edford Mail Tribute
Your Vacation
alll ha more enjoyable If you hare
(ha Mall Tribune follow you. No
addlllnnal coat. Phona 15 and place
jour order befora leaving.
Twenty-eighth Year
MEDFUKU. OREGON, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1933.
No. 77.
MIP
Pf fl flM
bftlLUuv
WW
The Weather
Forecast: Fair and earmer tonljht
and Wednesday
Temperature
Highest yesterday
I.ob Put tht morning 1ft
M
gE y ELECT
FBfl
1WDBE
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS.
FRANCE nd Poland default on
their war debt inatsllments due
to the United Statea.
Great Britain pays a little better
than one-aeventh of what la due, and
Italy about one-thirteenth.
Only little Finland meeta her debt
lnatallment IN PULL.
FRANCE, please remember. la the
second richest nation on earth,
as reckoned In terms ot gold, which
still constitutes wealth, even if it
lin't so extensively used as money
aa It waa a few yeara ago.
Prance defaulta, not because she
CAN'T pay, but because she doesn't
WANT to.
BRITAIN makes her ten million dol
lar payment in silver. The allver
comes from India, where silver is atlll
regarded as the real standard ot
money value, in spite of formal adop
tion of the gold standard In 1938.
SPEAKING of money, we read thle
paragraph in the financial newa
of Thursday:
"A broad rise In dollar exchange
waa accompanied by heavy selling of
stocks today. Leading shares tum
bled II to more than a ahare under
a large volume of offerings in the
last hour."
That Is to say, there was more sell
ing than buying.
QELLINQ of atocks as a result ol
rieing value of the dollar In terma
of exchange will give you aome Idea
of the part inflation has been play
ing in the recent rather apectacular
rise of the stock market.
THE GOVERNMENT, we read, plana
to raise aaso.ooo.OOO by taxing pro
cessors of wheat and cotton. It will
use the money to pay wheat and cot
ton growers to keep their land out
of production.
Thua It hopea to bring about a
long-term rise of prices of these crops.
f-e
CAN that be done?
Well, at least the effort Is more
Intelligent than the farm board ef
fort a few yeara ago to raise wheat
and cotton prices by going into the
market and bidding up the price.
Paying wheat and cotton growers
to keep their land out of production
will at least have a tendency to RE
DUCE THE SUPPLY, and the natural
result ot reduction ot supply la to
raise the price by bringing Into the
market more buyers than sellers.
'The natural result of going Into
the market and bidding up the price
was to INCREASE the supply by
tempting growers to Increase their
production In order to get the In
creased price. f .
WHEN the government taxea con
sumers In order to raise the
money with which to hire farmera
to keep their land out of production,
it la getting into business with a
vengeance. Nobody will undertake
to deny that. .
But, for several yeara to come, and
perhapa Indefinitely, the government
Is going to be In business with a ven
geance In thla country.
Perhaps you are old-fashioned, and
don't fancy this prospect. But you
can't help It. So you might aa well
prepare to LIKE IT.
CLAUDE INGALLS, of the Corvallls
Gawtte-Tlmes. complains bitterly
because he haa to go from Corvallia
clear to Portland in order to take an
airplane and get somewhere in a
hurry.
"Why." he says. "It takes as long
to get from here to the Portlsnd air
port as It takes to get from the Port
land airport to Boise. And it takes
ever twice as long to get to the Port
land airport from here aa It take
to go by plane from Portland to Med
ford." Why Is Mr. Ingalls In such a hurry,
and Just what win he do with all his
time when he' la able to ears It by
getting by plane directly from Cor-
T1IS
CHILD IS KILLED BY
ENGINE NEAR EUGENE
EUGFNR June 20. (AP Three-year-old
Jean Wtnkleman waa killed
at Field, near here Monday w.hen
she waa struck by a helper engine
on the Southern Pacific line. The
engine waa rounding a curve and
ww onir three ,n.rh away when
.r im,.i-i .M mat iv 9tv i
t&e a. ud. I
RECORD BALLOT
Total of ',468 Cast Thorn
dike Given 1312, Franklin
1171 and Dr. Phipps 324
Winners Voice Thanks
In the school election held yestet
day for choosing two directors for a
three year term, Eugene Thorndike
and K. H. Franklin were re-elected
by an overwhelming tote, defeating
Dr. I. D. Phipps. A total of 1408 bal
lot waa cast, the, largest number In
a Medford school election for many
years, including the bond vote for
the two schools recently constructed.
Tabulation of votes showed 1313 for
Thorndike, 1171 for Franklin and 324
for Phipps. Several other persons re
ceived a few votes, Rebecca Jensen,
school clerk, said today.
Because of the vigorous campaign
put on by supporters of Dr. Phipps,
who demanded a change in the school
board In order to have "a true cross
section of the people of Medford," in
Increased vote was anticipated and
two boards were placed on duty to
take care of the stream of voters
visiting the polls at the high school
on South Oakdale avenue between 2
snd 7 p. m. Monday.
Both Mr. Franklin and Mr. Thorn
dike. members of the board at the
present time, today expressed their
appreciation to the citizens of Med
ford for the support given them 'n
the election yesterday. When the
polls opened at two o'clock, about
fifty people were in line to cast their
vote, and until seven o'clock a steady
stream visited the polls.
Members of the election boards
were first: J. F. Banish, Judge: Mrs.
H. D. Powell, clerk: and Mrs. Earl
G add is. Second board: Mrs. Hal Piatt,
Judge: Mrs. Kate Young, Clerk; and
Mra. Nora C. Klrkpatrick.
LONDON, June 20. (AP) High
French quarters said tonight that a
proposal 'to adjourn the world eco
nomic conference would be brought
before the conference steering com
mittee tomorrow if there were no
clearer Indications that stabilization
of the dollar could be effected.
Included on the steering committee
are Secrtary of State Cordell Hull and
James M. Cox of the United States
delegation and Prime Minister Ram
say MacDonald and Chancellor of
the Exchequer Neville Chamberlain of
Great Britain.
OF
PORTLAND, June SO. (AP) The
city of Portland today owed local
banks 11.035.000. an Indebtedness
which grew by 1130.000 yesterday)
when the city treasurer found he waa : THE DALLES, Ore.. June 30. (AP)
that much ahort of being able to j Wasco county cherry growers remain
meet the semi-monthly payroll of ed stesdfsst. aa picking atarted today
1150.000. A year ago the city waa in their refusal to dispose of their
completely clear of Indebtedness to crops at prices thua far offered by
Portland banks, npllnniiencte In H.iil.r. Rly firm. Yi.i ht.a v.-
tax payments caused the shortage In I
city funds.
Rose Pastor Stokes of
Radical Fame, Passes
FRANK FORT-ON -THE-MAIN. Ger
many, June 20 (API Rose Pastor
Stokes, American leader of the radical
party, died today at the Municipal
hospital. A heart ailment waa given
as the Immediate cause of death. She
recently waa operated on for cancer.
The body will be cremated and tne
ashes sent to New York.
The cancer operation waa perform
ed by Prof. Vlto Schmieden. Mrs.
Stokes entered the hospital April 15.
She waa 54 years old.
Rose Pastor fltsfct -jlb thrmirhmit
her life a champion of radical cauies.
She waa often in a-nnfita-fc wftv. h
law and once she was sentenced to
serve ten years in Leavenworth penl-
tentiarv for rthtriu-tlr. h. Armf Th.
sentence was commuted by President
She was born tn a nr., in
fcussia. in 1879. and spent her early
childhood in London. Her family,
moving to America, went first to
Ohio, but later settled in New York.
a. ine aga of ten ahe waa roll 1 rut
tobacco in a New York cigar company.
She soon became known aa the
Tow of the Ohetto" Jame. nra-
la, met her ahortij after be bad
i
BASEBALL
National
First game R- H. E
Cincinnati - 4 7 2
Philadelphia 7 16 2
, Kolp, Benton and Lorn bud 1; Jack
son and Davis. .
Second game
Cincinnati
Philadelphia
R. H. K.
8 10 2
7 18 0
Derringer, Frey, Quinn and Hems
ley; Collins and Davis.
R. H. E.
St. Louis IS 17 a
Brooklyn 4 11 2
Hallahan, Johnson and J. Wilson;
Mungo. Ryan, Heimach and Lopez,
Cm ten.
R. H. E.
Pittsburgh .... 6 U 0
Boston 2 8 1
Swift and Grace; Zachary, Starr,
Frankhouse, Brandt and Hogan, Har
grave. R. H. B.
Chicago S 13 1
New York ...a 7 3
Tinning. Grimes and Hartnett; Bell.
Spencer, Hubbell and Mancueo.
PEAR AND APPLE
EXPORT RATES TO
HOOD RIVER. Ore., June 20 (AP)
H. M. Dexter, secretary of the Hood
River Traffic association, said today
the expectation is growing that there
will be a definite announcement this
week of new rates on apple and pear
shipments from Pacific coast ports to
Europe and the Atlantic coast.
" Shippers have urged a flat rate of
60 cents a hundred pounds on both
apples and peara. The old rate la 75
cents for apples, and 90 cents for
peara.
The recent steamship conference,
however, expressed' belief the new
rate will be a compromise between the
present schedute and the reduction
sought. The conference had expected
to make a voluntary reduction but
withheld action on account of the
change in dollar values.
E
PARIS, June 20. ( AP ) Barbara
Hutton. blonde American heiress
whose fortune Is estimated at $20,
000.000. married Prince Alexia Mdl
vani. member of the Mdlvanl family
of czarlst Georgia, today In a civil
ceremony at the Mairle of the 18th
Arrondlssement.
A religious rite will be celebrated
Thursday at the Russian orthodox
church. They plan a wedding trip
to Italy.
' By a marriage contract, signed be
fore the ceremony, the bride retains
sole control over the property inher
ited from her grandfather, the late
Frank H. Wool worth, chain store
founder, excepting a dowry which
she brought to the union.
Carried out with the speed of per
functory officialdom, the ctvil cere
mony lasted only a couple of min
utes. CHERRY GROWERS HOLD
FIRM FOR HIGHER PRICE
but there haa yet been no establish- I
eJ price for Royal Annes.
turned from bank Inn to social better
ment work. She was then writing
verse and reporting for a Jewish
newspaper.
Though a Jewess she waa married to
him in 1903 tn the litee of the Epis
copal church. They were divorced in
1025, Throughout the twenty years
they were together he atoutly defend
ed her whenever she collided with the
law, through her numerous arrests on
charts ranging from disorderly con
duct to violation of the wartime
espionage act.
She waa convicted of espionage In
1018 because she aald in a letter to
the Kansas City Star "no government
which Is for the profiteers can also
be for the people. I am for the peo
ple, while the government la for the
profiteers."
She was sentenced to ten years, but
hleher court et the sentence aside
The government eventually dropped
the prosecution. She was indicted in
Chicaxo in 1P20 with 85 rommunlau
on chsrjrea of vlo'atlnj the Illinois
antl-sedttlon law.
Four rears after her divorce she
married Isaac Romalne. a labor lead
er snd father of Jmr Romalne. con
e:Jrrd a p-g;dy. She was Romaina'a
Vila at tie tin bet deaU
COMPLETE JONES
E
E
Vice-President Conners of
G. G. C. First Witness for
Rogue River Mayor Ac
, cused in Ballot Theft
C. Jean Conners, of Plnehurst, vice
president of the self-styled "Good
Government congress." and It "par
liamentarian," who admitted enter
ing the courthouse vault to steal
ballots, and entered a plea of guilty
to the charge, waa the first witness
for the defense, which started this
morning, in the trial of Walter J.
Jones of Rogue River, on the same
charge. Conners admitted he was
one of I. A. Banks' "armed guards."
Attorney Glenn R. Jacks of Oregon
City, chief counsel for Jones, Inform
ed the court the defense would be
completed, today.
Glenn Up Next
The court ordered that steps be
taken for the bearing of the ballot
theft charge against John Glenn of
Ashland, former county jailed, which
will be called at the conclusion of
the present trial.
At the opening of court It waa an
nounced that J. G. Lusk of Barne
burg Lane, farmer, and No, 3 Juror,
waa ill with the flu. The county
physician reported a high tempera
ture and pulse. Alternate Juror 8
D. Kllngle, Phoenix, orchard worker
employed by Rosenberg brothers, waa
drawn to fill Lu&k's place.
The defense In Ita questioning of
Its witnesses, indicated It would at
tack the credibility of the state wit
nesses, ' and attempt to prove that
Jones wa. outside the courthouse to
preserve order among outside specta
tors, at the instance of Henrietta B.
Martin, ohalrman.
Heard Hall Offer, He Says
. . Conners. in hi direct examination.
testified that "he heard Leonard Hall
offer two boya 1.00 apiece If they
would throw a gaa bomb Into the
meeting." Conners aald they were
(Continued on Page Five)
I
T
Two defense motions one asking
for the striking from consideration of
the Jury, of parts of the testimony ot
seven state witnesses, and the other
for a directed verdict in the trial ot
Walter J. Jones, mayor of Rogue River,
charged with ballot theft, were over
ruled and denied by the court, after
argument by both sides.
The defense asked, through At
torney Olenn R. Jacks, that the tes
timony of Mra. Krlng that she saw
Henrietta B. Martin, president of the
self-styled "Good Government Con
gress." C. H. Brown, the secretary, and
his wife, parents of Mrs. Martin. L.
A. Banks and L. O. Van Wegen pres
ent, a considerable time after the
crowd had left.
The court ruled It was admissible
because there had been teatlmony to
show that Jones had told aldea he
would aak them to remain until the
stolen ballots In the rear had been
removed.
Objectione to portions of the testi
mony of Earl Bryant of Jacksonville,
wherein he testified E. A. Fleming
saw "Walt. Judge Fehl wants to see
me," and the testimony of Fleming
that he had seen a man with a ham
mer, a he courthouse, comparable
with Jones In physical weight, were
denied.
Testimony of Mra. Nora B. MrKlt
rlnfc and her daughter-in-law, Mra.
Elsie McKltrtck, concerning the use
of pitch. In burning the ballots at
the older M-Kttrtck woman's home,
was held admlasable. Three witnesses
testified Jones had . suggated pitch
to make the ballots burn better,
The testimony of Mark Whipple.
Rogue River farmer, that Jones hsd
bet him a elgar, "Schermerhorn would
not be counted out," and psld It. was
also allowed.
The defense contended that the bits
of testimony were Immaterial, and
not binding on the defendant. The
state contended they were links in the
conspiracy, "Innocent enough In
themselves but highly potent when
considered with other evidence."
A directed verdict waa sought on
the grounds of Insufficiency of evi
dence to connect Jones with the bal
lot theft. The argument waa msde
by Attorney Tom Enrlght.
Assistant Attorney Oeneral Moody,
in reply, declared, "there Is sufficient
evidence, without the word of an se
compile to warrant a verdict. What
tn the deure waa Jones doing run
ning around outside the courthouse
with a hammer up his sleeve, if he
was not engaged In a criminal enter
prise?" The court riled that In a conapl-rfx-y.
cirrumMnrr must be consider,
ed. and that all the evidence la a mat
tfii or m Jurj J2 Mb
ACQUITTAL
U. S. ECONOMIC DELEGATES
a Jar
Soma of the American delegates to the world economic conference are shown In their hotel quarters In
London ahortly after their arrival. Left to right: Rep. Samuel 0. McReynolda of Tenneaaee, Secretary of
Stat Cordell Hull, and Ralph W. Morrison of Texas. (Aaaoclated Press Photo)
JOBLESS LEADER IS
ACTIVE IN SALEfli
SALEM. June 20. ( AP) Making
"demands" and not mere "requests,"
pickets from "unemployed councils"
throughout Marlon county paraded
posters today after camping In the
court house yard here last night.
The "demands" were cash relief, no
forced labor. 60 cents an hour for
relief work, freeing of Max Ferrar
who la serving a six months term for
.assault and battery on a relief offi
cial -tiere, permission to visit Ferrar
In Jail, free fuel, free dental and
medical attention, restraint of util
ities from shutting off gas, water
and light of the unemployed and
removal of county relief activities
from the Red Cross.
O. H. Goes, unemployed council or
ganizer recently of Modford. declared
the pickets would carry their cause
to Governor Julius L. Meier If denied
audience with the county court.
"we're making no requests the
time for thst hss passed. We're de
manding relief. The court will ap
pear on these steps when we order It
to," asserted Goes,
O. H. Goes, reported spokesman In
Marlon county unemployed clrclea,
waa active here last winter In at
tempt to organize. Jobless. According
to locsl sources, his efforts did not
meet with much success and the dis
patch from Salem Is the first report
of his whereabouts for several
months.
STATES VOTE ON
By the Associated Press,
Iowa and the New England states
of New Hampshire and Connecticut
voted today on repeal of the prohi
bition amendment.
Prohibitionist conceded defeat in
Connecticut, a state which never gave
its approval to the 18th amendment.
New Hampshire and Iowa, however,
were expected to ehow a more evenly
divided sentiment.
Thus far 11 states have voted on
repeal. Ail have favored it. The ap
proval of aa states is necessary before
the prohibition amendment can be
repealed.
Statea which have voted, to date,
are : Michigan, Wiscoqatn, Illinois.
Indiana, New York. Nevada. New Jer
sey, Maaeachuaetts, Wyoming, Rhode
island and Delaware.
M. E. CONFERENCE
PORTLAND, June 30 (AP) Pre
liminary sessions of the six-day meet
ing of the Slat Oregon conference of
the Methodist Episcopal church.
opened here today. The organisation
of the conference under the direc
tion of Biahop Titus Lowe. In chsrge
of the Pacific area, will get under
way in Sunnyside Methodist Episco
pal church tonight.
For the first time In the history of
the conference, laymen will . unite
with ministers In meetings opening
Friday morning. The first conference
buslnesa session la scheduled for to
morrow morning.
Or. E. Stanley Jones of India, mlt-
ilonsry, traveler and author, spoke
at a union meeting here today on ''ine
Renaissance of Asia." He haa been a
missionary of the Methodist Episco
psl church since 1007.
The reading of ministerial appoint-
menta by Bishop Lowe will take place
ftu&da righA
Arriving jrom Jefferson Barracks,
Mo., via the northern route, a cadre
of thirty COO recruits, four enlisted
men, in charge of Major Norman E.
FJake, arrived today in a special car
on the Oregonlan, and were leaving
thla afternoon for Elk creek camp
where they will be stationed.
The boya also brought baggage and
equipment with them from the east,
which la being transferred to camp
In five Crater Lake national park
trucke and four national foreat true lea.
Recrulta for the various camps are
-expected In ; here almost dally, with
several more oadrea due thla week
from Jefferson Barracks. Major Flske,
who accompanied the unit from Mis
souri, was formerly stationed at Fort
Leavenworth.
E
Ti
PORTLAND, Ore., June 30. (AP)
For the third time this month the
Oregon motorist today dug deeper
into hla pocket for gasoline money.
There was a difference, however, in
that today's advance waa the first on
the product. The other two were
tax increases.
The retail price of ethyl and first
grade gasoline advsnced one-half
cent a gallon, and third structure
fuel was up one cent a gallon today.
Last week the motorist waa caught
for a half-cent Increase In the fed
eral tax, and on June 9 he atarted
paying an additional one-cent state
tax, the result of lower license fees.
ELECT TONIGHT
PORTLAND. Ore., June 30 fAP)
More than 700 delegate from 34
temples in 17 states, Canada and Ha
waii attended the 19th annual as
sembly of the Daughter of the Nile
today. Election of national officers
waa scheduled for tonight's meeting.
Washington waa represented by 150
delegates from Seattle, Tacoma and
Spokane, and AO Caiifornlans repi-e-sented
four temples in that state.
Registration of delegates, the re
port of the credential and the con
valescent relief fund committees oc
cupied moat of the time in today's
session. Queens of visiting temples
reported upon hospital work.
"Skipper" Roosevelt Has
Smooth Sea for Cruise
EN ROUTE WITH PRESIDENT
ROOSEVELT AT SEA. OPT OAPE
OOD. Jun. 30 (API In a dramatic
mating at s. President Roossvtlt
today gave Instructions to a special
envoy to the London ecoiiomlc con
ference. Raymond Moley, assistant
secretsry of state.
By I'RANC'Ift M. TF,PHKSON.
AT SEA OPP CHATHAM. Maa.,
June 20 (API The luck of the wea.
ther finally broke for President Roose
velt today and an easterly breeze
hot hla schooner slonf over smooth
ess around the bend of Cape Cod
towards Provlnretown on the tip.
Pulling out from Nantucket at ft
m , IE. 8 TI "flklprwr" nooee'lt
.railed broadly as the wind filled his
iMll ta4 ti ma sua put. ?aU-
IN LONDON
STABLE DOLLAR
CAUSES FRIGHT
OF
Copyrighted by McClure Newspaper
Syndicate.
By Paul Million
WASHINGTON, June 30. Come
economists and speculators grew hot
when they heard the administration
waa working out plans for temporary
currency stabilization at London.
Apparently they all reached for
telephone and called Washington
when they read wa were pressing the
British into an agreement. They
shrieked commodity prices hero
might be adversely affected. They
pleaded with the administration to
hold off.
That la the underlying reason why
the agreement was not then an
nounced. It la also the reason why
the Cox committee in London ad
journed from Friday until Monday.
They bad to have time to think.
There was good ground for the ob
jections. The only Inflation we have
had so far la based on the supposi
tion that we are off the gold stan
dard. Actually the dollar la atlll a
dollar. There la Just as much gold
behind It aa there ever waa.
When we stabilize it, we help our
foreign trade. We make Internation
al commerce easier. Aa a long tlmo
proposition It Is a very necessary
thing. But the Immediate effect la
to stop the Inflation buying wave.
With the dollar stabilized the delu
sion of Inflation la lost. The only
way you can get Inflation then la to
rovnlue the dollar domestically.
There are Indications that Gover
nor Harrison of the New York Fed
eral Reserve and Dr. Sprague, our ex
change expert, were willing to stab
ilize at 14 to the pound. The boys
here thought it should be higher.
They wanted $4.38.
That Is one reason why you saw it
ease off last week-end.
The Idea that the Morgans had
anything to do with the war debta
agreement la too silly to mention
outside a partisan political argument.
That la why only Senator Robinson
of Indiana mentioned It In the sen
ate. It la true that the Morgans co
operated fully on the exchange ma
nipulation. Nobody will criticize
that. For once this country had aome
cooperation between the government
and the international bankers In
working out a patriotic foreign pol
icy. It waa necessary.
(Continued on Page Two)
SALEM, June 30. (AP) Governor
Julius L. Meier todsy mimed Roy M.
Dobie of Portland to serve on the
Battleship Oregon commission in place
of Jsmee Abbott of Portland, resigned.
day'a threatened nor'easler hsd van
lahed and he waa quickly along on
his rolling SO-mlle course fsr out to
sea.
The course of the morntruj lay eaat
and northeast, rounding the bend of
Cspe Cod. nesr Chathsm.
Rain, wind and rough seas have
prevailed through most of the two
previous days. The Amnerjack II haa
pitched and rolled In the waves, but
she has proven plenty seaworthy.
Today's run around Cspe Cod la
one of the toughest parts of the nor
thern Journey with sll four points ot
the compass to be negotiated In
reaching Provlncetown.
Refreshed by a good reat yesterday
afternoon and night In Nantucket
Harbor. Mr. Roosevelt was again at
the wheel aa aalls were touted be
(911 (UWB UU tod
0-0 MILL OPENING
EARLY IN JULY TO
E
General Manager Owen Says
Former Employes Will Get
Call Recovery Act Is
Credited With Resumption
The Owen-Oregon Lumber plant, in
this city, expects to open "shortly
after the Fourth of July." Oeneral
Manager James H. Owen said thla
morning, and will employ In the nei
ghborhood of 350 men, in mill and in
the logging camp.
"At present we have 75 men en
gaged In getting out loga In the
Butte Falls district, and fixing the
railroad so we can haul them." said
Owen. "We will have to get soma
loga ahead in the pond, before we
can start cutting.'
Owen aald for the moat part the
workera would be old employee.
The Industry recovery act was held
by General Manager Owen to be "the
main factor In the resumption of
operations, along with a brighter lum
ber market." He aald all the lumber
yards In the east were depleted . of
stock, and that three yeara construc
tion Idleness had Improved the de
mand. "Everybody wanta to buy lumber,
and nobody has any," was Manager
Owen'a description of the lumber
situation. He aald the price waa ris
ing, and many coast mills have re
sumed. "Industry la limited to 30 hours a
week labor by the recovery act," said
Owen. "Thla haa the affect of cur
tailing the aupply. while the demand
la brisk, with the result that the Im
provement came before anybody ex
pected It."
Manager Owen aald that both U
dustry and labor benefitted aa a re-
suit.- - - - --. -
He said the length of operation de
pended on conditions.
There has been a steady Increase in
construction throughout the nation
the past month, and building haa
been resumed generally.
PLANE WRECKAGE
PORTLAND, Ore.. June 30. f API ,
Word waa received here late today
from SUverton that a forest ranger
at the headwaters of the Butte Creek
watershed had reported that he saw
what appeared to be the wreckage of
an airplane on the mountain about
10 miles from hla cabin.
Fliers left here today to Investigate
the report In the belief some clue
might be found to the disappearance
Saturday morning of William B.
Young, Portland airways pljot.
BEND, Ore., June 30. (AP)
Thomas LeBleu, 13, was treated In a
hospital here today for serious In
juries received late yesterday when
an explosion of dynamite cape man
gled hla left hand, Injured hla eyes
and peppered hla face with bit of
shattered metal. He la a son of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Le Bleu of Turn ale.
SMV ill-
ROGERS
'says:
SANTA MONICA, Cal., Jun
19. So father had a day Sun
day, did het But you figure
it out and he didn't deserve
any more of a day than he got.
There is a lot of hooey about
poor father being imposed up
on. Dear old father gets away
with quite bit of murder just
beeause he is father. If he wag
some outsider and palled the
junk he does, they would
chuck him in the alley.
There is nothing outBido of
a economist that's been any
more overestimated than a
father. He is a necessity and
that about lets him out.
Tours,
,. aimMtHiirttn.mtin..