PAGE FOUK ' Medford mail tribune Daily, Sunday, Waaklj Publlahai bj ua atKuruHn rKuiTiva oo. ia-lll N. til 81. PkM ROBERT W. BUHL. EdiW (. BUaHTKH SMITH. alma An luaepaDdeut Ncwipaper Cnterad w Mcood-clas mattar tt U4 lard, OragoD, mli let ot March $, U7. BUB8OBIPT10H RATK8 Sr Mall In iiianca: Dailj, with Sunday, faar 17.60 Daily, with Sunday, month .76 tail;, without Sunday, year t.60 Uallr, without Sunday, mouth... . -06 Weakly Wall Trlbuna. ona year.... 100 Sunday, ona year By Carrier, In Adrancc In Medford, aau and. Jackaonrllle. Oentral Point, Pboanlx. Talent, Gold Bill nd on Blghwaya: Daily, with 8unday, month 9 ,7k Dally, without Sunday, month 06 Dally, without Sunday, ona year... 7.00 Daily, with Bunday, ooa year t.00 All carina, caab in advance. MKMBEB OF THE ASSOCIATED PREH8 Becelvlnc Full Uaaed Wire Hervlca Only papar In city or county ncelrtnf Mwt by lelegraph. The Aaeocialad Preaa la eirlualrely an titled to he uat tor republication or all oewo dlapat-baa credited to it or otherwlae credited In thl paper, and alao to the local newt nubliahed herein. All rlghta for republication of cpaclal dia aatcnea herein art alao raaareed. Bwom dally aeerate crjcuvatloa for flfa month! andli4 Oct. 1, 1017, eeOi, (preaent drculatlon 4616). Official paper of the City of Medford. UlllCiai V ' V. - - - v I . Adrartlalnl flepnentatle M. O. MOOLNSKN A OUUPANT Offlcea In Mew York, Chicago, Detroit. Ban rranchKO, Lot Angelea, Baattla, fort- Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry j It will be late Wndnraday. before on accurate count enn be UHcer tiilnod on how ninny lovers of Mature in the uprlnlf, contracted polnoii oak' yentenlay. Nancy Beatterliad was too buny Sunday detecting who had a bon net like hem, to maintain her uverage In the dowdplng League. The latent local lie to Join the rankn of the duduri 1h Junior Kclmde, who has liloHHonied out In hi first Hult, equipped Willi a watch and chain. Wouldn't you encourage a boy to upend hlB spare time in the development of a calf? (Farm Journal.) Not unless he la gains to wear golf pants. Tho capturod men gave the games of Boris Stevens, Joseph aurenzano, John Mesarek and Joseph Artroksky. (Press Dis patch.) Anyway, they can pro nounce their own first names. There Is i.nly a week left for candidates "to get Into the field" which they will not do, but Is where they belong. NK('KI,IXTKI (SF. Inllftln) Testimony that sho hnd caught her husband playfully biting tho neck of a handsome mutron In tho kitchen of tholr . homo at 4063 Lyon avenue, Oukland, Krlday won for Mrs. Laura K. Root a divorce. John D. Rockefeller terminated his Florida sojourn, by giving away $1 in dime hatches. This orgy of extravagance was accur ately described In press dispatches, as "scattering'' and "showering." as ''scattering" and . "showering" dimes. Two more ladles have announced their intentions of committing suicide by attempting Atlantic fllKhts. Tho pair of ex-democratlo gov ernors of Oregon, who launched a brisk war on each other, have both run out of Ink and wind, unfortu nately. Tho hanging of two forsaken wretches at Salem next Friday, seems to be regarded as a matter of course. Us barbarity causing no undue protest from tho masses und the classes. If a school teocher should happen, however, to give the son of a lending citizen a much needed paddling, the citizenship would rise as one man and one woman, to squeal emotionally over the hldeousness of the offense. The doomed are completely nut of friends, money, lawyers, and po litical Influence. Husband 45tl3 has evaded the pru-smudKO housecleuuing ordeal, by insisting on doing it. CillKY MX 'Li- No one asked what he thought of war, How his conscience stood or anything more, Hut they took him to France, to stand his chance, It's all tight only a mule, He pulled his load to the top of the hill A shot rang out. and he lay quite still. "Any one hit ?" fit." "No, wero quite It's all right only a mule. 0 There Is a field where the grass Is Jong. And God at the gate to right the i wrong, i You can hoar Him say, If you pass' that way," "He's all right little grey mule" i (Westminster (Jnaetto.) j Argument Over $3 Collar Results in j Murder at Fresno FREfWO, Cnl., Aurll 9. (PI I Following nraltercutlon over a $3 , horso collar. Sum Ferugln. 44-year . old rancher 'nt nlttht hot nnii ; almost Instantly klllod -HIk 1)11!" ' I'earson. negro rodeo rider and blacksmith of West Fres. After making a complrie state ment to District Attornoy Glenn M. Dcvore, Ferugla was lodged In i the county Jail on a first degree murder charge pending a court I bearing. ' MUSSOLINI SUCCEEDS THE KAISER YES, timos ')innf! If Kip Van Winkle had (zone to sleep ten years npo and awakened today, the Kuropean situation would make him rub. Iiis eyes. A peaceful (ierinany, befriended by France, the Kaiser e serio-comic figure, pructieully forgotten, and his old role of sabre rattling being played by a strange theutrieul Dictator A Italy. lie would be amazed to see lliat a war to make the world safe for Democracy had produced the most effective opponent of Democracy of the present generation. IIj would be puzzled to understand how, in such a short time, the spirit of (iermau militarism could disappear, and be transferred so completely to another nation. But thot is precisely what has happened. As European diplomacy 15 years ago revolved about Emperor Wilhelin and Germany, it now revolves about Mussolini and Italy, The time-honored demand for a "I'luce in the Sinn" now comes from Rome instead of Berlin. The theory that the indi vidual exists for the State, and not the State for the individual, once the Kaiser's text, is now II Ducc's creed. France now regards Italy very much as she regarded Ger many before the World War, and a coalition against Mussolini is gradually forming. Does this mean another European wart I'robably not. Mus solini in all likelihood will full before conditions reach the fight ing stage. i But the properties of tragedy ore all there. NOT A PARALLEL CASE A NORTHERN contemporary finds a parallel between tho political Hituation today and the situation before the Re publican convention eight yearn ago. Then, an now, the flht was between two men and noithor of them won the nomination. In 1920 It watt Wood and Ixtwden. In April, elKht years aKo, no one beard of H&rdtar? of Ohio, Just a today no one is hearing of the man who will be the O. O. V. Hlamlard bearer. When it In all over, a oortnln Rhrewd polUh'inn by the name of Dawes will bo where Hurdfng waa In June. 1920, unle8 wa are much mistaken. "Unless" is a big word. There is no doubt Mr. Dawes is play hi f? his cards skillfully, but our pruphctic contemporary j rascal creeps and crawls closer and fails to realize that a victory for Dawes would be a defeat for clt,Hor, untl, lusukvH mtI" unive J runs toward his prey, and flattens rresident GoolidtfO. himself close to the ground where Unless there is n marked change in the political atmosphere!;!1"''0 !H, "0nK;,ull( "vwp' ,h .,lt0'M damaindr to the President's popularity, no man as hostile to Coolidge and his policies, oh the Vice-President, will be victori ous at Kansas City. Those members of the Inner Circle, who will really decide the result at Kansas City, will not throw away the Coolidgc prestige and vote-pulling power, ... i ..i n i Kri-nLi-Nt ushui, snuuiu, uy soiue liability. c . r i t ho while IJawes, like many chance, it is extremely remote. 3t still looks like Hoover after a few ballots, tout if he should fall out, his mantle will hardly fall upon Dawes or Lowden, but either upon the President him self or upon some dark horse who could also jjarry the Coolidge banner. QUILL . Among the unemployed at horses whose specialty consists If he is known as a mighty fine fellow, and everybody loves him, lie hasn't a Chinaman's chance for the nomination. Tho worst enemies of any cause arc the idiots who make it seem ridiculous by yearning to Correct this sentence: "I "when there's a woman ahead They might mako upper berths popular by advertising them as a preventative of pyorrhea. Still, a mau isn't freo until opinions. Note to onnilidntos: Don't whieh way you are going. A hick town is a place where you're either a millionaire called "Mister" or a poor mnn called 11 1 ley, there.' If you always agree with me, you stop thinking. Life: A period during whieh Tho modern girl may put on fault. She has more ruhhed off. The trouble with peroxide to make up'its mind just what THE NEBBS Oh Well CHIEF , I'M GOmC TO TO ISOO NOT ONLY BLCAUiC TME LOOT GOT BEXAUSCVOO VS.PX M INNOCENT MAM TOOM Gou-J&TO PRISON ANO I HOPE TO WAVE MR FUNT'i, ForayvCNEW) voa mv part IN TWE CASE :-Uv.' I WFvDFonn matt; unless what is the party's ii, . . i impruuumo Chance, uecome a i , I other aspirants, has an outside 1 POINTS ' present are the party wheel in pointing with pride. slay those who don't famor it. never feel resentful, " said he, of me at the bbarber shop." he ia freo from his neighbor's trll us whore you stand; tell us I am your enemy, I have made man mutters: "Never again.' more powder, nut it isn't her hair is that it doesn't seem aide eolor it wants to he. I'M GOING TO Gwc PttV.r TO rUNT.Hf. GO.VC ME Tt4C INFORM ATION THA.T LEDTOTMC ARREST (XND Ur UtQ QUVTE SOMC EHPEN.SC CONNECTED WITH TME. TRIAL TKTBrorff, rp.'O'POTtT), Personal Health Service By WILLIAM BEADY, M. D. Klgiieti letter pTtiifnlt'if tn pron.) health ar.d hxrieiu. not to din-aw dtagrioiii ot trritmi'iit, be tuiMUtri-d i i r. Hitnly if a tnuKM-t, wlf-u(!lriM-j envrlu. in eiicjim-! -Ufi nJiould t briff mni written to ink. Ovting to th ift nuirbcr ol lrtlt-ri re iflvtMl, only tie-m i-m be anttwi. til htr. No rtly n b minle to queries Dot conform-U-g Co liutruclioii. AllrrM Dr. Willum bruU, in curt of tlv. i.w.ppr. - THE SICKLY NOX-TrBKItC l'IX)ISIS CHILD Let's have a little chut about the kind of child that jiivt'H parents, u great df ul of anxiety hut dues nut, after all, have tuherculonin. 1 don't mean the reKular kid that i eultivutes an ob.ses.slnn of "weak i heart" under the , Intelligent and conscii-ntiin.H. there control of lndul- ; in jjruetlcatly no risk involved in Bent lmienta or yobr vibitM. (July ehllireii mudt fool thU yrund- (keep awiiy from the close environ itiiither or neu-jnient of the tuh i nuhtiH imtK-nt. rotlc uuntri; . nor Full of I-Jectrlulfy the pain n e r e d I When J go to open the dour and H.joflmt child Unit Just natur ally leuri.H, under hud discip line' and overcare, to he very dlnaKrecable flrwl unaml .ihle under the cloak of "nervous nenH." Thin youngMter we're talk nK about it underwelKht, what ever that may be, und perhaps easily fatiKued and without pep; he coukIib more or lew- tho Kcod v.fHH known too many sniart kids learn to couh to tnother'H entire satirifaction. Home hUKyboily, some crepe haiiKfr, pernuadeH mother to luy In a Klock of thermometers and watch the child's temperature, and Hure enough, Hhe discovers that now and utxain It 1h iseveral frac Uoiih of a decree above what the busy bod I eg assure hr is "normal." Aluyhe Uie poor child has had n severe bronchitis, or even pneumo nia Home time or other a serious mistake for a child of overlndul Kent parents, for thuy are pretty sure to endow the child with "weak lungs" ever afterward. Or worse yet. sumo puttering old doc tor ha firopruofed his bridges by expressing the fear that the young- i ster is dejtmed to develop tuber- culosls. l.ld you ever watch a cat stalk- itiu' n l.frrl? 'Au tho nr.uliitr.rv hind him. What for? Is ho try ing to frighten tho bird away? No, mi. Jt is Just instinct, evolution, heredity, bruediug manifesting It self. The cat's unrestors away back hud to keep the wiiy clear behind them in case theVprey hap pened to prove formidably or dan- " . - .. i " precisely the way Homo of our most popular doctors handle the Prognosis and diagnosis. 1 They never make any avoidable mis 1 takes. When children in their teens be have as tho they were goings to have tuberculosis, the first thing to do for them Is a proper physical examination not a farcial p..ptr j inquisition such as school medical inspectors make, but a real health ! examination such as u gouil pri vate practitioner makes, and very often it requires the highest skill , and ability for tho doctor to deter I mine whether or not tho child is tuberculous. A tuberculin (skin) tt is not unlikely to prove posi- uvo, in cnuurcii in mcir teens - that Is. the test gives the charac teristic hivcllke reaction at the point of application; hut this by no means indicates that the trou ble Is tuberculosis, for the most adults react positively to- the .skin tuberculin test, tho only a few have active tuberculosis. Itut if the tuberculin skin test is negative no rciiction, that Is a fairly reliable indication that the present trouble is not tuberculosis. When tho physical examination discloses no ub imiF, explanation for the child's ill health, and the tuberculin test Is posit ive, X-rny study of the lungs Is in order and this may givo strung corroborative evidence to support tho doctor's opinion, tho X-ray evidence alone Is by no means conclusive one way or another. (To be continued tomorrow.) Q I KSTI ON HA X iA X SV Kits UtttiliTsiiuke .lake I have had un inward goiter for l. "cjii'h . . . Mr. .lake . . . known as Rattlesnake Jake, says a rattle snake will cure ii, and offers to cure me for $ lun, in 10 treat ments, I to pay $in for each treat ment. What do you think about this? (Mrs. H. It.) Answer. I think ltarnum put it mildly. Friend Hits T. It, I have a friend In bed with tuberculosis. I visit her occasion ally und stay shout an hour. Am I running into danger? (M. M. .1.) Answer I'nless you know how t he (I (sens'? may spread and con duct yourself accordingly, you do take some risk of contracting It. that is. if your friend is in the active stage.-' If your friend talks with you. the invisible mouth spray may possibly curry tubercle BULL. HERE'S THE REWARD Bill Got from the bcnk TwlEV put in an extra 5oo Bucks tor keeping an innocent man oot OF d.AIL . 1 VsANTED HM TO SPLvT X VAJITM YOO BUT AVI? AID ONE. Or i KvTwEbE reuses will pick VOU POCK.ET 3 v ii r i Klip Vi pSfe T "Wt aP'- Ti tt.u 3rn.tn,. lr, 1 Tt.l Mttli B.t U S P.t. Off onr.aov, Monday, apktl n. ings. ttucilli to a distance of not over five fret. Miould she cough or t-neezo without cover tnK r maHk- int? none and mouth, the spray may carry at far ua 12 feet. If the na- tit-nt iH well cared for, or if she is which him a hi -ass kiob J get a fairly vigorous shock and also a snark. The tuime thint hannens when t touch the steel radiator. Is it possible for a person to be chaiKed or have electricity in his body While willing this I tested the thing by reaching to touch the radiator, and a spark Jumped when my finKer was -a quarter inch from the metal. (T. E.) Answer Anyone who happens to have a dry hkiti, in clear dry weather, may develop a charge of .-italic from friction of the feet over the floor, and get a spark. Just a lhohla Fifteen years ago I had a light nlnn shock, and since then I have juftercd from what Is called acro phobia. I am especially afraid -of dectric storms, but I also fear to be in a crowd . , . (U. AI. F.) Answer Tho term Is not agro, but agoraphobia. Agora is a word derived from the Greek word for market place or assemblage of people. I suppose the market place was sometimes deserted. One fearing to cross It alone would now be siild to have agoraphobia. Ier- -ions with agoraphobia usually pre- n-r to be in a crowd or among friends. Koine persons with claus trophobia become panicky when confined In a close or shut In space. I wish I could tell you how to master your phobia, ,but I don't know how. (Copyright John F. Dllle Co.) Bank roblHTS seem t' git off Uvicu as easy as feller- w h o marry tor money. Never polish a celluloid collar while it's hot. 4 (Continued from Page One) forbiUcllnft (he clipptDK of clnRs' ears. "Governor Smith won't veto that kind ot a law." said they. But ho (lid veto It. I)oks fiRht. cars clipped or un- clipped. CHppliiK fighting dn.su ears saves them trouble and pain. !f you were a dog, you would have the sensitive outer part of your ears clipped once for all, ruilier than have them bitten a hundred times. NiironibnrB ano all Germany cele brates wilb enthusiasm the -t mil It anniversary of Albrecht Duerer's duulh. Duerer never painted "a nude !ady descending a sa!rcase," look ins like a corkscrew, but his art will outlive the trashof this und tho lust cenlury. He worked ulek ly, as genius usually does. Ho went out to tho emperor, approaching his city, took one look at his face, hur ried back, and had an excellent por trait finished when tho emperor arrived. Omaha with telegiaph and tele- I Brisbane's Today phoue wires down, would have been 1 sidernhle loss to the cherry and cut off from the world, but for the iapple crops, 8. I). Flora, meteorol ratilo. No storm can blow down ' Rit. said today. ' SPUT T VvjTH ME '. ME NLVEk iVLiT WOOD - AND MAYBE MDO WAS INNOCENT OF Di6 TRICK BUT IF VOL) WENT TO JAlL NOO'D ONLY BE. PAYIN' BACK TAES OAT '.5 ALL kEEP VOUR QIQTDY FROM NOW ON BECAUSE t GOT TWO tVfcia tMj taOVNO to A .BE. WITM YOO ALLDE.TlMC1 Rippling Rhymes (By WH Mim) IGNOIIAXCE Professor J I ngleno n has taught in colleges for many years; he has a noble dome of thought that bulges out above his ears. Jt's wonderful how much he knows, his erudition's surely vaM; I list and marvel when be goes kerwhooplng thru h the dusty past. He talks of prehistoric men as though they'd borrowed his cigars; he knows geology, and then, he talks a while about the stars. 1 said to him the other night, as I leaned idly on his fence, "If Dcmpsey has another fight with Tunney he will show no sense. He's now an idol in this land, men root for him from shore to shore, but lr a third time he Is canned he'll be a joke, and nothing more." Th learned professor looked at me with puzzled eyes and w o r r 1 e d frown and asked, "Who can this Dempsey be? He surely is of small renown. If he's an idol in- this land, a mnn of universal fame, I surely do not understand why I have never heard his name." I viewed the learned man with surprise, but of amusement gave no sign; 'he is so great and deep and wise his ignorance is something fine. He doubtless has no time to brood o'r any small or paltry thing; his meditations don't Include the stalwart heroes of the ring He's never heard of Jack oy Gene, or Htrangler Lewis or the rest, and I admire, him more, I ween. Instead of thinking him a jest. If I asked Jak or Gene some day, "Does Jingle son seem great or small?" and they were kind enough to say they'd never heard of him at all, I'd hold they were too dumb and dense to gain re spect of nnyone; that man is surely lacking sense who's never heard of Jlngleson. the other, or whatever medium it Is that radio uses in its travels. Henry Keenah, of Jersey City, deals in horses. Is 97 years old and savs: -To live 100 vears. drink a little, smoke a little ond'trw 9-50 Pr 'on. don't sit down too much." A sim ple remedy, but in these bootleg days, one item must be eliminated. No man ustn-T bootleg liquor ha bitually will live to be 100. 1 IS NEW YORK, April 9. (P) Cold weather today checked Kaster floods in northern New York, Ver mont, New Hampshire and the provinces of Ontario and Quebec. High temperatures, which had melted snow and started ice down the rivers, and heavy rains over the week end had sent many streams out of their banks, disrupt ing rail traffic and communication systems. Two men wore killed when the racing Chaudiere river swept their wagon off a bridge near St. Lnm boit. Que., and two members of a Canadian National railway passen ger train were believed drowned when the eugMe and baggage car nf Ilia ti-nln nn i-nntn tn Mnntfo-il 'lon Quebec, dropped through a bridge at Drummondvllle, Que. In Vermont several temporary i.i ... ; bridges erected last summer were I carried away. The Fassumptic j river washed out rails at Indnn iville, delaying the Mont real-Host on j express on the Canadian Pacific railway id nours. Ire floes from Ijike Erie were swept Into the Niagara river near Hnffalo endangering small craft and causing tbe water to back up. In the LnSalle section of Niaparn Falls the river was about two and one-half feet above normal and be low the falls it was almost seven feet over. , Kansas Pears Xipiod ! TOPEKA. Kns., April 9. lP) A ', hnrd freeze and severe frost over ! Kansas last night severely dam janed the early fruit crop, includ ing pears, peaches, plums and! jnpiicots. and probably caused con- VOU CANT BLAME UlM WE DOES. THE. BEST UE CAN wtTM WHAT HE'S GOT TO DO IT WITH A COPPEK HICEADOCTOR-lF UE MAKES A MISTAKE JHE OTWEB FE.LLOW rREOCMnad' THE MARKETS UtrMorlt PORTLAND. Ore., April 9. W) Ciltle and calves weak to 25c i lower. Receipts J900, Including 16S direct or throufc-h. Two hun dred calves. Steers (1100 to 1300 lbs.) good $116 13; do (950 to 10U0 lhs.) good 112. 25fi 12.35: do (8O0 and up) medium 19.75ft 11. 5 do common .:5( 9.75; heifers I la 50 lbs. down) good I10.6O.& 11; !do common to medium 196 10.50; cows, good J.ou lu; cio con"""" cut 4.1'57'; bulla (yearlings ex cluded) good heef 7fi7.65; do I cutter to medium $6ft7; calves ' (500 lbs. down) medium tu choice ! Slofyt:!; veulrs (milk fed) good to choice $13fa H; do medium $11 if!l3; do cull to common $H.&04i jll. . ' I iiogs around fifteen cents high er; receipts 4850- Including 1480 ; direct or through. Heavyweight j (250 tu 350 lbs.) medium to choice ! $8i( 9.10; medium weight (200 tu 1 250 IIjs.) medium to choice $8.50 j (5 9.20; lightweight (160 to 200 'Ilia.) medium to choice $9.1 Cfj 9.40 'light lights (1.0 to 1 60 lbs.) me dium to choice $9(i 9.40. Slaughter ! pigs (90 to 130 lbs.) medium, to jcholce $8.25i 9; feeder and stock ier pigs (70$i 120 lbs.) medium to choice $7.76i'8.75. j (Soft or oHy hogs and roasting pigs excluded In above quotations.) j sheep and lambs steady; re icelpts 180. l.amljx (84 lbs. down) igood to choice .13110; do (92 jibs, down) medium $1 life 13; do j (nil weights) cull to conimon $9(?f jll; spring lambs $15ft 16; yearling wethers (110 lbs. down) medium j to choice $1012; ewes (120 lbs. duwn) medium to choice $7.50(r '8.50. Common $5.50 6.50, Produce PORTLAND, Ore.. April 9. (P) i Butter st4ldy. Wholesale prices: ! Portland dairy exchange net whole 'sale prices: Cubes extras 4uc; stan dards 40c; prime firsts ZXc; firsts 37 He; creamery prices prints 3c over cube standards, j Kggs steudy, fresh standard ; extras 24c; fresh standard firsts 21c; fresh medium extras 21c; fresh medium firsts 1 8c. Prices i to retailers 2c over exchange prices. . Association selling prices: Kxtras 25c; firsts 23c; medium 23c; undersized 20c. NUTS steudy, walnuts ICG? 27c; almonds 2Q(f2&c; peanuts 191fllc pecans 3tfT42c. HAY - steady. Buying prices: Eastern Oregon timothy $2050 21; do valley $18& 18.60; alfalfa $18i 1S.50; oat huy )14.5015; Selling prices $2 a ton more. CASCARA bark steady 7c lb.; Orvgon grape root 1 to 4c. HOPS steady. 1927 crop 21 T 22c lb.; 1928 crop 1 7 18c (contract) ; fuggles 20c. ' HUTTERFAT steady. Bids to the farmer 42c station; 43c track; 45c f.o.b. Portland. POULTRY steady (less G commission): Heavy hens 24250; light 15 Si 20 ; springs 20 ((v 2 1 c; broilers 35c: Pekin white ducks 30c; colored . nominal; - turkeys, alive 25(fi)27c. ONIONS steady, local ?2. 503 per cwt. POTATOES steady 75 f? $1.25. Portland Wheat PORTLAND. Ore., April . UP) Wheat: BBB hard white $1.35; hnrd white, bluestem, baart, fed eration, soft white, western white, $1.43: hard winter and western red 91.34: northern spring $1.35.' Outs No. 2.. 3li white feed and gray $45. , . - - - Receipt Wheat 45: barley 2; flour L'C; corn 2: oats 1; hay 8. San Pi-nnrlM-o Riitterfnt SAN FRANCISCO, April SI. (J) Butterfat f.o.b. 'Snn Francisco 424C - Wall Street Report NEW YORK, April 9. Wall Street chalked up another 4,- lllriOnnn ol.-ira ilnv n ik Y'-.l. 000,000 share day on the New York stock exchange today as the "bull" market R.ithered steam from the operations of powerful speculative pools which marked up more than three score issues to restore high levels. Early .;nlns pf $1! to $S a share In the active issues were Eggs Eggs I pay one cent premium for clean white standard ..eggs (candled basis). 1 H. S. BOISE 126 W. Main. Phone 805 By SOL HESS TwEY DON'T PUT TRUCK A GUY LIKE HIM SHOULD lit. HlTcWED UP TO A W4EEU BARI20W partly cut down by profit taking whlclQ followed calling on bank loana. More flian two score issues reac-ned new hitsn levels for Um year or longer, before t tie end of the third hour. The list Included Anaconda Cop per, American Bank Note, Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit, Coco Cola, r'airbiHiks Morse, Uliletle Saio... Razor, Greene Cananea Copper, Park and Tilford, Schuite Retail Stores, Skelly Oil and Standard Oil of California. Chrysler and Studebaker led a brisk auvance lu tnB lluporlant motor shares in lha lafternnon. LTtted States Cast Iron pjpe broke from. 300 to 205 and then rebounded to 270. Advance Humely preferred, Warren Hro. and American Radiator each advanced five points or more. .Mack Truck broke four points below Thursday's close and (ieneral Motors sagged from lltti 3-4 to 1K3 before buying support became effective to stem the tide of realizing. . . 1 Car Plunges Of f San Diego Pief, Woman Drowned SAN DIECiO. Calif.. April 9. yp Mrs. Catherine Simpson was drowned last night and her com panion, Ralph N. Post, was mi raculously saved when the car in which they were riding plunged of tho Broadway pier and sank in the water below. Post, who managed to crawl from a window of the machine, A was rescued by B. E. Scott, 24 a sailor, who plunged into the water fully clothed. Twenty min utes after the accident grappling hooks, tied to the rear of a fire truck, pulled the nutomobtle to the surface and Scott again plunged in, pulling Mrs. Simpson from the machine. Efforts by police and firemen to save Mrs. .Simpson by an hour's use of an Inhalator and artificial respiration proved futile. Priest Ts Executed MEXICO CITY, April 9. Dispatches from Guadalajara to day said that a Catholic priest, Albino Cardenas, and two unnamed companions, who had been held as prisoners nt the military barracks at Sayula for some time, have been courtmartialed and executed. Political Announcements FOR SHERIFF I am a candidate for the repub lican nomination for sheriff, pri mary May 18.- CI1AS. D. STACY. May 17. I am a candidate for republican nomination for Sheriff at the Maj primaries. I have had exper.sncl In both, tax and criminal depart, ments and 'promise efficient and economical service. May 17. ' GEO. B. ALDEN. ' COUNTY CLERK I am a candidate for republican nomination for county clerk; prom , tslng personal attention, economy and courtesy. G. R. CARTER. May 17.. Talent. I am a candidate for the nomi nation as County Clerk on the Re publican ticket. May 17. A. J. CROSE. I hereby announce my candidacy for the republican nomination fur County Clerk. CHESTER PARKER. May 17. , SCHOOL Kl'I'EKINTKNDKNT I am a candidate for the re publican nomination for school superintendent. V. A. DAVIS. Medford, May 17. COUNTY COMMISSIONER I am a candidate for re-nomlna-tlon on the republican tlckot for County Commissioner. If nomi nated and elected I will continue to do my best to give the people an economical business adminis tration. , VICTOR BURSELL. May 17 Stop in for your BROWNIE You'll y ant a Brownio the minute you see this "simplest real camera.'' And Brownie prices are as low as $2. SWEM'S Gift and Kodak Shop 1 window noon rp Aiwirc i Si kXa-iaTlIilJ AT D TROWBRIDGE ( B Lb nlci