Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1929)
o 4 The Weather Fun-cast Fair, but with local foes Medford Mail tribune Weather Year Ago Highest er agt today 4lt 1xmet year ago tckUiy.... its tonight and Friday; nu temper- alum rlianicrt. Illghmt ymlcnlay 83 Wmwt tills morning !!4 tllj Twtnty.ttlnl tef MEDFORD, OHKOOX, Tlll'K'SDAY. .JANlAHY 10. No. LMM). ; Today By Arthur Brisbane Danger of Cancer. Rickard's Last Show. N. Y. to Boston, Eighty Minutes. $87,500,000 Plum. Copyrlght. 11)29. by Star Co.) Various devices for creating "nrtifUrial sunlight," applying ultra-violet and infra-red rays, artificially made, to the human hody arc valuable IF P1J01' KIUA' USED. In the hunds of amateurs, us ill If them on children, with lack of knowledge as to the proper time of "exposure," tliey may he most dangerous. The Acad- r r...i:..: cmy 01 -iicuicine uunis ) ou j that such unwise use of these . around the world which horcto i, ,. ,i .. fore had been regarded as beyond rays,' irritating the tissues. h(j ,)f 1K)s,blmv, lo(lay ,,. may enusc Cancer. peared nearer rciiallzution within I the present year. ., , , ..... , , , , Furthermore, announcements of iln a bronze cotlm that cost , projected nights, made hern and in Wi.UUO 'Tex" Rickard lay in Paris yesterday, suggested the pos- .uauisou nquarc uarucn. j nose i . . . 1 i .. ni. that paid to sec men fight there , , , , ,, . entered the garden for nothing to look upon one that had just lost a fight that no man wins. Jinny that devote lilt'e time to thinking may have thought hard for several minutes, look ing upon the great fight pro moter, remembering that there is one light which every must lose. ln.iii Whatever makes men is useful. Mr. Kickyrd lyin- iu state ill his great 'sports arena"' was as useful as he ever was in his life. An air mail pilot on Monday fltMv. from New York to Uoslon J,)..80 minutos, IJl niilcs.v llow (lial would amaze conservative Bostouians of earlier years and delight, Heiijainin J',a" whu spent many days going from Huston to riiiladclpltin. From Miami, yesterday morn ing, Postmaster General New started a new air mail lino to Cuba, Porto Uico and on south. Gradually all of South America .;ii i, r,,,u,.i,.,l -illi nil oT i Mill be COIineclca Willi all 01 ; this country nil- mail. by If you have an opportunity tu buy a good 1 .1 ii v ink stock Hlil it. Stockholders in the National City Hank, of which C. P.. Mitchell is president, divided Tuesday what Wall Street calls "plum," amounting to .V.DUO. 001). p-Huy something good in the X'nitcd States and KEEP IT. j Canadian officials, traveling in flying machines wllere mis sionaries once paddled in ea iioes, are on their way to pur chase the last remaining Indian lands in Ontario. For $3 cash, 1 year, for ever, each, 1500 to IKJO Indians will sign away lL'3,320 square miles of land. No imagination can estimate the wealth that these Indians will relinquish, the unknown treasures underground, gold, silver, yopprr, oil ami, above all, the value of so many fertile -g-tjuare miles of the earth's stir 'race. The rooster in tho fable find ing a diamond, wished he had found n grain of corn. 'What you ean't use is worthless. The Indians could ifft use their land. They can use t o year ' Sometimes farmers succeed, but usually they must leave tho farm to do IL Jlrnlamln N. Duke, who died TT.csday morning In bl fifth ave nue, house Id Now York, began as farmer, working wllh his brother. JamcB Dulte, on their father's farm. They grew tobacco, started a small factory. Introduced cigarette mak ing machinery, and madn hundreds of millions. And. farmers note ,hi. ,h. h..i inn middlo ni.n haloed of bcin bossed by him. (Continued on Page Four). NON - STOP GLOBE TRIP Goebel Announces Intention to Fly Around Earth in August Or September Frenchmen May Make It a Race Question Mark Flight Suggested Attempt J WICHITA, Khs., Jan. 10. 1.4) ;Thc. moHt during project of uviatinn -an attempted non-stop flight smutty ol n race to realize mat ;,., ot IlU ,,ndiiraiiee ami dis- Uance fliers. Hoth fllRhla would j be refuellni; ventures aad wern aus- KPNlPd bv ,1P 8uiained fllnht of loU hours made- by the American army monoplane (Jcestion Matk in California. From a sii'k bed here, when lie is rccovTirn; from severe illness and operation, Coloni'l Arthur ('. i Goebel, noted distance and sliced I pilot, announced ttiat bn intended to lie tho first to take the air in an ef.nrt to Kinlle the utolie wit limit a 'stop. He tentatively set AiiRiist or 1 St-plt-niner for the flistlit. which lie , said would b: went to ca.-:l irorii I Wichilii to Wifhilu. i Almost Hiniimanconsiy u was r tnilik vcaled in 1'arfs that the latest pro- or t.v i-okk ay.anon rn. HrtJ ll,,.n,,,l i: in I), im co,i, ; direction from Paris to Paris, pos-l siblv In June, when il wan bnliiM'ed the liest weather would bo encoun tered. Hoth projects call for refuelini? planes at intervals along the 21,000 milo' route. : ' . Backing Required Colonel (iqebei, an otitslandlug pilot who won the Dole air race to j Hawaii in 11127. and who holds the ; non-stop transcontinental fllm rec- mi nit lil mu ll a f Kht wou d re- inuiro grcMi iivm ... ...iniiiia, Ing and a real airplano. CVank Pl illlps, the lartb-svlllc. ila.. oil man who backed .oe-, Ok it. i a ..uu.n.o... ... i.'u " naiiurtii in .lie i.tie till;.... I as iiK. n u... v. ..... K siblc backers of the flight, while several Wichita business men al- rea.y have" "Jic"'ed,. 'h,e wm ld ass st tn making lni Jn .n ,. ,.nJ l , lo o. em.or" two pilots and two ladio operators. i ,. t it, i .Z .,,iV,o, ,Jii , n 1 cially built plane, equipped with a powerful set. ..',,.,,, n I u,u,lrl - o- lo Washington as soon as tie is able to investigate the best route of travel on such a flight and the ' nmc 01 year ucni. nu..t;u iv n.v .- !turCi i It is estimated that the Question Mark In Its epochal flight which ended Monday afternoon llcw a dis tance of 11.500 miles. Speed and distance were no issue of Ihc Might, which lasted nearly seven days, but army observers pre dicted then that success of refuel ing the plane and the remarkable demonstration of endurance of men and -motors had brought closer the dav of non stop flights around the world. DRAWS 5 YEARS F - T Pi.liTI NO I -in 10111 1-r.tl tor" in an nitric l "fa-hoot 111 which vounK nirte wen: imm-huhU ,(j to Ijfoomc iincrH of niireotir. v:i fentenrfd to :l ftve-ffir tvrm McNrll fVdcrt.1 ttrlsnii wlH-n j(1 entered u pku of guilty In fiulernl ! court ln-re today. Cluldbrrir. un iidmltted addict. had ht'on convicted of niirtoUcu violtlinn on yevrrtil prrvlouH oc vHslvn1. 11 nd liiw crvrd our wri tcnec of throe yuar.i at MvNcll und Hnuihrr of two yearn in thu touiuy jail. Tht anotlc "school" wuh un rorrd hrns on Nov. wt. when fedrrul md local offlc-:r found two BlrlM of IS ycunt in fioldbrrif H rompany. fioldli v r k was quoted an con fen Intf he plunncU lo provide additional cus tomer, for hb BinUKKld nurcolica hy thin means, and in that way to guumn t w n u pidy for h I ninel f and to provide revenue from the loiitiabnnd. Ilunli lons hull. CHICAtitJ, Jun. 10 (P) The "Mlpsimdppi Mudeat," Guy Buah, Juat can't wait for stentorian com mand. "play ball." r.uch a youngft- ler who throws fan ones for the cropped nis intr kales Kit PLANNED 'DOPE' TEACHER yesterday, strolled Into tho sup- and similar amusements last year, ply office at Wrlglcy field, don-'the greater part wu spent on ci nci) u suit and started to practice, nemus. BARLING MONOPLANE PICKS UP FUEL IN FLIGHT u ,! - - . t On ita endurance flight at Mrh- Mo., the fost-ritlna monoplane built by Walter Barlino (Ineet) picka up a four-cal.on trum of nacolin; trim the ground. This Is enough fuel for about an hour's cruis ing. The pholograpn above was fnarpid aa ths hoolt suspended by cable, from the plane made contact with tho looped ropo attached to the csnlainer. nu i it niinnrno oai iATinuiOTO MnnTimnTT o blANI bU5ntMVHIIUINI5l5 HUKinUUI I 15 SANTA FE DISTJ SPOUT flames; Outlaw Wells After Belching Up Sea of Mud $1,000,000 Dam age Done Other Der ricks Threatened. WJI1TTIHK, Cat, Jan. IV. (P) While pillars of flames from two gigantic oil cushcrs in the Hants fc Springs Held weru shooting 180 I fnc-t in iln nlr nailv indav. eminent ! Wll8 )eil).? forced 'down adjacent ! ,, .. ,.,i .2 .... L. .... i . airp.a.. caused I I .I-.,:,...., ... ti nniimm from KJrmil , llt.,(1 'Blll(iucd'i llei!.nbor,nB derrieks. I . . t The whole district was lighted ,,n m. ... Ilri.q nr! the rnnr anil I vibrations from the two burning around. Tho bos Angeles fire CBl,C(i ,0 le tne, H"rftye'1 watnr on 11,0 m,ll ""'"P-iors inR BtaMnn of ,,hc General Pelro- lcum u" company, several nunarea tiunerai nootii becume neaq ot f , . ,.,,. of cni.l.i)0 salvation Army In lls upon Ployes, to prevent the spread ofjthe duth of his father, (leneral ,110 ,,r(, A sea of green mud, belcliod uularmy. lie was born at Halifax, i he present time" the alienists re by the two outlaw wells from the j Yorkshire,' In 18! and became an i ur said. "It wuultl seem," the 3500-foot level, has made streets ! officer In the army In H, being I re....... ...... mm,., I "t.. the ob- surrounding the confla-iratino for a distance of nearly half a mile in all directions veritable canals of I the sticky mass, hnglneers wal lowed hip deep in the mud as they directed the men laying high pres sure pipes for cementing the neigh boring wells, and crews In tractors and scrapers were battling the creeping clay. Fourth Blaze The present double-barreled gas ser fire is the fourth destructive blaze in tho Santa Ve Springs dis trict in as many months, tictty I No. 20 opened up with a roar of ; 200-foot flames when it blew in j Into yesterday Ignited by the flam Irv? General Petroleum well No. .lir0. which had burst lulo flames j when It blew In earlier In the day. 1 The socond well showered a mile square area with a coat of mud when It blew in. The two burning wells are but 0u feet apart, with many others near them. Engineers say the close nr.c.s of Hie wells caused the second one to Ignite. Getty No. zu blew I in after Ilie onrushlng gas from the '("""' roll.'vi'd llio (.rt-KHUi-o. und ;:0 """ ... . 1, - j .U IMI(1Mltll-B UliKHIK nfl nilll'H I'll- jiiiini in-Miiiiiiih isiiiii ii nan nfii ii n, 1 portrfl. Tha, to dorrlik iihovc Ih urar liUlnv No. '. lute Vftrr- iduy incltoil In the Ih h t iiihI rrn:-hpd !io thu rond, ruttlnic un :nKne house In two. 'rhls well and five others wcro ill danger of being fired und lost in smoke, but two of the latter had been partially m menled and the flow of the others shut off. A definite plan In conquer the flames hud not been decided on early today. It. A. Sperry, general manager of the General Potroleum company, said It will be several days before workmen can clear away debris sufficiently to iwrmit active combat of the flames. Ongian Weather. Oregon: Kalr but with valley fogs . tonight and Friday. No -hnnge In temperature. Oentle easterly wlnda on tho coast. Sweden Ltkca Movkv. STOCKHOLM Wl Of H.211. uOO spent In 101 tiwedtsh cities 'on admission fees to theaters, sporting , moving picture houses, ASK GENERAL booth retire -1 ' - : Catch FirejHigh Council of Army Con-; siders Leader's Age Barj to Recovery : Suggest; Retaining Title As Com- mander-in-Chief. I.ONHON, Jun. 10. (!) It was oflclally announced today that the hlKh council of the Halviitlun Army had' iikUmcI Oifiioral ' Urutu well Booth to retire. B .,, tl) ,.,.,(,.,, . . ...., .!. . i... .i... council said that il was cnHdcred I ... A communique Issued by Ihc nrtvanc.-rt ho could recover . ,. , under which be had ..olla,nd and ll ,-euuested HI,., to coo .crate In securing the future welfare ot lb ......... l.i. l.lu In,...., uu ... lined. dc-le,a retain his title of uomnmnd.r i ,,,-ohief of the army and the lion and dicnl.y attached to it. itV ltHlii Knnlh. who. fn urn nil the appointed chief of staff In ISS0. I servera that said Norlhcott Is 11s llow Hramwell Booth was first ' ,,,, a (ulp,i nititmlc of dls led to take all Inlcrost in the Hal- ierestedn(isn and a denial of rc ratlon Army shelters which were j..,nlljllly and that Ibis attltudo int. ueKiniiiiig 01 1110 most ijpicui InntltutlonH oonneuted with the army's foeiul work, Ih told In his own writing. Ono morning hack In thu eigh ties he wuh an early caller at hla father'H Iioiihc In Olapton, Ku.it London. "Knunwell," cried my father, "did you know that men Hie pi out all niKtit on the hrldgvH In London?" "Well, yen," younjr Uoulh re plied, "a lot of poor fclloWH 1 sup pose do tliat." "Then you ought to bo ashamed of yourself to lmvn known it und to have done nothing for thorn," he went on vehemently. "Go and do something; wo mufit do some thing. Uet them u shelter. Oet hold of a v.HrehouH,. and warm it, mid find something to cover them. JJut mind Hramwfll, no coddling." The leader of tho reform move nimt which sought to umend the army constitution and was urging tho general's retirement wuh Com mander Kvangollno Booth, the senerul'H siHfpr. and the head of tho army in tho United State 4. hi;nui;ky on - Thames. Kng.. .Ian. III.--() The high council of the Salvation Army adjourned bile today until Saturday to glvo seven members appointed to wait on len eral Ilnimwcll Booth with a reso lution suggesting his retirement an opportunity to visit lilni ul Ills seu side home. - 4. Gentleman JSarber Los Angeles Shop Found to Be Lady LOS ANOKLKH, Jan. 10. ft) WW-n department of Jus tice o trie la Is arrested n "Mr." V'lng and Miss Hteiln Harper, 19, on Mann act charges 1 here 0ist night Ihey disco v- 4 cred that both wcro women, The "Mr." Wing proved to be Misa Catherine Wing. 24. The two came here from 4 iiammoulh, Utah, four years 4 ago and Misa Wing, formerly a hair dresser, opened a bar- 4 bcr shop. t h t 1 1 1 1 y 1 1 1 MALINGERING SAY EXPERTS ' ! ' Wood's life, were hidden witli of- Ape Boy Declared Sane By.JstVSw.rX!" AlieniStS Trial U0ntinUeCl;aw a man advance upon Wood ; with upraised blackjack, and they to February 7 Egotism saw wood and wc. ot tho omccra ; fire almost simultaneously,- drop Dfifilarpri P.lnak Sp.CkS Prove Incompetence. 1 CllUltTliOOM. lilvemido, Cut.. .lain" LO. tP) Ciiirdun Stewart NnilliciXt in sane and Is nialliii! - .rill. ,1 foii.-niiii' i, fiinii of in - an.ty," in Ibo opinion of a hiici hI comiiiiuKit.ii nf hIIciiIhim. ixiircwed today acuurdlue to a written re - .. u i..,. ni - - It. -reeniun vn i iri:,i for i In- murder of Wal.er Collins today waa con- t.nucd lo l'cbrtiiiry 7 by Superior l,i,lu 1 W llilrlnn . ........ .. The alienist, JJr. (I. M. Webster of I'ullon. Cul.. und or. W. B. WclM chief of thu Itlverside county tiealth staff, were ui.polnt cd by Judge trrecman, at the re qucHt of defonwi counsel, to exam- ino tho 22-ycar-old Ciinadlan cuscd slayer of three young buys. ,.ii n,. .i. ii.f.nd. t. Northcott. Is sane and men- 1.. .11.. 11. i f.... l.l u ,.t , KUmu by hllil Willi tho I dun. of producing an Impression that he Im nut resiionsilde fur the erliucH of which he aceued. "Kurlher, it is our oidnlon I hut he nt the present time, fully renl i.eH the dlffri'nee between right and wrong and he Ih wholly re sponsible, for all of his conduct. "The attitude of egotism which he dtspluys Impresses us as a cloak. "We have reached tho conclu sion that the defendant Is ma hu'neriug or fciznliiK a form of insanity In order to prove himself incompetent and Irresponsible. I'OIITI.ANI). Ore., Jail. 10. Ifl't rue names of a number, of PORTLAND SLACKERS IN TAR RIIYINn NAMFI1 wealthy Portlnnders who have ob- sorinB the treaty, replied Hint ho tallied Cullfornla license plates for W, K )0 consider the aiig llielr nilloinoblles if a cost of but !..,,.. of Moses fur an ngree- , wlien they should have paid from in to 70 for Drctnn plains. Iihvo hcn fnvnWhcd police Mere, ( Hptaln Krvln of tlio truffle depart incut bald IoiIhv. lie hii an r.xtH would be made luiUH'dlately, ' 1'nrtlnnd mnlnrlHtH have until Salurday to obtain their lOli'J li cense plates. Arrests will bo made Monday of M thosw whoso cars are not equipped with the now plates. Captain Krvln said. ABOUT RING RETURN NKW YOIIK, .lull. 10. ll1) Jack Dcmpsey has not decided yet whether he will flicht again, ns hc had agreed to do for Teg Ittcksrd. he announced t,oday. Ills plans for aldlna the proinotton of the Hlrlb-llng-Hharkey fight at Miami Beach, February 27, also arc unsettled as a result ot a possible shift in this v'nk . . AMBUSH POLICEMEN FOILS PLOT! Newspapermen and Photog raphers Witness Attempt to Slay Wealthy Manu facturer Gunman Is Killed, Two Others Cap tured Wife Held. ! DKTKOIT, Mich.. Jan. DonyiiiK ny knowledge f h plan to hIhv hpr vHtrniiKd Intuitu nd he foro hn roulii tllvort:o hor, Alr. (!rncc M. Wood, 'Mi, chargod todft.v t that tho WiUmnd, Hnlph A; Wocd, wealthy ImlUlcr and contractor, - was trylnK to "fram" her. Wond'a t , j death was mild to have hen thc,H00Ver COmetTing lOT De tiujcci vii it mil n iiw iiiiiiciv u, KlH' men at IiIh office in Wyandotte, a I suburb, lust ninlil. HKTltOIT, Mich., Jan. In. 11 A crime that cameras captured was committed in suburban Wyandotte j InKi night wheu a Kuninan was i slain ami an oflicer critically I wountled duriiiK a spectacular but ! unsuccessful attempt to asHiisninatc Ralph A. Wood, head of (tin Wood Const ruction company. Newspaper men and plioloKra pliers, informed with police thai un attempt was to lie made upon l''"S the attacker ess than an hour later Wood'a eatranged wife, 4S years old, waa arrested. She was found ill In bed at her home and was taken to the city detention hospital. Officers I snu-rtit lo question her concerning 1 the story of one of the plotters ! that alio had Instigated the attempt ' unon her husband'a life so that -she might Inherit his estate, said to be large, and becomii beneficiary of , a $100,000 llfn Inaui-ance policy, 1 karlv today Taylor Pierce and 'Wi'lliam Thompson, each years old, wore aiioslcd as tho two who 'l'-- '1ll"rl" 'h,B '"'" b"tl10 ubn' tween police and the W ood assail- ants. Shortly afterward their au tomobllc was found marked wllh many bullet holes. They said the dead man was Ambrose llaggcrty. I Plot Revealed I Pollen learned of the plot through Cecil Holt, one of tho conspirators, ; vino turn uoy Smith, chief of police of Hlvervlow, a Detroit suburb, that 1 Mrs. Wood had paid a premium on 'his 125.000 insurance policy In re turn for his promlso to assist In the plot. (Continued on Piign Hlx EARLY VOTE ON I WASHINGTON, Jan. 10. (P) An understanding fur un early vote on the Kellogg unti-wur treaty was asked In Ihc senate 'today by Senator Moses, itepulill- ciin, New llainpshirc, who has lod the f.ght for au Interprclallvo resolution tu ttccunipuny rutlfi.cn tion of the pact. i Thu move for solllemenl of thu difference of opinion among sena tors, heretoforo handled In off t he-floor conferences, was broach ed openly In the senalo when de- l.ule nil tile t.lict l.ciMill tu tall. (,l,niMii Itornli. of Hie forelun ir..ti.ii...is e,,niii, e u., Ih soon gesllon of Moses fur an agree iiieul Thus fur ltorull 1ms steadfastly rejected all proposals fur it com promise on un Interpretation uf tho puct and ono Tuesday nlghl l.roku off all negollutlons to -thut ehd. I'endlng a renewal of the nego tiations proposed by senator Moses the senate went ahead wllh do- bate, Senutur llurkley. lH-mourat of k'eiiiueky taking the floor. At the outset lloriih ussured Seuulor Herd, Hepubllcun, I'ennsylvupla, that be did nut consider thut the treaty woid preclude "any nation from seeking uny readjustment of lis boundaries so long us It is undertaken by peaceful methods." In an effort to speed up do bate the senate hud met an hour earlier today and an iinmerllatu vote appeared Imminent on Hcuu tor Moses' suggestion, but It was deferred w hen Senator Hark ley asked to deliver tho speech lie had prcpured. Ho Indorsed tho treaty, but expressed disappointment thut Secreiary Kellogg bad not said "Just a llltlo moro" In explanation of tho position America takoe In 'adhering to the pact. MOSES SEEKS KELLOGG PA Middle weights , Fight Evenlm in 99 Rounds LA1C13 WALES. Fla., Jan. 10. (H-i Nineiy-ntno rounUM ti-Kottu-r In the ling and all r PVi'n is the record of Billy Louie, rhlladclpbla. and Al Truut. t'b'veland. naKro mid- 1- tiif fin inn, niifr iiifir iw i-j rotinu iiiuw neri) iuhi iiikiii. t They revently f o tl E h t 1'J rounds tu a duublc knockout j j in Tumpu. I Tin mcoiv now stalulu: Six i drawn, on. knoekout each . : ai'.d ono doc'jdon each. PARTY LEADERS Innmimtinn nf Bolinf Poll lc ""' ' , Problem Cabinet Rec- , . . I OmmendatlOnS POlir 111 ' Grange Committee Calls.; WASHINGTON. .Ian. ill (fl1) President-Kteet Hoover continued today his crowded schedule of conferences with political lenders with a view to determining, If pos sible before his depart tiro for Florida next week, whether and when he would be obliged to call a speclul session of cungrest to con sider farm legislation. Recommendations for cub! net uppoiutmentH continued to pour in EXTRA SESSON CONSIDERED BY on Me. Hoover from . bin callers, ness session. . who Included Senator UMlett of j According to County Agent lAiw Massachusetts, and Senator I'hlpps Mer, from tho standpoint of inter of Colorado. est and attendance, tho convention With C. Huscom Klein p. ft for- was tho best In many years. Dele--mer- ltepubllcau . representative gatos to the convontlon started to from Virginia, Mr. Hoover dla- j leave for their homes this evening, cussed means of consolidating in j , Thursday Morning Kctwloii, that Hjute,, the udvunlages gajned I In 'thQjiHonvvaV. of Y. Morrow1 by Ma, Daily lii the election.' Afr.Jof' rnyeijendnditfreAaoVnVindt,!' Slemp told the president-elect that of Corvnllla described tho moas with Virginia's swing to tlio Re-Jures taken In controlling an out piibllcHii column . last November, .break of abortion of the virulent ihe chances were excellent for the type, on Mr. Morrow's farm, election of u Republican governor! Hy following instruction, from this year. ) tlio experiment station, In, 18 After the conference, Mr. Hlcmp months tho herd wan again In sa Id that he himself wuh not seek- profitable production, ing any presidential appointment.! County Agent It. O. Fowler dc- Seimior IMiippH .suld he hud ro- 'scribed control work to dato In viewed wllh the president-elect Jackson county. Although tho, the legislative outlook In congress work is . now, co-opcratlon was wit h special reference to tho like- declared lo b pleasing. The pres llhood of a special session, and ent effort i to establish ubortlon Senator Ollleti, who Intimated freo arcusi of which two, Kvans that uppulutmeitts had beon dls- Croult and Valley View,, oro , not eusbcd with Mr. Hoover, declined to go Into tl etui la. KiUliieurs Heconuncnd O. V. Laughllu, nutioual legis lative representative of the Na tional flrotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, subniltteil to Mr. Hoov er the brotherhood's selection for appointment as secretary of labor in the next administration. Lauizh- I lln said after his conference that he did not feel at liberty to dls- closc tlio name submitted. 'John Nansen, It. A. Kllngler, .1. It has been bnown for sonio j. I'ondlolon, Oscar Shopbcrd, K. time, hownvor, that friends ot W, Heed Carter. M. Ileeklenburger. N. Doak, vleo president of tho Theodor Rein, Curl Ksch, lleorgc Brotherhood of Hallway Trainmen j, Hlowell, (.'. K. Ilellows, C. ". and a' leading representative of Arnold. J. M. Arnold. .1. ,M. Tny orgunlzerl labor here, havo been lor, tl. H. 1'oyer. l'aul Murtln. urging his nauio upon tho Hoover o. K. Slinnien, A. T. Uithrnp. Mrs. adt lscrn. j A . T. Ijilbroil. (1. W. Stevens. J t:. tJavlla, resident comtuls-1 James Wiley, H. O. Dlcss, W. O. siunor for I'orto Uico, also called M'ksche. I H. Gallatin. N. U. upon Ihc president-elect and told Newconib, II. V. Van Dyke, Mrs. him of the cnlliuslusm In tho H. jr. Van Jlyke.'Mrs. A. S. Klein island over his prospective visit, hammer, D. Peroxr.I. Joseph M. Mr. Hoover, ho said, assured him Sander, 8. A. Kroschel. Win. lloh- uint he will visit the West Indies u lie nas tune to do so. (Iriuigo Meu t all Tim executive committee Of the Nattiinal Orange culled on - Mr. Iluovcr und discussed with him feutures of their leglslallvo- pro gram, i The committee, composed of Louis J. Taber, national master, Leslie H. Smith, seeretury, of Kos ton, .11 ass.. lOugene Kekert, clialr nian, of Maseuutah, Illinois, and Albert H. floss, of Seattle, Wash., aald uftcr the conference thut their organization still Blond on Its previous - dcclariitiun tlmt they would favor nu extra- session of congress it satisfactory and com prebenslvo measures for the relief of nvrlciiltura weru not uduptcd at the present session. ..... Taber said that Mr. Hoover hud always shown' himself to bo very sympathetic toward tho rural problem and udded that he was j convinced that 11 satisfactory sulu- tlon of tho subject would be found within the next ycur. Tho cxeeutlvo committee em Iiliuslzcd that they would deem a speclul sesslun of congress r.eces sary unless at this sesslun of con gress, as appeared very unlikely, legislation comprehensive enough to effect higher agricultural tar iffs, chungc tho existing laud pul ley, imil oljicr aspects of thu farm problem weru adopted. . Hears Still Thrive. HAIlltlSONUUlia Va. (P) Daniel Houno did not get all tho bears aa ho crossed tho' inoun- i1oh to Kentucky. Two big fcl- lows navo noun bagged ny Hunters, and trucks indicate tho bears still inhabit tlio mountains 'In great number. S.G.SIMQN NEW HEAD nAIDVMCM limn i mm LTIIIIlllllL.il Thirty-Sixth Convention of Oregon Dairymen Elects Tangent Man President Berton Aldrich Vice-President, P. M. Brandt Secy. Final Sessions Today. At tho final scssiuiin this aftur noun of the thirty-sixth annual con vention of tho OrcKon iairymnn' asaociatlon, S. O. Simon of '1 mi Kent, Or., waa named aa prrHi dent; ilcrton Aldrich of Kedmond, vlce-proHidpnt, and i M. Mrandt of Corvnllln, Kecretury and truaa uror. Murnhl'iokl whb named hh tha envention city for next yeui. 'ltli the understandliiE that eastern Oregon city would eastern Oregon city would bo nam ed the following year. The envention followed out the recommendation of the nominating committee, and there was no con- test for uy ot tno offices. ftnnr or oodourn. ore.. whb the main speaker at the clos- ing meeting and told of his meth ods in building a dairy herd. He held that the only practical way for an ordinary dairyman was to begin with a good herd sire ami that money placed In a proven sire was a good Investment. Modern methods of teHtln-?, the speaKer said, mado It easier for tho dairy man In the selection of sires. Alton Kay of Klvorton told or factors thtft had aided him In dairy ing. The' convention camu to a clone this afternoon w.th a short buni only the first In Oregon, but also in the Unltod States. Tho dls eoHO, is to uq feared mora than bovlno tuberculosis. Control Told. N. C, Jumlson. of. Corvallis, de scribed how disease control asso ciations can' aid the farmers or Jackson county, and. said the college will bo glad to belp. Jackson County Ijist. J. It. McCraekcii, R. A. Clark. .pert. W. W. Itoblson. II. W. (Continued on Page Six) Will Rogers Says: NKW YORK",' Jnu. 10. The hie; nitfomohilo show is on here ill New York this week and thu only chaiifjc in a whole t w o billion dollar indus try is they have all stol on the sanit! low fhit radiator cap. K I was them 1 would advertise "My cm stands well in traf fic;." There is millions of them slundliii! to where there is not one moving. One-halt the world has no t'xeiisc for not knowing what tho other half is doing nowadays. jThry are sitting in " laxicab waiting- for a green light, the most lookrd forward touting in the world today. Yours. WILL ROGERS.