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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 3, 1923)
MEDFORg "RATE TRTBTJNti, MEPFORP, CmVGO ' W6XTliY, MfflifBRR' S, 1923 CLAIMS POSTAL DEFICIT REDUCFD BY $30,000,000 WASHINGTON, Dec. 3. Extraor dinary Increase In butdness severely taxed the ability of the postul service under Inadequate appropriations last year but "a most gratifying decrease In the postal deficit amounting to approximately $30,000,000 from the previous year's deficit, was brought about through economies, Postmaster General' New informed President Coolldge today in his annual report. "It would be an id mi I condition If the department could become self sustaining, with postage und service charges so udjusted us to do equul justice to all the using public," said Mr. New. "To attain this end, each class of mail matter need not neces sarily contribute its entire estimated cost. Public policy, for Instance, has Jong recognized the special claims for publications for the dlNsemination of information of a public character, or devoted to literature, the sciences, or arts. It Is a wise policy und makes for the gene nil good und the public welfare. On the other hand, public policy, as evidenced by tho uct of con gress establishing the parcel post system, favors the principle that rutes for Buch matter shall equal the cost of service. This, too, is a wise policy, for there is no sound r en Hon why the government should conduct a parcel business, so analogous to express, for example, on principles other than those of sound business." The money order, the postal sav ings, and the parcel pout systems, Mr. New said, should be entirely self sustaining. The relation of cost to revenue for the several functions was studied In 1907-1911 nnd the depart ment is making another cost ascer tainment at the iustunce of the post office committees and the joint postul commission, which has been author ized by congress. When results are known, Mr. New declared, they will furnish a basis for an Intelligent Judg ment as to postage rates and charges. The postmaster general made a number of recommendations for leg islation along those lines Including authority fur him to: Fix a charge for a . return receipt for a 'registered article; fix the fees chargeable for registration of mull matter and the limit of Indemnity; extend the lnmir- I ance and collect-on-dellvery services to third-class mall; and prescribe the fees to be collected for the Ihsuo of j domestic money orders. Mr. New also recommended that legislation bo enacted to: Provide for the appointment of postmasters of the third-class by the pOHtmuster general; pay rent on postofflce premises monthly instead of quarterly; com pensate employes for overtimes ser vices In excess of oight hours daily; establish motor vehicle rural routes of not less than 30 nor more than 75 miles in length; increase the interest rate on postal savings deponlts to 3 per cent and for other improvements: nnd amend existing laws In regard to examination and renewal of official bonds, ago retirement of certain em ployes, leaves of abseuro of railway postal clerks, and moving expenses of officers and railway postal clerks. I RIVALS OPEN UP AT I A big crowd, according to fndica tfons, will witness the wrestling match tomorrow night between Ted Thye, instructor of Multnomah Ath letic club, and Gus Schneldau of Med- ford. There Is no particular love lost between these two gentlemen and j Schneldau ts out to recover honor lost to Thye in Portland a few weeks ago. Two good preliminaries will pre cede the main event. Ticket sale for Med ford Is on at Brown & Brown. The American Legion 1h working bard to mulce its smokers a "big run for your money," and no doubt tomorrow night's show will more than please the audience. CHICAGO, Dec. 3. Two fruit auc tion companies opened rivul markets hi, Chicago today for the selling of fruits In less than carload lots to dealers. Each claimed that better market conditions would result. No decided price slushes were re ported, but leaders of several large commiRHlon nouses predicted that lower prices and a wider market dis tribution would follow. The Independent .Fruit and Produce Auction company, formed by about one hundred small dealers, Including many representatives of various na tionalities who likened themselves to a league of nations asserted the other auction company bad failed in an at tempt to squeeze them out. They re ported they had placed on sale 61 curloads of fruit and produce. The Chicago Fruit Auction com pany reported C7 carloads of fruit on mile. John Denny, a leader of the larger group, said that the auction company wus formed nt the behest of growers' associations to sell the asso ciations' products under one roof ln Htead of at private sale, as heretofore. The auction company, ho said, hits under contract ninety per cent of the available supply. ,,,i ,i, ,.k a.,.iI INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 3 Governor company itfny thru thoy huvn nl-AV'l"'en T' McC,"y tod"y was 8erve1 templet to crowd out tho smaller ,vllh warrants tor hlx appearance to de,,!,.,.,, nnsivcr to tho churKen contained In The' central grlevnn. o nKaint u." .?'Bht, ln;1",''"m returned aBalnt anlu R K. Nell)-, a loader of the com- hJ 16 Maf on ,COU"' JUry mm. unit ,!. ,h- i, fr rlclny. Honil of $L'S,CI00 was " iiinvi.l...l l. 11 ....... Indictments resulted from HELD ON BOND OF time to conduct nn auction at which the citrus fruit or the southern Cali fornia fruit growers' exchange will be auctioned In Chicago In less than car load lots. Previously it had been sold Tho grand Jury Investigation of the gover nor's financial transactions following admission to his creditors last August that he was unable to meet lmmedl- at private sale, which gave Individual ntoly , onBntlona to tllom. ijin ii n- .w inuiure u cur uuu mi... nrimi,.ui ,,.,. ni,,.t market Us contents at a ,roflt Bell- Kmernm m,ulo ,,, ,hu lulictments are Issuance of state- fraudulent U. S. NAVY PLANES TO FLY TO POLE .WASHINGTON. Doc. 3. Deflnlto plana or a nuvul expedition to tho north pole, to be undertaken proba bly next summor b yulrcraft, were an nouueed today by Secretary Ilonliy. tho lug less than carload lots at public embezzlement, larceny, forgery, ob- """ " """ " uimnuun.Mi, taining money under a false limning ii ucreHMino lu fieaiurs anu ment and consumers It has not reached before, t.hecks. and i neiieve will mean more good . Harry E. Sheridan, master In chan frnlt at lower prices for tho con- 'eery of tho federal court resumed tho timer." hoarlng on a petition of three Port The rival companies which formed Wayne. Ind., banks to have the govcr the Independent Fruit nnd Produce nor declared bankrupt. Auction company, patterned after a . ilmllar company in New York, tell a different story. They assert Hint the big dealers combined with the big shippers to form nn auction rrtmpnny which denied the sninll dealer the part he Md played In former auction compnnlcs. , Daily Report on the Crime Wave COPENHAGEN, Dec. 3. Advlcos from Chrlstlanlu say, Cuptaln Haokl Amundsen s exploration ship Mnrnl which Is believed to bo drifting, toward the north polo wit lithe Ice packs es tablished radio communication with Spltzanborg yesterday. Captain Wist lug reiHirtetl that Knglneer Slovortson tiled July 10 nftcirun Illness of several months, presumably of Inflammation of the brain. The Maud was In communication with Spllzenborg early last May, re porting she was 300 miles northeast of VVrangol Island. SAIL I . SEATTLE, Dec. 3. Major Fred erick McUnuRhlln of Chlcugo and Mrs. MoLoughlin, who until Wednesday wa Irene Castle, remained In their BUlte In a hotel here today. The bride, world famous us a dancer and the groom, n coffee broker and clubman, are to leave tomorrow In the bridal suite of the liner President Grant for n honeymoon tour in the Far Kast. WASHINGTON STATE DRIVE 10 OUST ALL ALIENS TACOMA. Dec. 3. Suit was filed In superior court hero today to confis cate the land holdings in this country ii f fcVnnv Vitvnp II, .t... augurution of a campaign to ejoct all iiueiiM inini mmiH rouowing tne edict of the United Htutes supreme court sustaining the Washington state alien iiunu iiiws in an particulars. 1'rnsecu tor James Seidell asked In the suit thllt thn IMIrlmio U.tl.ll...... .v T-i 1.1 hofer, a German, be confiscated by mo state necause he Is an nllen resi dent and has not In good faith de clared his Intention of becoming a citizen of (he United States. Mr. Solden said that the state law provides no remuneration for the lands of aliens that are confiscated. The county prosecutor said that addi tional suits will be filed ngalntit other aliens holding lands under deed or lease and he predicted that all such aliens eligible to citizenship, will has ten to becomo naturalized. "Tho state law Is not directed aga 1 nst J a pa nese," M r. Helden said, "but ngalDHt all aliens regardless of the country from which they came. It is our Intention to proceed against all nllen land holders as rapidly as we can discover their Identity. M I 8I3ATTLK, Dec. 3. W. Tl. Collins. ' town marshal of Tnlt, fifteen miles east of here, came into Seattle today and reported to the fthcriff that he had shot two robbers last night when he heard five of them looting a store, lie said ho saw two men fall when he fired three shots, but that all five escaped in a small automobile while he pursued them almost to this city. LOS AN'CIKLKS. Dec. 3. Two-men. who are alleged by the police to have held up the cashier of the Paclfb Klectrlc station at Sherman, near hero and escaped with $4302 in cash, were captured by Hollywood and itovcrly police shortly before noon near tho Doheny ranch north of Heverly hills. One of the men was shot through the back und Is not expected to live. Tho othor was shot through the arm. Tho money was recovored in an aban doned car. The more seriously wounded bandit gave his name as Arthur Joslyn and the other us Howard Hanna. They mild they cume here recently from nncouver, U. C. IS TO was seated with several friends .in the president's gallery. Balloting for speaker in the house was delayed while the clerk went thru the long formality of calling the roll by states to determine whether a quo rum was present. The galleries there were parked tuo. the crowd extending senate, and Senator Gerry of Ithode into adjoining corriuors. Senator Walsh of Montana was named vice-chairman of the demo crats' conference; Senator ISttman of Nevada was nominated as the demo cratic candidate for nresiuent of the Island was re-elected party whip. Senator King of Utah was named sec retary of the conference. J. Edward Hasley of Virginia was nominated by the democrats as can didate for secretary of the senate. EUGENE ESCAPE KITGKNIO. Ore., Dec. 3. Mix pris oners escaped from the county Jail here some time during tho niRht by ukIiik nn iron plate, wrenched from the Jail sink, to pry loose enough bricks front the wall to mnke a space for a man to crawl throuKh. The escnpo was not discovered until this morning. Fourteen other prisoners In the Jail did not avail themselves of the opportunity to pet away. Those who escaped were: Al Nell. Peter Thereby, H. Z. Kvans. J. C. Wray. all facing liquor law violation charges; Clayton t). Hall and Wilfred Coughlin. held on larceny charges. CHILDREN CRY FOR "CASTORIA" A Harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops " and Soothing Syrups No Narcotics! ' Mother I Fletcher's Cantoris, hu been in use (or over 30 year, to relieve babies tnd children of I'onatip&tion, FUtulcncy, Wind Colio and Diarrheal allaying Fererishneae arising there from, ami, by regulating the Stomach pad eV'ii. ft'! Uj" "i-'Uatiuu ot Food; giving natural sleep without opiates. The genuine bears aignature of F Scranton, Pa., Bee. 3. Tho finding of a boy's skeleton, together with evi dence making Identification positive, In a swamp near Oreeloy, l'iko county, yesterday brought to nn end a search of more than eight years for four year old Jimmy Glass, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Glass of Jersey City, N. J. FAILS BY 50 VOTES OI.YMPIA, Wash., nee. 3. A mar gin of about fifty votes defeated the $450,000 bond Issue for a port project in the election In Thurston county Saturday. E. L. Vanepps, county nu dltor. announced tudnj,, judging "from almost complete returns. Aberdeen Votes to Build City Power Plant, 1092 to 992 arrhi)Re;v. wmm.. tw. a tiv a majority of 100 votes, 1093 to 992, Aberdeen voters Saturduy endorsed thn nrnnnHiifl 1'i OOll II It 0 hntirt (aann for construction of a municipal dam anu power plant on mo upper wy nooeho river. City officials are nloftiritrl tint In rnrrwamrl tvlth rnnoirun. Hon until complete engineering data on tho project Is secured, which will require adoui n year, me w ynoocne nr.-. t.wi I-, ,ilf1 lui .... Kl a r.M- duclnjt between 27.UOO and 34,000 nurse power. t PiMeTughtTbdaa Dia.lVtiltANTH AT IIAMt.i -mi he with him In trouble; 1 will deliver aim. I'uuliu tHUS, Deke Barr told the Kiwanis club all about marketing and the fruit auc tion at the Kiwanis luncheon at the Hotel Med ford today. For the full allotted time the audience was held spellbound with a rapid description of the auction and when he Imitated the New York auctioneers several of the members jumped to their feet to bid on & car of California wine grapes, which seemed to make up the greater part of the New York auction. A letter -from tho Yakima Kiwanis club was read announcing a special radio program for tonight at '7:30 from Yakima station K- F. I. Q. on a 224 meter wave lengthy Local people were requested to listen In for an unusually fine program with the request that , those picking up this program mall postal cards to the Yakima Kiwanis club, saying how the concert came in. An Invitation was read from the Roseburg Kiwanis club to the char ter presentation banquet at Roseburg on December 12. - Visitors to the local club today were W. W. Walker, the tlonal bank and Norman Kvans of new vice-president of the First Na- Jollet, 111., who was the guest of Guy Conner. John Mann won tho Kiwanis em blem. v HOLDS VP FLECTION' (Continued From Page One) into a deadlock over the election of a speaker. On the first ballot no candidate re ceived the majority over all required to elect. BEGINNING TODAY , SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT She Lived a Thousand Years in her loyal ef forts to snatch a soul from doom. M WASHINGTON, Dec. 3. Facing an organization row at the very outset, the G8th congress convened at noon today for a session which promises to write a colorful chapter In the his tory of legislation and politics. The militant progressive bloc hold ing the balance In the- scale of vote's by virtue of the greatly reduced re publican majorities, raised the flag of Insurgency In the house by threaten ing a deadlock. In the election of a speaker.. While on the senate side the open ing formalities passed off with tho usual outward calm and decorum, the threat of a fight to force re-organl-zution of the senate and. some of its more important .committees was In-; the background,, , ..In both house, and senafe the ga-) vels fell promptly at twelve o'clock with Senator Summlna of Iowa, tho president pro torn, presiding over his colleagues, and Clerk William Tyler) I'nge occupying thjo speakers' chair' of the house pending tho outcome of. the fight over the speakership. J For an hour before the house went ' Into sersion the progressive bloc hod : been In conferenfje. , I Wo KUx-Uon TiKlay." "There will be no election ofi speaker today," said Representative Nelson of Wisconsin, chairman of the group, after the meeting. He reiterat ed that the bloc controlled enough votes to prevent .the re-election of Speaker (tlllett, hut declined to say how long the insurgents expected to hold out. "Our real fight," he said, "will come later when we seek to modify house rules. The senate democrats also held a conference elected Senator Robinson of Arkansas as democratic floor man ager and selected a shite of candidates for senate offices. The republican senators at o meet ing last week had re-elected Senator Lodge of Massachusetts as their leader. Democrats Outline program. Legislative Issues were 1 not dis cussed at the democratic meeting. "While we are not prepared and do not propose at this time to assume the responsibility which devolves upon tho majority to take the Initiative re specting the details,, of legislation," said Senator Robinson afterward, "It Is expected that our organization will stand for a materia reduction In taxes And for aggressive measures to effectuate retrenchment In public ex penditures. ' ''The transportation question Is worthy of careful study and decisive action. Practical and well considered measures for the relief of conditions among farmers will receive sympa thetic attention. Proposals advanced for tho adjustment of international conditions are to be disposed of with out partisanship." LuFolltite III. Senator LaFoiletto of Wisconsin, the recognized leader of the progres sive bloc, was the only absentee when the roll wrist rnlld In thn npnntn. Hp has been III for nevernl riavn nnri nrob. ably will be unable to attend senate sessions before next week. The new senators and those re-elected at the last election took the oath of office, administered by Senator Cummins, while crowds which overflowed the galleries looked on. Mrs. Coolidge. wife of the president. 0f r A. cross-section of throbbing human experienoi. Hero is drama fcuilt out of the very fabric Bf life. Stripped cf reserve, born of the robiliy of a woman's soul; nnd dedicated to the cause of saving .other lives from the unspeakabl- curse cf narcotics. Played by a perfect cast, including Mrs. Wallace Reid, James Kirkwood, Be3sie Love and a host of others, "Human Wreckage" is not onl Ihe most crashing blow ever delivered against the narcotic evil not only the most gi'-'-'tic fcheiirical attraction ever produced it is real ! It lives ! ' PRICES Including war tax, :' Adults 50c Children 25 Loges 75c Thursday Rln Tin-Tin Marvelous Police Dog hero In ."Where the North Begins" Get Our Prices COLDS 'Tape's Cold Compound" Breaks a Cold Right Up Take two tablets ever? three hours r until tliree doaes are taken. The first dime always gives relief. The second 2 and third doses completely break up the ss cold. Pleasant ait safe to tke. Con tains no quinine or opiates. Millions iUitty flvr.U. Uruw-UffW.. 5HIIUHUUIIII1IIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIII Going to Build? We have the largest and most complete stock of Building Material Just received a carload of Cedar Shiplap Flooring Rustic Ceiling Lime Cement Plaster Dpors and Windows Shingles Estimates Furnished Medford Lumber Go. Phone 629 Cor. N. Fir and 3rd