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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 1, 1931)
Tribune MEDFOKD tfi Twenty-Fifth Year MEDP0R1X OlfKdOX. SUNDAY, Fi'HIirAlfV 1, No. 312. Todav By Arthur Brisbane Get Ready For 1933. Great World Fair Coming "Crumpled On The Floor. Fine Chicago Weather. ' Copyright King Feature. 8ynd., I no. y, 'i' CIIICAfiO, 111., Feb. 1 rtomcr Click, publisher of the Herald Examiner, nml Mistor alias "Hahp" Meigs are at tlio rnilroad station to tell you that Chicago has a California cli tnatp. It has for the time be inur, the wind blnwino from Lake, Michigan bein; as mild nji though it came across the y jjnlf of Calil'nrnin. ','1 Marvelous, if it only lasls, as the Frenchman shiil passing ; the eighth floor, having fallen : from the twentieth. On the ChiciiRO American front page is a photograph of jLi man crumpled up on the floor of an automobile, a big police man looking in. The body, with a bullet in the abdomen, is that of tieorge .Smith, burglar, who will burgle no more. In the "Wieboldt Department store robbery, Policeman liind- ' er, shot down, fired upward ;from the floor and was quite sure he hit somebody. Sure ! enough, it was this mnu left to die in the abandoned auto mobile by his icompanions. t . This picture shows one of the ' many crimp strata that prohi ' bition has deposited in Chicago jind elsewhere. A better picture representing the real Chicago meets you on the lake front- park, token from the waters of Lake Michigan iy filling in. There you see the beginning tif Chicago's fair to open in 10:i:i, celebrating a century of progress. Mr. Rufus C. Dawes, presi dent and mainspring of the en terprise, shows you the fair building on the lake front with Chicago's skyscrapers for background, and only five min utes from the Hotel Centre, al ready well underway. Fort Dearborn, in which the whites found protection from Indians is recreated exactly as it was, made of loss in the old style, with convenient holes for shoot injr Indians. t I re re is a low stockade over whuh the Indians could easily climb. Having climbed, the. fouud themselves trapped bc tweeu two fences, the second very high,', which made shoot ing them convenient. Inside the fort is a little church, also convenient, in which prayers were offered for the repose of red souls, that had passed on. Tlin administration building. In modernistic myle, tins strange IiIkIi lines, milieu wide ut one tfnd, nar row at the other, fantastic conceal ed lltshts, columns nf pollened alum inum, p-acliiiiK from celling to floor. That will attract artists. . urcniteets cud others "tired of Irnnrlne nil! ttlinKS." The transportation building, n thouyuurt feel ioub, win uiuno possible for westerners that never sow the oceun to see In exuct re production part of n full side ocean liner. At one end of it Is a dome of steel, widest in the world, nearly 200 feet across, three times as wide as that of the capitol of WashinK ton, wider than the dome of St. IVter's. fnder It will stond the "Itocket." Stephenson's first effic ient locomotive, generously lent by the Uritish government. The lake front location of the fair ulready possesses permanent structures that should draw intelli gent families from all over the Vnlted States, thanks to the gen erosity and ctvlc pride of Chicago citizens who believe in big things. At the entrance to the fair park u,r.n.iu Knaniitiii mountain. It curt a million dollar,, to ''"" "" itu. River endowed I Jn"J.! ! million to keep It In good coiioi lion. To the rliiht Is the munificent museum that Marshall Field save (Continued on rage Two) O FIND LOST BABE ALIVE E Tot None The Worse For 30 Hours Alone In Forest Parents and Searchers Find Relief In Tears In fant Asleep When Found By Searchers. QUANTS I'AKS. Ore., Jan. 31. (A) Thirty hours alone in tho tall I'ori'HtH of the Siskiyou mountains left no visible effect on two-year ohl Koithie Dale liusen. who to night was sound asleep in (he mountain ranch home of his par ents 12 miles north of here. The lad's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Husen, exhausted by the long tense, hours during which more than 200 men and women comb ed the mountains, found relief in tears and sleep. The father had been tramping the hills continu ously since his son disappeared Friday, while playing hide and seek with other hoys and girls. The search ended three miles from the Iluson home just as darkness settled over the moun tains tonight. The child's physi cal condition was good despite the fact lie had spent a night and nearly two days in the forest. After the territory in which the boy was believed to have been lost had been covered several times by disorganized searchers, the parties were assembled and the members deployed ten feet apart to effect thorough search. Legionnaires, citizens, and Nat ional Guardsmen who joined the search, refused to quit until ex haustion forced them out. The Hed Cross and the Legion Auxil iary sent out units to serve hot coffee nnd sandwiches to the men. ON OIL CHARGES WASHINGTON, Jan. 31. OP) A "shown down" on Halph S. Kel ley's oil share charges was de manded today by the administra tion at the opening of the sen ate's investigation of statements made by the former land office or"';'"'- insisted the lands committee make a full in-vi-HliKation and cive the interior department a chance to answer every charge. .Senator Glenn, Re publican. Illinois, demanded that ithe committee inquire into the circumstances surrounding publi cation of the charges. FAKE BILL CROOK PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. SI. (Pf Portland police announced today they had arrested .1. A. Kalkner, L'S. San Diego. Calif., who they said, had been sought by I'nited States secret service operatives for two years. Police !n id Kalkner had about $2000 in spurious hills in hi pos session when a rrested, KalUner allegedly admitted he had passed ahout $."000 wort h of counterfeit money in the past two years. He was saiil to have worked for the forest service at Spokane for sev en months preceding ctoher 14 la. I.OS ANUKLKS, Jan. 31'. Ah Pedro Martinez lot his pistol, hit faith in mankind and his ' free dom practically at the same time. Pedro cat in Jail today, the po lice report said, after trying to bold up Dominic IttihMlnt in his cafe last night. Pedro told Kuhel lat he was stuck Up. Hnbellnt would not believe it and took Pedrd's pistol. "Please give me my yun," plead ed Pedro. "O. K.," s.iid the cafe man. "come back tomorrow for it." With rhild-Hke faith, Pedro plodded back to the cafe, and in to the arms of the police. WASHINGTON, Jan. 31 iT ! Th, w.lr ,ira,tnH ricur.d ...it' ?, ly th tM r , ln H., NEAR HON NAB LONG SOUGHT ESCAPED SALEsV! oldest officer on the- retired iisij of the army now rests ith j ..r John Wesley Uean. of Al t le an rn. Massachusetts, now nearing, his DSth birthday. o FORMER PRESIDENTIAL YACHT Associated l-.tsa l liotit The once proud ship, Mayflower, whose career Includes that of millionaire s pleasure yacht, gunbo.it, flagship, patrol boat and presidential yacht sank in more than 20 feet of water after it was swept by fire In Philadelphia navy yard. ; ALLIANCE, OHIO Steel City Threatened By I Million Dollar Loss As! Flames Spread-Aid From, Nearby Points Fails To, Halt Ruin. . , ALLIANCIO, Ohio, Jan. 31. (i?) The business district of Alliance was threatened tonight by rapidly spreading flames. Damage esti mated 1- the fife department at t750,ono had been done soon after the fire started. The fire started In the four story Allianco Hardware company build ing on -Main street and spread to the two story H. S. Kresge com pany building on tho west. The buildings on both sides were in immediate danger. The flames were beyond control ; of the Alliance fire department i and apparatus was rushed from Canton and Sebring. K lames also were eating their I way Into the Spring-ilolsworth de-j part men t store and the National j Furniture company and the Ale-j Crory 5 and JO cent store was j threatened. Police feared tho flames would I cause more than $1,000,000 dam-j age. Alliance, a steel making city, has a population of 23,047. ' FELONS ELUSIVE! KAMC.M. Jan. .1 1. Vt Kec Duncan and Dan Flynn, both IMi. who escaped from the state f peni tent in ry Thursday night, succeed ed in eluding capture, awaln dur ing the night, prison officials re porting today they h:id received no definite word of any clues. In formation from Portland that po lice there believe the pair is with, in the city was the only word coming fom Ihe slate prison. The report from 1 lalsey tluit two men, believed to be the con victs had stolen an automobile there, -was investigated by Ward en Jim lwis. IJUle credence to the belief the cifr was stolen by the convicts was given. The search by prison guards and officers con tinued. Police officials through out the state have been supplied with description and are on the watch. - KLAMATH FAUX. Orn.. Jan 31 Two men wore nrrot'd nnd ii 60-Kiillun liquor mill m.lwd ut Fuir Acr". n KUliurh, hero l' (Iny. Fift.n Billion of liquor nn.l ?ix Kallon of mash wero f.iiiiul. J. fi. Hull nnd A. K. Thomp kins woro takon In tho raid l'-d by Sheriff I,. U Low. The mm were HvinK In a tent Willi n l.onrd floor. A trap In thi floor ai dln (OVrcd. nnd n ladder I. d down In to n larno pxrnvntlon nlnr- f"t hifih where the Mill win lielnc op erated t.t raplHlty. Venlwon. nl.-u, found In the tent. I. AS PA I-MA Canary Ittlanrin, ,T0. SI. V -The Vierman wa ll;ine Io-X landed in thn harbor h"r at .V.ln f m. (10;10 a. :n.. US.T) BUSINESS AREA PROHI B IT! 0 N CAMP HORRORS SWEPT BY FIREiENFQRCEMENTjEMBARGO BASIS ! I 1 VENISON, BOOZE SEIZEDJN RAID ! n ' y.ZZ : I r y. ... 3,4, 228 KILLED IN Ten Officials And Eight Civ- ilians Slain In 1930 160 of Victims Suspected: Lawbreakers Mo Com-j parison of Data Possible. WASHINGTON, Jan. 31. P The killing of nlno persons in the. line of federal prohibition en forcement duties in tho past seven months was announced today by Prohibition Director Woodcock. The total of fatalities resulting fro m federal enforcement since January 16, 1020, was officially placed at 228. Newly HO of those killed were suspected law breakers. Five of tho deaths since July were of federal dry agents. During the fiscal year 1030, ten prohibition officers were kill ed in line of duty, and eight civil ians died as a result of enforce-, ment efforts. No complete com parison could be afforded as to whether enforcement killings have decreased, since the latest figures , cover only seven months. I WASHINGTON, Jan. 31. (A) Capture of the Canadian rum run ner Josephine K. by coast guard patrol boat 145 off New York last Saturday night resulting In the death of her captain, was upheld today by the coast f,uard hoard of investigation. LR.1 j NKW YORK, Jan. 31. (JP) (Several hundred communists t- tempted to march up the broad steps' of the powtoffice in Kighih j Avenue, across from Pennsylvania I slut ion today, but were prevented . by police. They wero proles) ing 'the re f u sa 1 by postal a ul horit I es I to accept communist publications j for the mails. Members of the Young Pioneers, i the junior communist organization, land of several unlonds of the I needle traden participated. Their ' parade was shunted off into n side street and they were dispersed. AIDE KILLS SELF IIKI.I.I.VOIIAM. Wah Jan. 31. (fl' John K. Sal.-r. flrrt asMlMaiit caiihler of tho Anieriean Nalloiuil hank heie. who. offlilaU Hl.id, misaliproprlated liank fiilidH to tatiiig almost IJIM.O, Fhot anil killed himself today. Sat.-r, an employe of tho hank for 23 yearn, had worked up from messenger to the position ho held nt the time of his death. The wid ow nnd n (laiiKhler survive. 1IAST1NOM, Kng. Jan. 31 . 0, One hundred twenty girl 'f tho (xr-tufilve Mattle Abbey n hofd fbd bre dawn tday fiom a dnrml tnry whli h w.ih de-droyi-d hy fire. No nnf Kim Injured hut the hin torie AhhotH Hull, part of Haltle Alibf-y.- datlnit bai k tn William the Conqueror, was d.'troyed. SWEPT BY FIRE SOVIET PRISON Lumber Price Secondary In Effort to Disrupt World Market, State Depart- I mnnf TrJr. Tariff Rein nielli iuiu i ui in whm Strongly Urged. WASH 1N ITON. Jan. 31. lV Kye-Witiiens descriptions of deaths, dyentary and deprivation visited upon thousands of convicts in UttWdnn "'timber -ert'miwv- were-'itttd before the state department today in the form of affidavits. Conditions in the soviet prison camps of the great forest district were described by i 0 em'aped convicts. tiatheied by a special investiga tor of the National Lumber Man ufacturers association, the affi davits were submitted as proof of the use of prison labor in soviet lumber production. Cuder existing tariff law the importation of competitive goods is prohibited If produced by con victs, and half a dozen moveH have been made to exclude llus sfan goods under this pi o vision. Kcprcsenuith e KlMi. Republi can, New York, named a com mittee of houso members today to visit the treasury nnd urge an embargo on Russian lumber. All of them human interest doc uments, the affidavits tmbmilted by the lumber manufacturers tes tified to conditions ranging from "food so b;td Ihero was dysen tery throughout the camp" to the dying of l.wiO prisoners from ty phus In a single group and 2 deatli - sentences for failure to complete an allotted daily task Carl W. Rahr. the investigator who gathered this tentimony con tended the Kuropean market al ready had been disrupted by fov let ennvict produced labor due to sales in which "price 1h a secon dary consideration. He added that Russian production plans called for an increase of 22.onn.nrjn.o0O hoard feet in l!t:!3, as contrasted with the prodiution of n.TiOO.OOO, HOO in lf2!l. The Noted Dead PORTLAND. Jan. 31. M'r Charl.-M N. IhiKKms. meniher of the lorl of t'ortland clnunlHslon, died at hiH home here lat nlKht. lie hud l.een III a month. HtiKulns was lisso. -luted with Hie f.ohhs & Mllrhell Lumber op erulloiiH and was vl.-e presldenl of tho Valley & Sllelz railroad. SALT I.AKK ' IT V , Jan. 31. l,Vl Mm. Zell:l Yoiiiik Card, 0. next to Ihe oldest livlne da.iKhter of HriKham V ik. the .Mormon pioneer lender, died here today he inuse of Ills lneidc.il to aid alio. Mm. Card was horn In lUa", the ilniiKhlei- of Zena I. Yo.inK. In 1 KK.'t, wilh her hushand, the late CharleB H fnrd. he went to I'nrdslon. Albert, I'anada. anil served i president or the Cana dian Vounn iJidles Mutual Im provement soelety of the L. H- -chureh for HI yearn. rollTLAM), Jan. 3 1 . (fP) A Htronx-man thief today carried awiiy lx Holifl hrawn port-hole rov ers from nn eimine and marhlne works here. Knrh wefhR 70 pound. Thy were valued at 3i npiere. W A H H I N f T ( N . Jan. 31. (Pj The repnrt or the const guard honr whh h Inquired Into the rnp tnre of the r'nnadlan rum runner Josephine K tftdiiy exnnernteii the rnft- ttf the p.itrnj bo.t 3(f rong- doing. hurl msmm chance ilNW RA LE Dry and Wets In Congress! Fume Plot Scented To Capture Both Major Par ties 4000 Legislators All That Voted On Prohi bition. i I- WASHINGTON. Jan. 31. (VIV- ! The lemncraiic party was warned tmla.v that its dry members will resist any attempt lo make the party w in a Hare of prohihi- lion debate that swept h-nh houses of congress. The warning to the Democrats came from the newest Democratic senator olina. -Morrison, of North Car K e present iiti vo Lehlbaeh, Hp publican, New Jersey, asked In t the house that congress consider his resolution to eighteenth amendment peal the Ho baaed his demand on the Wickersham report. I Morrison's statement was inspir- cd by attaeks on prohibition from ! Senators Ty dings. Democrat, Mary land, and Itlaine. Republican. Wisconsin, in w h I c h .Senator Walsh, Democrat, Massachusetts, . later joined. The senate debate took place on the motion of Senator Howell, Republican, Nebraska, to resume consideration of his bill to provide J a rigid prohibition enforcement law for the district of Columbia. Tho motion vn not acted on to day nnd will be tho pendlnit busi ness when tho neuato meets on Monday. Lehlhach, nil ndmlnlstintlon Ilo puhllcnn, predicted that tho puny which fallH now to meet the pro hibition issue squarely "will be overwhelmlnKly repudiated nt tho next national election." SnyliiK that a majority of tho Wickersharn rolllinlssiou believed (tin- etKhtcorttrr aniuiitlinont could never he ndeqiinlely enforced, Lehlhnch contended congress "must no longer teniporlr.e.' .Morrison told the senato pro hibition would never he repealed and Huh) "I servo notice the hope of nnti-pi-ohlbltlonlsts to capture the platforms of the two great parties will nover ho successful." Ulalnn told the senato "Corrup tion touches every department of tho Kovernnient that is called upon to enforce tho law." Morrison usserted corruption in oonnciilcin with liquor traffic had antedated prohibition nnd that corruption hi connection with en forcliiK tho revenue laws before enactment of the oluhtoenth amendment was us bad us that now described. Tydi.iKS said prohibition was enacted without the approval of thoso whom It was to affect. Only 4,000 men In coiikicss nnd stato ICKlslntiires voted on its enactment, he Hfilil. "We who nro not In favor of nntional prohibition," TydinKs said, "are not yelljjiB for tho whiskey bottle, the wine Rlass, the beer koK or the open saloon. What wn nro contending Is that prohi bition oiiRht not to have been made n national question. It oiiKht to hnvo been settled by each state." DeelarlnB the drys wero not willing to take enough money nut of tho treasury to enforco prohi bition, Tydlmrs said he would voto for 1300.(100,000 for 200,000 en forcements agents so every a gem could watch every 600 or 1,000 people. Walsh said that "any govern ment which seeks to forbid tho use of something that Is not in Irinslcally bad cannot claim to he extend Inif freedom to Its people." RA.V KlEANriKCo, J,in. 31. (yP) Krom oriletn of Mujur (itneral Malin CraiKl V, h, A., rommandlng officer or Kmt Wlnrieid Srott, which euiiKglcH up against the IiIMb of Han Kmnr lKco nnd hIIh hy tho hhlnlng hlg hpr wuter of San Franrisco hay: "It has reiently rome to the at tention of thin headquarter that tunny hathem and other persona of mlffctdlant oiiH character are. parad ing on ftuker's bench (u part of the military reservation) clothed only In n V string nnd some hnth ern hnve hflen Been In the nudo. j "This practice make it em barrassing to member of the gar ilNon who habitually rido along the bench. "To rid I(n ker's bench of the j numy batherM who pnrndn thereon! clothed only In a '!' string and sometimes even in the complete nude, officer nf tho dny Willi hereafter on Wednesday. Satur day nnd Hundny patrol In person (mounted I the vlclnl of linker's h.-aeh and .ake necessary ncdou lu stop such annoying piaclii'e." .OVERBOOZE AiY PROTESTS NAKED BATHERS 1 ,T IL DUCE FUSS However, Cornelius Points Out Italy Foreign Office! In Error - His Lawyer n tt r ft 1 . Ill bays ir onarge iviane u; Is True. PHOKXIX. Ariz., Jan. 31. UP) j The silence Cornelius Vandor I bill. Jr., has maintained oveer a remark attributed to him In which 1 ; Premier Mussolini was pictured as I a lilt and run driver was broken l)rinny lmhiy in a (,M1j.u of a statement from the Italian foreign offii-o that he had nover met Mussolini. The newspaper correspondent ! declined direct comment on his meeting with II Duee, but mon- j tinned two cables from Home In 1 referring to the meeting and said "They were true.' "Anyone has only to look up newspaper files of l'.2fi," he said. "My Interview with Mussolini wa? copyrighted. It was true. The j story from Rome ot my reception ' by Mussoitnt was cupyrigmeu. it was true. With that ho reiterated his In tention to say nothing about a story related by several persons in w h i c h he wa s sa I d to have told a group of men that, while driv ing with M ussolini, the premier ran over a child nnd did not stop to render aid. The story was repeated by Major Oencral Kmedley D. Rutler in Philadelphia resulting in an of ficial apology to Italy from the : United Htntes nnd n command to Butler to appear for court mnrt- iul. V'nnderbllt referred all quest loners to his counsel, Frank C. Smith, who snld Vanderhllt had advised the stato department about the situation, Hmith said ho had warned Vanderhllt not to talk. Smith agreed that Vnnderbllt's silence might Infer that story was told by his client but ndded: "Although I nm not prepared to say whether he did or did not say it, -If the statement wero made by him you, can bet it was true." LOW WAGE DRIVE WASHINGTON, .Inn, 31. (P) The houso labor committee vlg orously pushed toward the statute books today tho udnilnlstrntion bill urged by Secretary Itouk as an emergency measure to prevent a reduction In wage levels on public buildings. The committee unanimously up proved und ordered Chairman Welch to ask a suspension of tho rules for passing of the liacon bill to require contractors to pay tlie prevailing coal wage scale to labor employed in public building construction. Tho seci-etnry of labor would be made the final .iinlgn In determining this wngo level. Tho prevailing depression nnd pressllro of tho emergency con struction program wero said by IJoak to have resulted In many Lenses of contracts going to com panies mill niive wi.iue.i 10 o part cheap labor. RECORD LOW FOR CIIICAfiO, Jnn. 31. (P) Ixiw et nrlceit In nine yeurn reunited today from new hrei.ks In the corn mnrket. Trailo reiort wild that there had heen four nionthH of prolmhly the IlKhtem. feedlnis on rerord, that this wan the third vnrniet January ever known, und that n. Inrner movement of corn to murli.it centers was In prospect. CIIICAfiO. Jnn. 31. Wl Cnt tlo BhlnmenU for beef imrpoi.es have fallen off In recent months ns prices recoiled until the total receipts for January In Chlcnuo, tho world's premier market, were only 168,000 head the fewest lnrns' bureau Is now trying to do 4 Ti years, At the same time, farmers dls-goi-KOd hORK until In spite of low er prices, the total swine rem'tilim t'hlniKO penH were l.nr.o.OOll head In tho first month of the year. This Is far nhove nveri.Ke. us only ten times since K9l have receipts for Jnnunry passed a million nous. rOHTI.ANI), Jnn. 31. Wi Helullves of James K. Cnrson, 39, of Hherwood, Ore., today nsk de police to nttompt to locate the man who has heen nilssliiK since Decemher 2 when he disappeared lie. ween Hherwood nnd linker. Hi) was on his way from Nninpu, Idaho, to Sherwood. Ills family received ft postal card from hint dated in linker Dec. scen children." lie has ' 110 EVADE E I Congress Spit By Row 0ver Reiief Fund Handlina Blame Placed On Demo crats Extra Session In June With Presidential Vetoes In Sight. WASHINGTON, Jan. 31. & Tho path of drought relief toniyht seemed to point nirainht toward the rugged moutuainH of an extra session. Senato administration leadora confessed they could see no mid die ground between the enuncia ted relief program of the demo crats nnd the determined stand taken against it by the republican house. lt looks like an extra session if the democrats are going to in sist upon it," aaid Senator Wat won of Indiana, the republican leader. "They apparently are willing to have it. The country does not want it. i accept the challenge.' Jle made the statement utter house republican leaders hud sent word they would retreat not an inch from the position the house assumed yesterday in rejecting the first and broadest point of the democratic program. In a serieH of votes the weighty republican majority there refused to give $25,000,000 of govern mental money to the needy, either through the Hed Cross of other proposed agencies. Several of the mipply biltt. un less some extraordinary procedure l resortod to. must be passed if the" governemnt departments are to function next year have been londed down with relief proposals. They are bogged deep In confer ence and many compromises must he patched together if they are to bo towed out.' - ChRlrmnn Wood of the house appropriations committee proposed today that If agreements could not be worked out before Febru ary 15 by conference committees on these proposals and the many other amendments in dispute, ho would propose a resolution to con tinue existing appropriations for another year. While such a resolution could easily be passed In the house whero tho republican majority Is large, administration leaders in tho HPnnte innUnA imnn It nm n I forlorn hope. In that brunch an alliance betwoen thedemocrats and allianco between the democrats and has existed since the days of the tariff dispute. Senator Watson said earlier he believed If an extra session were called, the president would wait until June 1, shortly before the end of the present fiscal yeitr, te call It. ''We would be In session from June 1 until the nntional conven tions a year hence," ho sold. "Mr, Hoover will veto these measures. The democrats apparently are go ing to force the extra session." F LEGION PLAN FOR CASH AS 'COSILY' WASHINGTON. Jan. 31. Veterans Administrator Hlnes to day Joined tho actlvo opposition to cashing veterans' compensation certificates, asserting any "ade quate" plun would be too costly. Hlnes was called to counsel the houso ways and means committee, considering about 60 proposals to pay cash on the certificates. He urged finding employment for more than 200,000 jobless vet erans Instead of cashing their ser vice certificates. i . It Is this group of between 200,000 nnd 800,000 men he said who need help, adding: "We should make an effort to get them employment. The vet- ton.. t iei w o niKfuiii nui jeop ardize their eertificnteti -the only security they have.' Cooperating with tho Inbor de partment, jobs have been found for 13,000. "Whnt are we to do with the 300.000?" o-ked Representative Krear, Repunllean. Wisconsin. "It la our duty to find them employment. We should renew our efforts and help them out," Mines lyilil, "without asking them to sacrifice'' . . t Weather Forvrant Oregon Cloudy and unsettled Hundny and Monday, probably light rains In the west portion; modernto temperature; gentle to moderate southerly winds off- OT A ME shore. A