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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1930)
Medford Mail trdbl The Weather .forecast: Ton I gi it and Saturday fall: mild temperature. E Temperature IIIkIk-kI jwlcrdiiy 84 ljiwcsl IIiIn inomUijc ... 62 I'mlplliilliin: Ti 5 . in. ycMlrriluy till To ft ll. in. Imliiy IM) No. 117. t Twenty-Fifth Year SIXTEEN PAGES MEDFORD, OUHOOX, Fit I DAY. .JULY 18. 1!120. -- , , , Today jfy Arthur Brbbant Mr. Morgan's Yacht. ; Taboos Still Live. Hard Kurdish Fighters. u Two Little Fighters. Copyright King Feature! Bynd. loo. Today J. Pierpont Morgan, the influential financier, starts across the ocean on his yacht, Corsair. It's a 'bigger Corsair than that used by his father years ago. Hut, huge for. a yacht, 31 feet, long, the Corsair is, nevertheless, n sniall boat 09111-! pared with modern giant pas senger liners. ; ,,! Even the richest man could hardly afford a ship ns coni fortalilc as the one (hat. carries ,thc cloak and suit buyers to the laieTit styles in Paris, and brings them home to copy llieni. That, isn't exactly b'ol shevism, but it's a good imita tion. Civilized men laugh at "ta boos" that, keep n woman in tle South Seas from touching a canoe, make it a crime to touch a man with your hands after you have touched a hwxe and forbid the eating of certain animals, etc. - But the taboo is not dead, even in civilization. Horror seized the British house of com mons yesterday, when n labor ite member, Beckett, laid hands on the heavy mace that lies on the table in front of the speak er, and .ran toward the door ivifi.it:'"r ' -?--v"r-'"i: The .macfi symbolizes the power of the ' house of com mons. Beckett was suspended, m to -i. Kurds from Persia, convinc ed that Kemal Pasha, Turkish dictator, llonts the will of Mo hammed, undertake to correct (Vim. Fifteen thousand of them, pouring in from Persia,, made their headquarters on Mt. Ara rat, bnrni.ig, robbing and steal ing, as proof of their fondness for Allah and the Prophet. Kemal killed about 15,000, nearly all of them." But the Kurds, desperately courageous, as is usual with Mohammedans, say he will haVe to kill all of them to make them leave. Their treatment of cue Turk ish aviat'ir whom they shot down, immediately gouging out his eyes, proves their "earnest ness. Kemal V. bombing planes are searching the Mt. Ararat erev icl where Kurds- hide, a change from the day when the ark landed peacefully! Armenians are doing what they (Continued on Page Four. Second Section) Abe Martin Wlmi's urtrv'ti ninnln Into Mreet paratfc while flrvln1 from JiMlcv? Very little Is belli wild loii t Hie new cn rls an t niotHN nil tile down nur wny, 'off hr r. Iks ho talk Uw blam ed much about ever'thin. 1 SCENE AS MIT DEAD Weeping Women and Chil dren and Haggard Men Gather at Mouth Hetchy Tunney Debris Slows Removal Bodies. CAMP MITCHELL, Cal., July 18. iJPj Haggard men aim weeping women and children gathered aliout the entrance to the Mitchell Ka vine tminel o he Helen Hetchy project, 40 miU'H 80uthe;iHt or San Francisco, today as rescue crews toiled to reach the remaining holl ies oC 12 workmen killed enrly yes terday ill a gas explosion. Two hurned and ma'ngled bodies wer recovered during ttie night, those of C. K. Cavenaugh ot Seattle and Tony Itedka, no address. The bodies ot two others, John Mc Nichols, shift hoHH, or Loh Angeles, and J. C. Maybln of Souora, Oul., were recovered soon after tho ex plosion. As each blanketed form was brought to the surface It was hur ried to an ambulance and taken to Livermore morgue, 25 miles from here. The remaining bodies were un der tons of debris at the end of a 1400-foot horizontal shaft which turns orf the bottom of a 755-foot vertical shaft. Resume Work Rescue work, abandoned shortly after the rescue of the first two bodies from the foot ot the vertical shaft, was resumed after, nightfall when repairs were completed to the 24-inch ventilator shaft, damaged by the explosion. A crew of 10 men were lowered to continue the grim task. Meanwhile state and federal of ficials began an investigation to fix the blame for the disaster. Officials placed the cost of the explosion at-bout $100,01)0. Pay ment of $5000 will have to be made, they bu id. to the families of each victim, and the damage to the tun nel and workings will amount to approximately 40,000. HE Opening Statement of War den in Defense Claims Vigorous Effort Made to Enforce Law. rORTLAXD, July 118. W) The defense opened today in the state game commission hearing of charges of inefficiency and laxity brought by neveral sportsmen's clubs against Harold Clifford, state game warden, and VI. H. Clark, chief deputy. The com plainants closed their case yes terday after offering unsworn testimony for three days. "I have served under two gov ernors as state game warden and three' governors as member of the game commission." Clifford said, "and I will demonstrate to the satisfaction of the commission. I believe, my regime has been one of vigorous prosecution of gume and fish laws of Oreson." The name of J. E. Jergens, Los Angeles oil man whose summer home Is on the Rogue Kiver near Illahee, entered the discussion at yesterday's sessions after reports had become current he donated money toward the prosecution of the game officials. John C. Ken dall, attorney representing the complaining sportsmen's clubs, an nounced at the hearing he believed this report absolutely unfounded. Toledo. SI 6,000 bond Issue approved for purchasing additional Hunt of way for Newport-Corvalli highway through this city. "Come Home Joe," In A Man Hunt NEW YORK. July Is. OP) police of Nt-w York and Chicago are engaged in n manhunt that is different. If they find Joe Kerra. 42, of KINFOLK CLIFFORD SA PROSECUTED LAWVIOLATIONS Rosebank, Staten Island, they will Nobody acr-ued Fcrra. But assure him he has committed no i (hat night h null his job. Kor crime nnd will urge him to go i I J day he stayed home d'-bating back to his family. 'with hlinnelf hts responsibility nnd Kerra. a nfifht watchman at a j waiting for the police to come af hulidtng In course of const ruction, j tr him. Finally, on June 3n, he was busy filling the little red dnn- J klfsed hi family pood !- and )ger lamps out in front one night i when he heard n screan within. ! Ready To Enter Tunnel Where 12 Died Workers nl the top of Mitchell Havinc Nliaft, reailv to descend to Die lower workings to rescue men IriipiHtl by n giis expliiHlon, killluur 12. flight inset: H. A.rropiiiiv.ynskl siilfcreil froni shock after ho iliK liiuicit r0 feet by lllc explosion, . Prank Danes ilcft Inset) was one of tho first, lesi-ucrs iitKler grotliul. (AnsopliitiKl Press Photo.) SECRECY ON: DOCUMENTS AN AFFRONT Senator Moses : Says Re fusal of Hoover and Stim son to Give Senate Pact Papers Resented Few Know Anything of Treaty WASHINGTON. July 18. (jT-) The- blunt statement that Presi dent Hoover and Secretary Stlmson "seriously affronted" the represen tatives of tho American people In refusing them the private treaty documents, was made In the sen ate today by Senator Moses, Re publican, New Hampshire, during an assault on tho London naval agreement. . . The New Knglandor said the "ex ecutive, without right but with a power which was brusquely exer cised, declined to cooperate with the senate as the constitution pro vides," and Stlmson had taken the attitude of "superciliousness mucii more befitting to Ktn.n more (his London residence) than to Woodley this Washington home.)" "Thus,1 he said, "being denied the information which would right fully liein our possession and being under pressure hitherto unequaled in an attempt to force the senate' to do the executive bidding, and being harassed by long hours 'n the heat of nn Intolerable Wash ington summer, I am seeking o express my resentment and my re sistance to forcible feeding in the dark." Haying, the "pitiful thing about this treaty is that so few people know anything about It and that tut many people care nothing about It." Senator Mo sen insisted it was the "I'nited States which made nil the materia) concessions" at Lon don. MAIMER'S SPEED CUT BY BAD HEAD WIND MILES CITY, Mnt.. July 18. t&t Nick Mamer, returning to St. Paul on his 24-hour trip flight to Seattle, landed here at 1:20 p.m.. (M.S.T.) today and departed at 1:45. He bucked headwinds to this point, but expected to make St. Paul from here In four hours. Is Plea Of Police That Is Different On the floor he found the crush-i-fl body of a young boy. who ne;tking Into the building with his playmates, had fallen through the steel frnrnr of the second floor. went to i nicao to escape me "disrate." 1 Baseball Scores- National. . BROOKLYN, July 1 Chicago Cubs reduced im The Brooklyn's leutl tr a single game today by winning the fourth encounter of l their series, C to 2, In n battle or home Vuns. Beck, Wilson and KiikUhIi hit huniei's for Chicago nntl BIsHonette for Brooklyn. II.. H. K. Chicago fl 13 ' 2 Brooklyn : 2 5 2 BuUerioH: Blako and Ilartnott; Klllott, Moss, Thurston and Lo pez. , . ii. E, st. -Louis r 10 mi New York 8 12 0 Batteries: Hallnhan, Orimcs and Wilson; Donohue, Heving and Ho gan. R. H. E. Pittsburg 12" 1 3 Boston 4 0 2 Batteries: Spencer and Hems ley; Keibold, Krutik house, Cun ningham nnd Cronln, Kpohrer. R. ' II . 1C. Clnclnnntl 13 16 1 Philadelphia ....... 6 9 3 Batteries: May, Johnson, Fry and Sukeforth; Nieholu. Sweet land. Collard, Elliott and Davis, McCttrdy. American. H. H. .... 8 10 ... 0 15 Brown E. 0 3 nnd Washington Cleveland Batteries: Spencer; Myntt. Harder, Jablonowskl and R. H. 15. Boston 6 11 0 Detroit 7 10 1 Batteries: Gaston and Berry: SorreH. Hogsett nnd Hayworth. It. II. K. Philadelphia Hi 1 ft 0 Chicago 2 7 0 Batteries: Earnshnw and Coch rane; Barton, Henry, Walsh and Crouse, Schang. TRAPPER SLAIN BY ROSKBURO, Ore., July 18. (Ai J. W. Hamm, 6ft, surrendered to J. 1), Van Dyke, Drew store keeper, today nfter declaring he hud shot and killed Urban Barrett, OS, his partner, when the latter attacked him. Barrntt was a rancher, trapper nnd prospector. The two lived three milos from Drew In one of the most remote sections of Douglas county, llnrnm said Bar rett had been acting "queer, nnd this morning became violent." He said Barrett attacked him nnd he shot in self-defense. Tho two men had been engaged in trapping nnd prospecting. The place Is located off the Tiller-Trail cutoff In the extreme southeast section of the county. The only communication to Drew is by forest service telephone and details of the shooting were mea ger. Itnm Iceberg. MONTRLAL, Que.. July 1. Steaming along in a dense fog early today, the freighter UaJyran. carrying .70ft tons of coal f rom Swansea to Montreal, rammed in Iceberg and muck fat on ledge In the straits of Belle Isle. PARTNER IN DOUGLAS WLDS ? 1 90 LOST IN n n nmnnn urn oiuimi OFF KOREA Japanese f r e i g h t e t- and Crew Missing in Typhoon Heavy Damage Re ported Afloat and Ashore British Steamer Burns. TOKYO, July 18. (P) The worst typhoon In forty years In that region ravaged the Loochoos and Klushlu Island today nnd swept on Into southern Korea with unabated force. OSAKA, Japan, July 18. (P) Reports to the Osaka Ashal to day said the freighter, Korel Muru, with DO aboard, belonging lo tho ministry of railways, was missing between Shlmonosekl nnd Kusan, Korea in the Korea stralf. The most severe typhoon In many years swept Kyushu Island today. Heavy rain and a U0 mlle gale struck tho region. Heavy damage both afloat and ushore was feared. The typhoon stormed through the Loochoo Islands yesterday, leaving havoc In Its wake nnd headed toward eastern Korea and Vladivostok. LONDON. July 18. iff) The British steamer RanHltatu' radioed to the PortlKhead wireless station today that she had rescued all pansengers and crew of the der ma n steamer, Targls, which burn ed and sunk at nbout midnight In latitude 3&:f4 north longitude 5(1:07 west. ' ' ' Tho last radio message said nil passengers und crew were aboard tho Rungitutn, which, was stand- inK by watcblng the vessel sink, ut tho request of the master of the Targls. The TOPltloti iven was nbout' lfioo miles east of ?w York, in mld-AMnntlc. RECONSIDERATION HAN FRANCISCO. July 18.(P) Wurren K. Billings today nsled justices of the California supreme court, acting as nn advisory pardon hoard for Governor ( Young, to reconsider their decision of July 4, which led (he governor lo deny his pardon of conviction In (he Pre paredness day parade bombing here In 111 fl. The Justices will meet hero Mon day and decide whether (hey will consider the petition. WELLS SUPPLY WATER IN REDMOND DISTRICT ftKDMOND, Or., July IX. ff Hiy weather Is making ttef felt on the runKft lands in tills men hy scarcity of water for stock. Willow cnek, hnpoitfihl source "f water ' for livestock. Is now entirely dry. (Ham her are resorting to deep welt for their supply ler is hot and Uty. FIND BODYL1 CALIFORNIA LOCAL MAN,rO SWELTERS: LONG DEAD WLJ Skeleton Discovered at New port Resort Identified As Mysteriously Missing Jay Sullivan of Medford Was Miner. NEWPORT, Ore, July IS. (A') The seven-year mystery sur rounding the disappearance of Jay J. Sullivan, Medford mining man. who disappeared near Newport, on February 4, .has been solved with the discovery of his skeleton near Agate Heuch. Positive identi fication of the remains was made last night by 1 M. Carter, coroner. IdeutlUcuUlon was made through engraved cuff links, spectacles and objects in the man's pockets. The skeleton was found utter brush hud been burned near the beuch by men preparing anew golf course. There were no signs ot violence. Sullivan dtsnppeurcd from tho (lllmore hotel here and wutt never heard from uguln. Hu was known to have been Interested in gold mining nnd hud InveHtigutcil black sand deposits In the Medford dis trict, and was Interested In simi lar deposits here. In his pockets were found sev eral vials containing black sand similar to those found In his hotel room. In addition there was n leather case with a magnifying gluss and a gold nugget. It Is believed the man hud no relatives in the west. According to the records of the county clerk's office, the above J. Jay Sullivan In .luuntiry, 1!12U, filed on two mining eluinis In this coun ty one near Itucli ami one on Kv uns Creek.' Ho was known to Attorney F. J. Newman, who transuded some le gal business lor him, but bus no distinct recollection of the man. J. Jay Sullivan should not be con fused with T. J. Sullivan, well yuokn local mining man, who Is interested In the Ruck und Sulli van claims nnd other prnpeiJes In the Blue Ledge and Squaw Luke districts. TRAPS IN IN Fire Fighters Unable to Reach Elderly Miner in Blazing Canyon May Be in Deserted Mine. GRANTS PASS, Ore., July 18. (P) A. L. McCarty, state fire marshal, notified officers here to day that an elderly unidentified man, thought to be n miner. Is feared to have perished In a for est fire In the Williams creek dis trict when he was trapped In a Mazing canyon. Klro fighters are reported to have been unsuccessful In attempts to reach the place whero tho man wns lust seen. It Is possible, Mc- Carly said, the miner entered a deserted mine shaft before the flames swept up tho canyon. It impossioie ioaay 10 enier me burning section. A brush fire carried a potential threat to western Grants Puss yes terday until It wns controlled. WLLAMS AREA BEND SMOKE CLEARS - - All fires are now under control, iryrn rnnrOT riflTP backfires were completed yester- ArILK rUHwl HKto r,1,,;;'. nro ,,Bhtcr" The fire In tho Hhevlin Hlxon . district covered 6000 acres, dum- BKNIJ, Ore,, July 18. CP) Kor aged 41,0(10.000 feet of yellow the first time In nearly a week pine, lit, 00,000 feet of govorn- resldents of Bend today saw the meat owned timber, and some pri- inonntuins here, as smoke from vutely owned timber. Candidate Promises Immunity For Home Brewers In Campaign Speech ST. LOCIS, July 18. W Home brewing promises to figure prom inently In tho ,rneo for the Re publican nomination for prose cuting attorney here. Recently there have been re ports one of the lending candi dates for the . nomination had been telling voters If he wns elected home-brew makers would not bo he wenth-j disturbed. How Harry 11. Rich nrd', another candidate, has made DKWI'lIt, JI'LY 1H. (P R It 1 .1 , W. 1 1 ) IK! KM of New York City today was elwtiMl presi dent of tho International AssiHla tloii of Lions clubs to succeed Ray L. Riley or Kucrniiictito, Oil., nl the closing session of the organi zation's Mill annual convention. Ton ui to, nttmdn, was mummifcd ns the l:ti convention city. Belle Gunness, Owner of Murder Farm in Indiana, Where 15 Husbands Met Death, Escapes Clutch of Law in Mississippi. ' ' OULFPORT, 1 Miss.,' July 18. (A1) Tho sheriff's office here, to day said u woman, believed to be Mrs. Hello Gunness, charged .with operating a murder farm near LuPurte, Ind., 20 years ago, had recently left her homo on Wolt river, and gone out of tho stute. At the request of Indiana au thorities, tho sheriff of Harrison county attempted to arrest the wo man early today but found her gone. The suspect had been known In this section under an other name, Sheriffs of Hinds and Harrison counties nttempted to keep the news of the suspect quiet after It hud leaked out through the Indi ana authorities, mistaking a tele graphic Inquiry to learn If Belle Gunness was wuntcd to moan that she already had been arrested. The sheriffs have refused to say what Information led them to believe tho suspect was tho wo man wanted on charges of luring 15 or 20 men to their deaths by marrying them and then giving them poison. LA PORTK, Ind., July 118, iP) Bello Gunness, reported found after 22 years In MtsslHslppI, has been called by the luw and the press tho most notorious murderess of the century. Various Porter county prosecut ors have charged her with a mania for murder. Their Investigators said she lured men to her farm by promises of marriage and then killed them. In 1U0M, authorities digging on her farm found p "private ceme tery" in which the bodies or bones of 15 persons wero found ull al leged by the Investigators to be Belle Gunness victims. Tho Investigation showed the woman had inserted a matrimonial u d v e r 1 1 s cment In Scandinavian newspapers and the authorities be lieve the men who were said to have been killed were all Scandi navians. One by one, they suld, the men cume to the Gunness farm. Just outside La Porte, and were seen no more. his attitude quite clear, "I am not running for home brew Inspector." he said last night nt a meetlnic of the fifteenth ward voters. "At no time has any prosecuting attorney ever Issued n warrant for a homo-brew mak er In Ht. Iuls. If nn assistant under me In the offlm ever did Issue such a warrant I would prosecute the nrslstant, and not the home-brew maker." NOTORIOUS MURDERESS SLIPS MY SEVEN DIE More Suffering Predicted As Hot Blasts From Mojave Desert Strike Imperial Valley Mercury Reads 110 Three Succumb. LOS ANC.IOLES, July 1 8 . (P) W Ith woven deaths attributed to tho heat in tho last five days, southern California today faced tho prospect of sweltering further In a blast of hot Air rolling down from the Mojave desert. Weather bureau officiate said an area of low prcsmi'-e over Arizona nnd Lower California would reach this vicinity today, taking th place of a breeze which somewhat elevl ated the discomfort here yesterday. Four deaths were recorded yes terday, three In Imperial valley and ono nt Montebello, suburban . town on the outskirts of Los An geles. Temperatures generally were lower but hiRher humidity offset the drop. The previous three deaths nil wore In Imperial valley, below -sea-level which extends south and north of the Mexican border. The mercury hovered ut the 110 degree level throughout the Im perial valley yesterday and reach ed 103 nt Ontnrlo, 40 miles east of Los Angeles. Riverside swel tered under a 100-degree tempera ture nnd nearby Pomona saw a high mark of 06 degrees reached. In the Coachella valley, south east of her, .109 degrees Wfis regl istered at Indlo but the humidity wild low. - L CHICAGO, July 18. JP) A wo man who saw Alfred Lingle, Tri bune reporter, shot to death on June 9 has been found and will prove to be the state's most Im portant witness, State's Attorney John A, Swason announced today. The woman Is recuperating, he said, from a hysterical collapse caused by the succession of acci dents on the fatal day. She had been In an automobile accident a few hours before the shooting, Swanson said. On her way to a physician's office she saw n child's hand crushed In an ele vator door. Leaving the doctor's office she hurried through the Illinois Central subway to take a train and saw the assassin creep up behind Lingle, fire a bullet Into his head and floe. IVE E ORKOON CITY,- Ore., July 18. (fl7) Tho body of Charles Maler, 64, wanted for murder of his neigh bor, Andrew Nelson, 61. was found today In the Mollala river not far from his farm, tho top of his head shot away. Deputy sheriff said it wan unquestionably a case ,ot suicide. WILL ROGERS SANTA MONICA, Cal July 18. Humor is still rampant in the senate. Here is the two lut est amendment-) to the treaty, "freedom of the leas.? for aU' neutralH." That wan originally surest ed at the game time that other famous amendments waij,. "If your enemy atrike you' turn the other oheek." Wars are won by Starvation, how you go ing to starve anybody if every body 'else feeds 'em! The other gem of forlorn hope was, "Eng land must give .up five of her naval bases." I don't know how Senator MeKellar over looked llmtkingham l'alace in that demand. Yours, WHilv ROfiKRS. LOCATE WOMAN 10WHED INGLE MURDER I i