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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1929)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE MEDFORD, OREGON". SUNDAY, APRIL 7, 1929. KEDPORD MAIL TRIBUNE Dallr, tadw, Waaatt i FiAUabad by UM ' MZnrotO FUNT1NQ c. H-lf-lt B, fir tL Tam1 mim m: rm, uuar mumi SMITH. IUiw A UvkpcodcBt Nmw Mara M aaeond riaaa atattv at kMfanl. trm. Malar jet af Mart 1. 11. . (UBHC1IFTI0N um ' Br Mill In Wna: Daily, .it &iDdtr, ir ir.so Palli, alts Buorfar, Kotb Tft tally, vtuntrt Bandar, rear..., 0.50 Pallr, felllMMit Bandar, nonu).. s tartly Mall TruxuJt, mm rear 1.00 Bandar, mm rear . 1.00 Br Carrier, In Adfafire Id Mcdford, Aahland, ' laekiontlk, rmral Mat, rhoeui, TilaM, Gold dill and an Hkhtari; Dallr, alls Bandar, annul.. t ,Ti Pallr. wllbout Buodar. month 69 four, vltnout Buodar, aoa ror..... T.00 llaly, .it Bandar, ana rear. .00 All farm, eab in adraDoa. MEMBER OP Till ASSOCIATED PRR88 Barehlni full Uasad Wlra Btnle Tba Ataodated Prwa b ndaiiTrlj antiUatl ta) tba oaa far putillcatlMi af all nava dlapalchaa erriltrd ta H ar atbrrwlsa eredilad 1b tbla papar. and all. ta uw fetal orva published herein. All rtttu (ar .ublleaua af apadal dlrtalrtjaa strata ara alea raeerred. Bewrn dallr arerece rirenlallan tor all andli Oct. 1, 43a. Orfklal paper of the City of Medlar. Ollklal paper a Jaelwa Ceealr. Adeertisinf Bepreaeauuree M. C MOflE.VSEN A COMPANY Offkea b l York. CMeaco. Detroit, ' frandK.. Loa Ancelea. Seattle. Portland. Smudge Smoke Henry : Effun, who pioneered golf and police dogs In thettc parts returned from California, where .for. quite a ape 11 he wan them smart .refugees Portland so ciety editors tell about. New cars greet the eye on every hand. - I In a-, 1,4 r'..fll.a haai .afa .1. t. Ut -was in from the Phoenix district Friday talking to Judgo Taylor, friendly not officially. - Mr. Cor leut is a clear and deep thinker, and agreed with this col. In Its allegations, that the male legs In the legion revue' were the worst he had ever saw, and hurl ed a deep uurtton.c cuss at Hlney Flewher's underpinning. Owintf to the criticism that has been di rected at their . lower extremi ties, the males Involved angrily declare that . never again will they make a civic aacrlfico to ap pear in a I'lioruH. Never again, will he too soon,. In the concensus , of opinion. V. Preston of the Applegatc was - In town Wednesday for the flint,' "time In a long time. Ala had on ' hlH Hunday suit. The Vawtcr Uoya' clock mopped abruptly Friday.. at .8:48, due to internal trouble -It la alleged. Vi , The 5. McDonald boy has been . busy i all week, . demount ruling to a bird dog, how to bo busy, G. . 'Washington"; Maddox, tlio . eminent shluologlst and 'ex-Moth odlst, was ailing whh the fidgets most of tlie week. 'v - 1 ,. , rnui rji'iiurtrr una tjunu iu ' riovj on blis. and pllz. . I. , . . -.. . . Thero was .smudgo-Sat. morn, raising ncd with lucfe curtains and The present run of mustaches hereabouts are above tho average in virility. Tho nose-width, trian gular 'mustache no- longer has muvh voguer -aiid--ts being dls- - placed by the mouth-width, bris tled fi type. Heo Chet Baker, 1 James Btewart). The ultra-mus-tached are running to a puny . atrocity, that is nothing but a fringe following tho contour of the upper Up. (Bee Hod. tichulor. , X.OHh UcBump). . ' Mill Bates, who has been laugh .mg for three years becauso Chas. Htrang started to play golf, now has his risibilities tickled by the f new 'that foreign d'plomats have i 800 canes of European' HqUor. ' NolKidy In the county Is acquaint- vd with a foreign diplomat. i ' The youngest Dick Bhorwood ) boy was noted walking home from 1 school with a girl friend oho day recently. Tho middle - boy has ' been promoted to a sit-down Job at the postofftcc. A number of co-eddles wear Ung ' fraternity hardware weck i ended at homo. Tho frost nipped tho peaches I those In the orchards, and those running around in thin stockings. Brisbane's Today (Continued from Pag Ono.) draining all tho oil out of govern nient lands, and there is comfort in that for oil stock owuers.; f Senator ilorah, head of the rom' mltteo on foreign affairs, would again demand this country rei-nR-nlze the Kuaalan government. Tho pope, restored to temporal power, ,haa rcrognlxed It, thus obtaining permisBlon to enter laJuasia and fight against atheism. Is there any reason why Uncle Ham shouldn't recognlie a govern ment that has been stable and pro gressive ever since tho war? The real reason for not recog nizing itussla Is the tact that fool ish Wall Street boy banker bought bonda from the cr.ar when ho was toppling tind others from n-omlc Kerensk)". They think Itussla should pay those bonds. Itussla won't "... Friday, Nathan K. I.eopold. the father of notorious young mur derer, died, lie had been in se clusion since hi son's horrible crime, and was the last alive of three unfortunate fathers. The father of boeb died recently, un questionably of grief, and Jacob Franks, father of the murdered boy, is also dead. SHOULD UNCLE SAM PENSION EX PRESIDENTS? FORMER PRESIDENT COOLIDGE does not choose to have a pension. In the current "Cosmopolitan" he declares it fortunate ex-Presidents are not supported at public expense, "so they are not expected to set an example encouraging to a leisure class." ' ... , "We draw our President from the people," he write." It Is a wholesome thing for them to return to the people. I came from them. I wish to be one of them again. . . . They have only the same title to nobility that belongs to all our cltiiens, which is one baaed on achievement and character so they need not assume su superority. It Is becoming; for them to ennage in some dignified . employment where they can he of aervice aa otheta are." All of which is very sensible and conforms to the American custom aud tradition. We need future of our ex-Presidents. Any man who has been President of this country can be assured a comfortable and an earned income as long as he lives. . President Coolidge has had neither business nor literary training, and yet the prestige that attaches to the presidency is such that his opinions will have a high market value just as long as he is able tb dictate to a' stenog rapher. Wo fail to follow the reasoning of those newspaper editors who have recently been advocating a presidential pension, on the ground that there is something undignified in the spectacle of 1111 ex-President earning his living. Why shouldn't "C Cleveland returned to his law practice, Roosevelt became a magazine editor, Taft became justice of the Snpreme Court., Instead of regarding this as a blow at our na tional pride and self respect, the contrary seems to be true. , Of course in exceptional eases, particularly where financial reverses or ill-health intervene,' Congress should, and of course would, -vote a pension. But to make a pension a part of the regular procedure of presidential retirement scenis to us neither necessary nor desirable. As President Coolidge says Jic caiue from the people, he wishes to 'be one of them again. The return to privacy and COMPLETE INDEPENDENCE is undoubtedly one of his most cherished blessings. Why deprive him or any othor ex-President of such a deserved privilege, by making him a willy-nilly pensioner of the government as long as he -lives! . ' Press Comment THE IKVSAH.KA Sixty casea of liquor, seized from a consignment under diplomatic seal to the Htuniete legation, has been 'restored with apologies and an honor guard of murines hy the stair department. Tim Incident is closed. A legation or an embassy In America Is technically foreign soil, and the goings-on within are no affair of the Washington police. Meanwhile, a prophecy; Inside of three -years no Important embassy or legation In Washington will be serving liquor. The pressure which will tbe put on them will be social, not legal, 1 In the matter of dry ing up Washington, the frowns of half a dozen official hostesses are worth a thousand salaried keyhole peepers. During the many years In which Mr. Hoover's work took him all over the globe, there were no out wurd ' evidences that ho. was an advocate of prohibition. The am ber glow of Moselle in Its shotil d or less bottle on, white nap cry did not cause him to rlso with dignity and stalk from the table., Calva dos. Victoria Vat -or Oraud - Klne Napoleon .winking In Us diminu tive glass.' did- not mako him blanch or tremble. There arc reasonable doubts as to whether Mr. Hoover really believes that the Eighteenth amendment plus the Volstead act wero exactly tho pro per way to set about destroying tho liquor traffic. Hut as it constitutional officer of the United States In the Harding cublnet, Secretary Hoover's dinner table was a illstlngulxhed excep tion from most of the other cabi net tables in that It Was conspicu ously dry. He respects tlin fact that prohibition fs the law of tho land, aud there stands behind it a largu majority of public opinion. Heretofore there has been no In eentivo for Die emljHHMleM to dis continue serving liquor. While the White Mouko llseir has been dry since the Harding administration, the seiili-ofrielHl parties of eiiblnet member, milllniy mid naval offi cers, senatorial and congressional noelal 'elreles, tipimlly have not. Why. then, vhould the foreign le gations In these matters set nil example of coiihiiIcuous chastity? Hut with the nomination of Hoover last June tho tide In W'ash Inglon turned in the mailer of liquor. Cabinet members desirous of serving under (he new president remembered villi a Blurt that ho wus dry buth publicly and private ly, In July the press aiwoelutlons carried seareely veiled hints that a most prominent cablaet member whose offlelal duties brought him Into eloae contact with prohibition enforcement, had abruptly slopped serving cuektulls at dinner parties. For our wet Journalistic confre res whose parched lips are mum bling that the darkext hour comes Juki before tho dawn we see no hope. Tho Unlit winds of public opinion are slowly hlftlng tuns of desert Hand, which presently will covc- all. So water your Pamela while ve may. Willlar.. Allen White, in Kmporla, K-.nsus. liaxcttc. 4 MINOT, N. I)., April ,.lv Tho Judge who recently granted divorces to two Itenvillo county farm wive has anked tho slate's attorney to Investigate the remark riage of each to the other's former liu.-nd, with a view to criminal prosecution. The couples returned t olhls section, where they live as frlcnda and neighbor. MINNEAPOLIS. April l.JV Hprtng storms ofwornadlc violence whipped throngf? parts of Minne sota, Wisconsin and Iowa late yes terday, killing nine persons. Three others were missing early today and were believed dead. .More than 1 0 men, women and children were In hospitals, and some of them were so severely hurt that they may not live. not worry about the financial Medford Airport TIIK AIKI'OKT VOTK Uy an overwhelming voto in favor of tho airport bond Issue .Medford yesterday evidenced Its progressive spirit in a material manner and approved the $120. U00 bond Issue for the establishing of a first-class standard class A air port In thut city a "super-station" tor the convenience of the vast commercial development which is bound to como within tho next few years. And by the voto In Medford, not only the -residents of that city but the entire Rogue River vnllcy will benefit. Fear that tills valley might bo left off the main air route on the Pacific coast Is dis pelled by the asHUrunce that Med ford will provldo a field sufficient to accommodate and Insuro the safety of tho planes for many years. (Ashland Tidings.) KKKV F.VKS Vl'OX Fl'Tl'HK Hy u voto of more thun twolvo to one. the people of Medford up prove a bond Issue of $120,000 to build a modern ulrport. It will be remembered tiiat It was seriously proposed only a few months ago that tho chics of Oregon bo forbid den to Issue bunds for the acquisi tion and development of airports. With tho people of a representa tive Oregon city voting in tho ratio of twelve to one to bond them-, selves for airport development, one wonders Just how far rcstrlvtivo legislation of thut sort would huvo got. It is extremely difficult. In those days of direct legislation, to tell the voters they can't do something they want to dot There Is our famuus six per rent limitation, for example, which pr.0 fosse to tell us that we cun't In crease our taxes hy more than six per cent each year. Hut taxes, us everyono knows, havo Increased al a rate much greater than six per cent per year. It is rather n waste of breath, ill these modern days, to tell the peo ple what they'can't do. It, Is much better to tell them whut they ought to do and then convince them, by sound reasoning, that you are light.; . There are many good people, who Insist that It fs nil wrong to vole bonds to build terminals, at public expense, for the air trans portation lines. I,ct tho uic lines build their own terminals, they say. Perhaps they' aro right. Hut don't forget that. from tile very beginnings of government In this country the public has been Willing to vole largo sums of money for the betterment of transportation facilities. Ixmk ul the bonds that have been voted to aid In the building of railroada. i,ouk at the other vast sums that have been voted for the improvenvent of hurbors. Consider the grants of land made by the federal government for the build ing of railroads and wagon roads. Tho people of this country have never hesitated to voto money to secure moro transportation and better transportation. The airship is the lalcst development 111 trans portation, and so, whatever your views as to public finance, you might as well make up your mind that the public Is going to voto fnonoy to encourugu air transpor tation. Kugenc, Incidentally, was tho first city In Oregon to vote money to acquire a municipal .air termi nal. Note, by the way, that at that time they wero called municipal landing fields. Now we term them airports. Our vision is expanding. tOugene will mako a mistake If It permits Itself to fall behind the procession In the development of modern facilities for air transpor tation. No city that keeps Its eyes upon future can afford to Ignore the possibilities of aircraft. (Frank R. Jenkins In ugen Morning Register. ) Philanthropist: um who na money to lve away because thoso who helped him make. It didn't have enoufh to ipend. CONGRESS 10 SPEED FARM AID Measure Following General Lines of McNary Bill Ap proved and Enactment Expected By June Fin ish Hearing and House Starts Framing Bill. WA Hill XGTONV April 6- () A week in advance of tho con vening of the special session the two agricultural committees of congress tonight had completed the tedious task of taking testi mony on the farm rollef question and one committee, that .of the house, already had made , a start on the actual framing of a farm aid measure. The house group had placed in tho hands of a subcommittee the job of framing a preliminary draft and the senate committee the first of the week Is expected to turn Its attention to the same undertaking. 80 far the senate committee has not appointed a subcommittee to 'handle the work and it is probable that the full membership will devoto Its time to the work. Except for the testimony of Sec retary Hyde, both committees will depend largely on their own' knowledge of tho agricultural sit uation and upon the expressed ylews of President , Hoover In writing the measuro as tho hear ings developed few new Ideas re garding tho problems Involved. Committee -m e m b e rs, liowever, questioned most pf t If e witnesses closely as to the practical opera tion of tho various agencies which all of the farm leaders, new be lieve must be created to solve the production and marketing conditions which they hold rc- sponsible for (ho farm depression .! 8eeretary Hydo furnished what msny members of tho committee believe' 16. )o a clear cut stale-: ment of what the administration ' wants. This is now generally ac cepted to be a measure along the; lines of the bill introduced last season by Senator McNary of Oregon and which would provide for a federal farm board, com modity councils and stabilization agencies to regulato the surplus, and at the same time leave 'the business of ngrlculturo in, the hands of the farmer as mucli as possible. " In going over the details of tho measure both committees ex pect to confer with various faVm and administration leaders to gninj their views. ' . It Is the plan of leaders at both sides of the capftol to have the farm bill in shape for presentation to the congress as soon as it" con venes and It is their hope that the measure will bo enacted into law by June 1. Senator Watson of Indiana, the new republican leader in the sen ate, has announced that farm legislation will receive the first call in tho jtcnate and It Is his Intention to proceed continuously with consideration with the farm measure until, a final vote Is. reached. , ' Houto "leaders likewise are pre pared to press for early action alt hough It Is probable that tho t arlft rovlsion bill will ncove the first right of way. Tho houso ways and means committee, which has been working on the tariff measure expects to have the bill ready for introduction shortly af ter the session gets under way. If, however, the farm measure Is in shape for consideration at the outset ft number of members be lieve It will bo taken up at once. Farm Notes Potato Acmijre iHvroaso A decrease In the American po tato v ro p a o r en gu for 1 9 II ft of at least 1 1 per cent can be expected, according to a pre-season survey covering the entire country which Is reported in the Farm Journal. Indications are that the country will plant about 8.4O0.000 acres as compared with 3.8,000 in 191.8. However, the recent Increase In production per acre due to Im? proved culthfttloit will. Indicate that the resulting crops will not be decreased sufficiently to affect prices. Seven Union for Hotter Chicks Here are the meven rules to which the organised poullrymen of New Jersey are expected to adhere In their campaign to make 1929 their most profitable year, by re ducing tho losses by death and di sease: Hatch or purchase chicks before May 1: keep brooder-houses clean; provide a clean range, or brood the chicks In confinement: keep the growing stock separate .from adults: build a screened manure nhol; wire the drop-boards: clean tho drop-boards dally Tho Farm Journal. , TIo South' Finest Cow Red Iady, a Jersey owned by R. T.. Shu ford. Newton. N. C, Is the highest producing eow south of the Mason-Dljton line, according to tho Farm Journal. Red has Just completed her fourth official yearly record 7 9 pounds of but terfat In 85 days. A former rec ord by this same cow is 1028 pounds of fat. She Is In her twelfth year. The average of her four yearly records Is IMipounds of fnt. NORWAY SHIP HID ON AS BOOZE BOAT j Trigger Fingers In Coast Guard Service RCV6cll6d By Baltimore Sun - Inr. do not Copyrighted Article No Official Report of Inci- dent at Washington. UALTIMORE, .April 6. (A1) TJie Baltimore '-Sun1 In a copyrighted story tomorrow-will say .that two or six shots fired on the Norwegian-registered 'banana boat Juan, by a coast guard bqat narrowly missed . striking .the ship as it steamed up Chesapeake bay Friday morning. , , .Captain Karl Anderson, the mas ter of the vessel, and Paul E. Kes terson, the pilot who brought the Juan from outside the capes into port in Baltimore, have protested to the Norwegian consul, the news- paper willrsay..-- - ,. . Kesterson is quoted as saying that the last shot fired by he boat marked G. O. 189, passed over the stern of the ship and struck in the water about where the Juan would have been had the pilot not swung sharply to starboard after hearing the preceding shot.- When he hove to, 'Kesterson said, the commanding officer of the coast guard boat did not ap pear, but sent aboard two men who asked to see the ship's papers and asked where she was bound. They intimated they thought the banana cargo was a camouflage, but after peering down Into the hold, seemed satisfied thoro was no liquor aboard, Kesterson said. ' The Sun added that Captain An derson said the only liquor aboard was 16 bottles, listed in the mani fest and stored in the medicine chest. ' ' After being permitted to proceed, the Juan ' continued to Baltimore and unloaded her banana cargo to day. Hhe !! chartered by . the United Fruit company.' - WASHINGTON. " April 6. P C'oaHt guard headquarters tonleht said they had received no advices regarding tho reported firing- on the Juan by a coast guard boat. It was said that the patrol boat C. G. 189 was attached to the Nor folk. Va.; district. ; ' OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. P Impeachment proceedings have hastened the career of W. J. Hol loway, Oklahoma's new govern on. ; Holloway reaches the, apex of state politics two years ahead of schedule in -succeeding Henry 8. Johnston, who was -deposed on charges of Incompetency. Many party prophets had picked him as the Democratic candidate for gov ernor In 1930. The successful Impeachment of Clovornor "Jack" Walton In 1923 came when Holloway was a state senator, M. K. . Trapp, Walton's lieutenant governor and successor, called a special legislative session In 19i!4. Holloway then was named president pro tern of tho senate. As such he acted as lloutenant governor under Trapp. In 1928 Holloway was elected to tho lieutenant governor's office In the Democratic ticket headed by Johnston. Johnston's removal from office this year automatically made Holloway governor. Two years will be the limit of llolloway's regime under a former decision of the Oklahoma supreme court. Trapp. was ruled ineligible to succeed himself as governor In 192ti. The court held he had been governor In fact and hence camo under the constitutional rulo pro hibiting a chief executive from succeeding himself. Holloway has been active in slate polities slnco 1920. when he was elected stato senator. He is 40 years old and a lawyer. is SAI.UM. Ore.. April bids on three highway improve ments and ono brliliro project! will be opened by the state high-1 way commission at its meeting jn I i'ortlHmt April J9. Bids will be opened for a con-1 tmet to nave 4 S mile of tho Pa-1 clflo highway from Caneman to Now Kra. for the Rinding of 10.7s mile of tho central Oreiron high-! way . between TMlot Ridge ,il ' Hone Kldgo and for the grading of 5.f8 mil of the Lakevlew! California line section of the Fre mont highway. I The bridge bid will cover the' proposed constructlonv of a span over the Sklpanon river on the 1 Roosevelt Coast highway about: 11 mile north of Seaside. I City noises might be worse. 8up-! pose the combination ha thei ound of a giggle. -I OKLAHOMA'S NEW GOVERNOR RISES BY IMPEACHMENT New Inventions i ' At the turn of a knob, informa tion la furnished the traveling mo torist from, maps neatly and securely held In a siiuill roller cabinet. Klickerless motion pictures can bo made on two-thirds the quan tity of negative now required, it is asserted, with , tho aid of a special shutter which a .southern inventor has introduced. v- .t. Fastened to the helmet by snaps, an aviator's - cold-weather face mask, devised by a California air- i mail DlloC t1?8 a stff leather nose- i pieeu, - inia reuiiua tin sit ape 141 uii Added enjoyment In taking your own motion pictures is afforded by a simple outfit 1 for editing the films. It perm Its. .inserting title, "trick shots," corrections and other "extras" that feature ''tile usual commercial' film. It also ''simpli fies the tak of arranging the pic tures in their proper order. . (Steal1 tubfng for' "electrical con duits, formed with an electrically welded joint, simplifies work con siderably, as it ;is equipped with patent couplings which eliminate treading;, and can be bent to go around corners, instead of being threaded, and "screwed into special corner ' boxes. The tubfng also weighs less than-half as much as the old-style conduit.. . FINDS A WAY TO STOP ATTACKS OF FITS Reports are received of an amaz Ing treatment that epileptics state has proved successful in stopping tueir attacKg. K. iepso. Apt. 86 Island Ave., Milwaukee. Wis., has been supplying, sufferers with this treatment. He now wishes to reach all those who have not been helped and to do so is making the startling offer of a generous treat ment free to all sufferers... Anyone afflicted should write for this free treatment at Once, . giving age. Adv. Do You Want a LOAN SEE "" Redden & Co. For good loan on Improved city property. 119 North Cn tral. Phone 72a 12 Of course yon know real estate can. be bought on the installment plan. Tho title cannot be perfect un til the last installment is paid. A dishonest person can sell real estate which is only partly paid for and represent to the purchaser that he is getting; a- per fect title. Ther purchaser will suffer unless his title has been insured. Jackson County Abstract Co. 121 E. Sixth' St.; Phone 41 That Vacation Trip planned for ' hoped for, and now at last a reality, thanks . to systematic sav ings in a vacation fund. Sueli lias been the experience of many a joyful traveler. Stop in today and make the start that will brjjtig you a delightful vacation this sum mer. N "Partners In Community Development" - T ap vJWJL vjurmn -aid Itt? wdo- COATS D RE5SES -SPORTSWEARTT) 17)0lijJj 14 NORTH CENTRAL 1 1 11 II IK-I9I. parking troubles exist at The Manx, he doorman takes youx car when you arrive and places it in a garage connected with 1 the Hotel. Just hand him yourkey asyouleave : the car that's all- Located in the heart of the City near everything! - ' '; I 7 aermie,iiuuiiiy,noipuuiiiy (me MANX, hotel: i-SAN FRANCISCO! Trowbridge Lumber Yard Everything in Lumber and Building Materials Distributors for Johns-Mannvllle Roofings . . Trowbridge Cabinet Works Cabinets, Windows, Doors, Screens, Etc. The Old Reliable Established In 1908 When In need of ANYTHING for Building, Phone 238. We can be of real service to you. o 1 o I WATCH For Our 20th Anniversary ad in Tuesday's Mail Tribune v R. A. HOLMES INSURANCE AGENCY Jackson Co. Bank Bldg. Phone 444 SINCE 1909 C 3 ii MM i ll take yoMcar, Best Painless Dentistry Plates ; f that . . Look Natural Not only . must platea , be serviceable and give mouth comfort; but must LOOK NAT- ' t'RAL as well. Right here in my Medford office 1 make plates'of every desirable plate material, such as Hecollte, Porcelite, Resiri; ite. . Each Individual plate is MADE tp FIT) and "care is taken to assure a natural lookv Bring your plate troubles to toe' to solve:' My' service will please you. v Dr. I. H. Gove : Office Phone 872-J .. Residence Phone 768-J. 235 East Main St. tOI WE USE HAWKISON VULCANIZING 8VSTEM All Work Guaranteed Phipps Anto Park Highway at Jaekaon Phone 1037-R