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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1932)
edford Mail T Proved Facts Count Proved circulation la A. B. C Audited circulation no guess-work about It. That la why the Mall Tri bune la an A. B. 0. member. Proved facta count. Twenty-Seventh Year MEDFORD, OREGON. MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1932. No. 183. The Weather Tonight and Tuesday (air with (round fop tonlghti not much chance In temperature. Highest yesterday M Lowest this morning 17 rlbui E Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. THERE la much talk of the candl datee, from national down to lo cal, who wlU be voted on at the elec tion In November. People axe Inter ested In candidates, because candl datea are PEOPLE. They are leas Interested In measures. BCT don't forget that on the same ballot on which you will vote for these oandldatea there will be thirteen measures. These measures will either become lawa of the atate of Oregon, or will fall to become laws, depend ing on whether or not they receive a majority of the votes caat. Many of them are exceedingly Im portant, affecting In a vital way the future policies of the atate. YOU may not care for the opinion of thla writer regarding the Ini tiative, the referendum and the re cti: but whether you care for It or not here It Is: The Initiative, the referendum and the recall have been a disappoint ment, falling algnally to live up to the high hopes that were held for them when they were first proposed In the aggregate, they have done more harm than good in the past, and not a great deal In the way of betterment of government can be hoped from them In the future. f AWS enacted by the leglalature are too often dictated by self interest, and It was hoped that direct legislation, which means legislation adopted by the direct vote of the people, would be different In this re spect. Thla hope has not been realized. Direct legislation has been dictated fully as often by self-interest as has legislation enacted by the legislatures. ANOTHER point:' Direct legislation has to be taken or left, as Is. There can be no amendment of It on the Job to cure defects. It must either be swallowed whole or not swallowed at all. nHIS, please remember. Is merely 1 the opinion of one Individual, and Is not offered with any desire to In fluence your opinion. This writer's advice, always, Is to let NOBODY make your opinions for you. Make them for yourself, on the basts of study of the facts as you can get at them. You may think the Initiative, the referendum and the recall the greatest Institutions Oregon, has. It that 1 your carefully considered opinion, stick to It. fjUT, whether or not you approve dl J-) rect legislation, these measures are on the ballot, and those that re ceive a majority vote will become laws, So the thing for us to do Is to study them to the best of our ability and Tote on them according to our con Tlctlons, arrived at after such study. We shouldn't Just pass them up without voting This writer's advice Is to vote one way or the other either yes or no. TP YOU simply haven't time to moke 1 a careful study of these measures, there la of course one thing you can do. You can vote NO on all of those as to which you are In doubt. That Is better than not voting at all, and in thla particular case it won't do any Irreparable harm If many people vote that way. There are good measures on the ballot, measures that really should carry, but If all the thirteen arc dfoat.?d no harm will come to the state of Ore gon that can't be repaired. f- frf LATER Issues of this newspaper, 1 this writer will analyze briefly these measures and offer advice as to voting on them. This advice, it should be repeated, will represent merely the opinion of this one Indi vidual, and win not be offered with any color of authority or with any desire to influence anybody's opinion. If you care for it, read it. If not. throw It away. E DIRECTORS MEET PORTLAND, Ore.. Oct. 34.-t-(AP) Ten directors of the federal ie loan bank of Portland, district . i. II, met here today to adopt by-laws and to consider reports foT the or ganization of the institution, with ul timate plans to elect an executive v,ce-president and manager of the 6.000.000 bank. Election of the presi de nt also was cheduled for today' meeting. Ben H. Hazen of Portland, on of the directors, said that since L. H. Hoffman of Portland already has been named temporary preslden, his Appointment 1 "ft forgone coa- MAKE WEEK-END TRIP TOCHICAGO Definite Plans Depends On Finishing Draft of New York Speech in Time Detroit Address Scores WASHINGTON, Oct. 34. (AP) President Hoover will deliver a flve mlnute address at nine o'clock E. S. T. tonight before the opening of the American Publlo Health association meeting here. Surgeon General Hugh 8. Cummlng will preside over the seaston which 1500 delegates are expected to at tend. The association Is composed of state, county and municipal health officers, medical officers of Insurance compa nies and welfare groups that work with publlo health officers. WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. (AP) President Hoover Is engaged with plana for closing his campaign for re-election with a vigorous two-week drive which today Included a. speech In New York city and another swing 1 Inland through mldwestern territory. , Just returned from his third west ern trip and Detroit address, Mr. Hoover already had settled tentatively on going a fourth time into the In terior for appearances in Indianapolis and Chicago. White House discus sion suggested this trip for the com ing week-end, beginning Thursday night and ending Sunday. For the present, this plan hinges on completion of the address the president will make In New York City a week from today. If Mr. Hoover does not finish his New York speech In time, the tentative arrangements will permit postponement of the fourth mid-western tour until later. Upon reaching the White House yesterday after an uneventful return trip from Detroit, the president con ferred with Henry M. Robinson, Los Angeles banker and chairman of the central committee of the banking and industrial committees In the 12 federal reserve districts. Robinson is a White House guest, as was also for a brief time yesterday (Continued on Page Eight) teacheTfordiven BY WIFE FOR HOAX LOS ANGELES, Oct. 24. (AP) Like the story of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the hoax of Elliott B. Thomas, small city school superintendent, has reached lta ending In exposure, and confession. With a wife who volunteered for giveness Thomas retired Into seclus ion today, filled with repentance over Elliott B. Thomas, superintend ent of achoola at Redondo Beach, Cal., disappeared mysteriously when he went to his office for some papers. (Associated Press Photo) his attempt last week to end bis own personality and create another under the name of K. T. Sherwood so that he might complete In marriage romance with another woman, Sylvia Wilson of .Seattle. But the twelve-year career, first as school principal at Burbank, Calif., and later as superintendent of schools at Redondo Bach, Calif., which he and his wife, Olive Thomas, had built was at least at a temporary end. "The resignation of Thomas from his position at Rlondo Beach will be forthcoming in a day or no,'' Oeo. Penney, his attorney said. As for the police who hunted him for nearly a week since his disappearance last Monday the case was cload with the statement no charges would be pre ferred. Bewhlskered, clothes unpressed from constant traveling and eyes red -rim med from lack of sleep, the 38-year- old school head voluntarily appeared at the sheriff's office here Saturday night after a trip by automobile and airplane from Seattle. Mrs. Thomas met htm at the sher iff's office upon hi return. "It's all rl7 it. eld boy,:' she xai1, patting Mni. j "We'll carry on aain." They iiave a 94.jCjaro!d da lightest. t. HENRY FORD SPEAKS FOR HOOVER , : i wit t 1 Henry Ford Is shown as he spoke from Detroit, urging the reelection of President Hoover as "the best man for the Job." Mrs. Ford Is stand ing beside him. (Associated Press Photo) E UPON PAYMENTS OFDEBTINTEREST Quick to Approve Mussolini's 'Clean Slate' Proposal Paris Admits Need, But Fears o Set Precedent PARIS, Oct. 34. (AP) Italy's aew appeal for a clean slate on war debts has served to concentrate the at tention of Prance on tomorrow's ses sion of the chamber of deputies, where the entire debt question. Is ex pected to be aired. Interpellations on the debt question the December -oavment of 20.000,- OOrVirr-lntBTWon the riebf to the United States are expected to be deposited In the chamber. Opinion, as expressed In authori tative quarters appears to be divided Into three categories here: 1 That Prance should make no payment of the December interest because It would serve as a dangerous precedent and create the belief that the entire debt will be paid. 3 That the payment due in De cember should be made with the res ervation that this payment be taken Into account when the debt Is fi nally adjusted. 8--The negotiations regarding debts. between the United States and France should be hurried immediately after the American elections on November 8 with the hope that the problem (Continued on Page Eight) L. ROBINS ALIVE, TO RETURN ST. PETERSBURG, Pla., Oct. 34. (AP) Mrs. Raymond Robins, wife of the missing dry leader, says she has changed her earlier belief that Colonel Robins was "put on the spot by Flor ida rum runners." At her Brooksvllle home, Mrs. Rob- Ins said she now believes her husband, missing since September 8, when he left his New York club for a confer ence with President Hoover in Wash ington, Is still alive and will be found. She added, however, she had no definite information about rumors which were current here that Colonel Robins was safe and would return home after the election next month. She gave no reason for her belief he Is alive. HYDE SEES VOTE SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 24. (AP) Coming to Senator Reed Smoot's home state today to deliver a cam paign address here this evening, Sec retary of Agrlcultiue Hyde character ized the Smoot-Hawley tariff as "an act of God that came In time to save us." He added that "if there la any re vision of the tariff. It should be up ward in some cases, because of the fact that the decline in foreign cur rencies has had its effect in reducing tarflfs." Secretary Hyde predicted Republi can victory In November, declaring that a vast number of voters who have not previously made up their , minds are swinging to President , Hoover, and that much of the "pro- ' tost vote" im returning to the Re publican camp. fltolen Car Charge j David Russell Mann 35, of Spokane Wash., Is being held In Jail here by the state police, charged with steal- lng an automobile belcnglns; to a 1 resident of Kennewick, Wash. If Mann valvrs extradition, he will be returned to Benton c? Wsshiwi k tat ttfel, agkxv &i4 -4. . V v. ; '5 ! VMfcY . J. - 1 i,' F DESERTS F. D. TO No Time to Change Leaders Says Malone Al Smith Talks Tonight Roosevelt - Painted Tool of Tammany NEW YORK, Oct. 34. (AP) Dud ley Field Malone, who was a delegate to the Democratic national conven tion which nominated Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt for the presi dency, has announced that he will vote for President Hoover, x In making . public a letter to Presi dent Hoover declaring his support, Malone, who campaigned actively for President Wilson and former Gover nor Alfred E. Smith, said he was ready and willing to take the stump for the republican ticket If requested to do so. "It seems to me, his letter said, "the high duty of citizenship to stand by the president who has seen us through the past three dreadful years. There Is too much at stake in every home, store and shop to change leaders now." His letter explained he does not be long to Tammany Hall, and that he always has been an independent, although his father, now 60, has vot ed the democratic ticket 66 years. NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 34. (AP) Alfred E. Smith, who had the sup port of New Jersey democracy at the recent democratic national conven tion, will speak to thousands in a (Continued on Page Eight) LATEST1STAKEN FOR DEER VICTIM LA GRANDE, Ore. Oct. U. (AP) Jamos Ellta, about 35, dIM ben last night shortly after ha waa brought to a local hoapltal from the moun tains near Starkey where he waa wounaed ahortly before noon Sunday In a hunting accident. Hla left arm waa nearly torn from hla body by a aoft-noaed rifle bullet and loaa of blood and the time required to get him to medical attention resulted In death. Two oampanlona. a Mr. Oalnea of union and L. o. Johnson were ex pected to arrive here to.lay. After taking Ellis to the highway and ob tnlnlng transportation for him to La Orande, the two men were attemnt- Ing to get their car which went over an embankment Saturday Into wonting order. They were expected to arrive here thla morning. Fragmentary reports received here were that the bullet was from John eon'a gun. It was reported the men were close together when a deer was sighted snd the bullet struck Ellis. Johnson Is reported to have aald he did not Intend to shoot snd was at a loss to understand how the accident happened. Ellis Is believed to have been a real dent of TJklah, Ore. . Mail Tribune I Intend to vote for . I Intend to rote for . I Intend to mt for , I Intend to Tote for , Draw fill onf, wrlh or without tonieit Eulfor, Mall Tribune. A GRIEVE NAMED AS' QUIZ Gun Tragedies to Be Aired by Body Picked Today at Opening of October Term Many Routine Cases The October grand jury was drawn this morning and went Into session immediately to start work on one of the heaviest calendars in the history of the county. The new Jury is com posed of six men and one woman with W. T. Grieve of Pro poet as foreman. Members are: W. T. Grieve of Pros pect; George L. Knight, peal estate man, Medford; H. O. Butterfield. la borer, Ashland; James M. Hughes, painter, Ashland; Curt Jeschke, me chanic, Medford; P. H. McCurley, me chanic, Medford and Mrs. Edith Pat- ton, housewife, Medford. Among the major cases to come be fore the grand Jury are investigations Into the slaying of Glen Fnbrlck, prominent local business man by Ellsworth Konkle, on a hunting trip more than a week ago, and of Joe St. Germain of Central Point by his hunting partner, Reinhard Rolf, last Thursday. Investigation into the Rolf case was expected to start today, but Konkle's appearance before the grand Jury will await completion of surveys now being made by the county surveyor's office, of the scene of the shooting, out from Butte Palls In the very dense forest section near Lodge Pole, DLa trict Attorney George Codding stated. Rolf, who signed a statement ad mitting that he killed St. Germain, mistook the latter for a bear, while they were on a hunting trip out from Butte Palls, about 30 miles back into what is known as the nnsurveyed re gion, In the vicinity of the Dahack cabin. Funeral for St. Germain, who Is survived by his wife and three children, was held today. Another hunter, whose name has not been revealed, will also be called before the gTand Jury in connection with the near shooting of Deputy Sheriff Paul Jennlncs. who escaped a bullet bv a narrow margin while hunting last week In the Wagner Butte section. District Attorney Cod ding stated. , Among other oases to be lnvesti tiated is that of Wltfvn Glayzer, charged with knifing his wife in Aah- land following a domestic- quarrei August 37. Earl Hanscom will be brought before the grand Jury on a non-support charge aaa b. r. nams. charged with defrauding an inn keeper. A forgery case Involving Al vln Miles. Ray McOully and Ira Bailey will be investigated and the recent robbery of the J. O. Penney store In Ashland, regarding which Virgil Bur nett, Buck Wilson and Emily (Bobby) Mansfield are held. Numerous other cases of routine character are also scheduled. WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. (AP) Wilson McCarthy, a director of the reconstruction corporation, today conferred with George S. Mllnor, head of the Farmers National Grain Corporation, on the proposed sale on credit of 16,000.000 bushels of wheat to China. It was said the negotia tions have not been completed. China has sought to buy the wheat, offering Its governmental note and a surtax Import duty as security. The directorate of the reconstruc tion corporation feels that the note should be endorsed by a domestic signature but this has not been forthcoming. Negotiations are hanging upon the possibility of the Farmers National or the Northwest Cooperative signing the note for the several million dol lars Involved. McCarthy said the corporation was very anxious to make the loan and encourage exporting of agricultural products wherever possible but It was necessary by statute to obtain ade quate security. 4 Huey Long Clown' SIOUX FAIjLS, S. D. Oct. 24. f AP) Senator Huey P. Long of Loui siana, on a campaign tour for the na tlonal democratic ticket, said In ar address today that the present ad ministrrttlon had maintained Itself in offloe by rebating taxes to large cor porations In return for campaign contributions. -. Beer Ilevenue Told WHITS SULPHUR SPRrNOS, W. Vs., Oct. 34. (AP) Legal beer and a federal tax thereon could bring the government as much as 754,000,000 additional revenue, the Investment Bankers association convention was informed by its federal taxation committee today. Straw Ballot for President. . for Conntf Judge. , for District attorney. . for Sheriff. ilf nature, and mall to Klraw Ballot CHINA WHEAT BUY DETAILS AIRED Campaign Broadcasts (Time la Eastern Standard) Tonight: (Monday) WEAP-KBC 8:30 -Jlepubllcan. B. F. Hutton and Joeeph L. Scott. 10;00 Alfred S. Smith from Nawart, N. J. (7 o'clock, Med ford Tim) Dlxla CBS Chain 10:15 Oor. Roosevelt at Atlanta. Tuesday: WJZ-NBO p. m. Repub lican farm program. CLEARED OF PART IN UiY GRIME Arthur Barry. Who Stole Millions In Jewels, Lost All in Wall Street Escaped During Auburn Prison Riot NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 24. (AP) Arthur Barry, cultivated convict who says he built a fortune stealing rich people's Jewels and lost all but a "competency" in the stock market crash, has practically been cleared of suspicion in the Lindbergh kidnaping case. .'Everything big and worthwhile In the last ten years has been pinned on me." he an id as he sat manacled and chained to a 240-pound policeman yesterday. "It's about time they got around to that but I didn't do It." Police here are convinced he la tell ing the truth, but they are waiting for state police to question and clear him before shipping him to New York. The alight man with the broad "A" who was pounced on Saturday night In his Sussex county hideout, made a flaming escape from Auburn prison In 1020 at the height of a bloody riot in which two men were killed. He was doing 25 years at the time for a 9250,000 theft of Jewels from Mrs. Jesse Llvermore, wife of the Wall Street operator. That was one of a string of robberies, mostly commit ted in Long Island society mansions, which the thief nonchalantly total- tea at "something between 6,000, 000 and 10,000,000." Barry would study the layout of the big houses carefully, wait until a moonless night, then slip In and make .off with the Jewels. The Llvermore Job, the now gray haired thief told police, was to have been his last crime. ."I had almost 800 grand In gilt edge securities and I was planning to hit it for the Congo Free State for an extended vacation." But a tip-off led to hla arrest and he went to Auburn where he and four others shot their way out in 1929. Going to Albany and Syracuse, he eventually came to New Jersey. Another tip-off led to his arrest at the home of otto Reutter, middle aged contractor who had taken the apparently mild "window wiper sales man" in as a $2 a week roomer. FINDING OF NUDE SAN BBRNARDrNO, Cal., Oct. 34. (AP) flan Bernardino county In vestigators aald today they were com pletely mystified aa to th Identity of the attractive auburn-haired wo man about 2S yeara old, found alaln and nuda In the desert wastes forty mnes norm or here Saturday. A well-to-do Rosamond oouple who thought It might ba their daughter loaay convinced officers and them selves that It waa not. The Investi gators said they were without further clues to Identity. simultaneously another possible Identification waa Injected Into the case when Jsmes IM wards of ixm An galea, Informed the sheriffs office there that the description of the slain woman matched that of hla 30-year-old wife, Mildred, from which he has not heard since she left home three weeks ago to visit her brother, Roy Oraham In Ronald, Wash. Death had been caused apparently by a blow on the head. The brxly was found by a prospector, Frederick W. Schwann. Driving from a mine to hla home at San Pedro. Calif., he follow ed a ahortctit off the main trail and cam upon the remains. An old tire. resting against the body, provided In veatlgatora with their only definite ctue. Officers found no signs of a strug gle but there were fresh tire tracks nearby. They presumed that the alay er had driven to the spot from a near by highway and lifted the body from his automobile with the tire. They had been unable to find fingerprints on the casing. The body was nude and no clothing was found. - ! rtonria raid NEW YORK, Oct. 34. (API The National Credit Corp., 1ilch waa former one year ago aa a privately sponsored banking effort to keep ( credit channels open for bank loans j until the reconstruction finance corp. 'could be placed In operation, today leaned for redemeptlon another 10 per cent of the notes which It sold to give it working capital. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Clark and chil dren of Medford called at the Leon- Ml Up eVORkj 3ya498 MJtt. JObLbS SEAMEN IF DOLEJEID Want $1 Per Day and Leave Demands With President Expect Answer 'Soon' British Also Marching WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. (AP) Bight representatives of the "marine workers industrial union" today de posited at the White House a list of relief demands, leaving with a verbal statement that "unless something is done we will organize and come back in thousands." Theodore Joslln. one orf President Hoover's secretaries, received the dele gation in his office adjoining that of Mr. Hoover. Asked by George Mink, chairman of the union, what would be done with their demands, Joslln said he would give them to the chief executive and they could expect a reply from him "soon." The delegation asked payment of one dollar a day for all seamen un employed a month or more, admit tance of unemployed seaman to mar ine hospitals, passage of the workers unemployment Insurance bill as out lined by the communist purty, recog nition of soviet Russia, and the use of laid up government vessels, such as the George Washington, as lodg ing places for unemployed seamen. Mink estimated there are 80.000 unemployed seamen, 20,000 in New York alone. LONDON, Oct. 24. (ATP) Repre sentatives of several thousand unem ployed men and women who axe marching on London from various sections submitted twelve demands to the London city council for extens ion of aid to the Jobless today. They want the city to provide hundred pounds of coal a week to each unemployed family. They want a pint of grade A milk each day for each child of unemployed parents, they want free boots and shoes on demand for all unemployed and their dependents, and a 26 per cent reduc tion in the rent of all houses. They ! also demanded that accommodations be provided for their comrades march ing toward the city. The aldermen saw five members of the deputation. A score or so of oth ers gathered In the rain In a nearby subway station. Police reinforcements, stationed all about the county hall, cleared the station and the entire neighborhood of all loiterers later. A county council representative said , there was not the slightest chance the demands would be grant ed. A member of the deputation said, on leaving "we didn't get a thingl" AGEDlllAIN BLOOMFTELD, Ky Oct. 34. (AP) Lacking tangible clues, Nelson county authorities under Sheriff T. B. Peake today sought evidence which might aid them In their Investigation of tha killing of three persona whose charred bodies were found yostorday In the ruins of a farmhouse near here. That robbery waa the underlying cause of the tragedy that took the Uvea of an unidentified man and Mr. and. Mrs. Lud Ingram, recluse farm couple, waa the bollof generally ex pressed by authorities. Neighbors of the Ingrams, both of whom were about 70 years of age, found the bodies after the four-room frame home occupied by the couple had been badly damaged by fire. Authorities said the Ingrams were reported to have drawn their savings of approximately 98000 from a bank only recently. It was this report that caused them to advance the robbery theory. L ROSEBURO, Ore., Oct. 34. (API Two young bird hunters are In the Roaeburg hospital today suffering from gunshot wounds. James Carter of Riddle received a full charge of blrdphot Sunday In the calf of hla light leg when the gun held by his brother, Don Carter, waa accidentally discharged as they were loading their guns preparatory to starting 1n quest of pheasants. Al though the leg waa badly mangled be low the knee, amputation will not be necessary, physicians state. Oeorge Rice of Myrtle Creek suf fered minor wounds In both legs Sat urday when he stepped Into line of fire aa a companion shot at a pneas- ant. He waa at a distance of about 00 yards, so his Injury la not serious Domestle Woes BOISB. Idaho. Oo. 24. (API Mrs. Verna Mcrarland, Lawlll today lay critically wounded In a local hospital and her husband was dead aa a result of what the' coroner Inter preted as an attempted murder and suicide. Trent W4lat Wesker CORVALLIS. Oct. 14. (AP) Lack of an export outlet, coupled with alow demand from California, caused the slightly weaker tone In Pacific const wheat markets the past week, said today's wheat review Issued by the fedoral market bureau and the DEF1N1TESTAND SOVIETREQUESTED G. 0. P. Issues Challenge to State Position On Dole and Tariff Cut Jim Farley Denies Talks Hurt WASHINGTON, Oct, 24. (AP) After a conference with Prealdeni Hoover today, at which he said the matter was discussed, Representative Fish of New York Issued a statement challenging Franklin D. Roosevelt to 'state without evasion and further delay" his stand on the recognition of Soviet Russia. It quoted Roosevelt as having re plied to inquiries that he could not "comply with your request to give you a definite statement towards my attitude on the recognition of Russia," since "as governor of New York I have had to give my attention for the last three years to state mat ters." "In view of the fact that Governor Roosevelt has been finally smoked out on the payment of the bonus." he went on; "at least to the extent of straddling and deceiving the vet erans, are not the American people entitled to know where he stands on the recognition of Soviet Russia, the sales tax, the dole, flat money, pork barrel legislation, and tariff on sugar, oil, and lumber before they go to the polls on November B to elect a chief executive the highest office In the gift of the people?" After saying he was making a for mal "challenge" to Roosevelt to state his stand upon such matters, Fish added: "Most radicals in the country are In favor of the recognition of Soviet Russia, and in view of the charges made against Governor Roosevelt as being a radical, or being aligned with the radicals, the publlo has a right to know before election day his atti tude on this Issue, which Involves free American labor, our economic) life and principles of government." NKV7 YORK, Oct. 34 (AP) James A. Tarley, chairman of the democra tic national committee, returned to day from & week-end trip to Indiana, convinced, he said, that sentiment Franklin D, Roosevelt "la as strong throughout the country for Governor aa ever." "Prom my visit to Indiana I found the sentiment Just as strong In favor of Governor Roosevelt aa It has been from the beginning," Farley aald. "President Hoover's speeches have not In any way retarded the movement toward Governor Roosevelt. They tell me In Indiana they expect Roose velt to carry the atate by 500.000." Farley aald Governor Roosevelt will visit the national campaign head quarters hore Wednesday for the first time since they were opened. E ROCKY ML STATES DENVER, Oct. 34, (API A wet. clinging five-inch snow today blank eted Donver, breaking down trees and shrubbery and seriously Impeding traffic. The fall continued today, with so sign of abatement. Reports Indicated the storm was spreading northward. New Mexico was warm and Sunny. Mixed rain and snow were falling through most of Wyoming. A snowstorm in the Big Horn mountains of Wyoming today threat ened to terminate the search, for three hunters believed to have per ished In the blizzard that swept the range last week. WASHINGTON, Oct. 34. (AP) Department of Justice officials today continued preparations to answer on November 10 the Chicago board of trade's appeal from the eo-day sus pension imposed by the grain futures commission. WILL- ROGERS SANTOS, Oct. 23. Say, this Brazil is beautiful along this coast. Thought the plane was going to reach Rio Janeiro to night, but Old Jfan Headwind hit ui right in the faoe all day. If you read this in the morn ing, take another nwig at your coffee. Hero is where it's all raised and this is the biggest coffee port in the world. This town is just sweeping up the streets from, s revolu tion two weeks old, but down here the President stayed in. The Democrats couldn't dis lodge him, so that might he the first consolation the Republi cans at home have had. Yours, wh,