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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1921)
MEDFOlil) MAIL TIJlIilTNE. M KDFOWD. OUKliOX. WEDNESDAY. NOV EM DEW ::o. 1!:M PAGE. THREE MORATORIUM FOR SCIENCE TO STUDY M FAVOR, LONDON! OF HIGH LUG LONDON. Nov. 30. ( Hy the Asso ciated Prow) Ir. Walter UatlUMiuu, former Cernitin minister of lvemi Ktruotion t'ontt-rrcil last night with sir Koben S. Horno, ham t'llur of the exchequer. . Sir John lirutlhury. IJrit iHh delegate on the rt'pataiions nun mtssion, and Baron l-Mar d'Abfrnoti, Uritlnh amhas-sador to (ifrmany also , attended the conferem'. The arrival here yostorday of Ir. Hathcnau was -accepted in official and hitnkinjr rir ; cles an hearing upon the inu-aimi of i Germany's reparations obligation:. Th morniuK newspapfn giv,- xwai Importance to Dr. Kuthenau's visit. The tenor of the moat c-ntnnients huk tfeHtH that it would he easy in brins general opinion in line with the vi--.v. Attributed to financial experts, that a moratorium for Germany is Vsiiibk. The question of Frame's position i.-i (IfucUHsed by tlu financial writers vu-. awtumfl that moratorium would b. distasteful to her. but they arue Franee'n interests would be perved equally with Itriitsh and thai l'ntme will pain more in the Urns run under nurh a plan than by further occupa tion of German territory should Ger many default in her payments. Among the allied matters touched Upon by the writers is the sutftreKtiur. by Frank A. Vanderlip, .of an interna tional system patterned after the T.'nited States federal reserve ha nit system. I. IMA. rem. Nov. 30. (Fly the As sociated Press) Five American sci entists, part of an expedition which .plans to underake the first studies ever made of the physiological chances which enable people to live at Mph altitudes, have arrived lu re to await ihe three Itrltish scientists, who will complete the party. The Americans are Dr. Alfred C Il- d field, assistant professor of phys-i.-l,(fiy at the Harvard Medical .-ho.l. Dr. f. A. 1.. Hinder of the llnckef.-IMr institute. New York: Dr. Geo rue- Har rop. of the Presbyterian hospital. New York; Dr. A. V. Dock of the Masra ehiisetts Keneral hospital and Dr. i leni y S. Forbes of i larvard univer Kiiy. The commission experts to remain two months in Peruvian mining towns in the Andes mountains. They will spend some time in tYrro de Pasco, Ticlo and Oroya, which a re situated between 12.000 and 1-1, 00 feet ahove 'sea level. These towns are the cen ters of extensive American ini-iin? operations and are said to l.e the highest communities in the world in habited by whites. The British wcientists. who are ex pected soon are Joseph Bancroft of Cambridge university, who organized the expedition: Dr. J. G. Menkens o." Kdinburnh university and Dr. DoyKart of ICin.s college. Gam bridge. TO GET AMERICAN MOSCOW, Nov. SO. (By the Asso ited Pre.s) A total of -l.20u.000 children in the famine districts of ! Russia w ill be receiving regular food j allotments from the American relief . administration by January, it was 1 stated by Walter L. Bl ow n, director, I on his departure from Moscow after ' an inspection tour. 1 "Ve are having fewer difficulties Milan at first and the army is not lak- in any of the food ami we are ope , rating virtually without loss from I theft. The amount of supplies stolen in Hussia has been far less than was i the case in Armenia, and Poland. We ::ue now feeding half a million ehil !dien and by January the number will 1 be 1 .t'Ou.lMia. ( i.s dune at a cost of eighty cents a month for each child, or a total of $PJ.(U0.i)00 until the next harvest. ( "M. Ka me nef f lias expressed M, sat is fact inn and gralit ude to me for the work done and also confidence that our aims are not political. I.eo Kamenoff is president of the Moscow , soviet and also head of the all-Bus-Isian famine relief commission), j "The American relief administra tion has no plans for feed' pi; adults nor providing seed Rratn to in.mr the next harvest and prevent a ia'cr famine." START TO DIAGNOSE TREATED ROYALLY FUNCIIAIi, Islnml of Mailoira, Nov. 30. (By Associated Press.) Former Emperor Charles of Austria-HuiiKiiry and former Kinpress Zita are living: quietly In their exile. Their only guard ! at trie Villa Victoria where they reside: is a plain clothes policeman, who ac-t companies them on their .journeys about the island to prevent beggars ! from bothering them and to avert other annoyances. Charles and Zita are treated as honored guests by the ' ' new i governor, Major Acacio Correa ,1'lntOj and the other Portuguese offic ials. They attend mass on Sundays and have engaged. Canon Antonio iHomen de (louveia as their private, .chaplain.. After muss, recently a lew .women outside the -church attempted to kiss Zita's hands, thus showing !their affection fi-r a member of the family of Don Miguel de liraganza, pretender to the Portuguese throne. NEW YOKK, '.Nov. 30. Actors', theatrical managers and others weit railed together today by William A. llrady to determine what, If any thing, is the matter with the theat rical business. In his call for the meeting he said: "It i.s time someone put his shoul der to the wheel and called a spade a spade and to have all our people real isse what Is facing us. They are standing still and doing nothing and this explains the purposo of the meeting." The Noted Dead LONDON. Nov. 30. (By Associated Press.) Lord Mount Stephen. 82" years old, pioneer railroad constructor in Canada, and first president of the Canadian Pacific Railway company, died last night at his country resi dence, llrocket Hall, Hatfield, Herford-shire. T OREGON COUPLE HIGHLY PLEASED AT THE RESULTS j "I started taking- Tanhu when 1 ,saw the Rood it was doing my wife, jand now both of us are enjoying as good health as we ever did,' said O. Ingram, Hox 1TJ. it. F. 1J. No. l. l.innton, Oregon, a valued employee 'of the Standard hl company in Port land. "Rheumatism and stomach t roil hie ' had the hest of me and it was begin ning to look like nothing would reach 'my case. I had the keenest kind of pains in my shoulders and arms anil at times it Kenn-d like every joint in my body was aching. 1 could hardly i work. In fact, lots of mornings 1 ; didn't feri like h aving the luuiso at jail. My appetite was gone and what little I ato did me no good. 1 grad ually lost weight and hardly had any strength or energy at all. "My wife, who h:ut been in had health a long time, started getting fine i results from Tanlae, so I commenced j taking it myself and I'm now feeling , as fine as a fiddle. The rheumatic pains have left me and when 1 get up of mornings now I'm ready for a , hi? day's work. My appetite is a ; corker and everything I eat agrees 'with me. I have (diked up ten pounds in weight and feel strong and healthy I once more. My wife and I are both well pleased with Tanlae and are all the time recommending it to somo of ! our friends." Tanlae and Tanlae Vegetable Pills are sold by the West Sido Pharmacy, and by leading druggists everywhere. Adv. AlmDT MHM Dill CO RAIL WAGE ROWS 818,000 MEN ARE j KAIL WM KUM umulii niwiu in C1I1CAOO, Nov. HQ, Future wage adjustments for railroad employes by the United Status labor board must fit the new rules laid down by the board, and which supercede regula tios promulgated under federal con trol, Hen V. Iloper, of Tennessee, a public member of the board, declar ed today at a luncheon of the Chicago Association of Commerce. Utiles governing the 400,000 mem bers of the railroad shop crafts will ht announced by the board tonight to go into effect tomorrow. The board will then be freo, Mr. Hooper said, to consider applications from the railroads or the shop employes for a change in wage schedules. E, CHICAGO. Nov. 30. Final action on the question of a strike by employes of the puckers in all the packing plants of (he country is expected today or tomorrow when the executive com mittee of the Amalgamated Meat Cut tors and liutcher Workmen of North America meets here. j Little notice will be required for is suance of n strike call authority for which was voted some time ago by the i unions whenever their officers, in ! their judgment, deemed it expedient. The strike vote was n protest against j wage cuts. CASP1GU, Wyo., 'tfovao.Wrcok'nge of a southbound .IlurlinfUon. freight train which piled up last night hear Lox Station, 40 miles west of Casper, was being searched today for bodien of hoboes believed to have been killed. It is known that between twenty and thirty men were riding the train and only four of these whose names are unknown have been accounted for. All those picked up were injured. PAULS, Nov. 30. (P.y the Associat ed Press) The strength of France'H army was given as S 18,000 as of October 1 by the report of the army commission to the chamber of depu ties, made public today. The report was made public in connection with I the government's proposed law call ing the idass of to the colors in two contingents, one next May and the other next November. The report said a considerable part of the t-lasH.of JlHll had returned to thei'r homes ,011 crop furloughs or 011 indefinite leave.' making the active forces in uniform GOO, 000 or up wards, witli thu balance subject to immediate recall. The commission estimates that the government plan. - which is recom mended for .adoption, would, through the release of various contingents of the class of 1920 and the incorpora tion of the class of IHL'2 during next year, give a strength of fi-iii.ouu men in the spring. if Fill Come on along ! up your makin's papers with P. A. Greatest sport you know to pull out your makin's papers and some Prince Albert and roll up a ciga rette! That's because P. A. is so delightfully good and refreshing in a cigarette just like it is in a jimmy pipe! You never seem to get your fill P. A.'s so joy'usly friendly and appetizing. Prince Albert will be a revelation to your taste ! No other tobacco at any price is in its class! And, it rolls up easily because it's crimp cut and it stays put. It's the best bet you ever laid that you'll like Prince Albert better than any ciga rette you ever rolled! And listen! If you have a jimmy pipe hankering by all means know what Prince Albert can do for you! It's a revelation in a pipe as well as in a ciga rette! P. A. can't bite or parch. Both are cut out by our exclusive patented process. Prtne0 Albtrt It told in toppy rJ baa Hdy rd ting, handBomm pound and Itatf pound tin humidort and in tht pound eryatal glait humidor with mpongo moiMtonor top. , OLYMPIA, Wash., Nov. SO. Over tho protest of Mayor Charles 11. How en, tho city council last night reaf firmed its stand Involving the dis missal from the police force or Chief of Police .lames Kndicott and Patrol men William Korbes and Charles Hansen. The men wore charged with Incompetency following the dlsnp nearance of approximately 82 bottles of liquor from a cell in tho city police station. .Mayor Bowen was not present at the meetltiR last Friday nlnht when tho romoval of tho officers was rec ommended. At last nlKht's session ho insisted on a full Investigation before any action should be tuken, but final ly acceded to the council's request for dismissal. It wus agreed at the meeting that no definite date should bo sot for the removal of the officers and that they be asked to hold office until their successors arc appointed. E DUL ; ihc national joy smoke Copyright t921 by R. J. Reynolds ' " Tobacco Co. Wla ton -Salem. NKW YORK, Nov. 30 Search or the ruins of u new theater Iti Brooklyn which collapsed yesterday during con struction, liillint; six workmen, wus continued today to determine If the bodies of four missing laborers were under the tons of brick nnd twisted Birders. Kighteen other workmen are in hospitals, some In a serious condi tion. District Attorney Iwis, who yester day ordered Sylvester Rosenthal and Samuel Mimkowltz, owners and con tractors or the buildings, held on charges of manslaughter, said he ex pected further arrests today. DAY OR NGHT vVEEKS-CONGER CO funeral Directors U V MP " At This Time of Year Chevrolet Closed Cars offer the utmost in Comfort and Convenience at a moderate cost Tel. 150 112 So. Riverside ' j Now Showing The elements of value which you will recognize in these specifications, and in the cars themselves, are more impressive than anything we could say of the New Series of the good Maxwell, Cord tires, non-skid front und reur; 31 x 4 inch. Disc steel wheels demountable at hub nnd rim, or wood artillery wheels,option- ol without extra cost. Unusually long springs promote comfort, tire economy, roudubility. Alemite lubrication, Plate glass window in rear curtain Drum type head lamps, nickel trimmed. Non-glare lenses. . Heat leather upholstery; Turkish cushions. Adult-siic scats, deep and wide and roomy. Side curtains open with doors. Leak-proof windshield. Windshield wiper. Motor driven electric horn. A. W. Walker Auto Co. West Main Street, Medford H'he Qood MAXW E LL WOOD! Miller's New Radiator Shop Radiators Fenders Ti 1 TT I. may worn Mrnrnon irnri rn All kinds nf uuod at rlflit prUtw; drj mill IiIimIis. Oril.-i Promptly Filled I2H N. ;niie l'botio 900-H I'or Health VI m r. t or. Mr nud Third. r awl MAI.K Oil KKMaTL. Pamphlet Pr- m ltequat. AhIi fur WEU'II'H th OH lillNAL. I1KWAKB.OK IMITATIONS AND KrnsTITCTKM. WEIOI DRIIU i.,, . 1st Kihly Kt., Dept. J. Ban Kraiclcu., i hnnu -;C;,nf. Ai other Drugglatii. , '.