ses sion and since has shown the danger of permitting irresponsible to make our laws." Klemgard told Interview era today. ' "If It were not for a croup of cool-headed legislators and Gov ernor Martin, the lawmaking branch would run wild." Klemgard recalled 36 senators, in cluding the few Republican members, constituted the so-called conservative majority in the upper house the last legislative session. IN SPAIN STRIFE HENDAYE. April 33. (UP) Na tionalist forces widened the wedge between Barcelona and Madrid along the entire aouthern Trent today, capturing the city of Aliaga. 33 miles north of Teruel and driving down the coastal highway on Castel Ion de la Plana. Nationalist troops of Gen. Miguel Arnnda smashed a formidable loyal ist concentration on the coast high way and occupied Alcala de Chls bert after which they con United to wards Castellon. half way between Benlcarlo and Valencia. Nationalist headquarters announc ed that On. Bautlsta Sa riches's troops captured the city of AUaga at 0 p. ra. and continued to advance to the south, wiping out the long pocket which extended from the sea back to Teruel. NOTED EDITOR OE WASHINGTON. April 93. William AUen White, the small town editor whose writing have brought laughter and tears to millions, waa elected president of the American Society of Newspaper Editor today Donald J. Sterling of the Portland (Ore.) Journal waa elected first-vice-president. NATIONALIST WIN ' f,''t; v: - ?:r: : v . y ' - ', Diver Mike Sklnrenkn of Marshfteld descended Into the Little river at Fall creek bridge near Rosrburg In an effort to find the body of W. H. Mather, whose truck plunged Into t he htream. The body was later re covered a short distance downstream. The victim's son. James Mather, narrowly escaped a similar death. ( Associated Press photo.) PEACE HOPE BOOMED BY LONDON. April 33. (ff) Great Britain's new agreements with Italy and Ireland have put new force be hind Prime Minister Neville Cham-berlainX-Plan .'or a broad scale at tack on other problem facing Eu ropean statesmen in the busy week ahead. With new faith in his "realistic" policy as a result of these achieve ments In quick succession, the 60-year-old prime minister returned freshened from a fishing holiday to plunge Into this packed schedule: i. Sealing a pact with Ireland Monday which may go far toward re moving the long-standing differences between the two countries. 3. Giving flnnl approval to a new budget from which the nation's tax payers will learn Tuesday whether they must pay more to keep rearm ament booming on a large scale. 3. Mapping procedure for getting League of Nations approval to recog nize Italy'a conquest of Ethiopia a vital part of the new Anglo-ttallan pact, y 4. Conferring with French Premier Edouard Daladler and French Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet Thursday on a common policy for maintaining European peace and, If that falls, closer military cooperation. HERO OF 98 WAR SAN FRANCISCO. April 33. (UP) Col. Andrew Summers Rowan, the man who carried "the message to Garcia," found tonight that the world does not always forget. From his sick bed at Letterman Oeneral hospital. Colonel Rowan gazed with tired but happy eyes on hundreda of floral offerings sent him on the occasion of his 81st birthday. At his bedside. Mrs. Rowan shuf fled through a great pile of tele grams and letters. Many of them came from personal frlcndi; others, from all part of the country, came from persons the Rowans had never met. Most pleasing of all were messages from school children, who for years have been told the atory of Col. Rowan's valor snd obedience to orders during the Spanish American war. FRUITMEN FIGHT HOOD RIVER. April 33. fP A hearing before the state hydroelectric, commission today on a proposed pub lie power district in Hood River coun ty developed opposition from a group of fruitgrowers who contended powei distribution was a specialized Indus try of which thsy knew nothing. Representative oi private utilities also opposed the district, which wu favored by spokesmen for the Orange, which la sponsoring the plan. The commission will announce lta decision after considering the testi mony E T SHANGHI, April 24. (Sunday.) A Japanese army spokesman said to day the Rising Sun banner had been carried across the border Into Ktm;au province when the- reorganized Jap anese offenrve drove a- deep wedge Into Chinese lines In southern Shan tung. Twenty thousand Chinese were re ported retreating In the direction of Plhalen, about eight miles from the Lunghal railway, vital east-west line which the Japanese have been trying to reach for months. The Chinese asserted the Japanese offensh'e suffered a serious setback in vicious fighting north of Talerchwang where 6,000 Japanese troops who es caped from beslegiid Ylhslen attempt ed to Join the main column advanc ing from LInl for a concerted drive southward. TO NEW YORK. April 38. (AP) As sistant District Attorney Edmund Rowan said today that Elizabeth Warner, 32-year-old factory worker, had confessed killing her brothers, Hen-y. 31, and Charles, 14, by feed ing them rat poison. Rowen said the girl told him after an all-night questioning that she had administered the poison In her brothers' meals over a period of a week. She waa charged with homi cide and held for arraignment later today In Queens felony court. The assistant district attorney said Miss Wagner told him she did not know why she gave the poison to I fcer younger brother but that she waa angry at Henry because he shouted at her end once struck her In the face, knocking out two teeth. T ATLANTIC CITY. N. J., April 23. (UP)--Repeal of prohibition on In dian reservations to save Indians from the effects of bad bootleg liquor was proposed tod.ty at the conference of friends of the Indians. The proposal was offered by the Lewlstown, Mont., branch of the American Association on Indian Af fairs. It recommended specifically that the Blackfeet tribe be placed under local option. Bootleggers aupply only the low eat grade liquor, the report said, and because It la sold In bottles only, the Indians drink too much at a time. The report recommended that good liquor be dispensed by drinks at or derly bars from which any Indian who became drunk would he evicted Profit, the report aald, should re vert to the tribe. Head Templars PORTLAND, April 33 ( AP, Knlghta Templar of Oregon advanced . A. Thorn pson . Port la nd , to the poet of grand commander today mrreeriing Edwin O. Potter, Albany juris Medford Solon's Condition "Good, Considering" Naval Hospital Physi cians Report. WASHINGTON. April 39. (AP) Senator Alfred K. Reamcs, 68-yoar old Democrat from Medford, Ore., was 111 at the naval hospital to night of bronchial pneumonia. Reames was taken from his hotel to the hospital last night In an ambulance. Naval hospital physic ians said his condition was "good, considering the fact that he has pneumonia." Reames was sworn in February 11 aa the first Democratic senator from Oregon since 1931. He was ap pointed by Gov. Charles Martin to succeed Senator Frederick Steiwer, Republican, who resigned. Ho has announced he would not seek elec tion In November, when a successor will be chosen. 45 INE T GRUNDY. Va., April 33. (flV- Forty five charred and broken bodies of miners were taken from the seared depths of the Keen Mountain mine of the Red Jacket Coal company to day, victims of the volcano-liko ex plosions which greeted the night shirt as It entered the mine yesterday. The United States bureau of mines officials said no further bodies were In the "drifts" which extend far un der the mountain. Mingo Keadle, vice-president of the Red Jacket company, said the air had been cleared In altishafts, and rescue squads fought to reach the victims, but scant hope was held for their safety. The explosion, believed oaused by dust, wrecked the operation, one of the largest In Buchanan county, Juet after four mine cars carrying men for tho night shift had entered the shaft. The tremendous concussion waa felt for miles around. Fallen slate, ?oal and rock slowed the efforts of the rescue workers who did not reach the scene until after dark. O roping carefully along the haulage way they first cama upon the bodies of four mine motor oper atora sprawled In the motor barn not far Inside the mouth. , News of the disaster spread quick ly In the little colony huddled In a narrow valley over which Cumber land peaks tower. Two hours later state police estimated 10.000 persons were on the scene. E SEATTLE, April 33. ;p The Alas ka salmon fishing Industdy was again threatened with complete paralysis tonight by a Jurisdictional deadlock between CIO and AFL cannery work era unions. The stalemate developed Just 10 days after a conciliation agreement ratified April 13 was thought to have smoothed the way for the 1938 fish ing season, beset since the first of the year by labor disputes. The new dispute flared when two AFL unions, t he Alaska Cannery Workers No. 20.4M and the Cannery Workers and Farm Laborers No. 18, 3.17. drmanded an immediate election to determine the sole bargaining aency designated for all Alaska can nery workers. The Canned Salmon Industries, cannery operators, also asked an im mediate election. BULLETIN Night name SEATTLE, April 33.( AP Muller. Gabrlelaon and Gyselman collected seven of Seattle's nine hits tonight and pounded out a 6-1 victory over Oakland. Muller collected three hits In five times up. Gabrlelaon -got a pair In two tlmea at bat, and Gyselman wal loped two doubles. Turbevllle. Oaks chucker, kept the ball away from the other Seattle batters, only Hunt and flptndel getting aafetlea, but the extra-base clouts of the trio who eou'.d hit proved his undoing. Pickrel held trie 0ks acoreleas until tht eighth Inning. Abreu. flashy young thlrd-sarker, connected for three of the four hit Pickrel granted the bay contingent. The score: R. H. E. Oakland 1 4 3 Seattle 6 3 TurbevlUe, Douglas f8) and Con roy; pickrel s SplndeU Portland Mayor Advises N.LR.B. Alien Labor Chief Foments Sawmill - Strife Upstate. PORTLAND. April 38. (AP) Mayor Joseph K. Carson appealed to the "people of Oregon" to demand an Immcdlnte deportation hearing for Harry Bridges, coast C.I.O. di rector. A hearing was recently postponed by the department of labor, pending a supreme court decision Involving membership In the communist party as grounds for deportation. Carson telegraphed the National Labor Relations Board that ho had Information that Bridges was "al leged" to have threatened reprisals unless sawmill operators signed agreements with his union. "General condemnation" of Bridges, "when he la making every effort to have the lumber Industry restored to normal operations, allows the attack la not motivated by hon esty." E. B. O'Grady, Oregon CJ.O. director .replied. Don Helmlck. C.I.O. Lumber Work ers' union executive board member, challenged Carson to prove that Bridges had issued an ultimatum. Mill operators refused to com ment. Sawmill workers bolted to the C.I.O. last August 14. The AFL. later Issued charters to nine or ten mills, claiming majorities of work men, and lifted an, A.F.L. boycott. Mills, shut down In August, operated only spasmodically until a month ago. T VERY MUCH ALIVE NOG ALES. Aria., April 33. (UP) William Jamea Gilbert, 37. a tall blond cowboy, looked up from ills work on a desert cattle ranch iiuar here today and Informed Undorsherlff David Wllkle that he waa not tho victim of a blzarro murder plot in Nevada last November. Gilbert, who once worked as a street car conductor fn Oakland, said he disappeared from a ranch near Centerville, Nev., to avoid a "family fuss." "What do you know about that?" he said when Informed that two men , were now being held In the county Jail at Mlnden, Nev., accused of "aid ing and abetting" In what waa sup posed to be his murder. WAGE HOUR BILL DUE EARLY VOTE WASHINGTON, April 33. () Ohalrman Norton (D.-N.J.) of the labor committee' prepared an analy sis of the revised wage-hour bill to day In an effort to win right of way In the house for 11 from the rule committee. She undertook the task at the re quest of Chairman O'Connor ( D. N.Y.) of the rules committee, who said he thotmht the house should be allowed to voto on the measure. His committee haa power to withhold It from the house floor unless a ma jority of tha members petition for It to be brought out. O'Connor predicted that If the bill was brought to a vote It would pass. NEW YORK, April 33 (AP) Bear ing the blessing of his warrior father. Francis Warren Pershing left today for a world honeymoon tour with his bride of a day. Gen. John J. Pershing. 78 but soldierly as ever, headed a list of distinguished guests at the wedding of his only son yesterday to Miss M'lriel Bache Richards, granddaugh ter of Jules 8. Bache. financier and art patron. FEDERAL INCOME PAST 5 BILLIONS WASHINGTON. April 38. (AP) The federal government's Income In the 10aS flsral year crossed tha 15.000.000.000 mark In the week Just en1ed. A treasury statement ahowed to day that receipt for the fiscal year which began July 1. 1037. totaled 6,000,837,814 8? on April 31 v V r Lift . , William H. Harrison (above), who got nine dollars a week on hln first Jolt as a telephone repairman, was named vice president and chief en gineer of the American Telephone and Telegraph company. He la president of the American Institute of Electric al Engineering. JACKIE'S MOTHER TO CHANGE STORY OF Court Gives Right To Amend First Statement, And Explain Family Plans HOLLYWOOD. April 28. (Jp) Jackie Coogan'a mother, stating "I'd go through fire and water for tho boy," waa given permtsalon today to alter or amend the sworn deposition sho made InstMlndny in the stilt tiled sho made last Monday In tho suit filed money he earned as "The Kid" at the silent screen. The mother, Mrs. Arthur L. Born stein, won the right to change her statement when young Coogan'a at torneys agreed she should be allowed to give a moro complete account of early financial transactions In the days when Jackie was styled as a million-dollar stiy of the screen She itiild she wished to explain the guardianship petition she and hor deceased , husband filed In 1023 In probate court In which they declared their Intent to establish a trust fund for their son's earnings. Mrs. Bern stein previously testified she nevei planned to establish a trust fund for Jackie. For two years after he was of age, Jackie remained with his mother. Not until he married Betty Grabl? did ho leave the home hearth, tho mother aald. "It Isnt reasonable to believe that a boy who found home life aa un pleasant as Jackie now tells, would have stayed at home, particularly when he was earning between 130,000 and $40,000 during those two years." said tho mother. A proposed trip by Coogan to New York will not be made, his at torn ty said today. F Weather forecast for Sunday. April 24 th: Northern California: Generally fair Sunday, but cloudy northwest por tion: probably light rains extreme north coast; moderate temperature; moderate northwest to west wind off coast. ' Oregon : Unsettled; ralna north and weat portions Sunday: warmer eait portion: moderate southerly wind off tha coast. Outlook for western atatea April 25-30, Inclusive: Fair In central and southern California and plateau re gion: rains in northern districts at beginning and again toward close of week: moderate temperature. IS 9 YEARS OLD HOLLYWOOD. April 23. UP) Curly-headed little Shirley Temple the world's greatest boiotflca attrac tion, celebrated her ninth birthday today. She bounced out of bed this morn ing and. found her parents' Brent wood heights manalon Jammed with present!. They wera all wrapped In Shlrley'a favorite colors red and white. And they caiiw from admirers In all parts of tha world. This afternoon ahe played host to 300 children -f Bollywood and Los Angelea newspapermen. They gath ered In tha Cafe De Pare on the Twentieth Century-Pot studio lot. Principles Retained But Operation Limited Bitter Fight Looms Over Lend-Spend Plan. WA8KIKCITON, April to. (TTP) President Roosevelt tonight won hla fight to retain tha principles of tha undivided profit ta In the new rev enue bill, but stubborn conferees re duced the maximum rata and limited operation to 1842. WASHINGTON. April 2S. P)-Ap-proval of a modlfleld undistributed, profits tax by a senate-house com-, mlttee brought predictions today that it would ba an Issue In tha forthcom ing congressional electlona. Two conservative Democrats on tha conference group, Senators Walsh of Massachusetts and George of Georgia, said In a Joint statement that a pro vision limiting the 'levy to two yeara would "permit the country to pass upon this question In the next elec tion of members of congress." They were Joined in tha thought by- a Republican member of the confer--enoa committee, 8enator Vandenberg of Michigan. Referring to a letter President Roosevelt wrote .committee leaders, laat week urging retention of tha principle of the undistributed profit tax. Vandenberg aald that communi cation "beautifully typifies tha whole Issue." ! "Tha president pledged unyielding fidelity to tha tax principles which the country haa been so vigorously criticizing." tha Michigan Republican declared. , Ha added, however, that ha was "fairly well satisfied" with the con ference committee's compromlee on the undistributed profits and capital gains taxes, "The undistributed profit tax prac tically dlaappeare under this face-aar-ing compromise," he aaaerted," because, is limited to two years, provides only a 3A per cent tax spresd and embod ies cushions for corporations with daf-, iclta and Indebtedness ... . . . vs ,.. Business spokesman have attacked, the principle of the undistributed, proftta tax, contending it prevented desirable and necessary accumulations of surplus. WASHINGTON, April 23. (UP) . A bitter congressional flgh brewed tonight over the New Dear M.912, 000.000 lendlng-spendlng program. When congress resume work Mon day, the battle will begin In earnest and It will transcend party lines. A house appropriations sub-ommlttee Is holding hearings on the president's , request for 1,290 .000 .000 to fin ance relief for the first seven month of the 1031) fiscal yesr and will begin work on the plan to provide 1.000. 000.000 for public worka spend ing. Charging "political favoritism and pressure" In the administration of re lief. Rep. Bruc Barton, R., H. . an nounced that he would Introduuce an amendment to the corrupt practlcea act. fixing a penaUy of H.000 fine and three yeara Imprisonment for any official distributing government fund to Influence the political be-, llefa or acta of a recipient. 2 Barton aald ha was timing his amendment to coincide with the drive to push tha president lendlng-epend- Ing program through congress. Barton'a plan to place stringent ra- atrlctlona on the handling of relief fund was regarded a particularly significant In new of the charge and counter-charges concerning relief ad ministration In Pennsyvanla. He specifically mentioned tha sit uation In Pennsylvania, where work progress administration Inveatlgatore are Inquiring Into charges by John B. Kelly. Democratic leader of Philadel phia, that Sen. Joseph T. Ouffey. D-, Po.. waa exertlnng political pressure on relief worker. TO KEEP f-Ar.i.AMnara. Ont.. Anrll 33. (UP) The guardians of the Worm quln tupleta. whose father wants an In vestigation of their management, nwnri 2.4flh a vear on the glrla and their staff. It waa learned today. The aum, amounting to aa.auo month, la annroxlmatelv Ifl.OOO In excess of Interest from their IS00OO0 estate, most of which U Invested in government bonds. The avnenditurea are for the oper ation of the Dafoa nursery, home of the quintuplet, ana paymeni aalartea to a targe surf which In eludes Dr. Allan Roy Dafoa. their physician. parnDLPTON. April 23 (AP) Rob ert Cronen of Wheeler won hla fight for th presidency or the young Democratic Clubs of Oregon today, defeating Joseph Nanca of Portland 34 to 20. BRRLTN, April 23. (AP) Dr. Hugo Bckener plana to aall for tha United Sutet next Thursday to convlnca Washington officials th helium h h. haen endeavoring to buy will not ba uaed for military purpose. $2,205 PER MONTH QUINTS