ail Tribune The Weather Cloudy and cooler Sunday. Temperature Facts Not Claims Tou Ukt no chances on 1 B, d circulation. No cJslm made the auditor's figures tall the story. Xba Mall Trlbuna U MedforeVa Only A. B. C Newspaper. EDFORD Hlgheat yesterday Lowest yc.tcrday Twenty-Seventh Year MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, JUNE 19, 193 o r- No. 76. M M f Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS DOWN In the Tule lake country, below the dike designed to hold back the watera of the aump from the fertile landa beyond, la a trag edy. Eighteen .hundred acrea of grain, a week ago lush and green, waving in the breete. giving promise of abundant yields this fall, providing feed for the cattle and hoga and aheep arid chlckene and turkeys that In Increasing numbera are few each year In the Klamath Basin, are today I wild waste of water. rE dikes broke 'and the confined watera rushed through the break, t Inundating, the growing 'crops In an area, approximately three square miles. A few days, or a few weeks, hence, after the watera have been removed, there will be nothing there but a sour, slcklsh mass of vegetation, which will burn up In the hot aun. IP you don't thlnk'that Is a tragedy, try plowing and harrowing and aeedlng 1S0O acrea to grain In a year when money is scarce and h-vl to find and then, after yoi- Is up and waving in the win v- lrig promise of a good yield may perhaps. If you are lucky, return to you the Investment you have put into II. although no more In a bad year like this; and then get up eome morning and see all your labor and all your money and all your hopea burled under the watera that have broken through the dikes and rushed over your land. WHO la responsible for this trag edy? Practically without exception, the people of toe Tule lake baaln gtve thia anewer: "The reclamation serv ice." rjiHE people down' there put It this way: . "All spring It was known that the run-off would be exceptionally heavy this ' year, because of deep winter anowa and unusual spring ralna. Yet, knowing this, the reclamation serv ice. Instead of passing the Hood watera of Lost river through the di version canal built for Just that pur pose and permitting them to waste harmlessly down the Klamath river, kept pouring these watera Into the aump. ' "As a result, the water rose high on the dikes, putting a severe pres sure on them from within. Event ually, it rose so high that the waves, driven by a strong wind, began to batter at the top of the dikes, which are built for the most part of aoft lit, and eo they broke at the weak est apot and the watera poured through. "if th aumD had not been filled So full of water, the dike, in all probability, would have held." rit la assumed that through mis calculation of data the reclama tion service permitted too big a .head of water to accumulate Inside the ump, thus causing the dike to break under the burden, what la the answer? The only logical answer la this: The reclamation service, by divert ing too much water into the aump, CONTRIBUTED to the breaking of the dike. If that la true, the rec lamation service should bear at least a fair ahare of the damage caused "by the break and the subsequent flood. At the very least, It should rush In with money and equipment and do everything In Ita power to strengthen the remaining dikes, so that the flood may not be extended to cover other thousands of acres of growing crops. That Is only common fairness. HERE, eummed'up briefly, are the facta: The reclamstlon service, which la a branch of the government, leasee the lands below the Tule lake dike to citizens. Thus It put itself In the position of a landlord, receiving benefits from the ownership of prop erty. It Is alleged by those living In the area that the reclamation service di verts too much water Into the aump. thus contributing to the breaking or the dike and the subsequent flooding of crops on the leased land. (Continued on Page Nine) Buy Gum, Anglers, Fish Relish Chew PORT JEFFERSON, N. T., June 18 (API By gum. here'a a story. It's about fishes thst choose to chew. Two plecators fished all afternoon with worms without much luck. When the worms were all gone. In desperation they baited their hooks with chewing gum. They hsuled 'em Is continuously aa long aa the gum lasted. 1LLREI JUNE 27TH UNDER E Owen-Oregon's Former Em ployes Will Operate Plant On Profit Sharing Basis Around 150 On Payroll The Owen-Oregon Lumber Sales company, according to an announce ment made by Jamea H. Owen, gen eral manager, will start operation of ita sawmill Monday, June 37, under the same profit-sharing, co-operative plan, now In force In the logging camp of the company In the Butte Falls district. Final details of the mill operation will be completed the coming week. Workmen are now engaged in put ting the sawmill machinery and equipment In shape for operation. Manager Owen announced that only former employees of the company would be employed under the plan, and stressed that It was useless for others to seek, work by mill, phone, or in person. Around 150 To Work Between 125 and 175 former work era will be given work and when trade and the times warrant, this number will be increased. T.he sawmill has been idle or on part time basis for several months and Its resumption la due to the desire of the lumber company to provide a measure of work for Its old and loyal employes, and a chance for a "grubstake." Manager Owen said that the first train of logs from the Butte Falls area was received Friday and that the second train would be received at- the mill pond Monday. He said that the co-operative, profit-sharing plan was working smoothly in the woods and that it was within the range of possibility tf.iat a second crew would be sent out In a short time. Guarantee 60 Per Cent Under the plan the mill company guarantees the workers 60 per cent of the maximum woods labor wage, and the balance on a profit-sharing basis later. The company furnishes the equipment, In good shape, . and the workers agree to return it the same way. A contract was signed between the employer and employees, and a foreman- satisfactory to both sides agreed upon. Manager Owen hopes under the plan, that some of the unemploy ment in.uus city. and. count will be relieved. He left Saturday for Klamath Falls on business. FIVE ARRESTED IN L E In a series of ralda and "buys" last night, city, county, atate and federal officers made five arrests, and seized a small amount of liquor. At one residence a bar with a brass rail waa "knocked over," the officera re ported. The five men were .placed In the county Jail. Arthur V. "Doc" Ayrcs and Clarence R. Crlswell were arrested at the Ayrea home In the Thomas edl tlon, where the bar waa aatd to be established. At the Oregon rooms. J. F. Strout sold one pint of alleged liquor to the officera who found 13 and one-third pints of alleged liquor concealed in a clever cache. - Olen F. Jones, who has been ar reated previously, and J. W. Marr, were also lodged In the county tall. Jones sold state and federal officers a gallon of moonshine, and Marr sold them a pint, according to their reports. MICE OFFICE WILL BE MOVED PORTLAND, Ore.. June 18. (AP) George Neuner, United States at torney, announced today the north west headquarters of the United States department of justice will be moved from Seattle to Portland next week. The department's Port land office was eliminated last year. C. C. Spears, for many years an active operative, will be In charge of the office and departmental work for Oregon. Washington, Idaho, Mon tana and Alaska. An office will be continued In Se attle, Neuner said. Nation Will Dig Deeper For Tax After Tuesday WASHINGTON, June 18. (AP) A nation of 120.000.000 persons, from children to their grandparents, next Tuesday will start digging into their pocket tor an additional el. 118,500, 000 in new taxes to aid In govern ment balance Its bxulget. The IB32 revenue act, lined June 8 by President Hoover and designed to raise a total of 13.281. 500.000 to meet the government's expenses In the fiscal year, puta most of the new lev lea in force at that time. Nearly every citizen, from five and ten cent atore girl clerks to the mul timillionaire, will start contributing ! to the increased levies. They spply to a long list of articles and product, ranging from canrfr. j chewing gum and electric Ubt bulbs I BASEBALL RESULTS R. H. 10 Portland - S Seattle 3 a Bowman and Fltzpatrtck; Walters and Cox. R. 0 H. E. M!on .......-.......... 9 13 0 Los Angeles 0 0 a T. Pillette and FUcci; Sweetland, Moss, Moncrlef and Campbell. R. H. E. Sacramento . H 10 0 Oakland . ........ 3 7 0 Tincup and Wlrts; Ludolph and Bead. Second game: R. H. E. 1 0 Sacramento ...,-......-....4 6 Oakland . .............. 1 6 (Seven Innings by agreement.) Salvo and Woodall; Fieber and Gas ton, Read. GRANGE TO SEEK SILVERTON, June 18. f AP) A proposed Initiative measure providing for creation of a "bank of Oregon," to be operated by the state and do general banking business was voted by the state grange during Its clos ing session here late yesterday. Ar rangements will be made at once ro place petitions for the initiative In the field. Further recommendations of the banking commission and approved by the convention during the active business session yesterday would give congress the rlgbt to re-assume coin ing of money and that necessary cur rency be issued to transact the busi ness of the nation so "that com merce may flow free and unrestrict ed between producer and consumer." Pend'eton was voted the convention city for the grange next year. The city received the majority vote, while Eu gene received the next highest and Hillsboro third. Revising its previous stand on the old age pension matter, the conven tion adopted a resolution which urg ed a federal old-age Insurance plan with funds to be contributed equally by every able-bodied man at work, his employer and the federal govern ment. Proof of financial ability to meet automobile accident damage awards will be required of all automobile drivers In a bill which the legislative committee of the grangt was instruc ted to draw up. Motorcycles instead of automobiles for the state police and Increased taxes on Incomes exceeding 135,000 annually were among economy and tax reduction measures advocated. CAMP CLATSOP, Ore., June 18. (AP) Oregon National Guardsmen of the 82nd brigade, comprising the 162nd and 186th infantry regiments and attached unite, observed Inspec tion day here today. Major-General George A. White, commanding general of the 41st Nat ional Guard division, was the In spection officer. A full field Inspection had been scheduled, but because of an all day downpour the commands stood Inspection In their company streets, but with their equipment laid out In their tents. Ten Bodies Taken From Ship's Debris MONTREAL, June 18. (AP) With ten bodies recovered, search was con tinued today for the bodies of 15 other workmen missing since a series of explosions shattered the tanker Cymbeltne yesterday. A diver found three bodies In the water beside the ahlp today, but they were so entangled in wreckage they could not be extricated. Three Killed In Mexico Temblor MEXICO CITY, June 18. (AP) Three persons were killed an many public buildings were damaged to day by an earthquake which shook Coll ma. It was the second big quake of the month. The disturbance was felt in many parts of Mexico. to automobiles and conveyances of property. The wealthy will be the hardest hit because they purchase more of the artlclea taxed and be cause of increased levies on Income In the higher brackets. The largest part of the new duties will be upon articles not taxed since war daya. The manufacturer will pay the tax, but In a number of cases will pass the cost along to the ulti mate purchaser. These levies are de signed to raise 1451,000,000 In rev emie. The new Income taxes art aa high as those paid in 1921 with the nor mal ratea at 4 per cent and t per cent and the exemptions cut to 82,- ( Continued on Fs? four) Y L HEAR PUN JOB RELIEF Mayor Wilson Issues Call On Request of Committee Would Make Labor Agreements Legal Tender Recommendations covering forma tion of an association of unem ployed In Medford with plans for solving the immediate problem of food, shelter, fuel and other neces sities through co-operative efforts during the current emergency, will be presented at a meeting to be held at 8 p.m., Monday in the Pres byterian church. The recommendations, worked out by a waya and means committee of unemployed. In addition to pointing necessity for solution oi immediate pr Slems, also seek to provide re habilitation for as many as possible on small tracts of land or In some enterprise which would make sub sistence possible through individual effort;- The call for Monday's meeting waa Issued by Mayor E. M. Wilson on request of the unemployed com mittee. Representatives of all ser vice clubs, the county court, city council, city health unit, secretary and board of directors of the cham ber of commerce, community chest officials, officers of the Fruit Grow ers' league, Traffic association, firms and Industries, fraternal and church organisations, unemployed, and all citizens interested are Invited. The request that Mayor Wilson call the meeting was signed by a committee. Including Guy L. Ray. (Continued on Page 8even) RELIEF, ECONOMY PROBLEMS UP IN WASHINGTON, June 18. (AP) With the bonua bill out of the way and adjournment next week within easy reach, congress got a running start today on Its last major legis lative - worries unemployment relief and government economy. The senate opened debate on the controversial 83.000,000,000 democrat ic unemployment relic bill, which Its sponsors claim will provide work for the Jobless and set new blood run ning through the nation's industrial veins. In the house, the conference re port on the badly battered national economy bill was presented, prepara tory to consideration Monday, when a settlement of the disputed govern mental pay cut controversy may be reached. President Hoover began gathering from his departmental heads, in re sponse to a senate Inquiry, recom mendations for further governmental economies. He obtetned from Secre tary Mills suggestions for further re ductions of $4,367,000 In treasury funds. Adjournment plans were still In definite, but leaders were confident that the end of the session would come next week If no unforeseen ob atacles arise. FOX WAS BEAR E! WASHINGTON, June 18. (API- Completing ills picture ot the mar. ket activities or William Pox, a aen. ate banking committee Investigator today exhibited a photostatic copy of a S322.S80 check with which he said the former theater operator had been paid a profit from abort selling stock of one of his own corporations. The Investigator, William A. Oray, testified In the committee's stock market Inquiry that tie check waa made out to P. J. Hlggina, a partner In M. J. Meaian and company, but endoraed to rox In order to conceal that the latter waa In a short-selling pool of his Pox Theaters corpora tlon. POLLS OPEN AT 2 P. M. FOR SCHOOL ELECTION School election for selection of two director will be held In Medford to morrow afternoon. Th poll will be open at the high school building on South Oakdale from 2 to 7 o'clock. Dr. R. E. Oreen and Marc Jarmln, Incumbent, are the only candldatea announced' for the positions on the board. Roosevelt And House Closeted MANCHESTER, Mas.. June 18. (AP) Governor Franklin D. Roose velt, candidate for the democratic presidential nomination, conferred with Colonel Eoward M. House, pol itical advisor to Wood row Wilson, at the House aummer horn today. They met In a private dlecuwlnn which luted mora than two hour. Mutual Congratulations ,MM-tatrd Jr!s trlt-pholn ol rri'Mdrnt Hunter and I u-e-l'rtilent Curtis on the While Hnuw lawn in they were nominated by Republicans to run for re-election. The presi dent Is pattlnr "tVeeJIe," a Nnrweelnn elk hniind pel. This was the Ilrst time the president and Curtis nici alter the close ol the unicaco convention. BATES SCHEDULED FOR ARRAIGNMENT IN COMING WEEK Arraignment of P. A. Bates, IK. Poota Creek miner, on an Indict ment' alleging threatening to. commit a felony, will be made In tho cir cuit court during the coming -week, District Attorney George A. Codding said Saturday. Bates will be arraigned to pieao. and bonda will be fixed, by tne Judge of the circuit court, probably B. C. Latourette of Oregon City, who will occupy the local bench, to hear the civil action ot Nledermeyer, Inc., against Earl H, Fehl and the Pacific Record-Herald, for collection of a mortgage. Fehl filed an affidavit ot prejudice against Circuit Judge H. D. Norton. Bates Is' specifically charged: In the Indictment with "threatening to shoot H. M. Jamea with a pistol on February 25, laat. Witnesses listed on the indict ment aa appearing aa witnesses be fore the last grand Jury wore Mrs Lund a daughter: H. D. Reed. Jus tice of the peace of the Gold Hill district: Douglas H. Perry, manager of the Roaue River Qold company; Howard A. Hill, a member of the irand lurv: George W. Nellaon, dep uty district attorney and E. E. Kelly nd Prank Dcsouca. wno appear for Bates In Justice court proceed ings. The "Bates csae" waa listed by locsl newspsper as a "miscarriage of Justice," and It was freely charged (Continued on Pag Seven) CHAPTERJJLOSED One of the final chapters In the legal controversy of a dozen yeara sco over the Big Butte springs source of Mcdford's water aupply waa written yesterday when a man date waa received from the atate supreme court, directing that the appeal of Isabella Rowley against the Eagle Point Irrigation diatrlct be held In default, and eo listed In the records. Th suit was a companion action to othere Instituted by the Rowleys, and backers, against the ownerehlp of the water aupply and the right of this city to appropriate th flow for the present wawr ays. tern. Por many month It waa I controversial point In local municipal affairs and agitations. The action ha been pending In the aupreme court for seven yeara or more. FEHLM1E TO FORM APPEAL By stipulation between counsel. v.ri h whi anil lha Pacific Record- H.r.M nf thi. eitv. were given under ... .. nf ih. circuit court, until Auiuat 14 nnt to perfect their ap - i ni to the stau aunreme court, con. teatlnc the $18,000 libel verdict. oo- Ulned by Roy Parr, game wsraen of Ashland. An order granting the time e tenslon wss filed late rrlday. fehl and the weekly paper were re pre - I sented by Attorney Herbert K. Hanna, I on of hie counael. and parr by At 1 torney Allison Moulton - H,' si tvashlnctnn, D. C, the day alter TO STRIKE ITEMS IN LIBEL CHARGE A motion to strike from the com plaint, In the libel suit of George W, Nellson, deputy district attorney, agnlnst the News Publishing com- pany.and L. A. Banks tor 100,000 alleged damages, certain portion ot the complaint, waa filed In the cir cuit' court Saturday, The motion ask that In two causes of action, the phrase: "That aald article waa Intended to inflame, and did Inflame the lawless element of Jackson county" be stricken from the complslnt. It Is further asked that In tne cause of action wherein Nenaon alleges that by reason of the alleged libelous artlclea hi standing aa a lawyer, citizen and officer was Im paired, be also atrlcken. V It Is slso asked that an article in which It waa charged that "Jus tice was being trampled undor foot in Jackson county": that "an Inno cent man waa being kept In Jail," that "chaoa existed" and that "law and order haa broken down," be atrlcken. Attorney George M. Robert p peara aa counsel for Bank. 4 T CAMPAIGN DUTIES WASHINGTON. Junt 18. (API Seeking to divorce from the White House the political details of the coming presidential campaign, Pres ident Hoover announced today he would withdraw from the active drive for hla re-election with the ex ception of a few major .speeches. In a brief statement handed to newspapermen, the president asserted "My undivided attention must be given to the duties of my office." The chief executive added that In order to gain thU end, Republican campaign headquarters would be re moved from the capital to Chicago and New York. Put (State lleht ' SALEM, June IB. (AP) The atate treasurer's office today paid the bal ance of 1250,000 of the 11,000,000 loan obtained from Portland banks on April 1 of this year. It was an nounced here. Dawes Asserts Climax In Depression Passed OHICAOO, June 18.-(AP( Charles O. Dawes, returning from Waahlng ton and the prealdency of the recon struction finance - corporation, ax- ! nresaed the belief today that "we have reached the turning point in the depression." Oen. Dawea aald he came back to 1 attend to personal business, that h 1 would not discus rumors he ha to I head the civic opera, he did not know wnevner ne womu . fall campaign and he would not dls cuss politics at this time. When asked about th depression and business conditions, . howtva: Oen. Dawe wa ready with a type written statement. Lower taxes, re sulting primarily from reduced gov rnmenui expenditures, war wten F HEAV ON G. U. P. PLANK Shouse Opens Fire As Bour bons Prepare for Conclave Republican Prohi Plank Called Hoover Image ny CECH, B. DICKSON (Associated I'res. staff Writer) CHICAGO, June 18. (API An at. tack upon President Hoover and the Republican party was made tonight from Democratic headquarters by Jouett Shouse prepared to find their of Democracy prepared to find their candldatea and form their platform next week. Mr. Shouse, chairman of the Democratic national executive com mittee, in a radio speech called the new Republican platform "hedging on every controversial Issue, accu rately reflecting pretty much every thing that Mr. Hoover has aatd elnce his advent In the White House." He said the prohibition plank waa a "perfect counterfeit of the atyle and method of Mr. Hoover It can be read by anybody to accord with anybody'a Idea." Voters Resentful. "Instead of being deluded by the one man show that has been put on In Chicago under the name of tne Republican national convention, a vast number of the voters of America have become embittered and resent- rul at what they regard aa a atupld attempt to mislead and to deceive them again." Mr. Shouae la the lone holder or the newly established Democratlo (Continued on Page Pour) AS LETTERS LONDON, Juno JB. (AP) Mrs. Elvira Dolores Barney, socially proml nn defendant In the "cocktail shoot ing case." collapsed at her arraign ment today during the reading cf love lettern exchanged by herself and Thomas William Scott Stephen, whom she Is aocused of murdering. . At the conclusion of the arraign ment the court held her for trial on two charges that she murdered Ste phen May 81 in her Bohemian May fair apartment. In which a smart cocktail party had been held few hours earlier, and that a few weeks previous she shot at htm during a quarrel. The prosecution produced the bul let torn coat worn by Stephen when he was killed. Sir Bernard Spllsbury, pathologist, testified he could not be lieve Mra, Barney's statement that the pistol had been discharged while she and Stephen were struggling for It. A letter by Mrs. Barney, In which Stephen was addressed as "my darling ba.hy," read: "Sometimes when you are feeling furious do try to think of all I had to endure with J. B. (John Sterling Barnoy, American singer, who was. her husband.) Don't be too Jealous, be cause X suffered so much over that with him. It leads to all kinds of misery. I won't let you down. All my love, Elvira." GALLUSES SAVE F POWHATTAN. Kan., June 18. (AP) A pair of suspenders In the grasp of a sturdy farm hand saved Mal colmn McElhone from being awept away by a tornado last night. The force of the wind waa carrying him through the door of a bam when Oliver Whitney grabbed him by the overalls suspenders and dragged htm inside. A moment later the barn was blown to bits. Mrs. 0. A. Henry was peeling pota toes tn the house nearby when the tornado siluck. The pan was torn from her hands by the force of the wind, and set down outside without spilling the potatoes. More than a dozen buildings were destroyed by the storm but no one was Injured. tlsl to the full recovery of business, he said. He suggested, however, that municipalities presented th greatest tax problem, since they had greatly Increased their Indebtedness whereas that federal government had mate rially decreased Its Indebtedness. Small business enterprises with low overhead expense were th one Daw ea aald seemed to be showing Im provement, but he added that "In time, th larger ones must necessar ily follow." Th recovery In th depression will start from the bottom up, not from th top down," h aald, "For th real evidence of reaction we must look to th mass attitude of our people and not to the ahlftlng opinion of certain taction of it." TO Defeat in Senate Sends Many Homeward 150, 000 Sought to Impress Solons Reds Are Active ny C. P, Williamson (Asaoclatcil Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, Jun 18. (AP) A call for recruits to fill widening gape In their ranks and swell their numbers to 160.000 was Issued to night by lesders of the veteran army, disappointed and disgruntled by the senate's defeat of the bonua meas ure. The number of former aervlc men here, which has been estimated at 20,000 diminished somewhat as the more discouraged groupa refused to heed vie urging of stump speak er they remain to carry on the fight for a2.400,000,000 on their bonus cer tificates. By nlghtfalt police trucks had evac uated 300 and th roads lesdlng from tbe capital were dotted with members of the tattered army plod ding homeward. . Massachusetts Leaves ' One of the principal withdrawal waa that of the official Massachus etts delegation, headed by John H. Pahey of Watertown, who had been appointed chief aide to W. W. Wat er, the veterans' commander-in-chief. Before leaving, Fahey told tli commander he agreed with other vclerana who contended the groupa ahould "be home working for their Interests in the forthcoming election rather than anting In Waahlngton." In an effort to fill out their ranka. recruiting officer were dlapatched early today to St. Louis. Chleago, Mobile. Davenport, Iowa, Philadelphia and other key cltlea. . . Watera' laat word to them was: "Have 150,000 men here by fall." . Going Por Hecrulta . The veterans' national keadquart.' ers aald 190 men had left during. (Continued on fcage Four) WILL- ROGER? St1x?a . CHICAGO, June 17.Well,. the old Republican convention of 1032 went into either history 41. ! i o nn ml ' ur mo aMiiuun ut o iiiursauy afternoon and say, I saved my. "Injun" Charley Curtis for the. vice . presidency.' The rascals was just ready to Btab him when we caught 'em, so it's the same old vaudeville team of Hoover and Curtis. They nominated Hoover, but after a tough fight. Eighteen thousand out of nineteen thousand yelled for repeal, but the one thousand had a vote so there wasn't a vote in a carload. Curtis beat three good men, all of 'em. MacNidcr is especi-i ally a promising young fellow but he's got plenty of time. Wednesday night was a real session. . It sounded like some-, thing, but that's because there was 12,000 Democrats in the galleries. ,i Democracy and tho right of.' free speech that you hear so I. -1 A 1. . 1 ,1. .1- mucii HUUlIb UBU n BUluucn. when ex-Senator France want ed to withdraw his own name and proposo the name of Calvin Coolidge for president. Well that machine just bundled him right up and threw him into the alley. That was the real sensation of the convention.' The only way you could have got Calvin Coolidgo before that convention would have been to have it eomo in under an as sumed name. During all the ravings of the accomplishments of the Repub lican party not one mention was ever mado of Coolidge, so when Sncll and his strong-arm men stopped France and bodily throw him off, there is no pos sible cabinet job can ever, be too high for them. See you at the Democrats, where they will let anybody nominato everybody. etSlt.BliN.sskitrMKoa.taa,, ' SB