PAGE EIGHT
GALES IOSS
IN TROPICS
Dirigible' Sustains Light
t . Damage, And Will Sail
tor Home Monday Night
-Dr. Eckener Describes
., Thrill of Sky Storm
' . Lands at Lakehurst.
LAKEHUItST, X. J.. Mny 31.
(vP) After riiliiiff out thi moHt
tempostuoUH ho.uu!1h of Its career,
the .German dlrlKllile CJraf Zeripe
lln, ll)t great gruy rambler of llio
skfeH, arrived today at this Hrene
Of ,.Uh first triumphal itomhIiik of
the Atlantic.
' 'It Hhlmmerlnff fikln blanched
by tropic nuns and wnHheu by
Rilb-e(liatorlal torrcntH, tho Hky
nhip that Iihn croHHed the Pacific
once and the Atlantic Heven tlmwN.
to ' say nothing of rinpinK the
world,, noneil Into sluht at C o'
clork - (UT.) this morning as
ghostly as the minis from which
It nam. . ,
Offlcera and passengers told of
storms Jn the air and as soon as
tle; ship was berthed workmen
1'fgMji leimun iru nmniii "
hbtilinf? In place the aft rear en
gine, gondola.
JThe paflsengers spoke of tho
storm casualty and smilingly Just
o one tells of rough but undang
eiobx seas encountered 111 an
ocean liner. Even tho women.
Mrs. Mary Pierce or New York
City, Mrs. ijiurn Duisttm of Syra
cuse,. Now York, and latly Orace
Drummond Hny of London, said
they had not been frightened nt
any time.
Boon after the ship arrived, wit
nessed by a crowd of scant hun
dreds instead of the thousands
who came to see her on the three
other times she was here, the
passengers began to scatter. The
Infante Alfonso, first cousin of
the king of Hpaln, was taken in
a.. navy piano to Washington at
Invitation of the government.
' Defore tho paHsengois left, how
ever, they were subjected to cus
toms and health examinations and
to Interviews, sound reel talks,
and dotons of photographs.
An hour and a quarter after the
Ornf was first sighted. It wn W
curely housed In the great hang
ar It had visited three tlmeB be
fore and work was soon begun
to refuel It for tho last stretch
of Its four-continent flight, which
haj hardly tnken It 10000 miles
In 204 flying hours. Tho take-off
on; the return to tho home stntlon
at" Froldrlchshafen. with a stop
aty Hevllle, In scheduled for nine
o'clock, Kastern Htundnrd Time
Monday night.
The Journey so fnr has carried
the- Qraf, with Its crew of fifty
anil a shifting list of passengers
which when it Innded here num
bered thteo women nnd sixteen
men. from Frlcdrlchshafen to He
vllle, across the tip of Africa nnd
over the Atlantic to Pernamliticn,
flown to Itlo Janeiro and bnck.
end ihen northward 3.800 miles to
Lakuhurst.
. Arrival here was made dramnt
loisby a ring of ham around the
horlcon from which the ship sud
denly appeared quite closo at
hand like some strange groping
beaut from anothor world come to
Investigate the earth. On ono
side appeared the navy dirigible
jM Angeles, slenderer but almost
as long as the Oraf nnd on the
other the commercial blimp Vigi
lant, which seemed by contrnst to
make tho other ships even more
.gigantic than they actually nro.
In an Interview In the hangar
press room Dr. Kchener spoke of
the ehlp In high praise and told
of drenching rains In South Amer
ica and windstorms on tho way
from Pernambuco here. "At half
past eight last night," he sold
speaking through on Interpreter,
"we rnn Into a squall which was
the worst I have ever experienced.
Ono .minute the wind was blowing
nt 30 miles an hour In one direc
tion nnd the next It was blowing
40 miles In exactly the opposite
direction."
,"The ship dipped llko this, he
gestured with a swoop of his
hand. "Hut none of the passeng
ers was seasick. It was n worse
squall than the one In mid-ocean
on tho first Atlantic flight of the
Ornf when fabric was torn from
a fin." ''
VISIT TO KLAMATH
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore., May Si
P A parly of twenty-two offi
cials of the Weyerhaeuser Tlmhjr
company are In Klamath Kalis In
specting logging operations and the
new mill.
The party Includes J. P. ond Carl
Weyerhaeuser, of Tacoma; K. B.
ond V. Weyerhaeuser of HI. Pau.;
F, H. Boll, president of the com
pany; George 8. Long, chairman of
the board of directors; and 18
others. ... o
The new box factory nt the
Weyerhaeuser mill' site Is nearln
completion nnd la I he only part nf
the mill not In opernllon.
GREAT GRAF
Hetui
4 A
Mil is in. -- iJBPWW!n
A w vsfr 'V4 b furl
v k7r t wmfcm I
Nearly (TJ0 Oregon Mothura were entertained recently at tho University or Oregon, where they meet
annually to dlHCUBB student problems and visit their sons and daughters. Officers for tho coming year
were named as follows: Mrs. Walter M. Cook, Fortlund (center) was re-elected president; Mrs. W. F.
Bond, Pendleton (left), vice-president; and Mrs. Wilson F. Jewett. Eugene (right), treasurer.
0. S. C. GRADS RAP
L
OF ZONING LAWSilN ALBANY RACES
COHVAI.I-IH. Oil'., May 31.
Pj IhimlrfdH if Ktndmili'M if
Ort'KOti Htnti culW'Ke wmo hero
toilny fdlchrtiUiiK iilumnl day,
lutldliiK n-unioiiM, hiiHiiH'Ns hchoiih
nnd tho iinnual election nf of
fice fH.
Murk 1). McCalliHier, Halem.
was ri'-elected prenident by the
bonnl of director following tho
eleotlnn of Don MolKte, J'ort
Innd, to the lintird. Holgate'H elec
tion was by popular vole.
MIhh Jennetle P. Cramer, V'ort
land, woh elected vice preMident
nnd rharlon IteynoldH. Ij (lrnnle,
treuRiirer. Kdward C. A II worth.
CnrvalllR, waa retained an Kheral
Heeretnry.
The nHHoclatlon rnpped the city
of CorvnlllH In resolullonH deplor
InK the luck of r.onlns ordinances
and declnrlntt the value of prop
erty of the uttidentH and thoitttate
Ik jeopardlwd by lack of control
over building permlta,
Pr. Cecil H. Qnalnton, dean of
ChrlBt Church cathedral, Vancou
ver, If. (. will deliver tho bac
calaureate aermon tomorrow. Com
mencement exorclHOti will be held
Monday murnltiK and doKreet' will
he conferred on 480 senium nnd
prn dnate Htudenta. President K.
C. Ktllott, Purdue university, will
bo the mmmencement t;)eaker.
FIRE HEROES WIN
N EV YOltK, l ay 31 FV -Kour
telephone employes who dis
tinguished themselves In the Cleve
land clinic fire of May 15, W2U,
havo been awarded gold and silver
medals by tho Theodore N,
Memorial fund. All worked Tor tho
Ohio Telephone Co.
One nf th gold medals the com
mittee of awards announced, went
to MIhs XI lady s I. Gibson, opera
tor, who lost her life In the fir,
because she remained at her po.u
to gasp out the (Harm which
brought assistance. More than
persons died in the fire nnd ex
plosions which followed.
Other awards connected with the
Cleveland fire veri to Gerald T.
Mahaffey, district traffic superin
tendent: llenjamln G. Spaeth, dis
trict phi irt iiiperlutendent. and
.lames J. Itoonan, district Installa
tion foreman, nil of whom partici
pated In rescue work and working
In relays during the fire.
HOMEMADE RIFLE
KILLS PLAYMATE
PORTLAND, Ore.. May 31 OF)
William Mulligan, 14, was shot
and seriously wounded here toduy
wh n a home-nuure 2 2rsllhre
rifle fell from the hands of Ches
ter Cain, n playmate, nnd was dis
charged. The bullet pierced MulH
gan'ft abdomen. Physicians say hi
condition is serious.
MONTKRKAlr. May SI P- -Mix
passengers were killed nnd 30
Injured when the fast Pai'lH'Ma.
sWIles train was wrecked here to
night. H P O K A X K . Wash.. May 31.
(jT J udge George Turner wild
today that "Wnshtmtlon will lead
the nation In n release of nutl
probibltlon sentiment nnd the
nntl-saloon leagut has reached the
twilight of Its power," as a re
sult of the Republican state con
vcntlon nt Heltlnghflm last week.
Will ItulHl Garage
V. R. Ilagei ty will spend $2&
to build a garage on C-age street
according to an application on fib
yesterday at the city building department.
MEDFORD MATL
University of Oregon Mothers
OAK GROVE SPEED'HAMILTON, HOUSE
CRAFT VIS FIRSTiSPEAKER, TO RULE
AM1ANV, -Ore.. May 31 (!)
The H-4, fivvned by - li. 1 turns, i.f
Oak Orove, won flrnt place in both
the free-for-all and the Cla.HH C
divlnlon of the American Legion's
outboard niotorboat raceH here to
day. The lnlden .Slipper and lhr
Klylnt? Cloud, which were expected
to furntah the race, pluced Hecond
nnd third, reBpectively. The
time over the five-mile courHe ws
8:22. Other resultH were:
CIjikh l.l Miss Albany, piloted
by John Kleratoin. firm; KlytnK
Cloud, piloted by ITunny Thomp
son, second; and Why Not, pilot'.' 1
by II. Hamblon, KiiK'ne, thirl.
Time, 0:tiK.
Class C R-4. flrt: MIhs Pontlac.
piloted by Klecstein: and 1'rlde ttf
Altainy, piloted by Irn Cox. Tim'.'.
!i:47.
ClaHH D Klyinn Cloud, first; Tt
4, second: and flylnt; Kin. driven
by Levi Hamjnrvl, Anlorla. Thlr.l:
S:43.
MIhh KuKone, piloted by Shorty
Wilcox, KuRene, nnd Mlw Pontlac.
driven by Flersteln, turned over In
the Class D race. No one was In
jured. OF BYRD'S FLEET
PANAMA. May. 31. (fl) The
Steamship Eleanor I tolling, of
Itear Admiral ItlchnrO R ltyrd's
an ta ret ice expedition lowed the
bark. City of New York, into port
nt Italbon tonight, completing a
(Journey that begun at the antarc
tic Ice-packs. The bark left Uun
jdelin N. K.t on March 23.
j The Kleanor Moiling had al
ready made port, but last week
watt obliged to sail hundreds of
I miles out into the Pacific to take
' the becalmed bark In tow again.
Itnth ships will go through the
Panama canal tomorrow nnd be
overhauled In Cristobal harbor.
, Karly Tuesday morning, with Ad
miral llyrd and all . hands on
board, they will sail for New
I York, making the final return of
(the expedition to civilization.
CHICAGO KILLER
TO THE REWARD
HE OFTEN DEALT
CHICAGO, May 310?) A i
pitted hireling killer was paid off
In kind today wtlh pedestrians on
a busy southwest side corner wit
nesses to the transaction.
Shotguns, leveled over the side
of a speeding automobile, end.'d
the life of Philip Gnotfo. whose po
lice record started with an urrest
for gnn-totlng t Oreensburg, Ph..
In l!Ui, nnd progressed through
extortion, alcohol peddling and nl
leeti murder at so much per hea.l.
The wim shots wounded Cur
nielo Gueli, 48, Toledo, Ohio, and
caused another occupant of Gnol
fo's nulo to be cut by flying Hi"-"-Still
more shots that Mtrayed from
their mark struck a M-yeurold
boy who was passing with his bo
ther. He was wounded in the arms
anil legs.
SYOXKY. N. H. V., May 3l.p)
A pilot nnd his passenger won
killed today when the propeller
snapped off his piano ns It was
stunting nt fibt) feet and fell Into
thgt middle of tho main street at
TaTu worth.
PKH11AWAR, India. Mny 31.
(P A womun.and two children
were shot ncciT?entnlly this after
noon In Peshawar city during riot
ing In which firing and some cas
ualties resulted.
TRTBUNE, MEDFORD,
STATE WEDNESDAY
SA I. KM, Ore., May 31 (VP) j
When Cover nor A. W. Norhlad ;
leaves next Wednesday for an ex-'
teniv eastern trip. Italph S. Ham-I
ilton, speaker of the house nf rep-)
reson tui, I vch. will become chief exe-!
cutive of Oregon and will continue j
to serve in that capacity until Nor
bln, returns.
This in the first time in the his
tory of the state that a speaker of
the house of representatives has
served as Kovernor. The Oregon
laws provide that in the case .f
death or disability of the governor,
the president of the senate sh iil
serve us Rovernor. In case the pres
ident of the senate cannot serve,
the duties fall to the speaker of tho
house.
When Governor Patterson died
last December. Norhlad, who w.s
president of the senate, succeeded
to the office and that lenves Ham
ilton next In lino for the office.
LOOTED ST. LOUIS
Tl
ST. I.OCIS. May ill. (A) Tin
Grand National bank, looted of
mme than $1,000,000 In cash, se
curities and other valuables taken
from safe deposit boxes n week
ago, weathered a run today.
A long line of customers, fenr
ing the Institution would full nf-
ter disclosure yesterday that its
part of the loss would approxi
mate S-IOUOOn. filed through the
bank all day withdrawing depos
its. Twice money trucks arrived
with additional cash from the
federal reserve bank. One deliv
ery, the bank announced, consist
ed of $1.10,000 lent for the emer
gency by the Chase National bank
of New York.
l,ate today President Kd Mays
declared the crisis had passed and
that nil demands had been met
and would continue to be met. He
mid the bank was solvent.
BACK WITH WIFE
SAX FRANCISCO. M;iy 31 lP
Identified at Corning by means
of photographs nnd fingerprint
tallying with ones on file with the
war department, William Harold
Oouglas, former school teacher,
was safely home with his wife to
night after having wandered In a
state of (imnelsji for more than
eight months, Whereabouts of
Hotiglas had been a mystery since
September 1-. when his abandoned
automobile was found on un Oak
land ferryboat.
PORTLAND REFEREE IS
HURT IN AUTO CRASH
POHTt.ANO, Ore. Mny 51 (.D
Onillo Stoop. I'nrtlaml truffle pi
Hromiin nnd huxinic rfero. was ir.
il hivtpltiil hov tmlity wllh n fruc
turi'tl pelvis suffered late yeste;
il.'iy In a smushup while ho wrts
en route to another collision.
SI up was tlrlvlnix a motorcycle,
nnd (o nvoid colliding wllh nn nuto
inolille, swerved nnd upset.
WASHINGTON, May SI
Captain Arthur II. l'nge set a race
record of 1114. OH miles nn hour to
day to win the t'urtiss Murine
trophy race.
VATICAN CITY, May 31. (pi
Pope Plus today celebrated his
i event y-third birthday. Orectinjrs
poured In from all over the world.
QRECiON, SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1930.
STEPS FOR UNITY
BY PRESBYTERIANS
CINCINNATI. May 31 WP)
Further steps toward the unifica
tion of all churches having the
Presbyterian form of government
were taken hy the 142d general as
sembly of the Presbyterian church
In the t H. .A., with approval of
a report today from that body's
church cooperation and union de
partment. The department was authorized
to take up a plan for organic union
with the I'nited Presbyterian
church. Reformed Church in Am
erica and other reformed churches.!
nnd was instructed to report back
to the next nnnual meeting of the
assembly.
Favorable action had been anti
cipated on a vote to merge alo
with the Presbyterian church In the
United States, which Is the south
ern branch of the denomination,
having Its own assembly arid gov
ernment, but at the recent meet
ing of that" branch, action was
taken forestalling any immedlato
consummation nf the plan.
The southern branch first adopt
ed a majority report disapproving
unification, hut later another re
port was substituted permitting a
commission to make further in
vestigation during the year. Friend
ly messages from the Presbyterian
church In the United States anl
from the United Presbyterian
tv h u rch w h 1 eh is meet I n g a t Djs
Moines, were rend. The action nf
the latter on' the merger plan Is
awaited.
The general assembly amended
lis constitution today in accordance
with a favorable vote from the
Presbyterians whereby It joined tho
Congregations lists. MethoMists r. ml
Ituptlsts in giving women a vol.-e
li 'he administration of church af
fairs. An overture officially was
adopted approving election and
ordination of women as ruling el
ders, in this capacity the women
will have the privilege of partici
pating In the ruling powers of the
local churches. Presbyteries nn.l
synods.
XKW YOltK. (JP) Hverybody is
pleased when youth shows heart
and skill in a hard-boiled battle.
In baseball many fans feel that
perhapH here l.s another superman.
In the world of portsldu pitchers,
the momentary great one might be
another I'ennock, Grove or JOddle
plank.
Vernon Gomez, now with the
Yankees, certainly has youth. He
was born November 26, 11U0, at
iitodeo, Cal. And it Is In tho re;
JdhIs that he pitched a hard, suc
cessful game in his debut with th
Yankees recently. "J ,.
Brisbane's Today
(Continued from page one)
(Continued from Page One)
tin1, oceans, sens, hikes nnd land
under I hem.
r EiiRiiieers and sutveyois will
maj) out the mountains and vul
leys lying under the oceuns.
' And the future will see milium
rlne prospectors, searching for
mines and oil wells, below the
water, competing u'U;, modern pros
pectors now Benrchlng for treasure
and oil for nations by airplanes.
Those that should know, report
Dwlght Morrow Is not spending
nny money "worth while" In his
senatorial campulgti. And those
that should know are disgusted.
They are politicians, convinced that
an ambitious rich man, whatever
Ills personal fitness, should buy his
sennte seat.
The other candidate. It is said, is
spending most satisfactorily. If
Mr. Morrow should bo elected. It
would show that a man can cany
New Jersey, without "taking care"
of the practical politicians..
Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., president of
General Motors, protests against
passage of the new tiu-iff bill, warn
ing the country that its passage
would Injure American prosperity.
This country Is not Interested
merely In collecting duties on Im
ported goods. It is vitally Interest
ed In developing the export of
goods made here.
We cannot consume nil that we
produce. And to keep our men at
work we must keep (orelgn nations
buying from us. They cannot do
thai If we shut ourselves inside a
high tariff wall, and shut Ihem
out.
National grand opern. vln the
Women's Hose
$1.00 pair
8ilk from top to toe with
French Heel
Insurance 1
First Insurance
Agency
A. L. HILL, MniB.r
Phone 105 SO N, Central
Medford, Oregon
-ft.
I I
radio and on a scale of expenditure ! the opera sung today may be heard
. ... i :bv radio five hundred years hence,
unknown hitherto, is coming. . Vhat W1U surpass the five nun
What cast would you select dr(?d year run (jf Eurpdes Tragedy
from artists dead and living, if you ! jn Athens,
had as impressarlo miraculous j .
power? Pattl and the two Deresz-,- RUSSia'8 government takes over
kes. in their prime, or Marguerite, j ne exploitation of gold tields in
Mephisto, and Faust? This writer i(h t ftn and Yakutsk regions.
neara tne tnree in tnose roies hi
the-Grand Opera House In Paris.!
with Guonod conducting. It was '
the fiftieth anniversary of Guo-
nod's opera. ' ,
Pattl was far past her youth. jon and on, following a golden mir
the Dereszkes, young, overwhelmed j age, hoping always,
her. j Counting the value of time and
What a cast the old programs and i effort, more money has been put
the graveyards .would produce:
Scalchl. Nellson, Calve, Melba,
Sembrlch. Caruso, Tamago. Tor fu -
ture generations opera for the radio
will he preserved on records, and
Hear The Toggery "On the Air" Tomorrow Over KMED
Straws
We. Iinve a fine array in
sizes to KIT YOU I,e;liinis,
.Milans, Panamas anil Ken
nits. Sizes 6 3-4 to 7 3-4
$1.50 to $10.00
Remember The
See This
Charming Suite
in Our Sixth
Street Windows
A Striking
Davenport Set
Surprisingly Low in Price
Considering the Exceptional Quality
Davenport $104.50
Chair and Stool 63.75
This attractive suite, just arrived in Medford, is sturdily
instructed and covered with unusually heavy Jong-wear- -injf
mohau- and reversible cushions in extra-weight tape
try. Be sure to inspect this suite in our windows! .
We Call Your Special Attention
velfwiTtHfr,6611' modernistic laP which is also dis
played ith this Davenport set in our Sixth street window.
Of all eoverninent enterprises.
the hunt for gold would be least
successful, probably.
The old prospector, with his don-
i kev. uack. pick and shovel, plods
' Into gold mining than has ever been
taken out.
1 It is not a job for government
I officials, but for those that prefer
a life of hope and effort.
Your
Summer Wardrobe
Should Include a
4-Piece
SPORT
SUIT
Including Knickers
We have them as low as
$
Sport Shoes
Toggery Broadcasts Every Monday Night at 6:30
mi p
New
YOUR HEALTH
Ih your wealth. It'g as near lis
your telephone. Call 1290 for
appointment.
DR. CHARLES R. SIMKINS
Over Woolworth'a 8tore
Russian Massage. Electrotherapy
Chiropractic
Electrotherapy Chiropractic
Dr. H. P. Coleman
Tenth Successful Year In Medford
Treatments by Appointment
I Natural
Methods Food Science
! Medford Center Blda
i ' '
i
1 f inaifprt trtv",M;';i
Phone 965
from $6.00 up
iixiii
35