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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1931)
MKDFO'RD MATTi'TRTRTrVT? Airmawm - - . ' , " .Z r . MM MJ 1 . J . r, . I WEPgQRP HSTO TRTBTTNE, SffiPFORD, iOKEflOy, THURSDAY, 25, 1931 OVERSEAS Secretary Sailing Saturday Jor Europe to Participate in Final Negotiation War Debt Moratorium Con sider French Alternative ' VASIIINOTON, Juno 2B.-(P) Secretary Htlmson said Into toduy ho wait oncouragod on the neifotl aliens fur a. reparations and war debt monitpriuro'plan o the result of two conversations ho had toduy with Ambassador. -C laud e l of France. , ' r .. y :.' The secretary at. a special' con ference wjth nowspapomen, culled to explain fhe purposes of his European trip, Raid .ho was going on the advice of President, Hoove. WASHINGTON, June SB. (P) A second cabinet, member arranged today to sail for Europo to partici pate In the final negotiations for a one-year, suspension of - Jnternaf tlonal war debts. ' ' ; Secretary Stlmson, who reoently announced along with Secretary Mellon he would spend, his vaca tion In Europe this summer, decid ed to sail Saturday on thoj Conte Grande for Nuplos. ' -' Meantime;' Secretary Mellon was changing his "vacation" headquar ters from London to Paris and a tight-lipped , silence fell' upon Washington officialdom regarding the progress of plans for carrying out the moratorium, '.The reply of France to the presi dent's proposal was being studied by Mr. Hoover and Secretary Btlm son, but; the details of - the sup posed counter-proposal' of that country We're not disclosed, . ; ' loan Proposed ,';.' Another proposal designed to relieve Germany by !the grant of a short, term credit loun of flOO, 000,000 to the Relehsbank to tldo It over to the end of the month was' before federal roserve , and treasury officials, i Those negotia tions Included also ; the Bank of England, the Bank of France and the punk for International Settle ments at Basic. ' , ; ' , Governor Eugene' Meyer,' prlof 10 a meeting of the federal reserve hoard declined to comment on re ports of the joint credit arrange ment. ,' -. u- : -. ' The credit movement Is supple mentary to tho Hoover debt plun and was regarded In some official circles as a Btep not only necessary to promote European economic lability, but also as a further evi dence of good faith In a sincere effort to remedy the ' German cfedlt situation. Favorable Onion ' . Jtfhe announcement of, Secretary gflmson that he would go ahead nthm tlmo with his plans for a trip to Europe was tnken by some Indication that the . negotiations were proceeding favorably. . The secretary said tho an nouncement "merely Indicated that 1 am carrying out my original plan and that nothing has occur red of a nature to prevent that."- PARIS, June 25. P .Andrew W. Mellon, American secretary of the treasury, arrived at North Sta tion from London shortly before 6 o'clock tonight. . Mellon was met by Paul De La greze, representing Foreign Min ister Brland, and Theodore Mar rlner, counselor of the American embassy. In behalf of Ambassador Edge.t . , - .,.' The secretary of the treasury told newspapermen ho came to Eu rope on a private trip and while in London he had received Instruc tions "to do whut I have done." Mellon added he had come to! Paris for "the same reason and I do not lenow how long I will re main." ' DIMMING : DID EGG PLANT PORTLAND. Ore, June 25. (P) The pojwtbillty of establishing a dried ,k(C plant In Portland was discussed today by E. J. Dixon, gen- tMuil mannser of Pacific Co-operative Poultry Producers, who said his organisation in gathering data oi auch an Installation. i The move,, he wild, was prohipted by the Increase In the duty on dred eggs, of from 18 cents to 27 cents a pound. Tht plant, Dixon jiuld, would not only eliminate com petition from the Orient hut would tnke care of the frequent surplus of egK here. Success of such- a plant, he doclarcd, would 'be as sured by the demand from confec tioners ana bakers who, now buy from China. ' Hurt In Boat Race ; Post Is First of ; One-Eyed Pilots to Cross Atlantic LIONS 1932 IE1 L GOTO K. F. AmmUVIiiUU t'rtta I'lttilu t Loretta Turnbull, Citrus college, California speed boat racer, suf fered a dislocated left hip end other Injuries when she was thrown from her boat ... the intercollegiate out board regatta at Skansateles, N. V. CHURCHMEN OPEN SEATTLE CONFAB state department offloluls ns an tho volumes, 1 ; :( LA ORANDI3, Ore., June 25.- (P) Lions of . Oregon contlnuod their annual convention here to-' day with Knrle W. Hodges of New York, International president, the! principal spenker. . o Oregon wus led only by Massa chusetts In the percentage-- of growth of membership In the club, It wns reported, yesterday. Mem bership In this state Increased 501 In the puHt . year, with 17 now clubs, . . ,f - W. J. Moyor of Cottage Grove won tho nnnual g(f trophy yes terday. Mm Harry Swnrt, Port land, Mrs. Loo Wells of Kosoburg and Mrs. H. O. Cllnkey of Llnnton woro winners In the women's competition. Klnmath Falls apparently is certain of winning tho 1 1132 con vention. Lindbergh Book Gone St. PAL, Minn., June 25. (P) St, Paul public library officials to day reported the disappearance of several books written by the late Charles Augustus Lindbergh, fath er of Col. Charles A. Lndbergh. In vestigatlon has failed to uncover S15ATTLB, Wash.; June 25. P) Termed the most elgnlficant rellg lous gutherlrtg In the United States this year, 8000 leaders of the Con gregational and Christian churches were here- today to participate In five-day Joint- convention; featured by the union of the two denomlna Hons with a total of 1,060,000 com municants. V : - eonfeVi4nae',. will consider current world problems from a re llglous. standpoint and -afford churchmen "opportunity for free dlKcumion of religious problems without fenr of being unorthodox, an announcement said, i -. " ' Sun Soakers Are , Embarrassed By Airplane Peepers . - ., - ' EVANSTON( 111.,- June 25. P) And now , It's the air- plane "Peeping Tom." "' Hun-aonkere In the solarium atop tho new Yi'M. C. A. hni!e become provoked at rude pas- sengers In low-flying ulrplanes who loan out windows, wave handkerchiefs and stare with mirthful fncen. , V Bo a towel-clad delegation marched downstairs yesterday anil demanded that air lines change their courses, . . . i : 8AI.KM, June 20. (P) Oov ornor Julius U.' Meier today re quested tho Stule Highway com mission to take over the control of Chumpoeg memorial park, and to hnvo charge of the' entire prop erty. Tho state board of control now hne Jurisdiction of-the park. . NEW YORK,. June ' 24.- t-(P) Three-, one-eyed pilots have attempted to fly across the Atlantic, but Wiley Post Is the only one to succeed. In 1927 Francis Coll, who had but one , eye, started from France to fly to Amerl- ca with Charles Nungesser. They were never, seen again. The next year Walter O. HInchllffe, another one-eyed pilot, left England for Amerl- ca With the Hon. Elsie Mac , Kay as a passenger. They1 also were lost at sea. E DRY FAITH START OF ATLANTIC FLIGHT BOMBAY, ' June 25. (JP Ma hatma Oandhl today re-declared hUt faith in undiluted prohibition. 'If 1 were uppolntied dictator for one hour of all India," he wrote In his weekly,' Voung -India, "the first thing I would do would be to close, without. compensation ' all liquor shops, destroy all -toddy palms from which liquor U locally extracted, compel factory ownors to produce humane conditions for workmen and - open .refreshment and j-ecreatlon; rooms where work men could get Inrfocnht drinks and equally ihnoeent amtiHemet." ' ' : , Anooiatetl Prw Photo - The monoplane "Liberty" la shown above skimming over the financial section of New York as Otto Hlllig of Liberty, N. V. and Holger Holrlla, pilot, started for Newfoundland from Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Hlllig (left) and Holrlls, shown below just before the start, plan to fly to Copenhagen, Denmark, from Newfoundland, i. - . FABULOUS GOLD DEPOSIT FOUND SAYS ENGINEER Placer Deposits in Sinaloa District Return $50 Yara Typhoid 'and "fleas Prove - Barrier 16 ; Man JUAREZ, Mex. (UP)' A story of fabulous wealth In placer gold In the El Tambor, Slnoloa district. has beau brought back by Victor L.. Ochoa, southwestern mining en glneer. . ; - .' Hm renort- -waa. made v after t survey- of the properties in that district held by Manuel Llantnda, Juarez and Tla -Juana gambling tnnrwslnnnaire. Th.ro l 11115.000.000 Worth Of nnronnverori irold. Ochoa reported in the strip of territory he covered seven miles long and averaging 50 yards In width. ,,lt is all a placer proposition, and the dirt will ov- 6ri.g 50 per cublo yard, he said ' ' '. Tvillioilt Hits SlHit After working the district for seven weeks, however, operations were stopped and the mine return ed to the citizens because of typhoid epidemic. Much of the lumber, bought for the .operations was used instead to build coffins for the dead, Ochoa said. ' But Ochoa said he would return In several weeks to resume opera tions. . " ; . ' 'When I do," he said, "I am go ing to bulla concrete nouses to keep out the fleas. . You cannot sleep there for the hordes of fleas." Vast Territory The entire Tambor district, Ochoa reported, comprises 50 square miles and there are other creeks and numerous arroyos, all of which are just as rich In gold as In tho main Tambor creek vi cinity. Ochoa further states that Llantada controls practically all of the' area. The El Tambor range, Ochoa re lates, ' consists of three mountains so old ithey have reached the point qf obliteration, tionslderlng what ihelr original size muat have been. " ("Where , .these mountains have eroded." .Oohoa aald, "the gold has been leftjin dirt 'which la 50 yarda Ihipfc;' b'n the' top and sides of the mountains. The fill from these eroding mountains runs to the Pa cific Ocean." - - 'Long Neglected " For centuries, -O c'h o a believes, the pack-road - which - runs by Tambor Creek has been used from Guadalupe de lbs Reyes to -San Ig nacio as an. outlet for the gold and silver, but no one over thought of taking a look at the Tambor sec tion. ' 1 t -' Alfred ' Alaroon and Hoaplclo Torres, Ochoa said, discovered the Tambor section about six months ago. Many men.- women and chil dren , from Cosala' thewwere at tracted to the site and gathered gold. . - . Llantada, a former resident of Cosala, woa appealed to by citi zens of Cosala when the dispute with San Ignacio was at Its peak. He agreed to help out the citizens and thereafter operate the mine on a 50-50 basis, Ochoa said. Clean cotton rags wanted at Mali Tl-lhtjnA office. mm is - Vl Standard Lubrication Costs Little and Saves You Money ',"'' ' . Don't nrglrdl your rat while you are enjoying your summer motor trips. Protect it again.it dust and heat. Slandaru Lubrication and a full crankcajf of Zerolene before you start then a check-up every 300 miles, to be , sure everything; is all right that's all you need to keep chassis and engine well lubricated. Standard Lubrication saves wear and repair bills. It is thorough and systematized. It uses special Zerolrne Oils and Greases. Why take chances? Oil and grease are cheaper than bearings. Standard Lubrication coils as little as 11.00 for many cars. 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