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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1929)
Medford Mail Tribune The Weather . IVrMwM-l'alr tonight anil Weil neMUijr. .Net iiiucii change in leliiierHture. Temperaturea HIkIWi ylcn!ny liOHt'Ht llibt morning tit U,ijj)Tur(ilr-rurtli Ver. Wtrtls hiII)-rlKili Yr. MEDFORD, OU'KCON, TUESDAY, Jl'LY l!r9. Xo. 1 -'!). Today ORDER END By Arthur Brisbane rMnilhAMOr It's Not in Washington. One Pure City. ,Two Spirits in Mid Air. Time, a Gnawing River. (Copyright by King Features Syndlcuto, Inc.) WASHINGTON, July -'II. Wni'ki'rs in other parts of tin' country need not envy Presi dent Ilioover liis snnnner in Washington. Win-k holds him 1-tc, in spite of the heat. The thermometer elimhed to i7 yes terday. Today it had gone to !!."), when a brief shower eooled the streets. The men of Washington have learned to wear light clothing, and do without coals and waist coats. The government will( make an interesting prohibition ex periment with the Boulder dam project. A city for workers will he built on the bank of the Colorado river and everybody vJill be expected to obey the Volstead law. The government leases will "continue only dur ing good behavior of the ten ant." One drink, and out you go. "Simple homes, gardens with fruits and flowers and happy children," instead of a 'boister ous frontier town. That is the government's present plan. The town will be 111(10 feet above the eanyoii in Nevada, one of the four states that have refused to pass any prohibition enforcement Jaw. f I'ncle .Sain will have to do it all. . . . .- In the same hotel, on Seventh ivenue. New York City, u man and a woman committed sui cide, at about the same time. They were in different rooms, did not know each other. The man, -':!, killed himself with a rifle, left his money to medical science. The woman, 10 years old, drowned herself in the bathtub. Her farewell note said, "No money, nothing to live for." Do you suppose the. two nfet, on their way through the up per atmosphere, and on through the ether? Did they talk it over, wish ing they were back for another trial? How do the spirits find their way through billions or miles of space? How fast do they travel; ' The little town of Coming Mm., is in despair. Each day the relentless Missouri river eats awav five to twenty feet (Continued on Papo Kour) The linnlcM thing Oir tiny I to kei'p from lookln' Hiiiutl when you price xmiethln'. "Where do yon go to find out the value of old ihw? it a dollar Ir had over wliuv last Saturday." nk Ijon Mixni, nt llie iiiuKirni ulixhm today. (Copyright John K. Dille Co.) we tx W frit yK " NUUKHM MARATHON Major Robertson, Sponsor of Flight, Orders Plane Down When Fuel Ex haustedPresent Supply Expected to Last Until 10 P. M. Shoot Craps to While Away Time. l-'loim '.'.",.UI)II Miles ST. LOUIS.-July ail (!') Tim SI. l.ouis Jtohln endur ance plane lias flown ap proximately r,ini) miles, which is the circumference of t lie earth at the equator. Major (J. Hay Wassail of the refueling crew estimated at 1:00 p. in. today. This is at an average speed of approxi mately tio miles an hour since the plane went aloft at 7:17 a. in. July 13. The plane hail taken on 3f20 gallons of Kasolinc in 47 nl ucling contacts. , .ST. LOL'IS. July 3. Pf Ualc (Ked) Jarkson and Purest O'lirim will land their reeurd-break ins en (liirant.'p plane St. louis Robin "when the jjus runs oul." tliey said in a note dropird at Imbert-Kt. Louis field .shortly aTlcr 3 p. m. today. Officials at the airport estimated that their present sup ply of fuel would beeome. exhaust ed at 10 p. m. (10. S. T.) Should they land at 10 p. in., Jackson and O'Hrine will have es tablished a record of 4 22 hours and 43 minutes. Major William IS. Hubert son. sponsor of thf endurance flight, ivlm sent the filers a nolo request ing thtMii to land jjoine time to dy. refUKed tn .make . publju the. text of 'the note, but aid tile es sent'e of it whs that the landing would be mado when the prone nt supply of furl Is oxluuisted. The niesKJiK was sont up short ly after thf rffuelini: plane had taken aloft anollxM' note, written by Major Kobcrlson last nlbt, in which he told lliem they could land any time, but to use their own Judgment and to bear in mind that their own safety now was the most important factor to be con sidered. Past the loo. hour mark in timo. past the $18,000 mark in earn ings, despite a weakening motor, t-irctetl the St. I, nu is Kohiu today, its record aggregating more t ban the combined total f the most re cent endurance flight, that of the Angeleno, and of the first of UUVJ. i he Question Mark. The fliers. In yesterday's note. had said cylinders numbers 4 and t showed signs of weakening and j caskets were le;i kf ni Thev not nd I no difference In the propeller rev olutions, but mrc oil was needed. In a note, dropped late yesterdiiy, ordering t he night's gasoline sup ply. O'Urine told of H "crap game" at li.'iOO feet, aviid revealed the op It ni ism of the pilot was tinditn mod. It read: "I see a nice crowd wji iting down below for us to land. AVell. w e are su re sorry, bn t ft k fa r as wp know, we will be up here this time next week, so tell them to go home find we will not ffy them when we get ready to land. 'Ited has gone into the wood cutting business. I believe. It sounds like a bucksaw. He Just had a nightmare and "when he woke up he was singing. "I Won der What's liceome nf Sally, That Old (5a I of Mine?" OJackson's wife is named Sally.) "We bed a crap game this morn ing and f broke him. I got both nickels." f'OM'MRTIS. Ohio. July 3. (p. 'o!onel and Mrs. Charlen A. Lind bergh narrowly averted a serious accident in Port Columbus lute to day when a tire of their plane blew out in landings. The plane tartef to ground loop but the colonel was able to right it after scraping a wing on the runway. The occupants escaped uninjured and the plnue whs but slightly damaged. WASHINGTON. July :;m.i;ji r'oiiner Governor MckTeivtn r.r v.. lraka was appointed iml.v tn the j federal ln'in board, completing lu 'membership. , FEDERAL FARM BOARD GETS DOWN TO WORK Associated Prernt I'hutt Members of the federal farm board ched their coats and tackled the problem of farm relief. Left to right: James C. Stone, vice chairman: C. B. Dcnman. Missouri! Charles ft. Wii.n.. w.k- v.u. un. liam .Schilling, Minnesota; Alexander H. Legge. chairman; Arthur M. Hyde, secretary of agrlcul Carl Williams, Oklahoma; Chris L. Christiansen, secretary of the board, and Charles C. Teaaue. ture California LIFE SENTENCE!" SEEN AS CAUSE PRISON RIOTING ' vigor of youth through physl Rittpr Ppplinn FnnpnriprPfl ' eal exercise If they have led By Hopelessness Blamed for Auburn and Clinton Outbreaks Baumes Law Criticized. ALHAXY. N. Y., July a. (( Mandatory life sentences for felons convicted for the fourth time were blamed today by state officials for savage rioting in Clinton and Au burn prisons, staged almost a week apart. Hotli (lovernor Roosevelt and Raymond ! (1. Kieh, commiHKionei of correct Ioiik, brought up tho the ory that the workings of the Haumes law resulted In a feeling of bftternoKS on the part of prison ers, causing them lo flare up into open mutiny. Touching on tho Rnumes Ihwp, the governor sfiid: "They may he. all right as a deterrent lo crime, hut all wrong as lo the prisoners sentenced under them. "The sentencing of persons Tor long terms for crimes against prop erty and not against persons has a tendency to make an individual feel more hitter than if he were sen tenced for a crime against per sons. LAKE BED USED PLOTS V. II. Kluhrer and W. II. (Moose) Muirbead of this city, bile yesterday piloted their privately owned plane from tbo Medford airport to Lake of the Woods, Ito-ated way up in the mountains, making a landing on a dry lake bed. It was the first visit of a plane to the resort country, and in com memoration of the event all sum mer visitors at the lake. Wrote air uial! letters, which were brought to this city and sent out on the north and south bound mall pintles. The trip up to Lake of the Woods was made in 311 minutes, and t be flight back wan made in JS minutes. The distunce is about miles. Kluhrcr, who owns a summer home ai the lake, made arrange ments for the flight last Hunday. The dry lake bod was marked off with sa vd ust a nd a wind sock hoisted at both ends. When the plane . landed, the aviators were greeted by the entire summer colony, and were escorted by the reception committee to the store, where the two airmen re fused to make a speech. 1'liibrer says that the lake bed "Is large enough to start an Atlan tic flight," and no difficulty was experience in landing or ta king off. The bed has a few potholes, which can be easily avoided. The flight was made for the purpose of determining ft a flying route to the lake was feasible, and next year the birdmen plan to make regular trips to the lake. They will ask that some Improve ments be made to the dry lake bed landing field, and the Ike of the Wood.s conctudonuric.H will prob ably do it. K. K. Murk, who wan called lo Ottawa. Kaon., by tin, milium III- nen of hla father, baa returned NEAR RESORT IS home. Hi brother Karl remained lol Myers company, manufacturer there. Their father Is better butjof pharmaceutical products, and I" very ill. .'l ln l Oil company. nn? n am . Q , Big Jim" Thinks Exercise Hurts Men Past Fifty t WASHINGTON, July 110. (A) "Big Jim" Watson, 2t0- 1 3 pound senator from Indiana, 4 approaching his 65th year. 4 does not believe men near his ago should seek to regain the sedentary lives. Famous in the eighties as ; a Depauw university athlete. j he long since has ceased to 8 seek physical exercise be- 5 ; cause he Relieves that after i passing the half century f mark men who have not led 5 4 physically active lives will j break down their mental or 4 physical strength by excos- ? 4 sive exercise. 34t444,444,,t44 I L m il i i i nu Northwest and West More ' . Interested in Flying Than as. jjp fop JUiy FvnprtPfi tn FxrPPfl Jlinn cxpecitu 10 exueeu juiil Figures. WASHINGTON. Julv Jin. VI')- W. Irv jig tJiovjrr. assistant post master general In charge of air mail, returned to Washington to day after a two weoks Inspection I rip 1 1 1 rough l he west and north west, and said there was more in terest in those sections than in the east . "This com) il ton nf affairs," he said, "is no doubt due to the fact that flying in the west has forged ahead so fast that people lu that sect ton are much more air minded t ban along the Atlantic seaboard. This is further demonstrated when it is pointed out t hat there are now throe passenger lines running into Los Angeles." (Hover asserted that as a result of increased use of air mail thru the west lie expected tho total of (i 93, MOO pounds of mail carried over the several air mall routes In June to bo eclipsed when July fig ures are available. II' declared there would be spirited bidding for tho proposed air mail routes from Pacu to Heal lle, to Spokane and to Portland, bids for which will In opened Aug. I ft. s "Residents of t his sect bin," he said, "a pprcciale I he tremendous value the establishment of such routes will he to the cities affect ed." WASHINGTON. July ;0(P AHIxtant PoHtina.-tor Nenoral tllo ver wild today he believed Ihe pot office department ahortly inlifhl have "lo romddcr earrylni; I two-eent or fli-Ht elaKM mall Ifl the ialr, eierlally on Ioiik hopx ovi r paKKciiKcr ronton that have no I mall contract hut arc now oi" 1 rallliK." Drug, Inc., Expand! NKW YOKK. July :io. 1 -Imps:, Inc.. whl"h owna tho ('tilted Drut company and the I.IkkoII chain of Htorea. hud acoulrerl UrU. WES FOUND AIR-MINDED BY MAIL OCA COMMITTEE T CREEK CUT-OFF Chamber of Commerce Body Plans Active Cam paign for Caves and Cres cent City Road Via Red woods Highway Junction. Tbo coiuniittnn mi routls unci hishwjs ui mo uuamuer ot .om- muicu, ui a meeiing nisi nigiu, or ganized for business and announced that the campaign would be launch ed at once for the early construc tion of tho Williams-Creek highway to thu Oregon CHies, anil i;rHcent Clly, via a juncture with tho Red woods highway. Another meeting will he held next Tuesday night when special committees will be named. The committee Is composed of Jack Wakefield, Olln Arnspigor, Arthur Hill, It. V. Williams and Hert Anderson. Anderson wa.j named secretary and Wakefield was named chairman. ' Secretary Anderson said f hut the i-rtiiiimi,n un mo w imams trccif .cutoff would he waged -until we I find out, beyond a shadow of a doubt, whether it can he secured lor not. . TnG Wlltanis Creek culoff woiib' iiui i iiHi nil rtoituitM il rPR"" agricultural, cattle and lnblM. al.0ll( HD(I ,H ,.nnHHIlimali(,n has long been a dream oi' Williams Creek residents. A line road, partially paved, ex tends from thin cr;y to Provoli and to Willlnm Creek, 12 miles to west ward. The territory Is tributary lo (his city and Is closer lo (irantH Pass. The Josephine county court has been lukewarm upon the project. Tho road comes wllhln I he Juris diction of the forestry servlcn and Its format ton depends somewhat upon a request being filed by both counties. Support lo I he movement ban been accorded by I he Jacksonville chamber of commerce and tho en tire Applegate dislrlct. IjHhI spring a meeting was held al the Hotel Medford and commit tees named and thoy have been working (juicily for the major ob jective. FLORIDA HIT BY E WASHINGTON, July 30. (!') The 'luarantlne by federal and state authorities in Florida against the Meili terra uea u fruit fly was said today by Assistant Secretary jotimn of the treasury to have mm FLY QUARANTIN worked a hardship iiKalnst ruinih result of a aplnul leal mado ninn'TiT and had furred them to Saturday lo bhhIkI In thu ilolcrml- seek other HvenneH of entry Into t the 1'nlted Htalex. cioiccially thru the Canadian border. Lowmati aalil thlx condition had prompted Iwoiunee of urdorH to Commander Martin V. ItaamUM pcn. in'harun of the Buffalo di vision of the count Kuard, o HtrenKthen hla forcea to combat ncreased KmuRKllriK activities from 1 Canada. Ten fast buata armed with machine aoim. he added, would ho used In that area. In addition to the southern MiiuuKlers scQklna new places of i entry aloiiK the Canadian border, ; many of those prevented frotn rminliia their cacaoes across the; Detroit river, he added, hud trans ferred their activities to tbo west em end of Lake Krle. There how ever, ho added, they were mot by an increase oi cousi guara ooata. HEAT PALL NV I Pacific Coast Suffering Least East Coast Re ports High Heat Figures Thunder Showers Bring Slight Relief in Cities and . , Aggravation to Parched Farms. I'OltTI.ANH, Ore., July 30.--VH Northwest bi-eezes In the western (art of the state today promised to relieve to some extent I lie high temperatures that have prevailed for the past three duys. The weath er bureau today predicted local thunderstorms in the mountains of jtlie east portion of Oregon, To the town of Umatilla went yesterday's beat record for Ore gon. The official reading there was 106 degrees. Pendleton sweltered with the mercury at the 104-degree mark at 3:30 p. m. It was the hottest (lay of the year. During tho night the temperature felt to Gfl degrees. The official reading for Salem was i6 degrees. Medford had 90. as did Wolf Creek. Other Oregon read tugs were : Baker yi; Marshfiold 70: Portland 91; Hoseburg 90; Kugeue 90. NKW YORK, July 30. P) With the exception of the Pacific coast, the entire country today lay under a pall of torrid tempera tures. The highest temperature for Monday was 98 at Baltimore and Oklahoma City. Other high read ings were: Washington 90: Hel ena, Mont.. 94; Detroit 92; Port land. Mc, ill!: Milwaukee, Kansas City, St. Louis and Salt Lake City 90. lu contrast to thesu fig urea. were temperatures of 6-1 degrees n t San Kranolseo, 70 al Sun Diego and 7S at Los Angeles. . Thunder showers, bringing tem porary relief to wilting city dwell ers, hut only aggravation to farm ers watching their crops rapidly succumb to the drought, occurred at various points In the oast. New York City, where the mercury stood at 91 at noon, a short rain storm, accompanied by lightning, drove the temperature down 10 degrees in slightly more than a minute. Fourteen persons were Injured by flying glass when lightning struck a liruoktyn street ear bear lug a rush-hour crowd of mure than 40 passengers. Two heat deaths and II prostrations occur red In the city. Two deatliH In Philadelphia were attributed to the heat. The prolonged drought that has placed the grain crops of northwest. Canada In Jeopardy showed no signa of abatement. The temperature reached 108 de grees at Kdmonton, Alta., and 100 degrees at Medicine Hal, Alta. Manitoba and Saskatchewan also continued hot and dry One group of Amotions, how ever, may be envious of the hot weather. A copyrighted dispatch to the New York Times, St. Louis Post-Dispatch and assochited news papers, from Commander Hyrd's camp at Little America, Antarc tica, said that tho mercury had recently reached 67 degrees below r.ero. AFTER SANITY TEST ON SPINE CflUtMr.t'H, Ohio. ,lllly 311. () -Tho pltyalfHl fnntlltlnn of Dr. lanipn II. Snook attain todHy Hlowotl up Iho ulroHily IhkkIpK prm-exa. nf Holnctlng h Jury In hln trial for III i murder of Thoora Mix. IM yeHrold Ohio Stato co-ed, h haa cnnfoaNOil ho killed. Dr. Knonk wan HiilferliiK more severely today than yeHterday as nal Ion of hla nanlty. Onn lone, woman today hold her place on the lonlatlvo Jury an llu procoHH of KhapInK a Jury accept ahlo lu Htalo and dofmmn wont Into a fifth day. John P. Soldal nf tho doronao haa Indicated by hla quaallniia that ho wanta a Jury thai will have ni hesitancy In dlscusslni fully tho de- tails of the throe-ynar love affair belwoen Iho Ohio Htatn prolosHor and tho lrl ho admitted beutlnr to death. Although Miss Dysliiftcr had weathered tho defona campaign aaalnst woman Jurors up It) the start of tho fifth day there was no asMtirancn that she would not final ly he removed hy one of the re maining; six defense peremptory (challenKos In the drive for Jury composeq oniy 01 men. INN SNOOK SUFFERS Has Birthday V1 l I Henry I'Liar ' Jj lltiwfver, h fcu ns Mr. Kurt I w ctHutMnod. iho i.iniHtuy ws; in ut h like miyuthcr tiny In nis , busy life. An inspection of prop erly at 1 tear born. Including visits to the Kord farms and experi mental laboratories and Kordsoti automobile plant promised to be the order of the day. At Mr. Ford's office. It was said that although he u tight pose for a few motion picture views today he would not have more than the usual numbr of visitors at "Fair lane." his estate ill Dearborn. "Fairlane" is but a short distance from the farm house in Green field township where Mr. Ford was born, July 30, 1863. Numerous congrat ulatory tele grams were received at the Ford home but their contents and tho names of the senders were not disclosed. Mr. Ford planned to leave early this evening for West Orange. X. J., to visit with his friend, Thoimu A- Kdison. Heart Attack Takes Well Known Former Resident of Southern; Oregon Won Legal Fame in In dian Land Case Success. (iurKo A. MallHrlphl. for ninny yoat-H urtlvo In Ihc t'lvli tilul pollU- vni mm- in pmiuiprn irrrKHl linu in tho OrrctiM KtHtn (iranire. filed hih!- ' (lenly yoMloriluy from un atlni-k of heart fiillui-o, ut hi homo In Ada, Oklahoma. A toloffraln to ftiomiH horo convoyoil tho Had Infm-tnatlnn. ManNflolil waH Voll known thru- ont tho kIhIo, mill wuh ono of tho main proimnpntH of Iho co-opera tive innvomont nmotiK farmera. Ho wuh a ounillflato for Ihe liiio erotic primary nomination for united States aenator ln I!t20. He also ran fin- Iho loKlalaturp from this diatrlct. He was active In Hportamen circles. lie la survived by hla wife, Hose, and flvo children. A dnuithter Is a student at tho llnlVerslly of Ore- Ron, and a Hon, UoorffC A. Mans field, Jr.. lives at San Kraut-lsco. lie Wa about 115 years of hko. Mansfield won IokiiI fame and fortune by his conduct of an In dian laud case that after a long court flKlit, resulted In millions of dollars beltiK paid hy (ho fed eral Kovei-ument to the Indians. Al Iho time of his death, he was etiKaRcd In a similar cuho lu the Oklahoma courts. Ho moved to oklHhoma two years ao, to con duct the lltlKutlon. Tho flral case, one of the most unhiue In the annuls of American Jurisprudence was won on a con stitutional law point. It was foiiKbl to the hlKhest court of tho land. Mansfield bad wide acquaintance with senators, coiiKrossmeii and federal officials. 'In early life, Mansfield was a flKlire in the leaal ullil political affah-H of the southwest, and lived for several yeara In Old Mexico. KlKhtccu years alio he. moved lo Iho ItoEiie Itlver valley and elect ed a home on Kokuo river' near Mcl.cod, where he resided until he resumed Ihe practice of law In Oklahoma. . (. was ardent fisherman. III? was a man of powerful phy sique, and a Kentle soul, wllh a fund of stories and Information on a wide ntllKO of subjects. lie was an InilcfatKuble reader, and an orator of no mean ability, lie hud u faculty for maklna friends, and was widely known In southern Oregon. l-'uneral services, according to advices recetved here, will he held In Ada, Oklahoma. ST. I'AI'l.. Minn.. July SO. (') Charles I1. Murphy of Minneapolis, manager of Ihe Mohawk AlrcruU corporation of Minneapolis, was se vnrely bruised last nlllllt when H glider be was flylna crashed lulo a building at thu Minnesota state fairground., here. The glider was being towed by an automobile and was about do foot In the air. Murphy apparent ly al templed to hank it Just be fore It hit the building. He la recovering. VOR-D GEO. MANSFIELD DIES SUDDENLY ADA, OKLAHOMA ADD TO FORFRUrr P. Negotiating Purchase of Land for Quarter Mile Extension of Icing Plat forms P. F. E. Will Have Local Office for Car Di version and Expedite Traffic. Tho Pacific I'riiil Kxpress will maintain a general office ami the division clerk's office in this city Ike- cooling fruit shipment snanm t., serve tho Hokuo Kiver valley proper and Iho lii-ants Pass sec tion. The purihjses are to expe dite fruit ahiini"iilH and to illveil. shipments en route without previ ous extensive use or I lie telephone aud leleKraph. Officials of the Southern l'acii c railroad today are negntiutliiK for the purchaao of a tract of land fof a quarter of a mile extension of the Icing platforms. Construction or the additional icing platforms will he rushed anil w-ll tie completed for this season.' ' The Southern Pacific will dis patch two fruit trains daily. One will depart at 2 o'clock in the after noon. The second will depart as s, on after midnight as possible. The Southern Pacific expects to de lull five switch engines lo the loci! I yards during the fruit, shipping sea I son. I Tho general local offices or the I Pacific KYult Kxpress will ho lo cated In the main building of Iho ; Medford Ice & Cold storage Co., and the division clerk will be tlu lloned at the freight office nf Iho I Southern Pacific. Ho will he a di vision elerk expert with yoarH of , , experience In tho Sacramento ami. Iniperial valleys of California. , i High officials ot the Pacific Fruit (express and the Southern Pacific Iwill conies this wook with shippers' and growers on methods and poll ;cles lo be used (lie- coming season. (They will also dismiss Hie unsettled problem of how much salt tn use III! the Ice chests of refrlgerat. I' ears. Salting lias been a live ship ping topic for months. Fruit Starts August 12 Whllo there will he sonio fruit, shipments the week of August 12. Iho movement east is not ox peeled to get under lull swing before Aug ust 20 to 25. This will he. In both Instances, four, or flvo days Inlet, than last year. Revised estimates of tho fruit crop now place the total; Including shipments of cannery Hartlclls, at between Ron a ml 4-I00 cars, or about the I Itas rigurn. II is figured that the Hartlctt crop will ho with in 1 11(1(1 Inns of last season. Packing houses or Hip dislrlct are putting their places iii order and Retting ready for the rush. Practically every packing house in Iho valley added now machinery in Its equipment. Squads or box mail era are nt work and trucks aro distributing lug boxes lo tho or chards. Tho illy this morning started the work or paving Iho Hump On Soitlli (irapo street, upon Ihe p-tl lion ol Iho packing Industry. Will Rogers Says: JUiVKULY 1IIW.X, ( , July !IU. Sett h.v I lie piiii!i's that Mtiswilini is Hi year old. Hi: ilnn't wiint Italy to have any ut-l-c li r a I i o n. juys that tliey luive too W a n y lioli days imw. I t o I (I y ii ii wlieii I saw yon lltriM' years hud when I ihw h i in Hint lie was llie lip.r tfel man in 1 1 1 I i lil'c. tlici, uvrrylnnly wtm iMvilictiim' thai lie won Ii lit 'I hold 'up. 1 have nrvi'C yet seen n lliiti'.' that lie has done thai wnsn'' hitNcd on common senso'. II.' has (lone more conslitii'live IhiiiKN for his ciniiiliy since the war than any Ininilrpil ini'ti in tiny other coiiiiti'V. He solved Ihe farm relief problem the other day in imc command, "liaise inure K'raiii and not so many !'i'Hii's. Wine is all ritrlil, lilt' have Kinim liiscuils tn im will, it, then you pan tell the res' of the world what to do." I Lt; is tine wiso woi. ' Yours, WILL KOCiKIW.