EWS CLASSIFIED N The Emmmh News EWS COVERAGE Th Klamath New to read In awry sortloa of Klamath eimnly anil northern I'alllurnla. If liter la something lu aril, mil or trad r M you need eouirtlilng, III easiest method Is Ilia classified aila. The Klamalh News la serviced by Asaorlat. rd Press, United Pm, News Enterprise Association and McMaught Feature) Syud. eat. County coverage by staff writer sad cotrespondefit. Vol. 8, No. 224 Price F ve Cents. KLAMATH FALLS, ORE., SUNDAY, JULY 2, 1933 (Every Morning Except Monday) N Editorials on the Day's News 1 II V FRANK JENKINS r!0 NEWS: Xh, big elty banki ar tight ing luarantat of deposits, which will mak th smallest country bank aa strong a tha blgat city banka. Thay don't Ilka that, bacsuss banking strsnglh In tha big cities tandi to eonceutrat mon ay In tha big eltlss. a e COUNTRY DISTRICTS, aurh ai this, which nsed monay and acxIIi and don 'I Ilka lo se thm drained away lo tha big centers. I ar hoping tha big city sank loaa thalr light. UT, you aay, guarantoa of da- B i.n.iu. or rathar lnsursncs of deposits. Is Included In tha naw banking bill, which la sow law. Tru anotigh. But congraaa meet again about tha lima tba saw banking bill bscoms affac tlv. Congrau MIGHT rpl lb deposit insurant i' i It mlgM. that la. nnleal , anough of Ita mambara hear j from their constituent to tha contrary In tha meantime. LITTLE NEWS: A prohibition (gent, driving along a California road, aaw a pig coma out of tha brui. itag gerlng visibly, and attack an an lomobllo tlra lying beelde the highway. Then another pig emerged and triad wooslly to climb a fence. Ha Investigated and found tba animals had been eating mash from a nearby still. e e e MEN act tha bog often anough. but It Isn't ao often that boga try to act Ilka man. e e e ' va-ORE little news: 1 President Roosevelt, raea Honing briefly on board n imal! boat, la held for three daya In a fog off the coast of Maine. Dur ing these three daya. ha doesn't have. City men who Ilka to get out In the hills will understand hla reasons for letting his whiskers grow. Forgetting conventions for a short time means relaxa tion. Tha President of tha United States, upon whose shoulders rests a tremendous burden of re sponalblllty, needs all the relaxa tion ha can get. CALIFORNIA voters adopt tha Rlley-Stawart tax plan, which Includea, among other thlnga, putting the property of public service corporatlona back on the general tax rolls. In tha past. public aervlca properties have; baen assessed ..parately by the ; aiaie. i It la argued that th new . plan will reduce tha burden on property. Perhaps. At least. It will ba a change, and In times (Continued on Page Four) P. O. OPEN MONDAY Tli nnalnffl. wilt he nnM ,,... ... ,i, .rvie. ini'rm of on nT- bad Just Monday and regular aervlca will I c a teconi flve.year ba maintained, according to:,rm D(,for. Governor Meler'a Postmaster John MeCall. Tha office will oloie Tuesday. JVit7 Rogers Says: BEVERLY HILLS. July 1 Editor The Klamath News: That e e 0 n o m 1 e conference ought to ba start ing now over In London. Tha Amer ican delegation ar rived there Wed nesday. Thara has been millions of dollars made out of wheat In tha last month, but lot a cent made by anybody that aver raised any, or any body that aver really owned any. No wonder tha people In ao many states voted for legal betting on horse racing. The tatoa doea get a per cent of that. Those who demanded their pound of flesh finally received their satisfaction. "Fatty" Ar buckle accommodated 'am by dying, and from a broken heart. Ho brought much hap piness . to many, and never knowingly wronged a soul. The Lord will pass on hla In nocence or guilt now and not tha reformers. Yours, Governor Closes Forest Land As Fires Are Found SALEM. July 1. (UP) At tha request of Lynn F. Crona mtlter, etato forester, Clovornor Malar tnday proclaimed modi fied eloaura of 11.000,000 acrea of forest landa in tha atata. Tha order Includes all na tional foraala with tha exception of Hlualaw and privately ownsi. isnns wiinm inv tiiiuui lurviii. a well a too. 000 acrea of pri vately owned tlmtier landa out- I le of national foreeta. Tha prlva'ely owned landa In clude all of Deschutes county, Klamath county timber land north r.f Crecnt and Jefferson county land south of tha Warm Springs reservsllon. Other areai Include territory In Joiephlne. Jnrbsnn, Douglas, and Lake countlea. t'ronemlller laid flrea report ed from varloua sections of tba atate, especially la esetern Ore gon, Justified tha proclamation. KIDNAPERS GET if BARBER JAKE" Millionaire Abducted and Held for $150,000 Ran som; Son in Search CHICAGO. July 1. UP) R- lpor!i that kidnapers, wno am bushed Jonn ' jaae tne nru Factor, millionaire promoter. Vo day asked 1100,000 to fliO.wOO for hla aafe return were preval ent as friends directed tba search for him from headquart ers In a loop hotel. All Inquiries, however, were met with smiling alienee, except for the comment, "Please do not hinder our work." Closeted In the hotel rooms, tha aama suite from which ne gotiations were carried on for tha release of Factor'a son Je rome from kidnapers, were G Gala Gilbert, tha promoter's per sonal attorney and friend, Leon Hleet, "peraonal representative" of Factor, Jerome Factor, the son. and Lieutenant Leo Carr, formerly of the aecret alx, who unofficially aided Factor In the return of hla boy. Gilbert refused to say whether contact had been made with the kidnapers. Tha son. likewise declined to give any details of tha abduction, and answered all questions with tha reply: "All I want la tha sate return of my father." CHICAGO. July 1. UP) Kid. napera amhuahed John Factor on a north side thoroughfare early today, abducted the millionaire who waa once a barber from hla automobile while Mrs. Factor and their eon looked on. and sued away with their captive. They d ranged Factor and his friend. AI Epstein, an attorney from the rear Boat, barked curt: "Go ahead, kid. we don't want you." to Jerome Factor. the son, and Ignored a following car which carried Mrs. Factor. Mrs. Kpsteln and a chauffeur, Epstein, a friend of the stock broker and frequenter of night cluba with him, told tha atory. Magee Reappointed f0 Pharmacy Board gy CoVemOT Meier E. E. Magee of Urdarwood's I pharmacy received notice from Governor Meier Saturday of bis re-appolntment to the atata board of pharmacy for the term ending Mar 10. 1931. Magea la tha senior member of tha hoard, having already served for alx years. He was first appointed by Governor Pat- i terson to aerve an unexpired notice of re-appointment was re ceived Saturday. I The elate pharmacy board meets four times a year, and I hnlris evamtnattons for licensee at the end of each school year. Magea returned to Klamath Falls about two weeks ago after residing at pharmacy examina tiona both In Portland and Cor mills. Clue to Missing Aviator Checked ROSERURG. Ore., July 1, (P) -State Police Sergeant, Ralph Qulne of this city, left thla morning for 8oxton mountain, near Grants rasa to investigate an object sighted by . C. (Hill) North, secretary of the Corvallls chamber of commerce, who stat ed that he believed the obect to be a wing from the plane of llllam Young, missing Portlaud filer. Lake Birds Take To Mountain Area ROCK CREEK. The Aspen Lake district la entertaining two unusual visitors thla season alnce the arrival of two large brown sandhill cranes, who are nesting near the lake. The birds, native to the lownr valley areas around Lakevlew and Bleher, were first seen by Steve Stukle and AI Williams, employee at the Rock Creek ranch. Thla specie of fowl Is rarely seen In mountain districts, ac cording to persona familiar with their habits. STABILIZATION p loIDENT (, 4 - ."c Bloc Countries to i-fold Tight, Try to Force United States In Secretary of State to An nounce American Stand to Parley Monday LONDON. July 1 UP) Prea- Ident Roose.-elt rejected the Joint currency proposal for solv ing the stabilization problem In the world economic conference In lta present form. American beadquartera made this brief announcement Baying that elaboration of American pol icy regarding stabilisation would be made Monday morning. The announcement for which the world waa waiting waa made orally by a apokesman of the delegation who said: "The president has notified the aecretary of atate that ba haa rejected the proposal in Us present form. "The aecretary of state will on Monday morning make a state ment elaborating upon Amer ican policy aa It applies to this subject." It waa Immediately noted at the delegation beadquartera that President Roosevelt apparently had left the door open for ap proval of tha proposal with al terations, in view of the expree- aion "preaent form." Cold Return Policy The text of the Joint state ment, which waa drawn up here and to sign which the represen tatives of Great Britain and the gold countrlea prematurely as sembled twice In Downing street yesterday, waa not made public The atatement waa known. however, to have eat forth the determination of the gold bloc countrlea to atay on tbe gold standard and to play for the re turn of non-gold countrlea to the yellow metal eventually. Plan IWt Open It waa believed that all refer ence to stabilisation had been removed from the statement be fore It waa aubmltted to the American executive, Thla would leave him free to express a per missive attitude toward the plan, which calls for the federal re serve bank of New York to Join other central banks In smooth' (Continued on Page Three) Mayor of Bonanza Calls for Work on Highway to Dairy J. O. Hamaker, mayor of Bon ansa, waa a visitor In the city Saturday and etated that resi dents of his section of the coun try were enthusiastic over tbe proposed stat ehighway program which waa announced Friday. However. Hamaker said, it la the belief that one of the most needed sections of highway where work Is badly needed has been neglected, tbe seven-mil stretch from Dairy to Bonanza, which was built in 1923 and waa resurfaced and oiled. The hlghwav commission and county court will be petitioned to have thla stretch of road Improved, he said. This road tape two of the sec ond largest Irrigation districts In Klamath county, tha Langell Valley and Horsefly districts, and It la reported that thla sec tion haa the deepest oil well, S080 feet. According to Hama ker. valley residents have been Informed that It la only a ques tion of months until tha well will "lay a golden egg." Women May Boycott Places Selling Beer MILWAUKEE, Wis.. July 1. (UP) A national boycott of druggists and grocers who sell beer waa proposed to the Worn en'a Christian Temperance Union today by lta president, Mra. Ella Boole. She recommended that a reso lution be adopted by the W. C. T. U. national convention here providing that "each local union ask lta members and tha Influen tial women of the community to appeal perBonally to atorea which they patronize, asking them not to obtain licensee for the aale of beer and that our members he urged to give preference to dealera, corporatlona and Insti tutions who refuse to share In the profits of the liquor busi ness." Merrill, Henley Get Ag Courses SALEM, July 1. (UP) A Joint Smith-Hughes agricultural department will be established at the Henley and Merrill high schools in Klamath county. Earl R. Cooley, atate supervisor of agricultural education stated. The department will be In charge of J. 8. Johnson, and marks tha first time in Oregon that two small schools will re ceive the Smlth-liughea training under direction of one instruc tor. Klamath county unit school officials will Join with the atate vocational board In putting Into affect tha new project. She'll Dare Atlantic Flight! J17 rtv 'f v Miss Rosetta Valentl wants so airplane that she la backing Russell Boardman'a projected flight from New York direct to Rome Valentl is. shown her aa aha traced In th Inset JOB SEEKERS PRESS FIGHT Men Seeking Posts on Power Commission File To Get on July Ballot SALEM, July 1. VP) Mnda- mua action waa filed In th atata sunrem court hen today . to compel the aecretary of atata to place on the ballot at tha special election, July 11. th name of Peter Zimmerman, Morton Tomp kins and Dr. Albert Slaughter, candidate for state power com missioners under the 1935 Grange Power act. The plaintiffs filed their de clarations of candidacy on May 31. but on June 6. a referendum petition waa presented which suspended temporarily tha oper ation of tha entire power law. Allegation Made Subsequent to the tiling of the referendum petition th state, upon relation of Attorney Gener al Van Winkle, launched a auit In circuit court here to enjoin oper ation of tha referendum. Tho attorney general alleged that a large number of names on the (Continued on Page Three) City Bond Issue Redeemed; Funds Forwarded East Funds to redeem the (76,000 city refunding bond Issue voted In 1913. and due July 1, 1933. are In a New York bank for R. L. Durfee It company of Toledo, who Issued th bonds, according to an announcement from Mra. Ruth Olda Bathlany. city treas urer. The funds were sent east early last week by the treasurer, who received a telegram of congratu lation from th bonding com pany. Durtea declared that he wished to congratulate the city treas urer and other city offlcera for the businesslike management of Klamath Falls business, and up on th fact that th money waa on hand to pay tha bond Issue at maturity In spite of alow col lections, bank holidays, etc. The refunding bonda were voted In 1913 to take up pro tested city warrants. Lamson Won't Get Special Privileges SAN JOSE. Cal.. July 1. (UP) David A. Lamson, who faces trial August 21 on a charge of murdering hla wife, will have no more privileges than the rest of the county Jnil inmates, Sheriff William J. Emlg said today. Special privileges have been ordered removed, due to resent ment of other prlsonera who have watched Lamson enjoying food, books, rlgarets and other articles sent him by friends, and frequent visits by relatives and friends. Postal Rates Are Changed Saturday (fly The Amoclntcd Press) Starting today, a lot of peo ple get a chance to save aome pennlea on their stamps. The former two-cent local rate tor tlrnt class mall, except postal cards and private post cajdj, is restored . throughout the United States, Th three-cent rate will still apply to mail sent '-aside a lo cal district, . . Ail, r .. : f much to cross tha Atlantic In an and will be his passenger. Mlts their route. Boardman la shown Crater Lake Park Opened Saturday With Ceremonies The bin wonderland of Ore gon, Crater lake, bigh In the Cascade mountaina, waa official ly thrown open to the citizens of America Saturday, the 80th an niversary of lta discovery. Tour ists and gueste from all sections of the coast gathered at the still snow-covered rim to view the deep water reflecting a cloudless heaven. The opening, aponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce for Klamath county, brought representat iyee from, many citiee 1n' southern Oregon. Prominent members of the Shasta Cascade Wonderland as sociation with headquarters at Redding. Calif., halted their cara van at the rim after a two-day tour through northern California and aouthern Oregon. The lakeward bound caravan formed at noon at the Fort1 Klamath hotel where lunch waa served. Free boating and fish ing were enjoyed In tbe after noon at the lake and a program of entertainment, short apeechea and dancing waa held In th eve ning. Guests will remain at th lodge Rogue River F orest Ready for Opening Of Fire Season ROCK CREEK. Fir fighting tools and equipment with tbe red atamp of the government firs fighting service, bags of emergency rations, mesa kits and telephones are in readiness for th opening of the forest fire season in the Klamath ranger district of the Rogue RlTer na tional forest, Saturday, July 1, when lookout - on Mt.4 Scott, Agency butte and Devil's peak will assume their duties. Fire men at Pelican guard station and at Seven Mil were 'posted several weeks ago. Th observation polnta at Mt. Scott and Agency butte are co operative stations, tbe former being advantageous aa an ob servation point for the Crater Lake national park and the latter adjacent to the Klamath Indian reservation. George Scott Is In charge at Agency butte. William Mornlngstar will oc- (Continued on Page Three) Third Ballot Trial To Be Ended Today MEDFORD, Julv 1. (UP) The third of more than a score of trials In the Jackson county ballot . theft case drew near a close today following th eon elusion of testimony in the pros ecution of John Glenn, ex-county Jailer. State and defense attorney rested thla afternoon, and Judge George F. Sklpworth will deliver hla charge to the Jury Monday morning. Trial of Gordon Schermerhorn sheriff auspended by Governor Meier, will begin with selection of a Jury after th Glenn jury retires. Big Lumber Yard Destroyed by Fire SAN FRANCISCO, July 1 (P) Firemen continued today their all-night battle to prevent the spread of flames which destroyed 3,000,000 feet of hardwood lum ber in the heart of San Fran cisco's Industrial district. Officials df th Klrschmann Hardwood company, ownera of the lumber, placed th loss at $600,000 BY DIRECTORS Company Representatives Call for Scale Used During Season of 1926 Roosevelt's Approval to Be Sought; Plan to Be Rushed Into Action CHICAGO. July 1. VP) Rea toratlon of the wage acale pre valent In th lumber Industry during 1920 adjusted In pro portion to changed living colts, was recommended today in a cod adopted for th trade by the directors of the National Lumber Manufacturers associa tion. Th cod waa aubmltted to tbe Industry by John D. Ten nant, chairman of a committee instructed to draft rulea con forming with the Industrial Re covery act. Tennant la head of the Long-Bell Lumber company of Longview, Wash. Restoration Aaked Th year 1928 was taken aa on of tha mora prosperous per iods of the forest product Indus try. At that time th unskilled laborer In tbe northern tlmber landa was paid 40 to 50 cents an hour on an eight hour day. The committee proposed that wage in Una with those of 1926 be re stored soon aa may be practi cal." Th coda waa read to the varl oua lumber associations conven ed here, in a joint aesslon this morning. Th convention Itself, however, took no action, the di rectors having given th code their approval. Wages Considered Wages will be dealt with more specifically by regional associa tions In nine tenitoriea Into which the country waa divided. The section of the code per' talning to wage rates reada: "It ia the declared purpose of the lumber and timber products Industries and of tbe adherent (Continued on Page Three) June Precipitation Higher Than Usual, Temperature Same Precipitation for the month of June was .35 of an inch abor normal, according to of ficial statistics complied by the U. S. weather bureau at the lo cal bureau of reclamation. Total precipitation for the month was 1.02 Inches, and normal expec tancy la .67. The mean temperature lor the month was recorded at 60.9 de grees, one degree. above normal. Maximum temperature xor the month was recorded at 95 de grees on June 14. This ia the official figure, although the re cording thermometer at Under wood a pharmacy registered 100 degrees on th earns day. Th minimum temperature waa recorded at 36 degrees on June 2. Irrigation in th Klamath pro ject la atill almost at peak, with 600 second feet drawn dally from Upper Klamath lake and sent down government canal "A" to farmers, and 150 second feet taken from Klamath river through the diversion canal. Injunction Halts Bus License Law SALEM. July 1 UP) Circuit Judge L. H. McMahan late yes terday granted a temporary In junction to the Truck Owners' and Farmera' Protective associa tion restraining the state utilities commissioner from enforcing the new truck and bua law. This In junction, the second issued tor th association last month, will permit truck ownera to operate without complying with the new law until lta validity haa been determined. It Is understood. Coincident with a warning Is sued from the capltol yesterday, A. C. Anderson, president of the truck association, advised truck ownera to purchase new license plates tor their machines, since the injunction doea not apply to th regular license law. Crazed Con Wields Razor, Hurts Two FOLSOM Prison. Cal., July 1. (UP) A crazed convict was in critical condition tonight and three prison guards received treatment for severe cuta In curred when ths prisoner ran amuk ' with a razor, alashed at guards and cut his own throat in a suicide attempt. Th sudden attack occurred as prisoner were marching to breakfast. Train Accident Fatal to Four KELSO. Wash., July 1 OP) Four persons, two women and two small children, were killed at th aouth Kelso city limtta today when their car waa atruck by a train. Th dead, all of Kelso, are Mra. A, E. Murray, Mra. John Bartell. Jerry, 4, and Buddy. 3, children ot Mrs. Murray, California Turns To Sales, Income Taxes for Funds By THOMAS B. MAI.ARKKY Cnlteil PreM Htaff Correpondent SACRAMENTO, July . (UP) Virtual certainty of a salea tax and possibility of a personal In come tax faced California today as legislators prepared to return to Sacramento July 17 and raise me vast sum or tizi.ooo.ooo. That much new revenue must be ralzd for two purpose: 1. Assumption by the stats of the counties' fixed school charg es for th next two years, 176.- 000.000. 2. General fund deficit, ap proximately 145.000,000. On thing la reasonably cer tain; the legislature will enact salea tax. If a 3 per cent sales tax 1 approved. 180,000.- 000 will be raised during tbe next two years, according to es timates of tbe state finance de partment. That leavea a 161.- 000.000 gap to fill, and that gap represent the big question mark of the July legislative ses sion. LAW MAY HIT TAX EVADERS Chairman of Banking Committee Predicts Legislation After Probes By LYLE C. WTLSOX United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON. July 1. (CP) Legislation to close Income tax loopholes which hare enabled great banker. Including mem bers of th J. P. Morgan and Knhn, Loeb firms to avoid pay ments waa predicted tonight by Chairman Fletcher of th sen ate banking and currency com mittee. He aaid that aa a result of disclosures In the senate Investi gation h felt certain hi com mittee would make such recom mendations, particularly dealing with losaas through aale to rel atives, i ' -. - . . 1j - - 1weca to V Cnt "I toiler this legislation should be drawn so aa to limit losses deductible tor Income tax purposes to bona fide sales of securities for cash not to mem bers of one's family," Fletcher said. Police Mystified By Death of Wife Of Legs Diamond NEW YORK. July 1 UP) Two question marka danced before detectives today after an all night inquiry into the murder of Mrs. Jack Diamond. 33-year-old widow of the notorious "Legs." 1. Why did the dark-hatred widow practice marksmanship so intently for several weeka be fore a killer fired a bullet Into her tempi after a struggle in her Brooklyn flat? 2. Who sent large aums of money aometlmes ss high as 31.000 a week to Mrs. Diamond, who nevertheless lived In com paratively penury in her 45-a-month home? Strange disclosures followed In quick succession after the wid ow's body waa found last night, sprawled before a little table on which stood three coffee cups, drained to the dregs. Pilot in Italy's Air Fleet Killed AMSTERDAM. Holland. July 1 OP) One man, Sergeant Quin tavalle died of suffocation on tbe arrival here today of ths Italian air fleet from OrbeteUo. Italy. enroute to inicago. as one ot me z& eeapianes eapsizea in alighting, it was learned late today. Despite official denial It was disclosed the non-commissioned oiiicer waa amen ana lour other member ot the ship were bsdly hurt in the landing acci dent. In some quarters It was said ths projected departure tomor row for Londonderry, on the next stage toward America, probably would be postponed because of th fatality. Press Time AMSTKRDAM, July 2. (Sun day. (I P) The 28 seaplanes of the Italian air armada, at tempting the greatest maaa flight In history, roared away at 7:27 a. m., (2:07 E.D.T.) today toward Londonderry, Ireland, on the second lea; of their flight from Orbetcllo, Italy, to Chicago. WASHIXGTOX, J n 1 y 1. (UP) President Roosevelt haa summoned cabinet mem bers and other high adminis tration officials to a confer ence on board tho crnlser In dianapolis Monday, It was learned today. CAMPO BF.LLO ISLAND, X. B., July 1. (UP) Presi dent Roosevelt f. proceeded southward tonight along; the Atlantic roast bound for An napolis, Md., on th last lap of hla sea-going voyag. . STATE OFFICER SLAIN, 2 MEN CONFESS CRIME Burrel Baucom Murdered by Two Auto Thieves On Sexton Mountain Woman Witnesses Slay ing, Gives Description; Men Caught In 2 Hours GRANTS PASS. July 1. (UP) Two hours after the slaying of state patrolman Burell Milo Bancom, Henry A. Bowles. 41. and John A. Barrier, 17. both of Los Angeles, wer arrested near Glendale. Ore., and con fessed tbe murder. Sheriff Lis ter of Josephine connty - an nounced tonight Barrier, the sheriff said, ad mitted firing the shots with sn automatic pistol, after Baucom had stopped to question the pslr nesr Sexton mountain. The men were driving a roadster with California license plates, which they admitted they - had stolen yesterday in Loa Angeles. Man Hunt Extensive . Baucom was shot down about 4 p. m., and all atate, county and city officers immediately took up the trail of tha Califor nia car. First trace of tht, ma chine waa reported from near Glendale. when th atolen ma chine forced a truck off the road. . First report of the killing was relayed to the atate police offir at MM ford by Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Klumpf, operators of th Greenback mine. Mra. Klumpf, who witnessed the shooting, said one man fired twice from th car aa the officer approached. As Baucom fell, the man (Continued on Page Three) Lakeview Roundup To Be Sept. 2-4; Fourth Plans Set - I.AKEWKW;-' Oi ThiT'dtite " set ior the Lakev nr fourteenth, annual roundup ere September.' 2. 3 and 4. aceordingS New Sherlock, newly - elected 'presi dent of th Lakeview Roundup association. Other officers In-. elude Harry J. Anthony, secre tary? E. G. Favell, Lloyd Ogle. W. V. Miller. A. M. Denio and W. C. Hartley, directors. Baseball games with Klamath Falls, Alturas and Burns ar being scheduled tor the morn ings' entertainment. TO OBSERVE FOURTH LAKEVIEW, Ore. Under th auspices of the American Legion and the Legion Auxiliary Lake- view will celebrate the Fourth at Idora park at a large gather ing. Idora park, which has Just recently been completed, is ideal ly situated high In the Warner rang with a large meadow suit able tor sports. A large spring furnishes plenty of cold water. The Lakeview Boy Scout troop will assist In the directing of traffic, establishing of patrols so as to guard against tire and to lend first aid as needed. A feature of the day will he music (Continued on Page Three) Lions Install '33 Officers at Session Ed Shea, district governor ot ths Lions club tor tho stat of Oregon, complimented the local ' club on Ita activities and interest in the state organisation at th annual Installation of officers and banquet at th Willard hotel ! Friday evening. Dr. M. E. Cooper was Installed Us president of tbe local club for , the ensuing year. Following the installation of officers and short talks by each, a dance waa held In tha hotel ball room. Randall Bargelt, past presl- aent OI tn ciuo, gave a enori talk expressing his appreclatiou for the aupport and Intereat shown him during the past year. Other officers Installed wer: C. R. Williams, vice president; E. S. Robinson, secretary: Fred Heilbronner, Lion tamer; Doug Puckett, tail twister; Henri Con rad! and George Davis, directors. News Flashes BERLIN, July 1. (UP) Reporta that Ctiancellor Adolf Hitler waa planning to leave th Catholic faith to become a member of the new National Protestant chnrch of Germany were officially denied tonight. TOPEKA, Kan July I. U.R A wet rebellion flared la Kansas tonight. Tha law against the salo of beer was openly flouted by score of restaurants, drug stores and hotels. Others planned to start aelllng beer on Tuesday, Independence day. CHICAtiO, July 1. (UP) Tho nlrplnne bearing four avU atom who plan to search the water and tre fields of th fur north for the lost round the world flyer, Jimmy Mas tern, left rsnsnlclpal airport here 1st today tor Dulsth, Minn.. a route to Kosm.