Medford Mail T The Weather Forecast: Tonight and Wednesday unsettled, probably with showers. Temperature Highest yesterday SO Lowest this morning ISA Facts Not Claims Tsa fia ?;4ar 6s i, ft t etrsiaiiea, Js sstg t& Ktreeapr TTTVT Twenty-Seventh Year MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1932. 72. 17 " 1 11 ' " - . H I I I Comment the. on Day's News By FRANK JENKINS HERE Is an InterestSlng sign of the times: Homestead filings at the D. S. lend office at Roseburg, since the first of January of this year, have far sur passed in number those of any pre vious six months in toe history of the office except, of course, in the years of big land openings. Approximately 300 filings have been made on homesteads since the first of the year, and 28 have been made since the first of June or more than two a day. MOST of these filings, the clerk of the land office Bays, have been made by men who have Incomes that are too small to enable them to live in any degree of comfort at all in the cities. Since fcey are nnaWe to secure employment to heip out their small incomes, they are getting back to the land. Almost without exception, they plan to keep a cow and a few chick ens, and grow a garden. TWO of these homesteads have been taken by ex-service men who are drawing disability pensions. They have been ordered by their physicians to live at a high eleva tion, so they are taking up land on the very summit of Burnt mountain, in toe North Umpqua country. They are hoping that the bracing air of the high country will bring back their health, and at the same time they are expecting to secure their food from the soil. Everyone, this writer Is sure, Joins in hoping that they mBy find both .health and happiness. SHELTEK, .. food' 'and . clothing these are the primary necessities of life. In times of stress, such as these, those whose homes are close to the soil find It easier to secure these prime essentials of life than those whose homes are in the great cities. Observation of this fact is turning people back to the soil, after years of crowding into the great cities, and when tee world returns to normal and people again have courage to make plana for the future we shall see a more active demand for farm lands than we have seen for many years. ... AFTER two years of struggle? that has cost IS Uvea and the loss of two ships, divers working from a salvage vessel bring up 443.000 in gold from the hulk of the sunken steamer Egypt, which went down off the coast of France in 1923, carrying five million dollars in gold to the bottom. Burled treasure I What a lure It has! How many lives tee search (Continued on Page Eight) G.O.P.1932.. PTt: I i , i j f j r-r .;vL,r '"1 With h Hoovnf nomlntlon vlrtmlly Muri, th eouBtry" rpubt!cit ider Jtire4 In Chlejao to ftrmln a court, on th wt nt dry quertton "I m prton!Iy dry." id 8tBtof F n omffetf drlnlc o wat.r Out thr ir Moov.r opponntt B.Iow it ormf Senator Joto& t Franc ef Maryland a tandidat wh won't Siv. up until th votea ara counted Mra. Bertha 6aur al liimsia wait fthil Hi Ateia 1 iiSS 8f Inttruetton to wpnsaii (!tst vitt th tjhpnf ASKS CORRECTION OF STOMAL CHARGES IN PAPER Accusations of Coercion and Influence in Deliberations Denied by Hibbard Says Oath Was Observed Joslah G. Hibbard of Butte Falls, foreman of the grand jury for the May term, Monday issued & sweep ing statement, emphatically denying all sensational charges and allega tions contained in written attack upon that body by . A. Banfcs. news paper publisher. The statement was formally presented to Banks with the request that It be printed, and a correction of "mis-statement" be made. Foreman Hibbard declares that "you accuse the grand, jury of vio lating their solemn oaths of office, and adds that this, and all other impertatlons are baseless. Without mentioning any name, Foreman Hibbard refutes and re sents the serious Implications con tained in an editorial written by Earl H, Fehi, and published under the Continued on t-age Pwo) STATE-WIDt FOR UNEMPLOYED RELIEF PROPOSE!) SALEM, June 14. APJ All coun ty judges in Oregon as well as repre sentatives of industry, labor, wom en's clubs,, service organizations and civic groups over - tha state. - were named a state-wide committee to consider unemployment relief. Gov ernor Julius X. Meier named the or ganization last night to systemati cally plan elimination of suffering during the coming year. The first meeting of the committee was called by the governor for next Monday in Portland "with the idea that mobilization of Oregon's bounti ful resources will take care of the situation in en adequate manner." In a brief statement announcing the more to handle the unemploy ment situation this coming year the governor said "Oregon has not suf fered in the least as regards her ability to produce foodstuffs, Ko drought or flood has destroyed its power to produce food for its citizens. "It remains for us to utilise our fields and orchards to raise necessary grains, vegetables, fruit and berries, storage, canning and evaporating fa cilities to store away these foods for the winter months. Our registered unemployed can be utilized fo what ever labor la necessary to plant, culti vate, harvest, store or distribute these crops from the field to the needy home." Oregon Weather Unsettled tonight and Wednesday probably showers; cooler in the in terior Wednesday; moderate change able winds offshort. Rum, Vice Presidency Problems RES11SS PROHI LAW Li AS 0, 0. P. PLANK Administration Leaders Pre dict Success After Con- suiting President Hoover and Spokesmen for Drys CHICAGO, June 14. A P) Representatives of the liberal dry element In the Republican party privately spoke iate today of an agreement upon a resub mission plank satisfactory to the administration. By FRANCIS M. STEPES'SOX - Associated Press Staff Writer CHICAGO, June 14. (AP) Admin istration Jeaders intent upon defeat ing the forces of repeal by drafting an acceptable plank calUng for re submission of the prohibition ques tion today predicted success was just ahead after consulting the White House and spokesmen for the drys. During the morning they com municated by telephone with Presi dent Hoover's aides In Washington and called in Daniel A, Poling, head of the Allied Forces for Enforcement, and other prohibition leaders, to in espect the tentative resubmission pisnk already drawn up. Revision in Order Subsequent events Indicated revi sion was in progress. Secretaries Mills and Hyde of the cabinet poured over the issue with James R, Garfield, the president's choice to head the resolutions com mittee. A final agreement and ap proval by the president was expected before the committee goes to work iate today.. , . . - - Beaching the stadium from to prohibition conference -room long af ter the convention had opened. Sec retary Mills said wearily; "I donl think a real solution will be found until the committee meets, L'p to President Nevertheless, the departure of Mills together with Secretary Stimson from prohibition parleys indicated a final draft had been found subject to study by the president during the early afternoon. The fact that the cabinet members have taken over the prohibition job was accepted as showing almost cer tain presidential approval of tenta tive resubmission plank. . T,b powerful Pennsylvania delega tion to the convention today adopted a majority report of its special reso lutions committee calling for "resub mission of the iSth amendment by congess to state conventions." The roll call vote was 49 to 15. The delegation also adopted reso lutions calling for immediate modi fication of the Volstead act and for a federal law regulating the sale of liquor in i&e event the 33ih amend ment is repealed, SAN FRANCISCO, June 14. APJ A slight earthquake was felt by residents here at 1 ;44 a. m. today and at San Jose, where the movement was reported quite pronounced- I0N0F Fess of Ohio Poars Hinaelf a Drisk of Water ExSenator France Would "Stop Hoover" Mabel Wiilebrandt Is Besieged With Queries on Dominant liquor Issae Keynoter Lester Hckiason Arrives With Black Bag West Virginias Heads Women's Convention Program Republican Keynoter Silent on Prohibition Lauds Hoover Regime Sen. Dickinson Calls for Re-election of President as Move for Restoring Normal Conditions in U. S. CHICAGO, June 14. fAP In a keynote speech entirely silent on the thorny prohibition issue. Senator It, J. Dickinson of Ica called today for the re-election of Herbert Hoover as a "dependable means1 toward the res toration of "normal conditions." His address at te opening of the Repua Scan convention called moved by the president to meet the depression "bril liant." The Democrats were severely rapped. The farm board was defended and the Republican party was called the "undevisiing friend of ins farmer. The Smoot-Hawiey tariff was de- scribed as a bulwark against cheap j foreign products and the nations defense and foreign policy of the ad ministration were praised. The forceful white-haired lows He- publlcan told the delegates assembled in the huge, flag-decorated stadium that there could be no "greater pa triotism"' than the employment of every effort for the restoration of normalcy. Prevented Panic Senator Dickinson said Mr, Hoover was at "grips" with the depression before the country as a whole real ized what it faced, "His first act prevented s Jinan- i cisi panic. he said, adding that the chief executive invoked federal re-i serve board powers to cushion the effect of the stock market debacle. Conferences with industrial and la bor leaders Senator Dickinson said. prevented the bloody disturbances which have attended o&her economic crises. Then were reviewed steps taken "against depression on a hundred fronts.' Among them were Hated the formation of the national credit as sociation; erection of the reconstruc tion finance corporation and a "de termination that & balanced budget was the first essential to economic recovery Castlgatiott for Hems Mention of the tax hill was a pre lude to csfitigstion of tha Democrats. "For two long years they hampered ; the president at every turn," the; Iowa senator said, "Through a high- j ly subsidized pre bureau. Demo cratic leaders sought to distort his! every word; to belittle his every ef-j fort at human and economic relief; ; to impugn his every motive; to true-1 trat his every move. Their orders; were to 'Smear Hoover. Democrats in the house, Dickinson i said, foiiowed Mr, Hoo&er for a time last fall because they had eg po-; gram of their own but finally they: broke away. The Republican key- j noter said the result was the wreck- j ing of the economy bill and a flout- i ing of the party's own leaders. tiarner alii Flayed The relief proposal by Speaker Gar ner of the house which already had been lambasted by the chief esecu- tlve as a "pork barrel" measure was; assailed by Dickinson, He charged also that measures sponsored by fcie Democrats threatened to debase the Continued on Page Three JOi'riiW fKA.. i-liJ I II h .S JXi Maliat W!kr WilrtSsranit, CaHfornia 4alsat-at-iars, tirt hsti t" nuariat en tha tfomfnam juaf qaaatisn Saeiua at nr ormr pl tten aajiaiant ttrny stnara! f iht Unitta Stt in thr$ p linuor proKtutiora. Sht it shattinj witii Mr. WHm ineSi !- Vta, fitttcet &m!S&tt wofcta from Ohic - By lee J. Smith Associated Press Staff Writer, . CHICAGO June 54 ?AP Group ed la a line in the front section of the mammoth convention haii, si most directly st the foot of in speakers platform, the Oregon re publican delegation today Joined ia a spontaneous but brief shout of ap plause when Senator 1 J. Dickinson of Iowa, the keynoter, declared it U the greatest duty of American cifci nry to re-elect President Hoover in November. Th Oregon delegation sat directly behind the California group, which at every mention of Hoover's name, hoisted a large silken Qoidea Sear banner on a long staff. While many of the delegates from other states talked among them selves or glanced through magazines or newspapers, the Oregoniana lis tened infcentiy to Dickinson. Mention of the name of Charles 3. Dawes brought a ripple of applause. With a movement afoot to advene his nams for the vice-presidential nomination, the Oregon deiegatica announced it would support such a movement. Means Convicted On Ransom Hoax WASHINGTON, Jane 1. APi Gaston B. Means, the notorious de tective, stood convicted today of lar ceny in an amazing swindle based on the tragic kidnaping of the Lind bergh baby. He faces a possible tea year sentence. Police Heads Meet PORTLAND, Ore, June 14. CAP! One hundred prominent police offi cials, representing virtually every section of th nation, had registered when the SSth annual convention of the International Association of Chiefs of Poiice opened, hers today. Death of Congressman Esiiek Foliowmg Speech, Brings Adjournment Vets Eye Proceedings WASHINGTON, June 14. A? A final vote a the cash bonus Issue was delayed until tomorrow whea the house adjourned out of respect to Representative Bsilck ?D Tean.1 who died after -collapsing on the floor In the midst of a speech advo cating full payment. WASHINGTON, June 14, A?i Under the watchful eyes of several hundred veterans crowding the gal leries, the house today teegsn con sideration of the 2,4se,sssssa cash bonus bill with passage expected be fore adjournment, Democrstio leaders served notice they intended to keep the house in session untlt a final vote. As on yesterday, when the house voted to consider the issue, the capii! waa crowded with bonus marchers. Says Sonus Licked Just before the house met. Beprs- fiContinued on Pag Eight) WASHINGTON, Jus H. A? Sensior Smoot Hv, Uttth eaid today the house and senate conferees en the national economy bill have agreed to Use Hoover furlough plan and tftsfc the measure ss decided upon carrica savings of about 3eSKSS. Senator Smoot bora $a news to President Hoover at the While Houss and made the announcement public afterward. Under the Hoover plan, voted ay the senate government employe would b furloughed without pay for a month each year or placed oa a five-day week. PORTLAND, Ore June AP The Security Savings & Trust Co. has filed suit in circuit court here to foreclose on the property of the Pacific International Livestock Ex position company. The plaintiff charges i&at the -position, company had defaulted in payment of principal and interest oa 17S0GS worth of bonds. I- 'W)!wa j.iiimnii f-..: . rawwrcEsr" 1 T itjynota tp4B trrlvti frt BSatSt britt Irem isw is B stfs fstnt J ntg. U i. Bsjjtinacjt hewtt Mrt, Oitkirmn, tni ht tppttrti ja R fsrss t teeM th mi whfes u!S iht Bias party e8 os anathar ttmptiinChittQH httt crt$f A St fesiSns sstsii4 ff Mr, tiiit A. ot a Wt Vrs!n w tt ink ta tft wmmSttt fc;srtp tit !s p a Ktawmtx s wefiwn' . Ti nl f iS 5. ?, wmn &td a pn t fijar tut te tUtita i.ifS t f St &K UmktiTtt k as Confab Opens BASEBALL RESULTS Aawrieas S. K. S. FhS!S'.phi IS I Detroit , S S9 S S. K. Cinclnnstl ,.. 5 s S Philadelphia 5 is 5 Carroll and LoasbawSl; Ksnseit. Otfciiey, Rhcn and McCurdy. V. Da Vis. second game Cincinnati R. S. a i s s ? e Pniisdeiphia- Ogdea nd ilaaioa; J. EUdtt, H. Kiioti and V, Davis, Pitisourgh at New York, St, Louis at Brooklyn,, double headers, post poised; rain. DALLAS, Juna 14. f AT -Prenk Keiler, Jr of Portland, counsellor for the Empire Holding corporaiirsn, was sentences- to fir years la the state penitentiary when he appeared; before Circuit Judge Ariie O, WalSts? ihis mossing, fie was convicted several weeks go of; devising a scheme to defraud. 5?ncn. jRoilon of Barnett Goldstein, special jsrosswaior. iade Wai-ter dismissed Indictment against J. fi Ffftty, whose trial was gstiiag under way, and WJison R, A&srss and io decided &$alas retrial of .fudge O. P. Coshow, ex-president of th cons nsny end form? naemher of the sUte suprenw court, Cosfeow's irtzZ resulted is a huns Jury. SCelieT bail a Increased frosa $1S03 fe SQ8 and ne was jtiven frora IS to 15 days to raise its saiounfc. No noiir of appeal was given, After esrefu! eoRs&leretion msuy conferences, the coneiusion tvss reaches that it v nest to k ; for the jfismisssl of th indictments agsinsi $hs two renssfnins defend-; snis an !se retrial of se O. P Ceene. Attorney Goldateiu tlS the court. The eonferenr tvs at tended hy S. a Winkle, temeyitenerali James W JSott, state corporation sonsnsijwioner; Jolm Car- sob, Marlon county district attorney, and nijjsself. Dismissal of the chars? against ietty, Adams and Cosnsw Is no bar i& their prosecution by the law en foreensent authorities of Jackson, Douglas or u&nooish county where the hulk of sales of nsnire iiwr: took pise, or by the jjoemsieat fsri violation of tls msii fraud statutes,! which were similarly involved. TEOSOIQAIPA, Hondufa. June I $APj All the hanana Elanistione la the Suifc vsiiey between Chasnele con and Bsn Pedro were destroyed last night by a. hurricane. ..Wet or Dry i MAIN INT Oulet and Dignity Marks Organization and Keynote Main Committees io Start tabor Later in Pay !?y Byras lrlce (Associate Freas staff Writer! CHICAGO STASIU34, June 5-1 AP While asost of Its headers struggled hefeijsd fee scenes vriia their irounies over nrofeJ&tSosi sndl the vlce'fesideaey. tn republican conveatlos met today H ogfiss in Quiet and dignifies: session of less then two isours. It heard its keyaoJwr Senator T. J Ciekinsoa of so, l&n&ex ifc iiesBocrai sng Braise a isa line of republicans froa Ltneoin to Koorer, It cheered its heroes 33Kideriely and aat to jsreoceunied aiiante as tfe temporary slste of convention offic ials WSS resit- t wnU Its hslf-fills galleries jot nsrdly a usiii srem ine vrnois snoar. Bailer riles gesalutloa The wet Am ix?? ni wwt. officially is tfce notice of tfe wsks ssBt oat hardly anyone oa. the fsoer olss Siurray Butler sent Bis famous repeal resolution is tne ness: for reference to the sslstforns conunitlee. Silently it isent into tn aocser to Tise two big coavsntSss commit" Sees, ca platform eno: fmentslsw were called t meet &t tsy. harass S, Gasffeia of Ofsio, aeass tls firstj Albert 5ef&ries of man, Jfei the Utter, Tney iH try to sepoj fconjorreiff, Tne eosveaton alsas twa Wedseedsy sessions. oa si It a, m, a4 one afe 4 p, sj. WASHfNOTOS, Juns 14-fi?w Presiaeat Hoover wa Infosmed todsy by Senator SJeNary of Oess, ta sssistftnfc Republican leaser, that a believed congress cou sours tey new. Saturday, ifrXsry, after aslf insur with tn aresiiSsnt, iola aewspsperj&en he asd expressed tne opinion tftst If th psslnlnR Sssstion mo vS oa schedule, the present sesstos cf coa- gress couid iss ended ifess wee. AMELIA mo HUBSY SAIL FOR AlERiCA paSSWssr, sSSS far i! Usttta Ettiet