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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1928)
Medford Mail Tribune JtaiJt Twcntytli1rt Year W wkly Kifty-Mventli Year MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY,' JULY 1, 1928. No. 101. ? Today By Arthur Brisbane Four Good Men, All Dry. Helping the Farmer. Just a Little Usury. Lord Terrington's Error. fi (Copyright, 1027, by New Tor. Evening Journal. Inc.) (: Hoover anil Smith, both on i ilry jitiitforiu. Wet Dcimicrats will be told: "J)ou't worry, we uon i reany mean mat urv I Ktlllt." ' Wet liepiihlieans will be united: "Have we Kepublieans ever eleeted a dry ? J lave you had any trouble netting what you wanted?" f-f. Democrats want to help farm- er.s and expect farmers to hell) them. I hey promise them that what the farmers cannot soil in the United States shall he k sold abroad. But "the cost of surplus mafUetinjj; will be mt on the commodity." This means that what it costs to sell surplus products in Eu rope will be charged to the fanner. On the govern ment's charge for foreign niiir heting, lie will agree witli the power trust that our govem- liient isn't callable or honest j enough to engage in business siiccessfully. The Bible warns us against usury. See Deuteronomy 2:1 21 : "Thou shall not lend upon usury to thy brother. Usury of money, usury of victuals, usury of anything that i.s lent upon usury." . 1 That did not lieep big money gentli'ineii from raising the ' price ol cull monev in Wall ' j .street to 8 per cent yesterday. , They may have a private tin dei'staiitling with Providence. iStrangely, S per cent money did not keep prices from going up. Our laws against nsurv re-! mind you of prohibition law AVhllt doesn't suit tho b'lL' lot- lows dnemi t " rn " j f-f Lord Tcmiiijton, British peer, slnle $:ilMl,(MM), admits it, and pics tu nil for four yearn. That happens in Brtain. Had thu L'tMil lenian route to this country and made it if'MO,. 01)0,000 instead of JOO.OOO, he, Avuuld bo on his private ear or i yuvhi now, and able lawyers j a.. . .' , ! womti or uenouiirino; anyoonv Ir.viiiK to interfere with liim. Or, ns Senator Nye puts it, "you can't convict !(( 100,000, 000." The platform promises to nivo tile Philippine Islands liaeU to the Filipinos, of whom the plat form, says: "They have sue eeeileil in nuiintainiiii; ir stable government." The Democrats might give the 1'liilippines to the ilapanese. Tliey won't give thum to the Filipinos because the Filipinos couldn't take them. Those admirable little gentle men have not stU'CCetled in j maintaining a stabl I yoYrril- incut. The I'nited States lias main tained it for them, which is dif ferent. However, platforms must not j be taken too liternll Senator Norris of Nebraska, who forced Congress to admit that the people of the United States might own their own Muscle Shoals plant, 1h nut nunlnst tlo Demnct-iitle itlut. form. He doesn't see how any third I partv conld be organized. Which 1 means that I e and millions of otb-I .i i.i. r . r ..... . . , ! mibl'ican nonetheless nun v irwoien iiupiiii in rcnmni n, The Democratic platform prom- ; Ises to '"outlaw war.'' Women are ; delighted with that. They hope it will work better than the law to outlaw whiskey. That didn't work well, and unfortunately whiskey Land war are brothers. w (Continued on Page Four, ROAD F R (I M YREKA TO Klamath Holding Co. Buys Montague Branch and Tapping of Ore and Tim ber Planned Revival of Rumors of Hill Road Ac tivity. YRKKA, Oil., June 30. ypi Sale of the Yreka railroad, a six-mile ' lino linking Vrekii with (ho South- I e '""' M"ntuBuc. wna com-j I pletcd today. j The Yroka railroad, locally own- I f'1 line, was solcl thiouKli eftoi-ts of I iiiti i i c i a ciiuiiinci- in commerce 10 i the Klamath lliver Holding com pany. I Tho new oB'iera announced their Intention immediately to spend Slliu.Ouo in reconditionin.:,- tho road. Surveys will. It Is said, lie made (or Immediate extension of tho road inla Scott. Valley ami tho plans call for an ultimate construction of the lino to western Siskiyou county, with a probable terminus at Happy : Camp, on the Klamath river. The area which it Is planned the ' road will tap, ultimately has timber ' and resources which it is hoped will zo made available for market ex- j plallation. ! Dl.. Ke(1(1Vi who holl,K an ,, j on "1B rants Pass railroad und Is' I now in northern Calilornia, aceord- ing to local reports, is involved In j the Yreka sale. i ltonewal of the report of Mill Hue railroad octlvlly in southern Oregon was revived last week by the near-expiration of hte UO-day option (,-ranted to Dr. .1. K. itcd ily on the OrPKun-C'alifornia rail road, out of tiranls Pass by the wntuis I'ass city council. ur "' "0 ' '"' "ro. Ol Sliokline u-itp the oriirlnnl hriekprs of the railroad, a nre-war venture. I i lierenth- n dlsimti'b from Kluni -; atli Kalis told of rumored iilans ; iot mu linos to build into the . ,, koguo Itive over ibe Me valley, operating tlfrii-fl Lninrit),. r.-ill- I road. OroKuii-Oreiron Lumber ISISEENfCI fit ji'unipyny Hultsirliary cxtumUns' Sheriff liaii Mclnroe and Deputy i front this i-ity to I'.utto KniN, a ! Prosecutor A. ,1. Gillls, who are in disiiince of 31! miles. a similar charge of the case, stated they I report was in clreiilittion u yciirfelt an inuest was necessary to jfiu-o. hihI was fniunvcd by ihecl,a1' "1 tnu "flair to avoid threat I hi.n.i.o, ,.f n it,., . imiriI violence Irt KulknrHnii Kp1- I'.utte Kails section. i-b- .,w 'their efforts wore never ni:uU. : Innht'f linnet it fuvpfi iri.nr.fii . munauor and vh-e-nresident of tbeizens if tl,e matter was officially Owen-Oregon company went over the ground a year ago next month, and pronounced a railroad thru that section feasible. This week, l-'red Crouch, nup-erinh-ndent v( I he pacific Sba le rics ami Timber company, filed an a pplicai ion lor a rihi -of -way set aside for u county road, froi.i AKMte, a station on tho logging road, into this city. Tb Crouch I ompany. has survey stakes fri11nr(1 Mmn ...... nthpr man wnid ' . op Antelope creek . , into their tnnoer iiiiu mineral ""hiing. The county court denied tile application, Willi the proviso, that It financial barkilli; null, be shown, the application would lie Kr.'iuli'il. With other local citizens, Tlr. i Kedily has been workini; for . several months on the buihlltiK of a rillronil Into the Dine l.cdur' ; mlnliiK district. usIuk the Medford-j ,lacksonvi lie railroad right-of-way, as a nucleus. Xo agreement was I reached wit h the Sont hern Pa -j cific railroad, or the Guggenheim. (Who rnvn the I M u e I .ed ne m in". Ion guaranteed tonnage, and th." project Is in aiieyance. I For the last year, there has jbeen repeated reports of rail ac tivity In this section, but all have been shrouded in a deep hr.?,e of ) indefiniteness. A Medford resident, who for j several mouths "mis been working to interest the Hill Interests in a ! rsili'iad Into t his section, char- netcrhied tlte Grants Pass report ' us Just talk, and a re-hash nf an (lJu- story". and further added he "knew positively there is nothing to it." DKTKOIT. .Mich.. June 30. (Pi t -Captain Kniilfo Carrnnza. Mexi-, t an fc' WH flier, and Colonel 1 "rtea , i.inuoergn arrivcu in a l,iM,,w lonigbt from Cnrtiss field. Vw York. cni.mi.i i i.n.fltM.K f,0,i JdownatOak Harbor, Ohio, because v.vnvnni '" f" " im nnfi of lack of fuel and Captain Car- j mnxa brought his shii to earth and picked up the trans-Atlantic filer, continuing his Journey to IVtrolt. f. K IS John 1 1, Unekef etler. ; Jr.. has Ktven 2,, 0.000 francs-- i about JMt.onO - for restoration of i eight clerestory window In liar- tics Cathedral. i liiMPimnp UIIIU I I iUIU-U UI WHEN GAS FAILS SENATOR CURTIS' - ten TTiPiiiiik These women, photographed with Senator Charles Curtis, of Kan sas, Republican vice presidential nominee, have been taking care of his office at Topeka, as well as his convention headquarters, without remuneration. They are, left to right, Mrs. Marie Lake, Topeka; Miss Lola Williams, Columbus, Kas.; Senator Curtis' secretary, and Mrs. Florence Hasson, of Topeka and Washington. WALLULA FEARS M ACTION IN JUS SHOOTING FRAY TH Rancher Claims He Shot Marion County Resident al Pair Tried to Extort Mon- so Never Listened To Ra- ey After Entering Home Identity of One Victim Is Mystery. : WALLA WALLA,' Wsh., June 30. ! (P). After an investigation today j of the shooting iast night at Wal- .,... , mm, iiu nines est ui mis cuy, 01 two 11,011 1v Lee Fulkerson, govern- moot tratiner and rancher, when they entered bis home, demanded, money, officers returned tonight and stated that an Inquest would M,lu"au'.v "u ,1U1U i"y- intr on 1 he imrt nr Koine ei izriih ol the town was high and they teared j 1111 outbreak ou the part ot the cut dronned. they said Although Fulkerson was in Walla j Walla last night and today, he has' not been arrested and was allowed ; to return to Wallula this afternoon. 1 "It may lake n lot of nerve to i sleep in that, shack where I killed, those men hist night, hut I'm goiii.1; ; to do it,' Fulkerson said as he left for Walluht. Kegarding the shonl-i inir he snid: "1 am sorrv I shot' i,m ini. i ,1,, n,,t helievp I did iinv! havi; til)no in iny place." t The scene of the shootlnff lias : not been touched except to remove j the bodies, officers said. Kxamiuatlon of tho clothing of j the unidentified nian toniebt re-j vealed the name ".lac!, Williams" j on a vest, i-.tiorts are nein man to get further Information about the j man. ('ill llecht. the other victim was well known here and his repu- talion was said by officers to have been good. JACK HOLT SUEO T i I.os AN(H;iJ-;s. June 30 fF.-- Chaihs ,. "Jack" Holt, western pictures Mar a ml his wife. Mar- gltrel Holt ami four persons' j named only as John Dues" were : made defendants in a civil suit ! j for fT.VUlMt filed today 111 the: t'nited States district court, by I'. ' W. Siuylie. a l.us Angeles business, man. I'alse arrest, imprisonment j ,and curbing of civil rights were j . charged in t be complaint, i Sniylic's complaint charged that! he w;if arrested at his home and ! taken to Deputy District Attorney ' Wum'd hamn u llpril h Wum nilK"J- tioned, loiter, S my lie said, ho was taken to tin county Jail, f IngtT-printed, and subjected to ! ; other "indignities." : Tbe piaintiff said he had given ' llMtt n iiroinlssory note for money i . . ' his arrest was a plot to 'xt,"'t ni,,nf rro'" im- -u.rneys un- tuni shhi i ney nan ' i been notified ui ne son mil hiie I f the facts ( ; Holt was In the case nod that ! i wav to btame. Holt N well knrtwn in thl: valley, and siient several month several years ago on the lack K.jnnil there was n slight northithe national air tour which started Mori III ranch at Ccld Hill. breeze. 5 j at Detroit this morning. FEMININE AIDES UPSTATE LADY I HEARS OF E dio and Thought Aero plane a Miracle Lives Alone In House In a Can yon. SAI.HM, Ore.. June 30. ()- .Mrs. chnrlcs lll,.nn,. ,,,.,1 -l,l. w , a (icrnian woman, has not ; beon off the seven acre" that sur- i round ber hoim, on lint in. i.'reek for sixteen years. She lives alone GREAT-WAR in u little house that la hidden General Nobile himself. His return in a remote canyon, in the north j from the ice was nullified, so far end of .Marion county. as the number of imperiled men Mrs. JJickner had not heard I was concerned, by th marooning of the World war until two young j of his rescuer, Lieutenant Einar women visitors found her a few , Paal Lundbor. Swedish flier, days ago and told her about it. I There was anxiety here tonight She had never heard of the ru- j for the safety of Lieutenant Lund dio and had never heard a phono-' t"org and the five explorers at the ...v. hh v o....... jMi'-u it for her. A n airplane of tho forest patrol passed over her home two years ago and she thought a miracle as Happening. Mrs. Ph-kiier h; money. over ten years ago she deeded ten acres to some neigh-j irs, and In return they are to keep her in food and clothing an' long as she lives. 1 ItOlSK, Idaho, June SO. (P) John 1 homas, banker and Vattlc-1 in h n ol uoumng ana repuniican na tional committeeman for Idaho, wna today appointed I'nited Statea sen ator to serve the unexpired term of the late Senator Frank I;. Good ing. The appointment was mad by Governor II. C Haldiidge. TEASED A BULL; IS NEAR DEATH lane 30 ' OKKAT DKND. Ka ; (Pi John (ioddard, 2 6 -years- old, I farm hand, finding a moment of t idleness today, teased a bulk The ! an I mat attacked. crushing his .chest. He is not expected to live. ATLANTIC FLIGHT it O li T A. Island of Fayal. Axores. June .1l.(P- The trans fiid,! fcv..iriSt. Louis Atlnntic T. Courtney, Itritish aviator, will be resumed here tomorrow If re ports as to weather in the vlctn- h of Halifax are favorable. Tne hig "whale seaplane in . . .... . . . ... ok n uipuui tomxnej l"lol?the Kdsel Ford reliability trophy ,n,, t' Ul,,,"a 1 f " " ' '"c'","'u ( fnn - mn'--uu hiK'Ii. lepairs to the wireless dynamo! had been completed and a fresh! I store of fuel was in the tanks. j Conditions here tonight were fiom Indianapolis, the first to land j enue from motor vehicle license-. Fair. Rising temperature and dl nf th f ine.t Th. wn. rtitm nt lmhert-St. I,nuifl field hcrR on : nnd srasollne tar About 1 1 1 .100.- mlnUhln. havw plmwl. nvar tl,a In. SHIPS NEAR REFUGEES OF ITALIA ! Wpathpr Inr.rpaspc Pprils nf Lost Explorers and Halts Rescue Anxiety Felt for Swedish Hero Who Saved Gen. Mobile Ice Floes Crumble. i i M.OSCOVV, Juno 30. () The icebreaker Krasslu is expected to ! reach the place of the Italia's dis aster Monday, it was announced j here toni.'jht. The Icebreaker cross- ; led the 7Sth parallel Saturday on ' j Its northward voyage and was said I I to have made as much as 14 miles j an hohr through the heavy Ice. I No news has been received from j 1 the aviator, MahiiKlikin, who left rthe icebreaker Malign Friday In ) attempt to reach Foyu Island. 1 (Dispatches from Home, through the SefanK News agency to the ! Associated Pross, said tliat Habush-1 kin left the Malign Kriday night at I ,9:20 p. m. The plane maintained! ; its radio connection with the .Ma- j ; 1 i fill for only 20 minutes). I (Copyright 1928 by the Associated I I Press) I KIN'fiS MAY, Spitzbergen,' June J ,i(). (p) Today, the start ot the ! sixth week since General Vniberto I Nobile and his polar expedition in j die dir!lblo Italia crashed on the j conditions not only halting the ef- forts of rescuers but increasing the ice ou Aortacasi lanu, saw weauier peril of the six refugees whose lo cation Is unknown. Another day passed also without news of the nine missing members of the Italia's crew or the party of (zed for Hearch and rescue work ized for search and rescuet work In a French naval seaplane. Throughout the more than two score days since, the disaster, the i efforl.t of avltorr, ami mariners, jjm ikei liy the reao'irces of five riioveinnients, have, failed to effect a rescue, except In the case of camp rrom wmcn .oune ws res cued. The Arctic summer is affecting the Ice fields and the floes are moving under the influence of wind and current. The fields are begin- little use forn,nS to break l,p Hnd there ls lll" preneiiKiuii icsi i uu ui-; i iob uh which Nobile 's tent was pitched disintegrate. FIRST HOP OF Fleet Reaches St. Louis Af ter Indianapolis Stop Fly to Tulsa Today Ar mada Embodies Latest In Commercial Aircrafts. ST. LOUIS. Mo., June 30. (p The first day'a travel of the 6v00 mile national reliability air tour ended here late today, when 21 alrPlant'8 exemplifying virtually cciy laic uu uiuiiiiciil in i:oiniii";i - cial aircraft, arrived at I.ambert St. Louis field. Louts G. Meiser, piloting a Huhl "air sedan," followed after a nine minute Interval by Al Henley in A Ryan monoplane, landed at 4:(W as the first arrival. Last to arrive at 3:19 was a monocoupe, occupied alone by Miss Phoebe Falrgrave Omlie. The planes took off on Hie tour at 10:13 this morning at Detroit, arriving at Indianapolis shortly be fore noon, Heginnin-f at I p. m.. and taking off in vine-minute Inter vals, the planes then headed for failed to take off at the starting point. The fliers will leave S,t. Louis Monday morning for Tulsa, Okla., on the third leg of the contest for on(, nuro than fton , VMh prt7.es. ST. LOUIS. Mo.. June 30.- ifP Pilot Louis (1. .M elite, In a Buhl air- plane, arrived at 4:01 p. m, toclav PLANES FINISH NATIONAL TOUR FLYER SPENDS VACATION IN AIR Following the example of the street car conductor who put in hlf days off riding on the cars, Lieutenant R, C. Moffat, Dayton, O., chief of the research bureau of the army air corps, has taken ad vantage of his annual leave to travel, with Mrs. Moffat, from Day ton, O., to San Francisco, as a passenger on a tri-motored air liner. Lieutenant and Mrs. Moffat are shown nrior to denartum. BOY ON WHEEL INJURED WHEN IT BY FENDER Frank Steams, 12, Struck I ' ' When in Front of Auto, Rendered Unconscious No Bones Broken Is-Hospital Report. Frank Stearns, a 12-year-old boy who lives In tin Buckshot Hill vi cinity northeast of the city, was badly injured about 5 o'clock yes terday afternoon on tho Crater Lake highway near the hut when his bicycle collided witji the front fender of a car that L. H. Suther land of L'47',4 West Jackson street was driving while both vehicles were going about " miles an hour. Tho boy was riding behind an other car back of Sutherland's and started around this car, evidently ignorant of the fact that Slither- laml'u ..- . I,, l,.nn, f It ,,.,.11 too late to avoid striking (he (jer Mr. Sutherland took the injured lad to the Community hospital, where he came loo after an hour ! of unconsciousness. No bones were iHnv ln" voters start msorucnj broken nor Internal injuries sur- munlfcsimions around tho polls, rcrud, II was thought, but he suf- Every polling place will be guaril rered bad cutH on tho head und on I id by federal soldiers and nddl one leg and bad bruises. Ulonal troops will bo held In bar- 1 he boy was resting comfortably 11 the hospital last night and If no serious Injuries develop In theia meantime, may be taken home some time today. City Traffic Officer George Pros-' cdtt investigated the case after Mr Sutherland had mude a report of It and found the circumstances of the accident to be substantially as related above. KOZER SEES CAIN 8ALKM, Ore, June. HO tV) It' thu icgistratiun of automobiles in Oregon continues from now on at the stride set the first half of the year, said Secretary of State Ko zer today, thu total in registration fees in the motor vehicle depart ment will aKgreeatc $(,500,000 bv the end of the year. For lir.'" the total was $6,527,000. Over 217.000 licenses have been issued o far. this year, against, 20&riiOO for tile same period last yea r. I-'ees received io f a r t h is year total (i. 290.000 against $5, 951.000 at ibis time last year. The fact that the cheaper au tomobiles tire heavier under the new models makes a striking dif ference in revenues. Kozer snld that few cars today come under the $ t and the 122 license pro visions. U'M-elpls from the gasoline tft for the first five months ot this year aggregate nearly twelve per cent greater thun for the same period of last year, should the use of gasoline continue at the came rate the remainder of th vb.ir th filial revermn from this I tax rhoiiM be around SI, 40'). 00(1. thereby making the combined rev-1 loot) for the year, against 1(M00,- j loot 'last year. . OBREGON ONLY CANDIDATE N MEXICAN V E Assured of Presidency WhenhetrriaT peopI 10 Blv J 1811 iri, ;, r. i n ii i n it First BallOt Last lOaay Saloons Close a n d COUrtS Open, and TrOOPS, r 7 . j To Guard Polling Places M-,., rt:, ,;., nieW UOnSTITUTIOn in Effect. .MEXICO CITY, June 30 (P) The duly qualified and certified voters of .Mexico will go to tho polls tomorrow to elect a presi dent for the six year term start ing Llecotnbcr 1. Ccneral Alvuro obregon Is the only candidate and)laH ),een selected as manager for technically will be elected as soon the western campaign and ho will as the first ballot is cast in bis j be assisted 111 organizing his head favor, quarters staff next week by Secro- The uilmlnlstnillon or President ' determined to preserve 'order and throughout the repub- ! Hnluo,lfi wl" rem,lln ,cloHel "d ;u"" Rl'"1 i" mui spceuy , bodice .nay be dispensed in case ; racks in reserve ,k further insurance against j disorderly election day, no civ- j Iilans will be permitted to bear arms. The saloons were closed last night and the republic Is to continue dry until Monday morn ing. c ! en e ra I O b rego n wilt be the first president under the new con stitution to be chosen for a term of six year's. This is two years more than was provided until a recent a mend ment was enacted extending the presidential term. Oth-'i constitutional amendments havie been provided for the Obre (ton administration but have not been promulgated. He will -have the power to appoint Judges who hitherto have, been elected, and the number of members In the national legislature is to be ie-dm-ed within thre years. A fur- tber change in the fundamental law of the country establishes a, commission form of government for Mexico City. senators and representatives are to ne chosen for the national leg islature and there are to be elec tions for governors Hnd legislators In several of the states. 2 BOYS AND A GUN; EASY COIN, CELLS PORTLAND, Ore., June 3 'JPH A pistol una easy mime.. jen terday's dream the "big house" for ten years and not a dream. Two days ago Sonny Martin and Pert Lee came north from San Francisco with a gun and a deslrn for easy money. Ij,st night thev held up three clerks to obtain $59. f h , w" c.turd I Tnfluv Ihpv tt'ulvj.,! Today they waived hearings and j were sentenced to prison for ten ''ar" Orenon Weather terlor. Moderate northwest and north winds on the coast. VE STAND 0. P. Candidate May Ask Fair Trial for Prohi b it ion in Acceptance Speech To Invade Farm Belt On Trips West Campaign Plans Take Shape Al Rests. WASIIINTrTOX, Juno 30. (A) ' With the presidential tlcketa of tho ; major poliucui parthiH Holeclud, re I puhtienn -londers went ahoad with their plniiH for opening the cam- j paign while Secretary Work, chair t man of the republican natlnmil com- mittee, whk en route to WiscoiiHin i to submit biH resl.;;nntion from thu I cabinet to President C'oolidgo. j Following closely the expression or the republican belief that the campaign must be fought out lit the east with New York state &s j the center of battle, came tho in ; formation that Secretary of Com j mercc Hoover, republlcnn presiden tial candidate, would emphasize hit party's stand on the prohibition question In his speech formally ac cepting the nomination. There whk a possibility, it was snid, that he would go further than a mere dec laration for the enforcement of thu prohibition law and the constitu tional amendment and cnll upon the e the law a rioover 8 second cainoTouu spcecu wm be at West Branch, Iowa, and Ms expected to (leal with the tarin i question. Whon the democrats nominated Governor Smlth ot New York as their presidential candidate tho re publican leaders reached the con clusion (hut instead of the thick of i11" 'W'1 oeing laid in agricuiiunu sections, it would have to be waged ; tn the east. New York became a point of especial Interest and it was recalled that Hoover's calling list has shown ft larger number of prom Ident republican leaders from that state than any other section. The selection of an eastern cam paign manager has not been an nounced by the republicans, but II was assumed that Senator Moses of New Hampshire would take thai post. James W. Oood of Chicago tnry Work. It Is now planned for Secretary Hoover to leave Washington within a week or so, traveling west to his Qt,,f,M-,l imli-np.Sv hnmn utnimlii 'J t""',; ' , f, ': Coo, , g0 e n route t0 Rj, 0 , ros,dcnt (.ooll(IM) his resignation. WASHINGTON. Juno H0.(P) Secretary Hoover devoted most of hla time today to tho writing of his speech of acceptance of the re nublicnn nresldentlal nomination an(1 mad ,.ians to HlKjmi a uief glln()Hy nt his home. Tomorrow Mr. Hoover will attend with Mrs. Hoover the quaint Quaker church here and then will remain the rest of the day at his homo, probably enjoying a reaplte from the heat In the spacious garden at the rear of his residence. For the writing of his speech, the republican nominee has estab lished an office at his home and Is carefully formulating the address. Cor.Ktnnt revision makes the task a slow one. He writes a pae In long land, has It typed and then revises it again. The final draft of the RddresH probably will not be made until a clay or so before he leaves for California. Most of the morning at his com merce department office Mr. Hoo ver devoted to departmpntnl mat ters which he Is clearing off his desk before his contemplated res ignation. One of his visitors, Rep resentative W. K. Hull of Illonofs, I however, discussed the campaign and ?ave Mr. Hoover his analysis of the farmers' political views. Mr, Hull declared that he bellev. ed thu farmern did not wish to "change horses," and would sup port the republican parly In the November election. Secretary Work, the new repub lican national chairman, who left today for Wisconsin to present his cabinet resignation to President Ooolldge. will spend tomorrow ln Evanston, III., visiting his daugh ter, Mrs. A. W. Hlssell, and then will go to Hrule tomorrow night. On his return trip Mr. Work plans to spend a (lay or two In Chlca't" organizing the republican western division headquarters ALBANY. N. V.. June . (IV povcrnor Alfred K. Smith rested today to prepara for the nrduotii task Immediately ahead of him for drawing up his plans of political 'battle. He did not go to the capltol at all, thus disappointing scores of state office workers 'bo hud planned a siinrprtse demonstration lor him. He sent word that as soon as be nine back from New York next Thursday he would greet them all In the executive offices. At the executive mansion he did (Continued on Pe,Iour)