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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1936)
The Weather i Forecast: Fair tonight and Thursday; continued cold. - Temperature: Hlghes yesterday M.l LOWOSt thU morning JJ.g It Really Pays Thonundi of eye are on Mall Trtbuna classified Ida dully. Make your wants known tbroufh these columns for quirk and satisfactory results. It really pays! Tribune FORD Thirtieth Year full Associated Press MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1936. mil United Press No. 264. E Lru La WW MED (glEl : , : .,- . t A I ERNE5 By Paul Mallon (Copyright, 1S36. by Paul Mallon) WASHINGTON, Jan. 39 -President Roosevelt's dexterity as an alchemist waa never better Illustrated than In the selection of the federal re serve board. The man In the atreet may not know It, but that board means more to his everyday life than any other official authority 1 n government. Jt runs the fln- iDCH of the country: which la to say, it runs the PAUL MALLON country. Mr. Roosevelt may be the janitor of pie government house, but the FRB Is the control valve (or the heating and cooling systems. KIs problem was to renovate the board, remove old banking codwcds, protect It from aelf.combuetlble fire brands and get Governor Ecclea con firmed past Senator Glass. With scientific methods In his White House lab, he composed the contrary political Influences Into a substance which la not by any means pure gold but at least Is a board with a few splinters In It.- Half the new board waa hla own Idea and the other half was to get around Senator Glass. , The first things be put Into his mixing glass were the reappointment of his financial man Friday (Gover nor Eccles) and a sound liberal whom he found on the board (M. S. Ssymc aak). Only the Insiders knew It but Szymczak has frequently disagreed with Ecclea, notably against the Ec clea centralization of the open mar ket committee. ' , -"' - .' Neat, Mr. Roosevelt put in his old friend, Joseph Broderlck, superintend ent of banks In New Tork. Stolyears ago, as governor, he named Broderlck to the New York Job. Financial men characterized Broderlck as a man with bis feet on the ground. These three Eccles. Szymczak and Broderlck were the Roosevelt Ideas. Georgia senators are understood to have been behind , the No. 4 man, Ronald Ransom. He combines the legal with the banking type of mind, will probably be the composing spirit needed on every . board of directors to get opposing factions together. Af ter all. It la not Inadvisable to have one banker on a federal reserve board governing banks. The Ohio senator, Bulkley (cloee friend of Senator Olass), Is sponsor for the No. 8, John McKee, but RFC Chairman Jesse Jones Is supposed to have put the anointment over. Mc Kee waa an examiner for Jones, and Is also a solid citizen. No. t. Ralph Morrison of Texas, la being credited on the inside to Vice President Garner, but the Texaa aen ators were agreeable. No. 7 Mr. Roose- lOontlnued on Page Four., pay w mi- i1 m WATSON AND COLVIG FRATERNITY PLEDGES UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu gene -(SpD Richard Wateon and Bob Colvlg, both of Medford. were among the 34 men ' who atadged fraternities on the University of - Oregon campus during the first two eeka of winter term. OfaMwi nlilDMl AlErma Phi EDSllon and Colvlg affiliated with Sigma Nu. SIDE GLANCES by TRIBUNE REPORTERS John "Swedish Boy" Jensen being glad the weather man hasn't yet discovered hla return from California, being convinced It wlU rain again John Redden declining to haunt the Table TennI club courts again tonight, because, after hla being there five night In a row. the little woman Is beginning to rebel. Frank DeSoura, postmaster, view ing with alarm the fact that only two more days of fishing remain, and Just as he was about ready to break out the fishing tackle, too. Hoosler Hoffard. who his man- aged to keep pretty much out of sight of late) letting out in alarm ed squawk at bis two bird dogs, whlh somehow had broken loose and wr rinsing the neighborhood on ffwith Oakdale. Mr. Willis Messon falling to show up at the Mall Tribune to claim bis letter, and the M. T.'a bureau of missing persona looking hopefully under desks and such for him. Oene Narregan onloading his pockets of orangea scavenged from a wrelked fruit miek he rem upon while returning from RoatbuTg. T EDER; 24, SKULL OFF Was Visiting Brother On Farm Near Central Point Letter Indicates Des pondency And III Health. Ernest Herman Gder, 24-year old cowboy visiting In this vicinity from Globe. Ariz., committed suicide at 5:00 o'clock; yesterday afternoon by firing a high powered hunting rifle through the roof of his mouth, state police and Coroner Frank Perl stated today. The young man was visiting relatives In this vicinity, and was "batching1' with & brother, Lew Is, at a farm two and a half miles south west of Central Point on the Hill road. Bder had been despondent and In 111 health, according to state po lice, threatening to commit suicide twice before in the last several weeks. A suicide note, left to a friend In Globe, saltl In part: "I -have caught the last horse, til be riding." War's brother told state police that he had gone to the woodshed for wood at 6 o'clock, and heard a shot. Rushing back Into the house he found his brother dead, and ran and walked to the nearest neighbor and came to this city to notify policy. State police officer. Sheriff Syd I. Brown and Coroner Frank Perl viewed the body and declared the case clearly one of suicide. Cor- Continued on Page Pwo) . 4 OF SOUTH UNITE TO BATTLE F. R. MACON. Oa., Jan. 39. fAP) In surgent southern Democrats, rallied by the cry of "states' rights," organ ised at a grace roots" mass meeting today for a drive against the nom ination of President Roosevelt for a second term. . - Resolutions condemning the ad ministration's record were presented and the Roosevelt policies were as sailed in speeches by Governor ' Eu gene Talmadge of Georgia, himself a tentative candidate for the presi dency, and John Henry Klrby of Houston, Texas, wealthy head of the southern committee to uphold the constitution. TOPEKA. Km., Jan. flft. (AP) The Kansas O. O. p. state commit tee today commended Gov. Alf M. Landon to Republicans of the nation as a candidate for the party nomin ation for president. At a meeting called to set machin ery In motion for - selection of the state's 18 delegates to the national convention at Cleveland June 9. the committee unanimously endorsed the Kansas governor. Governor Landon has not yet In dicated whether he will be a candi date. NEW TORK, Jan. 39. (AP 8purred on by Senator William I. Borah's denunciation of the "selfish and sordid interests pulltng the strings" In the Republican party, the ant! -"old guard leaders In Hew Tork state opened their drive today for delegates pledged to the Idahoan. Addressing a "Borah-for-presldent" rally last night In Brooklyn, the sen ator charged the voters of Hew Tork and of many other states "have been disfranchised" In the selection of a presidential nominee by a "self-ap pointed and self-annotnted" group meeting in "secret conclave, behinfl closed doors, long after midnight." MRS. H. D. HOWARD I Word haa reen received here of the cleath of Be -nice Angle Howard, wife of Horace D Hoverd. late yeeterday afternoon In the Sutter hospital in c rremento. Cal lollowing an oper ation. Mrs. Howard wis born In Jackson -ounty. as a tlrer ol Mrs Earl C Oa die .nd th lu Mrs. prue A. Piatt of Me.'or4 She spent rooet M bet life in M-df-vn and vicinity, mov ing with hoi f itt 1 1 j to Sacramento TtpptnlmaV!; 13 year, ego. She Is urvlved by her Ljsband, two chil dren: a nro'.ier Crierles Angle of th rule Rock 3ittr.- and Mrs. Gsddla A comr.let oMusrj will appear a: later data. with ew RIFLE Lost On Mountain - m0 'it Fears were felt for the safety of Oelmar Fadden, 23, Seattle advan turer shown In hiking costume, who failed to reappear aftir he set out to make a daring mld-wlnter climb alone of anowclad, 14,408-foot Mount Rainier In Waahlngton. (Associat ed Press Photo! GILLETTE GIVEN 2 1-2 YEARS ON A state prison sentence not to ex ceed two and one-half yesra was meted this morning to Virgil O. Gil lette, former secretary of the local lodge of Eagles, who entered a plea of guilty before Circuit Judge H. D. Norton, to larceny by embezzlement of $2100 of lodge funds, intended for sick benefits and death clauses of tlw-oidnv Gillette watf specifically ohnrged with the embezzlement of 200. , The court denied Gillette's plea for leniency, on the grounds that "In cases of betrayal of trust, It la against public policy to extend par oles or suspended sentences." "I plead guilty, and know t did wrong," Gillette told the court. "J will pay the money back. X believe the lodge would rather have the money than see me serve a prison sentence." Gillette also waived his right for 48 hours before sentence was psseed. (Continued on Page rhree) OF IN ACTIVE CLUB TALK The Rev, E. 8. Bartlam, pastor of St. Mark's Episcopal church, traced the origin and development of relig ion at the weekly dinner-meeting of the Active club at the Hotel Medford last night. Dr. 8. E. Phillips spoke on Friday's apeclal election and urged the mem bers to vote for civil service for Med ford firemen. Clvtl service, he ssld, would afford the community better fire protection by assuring competent firemen of security In their jobs. Un der civil service, he asserted, only capable men could get Jobs with the fire department. Frank Bash urged the club to sup port the President's ball to be held here tomorrow night, pointing out that 70 per cent of the proceeds would be reatined here to fight In fantile paralysis and help victims of the disease. Earl 81ms reported on the 1935 activities ot Boy Scout troop 16 which waa sponsored by the Active club. The report showed a long Hat of ac complishments. The committee In charge of the troop comprised Mr. Slma, John Nledermeyer. Jack Butler, Kenneth Anderson and Harold L. La r sen, scoutmaster. William McAllister, International first vice-president, who, accompanied by Olen Pabrlek and Jack Butler, re cently attended a meeting in Port land, told the club of the decision of Active International to hold Ita con vention here June 19 and 20. Quests of the club were the Rev. Mr. Bertlam, Otto Phllllpbaum, A. R. Thornton and S. F. Coleman. MIDWEST FACING NEW COLD SNAP TOMORROW CHICAGO. Jan. 30. (API More ! snow fell over the central northwest i moving eastvard today as aero weath er clung to Ita western atrongholda. j A new cold snsp for the midwest wsa forecast for tomorrow. The new snow blanket stretched from the Dakir.aj to Ohio, and waa due to reach Into Pennsylvania and Mew Tork before nightfall. ,i LAS VEOAS. Net.. Jsn. JO (APl . Marriage license: H. K. Kiles, 41. grants Paw. Ore., snd f-ucilie Ellen O'Connor, 39. Qitndale, Cel. Al Smith s Record Cited by Senator Robinson in Reply to Attack on RR- "Happy Warrior" Has Dtopped New Deal Principles for Liberty League Charges Democratic Leader WASHINGTON, Jan. 2B (API Political quarters waited expectedly today for any counter by Alfred Smith to the new deal contention he had "advocated and championed" Ita every basic principle but ' now hsd Joined "the enemy." It waa hla turn, If he chose, In the democratic feud heading up be hind him and Senator Robinson of Arkansas. Although Smith was un derstood to feel President Roosevelt should reply to hie liberty league address, Robinson took the official leadership against him by radio laat night. Cites Smith's Record Let's look at the record," he aald. and called upon the Smith words of previous years in testimony against Mm todsy. ' 'Al CHALLENGES ROOSEVELT REPLY TO LEAGUE TALK NEW TORK, Jan. 39. (AP) Alfred E. Smith declared today "there la only one man who should try to answer" bis American Liberty league siddresa an open challenge to Prea lderltf Robsevelt WueoT after Senator Joseph T. Robinson's reply to the Liberty League address. -, The former governor, bitter critic of the new deal, defended hla course of action before the Liberty league, praised the group of anti-new deal Democrat who have "put country above party" and delivered sarcastic comment on senator Roblnson'a ad drees laat night, . : . The 1928 Democratic presidential nominee said he would make no spe cific reply to Roblnson'a address Which accused Smith of an about face in political views and beliefs hut aald a "few words sibout my friend Joe. I waa an unhappy war- lor to hear him read off his speech over which he stumbled ao that I felt aura It waa canned and did not come from the heart of the Joe Rob inson that I have known." LIQUOR LICENSE ES ALREADY EXCEED 1935 SALEM. Jan. 39. (AP) Already this year the atate liquor commis sion haa taken In more from license fee receipts than during the entire year 1936, It waa announced late yes terday. The commission haa received 9199,- 000 from licenses on retail beer, package wlnea and beer, wholesalers, breweries and other sources. Receipts laat year were only 9138.000. The commission said the Increaae waa due to the action of the 1935 legislature In increasing the fee for retail beer establishment from lift to 933. ALL MEDFORD BANKS TO BE CLOSED FBIDAY All Medford banks will be closed Friday because of the special atate election. Ran Francisco Bntterfat SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 39 (API- First grade butterfat, 2,ie (approxi mate f. o. b. San Francisco. Townsend Plan Folly Says California Solon WASHINGTON. Jan. 39, (AP) Speaking to th house against the Towneend plan, Representative Clar ence F. Lea (D.. Cal.) aald today If the nation adopted "this magnificent folly" It would "probably long repent In sackcloth and aahee." The Townsend movement," h told th house, "I a mass attack against the earning snd aavlnga of th In dustrious and the frugal. "It offers not something, but much for nothing." he aald. "In encour age idleness, discourage Industry and frugality. It makea a vlctoua ap peal to th electorate to uas their politest power to vote themselves competence. ven t th expenae of those slreedy In poverty snd distress." Representative Ferguson D, Ok la) Regarding failure to fulfill the 1933 platform promise of as per cent reduction In government cost, the senator spoke of relief needa and said Smith himself was urging emergency appropriations at the time the plank was drafted. The former New York . governor hsd advocated "tactics of war" In 1933, he recalled. Including power for the president to "cut, slash, dig Into and run through all the red tape and through all the etatutory restrictions." Robinson belittled the Smith AhM nr .M-iaitKm atut oommun- lsm. He reminded that Smith hlm- aelf had been attacked for "aociai- (Continued on Pane Foun READY TO OCCUPY LOCAL QUARTERS Western States Grocery company today waa rushing remodeling of the old C. and E. warehouse at South Fir and Eleventh atreeta where It will make Ita distributional headquar ter for southern Oregon. The com pare? -plans v ormu. openintnittu February 30. ' Today nfflcea were being -ftrepared and equipped, the floor space waa be ing partitioned, cablneta and racks built, lighting fixtures Installed and the whole building was being painted. Several key men ot the company have already arrived here and other employee will be chosen In Medford. L. a. Blckel la general manager, A. v. Hardy la office manager and Clarence La Coma la In charge of the cash and carry department . maintained for email stores. ' . . The company bought the warehouse property laat September through the First National bank of Medford which had acted aa trustee for certain cred itors of the C. and E. concern after ita failure in 1931. A lease prevented the company from taking Immediate poaseaslon. Laat tall the Western States Gro cery company, described aa one of the largest concerns of Its kind In the world, entered the O rants Paas field. Prior to that the company did not aervlce southern Oregon. The plant here will aerve the trade In Medford, Ashland, Eagle Point, Applegat and other communities of the Rogue val ley, eventually extending Ita aphere of activity to northern California, Mr. Hsrdy aald. "It la easy to see that Medford la the center of the Rogue River valley ao far as both population and trade are concerned," Mr, Hardy said, "and that la why we are making headquar- tera here. We would not Invest ao much money here If we did not have faith In the future prosperity of Med ford and th valley." The wholesale grocery concern han dle a full line of staple commodities, including national brands. Earl Ooddlng has the contract for th carpenter work at the warehouse, Harry Marx for th painting Job and th People's Electric store for the wiring and lighting. - Weather Northern California: Fair tonight and Thursday, allghtly colder tonight: moderate to fresh northeast wind off coast. Oregon: Fair tonight and Thurs day, continued oold; moderate east erly wind off coast, with fresh to strong In Strait of Juan de File. aay no member of th house. In cluding th author ot a Townsend bill, would vote for euch old ag pension legislation. Ferguson yesterday challenged sny member of th chamber to go on rec ord a saying be would Tote for the pian. He called for an Investigation of the clrcumstsnces surrounding an article tn the Townsend Weekly, which listed 44 representative as supporting th 200--month pension propoeal. Representative McOroarty (D, cat.) la th author of a Town send plsn In oongreaa. Representative Crawford (R. Mich), among thoae listed, aald he "did not even answer" th questionnaire sent to him. U CIIDCTITIITC rlnrt GUUOIIIUIL GOES TO SENATE Agriculture Committee Members Doubt Constitu tionality Inflationary Phase Inclusion Sought. WASHINGTON, t Jan. 39. (API Burdened with constitutional doubt and threatened with Inflationary at tacks the revised administration soil conservation subsidy plan tot- re placing the AAA waa ordered re ported to the senate today by It agricultural committee, rne vote waa IS to 3. ' Chairman Smith (D., S. C), ex- 'mM Hntlht1 .A the measure's oonatltutlonallty and aald he and several othera of the 1A on the affirmative aide voted merely to "report" It Instead of "favorably" reporting It, He and . Senator Bankhead (D Ala.), who Introduced the bill, de clared, bowever, that majority of those voting wanted a favorable" report, " Senators McNary of Oregon, th republican leader, and Norbeck (R.. S. D.), voted against th bill, which goes to the floor without material change. Smith aald the committee would meet tomorrow to decide whether to (Continued on Pag Thr) ROOSEVELT BALL YEAR'S BIG EVENT At o'clock tomorrow evening, cltt nt In 3,000 olt'et throughout the United State will gather In hall and hotels to oe'ebrere the third annual President' BtrthrtAj hall, prooeeds of wh'ch go to aid in th fight against .nfintll paralysis, Ool Holmes, ticket chairman f.r the 1934 ball, ttatea that Medford citizens sre max. 'nf ah enthuaiastJo response to the rait of tickets, and that Indications re that tho crowd attending thle year's ball wl'l more than equal that of previous ar Oriental Oerdens ballroom haa been selected by .ne ha'l oommittee, head ed by O. O. Alenoerfer, as th place for th ball. In addition to being th moat important social function of the winter season, th ball ha th virtue of contributing to on of tn moat charttaol and human cam pa Urns waged by modem humanity that of oombattiu Infantile paralysis, to which helpless children are pecu Mar.y euseepj'bl. The fact that Med ford and Ja4caon county were dan gerously close to an epidemic of the Uaeaae this year ha empnaMcea to local people th need for a determined and non-oeaalnf f'rjht to lower the appalling toll of death attributed an. Dually to the d'aeu. , Seventy pcent of th proceeds re ceived from th Medford ball will ba retained hen for effort toward r- aearon and ellmnfitton of th dle- eaat In thl vicinity. The remaining SO percent 1 sent to the Warm Springs (Georgia) Foundation, personally sponsored by Pradent Roosevelt, for extensive research carried on than, and to aid in th oar and cur of youngster siready victim of th dis ease. General Chairman ' Mayor George Porter haa expressed bis hop that Medford cH'.rena nU eooperat thl Tar as wholeheartedly a they have for the two previous ball. Chairmen c-.mmlttee for Med ford are: oenerV chairman, Mayor Oecrge Porter: aaataUnt general chair man. M N. HoeMT publicity. Herb Grey, Moor Hamilton Lee Bishop; tickets, Cole Holme; music, Sam Carey; floor. R. O. Stepbeneon. S. O. Jerome, Jack Porter, Frank Defiouza; hall arrange :nenta. O O. Alenderfer; tpeaker. Ot W F. Roney and mem ber, of th Medford Speakers' club. Income Shares Maryland Fund, bid 18.60; uked 40.11. Quarterly Inccrre Shares, bid Ml; aeked I N, tamdnn on Air Tonight TOPEKA, Kaa., Jan. 39 (AP) Th addrea of Oov. Alf M. Lan don tonight before th Kanaaa Day club banquet will be broad cast over th National Broadcaat ng company chain and over WIBW, local station, beginning at 9:00 p. m. (Central Standard timet. Out Of Prison sWiiMii -rJf h$!tev3. : ' - Duncan Rsnaldo, Rumanian movls actor who servod a two-year aant nc In federal prison on a ehargt of falsifying hi passport to msk th plctur of "Trader Horn" la Africa, I hown ha arrived al 8attl from McNeil Island pen) Untiary to b deported to hi na tlv country. (Assoelsted Prt Photo) SLAYING OF LOEB PEN CONDITIONS JOLIET, HI.. Jan. 39. (AP) A coroner's Jury sifting Richard Loeb'a slaying In Statevlll penitentiary yesterday returned a verdict today accusing Jamea Bay, 33 year old lei low convict, of "homoclde." Th Jury recommended that Day, who refused to tell his own story a th first official Investigation was launched, be held to the Will coun ty grand Jury. . Authorities said the Jury's verdict waa the usual one In caaea of mur der, but It report found that Loan, partner of Nathan Leopold, Jr., in the murder of Bobby Franks, died in a fight with the younger convict. Day smoked nervously a a men tal expert confirmed In part th killer' tory that "Indecent ad vances" by Loeb brought the Infuri ated attack. Day chose not to testify after h waa Informed It waa his ' constitu tional right to remsln silent, sine he faces trial for murder. Th dull-eyed atooned young pris oner blurted one sentence before making thle decision. He cried ! My life haa been miserable her (Continued on Pag Two) DISTRICT MANAGER OF TO CONFER WITH AIDS T. M. Medford, formerly of The Dalles, who haa recently been ap pointed district manager for Safeway Stores In this district, with headquar ter at Klamath Fall, conferred with officials of the local Safeway firms Tuesday and today. Prevloua to assuming hi present duties for th Safeway organisation In southern Oregon. Mr. Medford filled the asm position In Th Dalles district for four year where he waa active In affairs, being a director of Th Dalle chamber of commerce. Mr. Medford' first experience In the grocery business waa In Klamath Falls 19 year ago. He waa at that time associated with Stone' Cash Stores and later a member of the MacMarr organization aa manager of th Coos Bay district, later becoming advertis ing manager of all MacMarr stores In the west. When MacMarr merged with Safeway he waa named manager for The Dalles district. He succeed Ed Seydel In Klamath Falls, th latter having been moved to Spokane. Wash. Sflayed by SNELL WASHINOTOW. Jan. 39, (API Th marine band's walkout on th Women' Patriotic Conference for National Defense waa aaealled today by Representative Snell, th Repub lican leader, aa "amacklng of some thing ' un-American." H spoke on th house floor only a few minute after Secretary Swan son gav at a preas conference, his full approval to th action of two naval and one marine officer In can celling scheduled speech before the conftnnc. . MARINE WALKOUT KILLED AS AUTO SKIDSJN EAST Mrs. C. J. Foster Fatally Injured Near Memphis Was Once Wife Of Secre tary To Queen Victoria. MEMPHIS, Tenn., Jan. 39. ( AP) Mrs. O. J. Foster, 89. of Ashland, Ore., waa killed, and hor husband, a salesman, wsa Injured today when their automobile skidded on an Ice covered Arkansas highway 18 mile west of Memphis The car crashed Into a ditch. Th two were on their way to Oregon. Mrs. Poster died a short time af ter being brought to a hospital at Memphis. Foster ws not seriously hurt. By a trick of fata, Mr. and Mr. Foster, who had been visiting In Ann Arbor, Mich., took the southern route home In the expectation of avoiding snow and Ice. They found th aoutb gripped by a cold wave. Mrs. Foster wsa Alio Beverlelgh before her marrlag. Friends of Mrs. Foster In Ashland thle afternoon revealed that ah waa one th ward of a man named Bev erlelgh when he waa secretary to Queen Victoria of England. Although he waa considerably older than hi ward, he eventually married her and the young woman traveled with her huaband and the queen about the British empire. When Beverlelgh dted hla young wife cam to America. She married Mr. Foster who waa In the lumber business In Hilt, Calif,, friends stat ed. For a time they alternated be tween Hilt and AKhland where they maintained homes. A few years aao Mr.-Foster retired and th tsoupiej made their permanent horn In Ash land .taking up residence recently on East Main atreet. ' Mr. end Mr. Foster wont eaat re cently to settle an stat belonging to relative of Mrs. Foster, an Ash land friend stated. They war re turning to Ashland when Mr. Fos ter was killed. Mrs. Foster waa described a a charming, well-educated woman. Sha and Mr. Foster kept very largely to themaelve and were known only In a small circle of Intimate friends. They have no relative In Aahland and none of their friends ther oould ba found who had been noti fied of the fatality. BONUS BLANKS READY AT VETERANS POSTS WITHIN SHORT TIME PORTLAND, Jan. 39 (AP) Th veterans' bureau her announced to day that application blanks for bonus "baby bond" payment will be available in Portland tomorrow. Th varloua post and headquar ter unit were busy today mobiliz ing their staffs to handle the ex pected rush of request In every part of th state. Carl B. Moeer. state adjutant of th American Legion, aald blank will b available at each Legion post. Dwlght Alderman, department commander of th Vetera na of For eign Wars, said his organisation will aupply blank to veteran requesting them In all parte of th state. Tq organization of Dleabled American Veteran of th World war also will aid in distribution ot th bonus blank. AUTOIST KILLED ON SEXTON HILL O RANTS PASS, Jan. 39. (AP) A man Identified aa Carlyle Engle. 39 ot Renaon, Kaa, was killed and Hugo Anderson or the Merlin stage road waa placed In the Josephine general hospital with a acalp wound by an auto accident about a a. m. today on Sexton mountain about 18 mite north of Oranta Paaa and on mile outh of Oravo craek. Coroner Virgil Hull returned to Grant Paaa shortly before 8 a. m.' today with the body, having extri cated It from beneath t.e car which hsd rolled about SO leet from th highway down a steep canyon. He waa notified of the accident when Anderson waa brought to th ho pltal. A hurried examination ehovM that Kngl received a broken neck among other Injuries. Identification waa not positive, th nam being taken from a driver' license. The accident occurred oa a straight of wax.