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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1934)
Medford Mail Tk 1 3une WDTNEK The Weather Forecast: Fair and wormer Sunday. Temperature Rlgheit yesterday -r- R Lowest yesterday - 50 Pulitzer Award FOR 1934 Twenty-ninth Year MEDFORD, OREGOX. SUNDAY. JUNE 10, 1931. No. 68. H By PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, D. 0., June 7. Thla la a correction. A few days ego the Inside news wu carried In this nice that tits White House would not deal wltlh Senator Smith to get the Tugwell nomina tion through the eenate. An apol ogy is due all readers. All parties to the deal still deny that one was made. The publlo record only Paul Mallon circumstantial evidence. The apology stands anyway. Here la the evidence: 8 ZZ. ....v.. senator Smith bottled up the Tugwell nomination In his. senate agriculture committee. He .was adamant. Recently no aim u Carolina colleague, (senator invited to the White House to. nether. Shortly thereafter President S. ,.,. namerf three Smith men to ...i nnnitions in South Carolina. ' Twenty-four hours later the admin istration started to extract the Tug well nomination from omnns cum mittee. and. while Smith protested v. Hirt not nrotest too much. Tou cannot keep skeptics from be u.vt? that Smith eased his punch against Professor Tugwell for two United States marshals and a col lector of customs, The only question among the pol iticians la whether the White House overpaid Senator Smith. Some think Professor Tugwell's value as esslst trv of sericulture could be traded In an open patronage market today for no more than a seconu cless postmasterehip. Qood friends of ths administra tion know that such auggestions are merely sour grapes in the mouths of Professor Tugwell's critics. Mr. Roose velt would gladly have given a fed eral Judgeship or even two Judge ships, If necessary, to get Tugwell confirmed by the senate. At least, that is the view of the Tugwell de fenders. However, for two marshals and a niirtnr. Smith could hardly be ex pected to back down completely in his opposition to Professon Tugwell. Matters had to be arranged so that he could maintain his opposition with reasonable vigor. That angle has to be considered when you are talking about the price. Other extenuating circumstances also will have to be considered. There r four South. Carolina Jobs open -v,.n senators Smith and Byrnes were beckoned by the White House, The best Job was a federal Judge, .u. nvn... id it man for that one Frank K. Meyers, who was ardently opposed by Smith. Mr. Roosevelt gave that Job to the Byrnes man. The three Jobs which you can fairly say Smith won were: William Burgeson, United States marshal, whom Byrnes also liked; Reuben Gosnell, United States marshal, whom Smith demanded and Byrnes did not oppose, and Charles J. Baker, col lector of customs, a Smith man op posed by Byrnes, who had another candidate for the Job. Deducting the federal Judgeship from the purchase price, you .can easily see It was really not so high after all. The Inside of this mutual arrange i. nffeirPH in detail because It la the best example of quite a few less obvious ones which are made in these closing aays 01 The truth of the matter is that the opposing faction are swapping favors right and left to gain their points. It is nothing unusual. In politics, if you want to take you also have to give, especially -Irwin and time is valuable, There Is, for another Instance, the ,.ii,-nf mutter of the administration housing bill. It would be an insult to the political intelligence 01 M.n fttMffRii of the banking com- tn unv he Is Roing to uncork his stopper on that bill unless he gets something on the side. Mr. Btcagall haa feelings, strong feelings m far as the housing bill u concerned. He failed even to hold hearings on it for a long time. Hla feelings must be salved. Patronage Is the strongest salt ever Invented in politics It heals all wounds. The election of Henry netcher as chairman of the republican national committee caused a less fsvorable reaction among republicans here than was apparent on the surface. The Inner feeling wes not so much against Fletcher personally as against the sgents of the party who put him over In Chicago. The congressional crowd (except the eastern conservatives) apparently believe that Fletcher's election leaves them out In the snow. He will have a tremendous diplomatic Job on his hands making them feel good about him. (Continued on Page i"hree tiemocrnts Rewarded PORTLAND. Ore., June 9. (API A special dispatch to the Journal to day mentioned the following who have been nominated postmasters In Oregon: Astoria. Harry Burk: Wood, burn. Howard F. Butterfirld: willa, mine, Frank H. Fawk; Maupln, Ben, Jamin P. Turner. V AGREEMENT SEEN WITHIN WEEK ON PORTLAND DOCKS Gov. Meier Heads Parley, No Statement Hearing On Blindness Portland Police Delayed Alaska Faces Food Shortage. PORTLAND, Ore., June 9, Private conferences were continues here tonight by Joseph P. Ryan, presi dent of the International Longshore men's association, In efforts to bring agreement In the longshoremen's strike. Silence followed a strike parley to day attended by Ryan, Governor Ju lius L. Meier and other representa tives of shippers, business men and strikers. All referred Inquiries to Governor Meier who in turn said he had noth ing to report. Ryan's only comment was that It is my hope" that the strike will come to a settlement this week. The hearing of 13 Portland police men suspended for alleged neglect of duty when the crew walked off the old tanker Kekoskee and left town at the Instance of plcketolng seamen was continued until Monday. AH the police questioned said they saw no violence end heard no pro tests from the crew or threats from the atrlkers. Several officers aald they saw the Kekoskee aallors laughing and talking as they tossed their bun dies Into a truck. None witnessed the beating of one member of the crew. Captain R. Bertlln. master of th9 Kekoskee, declared the 2,000.000 gaV Ions of gasoline carried by the craft should be unlosded Immediately, but the longshoremen's union would nas permit htm to get men to discharge the fuel. A catastrophic conflagration would sweep the Portland harbor and the Columbia river down to Astoria of a collision or explosion resulted tn a fire, Bertlln said. The blazing gasoline would sweep on top of the current, he explained. SEATTLE. Wn., June 9. (AP) The Paclflo coast longshoremen's strike, husky month-old child of the labor unions that haa wreaked havoc with commerce, today found a baby brother in Seattle a seamen's strike that almost .spilled what few beans had been picked from the general confusion. The seamen's strike blocked a long shoremen's agreement to let a few ships carry food to distressed Alaska blocked It for several hours, until the seamen's wage and recognition demands were granted by shipping companies. The Alaskan agreement had been the only favorable development from the chaos. In Portland Joseph P. Ryan, head of the International Longshoremen's association, said he would make no prediction as to when the strike would end, but that con ferences were developing a common ground on which employera and long, shoremen could stand. More trouble flared In San Pedro, Calif., where three students were manhandled In a mob demonstration. which, police said, grew out of the strike, the mobsmen believing the youths were strike-breaking sailors, SEATTLE, June 9. (AP) The Sailors' Union of the Pacific, Includ ing sailors, firemen, watertenders and cooks, who had blocked loading of ships for Alaska, announced to day that most of their demands had been compiled with by employers, and that Alaskan ships might proceed In accordance with arrangements already made by representatives of the wat erfront employers and the striking Pacific coast longshoremen. The sailors unions consented to remove their objections, they said, because of pressure brought upon them to do their part in helping relieve distressed Alaska. Meanwhile the general longshore men's strike continued along the Pacific coast. Seattle was the first port where an agreement was reach- ed for movement of even part of the congested commerce. Demands continued to be made by represen, tatlves of agriculture and Industry that the federal government and state governments Intervene In the strike. The Pacific Northwest Qraln Deal ers' association, convening In Walla Walla, Wash., today, was the latest group to make such demsnds. -. World News At a Glance LONDON. America and Britain to begin discussions preparatory to 1935 naval conference. MOSCOW. New Soviet criminal code makes flight abroad punishable by death. VIENNA A night of destructive tcrorlsm topped by discovery of bomb In chancellory. LONDON. Earl of Lonsdale, form er cowboy, wi'chea 16,000 British cheer Americans at rodeo. SAN SALVADOR Belated reports from Interior add to death toll and destruction from hurricane. Murient Advled LAKE FOREST, III., June 9 ffT This years collece uraduatea were called upon by AUoriicy-Oeneral Ho. mcr cunnlnu today, to steer trie country sway from any future eco nomic disaster. Dancing Ban At Willamette Lifted But Not Tod Much SALKM, Ore., June 9. (AP) Student of Willamette university will be permitted for the first time, officially, to hold dances next fall, as a result of action by the university trustees today. The dances will not be held on the campus but must receive the approval of the desn of women and be chaperoned by faculty members. The resolution permitting danc ing states that this action was taken Mln deference to the Judg ment of many friends of Wlllsm- ette and to meet a situation very difficult to control otherwise.' TUGWELL TO FACE Democrats Head Fight Against "Brain Trust" Chief's Appointment To Higher Federal Post. WASHINGTON, June 9. Sen ata agriculture committee members studied the published views of Rex- ford O. Tugwell over the week-end in preparation for some pointed ques tions when he comes before the com mittee in an open hearing Monday. The committee at that time will seek to determine Tugwell's "fltneis" to serve aa undersecretary of sericul ture and la under orders from the senate to make lta report, one way or the other, by noon Tuesday. The senate's Instructions were the outgrowth of charges that Chairmen Smith had tried to prevent confirma tion by holding up oommlttee action, They were Issued last night after a plalnspoken democratic party row. Smith opposes Tugwell because he la not a dirt farmer. He admitted he had done nothing to expedite com mittee action, but said that It any member of the committee had asked that the nomination be considered, he would have acceded. Also leading the campaign against confirmation Is another democrat, Byrd of Virginia, who waa Irate --be cause a letter he sent Tugwell was not anawered within a week. He ac cused Tugwell of trying to ueurp the powera of congress In administering the farm act. Underlying the whole squabble, which has been quietly enjoyed by the republican regulars, Is latent con servative opposition to the liberal ele ments among President Roosevelt's close advisors. To the conservative elements In congress, Tugwell because of his high standing with the president and be cause he Is the reputed author 01 much of the legislation which that faction denounces as socialistic and Intended to regiment agriculture, symbolleea the "brain trusters," "col lege professors," "academicians" and young liberals." For thia reason, the question of confirmation la assuming the propor tions of a vote of confidence on the more liberal provisions of the presi dent's program. Democratic leaders are counting on a favorable vote, but are making no predictions as to the extent of the majority. CAMERA EYE OF CAPT. GUARDANE IS FORGER'S REGRET PORTLAND, Ore., June 9. (IP) Heat and the monotone of a detec tive's voice addressing a group of peace officers in an anti-rubber check meeting made State Police Captain Wayne M. Ouardane drowsy. The captaln'a glance wandered to a window and he gazed drorally on the pedestrians passing on the side walk SO feet below. For a moment, his mind wss a blank. "No, I wasn't thinking about a fishing trip, nor anything to eatr I waa thinking about nothing," he explained later. Abruptly Captain Ouardsne's men tal faculties snapped into action- faintly familiar face came into his vision. Like msny policemen, uap tain Ouardane had developed a pho tographic brain In which la stored hundred of portraits of "wanted" criminals. The face he saw matched one he had seen only on circulars and prison records. He dashed from the meeting of "DSDer-hsnner" Investigators to the street below. "You're under arrest," he said to the pedestrian. "Aren't you Dewoy RBlnbolt?" Dewey Ralnbolt, wanted since IWJ in Walla Walla, Wash., for passing bad checks. It waa. His face testified his surprise. Soon he waa in Jail, held for the sheriff at Walla wane. Captain Ouardane heard the lv of the detective's speech. Hit by Rock ROSEBURO, Ore., June 9. (AP) A flying rock from a dynamite blast knocked out eight teeth and cut and bruised the fa-e rt W lbur SwarU CC.C. u-nrfcT r. :;ivlll CJmp. who was edmlnlimcJ 10 at th Veterans' hospital her today. - SPEED DROUGHT ilVia ... n if A fl President Roosevelt personally took charge of speeding drought relief when he called this group and congressmen of drought-stricken atatea Into White House conferences. A $525,000,000 emergency relief program was outlined by the President to congressional leaders. Left to right: Lawrence Westbrook, assistant to the federal relief administrator; William I. Myers of the farm credit administration; Chester C. Davis, farm administrator; Rexford Tugwell, assistant secretary of agriculture. (Associated Press Photo) 56,000 VISITORS IN CITY DURING DIAMOND JUBILEE Celebration Officially Closed Last Night Finance Re portGeneral Chairman Thanks Oregon Cities For Assistance. Oregon's Diamond Jubilee, com memorating 75 years of statehood, and Btaged by the Jackson County Cham ber of Commerce. A. H. Banwell, seo- retaryrcame to an official close, last night. It was a success from' the standpoint of community advertising and cementing of good will. No state ment on finances will be forthcom-. Ing for the better part of a week, and until all the bills are In, and paid, and the final balance struck. The Jubilee was first suggested by Secre tary Banwell two years, ago, and plans were under consideration for that length of time. With the exception of threatening weather during the early part of the week, the celebration moved along without a hitch. Conservative esti mates, complied from the thoughts of numerous persona experienced in estimating crowds, place the num ber of vlsltora in Medford during the past week at 68,000 people. Pre Jubllee celebration activities were un der way In Medford last Saturday, followed- by thousands of visitors In Medford the next day for the speech of Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace at the fair grounds, union church services In the evening at the fair grounds attracted several thou sand more. Impressive coronation ceremonies were the feature Monday evening, honoring pioneer womanhood. Anne Whlteaker of Eugene, Queen Mother of Oregon, waa crowned by Prof. Irv ing E. Vlnlng of Ashland, himself a member of an old-established pioneer family. All details were carefully planned and executed. The next day hundreds and more nundreds of peo- (continued on page nine) T OVER WHEAT PACT LONDON, Eng., June 9. (API- Repudiation by all the big wheat exporting nations of their commit ments under the 1933 agreement and a trade war with Argentina waa fore- cast tonight aa membera of the wheat advisory commission surveyed the present exhortations from the South American country. Although only unofficial figures were available, members of the com, mission agreed that these accurately disclose Argentina broke the wheat agreement during the past week In view of the fact that the unit ed 8tates, Australia and Russia are not In a position to take the lead In a trade war, It was believed In In formed quarters that Csnada may turn loose her huge stocks available for export In retaliation for con tinned Argentine dumping. The declaration of Secretary of Ag riculture Wallace that the United States will no longer regard herself as bound by the 1933 committments If the pact Is broken was recalled by rommlnelon members, who asserted Argentina is not even trying to curb shipments. ASTOPIA. Ore., June 9. (AP) William Mannlla, city commissioner. arrested by slate police on a drunk ; driving charse. enured a plea of not j guilty In Justice court today and; was bound over on $360 ball. I RELIEF AT WHITE HOUSE MEETING MID-WEST RAINS SEND NEW PERILS (By the Associated Press) Man and nature Joined forces Sat urday to aid fanners harrassed by one of the worst droughts In United States history. While President Roosevelt asked congress for $536,000,000 to finance drought relief program aireaay un dertaken by the administration, showers continued In the northern and central farming states and ex tended Into parte of Missouri and Kansas. .. President Roosevelt asked freedom for the .administration' to -spend toe, money. He said the administration planned to spend 135,000,000 for special work and human relief, $100. 000,000 for shipping, processing and relief distribution of purchased cat tle and $100,000,000 for emergency feed loans to farmers. - SmBller amounts he said, were to be used for relocating destitute farm families, livestock purchases, work mn in drought areas and the mirchase of eeed for 1935 planting. Continued thunderatorma were fore cast for most of the northern and central states. In Iowa, where the drought ceased to endanger crops, wind, hsll, and flood caused additional damage. An ni.t.hronv of tvohoid fever waa feared at Sioux City, Iowa, whore hundreda nf acres of lowlands were under water. Doctora were busy through the day Innoculatlng 1,500 persons Hriven from their homes. Continued rains In the northwest form belt aave stockmen hope that enough feed could yet be grown to carry their cattle and nogs inrougn the winter. FLETCHER URGES USE OF 'BRAKES PHILADELPHIA, June 9. (AP) Pennsvlvanla's major political body, the republican state committee, ohose a new leader and entered upon a new term today. With Henry P. Fletcher, new re publican national chairman, himself a Pennsylvanlan, sa Its guest, the committee executed the harmony pro gram arranged by leaders. Fletcher called for votes to block practices of the national admlnls- tratlon and warned that "If the democrats can carry Pennsylvania, the future of the republican party will need more than rebuilding, He exhorted the committee not to forget "there are congressional elec tions coming, and It Is nceesary for us to have a congress that will put the brakes on what Is going on In Washington." F WASHINGTON, June 9. (API More than 483,000 acres of public and private lands will be transferred to five national forests throughout tne west under terms of bills passed dur. Ing the present session of congress In addition President Roosevelt has been authorlrd to sdd 350.000 acres to the Fremont national forest In Oregon The location and acreage of addl tlona Include: Oehoco national for est. Oregon. 1.008 seres: Boise net !eniii forest. Idaho. 373,340 acres: Mt. Hood nstional forest. Oregon, 4,798. seres. NORTHWEST WATER ROJECTS SLATED TO GET ONE BILLION Columbia River Develop ment And Eastern Oregon Irrigation Listed For Quick Action Power In crease Contemplated. WASHINGTON, D. C, June 9. (AP) A billion dollar water devel opment and flood oontrol program for the Paclfie Northwest states la contemplated In the report of the president's special cabinet committee on water flow. . ; Oregon, Washington. Idaho and Utah flood control, irrigation, power development and navigation pro grama were estimated to cost $1,207, 935,000. Dsvelopment of the Columbia river basin at a cost of about $664,000, 000 wsa among 10 projects scattered throughout the nation which were recommended for Immediate action. Power development on the Willam ette river and lta tributaries waa placed at $15,700,000 with an added $6,120,000 .recommended for atudles of Irrigation, navigation and the In itial stops In developing locks and dams, The possibilities of the Columbia river basin are clarloned In the com mittee's roport which declared the inland empire "offera the greatest opportunity for power development In the western section of the united States." The committee said that "economlo conditions do not Justify" going ahead with the irrigation angle of the Grand Coulee development -at the present time. The Grand Coulee dam (Continued on Page Six) E ON SILVER BILL WASHINGTON, June 9. (AP) The long controversy over sliver leg islation virtually ended today .when the senate reached an agreement as, surlng a vote Monday on the ad ministration bill to Increase the use of the metal aa money. The agreement, limiting debate on the bill 15 minutes for each senator, beginning Monday at S p. rn.,' put an end to any threats of a filibuster on the legislation" and made lta ap proval a certainty. At the aams time, leaders of the move to liberalise the bill abandoned their fight when they found little support, even among the silver bloo, for their amendments. PARENTS JAILED FOR TOT CRUELTY PONTIAC, Mich., June 0. (AP) A felony charge was pending today against the parents of two atnall chtl drrn whom the police found tied to a bed, their mouths taped ahut, while their mother and father were out for the evening, The parents. Raymond De Harrold, 34-year-old mechanical engineer, and his wife, Maybelle, 36, will appear In circuit court next week to plead to the charge that thev "willfully, un lawfully and cruelly" punished their cmiaren. Dave Force Finds $4000 Gold Pocket Along Squaw Creek Dave Force of Central Point wss definitely on the gold standard thla week when he took out a $4000 pocket of gold along Squatf creek In the Applegate country, according to reports. E Ed Huntington, Prospector Of Gold Beach, Arm And Jaw Broken, Blinded, By Fall Produces Saga. GOLD BEACH, Ore., June 9. P) A backwoods saga of stamina and de termination unequalled in the ref lections of the oldest settlers of southwestern Oregon la being piece;! from the sporadio flow of words from the swollen lips of a battered, bruised and broken hulk of a man In a hos pital here. Ed Huntington, 39, played hla lone hand agatnst desth In a remote mountain cabin and trudged, crawled and swam despite a broken arm and fractured Jaw over 38 mllea of mountain country. On the last day of May or the first of June, Hunting does not re member which, while proapeotlug alone on upper Mlalatnah oreek In the craglcs, he leaned out to peer around a cliff, loat hla footing and fell to the rubble 50 feet below. He must have landed on hla face and one arm. When he returned to rationality he realized he waa Injured seriously and hla eyea were alowly swelling ahut. He managed to reach hla camp before hla eyea were closed entirely. He must have hla eyea to guide himself to civilization, so at once he set about building a fire to heat wat, er for hot packs to reduoe the awell ing. His left arm waa useless, broken twice and swelling. Huntington thinks It was two days before he managed to get his eyes so they would stay open.. During this time all of hla actions had to be started while holding the ltda of hla right eye open with hla right hand To gather wood he had to hold hla eye open until he found a aticx. He used hla sense of direction to pica up the stick and make hla way to tho fire. Then he'd deposit the atick on the ground near hie foot, pry hla eye open, and kick tn fuel in. For food he managed a gruei oi bread and potatoes. Whan he at last waa able to set out he dared not hazard the treach erous Mlslatnah canyon pass. He took to the creek bed, following It from rock to rock. Several deep holes he waa forced to swim, hla limp, left arm trailing use lessly through the water. He remembers crawling acoui in the creek bed one night and con cludes he must have consumed two dava before he finally dragged him self 38 mllea to the cabin home of Will Tolman. ex-aherlff of thla coun. ty. A telephone call brought a ranger and his automobile to within two mllea of Tolman'a cabin. Huntington hiked that two mllea and after a delay when the ear atalled while crossing the Ohetco river, the party reached the hospital Tuesday night, mora than a week after his fall. The Injured man Insisted on walk, Ins to a bed. Then relaxation aent him Into an Irrational coma from whloh he la alowly emerging. His con- dltlon la not regarded aa aerloua, due to hla wonderful physique. Hla present troubles are conetdsr- ablv mental the terrifying Illusions of butzarda olrcllng over hla neaa. GOES TO EUROPE, BALKS KIDNAPERS NEW YORK, June 9. (AP) Fear ful his two children might become the victims of kidnapers, Horace E, Dodge of Detroit, today aalled with them on the liner Leviathan, taxing them, he said, "where they will be safe." Just a year ago, kidnapers' threat against the Dodge children were re, ported by their father when he turned with tnem irom Europe. It Is understood the children will stay tor an Indefinite period at home In Windsor, a suburb of Lon don, Engl. 5 BABY GIRLS IN CORBE1L, Ontario, June 0. (AP) All now corny housed in separate Incubators, the Dlonne quintuplets today continued to ahow growing atrength, and three of them gained weight in the last twenty-four hours. Two remained unchanged Yvonne and Annette and they are the heav iest of the five. The total gain for - 1 Ihc day brought the lotal velght of an nve nine gins io un puunoa, . imvv ana vm-ivui.u uiwvm GRANGE PLANS TO T Holman And Mahoney Forces Also Combine For Fall Politics Master Gill May Be Candidate. SALEM, Ore., June 9. (AP) In dependent candidates for governor and representative In congress from the second district were freely pre dicted here and In Portland today with the additional prognostication mat some definite announcements would be made Immediately follow ing the State Grange convention In Roseburg next week. Political observers, here have watch ed the activities the past week of both the supporters of Rufus O. Hol man and WUUs Muhoney following tneir aeieats in the primary election for Republican and Democratic nom inations for governor, and have learned conferences would be held tomorrow between leaders In both these groups, with Mahoney himself sitting In. To round out the picture. It waa strongly indicated there would be some pertinent political discussions at the State Grange convention next week, to be followed by announce ment of at least one candidate who will compete against Joe E. Dunna and Charles H. Martin for governor. The youthful mayor of Klamath Falls, who waa declared by Dr. Rob inson of Moscow, Idaho, his chief supporter In the primary election, would become an Independent can- dldate, may sidestep this attempt to a grange candidate and himself run against Jay Upton and Walter Plero for congress from the second dis trict. Peter Zimmerman of Yamhill, a member of the state senate, appeared tne most likely candidate for gov ernorship honors, since announce ments from close friends of Ray GUI, State Grange master, and of friend of Charlea M. Thomaa, publlo utlll- tica commissioner, that neither would be In the running. Senator W. E. Burke of Sherwood told the writer he waa not entering the independent race. Should Mahoney run, and In the event Ray Gill or Burke should change their minds, they would be confronted with legal obatacles which would be decided by the state su preme court. Mandamus proceedings would be started at once In the event of filings of any of the three, It was definitely learned. The three were candidates In the regular, election. Both GIU and Burk were nominated on the Republican ucxec ror state senate, while Maho ney waa defeated by the Democrats for the gubernatorial nomination. Their pledgee at the time they filed were the legal obstacles over whloii attorneys disagree. - SUDBURY, Ont, June 9. (AP) Dr. Lulgl Pancaro, Sudbury physi cian and surgeon, today announced discovery of a fluid which, It la claimed, will stop bleeding even from major blood veecela. The fluid, clear and colorless, has been put to experimental and prac tical usage and will have varied scope The hemostatic, the doctor main tained, is a development rather than a discovery, and followed two yeara of Intensive work In the physician's laboratory here. Experiments were mad with doc and rabbits. The physicians used the preparation on himself, both exter nally and internally, before applying It to patlonte. Huge Lift Plans PORTLAND, Ore., June 0. (AP) Specif Icatlona were laaued here to day for construction of on of th highest single lift navigation locks In the world, to be built In the $31. 000,000 Bonneville power and navi gation dam of the Columbt. river. ' WILL ROGER? HOLLYWOOD, Cal June 8. Both aides in tho steel busi ness scorn anxious to strike. Well, if they would only strike just each other it wouldn't be so bad. Don't it look like there ought to be some civilized way of finding out what tho employe and employer owed t6 each other. Tho ktcst papers say that "it's up to the .president now." Is there anything difficult under the sun that's not put up to that man? lie will eventu nlly be asked to decide if the five little babies born in Cnna- d must go tn the world's faip in Chicago or not. 17