Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1925)
MODERATE TONIGHT, SUNDAY SEBUM Conse" f 9, VOL. XXVI NO. 204 OF ROSEBUBO REVh'tC'. tlon of Tha Evening New! and "h Roseburg Revlsw 5rc'ii"'' -v DOUGLAS COUNTY 3 ROSEBURG. OREGON. SATURDAY. JULY 18. 1925. WWW An Ind.p.nd.nt Newspaper, Published for tht Bttt Inttratts of the People. ASSOCIATED PRESS LEASED WIRE SERVICE WORLD'S NEWS TODAY VOL. XIII NO. 103 OF THE EVENING NEWS HOTWAVETAKES condition o. TOLL OF LIVES; FIRES RAGING Inland California Swept by Scorching Temperature Causing Casualties. TWO DIE IN FIRES Forest Blazes in Three States Are Being Fought to Prevent Spreading Sunstroke Fatal (Aanrlatrd Praa Leu) WliO SAN FRANCISCO. July 18. A heat wave swept through Inland California yesterday causing four deaths. Two persons were burned to death also In a forest fire In Washington and two were injured. The forest fire was one of a series of blazes which swept timbered areas along the Pacific coast. Many of the fires continued burning to day. A freak electric storm near Bakersfleld, California, stabbed an underground oil storage tank and ignited the oil. It was estimated that $450,000 damage was done. The fire was still burning early to day. John Gleason, and Ole Johnson, Spokane, lost their lives while fighting a fire In the Lamb Creek valley near New Port, Washington. The two men were overcome by smoke, is ;ito 'OKSR SALEM. Ore., July 18. The condition of Adjutant General George A. White of the Oregon National Guard, was reported to be slightly more serious this morning, (ieneral White was taken ill with intestinal flu early this week, and by Wednesday af ternoon his condition was such that he was ordered home by his physician. Reports given out at his home 'this morning indicated that his condition l not con sidered critical js yet. and hope was held that he will be back in office next week. E IN FLAMES RESULT I (AiancUtff) Prm Leurd Wire.) BAKERSFIELD. Cal., July 18. The huge oil reservoir of the Pa cific Oil company near here was burning today with 600 men erect ing steel barriers two miles long to prevent the spread of burning oil. Lightning struck the tank last night causing a pillar of flame to leap skyward a thousand feet. The logs to the tank is expected to reach $500,000. There were 180.000 barrels of oil In the tank valued at $225,000, and these will be destroyed. The seething flames mushroomed over the white hot brim of the tank and then swept to the first steel firewalls erected by oil workers summoned from all parts of the country. Reports from the fire front were that no one had been nljured. Be hind the first fire walls stands the searchers who found their ! second wall of steel barricades and BATTLEAGAINST RI O.S. DPENEO BYDRYS Prohi Officials Start Inten sive Drive to Hold Down Booze Traffic. SHAKEUP IMPENDING' FALLING TREE KILL8 COQUILLE SCHOOL HEAD (AMtt-latnl lm Leied WlrO NORTH BENP, Ore., July 18. County School Supeiiu- tendent Charles E. Mulkey, 45, of Coqullle, was instantly killed In the city park here late yesterday when a large tree fell across the autorao- bile in which he was riding. His neck was broken. Mulkey had been visiting schools in the North Bay dls- trict, and returning had reach- ed the entrance of the park when the accident occurred. The high wind uprooted a green tree three feet In dla- meter and dropped it squarely across the road upon Mulkey'g machine. INEW HOPE HELD BY DOOMED MAN INNEWWITNES5 i Telepranh Onernlnr Claim He Saw Fight Which Resulted in Shooting. All Enforcement Officers to Lose Jobs in Changes Wets Line Up to Fight Moves. (AmoeMri Prm Lrurd Wire.) NEW YORK. July 18. Uncle Sam has started an Intensive mid summer drive against rum. and the liquor forces are making sev eral counter moves. In today's news there figured, on the side of prohibition enforce ment: 1. Eight arrests In New York es 4he result of heavy shipments of liquor to inland points in trunks. 2. Tour of Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Andrews to Cana dian border points to repair leaks in the roof. 3. Reports of warnings to Ca nadian rum runners that they will be fired on In American waters or the flreat Lakes. 4. Completion of formalities on a treaty between the United States and Canada, regarding smuggling. ft. Impending shakenn nnitor bodies believe. Emit Lambert of earth breastworks to stein a second i which all prohibition agents will lose tnelr Jobs and many will bo hired over again. In behalf of the wets there de- Spokane and Luke Krlkor, Seattle, were burned severely while fight ing the same fire. overflow, should the oil sweep the Ilrst wall or steel. At five o'clock this morning, Fifty men are fighting a fire in second boiling over in the great veloped these moves Hopper Canyon, Ventura, county, tank occurred. The counter-attack, 1. Reappearance of rum fleet California. The same fire was re- of fire-fighters finished, the en- of the north shore of Massachu- ported earlier in the week and Is croachlng sea of liquid fire roared setts. now raging anew, having already titllely at the barricades, hut did 2. Effort to hold up salary of ourneo over oeu acres, i ne lire pas "ul hmii jiiiu me secunu area r-roniouion t ommlssfoner Haynes penerrniea me ama uamara Da- mvubc nrcims. tlonal forest. Forest Supervisor ' ON TRAIN AS IT BLAMES BROTHER Two Others Write Letters in Which They Absolve Sentenced Man; Broth er Still at Large. 'Apsm-lated Pre! touri WlrO CHICAGO, July 18. Russell ficntt ttratu-hlln Ponaiflun fltiane. R. E. Farmer, of Wichita Falls. iu ,.,!.. ... k. Texas, died Ibis morning on S. P. Meek of life given him in the coun tra n number 14 shortly before its I ty jBil death cell, has been buoyed arrival in this city His body was up ,n ni, hope of Utimntely escsp taken off the train here, and Is be- lng 1he uows by a development ing prepared by the Roseburg Un-!,a Grange as the message which uertaklng company. Tor return to : brought him a reprieve, his home. The widow, who was Tnlg wa8 tne fndng of three accompanying her husband on a , new purported witnesses, two here pleasure trip north, is at the Ump-and one , netroU, declaring the. qua hotel, suffering greatly from murder of Joseph Maurer, drug the shock of her husband's death. ,.ierk. for which Scott was con As aoon as she Is able to travel demned to die, was not In a hold she will take his body back to ,,, bllt ln quarl.el over bootleg their borne. whiskey, and that Robert Scott, his Mr. farmer, who was trainmas-.brother, actually fired the shot, ter on the Wichita Falls and The ch(ca(f0 WlnP8l,es named ouuiuo.u i.i.uu, ich im ! WPre withheld bv Scott's attor neys. The Detrolter is James M. Ball, a telegraph operator, who bryan Has 'Em Puzzled y .;X week to make a tour of the Pacific const. This morning, while the train was at Dlllaril. he went to the wash room, death apparently resulting there from heart failure. His body was discovered a short time later by a fellow passenger, and word was sent ahead to have the body removed here. said he saw the killing br Robert. Ball s story was branded as a "pure fake" by George E. Gorman, assistant prosecutor, who procured Scott's conviction. He also termed a "bit of strategy," the telegram signed Robert Scott sent to Gov- m it i v-i k .J . """i?rnor I.en Small from Detroit. In .(lin. IJriDH V,lt4lvri, UUI II Ul 1411- Chester E. Jordon announced after a survey of the situation from an. airplane. , Brush and forest fires were rag ing today In the farm districts near Templeton, and Eureka, Cal. Fighters are battling the blazes to keep them from reaching fields and farms. It was estimated that six thousand acres had been burned over. Electrical storms Bet more than fifty forest fires ln the foothill country in the eastern San Joaquin valley, California, from Kern coun ty on the south to Madera county on tne north. IT T lAMnelatel Ft-. T t WlrO WASHINGTON, July 18. Am erican Vice-consul Harry O. lire- Reports from Huntington Lake therton at Aguas Calicntes.'Mexi Indicated that several small timber co, has been instructed by the fires were burning. The other fires state department to take up the burning were chiefly brush and . case with the Mexican foreign of stubble blazes. flee for an Investigation and pun- Several deaths In California yes- lshment of the assailant, terday were attributed to the heat I Advices on the shooting were while high temperatures estab- forwarded today by Consul Haven llshed new records In many parts ;at Aguas Callentes. of the state. - He ald the cause was not P. Ortega collapsed while work- known, but that the shot was be lieved to have been intended for a person other than the vice-consul. There have been no reports of anti-American feeling in recent weeks In Aguas Callentes. Bretherton was born ln Canada, but his rather was a naturalized American citizen. He spent his Ing on a ranch near Stockton and later died. E. L. Hall, of Los Angeles, suf fered a sunstroke at Chico which resulted in his death. A three-months-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hall of Taft. died of heat prostration, accord ing to a report from the coroner. The ten-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Garcia of Riverdale, was stricken with heat prostra tlon yesterday and died despite medical aid. . nrttrpn . Temperatures of over 100 de- PIONEER OF STATE grees were registered both In the DIFS IM POPTT AMn southern and northern parts of the llNTUK 1 LAIN LI state. because of his employment of woman lecturer on prohibition. 3. A sales organization that retailed liquor at the rate of 30 trunks full a day to 20,000 cus tomers throughout the country has been smashed In New York. One woman and seven men com prising the head office force were arrested yesterday. Federal Attorney Burkner de scribed the organization as "the biggest bootleg ring uncovered lnce the nnprehenslon of Mannle Kecler Kensler on his way to his home here today from the Atlanta penitentiary after serv ing two years and paving a $10,- ""u line tor the alleged w th- cugo. III., although strangers to Mr. and Mrs. Farmer, stopped off with the bereaved woman and ac companied her to the Umpqua ho tel where she is being cared for until she can start back home. LEEPER DOME WELL TO BE PUT ON 24 HOUR SHIFT BASIS which responsibility for the killing- was assumed. Receipt of this telegram caused Governor Small to grant Scott a reprieve of one week, six hours be fore the time set for his hanging. Ball told his story ln the office of the Detroit Free-Press. He said he was In the drug store, across the street from the Chicago city build ing, when the Scott brothers en tered. Robert spoke to Maurer and asked him for money the store owed them. Maurer denied the d"bt and v . ... Above: William Jennings Bryan, of Scopes prosecution, get otde good news In the courtroom ip Dayton, Tenn. Below: Arthur! Garfield Hy (left) and Clarence. Darrow (right), of the defense, ;rcuier Jfhat It U. . " Bryan SJ People Have Right to Say What Shall Be Taught in the School W T. Pnhh monacra.. t V, .. 1 .. 1 land Oil and Gas company reported I healed words passed," Ball's story doubt of the constitutionality of this morning that the drilling oner-! eontlnned. "Maurer ordered them1 'he Tennessee evolution law, ho atlons at the Leeper Dome well are ! '"" th "tore and rnNrd his hand j affirmed Inle yesterday after to be imt under a 24-hour shift A ln striking position." Judge Raulslon had excluded ex- telegram has been sent to C'alifor-1 "Rnhert Scott bent forward." . Pert testimony from the Jury III nla for another driller tn lake I Bull. "Several reports rung'"1 John T. Scopes case. charge of the Becond shift, and as ' 0,,t- Maurer crumbled up. Russell. The fundamentalist leader, DAYTON, Tenn., July IS. .volved In thta case. First, that William Jennings Bryan has no the state has the right to regulate, control and direct the public ATTORNEYS SCOPES BUILD BASE TO APPEAL Make Affidavits to Show What Science Testimony , Would Have Included. DARROW BLAMES W. J. Says Commoner Respon sible for Shifting Case in Favor of the Prosecution. ' schools. The opinion specifically declared that the slate has the right to direct what shall be taught and to forbid the teach ing of anything manifestly Inimi cal to the public welfare. The With- i t . . .... fhn drawal of more than $S00 000 I " "r v.?".u.r,,l,n.."' . " .". .'.., worth of liquor from the bonded i wprenouses. The association against the pro hibition amendment has addressed a letter to Comptroller-General McCa'l requesting Mm to with hold the salary of Commissioner llnynes until the treasury has re covered about $1 1,250 paid to Mls Georgia Hopeley. The asso ciation charged that Miss Hope ley who recently resigned, had been employed as a prohibition officer, but had been assigned to touring the country, lecturing on iMuiuMiuon. inree rum snins and night. Under the direction of J. J. Woodruff, head driller, the work at the well is progressing rapidly. Good progress Is being made and the Indications are splendid,. Mr. Cobb reports. FAKED GUNFIGHT DRAWS COPS FROM BOOZE LANDING fMM.nM Vrem liip,l Wlrf.) MONTEREY. Cal.. Julv 18. driven off New England's rum row I To second gunflght within two bv the recent dry blockade, have weeks between a clllzens' posse returned with freh supplies and "1'1 supected bootleggers took hrntlini- uo. .ton,! In. ! .n,.l with Annanl fur lh nrn- ' COUTl in ItlOl CUSS BISO declared ands to his sides ad sedition of the Dayton schonj nt nB parent is primarily ine could not hsve done It. Robert teachor. Insisted that he believed guarnian oi me cnua; mat ne mlrht have fired from his cost no court will deny the people of f"ld.1" no.t the mere creature of nockt or with the run In hi. Tennessee the r ght to Protect "" " " hand." i their religion from what they re- Ball did not discover the mis- gurd as an aisuult upon It by a tske In identities between the minority that is trying to force Scotis until Thnrsdsv when he saw i its views upon the children. PhntogrsMis of the condemned ! "The court has held the law man. He said his knowlecge constitutional In this cuse and the bothered him. , decision is backed by authority I After Mcott nad been reprieved. that In my Judgment is inuisput- n icierrnnnea in mm to nis nesih'anie and unanswerable, iwr. iiry cell and asked that Scolt send his j an said. rather to Detroit. i "The defense brought out every 'numm. .h. urA ih. i.vnav.r. .nt Meanwhile Robert Scott, who cnncelvablo objection, several of i the voters, pass a law to prevent prolsed In the messsee to Gover- them bared on the constitution of I i, hin r . -,.rtin H,-trin nor Small that he would surrender, i Tennessee and one on the const!- ran,,,) evolution in the public nun inn iui in an nupcarance.' till Ion or the t'nueti males. l ne schools the duty as well as the privilege of protecting the child and guard ing its welfure, meaning its relig ious welfure, because the Oregon case was a case In which a par ochial school was the plaintiff and the court affirmed the right of the narent to send Its children to a private school instead of a pub Uo school. 'That Is lust this case: The aiipearance.' tlltlon of the rnlted Stales. The .rhonls Thev define Ihe doctrine earlv life in .Montana, where helrr destroyers, sunplemented hv i P'"1,1' last night at Cypress point.. n'i"ln" "i"' governor timnu court overruled mem an ana in,,,n, ih,.y mean:: namely, that j. Ilewasia flotilla of smaller craft have i "n ,n' sevenieen-mlle drive near """ j studied mining chemistry. II I appointed to hi post i Callentes in 1915. at Aguas ! wung Into action. The latest ar rivals are tar at sea orr the north shore of Masschllsettn conslder sble distance from the summer White Home. here, but as far as is known no blood was shed. There was no trace of the supposed boutleg party today. dav took n hnnd In an Inquiry J doing so did what 1 believe any l"to the cne are without fnundu- j tlon In fact. Governor Small l on his vnca i tlon In Northern Illinois snd has men Is a descendant of a lower MMnHM rrrsp faiM WlrO I PORTLAND. July 18. Captain EUGENE, July 18. Timber hold-jMellle A. Hackett. 68, president of Ings of the Anderson and Middle tne Hackett Digger Company, ton Lumber Company and timber along Culp creek ln the Cottage Grove district are seriously threat ened by a fire which started yes terday afternoon when a charge of dynamite ignited dry slashings, according to word received here. It is thought this morning that the The nosse headed bv Town Mar- Irlven no ntten'ion to Srotl'a case I shal Martin Kordway or Pacific j "'"ce he si-n-d the reprieve Inte Grove rushed to the spot at mid- j Thursday night. THOMPSON TO 8UPPORT PENDLETON A8P'RANT I n'Kht In response to a mysterious fire an be held under control by the force of 75 men who fought It yesterday and last night. N orkmen who were extending a SALEM. Ore.. July 18.-W. Lair Thompson. Portland atlornev who dead. Captain Hackett was one of r .k! .-- " . ; T wa" no ''n of the rum run- o the slaving of Vr,?. i ll? th"fd'"v,'l",1m''nt of rnlted State. ator to succeed E?rn I- i.n!i rlmi- "IKob-rt N. Stanfleld. said here to- team He operated the first ferrr T .r'"' i p?nrt,H",n' for "raw all of the peace officers of .rce.he'U.:m"7.e rv7r "hr.'"'''?,';,, Jhe ta,r ,0'!he If1 ' h- ".hr"." T1"" .. , iiriunr wai innnpfi $ uwriir' court anil evt-ry rourt will do. I form of Wh. and fn th atatute "Tim court cttfd the rortnt rt'-lthpy nlve thp reanon for thla doe rNlon In tho Orcynn Fiinn that j trine, that H (linpiitnn the Mble rnviT b ith tht propowlHona tn- I rerord of man'w rrBtlon." COOKS ENGAGE IN , SENATOR PREDICTS BATTLE WITH PEPPER TAX REDUCTION BY AND BUTCHER KNIFE ! THE NEXT CONGRESS telephone call saying that a party DETROIT. Mich.. July 18. of rum runners was ambushed .James M. Hall. Intlnerant tele- there. Shots were exchanged, but Igranher. may have been a witness osenh Maurer. I. i. h I, 7V . k In Hr ."'""i 'ourt this morning, and the case "'antlal reduction In taxes by the It Is believed by the posse ! Russell T. Srott Is under sentence '..... . , nMt Pnru.. wB t,r..,ii,-tMi ..,t..r. II,. .V.. .! I . V l... AA l. i """! HUM H......I-I .uns. IS - 1 k n .... I ... 1 ..I .1 L. .!- dAMnl. V. . . . . I. -1. Herbert SnydT. cook ln a local ' 1 resbiurant, was fined Sfi In the city I fAwwtatMl Tst Mtm WlrO WASHINGTON, July 18. A Sllb- . . . support hTed- sage may have been a ruse totold his "" "-"er. m rennieinn. tor tne draw all of the Deare officers of :sald tods still under nilv:sement In the same by Senator Moses of New Hamp- flght In "hire, president pro tern of the seii- at Portland. V Thn Hall - II. """ H-BWII .11 IIKIIl III . - .r i. ?ii ?hiM,.i !hlch the two culinary artists eti- ' ho also expressed hlfh thi.rn Are stv smull chlMrnl I Illvo in a single room. Captain Hackett referred to in the above dispatch. Is well known this locality having had railway line were responsible fori'"nlvo property Interest in this the dynamite blast. Before they county ror a numlier of years. He could reach the place where the ! at one time owned one of the slashing Ignited, the fire was out of largest orchards in the county, control. The fire was only about 1 "ted at the forks of the river, a mile and a half from the Ander'I", his hospitality and good na son and Mlddleton camp, but ,,lre won ,or him many firm prompt work of fire fighters saved i Irien, ho are grieved to learn the camp from destruction. lof b,r death. Author's Son, Heir to Millions. ' Can't Get Enough Money to Finish University Work; Air Differences SAN FRANCISCO. July 18. William Hyde Irwin, son of Will Irwin, the author, and heir to one sixth of the million dollar ..... T-nmiB l 111- nuill, I - r.llZHTMin OLYMPIA Wash. July 18 I iviii L'lu.- . "ugus'a nixier, wants tunas irnm Emergency fire fighting eo.ulp- FOIJ.OWING STROKE ".V ford irZ l,r but Z broke out late yesterday after-'pita! here today following a stroke f, Josonln vall-r which Is part ""Ui? l,h lZglDSZ!"l0" 0f ' Mr""'" wh" '" b"k- oi rihi Blxler holding" P I "ulu" n '""" toia ueacn. MCimnOUgn DlfferencM between the mA. would develop himself according to his plans If he took hold rf the fllxler ranch. t harles C. Mcintosh, and Sa 'I'm sure my hnshsnd doesn't know anything more about Scott than he read In the papers," she said today. v PRESBYTERIANS TO DEDICATE BUILDING 'wlal Prea tMl WlrO (Aasa-Ut-il Pnsa Uurd WlrO DAYTON. Tenn., July 18. While Judge Raulston and attor neys for the prosecution rested today after the arduous duties of the week, counsel for the defense of John Thomas Scopes, charged ' with violating the Tennessee anil evolution statute, busied themsel ves with the preparation of scien tific affidavits. There will be brought Into the court Monday for the purpose of entering them Into the record. Primarily they will show in de tail the theory of evolution In an endeavor to conform to the story of creation aa recorded In tho Bible. Shorn of all hope of producing their science witnesses ln court to testify from the stand, defense at- torneys, after the ruling of Judge Raulston yesterday, resorted to thla method of having their testl mony placed on record for tha Information of the presiding Judge and to reveal to the appellate court the nature of the evldenca they would have submitted. Permission to do thla was granted by Judge Raulston yesterday-, after his ruling -that Biich evidence was not revelant. Ex ceptions by defense counsel fol lowed, after which It was agreed that the statements should bo preparer- and admitted to tha record. While Dayton moved calmly and seemingly unruffled about Ita buBlnesa, heated statements from members of the defense counsel seemed to Indicate 4hat storm clouds were breaking in thosa quarters. The first Indication came yes terday ln the form of a none too closely veiled expression from Clarence Darrow to Judge Rauls ton. ." i Several of the scientific expert 'Called to 'testify today were pre paring to return to their respective- homes after placing Ihelr testimony In affidavit form. May nard M. ' Metcalf, former head -of the zoological department of Ober lln college and first scientific wit ness for the defense, left early I todny. The exclusve of expert tests mony was characterized by Johft R. Neal, chief counsel for the de fense aa the death of the last hope of the defense for winning; the trial. Clarence Darrow was more .ve hement In his declaration that tha defense would seek "Justice ln tha higher courts." In a statement la sued late yesterday he asserted that William Jennings Bryan was responsible for shifting -the scales In fav of the prosecution. Mr. Bryan himself, declared that under the rules governing the ad mission of evidence In Tennessee courts. Judge Raulston could not hnve done otherwise than exclude It. Attorney-General A. T. Stewart, pronounced the decision a glorious victory for the stale. The taking of testimony from tha scientific witnesses proceeded far Into the night as under the direc tion of Mr. Darrow, a corps of court alenographers busied them selves In preparing the affidavits. hope gaged Inst night. Hution. It Is that the reduction could be made claimed, went to the place where i retroactive- to become effective Snyder was working and became I "hen returns are made out next abusive over some real oi fancied MHr,,h. offense. The Istler finally became! Turning to politics. Senator exasperated and picked up a can Moses said the people In New of pepper and threw a quantity of England took It for granted that It Into llnlton's eve. He fnll.w..l President Coolldge would be re. I with his fist .ml . r.oriin .-.nominated and reelected. the butcher knife to make a com- "1 n"r regard Ihls as cerlaln as pleie Joh of It, when soectalors .: anything can be that is In the I terfered and railed the eml ..r future," he said. I I the first round. Huflnn. sccordlng " ' n EI'OENB. Ore., July 18 An out-; to Night Officer Itsusrh. had evl- flFlMF SARA7FN ! Kansas Woman Visitor Mrs. George C. Nelson, of Wichi ta, Kansas, was a visitor In this city yesterday. Mrs. Nelson has been visiting friends In Marshfleld and left thla morning for Los An geles. She states that she Is very favorably Impressed with this part of Oregon. The Weather lofwflnir fiialilr- In th ul.u.tln. .1 n , I . k . muel J. Hamilton, administrators day program of the 31th annual see-1 Snyder entered a plea of guilty of the estate, testified they be. slon of tho Presbyterian synod or to disorderly conduct, and was glv- lleved young Irwin should obtain Oregon. In meeting here, will be e:i a Ikht fine of $r.. as he was not a first-hand working knowledge the dedication services of the new Iho urmuf In Ihe .rr.le II, .1. OPEN GOLF LEADER JIHONXVII.LE. N. Y., July 18. ene Sarazen. former national com-. fast at Gold Beach. MrDnnourh pany Is endangering camp . ulld-'wa making a trip with Frank Ie- Ings in addition to green timber i linger of Medford. McDonouih has ' erf Mh. . k. deemed necessary. Judge E. P. Shortall continued and cut log,. It was reported here a ...ter Mrs. George Samuels. Ilv.jyrd.n wh- Irwin tol'd the ! VbTed attorney, ?o Jettl. c'ot (Continued on psg .) I ing In Medford. jcourt that h.Ild not believe be ' troversy out of court. AT thf ra nfth hrnnari t ln.tn.,1 nr Iia.a ti ti. - a , . .. . ... rlolnr r.o.i wr.A . V. .i. " ' , , ' "" '"" case, nowever. is nemg con- open champion today won Ibe me noing po.t-grsduate work at cent to the I'nlverslty of Oregon sl!. red more thoroughly and he ironnlltsn onen golf crown over Is'hrtHL-TSJ'?. T""" The how ., be required to psy I fine and h.PC,.y Tpaln cl. S course were authorized nnder the will to , was built for the use of Pr-.by-, have town. . W,h a final score of 2S for the furnlkuch further .urns as they i.,i.-..irf.. .. .h. eu....n - , witn a tinai score oi -5 tor tne 9 (!) i nsj'ious wnirn is or r.ngimn cot-1 .miss Feme Reymert left today nesa. f.lrvlew professional, fln laee type, was built on land pre-, for Bandon. where she will be the ished one stroke behind. Mike sent'd aa sj-lft to Ihe synod by,werk end guest of Miss Kvelyn llr.dy of Winged Toot snd Tom two donors.Tir. K C. Brown snd Qulne. who has been there during my Kerrigan of Hlwanoy, followed his brother, Dr. 8. A. Brown. the past week. jTurnes with cards of 27 each. M Highest temp, yasterday 90 Lowest temp, last night 41 Pair we.ther and moderate tampsratura to night 4 Sunday. ' How warm I. f?" "Take a look at Arthur." "Arthur whor "Our thermometer.'