.ik
Medford Mail Tribume
Batch the TBlUU.Ntu
classified aua . .
Lota of food bargains
that mean genuine
savings.
Twenty-ninth Year
MEDFORD, OREGON. THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1934.
No. 24.
rn
M
The Weather
Forecast: Fair tonight and Friday.
Temperature above normal.
Temperature:
Highest yesterday . .. SJ
Lowest this morning 44
pa
SOFT
1 I- T
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yvd own mm
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By PAUL MALLON.
(Copyright. 1B34, by Paul Mallon)
WASHINGTON. D. C, April 19.-
Everything la going to be all right
now. Ben Smith and Tom Bragg are
Bomlng home,
i That may not
mean much to an
outsider, but the
boya in Wall atrcet
trill catch on.
Messrs. Smith
rod Bragg left the
country at an op
aortune moment
about two months
ago. When the
senate stock mar
ket 1 n v e stlgatora
started looking for
Paul Mallon
them, they had ust set sail tor Hono
lulu, or Australia: no one knows
which. They were beyond the reach
of a subpoena which would have re
quired them to testify about certain
adventures they
stocks.
Thoy are also selecting an oppor
tune moment for their return. The
stock market Investigation Is over.
Only a few days after that newa got
ut, they notified friends confi
dentially that they would be back In
New York early in May.
When these boys get back to Wall
street, there will be something doing.
They are the most ferocious of all the
bulls and bears. Their comradea In
margins call them "Peck'a bad boya"
and "the Gold Dust twins." They
won the latter title by betting right
when wo went off the gold atandard.
At least, they received inner acclaim
for having bet right, although no one
ever knowa exactly where they stand,
or even where they are.
They bob up In more unexpected
' places than Mrs. Roosevelt. They
managed somehow to get on the Inau
gural train from New York to Wash
ington. They even managed to get
a business appointment at the White
House executive offices 'on one occa
sion. They carry an air of knowing
at least a few of the right people.
The only trouble about their return
la that no one can tell whether the
market will go up or down. They
have worked both aides of the street
with equal success.
A slick scheme for boiling down
the veterans' lists by publicity heat Is
under serious consideration by those
here with authority to carry out their
Ideas.
They would post the name of every
veteran on the rolls In the postofflce
of the city In which he resides. The
amount received by each veteran and
the reasons therefore would be posted
alongside his name.
In that way, each community would
be able to Judge for Itself whether
its veterans were legitimately entitled
to their disability and presumptive
allowances.
Sponsors of the plan believe It
would result In 15 to 35 per cent of
voluntary withdrawals from the rolls.
The pun probably would be put
Into operation In a minute If It were
not for congress.
Just now, the administration Is
trying to quiet down the wild horses
on the hill. It does not want to do
anything which could be considered
a direct affront after the overriding
of the president s veto on veterans'
restorations.
There Is no real basis for objection
o the scheme, however, and It un
doubtedly will be put Into operation
sooner or later, either after congress
goes home or after the next elections.
As matters now stand, the veterans'
administration keeps Its rolls to Itself.
It will answer specific inquiries as to
whether a certain person la on the
rolls, but it does not like to.
The president's "tough guy" speech
to congress and all tho current bick
ering about taxes, silver, etc., make
It appear that the White House and
congress are at swords' points.
rvt. u true nnlv on the surface.
On the inside, the White House and
the congressmen are going vo great
lengths to keep from fighting each
other. The congressional leaders have
been permitted to understand on the
Q. T. that President Roosevelt will do
everything he can to help democratic
congressmen get re-elected. He actu
ally has planned to make a state
ment at the end of the session, con
gratulating congress on It work.
There has been some suggestion
that he Issue a public appeal before
next November for election of a Demo,
cratlc congress. He probably will not
go that far. not because of any per
sonal feeling, but because past ex
perience p.-oves that presidents alwaya
get In bad when they try to Influ
ence congressional elections.
Congressman Blanton's rantlngs
against the press do not mean any
thing. He has two buttons off his
vest and has had for a long time.
Newsmen got the lists of house sig
natures on discharge pctltlona from
a couple of congressmen who went o
far aa to have copies made, segregat
ing the signers by states. Blanton's
e'tark nn tie newsmen was nutkly
repudiated by other members of the
apontlnuat 04 Pag Sahtt
Insurance Head Gave Money
for Campaign Against Al
Smith to Be Expended
As Bishop Cannon Saw Fit
WASHINGTON, April 19. (AP)
The story of his activities to defeat ;
Alfred E. Smith for president waai
related by Bishop James Cannon. Jr.,
to a District of Columbia Jury trying 1
him for conspiracy to violate the
federal corrupt practiced act.
He said he met E. C. Jameson, New I
York insurance executive, through i
C. Bascom Slemp, who was White j
House secretary when Calvin Colldgc
was president.
Jameson contributed (65.000 to the
anti-Smith campaign. The bl&hop is:
on trial with Miss Ada L. Burroughs!
for failure to report receipt of all this I
contribution.
"X said to Mr. Janieaon," Cannon
testified, "that we ought to have
about aso.OOO within the next two or
three weeks to carry on the cam
paign In Virginia aa I thought it
ought to be carried on.
"Mr. Jameson aald, 'Well, I'll fur
nish you with about $50,000. How
would you like to have It?" 'Well,
I said, about 10,0OO a week.'"
Cannon aald that he told Jameson
he preferred to have a aubstantlsl
amount of the money In caah.
"He said," Cannon testfled, " 'Would
you want to carry It around?' and X
said no one would auspect I had It."
"I said. 'I know that liquor crowd
In Virginia and I prefer carrying on
transactions In cash.' "
Cannon then said he told Jame-
aon:
"I want It distinctly understood
In accepting this money, that I be
allowed to spend It when, how and
where I desire.
"He said, 'Certainly It's , in your
discretion.' "
reignoTsaTan
IN FALL
ZION, 111," April 19. (P) Wilbur
Glenn Vollva allowed his parochial
high school and college to reopen to
day and announced that he planned
an Intense campaign to Inform the
public that control of the world by
Satan Is Imminent.
The religious colony overseer said
reopening the schools was not a con
cession to his opponents, but rather
to allow students to obtain their di
plomas. The grade school connected
with the Christian Catholic Apostolic
church remained closed.
Vollva Indicated he hoped by a
tour of the country to raise sufficient
funds to free Zion Industries, Inc.,
once a 10,000,000 corporation han
dling all of Zlon's commercial enter
prises, from receivership.
In making a prediction that Chris
tianity would disappear from tne
earth, beginning next September, Vo
llva quoted from chapter 16 of the
Book of Revelations In the Bible, re
garding Armageddon.
"I predict the Antl-Chrlst period
forecast In the Bible will start within
a few months," Vollva said. "The
period will end with the end of tho
world. The populace must be warned."
E.P.
A loan of (93,000 has been granted
the Eagle Point irrigation district by
the Reconstruction Finance corpora
tion, according to wires received to
day by O. C. Bogga. attorney for the
district, from Senatora Chas. L. Mc
Nary and Frederick Stelwer.
No details were Included In the
wires received this afternoon, other
than that the loan had been ap
proved. The officials of the district, Mr.
Bogga stated, anticipate paying off
the bondholders of the district at
the rate of 35 cents on the dollar.
Nash Will Make
Low Price Auto
vrsiriBTA. Wis.. Aorll 19. (API
Nash Motors company announced to
day It would enter the low price auto.
mobile market witn a new nne 01
Lafayette cars at a base price of 1595.
OSWEGO CEMENT MILL
WILL OPEN MAY FIRST
PORTLAND. April 19. (AP)
Orders were received today ty the
Oregon-Portland Cement company
plant at Oswego to prepare the mill
or opening May 1 and to notify lav
mer employes to be ready to reaume
WHEN INSULL
This Associated Press picture shows Samuel Insull (left), for' 18
months a fugitive from United States justice, as he left the Turkish
court at Istanbul after losing his fight to appeal a decision for his
extradition.
MINES OF REGION WARNING BY JAPS
10 BE TOPIC FOR
T,he mining Industry of Jackson:
and Josephine counties will be fea-!
tured In one Installment of a motor-:
logue series In the Sunday Oregon
lan In the near future, C. E. Gates
of this city, a director In the Oregon
State Motor association, announced
today following a conference with
D.M,w.a .mtnmP nf fh! motor
..njf - planes and Instructors,
association, and Edward M. Miller, . Mliny Chinese itlso envisage a Nip
Sunday editor of the Oregonlan, who poneM protectorate over China on a
are here today In the Interest of the . bM,s of JnpluV announcement that
Industrial series to be published by- ,on,ldor. .ole,T rMDOnJ,i-
the newspaper.
The two Portlandera visited Jack-
aonvllle and the Sterling mine re
gion thla morning witn oeorge u. pEipiNa, china. April 19. (API
Barton, well known aouthem Oregon j North 'Chlna, paction to Japan's
mining man. The aeries, they pointed j n.nd,.0 Cnm. Denouncement In-
out, will emphasize the Industrial
advantages of this state, as well as
the travel Inducements.
Discussing the advantageous pub
licity to be gained by southern Ore
gon through this channel,' Mr. Gates
this afternoon stated tnal tourist
trade Is already Oregon's leading in-1
dustry,. the travel dollar being the
largest one spent here. It la esti
mated, he explained, that twenty
five' million dollars will be brought
into Oregon this year by out-of-state
motorists. This will be Just one
fourth of the total amount spent
in recreation here, the other three
fourths coming from state residents.
The association is striving this
year, Mr. Oatea stated, to sell all
business men. on the idea of encour
aging tourists to spend at least one
more day In Oregon. This can be
done, he believes, if business men i
will Just take the trouble to list the
recreaiionBi pussLuiuwcs ui t,- j
Uon, wnenever visitors are conuwica.
If each tourist la Influenced to
stay Just one more day, the Oregon
tourist dollar will swell to very Im
portant proportions, Mr. Gates added.
To prove ills contention mat tne
ttanring dollar Is well divided among
many businesses, Mr. Oates produced
a chart listing t.e channels it en
ters in Oregon. The largest portion
of the dollar, 36 cents, goes to mer
chandise. Restaurants and cafes re
ceive 20.5 cents of the dollar. Hotels
and rooms receive 17.3 cents: auto
mobile accessories 115 cent; theaters
and other amusements 6.5 cents:
transportation (railroad visitors) 7
cents: confectioneries and incidentals
5.9 cent, and atreet cars and busses
3.3 cents.
HEAT SETS RECORDS
FOR EARLY SEASON
At 3:95 thla afteroon. the thermom
eter at the Medford federal weather
bureau recorded 85, two degreea below
yesterday's highest, listed at 87.
PORTLAND, April 19. ( AP) Wed
nesdsy brought some new heat rec
ords for the season to Oregon aa fair
weather and temperatures above nor
mal continued. The tame conditions
were to prevail today.
Umatilla had a maximum of 93
degreea. It waa 88 at Wolf Creek;
Roseburg and Medford had 88 de
grees; the Portland and Eugene maxi
mum was 86: Salem and Albany had
81: Baker had a 18-dearee reading,
and It was 68 at Marshfleld.
4
PORTLAND. Ore., April 19. ( AP)
Whether about 815.000 should be
spent to place an Oregon exhibit In
the Century of Progress exposition
at Chicago thla year wtll be deter
mined by a survey authorized by the
governor's special commission. Money
appropriated by the Portland cham
ber of eommerct will be used lor tut
UUZKfr x
LOST FIGHT
SEEN AS BLOW AT
SHANGHAI, April 19. (AP) Ja
pan'a restatement of policy toward
china Ib seen here. In part, as a
direct blow at the activities of Amer
ican aircraft manufacturera.
In the draft, announced by the
Tokyo foreign office, Japan Btatea
that ahe objects to other nations
..mi,.in m.ino uMHi Tnlllt.flrv alr-
1 ' .
ble for maintaining the peace of East
Asia.
dlcated today that Chinese of this
region see In the declaration a direct
challenge to other powers.
WASHINGTON, April 19. (API
Japan's "restatement and clarifica
tion n nn11i.r inmarA C!htn" In ItJt
lncomplete form M contained in
press dispatches from Tokio loomed
today as a possible major Issue In far
eastern affairs.
No official communication of the
text of the purported document has
been received at the state depart
ment. Pending the actual receipt
state department and other adminis
tration officials declined to make
any official comment.
; Darren sell, B-ycar-oid son or s. v.
Bell of Route 4, near Phoenix. Is in
the Community hospital, suffering
numerous injuries, the result of being
knocked down yesterday afternoon by
the automobile H. R. Westerberg of
Ashland was driving, on a road west
of Phoenix.
According to Dr. R. W. Stearns, the
little boy suffered a fractured shoul
der, bad cuts and bruises about the
face, a slight concussion of the lungs
i nhlrh wm rstrw-irr rt tnunh hotter thill
and his teeth knocked loose.
Tho report placed on file at the
city police station by Westerberg, said
the little boy grabbed some books
from another child as they were walk
ing down te road, and ran back
ward Into the road, directly In front
of Westerberg's car.
DOG RACE HALTED
VANCOUVER, Wash.. April 19.
(API There will be no dog racing
on Bagley track tonight.
The action of Prosecuting Attorney
Dale McMullen yesterday In tiling a
formal complaint upon which a tem
porary restraining order wsa Issued,
effectively halted the scheduled open
ing for tonight, and promoters of the
greyhound racing meet said they
would not put the dogs on the track
until a hearing can be held. They
would take a chanea of being cited
for contempt should they conduct
the races scheduled.
The hearing was set for April S4,
but attorneys for the promoters were
trying to prepare their case for a
ieans taoctrpw.
E
WILL DIP LOIR
E
First Birthday of New Dollar
Finds Chief Interest in
What May Be Expected
During Second Year
By CLAUDE A. JAGGF.R
Associated Press financial fcdicor.
(Copyright, 1934, by Associated Press)
NEW YORK, April 19. On this first
birthday of the new dollar, the world
of finance la chiefly Interested In
what this dollar Is going to look like
on Its second birthday.
The monetary doctora widely agree
that the dollar will not buy as much
a year from now, as It will today.
Whether It will contain less gold, or
even some silver, remain mote ques
tions.
The dollar Informally left the gold
standard March 4, 1933, when the
federal reserve banka ceased redeem
ing paper currency with gold, but It
was April 19, a year ago, that Former
Treasury Secretary Woodln formally
announced the dollar waa no longer
a gold dollar, but a managed dollar.
Our monetary unit now flnda Itself
on a modified gold bullion atandard
"1934 model," according to Becre
tary Morgenthau and atrlpped from
25.8 grains of gold, nine-tenths fine,
to 15 fi-21 grains.
Can Fluctuate Gold.
Under legislation enacted last May,
and last January, the president may
Increase the amount of gold In tne
dollar a trifle, that IB, to 15.48 grains,
and may decrease It substantially. In
fact to aa little as 13.9 grains.
President Roosevelt and Secretary
Morgenthau have made It clear that
they wish to continue with the pres
ent dollar of 15 5-31 grains, for the
time belmr.
In the meantime the silver bloc in
congress Is agitating for greater mone
tary use of allver. The anminiatra-
tlon has been cool to most of the sli
ver proposals, and usually well-in-formed
quarters assert that any man.
datory allver legislation of extreme
monetary moment would be vetoed.
So, barring unexpected aeveiop-
(Continued on Page Eleven)
LAST OF PEARS
I
Pear storage holdings In this val
ley today totaled 63 cars of Winter
Nellls, acordlng to Rogue River Traf
fic association figures. They are the
last of the 1933 crop,. and will be sold
by May 1, It la forecsst. It Is tho
lowest storage mark of several years.
The 63 cars are based on 630 boxes
to the car.
Apple storsge holdings total 78 cars
baaed on 720 boxes to the car. There
are an estimated 1540 boxes of loose
apples In storage.
Fruit shipments for the week end
ing last night, according to tho
Southern Paclflo freight office, were
JO cars of pears and one car of ap
plea. The season ehlpments for pears to
tal 9,031 cara of pears snd 133 cars
of apples.
ENDEAVOR GUESTS
SALEM. April 19. (AP) Opening
of the state christian Endeavor con
vention In Salem tonight finds the
general convention committee faced
with one big problem; that of hous
ing the more than 1000 out-of-town
delegates expected to register this
afternoon. '
Outside of this one difficulty every
thing la In rcadlpese to take care of
the Influ of young people from all
over the atate. The convention opens
tonight and contlnuea through Sun
day, with all sessions to be held In
the Willamette university gymna
sium. The gathering this year marks the
observance of the first 60 yesrs of
endeavor work In the state.
4
SUGAR BILL PASSES
49 TO 18, IN SENATE
WASH1NOTON, April -. P) The
senate late today passed the Jonei
Costlgan bill to control sugar produc
tion and returned It to the house
for action on amendments.
The vote on final passsge was 49
to 16.
SALEM. April 19. (AP) Healing
on the Investigations Into the Pacific
Telephone 8c Telegraph company,
scheduled to be reaumed In Portland
today, has been Indefinitely postponed
due to the Illness of Claude R. Les
ter, chief engineer for the public utili
ties exgnsUMloib .
INVESTORS GET
SMAUSALVAGE
Six Per Cent Being Mailed!
As Only Payment in Final
Liquidation Nine More
Firms to Be Wound Up
SALEM, April 19. D Fourteen
thousand shareholders of the Guar
dian Building and Loan association
today were mailed checks for six per
cent of their Investments, the one and
only payment they will receive In the
final liquidation of the association.
The state corporation department an
nounced Issuance of this payment.
amounting to (67,783.
Charles H. Carey, corporation com
missioner, stated that the email salv
age would be disappointing to share
holders, but thla was the most -that
could be realized after the preferred
creditors were taken care of. The
company waa taken over by tho atate
In 1931, and Carey aald If liquidation
ahould be continued longer, not even
a alx per cent dividend could be sal
vaged.
Sold Asests to Equity.
The state sold all the assets of the
asoclatlon to the Equity Finance com
pany, created by the preferred cred
itors whose claims aggregated about a
half million dollara, for the amount
salvaged for the ahareholdera. Carey
said the claims of the preferred cred
itors ranked ahead of the common
stock, and the sale was the final step
In the liquidation program. The sale
was authorized by the Multnomah
county circuit court following a full
hearing.
Disposal of this ocompany malka
the first culmination of liquidation
or reorganization programa of any of
the 10 such associations which were
taken over by the atate corporation
commissioners since 1931. Nine com
panies still remain In the hands of
the commissioner, but plana were In
various atnges of progress In all other
cases. - .
Consolidation Approved,
The consolidation proposal for six
large Oregon firms has been approved
by the circuit court. They would be
formed under a "Consolidated Build
ing and Loan association" and would
continue business with the asseta of
all companies. The firms Involved
are the Western Savlnga and Loan,
Dime and Dollar Buildings and Loan,
Northern Savings and Loan, Pruden
tial Savings and Loan, and the As
toria Savings and Loan association.
The Union Building and Loan as
sociation reorganization proposal has
been delayed by legal action and the
case la now pending In the federal
Court.
Plana appear near culmination for
the reorganization of the Western
Loan and Building association of Salt
Lake City In cooperation with seven
other states, Carey said.
The tenth association, also foreign,
will be liquidated outright, but good
security Is on hand for the Oregon
ahareholdera. This Is the Inter
Mountaln association of Utah.
1
BASEBALL
American
BOSTON, April 19. (AP) A ninth
Inning home run by Julius Bolters
off Alvln Crowder gave the Red Sox
a 8 to 4 victory over Washington to
day, their first win of the season.
The smaah cleared the leftfleld wall.
' Morning game.
Washington 4 7 2
Boston 6 10 0
Stewart, Crowder and Berg; Wal
berg, Rhodes and Hlnkle.
Second game.
Washington 8 5 0
Boston 7 13 1
Prim, Fllley, Line and Berg,
Klumpp; Welch and Ferrell.
R. H. E.
St. Louis .'. 3 8.1
Cleveland 8 6 1
Batteries: Wells and Qrube: Harder,
Wlnegarner, Connelly and Pytlak.
National.
R. H. E.
Boston .... -.... 13 0
Brooklyn 1 8 0
Batteries: Zachary and Spohrer;
Beck and Lopez.
(Called end seventh, fog)
R. H. E
Chicago ...... 4 9 0
Cincinnati 15 2
Batteries: Malone ad Hartnett;
Derringer, Brennan and O'Fsrrell.
Philadelphia ...
New York .
Collins and
0 8 1
3 4 1
Wilson; Psrmelee,
Luque snd Richards.
Export Wheat
PORTLAND. Ore., April 19. (AP)
Emergency Export corporation bid
for soft white wheat for foreign amp
I ment, 67 cents a bushel.
PORTLAND. April 19. (API
Funeral services will be held here
tomorrow for Mrs. Rachel B. Calvert,
91, widow of Judge Stephen A. Cal
vert, former atate land commissioner
for Washington. She will be burled
in the family plot In a Tacoma ceme
Inventor Leaves
Veteran Workers
Share of Estate
PITTSBURGH, April 19. tJP
The late Edwin Rudd, who came
to this country a penniless emi
grant from Normay In the 80's,
provided a 8130,000 fund for em
ployes who helped him build the
Rudd Manufacturing company.
Thla la disclosed by the will of
the Inventor and manufacturer of
heating equipment which was filed
for probate yesterday.
Persons employed by him for 20
yeara will receive 62.000 and those
employed for 10 yeara 81.000.
The bulk of the estate, which
totaled 81.900,000, goes to members
of the family and to institutions.
EXPECT SAWMILL
OPEN NEXT WEEK
DECLARE OWNERS
It Is now expected that the sawmill
unit of the Owen-Oregon Lumber
company will atart operation next
week, Jamea H. Owen, general mana
ger of the company, said this morning.
Arrangements to thla end are being
pushed.
Timber-falling and logging opera
tions are now In full awing In the
Butts Falls district where 68 men are
employed. Another crew la engaged
In repairing the bridges and trestles
of the Medford Logging compsny and
It la expected that the logging rail
road will be In operation within the
next fortnight.
About a million feet of logs are In
the mill pond, and the sawmill will
start cutting them in order to clear
the pond for the new timber.
When the plant la In full operation
fore than 300 persons will be on the
payroll. Thla will lessen the strain
In the local labor field. The em
ployment lists have been completed,
and no more will be hired. Practl
oally all the workera are residents of
this city and county, and old em
ployees. Many own homes.. Of the
more than 800. only two have resided
outside the county the pest four
years and they both have worked for
the Owen company for more than 20
years.
The plant will operate under tne
NRA lumber code, and the length of
the operation depends on the condi
tion of the market, building and
trade conditions, now markedly on
tho up.
f
WILL SAYS JUDGE
PORTLAND, April 10. (AP) Cir
cuit Judge Tazwell yesterday refuMd
to admit the will of the Ute Plymp
ton J. Kelly, elderly widower, to pro
bata, after announcing he believed
undue Influence waa used by Jeaste
O. Northrup, a nurse, In obtaining
bequests of nearly 160,000 from the
will. An administrator for the 90,-
000 estate wMl be appointed, the
court announced.
Judge Tazwell held the will did
not express the wishes of Kelly In
that he "waa not exercising hla own
free will but was under the domina
tion of Mrs. Northrup." Letters the
nurse reputedly wrote to another
person, the court said were "suffici
ent to disclose the methods employed
In attempting to attain her object."
T
VISITOR AT HOME
MOORESVILLE, Ind., April 19.'
(AP) Declaring that "John Isn't In
Indiana now," John W. Dllllnger re
vealed Wednesday that his son, the
notorloua outlaw, spent a few quiet
hours at the old Dllllnger farm home
near Mooreavllle on the weekend of
April 7.
"I talked with him for tome time,'
the elderly man said.
Neighbors who aald they saw the
young outlaw on this weekend visit
here, declared the color of the ban
dlt's hair had been ohanged from
chestnut to henna.
WASHINGTON. April 19. (P
Forty-five envelopea containing bids
of aviation companies to fly the air
mall' on a three months' basis were
received today at the postofflce de
partment.
They will be opened at noon to
morrow, by Poatmaater-Oeneral Parley
The number of companies that bid
was 89t tt4 kaow
ISTOL
Klamath Officer Says Only
Prints Were Found On
Barrel of Gun Parade of
Witnesses in Full Swing
KLAMATH FALLS, April 19. (AP)
Leigh Ackennan, Klamath Falls po
lice officer, this afternoon testified
that he had photographed four finger
prints on the revolver found clutched
In Ralph Horan'a dead hand.
They were on the barrel. No finger
prlnta wore found on the handle or
the trigger.
Although Koran's prints were taken,
Ackerman said he did not compare
them to those on the gun. Nor did
he testify that they were Manning's.
The pictures were accepted aa atate
exhibits.
KLAMATH ALLS. April 19. (AP)
The word picture of State Represen
tative Ralph Horan'a death contin
ued uninterrupted today aa swiftly
Increasing numbers of state witnesses
offered testimony.
Three peace officers, an engineer,
a stenographer and a physician were
the first six of more than forty wit
nesses the state will call In its effort
to establish Horace M. Manning, vet
eran Oregon attorney, aa the first
degree killer of hla former law asso
ciate.
Today Lloyd Low, Klamath county
sheriff, continued his testimony out
short at adjournmgnt lata yesterday
ma Outline, stenographer, and Dr.
Charles V. Hugh, the physician who
performed an autopsy on Horan'a
body after he waa found shot to
death In Manning's office last Feb
ruary 13.
Court Room Jammed
The courtroom again overflowed
with spectators. 1 Long before - the -trial
convened crowds gathered In tho
halls hoping to find seats. The audi
ence waa orderly following yester
day's attempt to push put bailiff
Into the limited room.
Sheriff Low Identified bits of gla
picked up In the streets beneath
Manning's windows, These blta of
glass, the state expects to show, were
from a gin bottle tossed from the at
torney's office shortly beforo tha
young legislator was killed.
Clothes of the slain man were of
fered and accepted as exhibits. Al
ready tha space before the bench Is
filled with desks, chairs and book
cases all scarred by bullets taken
from Manning's office. , -
Bottle In HorntiS Car
The sheriff Identified a bottle re-
(Continued on Page Two)
WHEAT PRICES BREAK
CHICAOO, April 19. (if) Wheat
prices o nthe Board of Trade broke
five centa a bushel late today under
pressure of heavy liquidation that
followed a statement ascribed to Sec
retary of Agriculture Wallace that do
mestic and world prices of wheat
would be closer together during the
present year.
The drop was the maximum' per
mitted under present trading regu
lations. WILL
ROGERS
'says:
SANTA MONICA, Cal, Apr.
18. With tho baseball season
opened and Washington head
ed for another pennant, boy,
congress better be good from
now on.
Huseball is in for a grout
year. It's our national gamo
and will always be our national
game. We became a great na
tion under baseball and com
menced to flop the minute we
started to lake up 8 lot of
other poor substitutes.
Golf is played for conversa
tional purposes, polo is played
by us lazy ones because tha
horso does all the work and wo
love to just go for the ride, but
you have to play baseball for
itself alone, for there is no club
house to talk it over in after
the game.
From an old first baseman of
the Olagah, Okla., Giants-