Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 2, 1929)
PAGE EIGHT Jhe New OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Tfcarsday Morning, May 2, 1929 PoraiSs list - LOS ANGELES, May 1 (AP) Calendars of Los Angeles coun ty cotirts, which for 18 months hare contained criminal cases growing out of the collapse of the Julian Petroleum corporation and the A. I. Lasker Finance company, tonight contained two new names, Harold L. "Buddy" Davis, and Donald McKay, former deputy district attorneys under Asa Keyes, charged with bribery. The former deputies voluntarily surrendered today. Davis will enter his plea May 6. McKay will plea tomorrow. I They were re leased on 5,000 bail each. Davis, who In four years In the county prosecutor's office advanc ed from Keyes' secretary to his chief deputy, faced a grand jury Indictment alleging be accepted J7. 500 through Ben Getzoft from Jacob Berman and E. H. Rosen ; berg, Julian Fraud case defen- dents, to arrange lax prosecution. McKay, who likewise became prominent during Keyes' regime, advancing from the police force to assistant chief deputy district attorney, was indicted upon Getz off's story that he was paid 91,' 608 and given a suit of clothes on behalf of Lasker, who then was awaiting trial on a charge of vio lating the state corporate securi ties act. District Attorney Buron Fitts said Getzoff confessed his part in "fixing" cases in his Spring street tailor shop following his convic tion with Keyes and Rosenberg on charges of bribery conspiracy. Getxoff was the only witness be fore the grand Jury. He was giv en 14 years probation, while Keyes and Rosenberg - were sen teaced to from 1 to 14 years in San Quentln penitentiary. , Davis, upon surrendering to of fleers said his indictment was the result of bought and paid for perjury." Davis was in charge of the prosecution of Berman, Ro senberg, E. C. Lewis and seven others on charges of conspiracy to overissue Julian stock up to 9100,000,000. All them en were acquitted. L S. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MEETS WASHINGTON. May 1. (AP) Finances and the tariff oceupPT ed the attention today by dele gates to the annual convention of the United States 'chamber of commerce. Increase of the federal reserve rediscount rate from fire to six per cent, or higher, was advocated by Professor Q. M. W. Sprague of Harvard university as a means of restricting the amount of money used in speculation. Chairman Hawley of the house ways and means committee told the delegates that the making of a tariff bill is entirely a domestic problem and that the United States alone has the right to say what tariff barriers shall be erect ed. He added, however, that sug gestions from foreign countries had been considered in formulat ing the house tariff bill which he laid, probably will be reported out of committee Saturday. Professor Sprague declared the present policy of the federal re serve board bad proved ineffective and urged that more drastic ac tion be taken so that the full ben-1 fit would result immediately in- VIVE BODY A CHANCE TO REGAIN STRENGTH Convalescents, Fearing that Others May Think The) 4re "Wasting Time," Too Often Rush Back io Full-Time Work Risking a Relapse. By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D. United States Senator from New York Former Commissioner of Health, New York dtp. MOSE frequently this year than ever I hare urged you to wateh out if yon have had a hard cold, the measles, whooping cough or influenza. It is a common thing to have cough after one of these ailments. That is remnant ef the diseases and should not be neglected. The whole family rejoices after the patient has-"recovered." He has been confined to the house so long it sems good to get him into the open. That is believed to be Nature's way to complete the restoration of health. But the trouble about it is, not every patient Is willing and able to make the necessary efforts. The little walks in the sunshine, alternating with ehort naps, and the eating of plenty of nourish ing food- these are essential to full return ia health and vigor. But inclination to do these things Is lacking; It is not to be expected that one who has had long sickness, with high fever and great pros tration, can rush back to hard work. It ia a mistake to do so. I Yet nobody wants to "loaf on the job," or to be "yellow." The fear of wha one's associate may say or think is a spur to hard work before the body is prepared for it. So the frail convalescent, wobbly on his feet and dizzy In the head, does not know what to do. He thinks ho ought to go to work. Dut Knows ne ooes not leei ante to?- do so. The ambitious ' parent hatea to kave the child out of school a single day longer than absolutely neces sary. The poor youngster, too weak to resist, goes to school s couplV'oit Mki too soon. Do sot rorgret that it takes Urn to recover normal health after an acuta Illness. The system has been poisoned by the products of disease. The reserves of vitality have been exhausted. The nervous system does not react as ft should. The heart Is weakened from overwork during the high fever. The muscles are soft and Cabby. Time alone, aided by rest, sunshine and frequent small meals of nourish ing food, can remove the effects of the disease. Even though you think tt ia wicked "to waste so much time," I beg- of yon to be sensible bout the matter. Ton win fie the .winner ia the long run. May X amy a word to the parents, too? Tour child, who has bad one f t the contagious diseases ef early Ufa. most not be considered as on the way to run recovery nnttl the cafes show increasing weight . There Is sure to be loss of weight n eonseqnence ef one of these at tacks. At least, during the period f Illness tam rn w .. ta W weight which children ef growing se areexpscted to show. Data the "DAPHNE" FRIDAY A delay in mail service coming from. New York City has held up the next chapter of Daphne which will probably t arrive by air mail service Thursday In time for publi- cation in Friday morning s issue of the Statesman. ' stead of following the policy of slow, gradual pressure" which he said had been employed by the board. By raising the rediscount rate. Professor Sprague said, the re serve board would serve notice that unlimited demand for credit will encounter definite and effec tive obstacles. Sprague explained that be did not contend security prices re too high at presentbut declared the reserve board snouia act oe- fore prices 'do become too high and possibly result in a collapse. S AFTER BID CRASH H. D. Hubbard, 116 Marlon street, who received three frac tures of the left jaw and severe cuts about the head when he was struck by an automobile Saturday at the corner of Marion and Com mercial streets, is reported to be recovering. It was not until Mon day, however, that he regained consciousness and U will be neces sary that he be confined to a local hospital for some time. Hubbard held an auto accident policy Issued through the New Oregon Statesman. Husband Hurls Catalog At His : Wife, She Says One of the worst things J. F. Cooper ever did was to wield a large mail-order catalog above his wife's head and finally to strike her with It, Maysel Cooper, the wife in the case, alleges in a di vorce complaint filed in circuit court Wednesday. She asks a divorce from the hus band whom she married in March, 1925. custody of the only child of the couple and for such other help as. the court deems equitable and right. Wife Decides 26 Years As Spouse Too Long Period Cora S. Brown was married 'way back In Wisconsin "way back in 1903 to James A. Brown but 26 years of married life has convinced her that her husband is unbear ably cruel and that she should have a divorce. His heartless me thods of treating her are set forth in a complaint filed Wednesday in circuit court by the attorney for the plaintiff. Custody of two children and $26 a month support money was re quested by Mrs. Brown. MISSOURI MULE WEAKENS ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) Mis souri's famous mules are losing their race to machinery. In 14 years the state's horse and mule population has decreased 14 per cent. However, South America an nounces an increase in mule vis- Itors, many of which are from the Show-me state. don't hurry the child into hard work. Similar avlc should be followed by adults. Until the stre turns, doat begin to put ) in fan time. You may do the easjff part of your work provided It does not tire you. But take it easy for a while, certainly until the cough is gone. Observation of these suggestions by every person who does not get up well after, an illness will prevent many a case of tuberculosis. Please be sensible. Answers to Health Queries" MART K. a What do yon ad vise for bad breath? A first remove the cause, which may be nasal catarrh. Indigestion, decayed teeth,' diseased tensile or constipation. , see U H. Q-Can blackheads and whiteheads be removed? is. for further information self-addressed, stamped en velope and repeat your question, see. J. M. C O Can a sear be re ed se any way! atickt try the X-ray.) Oouult speelaiw. RECOVER DR. C0PELAN) Diary Scrawled on Plane v Rudder Tells Gruesome Details of Flyers' Deaths STDNEY. Australia, May 1. ' (AP) A rough diary, scribbled on the rudder of their plane, revealed the tragedy of Robert Hitchcock and Keith Anderson, aviators who, lost their lives in an attempt to find the airplane Southern Cross. The story came from a land party under Lieutenant Eaton who came upon the airplane Kookaburra with the body of Hitchcock under one wing and that of Anderson about forty yards away. The Eaton party made a forced march from Wave Hill Into the heart of the waterless desert in the northern territory. The brief communications from them did not give the exact text of the records on the rudder, but did reveal the manner in which the two aviators met death. A forced landing, due to a faul ty cylinder and push rod, drove the Kookaburra to earth, seven hours after leaving Alice Springs on Apll 10. The men tried to con struct a runway to permit them to take off again, but did not suc ceed. They searched vainly for wa ter and finally were reduced to drinking alcohol from their com. pass. They had dug a hole near the machine in an attempt to reach water but this hole was dry. Food was not lacking for the plane contained two tins of bis cuits. When the Eaton party found it, there were twenty gallons of gasoline still left In the fuel tanks. "Attempted to take off." said the diary, "Clearing runway, but owing to Increasing debility and thirst we are unable to make fur ther attempts." The last entry was dated April 12, and ft showed the exhausted condition of the men. Apparently Anderson left in search of water or other aid after his companion died but he seemingly walked in circles until he too collapsed. Lieutenant Eaton said that the nearest water to the place where the plane landed was five miles POLLY AND HER PALS whY Should pa KEEP TO HIS ROOM UUST BECAUSE: HE- SHAVED OFF HIS MOUSTACHE; t THfc TILLIE, THE TOILER mwf a. L i , 7 vrUiWy II M1QHT, "TIUMe 1 c - A I I 1 l ASM M l-m VT I NS3HT 1W. Kra FWm SjnWKit. M, Cm LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY mow to oeTiiiiii SOME OF THOSE y I JEWELS I KEPT amp plant them g ii nvi akjnie's f mm I v nr. ice i y- mm r TOOTS AND CASPER BE. HERE. ANV Tioo-rft. SO BE M1CB. DOrr CLAM UP WTTH 5HE AM OUi njiEMto COOBTTaT: distant. Because of atmospheric conditions and the fact that his horses had been without water for fifty hours, he was unable to bring out the bodies. His party therefore buried them near the plane and hastened back to civil ization. CAUGHT BY BLAZE LONDON, May 1 (AP) Lloyds reported tonight that fire had broken out in number two hold of the White Star liner Me gantic, at King George the Fifth docks in the Thames river. Thirty rolls of paper and a large quanti ty of loose straw were the only contents of the hold and it was not considered likely that the fire would extend further. Dense smoke hampered the fire men but after a five hours effort it was announced that the blaze was under control and would hot spread beyond the hold in which it originated. Firemen were or dered to stand by all night. Indiana People Buy Stone Farm In Hubbard Area HUBBARD, May 1. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Sargent, daughter and son with his wife and two child ren from Indiana, have bought the A. Stone farm which 4s located on the Pacific highway about one mile south of Hnbbard. The Bar gent families left Indiana a month ago and while looking for a home in Oregon found the Stome farm BRITISH SIEIB SEARCH ME, FDLLV. I JESS ) 6toE HIM A PIECE OF MV A MIMDJHR0U6H KEyHOLfcM r BVR.E V4HO VOU SONf4A fcT TO HIS PLACE 1 -Msf rvsr liAWG opl Brits ritM i 1 i i I . . I It .-T V. 1 VJHAT n THAX NOr3B MOMENT, HEAP , CAftPER-? l! A OH, UBVl 1 ANSd TO HC IT THE. CEALOUBV AMJMlMi OM THE. OP NB A WINDOWS FLAPPlHd IN THB BPEEZEI EXCUSE MB. AT FIRST I TMOUcrKT 111 . 11 t TT VWA5TOURHBAJrr GOOD-NIGHT STORIES By Mix Tten The Tin-Soldier Tells of His Stir ring Battle With The , "Crbach" WHEN' I was younger," said the tin-soldier, I fought "A crlnch!" exclaimed JMIJ, Flor, Hanld. Tan and Knarf, the five little shadow-children with the tnrned-about names. "What is a crinch?" The soldier gazed at them in surprise. "You don't know what a crlnch is?" be demanded. "Is It like a Jabberwocky?" ask ed Hanid; who had read "Alice Through the Looking-Glass." "I never heard of a Jabber wocky," said the tin-soldier, "but I'm sure it's not like It at all." "Of course. It isn't," repeated Knarf, trying to appear very wise. "It isn't like it at all." "A crlnch," said the soldier, "is twice as large as a Jaberwocky." Knarf nodded In agreement. "Certainly it Is." "How do you know?" inquired Tam. Knarf looked very bewild ered. Luckily the tin-soldier came to his rescue. "A crinch," broke in the tin-soldier, "is twice as big as anything else." "That's just what I was about to think," said Knarf, triumph antly. The others were on the point of expressing their amaze ment when the soldier continued: "Its skin is made of rubber-bands. The minute it sees anything it stretches itself until it is twice as big. Then it snangs at it . . ." -"What's that?" cried MIJ, Flor, Hanld and Tam. The soldier gaz ed at them in wonderment. So did Knarf. for sale. Last year Mr. Stone sold his farm east o f Woodburn and bought the Jake Ott farm and now after -selling it to Mr; Sargent . has bought Bis old farm back and is living there. Read the Classified Ads. HOM. MA HAS GoSh! HOW Kirt l TO FETCH VOli ) f?SSZr food, Sir.' r ) "THAT'S VUHAT'S TAKE N1E V a ) I 1 HATE TD fW VJITH H 5EE WHI2, I'M GOMMA j Hffl , Piiotau.T ( THEM 6UT I MUST GET I FIND MS. TAMLERAM' A5K W r If t' - AWMEfiOOMEWAMD 5 I HIM MOT V0E 50 AWFUL. Jh MV ' f AM HE--HE5 L MRS. 60TT5 IF ITS 1 MEAM AT U5 I MOM0EC 4l: i; V GOT-TH JEWELS ) sT s! , , s - r THE DOOQBELi. j A CLASS TBiCk, TOOT! f f!&i' k VOU OLti J I rSZ ) I) CAMPER.' J THlNr-BEAUTiPuucVcsl XJSliJ SilKlS' ) f tllbet rro f ANb roqt checws I -"SftJ?- rZzXrl sT tVfci y N PEtYi y wcTufiE of HeAtTMl ;xy4- cd&Dl All "Snanging, explained the sol dier, is something like snapping and something" like banging ex cept that there's a sniffle in the middle of it." "How does it get the sniffle in?" asked Tam. "It gets In without any trouble at all said Knarf. "It always has a cold in the nose," added the soldier. "That makes It easy for it to sniffle. A snang without a sniffle would be to ". . . would be nothing at all," completed Knarf. "Exactly," agreed the soldier. "I Fought With a Crinch!" The shadow-children were get ting more and more mixed up "Perhaps," said Flor, "you'd bet ter tell us about your fight with the the " "Crlnch," the soldier reminded him. "It all happened in this way. One night as I was thinking about how many things there are to think about, I saw something stirring. "Who's there?' I cried. But nobody answered. Then I knew it was a crlnch." "How did you know?" demand ed Mi. "Because a crinch never an swers when it's spoken to. It's a crlnchy habit." "Everybody knows that," said Knarf, trying to appear very wise. "What happened next?" asked the other shadow-children, disre garding Knarf's remark. "Why," exclaimed the Impertin ent Knarf. "I can tell you my- I ecrr r AVC MR MTH Bv m MV. OFFICE r HE'S PEPpy 0 &P j ' I ) The Home Kitchen By ALICE LYNN BARRY TODAY I counted no less than fourteen kinds of fresh fish in the market including such delicacies as sturgein and shad. For flavor there's nothing superior to shad, but it takes an expert hand to bone It properly. ("My directions for boning a shad," said one young housekeep er after her first tussle, in which she lost, "is, remove the rde and throw the shad out of the win dow!") Let the marketman do the boning, and if he won't, and you are a stickler for good fish flavor, you may find a quite pleas ant substitute in whitefish, baby bluefish, or rainbow trout. To know fresh fish is easy. The gills must be bright red. the flesh firm, the eyes bright and bulging. Anything else isn't fresh fish. Not that frozen fish is inedible. We have excellent refrigeratiQn meth ods today, and it brings to our markets a large variety that would otherwise be unavailable. But there's no denying the difference in flavor. If you're fussy about flavor, only fresh fish will stilt. And that means buying what hap pens to be fresh in the market, in stead of deciding that you want some special fish (which may or may not be In season.) Always wash fish both inside self:" At this momest, a very curious thing happened. One of the real children, who had been sitting by the window, picked up the tin soldier and without realizing that he was in the middle of a story, put him in his pocket and walked off with him. "What a pity!" cried Hanid. "Now we can't hear what hap pened to the crinch." "Oh, yes we can," exclaimed Tam. "Knarf can tell us. He said he could himself." But when they turned to look for Knarf, they found him hurry ing off. "Come back, come back." they shouted. He wouldn't at all. And you know why. R-STf SHHH! "DEL. DOnTT INJFERkJAL -me vajav. "FO6ET it: "THAT'S 1 HAVE PAiDMR. WHfPIe THAT OVUED rMJ NOTHING and out with a cloth moistened in cold, salted water. Then dry with a fresh towel. .The fish odor which is so objectionable may be rera.oved from the hands or any dishes and cookln? utensils by washing in water in which a half cupful of salt has been dissolved. If you boil fish and want it to hold its shape, add to the waur one tablespoonful of salt and three tablespoons of. lemon Juice. Broiling is thac best way of treating almost all fish. It is the quickest of cooking process- (and fish shou'.d be cooked rap idly) also it keps the flavor with in the fish, an.i renders the flesh flaky and dedicate. To broil 4 fish mackerel. bluefish, bas?. wakrish, peren, shad, swordfish. etc. place in a buttered baking dish, skin fid down. Pour over the fish melted lemon butter; three tablespoons butter, one tablespoon lemon juice, one teaspoon salt, quarter teaspoon pepper. Leave under the broiler about 10 to 20 minutes, until the fish is tender and light brown. Every few minutes, pour some of the Juie in the pan over the fish so that it does not dry during cooking. All fish except the small items like perch and smelts, can be bak ed, and large mackerel, cod, hart dock, salmon are particularly good. RdkAd Fish Any large fish. Two table spoons butter, two tablespoons flour, milk, half teaspoon salt. Mix the flour and butter ami add enough milk to make a pabte Just thick enough to spread over all the fish. Lay in a buttered baking dish and bake in a mo erate oven. Garnish with slices vt lemon, and accompanied by a Fish Sauce half cup melted butter, half tea spoon salt, half teaspoon mus tard, one teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, two tablespoons lemon juice. Beat together in a bowl so they are well blended. By CLIFF STERRETT, LISTED KALPfltJ BE; A IDIOT BURGLARS. TODTPAOSl POLICE By RUSS WESTOVER NIFTY'S lT By VERD By JIMMY MURPHY r r 1 1 (VLL ' mtwm yon a taworaMe