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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 31, 1932)
Tomorrow Is Last Day to Enjoy Mail Tribune Cookins School The Weather medford Mail 1 To Subscribers forecast: Tonight and Friday proh ably showers; moderate tempera- RIBUN If rout Mall Tribune it not d limed lo you promptly, Teleuhoo !3. Oiru, open until 7 siery ,,ning. l'le call ui bdnn that tlm, ana ropy will h delivered to your home Highest yesterday Lowest tht ntnrntnt: Twenty-Seventh Year MEDFOliD, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1932. No. 8. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS THE American dollar sella off In foreign eichsnge an ominous sign In the financial sky. The NEXT DAY the house of rep resentatives, where tax legislation must originate, pledges Speaker Gar ner that It will reatore to the revenue t;U "some taxes by which this coun try's financial Integrity may be main tained." IN A real emergency, you see, states- ship rises above politics even In election years. etnt ASHLANDWDINQS tells us., rpiKE Abnututu " soundly enough, that Instead of levlng new taxes to balance the bud jet congress might try CUTTING EXPENSES. That la fine until the board of army engineers, in lt desire to help congress CUT EXPENSES, recom mends AGAINST Improvement of the Crescent City harbor. THE troubla la' that there are many communitiea In tola coun try, and every community has been wanting something done for It by the federal government and de manding of Its congressman that he GET something done. Speaker Garner, Is opposed In principle to the sales tax. But In the present national emergency ANY tax Is better than no tax at all. COKING at the other side of the I olcture. Senator Borah put it rather well the other day when he said that the sales tax. which would be rather painless In Its operation, would provide congress with the ex cuse to go on spending money reck lessly. Instead of turning In and cut ting down expenses. Th, cynic, however, will wonder U Borah would feel that way It cutting down expense Involved doing -without something that IDAHO WANTS PROBABLY the' 'nearest approach to a popular tax la the gasoline tax here In Oregon, which Is paid more or less painlessly and whose proceeds go to pay for something thst people wsnt. The gasoline tax Is a sales tax BUT the gasoline 'tax Is peculiar In in Ita operation. Its proceeds go to pay for maintenance of highways, which everybody wants. In addition, the better fclghwayat that a:e made possible by means of the gasoline tax reduce the cost of operating an auto mobile, so that the user of the hlgh-w-aya, who pays the gasoline tax. la really out nothing at ail in the long run. Wouldn't It be nice 11 aJl taxes were like that? POST-EASTER storms shriek up and down the North Atlantic coast. We resd: Northern New England was speck led with automobile, stalled In snowdrift several feet high. Many communities In New York and Penn sylvania were Isolated. Schools did not keep, telephone poles toppled, bluebirds met death In freenng winds, snow and lain." rmi.E of tiie Pacific Coast were experiencing i winter than the much tolder and wetter average, the Et was enjoying balmy e(her, with temperatures aa high octaelonilly as 10 In the ml'.fl! of winter. One extreme, they ssy, follows an other, and now t!-. East, alter an extremely warm winter, Is jetting sa extremely cold sprltig. The weather man la ape to be Impartial, in the long run. a . N O ONE, of wiw, wlihes the East ar,r hsrm. But 1. sa a result of a warm winter followed by a freez ing sprlcg, the fiutt crop of the East hould. be a f!!u:e we of the Pa cific Coaat would accept the h.gher fruit prtcea tfcat would follow and be vaaukful for" our good fortune. Sucb Is human nature. HOPE TO RESCUE IAD FROM SHAFIIs F1CKXR, Ot:a.. March Jl V- A 1 ui cry heard n,:n v after S p. m 4 vssy pund on wvrKrs who we'! e.T.ic.'iig a ehft is as e'fort to r t.br-ye.r-oLd b?y SO fee: ' t':'-n 'iUO'tvA CT.i. a: ; Ki7 Ara had auS tc H-n ae-- T FALLS 200 FEE!; SPERM Mrs. Carl J. Rasmussen Badly Injured in Tumble From Red Blanket Cliff - In Local Hospital Falling a distance of 200 feet i down a ttMp cll(f OTer Rfi Blanket; falls, out from Prospect. Mrs. Carl I death late yesterday afternoon. Her "ft shoulder waa broken, her spine fractured, and face and hands badly cut by contact with the rough boul ders, one of which checked her fall at the foot of. the canyon. She was brought to the Sacred Heart Hospital about 6 o'clock last night. On the floor above her. Mr. Rasmussen la also receiving treat ment for a broken back, which he received In a minor accident at the California Oregon Power company project at Prospect about five weeks ago. Mrs. Rasmussen will undergo an operation for correction of her shoul der injuries tomorrow morning. If her condition has improved suf ficiently to permit It. Dr. L. D. j Inskeep. attending physician, stated today. Mrs. Rasmussen was enjoying the view of the falls with a neighbor yesterday afternoon when the acci dent occurred. She was peering over the edge of the cliff when ber foot slipped on a rock, throwing her Into the canyon. The neighbor's husband brought her Into Medford Immediately. Ar riving at the Sacred Heart hopslul. she insisted upon walking from the car into the hospital, obviously fall ing to realize the pain of ber Injuries at the time. AS WASHINGTON. March 31. (AP) Legislation to permit agreements be tween producers In the oil, gas and timber Industries with a view to con trolling production and avoiding waste, waa urged before a senate committee today by Secretary Wilbur. Insofar as "natural resource In dustries are concerned, he favored the Nye bill to enable the federal trade commission to approve agree ment adopted by an Industry and give them legally binding effect. The secretary of the interior added some provision should be included requiring the agreements become In operative If it produce coercion on a member of the Industry or result in exorbitant prices to the public. President Hoover In .his annual I message recommended concress con- alder changing the anti-trust laws along this line. In answer to a question from Sena tor Sterwer Ore.), who also is keenly interested In such legislation. Wilbur said the povernment has a direct interest In controlling produc tion as an owner of enormous quan tities of natural resources. Steiwer proposed an amendment which would more emphatically be stow upon the natural resource in dustries the ripht to make agree ments for controllirtg production. Raying If this were incorporated he would drop a separate measure in troduced by him to atrcomplish a similar end. T By An uprising led by the students tc j the Go'd Hill schools to oppour ac tion taken by the board in hiring j the teachers It the coming year, was ' reported here toduy. The reaction of the p'jpiii tie first of the veefc took ! the form of a walkout. A meeting of . taxpayers of the district was held j last nipht in an eflort to un-agie the difficulty. An inMruct:, et pertally fsvorefl by j te student body, lias not been re tired, is Uj story, and tr stuocti are demsnc:nr a reason for this ac tion from tb oard. j Pinchot Refuses To Enter Oregon i K A R F. . B IT-G , Pa March tl.F Governor Piacnot today he fc iecrapid State Senator J. . Ben- Port'iand. Cre.. tat he woud h;s tame to be ued tr OrrpOB Jtpub;cas p-etiidrctial p-e:e:en:.ai pr.may etectii. Britain EnjO'S Qt La C J Oilgflt OUrplUS LOKDOF Urg- Marrt t;. -Ff j A sirp:is of ?ouni ': ,BW - : 'XA at pe.f ed or. tte bi-.fc of i 1 1.;'""! tC:r.rnrr, v-.-cr t the ; INTERMEDIARIES . c It! X W; Jt :J'--rJ,f i -A .associated Prca, Photo Rear Adm. Guy H. Burrage (left), John Hughes Curtis (upper right) and the Rev. H. Dobson-Peacock, all of Norfolk, Vjl, were re ported to be negotiating for the return of the Lindbergh baby. SOLDIER BONUS LIKELY TO PASS E IS VIEW WASHINGTON. March 31. IJP) The bill calling for two billion dol lars In full payment of the soldier bonus has given congress, already oc cupied win the effort to balance the federal budget, another problem to solve. Party leaders aay the bill Is likely to pass the bouse, and possibly the WASHINGTON. March 33. () Representative Pish (R- N. T-), on leaving the White House today, aald he had Informed President Hoover he believed the posilbillties of the adop tion of new bonus legislation by the house had been shunted aside by the chief executive's recent statement op posing such legislation. He characterized proposals by Rep resentative Patman f D.. Tex.) and Rankin (D Miss.) that new currency be Issued to mske new bonus pay ments as "too absurd to discus." "I understand the secretary of the treasury nas suggested if such notes are issued they carry the picture of Representative Patmsn on one side." Pish said. My amendment would be that they place Rankin's picture on the other side." Fish said he had told the President It was his opinion that over one-naI of the veterans in the house were op posed to additional bonus legislation.: adding he believed thst "any attempt to approximate I2.400.000.000 for this purpose in the present nationO emergency would knock tiie props 1 from under the entrjoergonr eta oa from under the entire program of na tional economy and would destroy economic confidence." T PORTLAND. Ore. March so. (AP) Members of the Orecon dfiecatlon In congreas today expressed disap pointment over the Columbia riier protect, according to a special dis patch from the Washington, D. C. bureau of the Journal. Tiis report submitted by the war department recommends an expendi ture by the government of ti6,.100, 000 Jnr locks in propoe dams, pro viding pfwer compfcnie and "local mtr.refiw" spend 3i'D.OC0.900 to build the dams. They eisatrreed with the Idea that 0eveinpmer.t of the Columbia should depend on private capital or utjt and local r' I nrt undeT t?:e water power art," tiie dispatch arid. SUICIDE M EM CAKLAKD, CaU Marrb SWfAPi Tbe body of a mar. iflfnufied from carti as Henry T Wagner, 46 for merly of Bote! WiT.arf t Klametb Fa '.it, Ore., and Crtvaett Cal,. was frmnd last mcht in the rear VJ tne Oatiand auditorium. He had been ehoT, trimugh tiie le't cherrt. A gaa lev at his sifie Polirr er.rtrrsed belief tli man had corr.n.::tC puicoe. l-Hf fund on Mattes. POTTUKSD, Cn .. Mart h ti. KP a riTotinttai to le"rr a special tea to raise tT.V.WH) 3tw relief of Muit.no- jtihJi count y a mcij?e:rt :iierr4'iOved wil.- he jnmiTt on the Me priifari tts'iru here, it wm ceciaed It elites- IN BABY HUNT BY CLUB UN j SHANGHAI, China, March 31(P) Animosities between Chinese and PHILADELPHIA. March 31. (AP) j.panese civilians, which had been Mrs. Walter C. Hancock, proml- ! dying down considerably, were stirred nent club woman, who aaya heDew till anoon n a crowd ... ........ 'oI Chinese ru.'lhun attacked and ee- was visited by a woman who be-1 , , z vu.u Inously Injured a Japanese who was lleved she had s good Jue to the J walking down Edward VII atreet in kidnaped Lindbergh baby, said today j the heart of the settlement. the Investigations being conducted b Philadelphia police might tajte, a week or two.. " , f Mrs. Hancock, the wife of a oosi ' dealer, said she was not at liberty j to give the name of the woman, j "She la not sensational and has no oesire to capitalize In any way on what she knows of the case," Mrs. Hancock said. 'She is certain from the actions of certain people she knows that the baby la in Philadelphia, or nearby, at least. The detectives are running dowa her clue. NORFOLK, Va., March 30. (AP) (Continued on Page flie) COLLEGE RADIO GETS Fl SALEM. March 31. (AP) Elate ' departmental heads late yesterday ! To''d to oontri bu t approxlms teiy 6000 necessary to keep the radio station. KOAC. at Corvallia in opera tion until July 1 at which time tiie state board of higher education will operate It under a new budget. In return the state groups will ue the state college equipment f'T broadcasting educational and In forms ttve reports. f jae action was tafcen at a meet- j lng called by Governor Julius L. ! Meier after President W. J Kerr of ; the college stated tiie fund were ! highway relief program, now employ required to keep the station opera t- j lng 80 men. Distribution of this work lng and thus not to lose its position 1 to care for 43 additional laborers on the air. each week, however, at this time ap- pears practically Impossible. 7'Foot Sturgeon Landed By Angler PORTLAND. Ore.. March 31-'APi i Like other fishermen. Alfred I ! Plrkthom has told of the big ones that got ewsy. Testerday st events overshadowed the , fiast fcr hitw for ,he landed with hand ta'-kle. a sturgeon that met- ; ured 7 feet 1 4 Inches aud weighed , 16H pounds. 1 Oregon Wea titer. Ram west portion and probab.'y locJ shavrrs east portion tonigb t and Priesr; tnoderate V'rr;;cn' ure Iwh vo strong aoutheriy wiiidt offshore- Cops Disguise Too Good Masher Gives Him Kiss AX7KORA. in March SI. f'AFi N'.boflv can s'al a kiss from Pait'je- man Ion.d F. Curran and get away with It. Easing toaeed aside his cigar. t earned Limself in a womat t ionr cioak and aanntered fiown one o' the cliy's aliatiowirO atrw'-a. Cm hi net. Ftcjio his band swung wo- mans haiidrmft. Hr vored tir 0 capture tbe man beiie-yefl re:oiia'b.e lor .tctitnf SO purne in 80 oays xtt know wi;v, fcvtWiW as he pbmrt a tit. wmw.-ur ,fti4 upr.n turn a bug T 1VI E SIBERIA REGION Thirty Thousand Troops, Concentrated at Vladivos-1 tok Hints Trouble Is Ex-i pccted Deport 'Whites' SHANGHAI. March 31 (AP) Def inite progress toward a settlement of the major Issue of withdrawal of Jap anese troops from the Shanghai area waa made today at the re-opening of the 81 no-Japanese peace parleys. TOKYO. Japan, Maroi 31, (AP) The war office published today an official report from Harbin which which told of concentration of 30,000 soviet Russian troops at Vladivostok and aald the number haa been in creased steadily since last January by ani va 1 of re 1 nf orce men u 1 rom Europe. Since the end of January, the re port said, soviet authorities have been confiscating the property of In habitants of the Siberian maritime provinces whom they suspected of w,hlte" tendencies. About 30,000 of these suspected "white" have been deported to central Siberia, It aald. CHANSCHUN. Manchuria. March 31, (AP The rebel Chinese forces under General Li Hal-Tains; which have been threatening this new Man churlan capital for several days ap parently had taken Nangun, 35 mile from here today, and were pressing on to the south. Large rebel force were seen In a village four kilometers sout3 of Nan gun and sharp fighting was going on. RELIEF WORK ON STATE E The Jackson county court received orders this afternoon from the local offioe of the state highway commis sion, announcing that the state high way relief work, under way In this section sine November a, will be discontinued at once for an Indefi nite period. This action Is necessi tated by lack of funds, the source of revenue lor financing of the work being exhausted, the report further state. Porty-three heads of families have been employed each week in state highway relief work here in the ro- tatlon program adopted by the court to extend the work to as many needy laborers as possible. ! Work on the Crater Lake highway ! stopped some time ago and this ! change will halt activities on the 1 GreensprlnES highway. The announcement leaves the court Is a very doubtful position re garding a solution of the unemploy- ment problem, which Is gradually roiojiiK mure m rriou, mrmoerB atated thla afternoon. All effort will : be exerted to continue the county; STATE LIFE HECEWf HALTED t'T. Msrcb 31 . yp, fce- oelvership piooeedmgs instituted yes terday a.nst the K-issoun State Life Insuranoe oompsny, which ha poi icie outetandJng totaiing 81JIO0.0U0, UW and Is the largw msurante com pasy west of t!e Misslsaippl river, had been baited terr-porsriiy today by an order of te Missouri supreme court at Jefferson City. but ure)y began to overcome Polloe- nifi n Curran. Foii'-seman Curran yelled for hop. Then be was borror rtricfcrn He leit th Imprint of Hp upon b ciieek. His etaruiae was ao good hie aseallatit had atoien klse. hi'.'b, made htm ao angry he gamed new rr-iirtr'. seined nts opponent and QaMed Li a to the ground. When FoUoe man Frank Carroll, reepotadiiig to tlj cry for beip, rearhed tit aoent., Curran wa it ting trmniphantiy upon the alleged purse cuatcheir' head. Trie priaoner. a oeaf mute wrti-e lWSGUM aX-ittM, ltd. STOCK BROKERS E OF TAX BURDEN New Revenue Bill Will Raise $91,000,000 by Levies On Deals in Stocks, Com- modities and Real Estate WASHINGTON, March 31. W) Without deviating from the plan out- f i mp v tun mtiii mlttee, the house today laid 9 1,000, -000 of the new tax burden upon those who deal In stocks, commodities and real estate. In quick succession It adopted pro posal of the committee to put taxes of one-fourth of one per cent of the sale price of stocks upon their sales; five cents per 1100 on the sales of grain, cotton and produce on the ex change, and W cent per $SOQ on conveyances of real estate. There still waa to b acted upon a proposal to tax bond sales. The stock and commodities taxes wore described in debate a aimed. In ad dition to raising revenue, at curbing short sale. The real estate and stock sale taxes expire automatically on July I, 1954. WASHINGTON. March 81. (p, A 10 per cent tax on firearms and am munition. expctd to yield more Uian (3.0O0.O00, waa Inserted In the rerenus bill today by th house. WASHINGTON. March 31. VP) An eight per cent tax on the carry In charges of oil throuirh pipelines, estimated to return S15.000.ooo, waa placed In the revenue bill today by the house. I0GE E 8T. LOUIS. March 81 f AP) For mer President Calvin Coolldge ha written Lewis B. Tebbett, fit. Louis Insuranoe man. explaining he meant no offense when In a radio speech last October, he cautioned agtosY insurance agents who "offer to aave money for you by replacing your policy In another company." Mr. Coolldge enclosed a check for 2bW. Tebbett said hi reputation as the "leading advocate In the United State of the so-called term life Insurance policies." waa injured by Mr. Coolidge's address !n which he said the following language waa used; "Beware of the eo- lied 'twister snd 'abstractor or any agent who offers to aave money for you by re placing your policy in another com psny." The former president wis served with a summons last month at the instance of Tebbett. who also in- ti tu ted i mi 1st action agal net the New York Life insurance company. of which Coolldge was a director Tebbett aald the aummon agaluat Coolldge would be dlamlsaed April 7. but that a damage suit against t J nsu re nee company would be filed then. E W'AffHINOTOW, Msrch .iJPk new effort to obtain action by con gress on the equalisation fee and ex port debenture plan of farai relief Is planned by three national farm or ganization. Legiaiatl committees of the groups the Rational Orange. Amer ican Farm B ure.au Federation and Farmers Union re preparing a bill consolidating theee plan. Separate bills embodying the plans deigned to remove crop urpluae and bolster prices r now before house and senst ctommittiee. j The farm group want the agrlcul-; tural marfcetini: art. under a'hlcb the farto board was created, ameridd to give the board authority to use any or all of tte relief piana at It dis cretion.. T PUNTS FOPTLAICD. Ore.. Uarcb J.-fAF) F. R lurtda,rtm, manager of the Ford asaetttbfy piant here. annourK d today that tt fartory will re open within "a very short time" and gtv employment to about 1i0 men Lund train aald he experted to re deive word toda) a to the date on wli-icb operations will be euiited . FrrferenK will be giveB Vu urninr unlc Vbe cokB4rthiuT, Denies Engagement J ... I Attoeiattd Prtss Phot At she aslled for a vacation In Hawaii, Lily Damlta (above), film actress, denied she was engaged to Sydney 8mfth, New York broker, although he was aboard the earns liner. CRESCENT CITY " V"VU1W iV ' v eroon returned a verdict xor AoeniM'v' wj'h cnocoiate, tamale Die Hughe and 2ft associated pialntiiz agalnat the Crescent City Investment company and C. B. Day for Judgment for sums carving from 1928 to t25, for money Invested In Crevnt City lot and made further awards agalnat the American Surety compa ny for Judgment of 12000 and 81, 330.07. The surety company provid ed bondst for the land salesmen. The crescent City Investment com pany was not represented at the trial and did not contest the action. The question Involved waa a legal on from the standpoint of the American Surety company. There waa no dispute of facte, the attor neys eUted this morning. Tiie ju Uon for Judge Norton to decide we on of whether or not, under the Oregon laws, the surety company was liable on It bond, it was aald. The Jury, O, T. Bergner. Aahlsnd. foreman, made awards to A Id en Hushes and Arlyn Huglje for 8V28 and 840I.&Q, and to 24 other Invest or of thla city and county as fol lows, on the causes of action, with the money assigned to Hughes for ty purpoae of the suit; C. tt. Helmroth, 850; W. W. Sever In, 812$; J. B, Dobyn, 8183.2 Klmer (Continued on page fourteen) FIRST METHODIST SOLD By SHERIFF TO The Drat Metfcodlat chuich of this The aeuat, baualnf ,ub-commltte dty, a-aa aold at a sheriff's foreclosure iconelderlna; the Olaas banking re sale this morrung on the courthouse vision meaaur, acreod unanlmousl. steps, pursuant to a court order. Attorney Porter J. Neff, of thla city, acting for tle Mercajatlle-Corauuerclal Bank and Trust company of Mew York City, bid e.31,t00, the amount of tiie note, due for non-payment of bonded Indebtedneaa. It waa a formality. There were no spectator, and Attor ney Keff waa the only bidder. Tne Oolham bank la now lerai oa-ner of th, aa actuary one of the most Im posing structure. In the city. Attorney Welf aald thla morning, that negotiations were now underway for tiie granting of a lease to the First Methodist church, for a yea', and that a definite decision would be made by next Sunday. The Methodist church, located at Laurel and Main street,, wa built five years ago. largely through the effort, of Its paator, th, Kev. S. Randolph Baaanrtt. It waa bonded, and the church defaulted In lta ps.vmenta, re acting In the bondhoWere taking legal etepa. Th economic ,tre, of tli, world and nation brought th Strang and unusual fat, to the house of worship. , Ti board of truatcea aufc. mgr. gatlon had no alternative, aaa, n let "the law take It, course." The. mre bopeful a way will be found. PROMOTE IRK MARbHKJELD. Ore,, Marcb 1 AF( A bouse -to-Aouae cauvaav of every avonie In the Cows Bay CHrtrlct is Vn be undertaken at onue by tiie Oooa Bay chapter of tle Oregon Building Congrees. for ttk purpose of protuoting employment atd trade for tt building a?d allied Utdus tnea. Th plan was agrmid upon Wedtieaday- Fieflpe for a'.: kind of repair eat) ootiatruct.oD work wit! be taken. The chamber of r?otnuierue of Maralxfield acid North Bend are co-operating. Vneiup.oyu.eut in the bajr teiui. -a TO CLASS FOUADIES Spanish Dishes Feature of Today's Demonstration by Miss Heath Nursery Proves Hit With Mothers Toda,', p,Srm Tlle ,, Tribune', Kllrl,e thaulaumj. at "...re end,,,,, ,an p f . V" "'"nln """ MJ today (re , .. Z7L""1 '' d"n being nrrn r"""nt'- '"'. . .?. In "n1 """' "erer H.!lle ' itommodale the lhrg t mal)r of ahnm ere from dll,, ,, , . surrounding lounir. "Spanish Culinary By-P.tha" wer. the roadway, followed today by Mlai Heater Heath on "A Coo . Tour" at the Mail Tribune Kitchen Cbaut.u. qua belny conducted in the Moll, theater, continuing through to Mlsa Heath' lecture and demon included emDMn u X3ie-' CA' of frozen and orange marmalade. Actual count at yesterday', aeasioo which opened the three-dsy Chautau qua, ehowed that 1070 women wer. In attendsnw. Much Intereat vaa evidenced ae Mlas Heath told tha many detail, or preparing the Italian dishes, and numerou, questions wer, asked concerning the recipes. Ooora Open At 12:J0 Tomorrow alternoon, aa ycterdsy and toosy, the theater doora will be opened at 12:30 for the many valley housewives who wlah to attend thi school, and at 1 :Z0, through to cour. t,y ol the Holly theater, th. reele of " Crater Lake pictures In winter wer, shown today. ' Th, BiauaKemeat haa tut. yet an. nounced the movie feature for th, Chautauqua tomorrow, but aom, in teresting ahort subject, will be pr ented between 1:80 and o'clock. About forty children were cared for In the nursery yeatwdajr. n charg, of Mrs. Eunlt mills, and today ah. TS. .1,- ' . b jot vji, children was available thla alternoon and th, many youngstera .pem a pleaaant afternoon In th, nursery. Mother, ar, reminded to brine toy, for th, children to play with whll, they ,r, ,t ttl tnestw. Tomorrow, th, cloalng day of th, school, Mlas Heato will deavonatrat, preparation, of a continental dinner, which la International In the vartety of dlshe, Jt represent,. WAoHIKOTOW. March 1-AP1 today to make an inquiry Into the charge of Senator olas, (D Va ) that an organJaed conspiracy eaiat, in the banting community to de feat th, legislation. Ko time haa been fixed by the aub-comtnlttee. beaded by Senator Olaaa. to atart th !mt.lgat!on. The contuiittee already baa authority for the Inquiry, acting tinder reeo lutlon adopted more than year ago by the senate for study of th, whole banking aHuatloa. WILL- ROGER? BEVKKLT IIJJXS, CIif, March 31. -No matter what the ir old dumb Eoveroinent tf ici j do 1 lie "Us l.i'jvs" hate a efbeme (bat bt-at it. Now the biif binkfr have got a new "rt'kct." lustcad of V. V'wt'l? Jirect to the tw?w fina.te titiuiuu'tfeion for dough they K'tiiJ the folks that ovrt tliein. He geta it from the gor eraiueut and then pat- tliera off. That don't leave ingl aoui out tmijie huuting witi sack but the jfovernmeat; and brother, when one of those "big babies. traneJert one of hit loans o er to Uncle Kam it" not a "fro&n set," it' "irtfi fif d peraluiuion. .fcMlu. ai.MjuW VNl.vt.Saa,': '