Medfokd Mail Tribune
The Weather
Temperatures
Highest yesterday Hfl
Lowest tlilK morning M
ForNnt -Cloudy tonight ami VYI
ttay. Slightly cooler tonight.
Pilly Twenty. fourth Yr.
Fifty -mwith Vw.
TWELVE PAGES
MEDFORD. OU'WiON, TIIUKsn.w. -JUNK 1;!, 192!).
No. SI!.
Today C
By Arthur Brisbane U
RENCHMEN
Thou Shalt Not Drink.
To Teach Thinking.
Hail Miss Goldarbeiter.
Thoughtful Bourbon.
(Copyright by King Features
I Syndicate. Inc.)
The novoriimt'iit is employing
IIIKI new men in a determined
. effort ' to - prevent shipping:
Vliiskey from Cumuli! to De
troit. They will find it diffi
cult, according to a reliable
person, who says whiskey is
sent across now by torpedoes,
dragging eases attached to a
buoy, which are picked up later
by waiting boats, guided by a
flare.
An official of t lie Canadian
government, traveling on a
rum running boat from the Ca
nadian shore to Detroit, was
assured by the bootleg comman
der that government officials
"never happened to lie just
where the rum boat landed, and
never would happen to be
there, for good reasons."
Enforcing prohibitonn is
hard, and is not mado easier
by the rather frequent- killings
by prohibition agents.
A youth recently shot by pro
hibition agents has just died.
A man driving an automobile
with his wife and two children
was shot dead by prohibition
agents.
Such incidents might worry
sincere prohibitionists. Too nied by a coast guard amphibian.
Auanv such killings will arouse The "tireen Flash," American
4 ' plane, with an American crew, nns
liilltHgonism. ed over on the beach and swerved
. 'Into a ground loop about midway
The 11 o w commandment, of her run.
"Thou shall not..' ,lrink,-r:: h''.!d'in?r2hSutl00l '"" """"
not yet
elimtnaU'd tlte older
iMimimuulinrnl, "Thou shnlt not
kill," us Mr. Harding-points
nut in a forceful cartoon.
Don n Hutcliins, soon to 1m1
Iirad of the I'niversity of Clii-
. , -li p'
cago and youngest president ol
any big college in the United
SUites, says the teachers' real
work is teaching students to
THINK.
"A university is not made to
reform or amuse young men,
hut to tench him to think, to
think straight, if possible, hut
to think always for them
selves." No educator ever said any
thing more important or ex
pressed more accurately the
purpose of education.
Hut how can you tench men
' TO THINK? That is the (ues
t ion. You must take them
young. I'rofessor Hutcliins says
"It is sad hut true that ttt 18
of 1!) it is too late to take a
hoy and make a man of him
and interest him in his st in lies.
He is solidified too often in
f Continued on Paire Fourl
They're glitlti' after grape m!- Suspend But Fare
rrs. an' prj-ln' Into burti'y roln'' S.M.KM. Ore.. June 1.1 Pj The
It's ontv a question ol time till public rvlce rntnmlu'lnn today
.tlnwc liartairln' dandelion 'II lie extended to and Including Novem
len the green carpet. DoH'l you her 23. this year. Its snsponslon of
wish you'll INtenetl to that life the Portland Kleclrlc Power cum
InsurniNv an-iu ou almost kick- pany's proposal Increase in street
cd out of jour office SO years no. 'ear fares from S to 10 cents.
AMERICANS
!IN TROUBLE
ON TAKEOFF
Yellow Bird Makes Fine
Start 1C:08 A. M. Today
Green Flash Ground
Loops When Wheels Give
Way Prop el let and
Other Portions of Plane
Badly Damaged By
Mishap.
OLD ORCHARD, Maine. June. IX
(P) Rumors that a youth Htowed
away in the "Yellow Ulrcl" before
it took off for Paris today received
some credence this afternoon.
Arthur Schreiber. 22, of Portland
was said by two other youths to
have crawled into the big plane
while the motor was being warmed
up.
OLD ORCHARD. Maine. June 13.
-TP) One of two trans-Atlantic
airplanes got away to a Rood start
today for Paris, but the second,
destined for Rome, crashed before
she left the ground.
I he "Yellow Bird, huge French
i monoplane, manned by a crew of
three young Frenchmen, made a
1 beautiful tnliR.nff at 1(l:hX a. in. and
LowIh A. Yancey anil ItoRor Q.
Williams of the Aineiiuan piano
were not injured.
The "Green Flash" nearly dupli
cated Its accident of two weeks bko
today. At that time one of the
wheels dropped into soft Hand and
caused it to ground loop, hut only
I the wheel and a few alay wires
were uuiiiHKt-u.
The )HUe wag travolinB ttt
much higher rate of speed today
unit il in umit'vcu tiiu utiiiiunv
would be more serious.
The French plane got away two
weeks ago hut was forced lo re
turn after 20 minutes because of
a leak in the main fuel tank.
Using Mixed Fuel
The "Yellow Bird" lodity was
using a mixlure of benzol and gaso
line. The benzol was pul in the
fuel lo reduce Hie detonation and
vibration which caused Hie leak on
the first lake-off.
The mixture will he about 10 per
cent benzol for Hie first two hours
of flight. It will then lie fill to
per cent and later to 2U per cent.
The crew of, the "Yellow Illrd"
aro Armona lotti, Jr., sponsor and
co-pilot; Jean Assnlant, pilot, and
Keno I.eKevre, navigator.
Assolant, a -:i-year-old pink
cheeked youth, was married three
days ago In Miss Pauline Parker
of New York.
She accompanied him to the
beach this morning and was very
grave as she bade him goodbye and
saw the plane roar tlown the hard
packed Hands of the bench.
The Frenchmen carried two au
tomobile Inner tubes for use as life
preservers. l.oltl ordered a good
sized rubber boat discarded because
i of the added weight.
One-half of the propeller was
broken when the "Green Flash"
nosed over, Ihe left wing strut was
broken and the lauding gear was
smashed.
Yancey said the right wheel let
go beneath I hem and the ship
twlslpd In Die right al Dial mo
ment and centered Into a nosn
over. The rear part of the fusclng's
near Ihe tall assemblage was bad
ly dented and the left wing lorn.
The cowling over tho mnlor also
was badly 4"iilcd. ;.
Gasoline leaked from the tanks
and spread annul the ground and
the throng about tlte plane was
pushed hack for four sotwonc
might toss a lighted cigarette or
match on the ground and Ignite tin.
ruel.
The roast guard timphlhiiin, pi
loted by l.leut. L. M. Malka. which
accompanied the "Yellow Mlrd" at
the start, returned above the bead,
I to minutes later.
The coast guardsman in charge
of a porthole short-wave rncoivinc
sel hero said that Malka had re
j purled Ihe "Yellow Illrd" at K'fi
miles out 2miu feet up nnd going
: strong.
LONG WAIT FOR FAIR WEATHER ENDED
The fast IlclfluiYl luonoilnllc
IJudlH'rKli trail lo I'urls. Ikdow,
WOMAN AVERS'CAL NOT KEN
M
E INVADED
Hollywood Intruder De
scribed As Much Sought
Tallman Gains Entrance
By Ruse Place Ran
sackedGuard Vicinity.
1 ,OS A Sd K I liS, Juno 13 (A1)
Police announced today thut
fiUKd-printe photographed In the
apartment of .Mrs. Harry Stern,
Hollywood, who reported lnvunlon
of her home by a mun answering
description of William 1. Tallman,
were not those of tho former
mdio operator.
Mrs. Stern reported to polico
hitu lat night thut she had been
hound and gagged hy a man who
entered her home. Kho identi
fied pictures of Tallman, wanted
in connnr-tion with the murder of
Mrs. Virginia Patty a8 tho in
truder. "J am a radioman," Mrs. .Stern
told police tho man Hairi as he
entered her apartment, "and the
police are looking for me."
Men. Stern Haid tho intruder
waa dressed in a blue suit, which
was mudHtained and had been ap
parently walersoaked. His face
was covered with Hcverat days'
growth of beard.
The fingerprints taken in Mrs.
Stern'H apartment were wild by
polico to bo very "smudgy" and
somewhat uncertain In detail. They
e.xpressed belief that tho raider
had worn cloth gloves.
Mrs. Stern reported that the
man gained entrance hy a ruse.
She said he told her ho was a
radioman, and thinking he had
come to repair her radio net, sho
admitted him. Ho Haid he had
been in an automobile accident
and asked to wash his hand.
Showing him to tho bath room.
Mrs. Slern said ho reappeared with
several bath towels with which he
bound her hands and feet, then
gauged her and forced her into a
telephone closet, locking the door.
She succeeded in freeing herself
sufficiently to be able to tlrpholie
police. Shown pletureH of Tall
mtin, Mrs. Stern Identified him as
the raider, polico said.
Officers arriving at the apart
ment found furnlthre and fixtures
In disarray, Indicating the man
bad ransacked the plnco thor
oughly. f
STUDENT SLAYER
PORTLAND. Ore.. June 13.- (Ti
Sanity examination of Walter
Flnke Jr.. I i. charged with the
murder of his student rival in love,
Herbert lleem. 1 S, Ktarted today
in Juvenile court. The examina
tion Is customary in cafes before
this court. Circuit Judge Ollbert
has under advisement the. question
of whether Kinke will be tried is
a Juvenile or turned over to circuit j
court for trial. '
W RADIO MAN AS LIFE WORK PREMIER S VISIT
I . ' :
QUESTION SANITY
t i &)'-, tiff SA h , ilu4u
Yellow Jtlnl. ill which three young
left to right: Ariiieuo llli, Jr..
ABOUT
Forrner President Finds it
Easy to Write On Known
Subjects Output in
Longhand Injured On
Recent Fishing Trip.
N F, V V O K K , Juno 13 . (P)
Calvin Coolidge. In an Interview
published in the New York World
I today, discloses that writing as a
career has no apeal to him.
j Mr. Coolidge, who was in New
' York to attend a meeting of the
, board of directors of the New
, York I-ife Insurance company, was
i Asked whether he liked to write.
"I don't," he said, "oh, I don't
find it so difficult to sit and write
about something that I know very
well, such as my own life, but a
! career of writing" and he left
j the sentence unfinished.
I The former president also dfs-
elot-ed that all his writing is done
In longhand.
He said lie hail heard of per- I
sons who coulon t write, a. word
unless they sat at their type
writers. "They always said that Presi
dent Wilson had that habit," he
added. "He would use Just two
or three fingers at his own ma
chine. At least that was the story
about Washington. ! don't know
whether it was true or not."
Mr. . Coolidge carried bis left
hand bound in a black silk hand
kerchief as a result of a sprain he
suffered while on a fishing trip
last week.
"I was Just trying to laud a big
trout," he said, "and in my excite
ment during the hattlo I slipped
! over a large rock and hurt my
hand. The doctor says II is a bad
sprain."
!' He was asked whether ho got
the rish.
"Oh, yes," ho replied, "I landed
I him nil right, and 1 guess he was
worth It."
SUE FOR TAX CUT
POUTI-ANl), Ore., .Iiino i:i. -pj
rive large lumber companies op
em ting in the Kin ma I h conn t ry
filed Hull in federal eourt here to
day to restrain the Klamath coun
ty court to revise Its annual budget
downward. The rmupanlcH are:
Weyerhaeuser, IrfihK Hell, (i IIHiiTh! ,
Shevlln-liixon and Italph K, (ill
christ. The complaint asks for a decree
holding void general taxes levied
against the plaintiffs for Hrjs and
now collectable.
Casualties of the
Air Service
SAX ANTONIO. Texas. June 13. j
(A'f adet L. II. Troup. IM, stu- !
cut in the Hdvanccd fiytnu school j
at K el ley field, was killed n nd ,
Cadet Floyd lirna i d Wood, if I .
escaped death by taking to his j
parachute when their plane locked
wings over Kelley field today.
' AMsoeinted J'reM Photo
Treneiiinetl ulv oViiyiiiir the
Jean snlant tunl Keiie Irf'ffvrc.
DAIS 10 GIVE
Ambassador Will Meet Mac
Donald in Scotland Sun-
-ay-Present Credentials
to King Saturday Ad
vice On Visit Desired.
LONDON, June 13. (P) It was
stated authoritatively today Am
bassador Dawes would travel to
Scotland Sunday to meet Promle'r
MacDonald at Forres, a little town
17 miles from LIhsIc mouth, where
the premier is spending a short
vacation.
The new ambnsador will be re
ceived by King tJeorge at Windsor
castle Saturday, when he will pro
sent his credentials, the presenta
tion taking place, possibly within
i hours of Ills landing at South
ampton from the Olympic.
This procedure is necessary, ac
cording to the code observed by
diplomats, which would not sanc
tion an Interview with t he prlpio
minister .prior to presentation to
his majesty.
At Lossiemouth, Mr. MacDonald
(old an tlntervlewer with regurd to
his prospective visitor: "We shall
meet over the luncheon tahlo and
In Ihe short space of three or four
hours great questions of A nglo
Amerlcan cooperation In the eaio.o
of disarmament and permanent
peace will be opened."
It was said plans for the pre
mier's projected visit to the Cnlted
States depended upon the message
li r 'i ii k h t him by Ambassadnr
Dawes. who was assumed generally
to have been authorized to convey
a cordial invitation to Mr. Mac
Donald. Mr. MacDonald. It was under
stood, would be guided by tieneral
Dawes as regards the program of
his visit, and the scope of his dis
cussions while in the Cnited Slates
u ould depend upon t ho ambassa
dor's advice.
GRANGE HOST VOTE
MYltTLK POINT, Ore.. June 1 "1.
- -fP) -llalloilng on location of
next year's Stale (irango session
started here this morning and
the early count of voles indicated
Iterimond will be host clly in POO.
Hood Hlver, IjiUninde nnd Klain
ntli Kalis alHo inxdc bidH.
CLAIM 123RD VICTIM
'I.KVKLAN'D, Ohio, June 1. t1b
The fatal fumes generated In an
X ray film lire m the Cleveland
clinic May 15 claimed another life
today and Increased the toll of dead
in tho disaster to l-':i. Henry Lus
tig. 48, attorney and theatre oper
Btr, died today.
DEBENTURE
BEATEN ON
ROLLCALL
House Backs Hoover By
Rejection of Export Plan
in Farm Relief Leaders
View Vote As Paving
Way for Senate Action
Conferees to Meet Senate
Committee.
WASHINGTON, .Tunc. 13. (I5)
A meeting of tho aonato and house
conference committee on tho ftym
relief bill has been called for to
morrow morning, at which time
they will take up the question of
eliminating the debenture plan from
the measure.
WASHINGTON, June 1 3. fl
The house today hacked Up. the
views of President Hoover by re
jecting the export debenture plan
of farm relief.
The vote was 250 to 113.
The debenture proposition,
which Mr. Hoover had attacked
twice in public statements and
which lie had termed a subsidy,
was votfd down on a roll call vote
taken at the insistence of the sen
ate, which hud approved it on
two occasions.
A number of senators had been
represented, however, us demand -
itlir the ltictllMhin if Ihn li,n Ii,
the bill in order, that the house
memiiors cuuui be recorded on It.
Today's action was regarded by
administration leaders as paving
the way. for a recossiou by . the
senate in its stand and a qtitck
transmittal of a relief measure,
minus the debenture, to tho White
House.
A few minutes after the house
clerk had announced the outcome
of the hiillot. Senator1 Kobtnson of
A rkansas. t he d omocra t lc sena t e
leader, indicated ho would carry
out his announced Intention of
abiding by the decision of the
house. Kohinson has been a
leader of tho move In the senate
in behalf of the debenture and
has been Insistent upon a direct
voto by tho houso on tho propo
sition. Speaker Lnmrwnrtb Immnll.
ately appointed conferees to take
up consineration or the question
with the senate once more.
They were Haugen. Purnell of
Indiana, Williams of Illinois, re
publicans, and Aswell of Louisiana
and Klncheloe of Kentucky, demo
crats, who served on tho first con
ference committee.
It WHS llldlf Mtfri Ihn r.nnr,,.nau
would seek an immediate meeting
won senate conferees, and Ttlson,
in the event nn agreement should
he reached late today, obtained
permission for the house group to
file a report until midnight. This
would onablo n voto in the house
tomorrow on whatever agreement
nilght be worked out.
Baseball Scores
America n.
R. II. VI.
St. Isolds l 7 j
Moston 4 7a
Collins. Klmsey and Schang; M,
Oastoii and Merry, A. (iaston.
R. If. K.
Cleveland 3 11 0
Philadelphia 10 U 2
SSInn, MHJns and L. Howell;
Rommel and Cochrane.
R. If.. K-
Detroit R 7 a
New York 8 1 !i 2
WhltelilM, HI oner and Khea;
Wells and flMibowskl.
National.
U. II. K.
Philadelphia H 4 I
Chicago f) 3
(Culled end or ftlh. rain.)
WllloiiKhhy and Davis; Root and
( iraco,
R. 11. K.
New York 7 11 J
Pittsburg 1 1 Li 0
Walker, Mays, Henry, and
O'Karrell; petty, Jlill, Hwetonlc
and lleiusley.
n. ir. k
Itrooklyn 2 It 2
Cincinnati t ft
Vsnce and Deberry; Kolp and
Oooch.
4.
(Hiiiy In i YhImt.
WAHIII.ViTON, June 1 3 A'i
Kecretary Mood today Instructed
Hrmy officials to extend courtesies
nnd facilities to tho British cruiser
Colombo on Its visit to t he Pa
cific const this summer. The
cruiser will visit Portland, Ore.,
August lb; Multifield, August 27.
Honesi xretta
Returns Diamond
Worth Ten Grand
M-:V YOISK. June IS.
M'l Wlml a tlnill fur honest
liurettu OlHtntl, clerk for tL
piano company. She fouml
iliamnml 1M1K in tile lohhy
nf the enmpuny'.H buililitiK.
notified the elevator man that
she hail found it. put it on
and dazzled friends display
ing It. Then she took it to
a jeweler for appraisal. He
valued It at f 10.001). Tho
thrill was hiKKer than ever.
Hut Ijiuretta wan afraid of
sui-h wealth. She left It in
the jeweler's safe. Now she
Is to et a reward from the
I owner.
PEAR RATE OF
UNTILDEC. 31
Rogue River Traffic Asso
ciation Announces Rec
ommendation of S. P.
Accepted By Other Routes
Prof. Hartman Engaged
It was announced at the meet
ing of the Rogue River Traffic as
social Ion today that the Central
Freight association bad ordered
tho emergency rate of $ 1.113 per
hundred on pear shipments, as
recommended six weeks ago by
the Southern Pacific, and accepted
by other railroads. The rate will
bo In effect . until December 31,
next.
Tho association voted' to co
opera I o with the I' r irtt growers'
league In securing the services of
Prof. K. T. llartmann of tho Ore
gon Slate college, lo go to New
York City the coming ' fruit ship
ping season, and advise the trade
on the storage and marketing of
Hog tie river pears. Prof, llart
mann Is an authority on this sub
ject, ami will visit tho city and
valley next Tuesday, with the
board -of regents on a tour of In
spection. A fund is being col
lected among the fruit growers for
the sending of Prof, llartmann to
New York City, If arrangements
can be ma fie.
The regents and Prof. llartmann
will be guests of a Krultgrowers
Tarlff association luncheon next
Tuesday nnon. ,
A committee composed of
Messrs. Hamlin, David Rosenberg
and Newbry was appointed to re
port as soon as posslhlo and as
briefly as possible, upon tho prac
ticability of packing houses keep
ing packers at the same bin by
the day distend of rotating them
every hour. It is claimed that by
keeping the packers at the same
size trull for a day at a time, the
quality or the puck would be In
creased. The abrupt elevation on Houth
Kir street, where unco steamed tho
Rogue River Vnlley railroad, will
soon be no more. Next Tuesday
evening the city council will be
asked to eradicate It. Packers
aver that the "big bump" is detri
mental to (H-irs being hauled to
the packing houses. Much of the
pear hauling traffic passes over It.
A ttorney Rawles Moore ex
plained to the association the
changes In the slate marketing
law passed by the last legislature.
The secretary was Instructed to get
a copy of the law for each packer
and, they In I urn, were urged to
comply with the provisions thereof
'before July I next, or suffer the
penalties therein provided.
Jack (frirrils informed the meet
ling I luil he was busy putting up
the machinery tor the R. W. Hur-
rows paper p;id factory on South
Front street, and would start mak
ing paper pads within a few days.
MADIHON, Wis., June 11. P
A resolution whs Introduced in the
state legislature Inst iiUM praistiK
federal dry agents "for their failure
j to shoot Hnyone" during tho pinhi
jhllion raid at the Republican par
'ty's diamond Jubilee celebration at
Rlpon. Wis., Inst Katu-day. The
resolution was killed, If to 7.
j Tho measure was Introduced by
Senators James A. Marker of An
Ulgo and Hen Gettleman of Milwnu
. kee. It declared the agents' "fail
ure to kltl anyone" at Klpon "was
unusual.
1.63 ORDERED
IDONAID
i in uAHMrn
d WMItlNLU
BY LIBERAL
Liberalism1 Not Socialism
Must Be Policy, Says
Lloyd George Await
Declaration With Interest
Jowitt Defection Pro
duced Universal Condem
nation, Is Charge.
LONDON, June 1 3. (P) Lib
eralism and not socialism must ho
the keynote of the new labor, gov
ernment's policy or its career will
come to a summary conclusion,
declared David Lloyd George, lib
eral leader, in outlining this aft
ernoon the policy of tho liberal
party would pursue in the coming
parliamentary sessions.
The little Welshman, who holds
the balance of power in the houso
of commons which meets Juno -5.
told a meeting of the liberal par
liamentary party that the noun try
had given a liberal and, not a tory
or labor mandate. ,
"We shall awuit with Interest
t h e fort h uo m In g d ec la ra t ion . of
ministerial policy," Raid Mr. Lloyd
George, "but we must declare that
as far as' lies in our power -the
mandate of the government ends
when it fails to pursue the liberal
policy. . -
"At the very hour that the min
istry decides to become a socialist
administration, its career ends.
For it has no authority from tho
nation to embark upon socialistic
nVltiHi.rnlM II ,,n Irl ..)vr . Ihnn
be kept In poVr- by tory votes or
tory Indulgence."" t ' (
Mr. Lloyd George: dealt' sum
marily with tho defection of Vy II
liam Allen Jowitt from the liberal
party to become attorney general
of the new labor government.,
Ills referenco could hardly be
misunderstood when, without men
tioning Mr. Jowitt hy nn.mc,. he
remarked, "We huve had one de
fection. I shall make no comment
on It or on the unparalleled cir
cumstances under which It took
place. I leave It to the universal
nausea felt and exprossed In every
circle. . . , .
With reference to Anglo-American
relations " and disarmament,
Mr. Lloyd George said ho assumed
f hat tho new labor government
would take Immediate steps , "to
not upon the approaches made' by
the United States regarding naval
disarmament. .
"If the government Insists upon
the solemn obligations of peace
treaties, as to disarmament being
curried out, then they can ' re.ly
on the whole-hearted HUpport of
tho liberal party."
Li
LOCAL AIRPORT
SKATTLtJ, Juno 13. tP) Two
( tregon points, Med ford and Port
land, and four California cities,
wilt soon be linked hy automat lc
i printer telrgruph with the Seattle
j office of the Ileolhg Airplane com-
puny. Officials of the company
have announced that the printer
; telegraph units will he installed
I' on these airfields to Insure in
stantaneous communication be
I ween airports. The California.
I cities aro Loh Angeles, Uakersfletd.
Fresno and Oakland.
The usual telegraph faclittln
have been relied upon in the pat,
Moeiim officials said, but increased
use of its service has necessitate.'
a more private commiinlcathiu
system.
f The equipment at the local air
port is expected to bo In opera
tion by July 1, and wilt bn located
in the present Pacific Air Trans
port headquarters at tho field.-
CIIATTANOOHA. T-nn.. Juno
13. (IP) llva Cofor, Gporiitown,
Tenn., farm Rlrt, chnrKert with
ln'ltiK Leo AU'hlcy, 35, merchant.
I with a wnjron mtnlce after an nl-
IpkimI Insult In hla More, waa no
liinllti'U by a Jury lodny. j
BOEING TO
BY m V
! WAGON SPOKE SLAYER
ACQUITTED BY JURORS