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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1928)
edford Mabl Tribune Weather. lYear 'Ago Forecast Raul. Maximum yesu-niar . Minimum ynJrnJ f , lrei-lpltatiou 51 . IT Maximum .Minimum . 42 A 01W TityUUH Tj TWELVE PAGES MEDFORD, OREtiOX. 1TKSDAV, OCTOBER ;50. 19JS. Xo. "J21. The Weather M A: Today By Arthur Brisbane Homeward Bound. Can't Scare Wall St. The Greatest News. 15 Billions To Spare. (Copyright, 1928, by Star Co.) Fur iibovc the ocean, flying buck to Oeriuuny,Q(lic great "Graf Zeppelin" (j homeward bound. The world admires the ' efficiency of the German cngi- ncers and builders, and con gratulates the briant air cap tain, Dr. Eckener. And the world's small boys will piiw one Aiiii'i'ipiin linv. j making the trip as u stowaway. With the election only one week away Wall Street still re fuses to be frightened, to shiver or shake, or lowe prices. In A fact, prices go up. i w - It must lethal high finance does not take seriousl.Qthc kind of "sociulisiu" attributed Governor Smith. As a mutter of fact, every body knows it is "government" or "state socialism" thut Mr. llnm-pi liiiil ill miml. Tlmr whk invented by Uismarck and docQ not frighten anybody. On the contrary, it is a good thing, as Germany has discovered, after you get used to it. The important news in the world has nothing to do with the election, or the intel- liirpnr.p nf tlid innileni "fiinner". . ! i . i ,. ithe agi'lcullural IllIIIV iprizeit uy eAIUL'lllluilui societies. Tlie year's ' import -nut news tolls of a -ginnt tele- cope, a 200-inch mirror tha'a"'"0'011 lhe ..n" .. wuiesm-cnd lnter-J Rill reveni tiic c.ves ot men ImiiuTcds ot millions ot new stars and ifiliint "universes.1 M ' Appalling to man's feeble in flcits is a thin instrument that will britijj within reach of our eyes the light of Xcbulae in a far off universe, light tliit has been traveling through space one billion years, at a ' speed of 180,000 miles u si ond. O Mr. Raskob, a. brilliantly able man, said, probably out of politeness to please political as sociates, that our prosperity is not ;cnuine. The General Mo tors company, for which lie has done good work, seems not to share his opinion, judging by the price of its stock and the izc of its earnings. Mr. McHon, secretary of the treasury, thinks our prosperity is sound enough and so do oth ers of financial ability. Mr. Frederick Ecftcr, vicc prcsTdcnl of the Metropolitan Life Insurance company, says the main clement in prosperity , is the wage earner's log." 44 Workers in this country earn about ONE IILTNDllKU IUIjTj ION dollars a year. There is a good deal of ex travagance and waste, but in spite of that, not more than 85 per cent of the earnings is pent. This means that the pco- ulc earn each year FIFTEEN" UlUilONS moro than they spend. livery year, after paylns their living expenses, the people have loft over tlftoon thousand million dollars. B0 per cent more than the gigantic sum lent to Europe, in the war by this country. This "social surplur." comes In EVERY YKAR. That Is a substantial "hack log to keep tho prosperity fires burn ing. M John D. Rockefeller, Jr., In mem ory of his mother. rtvcs to the University of Chicago 1. 000,000 "to promote the religious idealism of students of the university." Those, unfortunately numerous, Ut do exist WITHOUT religious Realism, never lifting their eves ffl-om the ground to contemplate and question the heavens and the (Continued en Pag Flvt). FARM AID ZEP MAKING TO BE TOPIC GOOD TIME OF HOOVERlHOME TRIP St. Louis Speech Friday Of i Radio Reports Show Half Extra Import Farm, Relief Principal Subject Advisers' Suggestions Followed For Formula Discussion Other Talks On Home Swing of Short Duration. liy Jamc h. West, (Associated Prows Staff Writer.) WASHINGTON, Oct. 30. P) Asido from his speech of accep tance perhaps no address Herbert Hoover has mudein this campaign hHH aroused keener advance inter est than the one he will deliver next Friday night at St. Louis. pealing almost entliWy with farm relief, the speech not only will he the last word of the Re publican nominee before election day on this outstaml.assuc, but 11 is likely to furnish IhiO'atVevi after which- his first meSiagoMo cunprcsH will be Cushioned if ho Is .succewfui In his quest uf the presi dency. While the contents of the ad dress are beiu; closely guarded, it Is believed rWit Hoover ha fol lowed the ttUPKOstiuiiM of his ad visers to discuHS In rather comi'letc detail tho nianner in which he be lievcH his formula for farm aid will work out tij elaborate upon the various equations in that formula. in liis acceptance speech, the Republieun standard bearer, put the tariff tl in his discussion of question, but ai- vIcch received here indicated that his proposal for a farm board to handle crop surpluses with federal financial aid is one which has at- .McsJiU'cn Coupled Greater tariff protection and a measure establishing a more satis factory marketing system are cou pled with the farm board and the three go to make up u program, which congressional leaders doubt can be translated into legislation at the three months session of'con gress which will begin on Decem ber 5. ' r Especially would this be so If advocates of the McNary-Haugen bill should renew their cfforti-On behalf of that legislation, which twice ihas been vetoed by Prcsldont Coolfdgc. Herbert Hoover has siaieu mat n congress Tans to ucyv nt this session noil If the viilm-iS' continue the Kcpublicun P'v In control of the government lie will call .an extra session of the seventy-first congress. q Hoover planned to finish his St. Louis speech today and to resume work on the three others he will ylivcr us he swings through the m.rdcr states of, Maryland. West Virginia, Kentucky and Missouri and on across Kansas,! Colorado, Utah. Nevada and California. The St. Louis address will be the only extended onei of tho four. Those at Cumberland, Maryland. Thursday night: Louisville. Ken tucky, Friday morning and Pueblo, Colorado, Saturday night will be of from only fifteen to twenty-five minutes duration. ' - There also will be some brief platform talks at other places but ufter St. Louis Is behind the candi date there will be stops at no large cities except l'ucblo und Salt Lake City and Ogden. Since the pnssagc through the Utah towns will bo on Sunday Hoover will refrain from political discussions In. Ihem. E BY C'HICAOOP Ocl. SO. () I'lis- seirs on the Michigan Central's i cftiei-n express, -cw l orK-unt- cago extra faro train, were held up last night by an armed negro who got aboard at Michigan City. Ind.. and Jumped as the train was roaring toward Clary. Ho fired one wild shot at n brakeman who walked Into the observation car while the robbery was In progress. With about in cash which he had taken from two passengers, the negro ran to tho front platform and leaped from tho truln, which was making 45 miles an hour. Mother llenli t.isits. MAUHHKIKLD, Ore.. Oct. 3(1. HP) Mrs. Helen Walters of Marsh field. , reported today walking from Florence,' carrying her two-year.-old child under her nrm and herding 20 head of gout ahead of her. Khe was driving tho goats here from a ranch in Florence. In tending to cover the entire distance of about 60 miles on foot. Mrs. Walter 1. the mother of four children. Of Journey Toftedrichs hafen Is Completed V&ather Continues Fair Former Caddy Is Stowaway On Dirigible, 40NDON, Oct. 3D. iJP) A ruUlo nifssugo from th cublo ship Do nilnlu to the Assoclutcd 1'rcaH viu l'oi'lhcttd, says that tho Clruf Zeppelin passed over head ut 7:15 Cireenwlch mean timo (2:15 p. m. ICOs. T.) . The message wua dutA October 30, and read: "l-atllul03.5, longi tude 31.9. Graf Zeppelin passed over us heading cast. Fiuo wealh. er." Tills positlun is approximately 850 miles northeast-easLof Cape Mace. It was conflrme-Vby mes sages from the Ascania of the Cunard lino, which sighted the Zeppelin at latitude 63.'J9, longf) Verdict of occidental death was' tude 40.32. !,k, i ..r 1,1 . v - y LONDON., Oct. 311 IP head dispatch to the IT. -(P A Portia- rcss Assoc!- ution lato today said that a iiii'.i sage had been received rrom trie German (vnmshitf"M unchon indi- n ArnimKilirMunL'hcn indl- eating thVt the CJraf Steppclln had liif of ward Journey to d Journey to iViedrlchshafen. JfJW YOIIK. o5T30. (fl The Graf Zeppelin's stowaway, a 19 year old St. Louly boy who looks younger than his age. has been "crashing gutcs" the last two years from New York to Nome. Mis nanio is Clarence Terhunc hut fellow caddies at tli Rye, N. Y., country club calledQnim "St. Louis." . IHs parents are dead, his father, Charles , Terhune, a St. Louis barber, huving killed his wife and' himself last July. Ills only possession, a knapsack U'jtttHlning or for pleooM .of clothing' arm trophlw ho hud picked up on his- wontloiings ho left at Mrs. Donnelly's. They'll bo waiting if he' ever goes bade to claim them. "I'm going t'.kGcp these things lintll the boy coTTies buck and tells me all about his trip," sho HlT. attePTBe io GIRL ALIVE IN VILLAGE HALL LAKE lll.LKF. 111., Oct. .10. (fl) 'Apparently tlio victim ol' an as sailant who had attempted to burn her alive in the basement of the Uiko Bluff village hall. Miss Freda knuak, 4, former school teacher, was found luilay huddled ugalnst the furnace. In the basement of the police station, her bouy nude and arms, fect and head a scared mass of burns. The girl was taken to a Lake Forest hospital, whoro doctors said alio proQ'ily would die. The con dition ot tho body Indicated that an effort had been made to shove tho girl Into the furnaco after bend ing the body double, but that she had either fallen or been lifted out'. Tho girl's arms wero burned, her feet were burned almost to the uune, ana me oaca oi iter ncau j was-uaoiy uurncu anu laceiaieu. She was unable to talk. The young woman, who resided In Dcerfleld, 111., near Lake Bluff, left home yesterday afternoon to go to Chi ca';o to attend a sales conference ot a publishing company in Chicago-which employed her. She left this meeting shortly after 6 o'clock to return to her home. No ono has been found who saw her from that time until this morning when a Janitor went to tho base ment ot the police station to slnrt tho flro and found her. 4 , Senator Helflin Seems Opposed to Gov. Al Smith MONTOOMEItV. Ala.. Oct. 30. OPi Senator J. Thomas Heflin of Alabama was quot- ed toduy In a statement pub- llshed in the 'Montgomery Advertiser us stating . "So help me Clod' I will vote 4 ugalnst Al Hmilh If they reinl me out of the Demo- 4 crntlc party and drive me from every senate commit- tee." Although Senator Heflin 4 has been active In attacking 4 Governor Hniith In campaign addresecs. this was said tu 4 be Ms first declaration that he would not vot fer the 4 Democratic nominee. 4 "YANKEE DOODLE" ENDS EAST-WEST v 7- Captain C. B. D. Collyer . n.Ai uMt.bound tranecontinenUI - - : Ftsr P Lot Angelet.' Harry Tucker, pajunner. nd owner, is leaving the craft a - - ..linn ii uiiiii i i blowout caused KILLING BARES Robert lansin HARRISON CRASH nup TPlAfil P iWILSON SECREIRY BLUNT CHARGE f IS FRIEND'S BELIEF n o WILLOWS, fdft Oct. 30. Ot'-' 1 Corning ovei Mr. I'hil U. IWrrl- i son, 07, of iledford, Ore., who was : iiistautl:0'llld Sunday morulng (a f ,.,.. 6lcn a car n w ich she was riding with her husband struck UQeoncrete bridge and dropped lo fect into a dttli. Tho body was held lltQ1 local mortuary pending arrival of n uaugnter irom uaigary io snip "c remains to New Hampshire for in terment ut the former homo of the deceased woman. MarrisiiMi is under a physician's euro ut aVorn- lng hospital, lie Is In a serious I condition from shock of tho acci dent. O The iito tragedy near Corning, j t0' tn nhouunK and wan phieed In Cal., Sunday morning which cofit'J'111 " flnu-gcH of murder ami tho lfb of Mra. 11.11 U. JlnniHon f M'1'; 11 woapon. of thiH cjit- wa duo to u' blowout 1,1 A iU'd tatement tir police of. a frontMlre, as near ixh if)is'? ,lMV . nou. "ufV humanly possible to determine, t. cording to T, 10, Daniels, a elese friend of the stricken family, who i returned lale yesterday. Mr. and1 Mrs. Fred Heath, Sr., who. also! rushed to the scene with the first: word, remuined with Mr. Harrison, j who was badly bruised but not seri ously Injured in the crash. A coroner's jury, sitting at ning, reiurneu a veruici ol acci dental death. j ne sii'ering gear vi ino auio, first thWght to have been defec-, Cunningham was southern presi tivo. was found lntuct. The nutoilU.nt of tht, Oreeters, nation hotel was u tangled massif wreckage I mcnH organization, und long uiicr us plunge on w n 'bridge into a 15-foot ravine. The Harrison uuto was noticed to swerve violently, by . C. A. Kjilght, In a following car .-.'00 or 300 yards behind, befniV it reached the bridge. About mid way of the structuro the auto ci-'Qlicd through tho railing and tuflied over twice In Its downward plunge. Mrs. ' Harrison was hurled from Hie machine und was burled l.an,.IK 11. a ...... oeneatn the wreckage ot the car Dcuth.was instantaneous. Mrs? Helen Connally of Calgary, Can., daughter oiO.Mr. and Mrs. Harrison, who left immediately upon receipt of the sad news. Is expected to reach Corning tomor row, when a definite decision re - gardlng funeral arrangements w 111 PORTLAND CHIEF MAY REIN OR T k lr niPAUIPP A I ha(l ""'-'"' niched her door fllr I IV fll !lmn sho heard a shot. IHAL UlUl lI.UOnL' Holurnlnsn. lie found her hus- DUI1U I.VINK WOUIIUCU Oil U1C K1UUI1U . ! ami Klger standing by hi in, she '!naid. rOHTLAND. Ore., Oct. 30. 1 Mis.: Cunningham and Klger Capt. Leo P. Harms, whose martial, p,.ed the wounded man In an affairs were aired at a hearing yes-1 uulomobilo and rushed him to tho terday, was given the option last j Vundorbllt University hospital, but night by Mayor Ocorge L. linker Cunningham was dead upon nrrl of resigning with rlgltt to pension. 1 val, uecording her statement. or being dismissed from tho police; department. Mayor Duker praised i hand had found Liggett In their his record us a Spanish-American ' home lust March und warned him war veteran und us police cuptalnlnot tu return. ; c . , for 21 yeurs, unU then upbraided him with the churge thut he hud broken up a home. Men wept and women fHlnted us the hearing reached a dramatic close. Tho heurlng. attended by a big c. iwd, revolvea I about Captaln'TYl llim 1 1 0 K II T R II 1 II' Ip fOMrs. Irvlngi Ml lMLM NM1- 11 A W i o husbund' cross- ! III II 111 II II I IlIKll divorce oelion re-, 1 W ' 1 UU Vml- j Harms' friendship H. Crocker, whoso complaint to her dlv suited in the Investigation by May or Iloker and fhlef of Police Jcn klna. Harms still hus a right to appeal to the civil aervleo biaird. InvcBtigutc 1'olMinlng. MAKHIIFIKLD, Ore.. Oct. 30. P) Tho Marshfleld council last night ' decided to Investigate the cause of death of ZV dogs and sev eral cat in the South Marihflcld district vrlthln tho put few daya. Htomach contents will bo analyzed to determine whether poison wait the cause, .. t A etanding In the cockpit of the Lockheed nonstop time mark of 24 houre and " . . . , m . Prominent HOte Man Slain By Love Pirate Wife o ' 1 Confesses Clandestine Affair With Grain Mer-' chant Gardfjeas The1 Trysting PlaceP ' ; o j NAS11V11.L1C. Tenu.. Oct. 30 ! (ff) Walter I.. Liggett, prominent ! gruin nu'rehunt Khol a:id kilted jTurncy- M. Cunningham, manager of a large down town Nnshville. hotel liist night, in an alley behind the CunnlmfnYm homo. He ailmlt- nam h iiii nnem teen neeiinir ine grain nu ha nt secret ly almot a year and Hint hho had gone to her garage lust night to meet him "Tor a fow minutes" after first refusing tu do so. Karl Klger. a private defective, was the only known witness tjpvtho t I.iifirntt . fit limvn thn urrnr lint IN TFNNFSSFFl FTATE IS DEAD! IN BALIIIVIont II hi ItaWWlsa- Cor-Jthat (ho K.Itln nKM.(,,mIlt Oeclined to louve. The only slat emeu t of I Liggett to police was that Cun , i,ih1.i rii-,..i ri- ; prominent In his field. Liggett is identified with civic enterprises of Mishvillc. Mrs. ('unnii&hituit detailed the events leading up tu the shooting In answer to police iiiestiolis, de claring she begun surrepllclolls . visits with Liggett about t.'hi lstiiQ' j n year ego. - . ' j 'Airs, lunnlngham prefaced her statement to polleo by charging A-iggett had been "vicious" with ,1 1 I ', uttemptlug to Oi0' throat and twice attempting to shoot her. Later she declared sho "Just felt this association was going to cause I a tr.igedy." . Describing the events preceding j the tragedy, .Mrs. Cunnlntrham do- 'om,,,, ''Kgeu caucu j twice 15 und ' yenlcrduy afternoon, ut (5:30 p. m., und Insisted upon see ing her. "I felt that I wur being watched but finally consented to see hi in In the garage," s'Q said. On the way iu the garage, in the rear iOih homo. Mrs. Cunning- ham declared, she thought she saw j someone hiding nearby, and warn ed Liggett when she first saw him, and Lfagott finally decided to leave. .Mrs. Cunningham said she Mrs. CunnlmVatn mild her hurt- IMISS VOLSTEAD !S HT. PAfU Minn.. Oct. 3(1. UP, Miss laura Kllen Volstead, whose father. Andrew J. Volstead, was tho author -of the prohibition en forcement act, will bo married to night to Carl J. I.omen of Nome, .laska. and New Vork t'lty. Mrs. Mabel AVlllebradf, assistant United Htatea Bttorney-generat Jn charge uf prohibition law prosecu tions, will be brldcamaid, Khe was a college cuiismule ol Ml Volstead. RECORD FLIGHT - Vega plane which he piloted for 51 minutes, from New Torn io by the tide door. WASH I XC.TOX, Oct. 3ll. lA't . "obort Lansing, secretary of state under President Wilson, died at his i home here thtM afternoon. IMh offiee (ryiQtineed Mr. l.un- sing's death, Willi about 4::!l p. 111. .Scvoial years ago Mr. Lunsiug suffered from diabetes, but after p a r e n t 1 y recovered his health. There had been no recent reports that he had been In 111 health. . E SHANGHAI, Chlnu. Oct. 30. (!) The t'hlnn International famine relief is being flooded with ap peals (rem the famine stricken districts. ' From Blums! tho appeal declares "Halites ure being killed bocutiHU I hern Is nothing to feed them with and children are belli'; sold for a mere boik." Thousands of persons n said to bo living on the bark and loaves of trees. In addition lo Hhansl. tho famine Includes districts UkKwa,1S Ji Hnlynn Hunch. UunanYiiid Mo- nan. A magistrate of Vang Hslen In a letter esilini.-os that thero mo 200,0i)(l ramliic atirfurars, owing to the drought and tlm tlovaslatlomi of the "Ked Spears," u guerilla or ganization. Thu situation In Bhutisl, the miglBtralo declares, Is unpre cedented, children being Hold open ly In tho murkct by imroiits cugcr for cash. In Hunan thousands arn on the verge of starvation, due to bandllry, communist iiprlslngH, the Hod Bpears and droiiKht. Med ford's Sand Traps Also Have HipPO Foot print 8 rr r KITAI.K, Kanya Colony. Africa. O.I. 30. (Pi The ,,rl"" of l,,""1 yesterday on a courlie ot Jin- jo. which Is probably the only oni? in tho world with the lo- cal rule tbut the bull may be lifted without penally If It Is lying In the footprint of a 4 hlppopotumcs. COKVAM.IH, Ore., Oct. 30., Pj H'l ankle lluruell, Hortlnnd woltol' weight, added unuiher knockout to Ills vi.lii hare lai.t mailt lin bo stopped Hienmbont Jackaon. Spo kane, In the third round of a thed uled 10-round go, , u , Itobcrt Lansing li Qsulri 'Q'-urred mily Outvote 'r Menage j WASIll.Ncn (A1) Tile Alfred Oct. 30. K. Hnilth family inn outvolu the ller- bert Hoover family two to one next Tuesday as there are ten of votinn ago in iho 4 Iniliu'dlate family ot the Uemoi'i-alie candidate and only fivo in that ' 'ho He- iiublican nonilnee. 4 Itesides the governor and Mis. Smith there are two sons and their wives and two daughters imi their bus- hands who caw oust their ballots. In addition to Mr. and Mis. Hoover thero are two i 3 sons, (eli of voting and tliu wife of one I lei belt, Jr. line, Hon, o Anti-Salooneague And K. K. K. Working With The ! n i.. r RentWican Party Forj Smith Defeat Is Charge -Propaganda Use Claimed. -e Uy I). Ilin-olcl Ollrcr. (Associated I'rcs Staff iVrlter.) NV VOKK. ftt. 30. (P) Uov ornor Smith nrilvod In Now York from Hiiltlmore at 5:fi0 o'clock t'Qi mui-nlng. (lovcrnor Sniilli was record today with the blunt ehiugo Mj U the Antl-Haloon league and tho Tvtl Klux Klan wero forces working hand In band witli the Kepubllcun party to bring about Mh defeat'. Addressing ono of tho most demonstrative and colorful audi ences of his presidential drive In tho Fifth Regiment armory In Baltimore lust night, tho Demo cratic presidential nominee vigor ously assallod tho league and the Klan and contended that Republi can leaders,' including Hcrbort Hoovor, wero "wiggling and wob bling'' on tho question ot prohibi tion because their party was "hold right down to enrth by tho power und tho influem of tho forces of intolerance.' Hpeaklng In the namo building whore W'oouOw Wilson was nomi nated 16 yours ugo and with the wur president's widow on tho plut form, the governor devoted a largo part pf his speech to tlio argument thai the Kepubllcun party stood for "tho old order of things" and tttand-patlsm as opposed to the Democratic stand for "piMfr eMalve" treatment of tho big queSflons fac ing the country. Foreign policy, watorpower, the tariff, government reorganiKutlon ul) were dealt with In detail before prohibition und Intolerance were reached. IroMigimlu ImiI The Anti-Kuluon league,, the nominee charged, had flooded the country with propaganda "In an effort to make Clod -fearing men and women believe thut tho eigh teenth amendment und tlio Vol stead act are dogmas of rollgion.' "So church thut I ever hoard of, no church thut you ever heurd of," the governor asserted amid loud uppluusc, "attempted to mako the eighteenth amendment or tho Vol stead act un act of faith," "What is It?" he continued, "It Is nothing moro or less than legis lation passed In tho stress of wur and lobbied through tho congtss by the brow-bcatlng methods of the Antl-Huloon league." The governor contended that evory religion taught tho vuluo of sobriety und temperance, us well as the d tuiger of intolerance, and declared he could not escupo the thought tlwit It must be "uulto a shock to the Amorlcun people to have the moral . power of tho church used to Impress men und women with the Idea thut In talk ing agninst the eighteenth umend ment or Volstead act they aro against every church, or that they Smit huve sinned ngnfjst God hlmsetf."0T ino llueu rs UKM'e ,m8 oeon n.tniilnt VhitIh Heimlillr.il n liuln. jPndent of Nobrusku, who, In u I speech 8uturduy night announced his support of Governor Hmilh. was said by the nominee to huve i received a "cold hloodid threut" from the Antl-Haloon league de claring It would withdraw Its sup port of the NebruskaiQlf ho made that spcoch. "That means." the' governor said amid clioers, "that ull of Menutor Norrls' groat work In tho sonata, all the efforts that ha put Into tho advancement of progressive legis lation, all thut ho did for men, women and chlldron throughout the country fulls to tho ground and crumbloa Into dust In the oyes of the Antl-Huloon leagUe Just a Boon fis he runs counter, to their Ideas nd Just as soon as he gets out of line and nut of tune with their bigotry and Intolerance." Referring to "that gallant band 'CouHoued. gn Cage 8U0. SECRETARY GIVES GUIDE Apply - Business Principles Is lllon Plea To Voters Good Balan Sheet Should Preclude Change In M&agement Gov- crgnent Complex In Effect On Individuals. o WASHINGTON, Oct. 30. (P) Secretary Mellon last night Iho eleQjiuto to apply business prinetpleH to its choice of n presi dent and. If jOip proves of the nU mlnlHtrntlon ot eriident CooMiIko und tho itepubliuun piirty, to cun ttnuo that party in power. "tn my own bun in ess experi ence he naid in un uUUress whieh was broadcHHt by radio, "when a management guvo me satisfactory bulanee Kheot nt tho end of the year, showing a reduction In over head, a decrease in indcbtedne.sH und at tho nanio timo an increase In dividends, I would be unwilling t hoc a ft inge in nuuiugement," m nddWon. n.-. ieiion deserib- cd the Republican party as "the party" of progress; and listed the maintenance of the protective tar iff, tho restriction of Immigration, careful attention lo credit prob- I'tp.s, and the encouragement of Individual enterprise as among the party's traditional and modern principles. Lcclai0'g the Amorlcun govern- f innt to oe "tho greatest business eW'rprlso in tho world," and in finitely complex In its effect upon its Individual citlsons and In Its relations tu what, he termed "th0i great edftiomlc fore oh by whioh tho average man's welfuro is greatly affected," the secrotury said that ut tho head of such u "business" he wanted' to see "u man of ability, who is thoroly fa nilliui-Qvlth ull Hh phases," ono ' who "EnidcrstHnciH these great eco nomic forces with which ho niust dciil" and who 1ms a feeling and sympathy foi tho conditions under which the nvcragc0mn nml wom an must live. Hoover Metthiircii L: "Herbert Hoover measures up lu these (iuallfl0tlpns," bo euld. 'Tho governmout wilt be safo In his hands. As a Republlcun and an Amorlcun t shall support him ana vote for him because I, believe bw election will do tho most for the progress und prosperity of tho country and for tho larger wolfaru of tho world." , Mr. Mellon asserteA thut the Re publican purty 'has kept u breast or the tlmos und has been prepared to meet new conditions us they urose," but thut ' euch ' forward step" has been touted "by tho light, of sound economic principles and of established American tradl -tloiiH." "It hus jealously guarded and promoted individual Inltlu 1 1 v o which Is perhaps the must power ful contributing factor In the fur wurd march," ho continued. "It has over recognised thut motion Is not synonymous with progress but that stability Is cssentlul to confi dence und that confidence Is tho very spirit of business enterprise." tiuch prtnoiplev, Mr. Motion wild, huvc boon borne In mind by tho present administration and ho went on to cite debt and tax re- ductlon, "sound turlff and Immi gration - legislation." encourage ment and promotion of foreign trade, "a consistent foreign policy" und assistance to foreign countries In the stabilization of currencies as the achievements of the Cool Idgo regime. . "ily.ull these meusures." he said "tho administration has helped to build up and mulntuin prosperity." .... t Rouging Addedo ; to Curriculum : Chicago Schools CHICAGO, Oct. 30. (P To "reading, writing, 'lithuiutlc and rouging." k . ' Tho courso In the art .of niuka-up hiis been tnstullud In Chicago continuation schools. w-lth the 'approval uf tho board of education. "Since tho girls simply will riiiiko up.fj) explained Miss 4 Nelllo Ryun, principal of the 4. . North side C o n 1 1 n u atlon achoola, "wo have decided tu try to Initiate them tn tho 4 correct und artlstlo uppilca 4 tlon of make-up." 4 Usli IMmcs KUI, ' . MARTINEZ, Cal., Oct. ao. ilP Kumes from whiskey mush killed Michael Horan, 73, rancher, ft was v3iu,3 today, whea hU body wa. found sprawled over the mouth of a barrel of ntaih. Three were pa tracoe of a itUJ, ' . . - VOTER