Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 19, 1929, Image 1

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    Temperatures
IliKlMvtt yesterday 88
ltwti tlil mnnuiitr 51
KBmEVS. FOURTEEN PAGES MEDFOKD, OUKOOX. FRIDAY, .ll'LV 19, C0 ' " No. 1 IS.
' ' ' , , O , ' " ' ' ' -'
Todayl'SOII HAS
By Arthur Brisbane
Uncle Sam Kills Rats. .
A Lady Would Fight.
California's Peaches.
Russia Seems- in Earnest.
(Copyright by King Feature!
Syndicate. Inc.)
The poveniment Bureau of
' Biological S u r v c y lx-lpod
drepiislnirsr, X. ('., to rid its
business district of rats. The
rats, thousands of them, in the
basement of one drug store,
were killed liy a poison called
"squill" mixed with ground
fresh fish mackerel.
Siiiill, a bulb that (trows wild
along the Meterranean Sea- kills
rates, and doesn't hurt human
beings or domestic animals.
Providence seems to have made
that poison especially for rats.
This part is interesting. The
first "rat baits" were laid
down where the rats would find
it without any poison in it.
That inspired confidence. Other
baits," with sipiill, were laid,
11,000 of them. The rats ate,
and passed on.
That's the plan of get-rich-quick
schemers. They let vic
tims make a little "easy"
money at first. Then the other
thing happens.
Mrs. Bobby Burns, widow
lady of Baltimore, learned box
ing from her late husband, and
asks the state athletic commis
sion to let her enter the prize
ring anil fight for the gate
money.
M'rs. Burns has fought, in pri
vate fights ii ml the boxing com
ing commission, it is reported,
will examine her physically to
make sure that she is fit to
fight. -
Somebody else ought to ex
amine the public, and make
sure that it is fit to watch wom
en in the prize ring. .
Such a spectacle should help
to terminate prize fight bru
tality. It is not likely that Mary
land, which respects women
will permit female prize fight
ing. The Farm Belief Commis
sion might investigate Califor
nia's peach crop problem. The
state produced last year over
(iOO.OOO tons of fine peaches.
One-third of the crop was
wasted on the ground before
the canneries, on whom grow
ers depend, decided to offer a
price.
Xow, within a week of pick
ing, the canneries have set no
price, and growers do not know
where they stand.
They want ifcSO a ton, 4 cents
(Continued on Pnge Four,
Socond Section)
I don't knew which rati-cv tin'
most grief I ta mc lluttmr or I'ati
(lipid, an' ther's mi way to side-
veep fltheraniic, ou'd think If n
crt nil nut Judue ciiu'd tike h hcii-
linn imed nii)biidil ttmld.
y -A t , ...
NO IDEA OF
NA WAR
Kellogg Pact Held More
Precious Than Loss of
Trade Relations New
York Communists Dem
onstrate Against Consul
ate Report Capture of
Border Towns.
N 12 V YOKIC, July 19 . (JP)
Police reserves were rushed to the
Chinese consulate in Astor place
today on u rcpm-l that commu
nists were stuping a demonstra
tion In front of the building.
MOSCOW, July 111. tP) The
acting head of the soviet govern
ment told American newspaper
men that Soviet Jiussia hud no
Intention of declaring war on
China over the Mant-huiiau situa
tion. Citing the Kellogg peace paci,
to which Uussia Is signatory, Jan
Hudzutak, who in the absence of
Alexei Jtykoff, is acting head of
the government, said Uussia
thought the. Kellogg pact more
precious than the loss 6f $3,000,-
000 or $10,000,000 involved in
seizure of the .Chinese-Eastern and
suspension of trade relations with
I China. Rudzutak, vice-president
I of the council of commissars of
jthe 1.'. S. s. It. commisur for cum
iminicntions, is acting president of
! the council.
OSAKA, Japan, July 19. (8)
The correspondent of the Osaka
Asa hi telegraphed his paper today
that the Russians had assumed the
offensive ' and had captured the
border cities of Pogranichnaya and
Manchuli.
Pngrnnichmaya- ind . Manchuli
are border points, the former
about 1 50 miles north of Vladivo--stok
and the latter 1,000 miles
a way across Manchuria. Jioth are
key positions to the Chinese East
ern raftway.
Neither place Is of Industrial or
commercial importance.
Manchuli is definitely In Man
churia, being about 10 miles from
the border. Pobranichanayu, n re
cording to nvalluble atlases, is on
the Russian, side of the bolder,
and the use of the word "cap
ture" by the-Osaka Asahl corre
spondent presumably would mean
that the Russians have expelled
the Chinese there and taken over
entire possession of the place and
nnnh'nl ..f fh,. v.ilx-r.ir
1 1st ration.
RHANOHAI, July 111. (P) Pri
vate aclviceH received here today
state that Russian troops tried to
cross the Amur river Into Man
churia at Blagoveschensk and were
fired upon by Chinese troops who
forced him to retire.
OF ANGORA IS
RAZED BY FIRE
'CONSTANTINOPLE. July If
(A1) A, large part of the city of
Annora was ravaged by fire toi'ay.
1 "lames broke out at ;00 a. m..
and fanned by a strong wind.
pread ra.iidiy.
Six chuTed bodies weri recover
ed in the ruined bu ld 'igs when
the fire was brought under con
trol after burning 8 hours.
Tho total number of casualties
had not been listed, it was est
imated that more than lOUu shona
and houses were destroyed. TV
financ.al loss will be considerable.
f hail M usiaphn Kemul, presi
dent of the republic, arrived
the scene of th fire at ?, a. m.,
and personally c!hvct.t the fire
men's fight.
The greater part of the old and
plet uresque town of AriRora was
destroyed, ns well as the nmrUf-'.
The flames were checked 'just be.
fine they reached the new city.
JUNIOR GOLF TIM
MKTI..VNO. or-.. July lt. (
n.iving the difficult Mulinotnah
' jjolf club cili ce in even par. li k
Near. 17. high si-hod student of
' KufiHtii'. won the Oregon state
Junior lf title here yesterday by
b'f"atinir 1 1 o I in a n Crawford,
: j'nlltlC liefcro star of the I'ellinstila
cmirsn. Near w-n 7 ami r. in the
in hob final of the torn name nt.
Near w.t obliged to play enlv
1.1 of the. is hne. i!e w.-ts nut in
-i.ur :5 while Ci;iv.f.id tonk the
nine in 4.'.
HISTORIC TOWN
POLISH
' - - ........ v' .x'
ad u irk Idikowki (left) and
fl'. hi, Pai i., July 12 with New York as their destination. They were
the A .ores, the plane being demolished and Idlkowkl losing his
PLAN PETITION
Fruit Men Back Effort for
Protection Packing Plants
Canned Heat Addicts
and Loafers Seen As Fire
Menace. .......
Following the report yesterday
of C. C. Lemmori, chairman of the
council committee of the Kogue
River Traffic association, that he
had premmted the matter of police
protection -for dhe fruit packing
plant district to the city council,
"but did not get very far with it."
business men and property owners
in general took notice, and plans
are afoot for the circulation of a
petition demanding that the request
be granted.
The fruit packing industry is the
backbone of the community finan
cial life, and a fire of any conse
quence during the shipping Beason
would be something of a catastro
phe. A fire in the loading phtt
fntniH of tho Med ford Ice & Colli
Storage Company would demoral
ize fruit shipping for days unti
cause a heavy loss alike to ship
pers, growers and business men,
and the community in general.
Tramps, canned heat addicts
domestic and foreign and the lo
cul riff-raff find the space beneath
the packing plants ideal places tor
sleeping, smoking, and imbibing
their fiery concoctions after cook
ing the same over a small fire. Un
like the careful camper, they do
not put their fires out. This con
dition alarms the packers, ns well
it may.
One of the arguments against
spociitl police protection was thaf
i f he space beneath the plants ' was
not hoarded up." There is only
i about 20 miles of boarding up to
be done and, even then, there is
no guarantee that the unwelcome
lodgers would not tear off a few
hoards to crawl beneath the build
ings. Shippers interviewed this morn
ing said the issue was nothing to
I spit hairs over; that they did not
(know or care what the political
I significance of the situation
nmotinted to, and many felt that
"the police might as well lie mobll
i Ized in the packing district, where
they could do some good, as around
I the Nash hotel."
I Mayor Pipes said that he was In
t favor of granting the request of
J tho packers without any nrgument.
Baseball Scores
National
St. Louis at Hoxton, IMttsbnrRh
at New York, Cinclnnalf nt I'hila
d(lhia, Chicago at Itrooklyn, post
poned; rain.
Kirst Kme: I(. If. K.
New Vork 7 14 1
Cleveland - 2 X '.i
S.u-hary and Dickey; 1 1 mil in,
inn and I.. Sewell.
American
R. IT. K
Moston I 6
ChlcaKo 2 7 2
KiiHst-ll and Iterry, llevln:
Thomas and Herf,
' It. II. K.
Philadelphia 4 it 1
Detroit 2 r 1
Karnshaw and Cochrane; Carol I
and Harnreuve. '
It. H. i;.
U'aHhhiKton s :t
Si. Louis 7 1 J 1
Itraxlon, Liska and Itud, Hp n
( r r; Slewart urd Furrell.
,
Astoria --Astoria Transit com pit
ny's new bus started Bervice on
hill route reientty.
FDR Ann T ANA
I Ull IIUUI I IUI1IIL
POLICE SERViCEll
FLIERS FALL IN AZORES
CaMinir Kultalii. Polish aviators,
lift.
Buck Picks Battle
With Herd Leaders j
Table Rock Farms
TAULi: ROCK, ore., July
1 7.- (.Special. A big buck
deer which has become a
fa m ilia r f i g ure due t o h Is
habit of hanging around the
alfalfa fields along the river
bottoms for the past several "f
mctnths, has recently been
seen fighting with the herd
bulls on the Wilson and
Nealon ranches, 4
LOS ANGELES!
.
District Attorney Plans
Grand Jury Investigation
' .
nrinin 'Tin' That PailCPfi
urigm up mat uauseo
Search for Still 1 Will
Oust Officers.- 7
I,OH ANOKLKS, July 19. WIN
i informers who send police on
! fruitless liquor raids can be sued
! for malicious prosecution by the
I victim under a decision handed
idown here by the stute district
1 court of appeals.
LOS ANCKLKS, July 1!. (Pi
Plans asking for a Kiand Jury in
vest iKati Ion were being made by
District Attorney Huron Kills to
day in an effort to determine who
'was responsible for the tip which
led a dry enforcement so,uad from
his office to raid a Catholic con
vent in Itelevedere. a suburb, in
search of a still.
The door of the convent, in
which refugee nuns from Mexico
were kept, was forced in when
admittance had been refused. The
officers, operating without a
search warrant, found no evidence
of prohibition violation.
Dismissal of at least four offi
cers assigned to the prohibition
detail will be ordered as an oul
growih of the raid, which was
staged June 13, Kltts said. The
names were not disclosed. While
the dismissals will u mount to a
j reoi Kanlzat ion of the department,
1 'a plain Clyde pluminer, chief uf
j the dry enforcement squad, will
i remain.
; Constable Harry Tucker of Itele
vedere denied having hud anything
to do with the case, despite the
ftuct that Ihe tip was believed to
have orinlniited from him. Tuck
I er said lie was of the opinion the
! information had been given by an
I unidentified person who previous
ly caused him to senit one of bis
1 deputies to the same locality in
search of a still.
I i . 1 1 1 A' m j , juiy jy. urf A iigni
rain falling in the Canadian noith
west and in South I lakota wen k
ened the grain markets today and
1 a it h a lull in buying, price e
' rllned. neat had opened nil
'(h .rili'd fre.ni yesleiday's finish t'
1 higher, bill the ellll-ent tllll:el
! v. ii h iii 1 lie njM-n i tu l our a nH it
! I" .'til oYb.rk wto .it Was 7-S lo
! 1 !i-e Ji.er lb. in Thil':dav s
' close. 1 lore ni ln-r delivery sold at
! f.ti T.-H, .Hepternber at 44 -;
.and July at fl.3u 2-L
ASK PROBE OF
CONVENT RAID
Jssaclatrd VfA.l 1'hato
Am toik mi iroin l.o lioiirget
Toiced down on a rocky field in
E
I
1 ENDURANC
TEST ENDS WITH
ISDEATH OF PILOT
Ross Arnold Killed in Des
; Moines Refueling Test-
Companion Uses Para
! chute St. Louis Plane
! Starts Seventh Day.
'PES MOINES, la.. July 1. (JP
Ross Arnold, pilot of the endur
ance monoplane, Oronler Des
WoiiifK was killed lati yesterday
i wftn the plane crashed nine miles
southeast of here. The crash fol
lowed an attempt nt a test refuel
ing preparatory to starling an en
durance fllfiht today. Chnrlen Oat
schet, co-pilot, was thrown from
the plane, but landed safely with a
parachute.
The piam- w. nying directly
below its' refueling ship, the Miss
N101' """'"'J
brother Amon. and Jimmy Hur-
I Kick- " KUildonly went Into a dive.
(!uthH(.,1(.t ,, Arnn,,, ,,,
I in tne rear cocKpit, wnicn was
equipped witn miai controls.
One report said that Arnold too
was thrown from the ship, but
other witnesses declared he at
tempted to right It.
f ST. LOl'IS. July l!l .MP) Still
'going strong after six days in the
(air. the '"St. Louis Kobin," endur
ance piano piloted by Dale Jack
son and Forest O'Brine, took on a
new supply of fuel at 7 o'clock this
morning, and drove on Into the
seventh day aloft. The plane had
been up 144 hours at 7:15 a. m.
A sister endurance plane of ihe
Curtiss- ltobertfim Mann fact nring
Co.. the "Missouri Uobln." a p
proached the end of Its second day
of flight tills morning. A 40-foot
hose used in refueling struck the
steel propeller of lli( "Missouri
Robin" during a refueling contact
late yesterday, but apparently no
damage was done as the plane
was cruising smoothly today. It
is piloted by Joseph Hammer and
W. Oentry Shelton,
IIOTTSTOiV. Tex., July fl. WV
Nearlng the end of its second day
in the air, I he endiinincc mono
plane, "Million Dollar City," piloted
by Clenn L. Loom is and Joe Class,
still was aloft early today.
The plane look off at 1
in. Wednesday.
: l!i:
IE
BY SEVERE QUAKE
FLOltrcNOi;, Italy, July
-rFlorenco was shaken by an earth
quaku at l:tl2 p. in. yesterday.
The shock lasted about eight ec
nnds, and did cotiKidenihie damage
to wall and roofs In neighboring,
vlllageft.
Knot fell and devices appeared
In wall in Horgo, San Uin-uzo,
' Vicohlo, Harberitio and l-'ireenzuola
bill no personal injuries were re
ported. ! Thfc Piazi M h ImHangellno. the
Campo do Marie and Le tiafeino
were full of fearful people, while
I the, populace of the hi'inlet Mugelo
went out into ihe field to sleep.
At iiologmi the fthoi k wan lighter
than at Florence, At Faeimi and
Castel Del Rio the inhabit mil s
were greatly alarmed.,
Ifowlii-r Implodes.
ITIMPL'ST. MutiKary. July 1:1
M, a field howitzer exploded
during pi a ' tii e today at Hay-
niatkf-r, klllitm four of its crew,
indnd ni Captain Krlc Viktor.
Several other noldlei were in-
j Jured by the blast.
MERE IV,. N
COMFORTS
American Males in Revolt,
at Fashion Clothes Too
Heavy Wives Trip About
in Ten-Ounce Garments
As Males Perspire Belts
Foolish, Says Dr. Dar -
lincjton.
XKW YORK, July III. Pi The
j American man is in revolt, with
his nuns oi rebellion aimed at his
own clot lies, his war cry, '"down
with discomfort."
So says Dr. Thomas Darli'imton,
widely known physician, Presby
terian elder and former city health
commissioner, and Stuart Chase,
writer. Bank clerks and salesmen,
perspiring into their wilted collars
while their wives trip ubout in
jchlffou, are following their exam
!plc in rebelling against the clothes
that wel'h ten pounds to the worn
i en's ten ounces.
A change lhat means no belts,,
no collarx, no boiled shirts, no
wool clothe in ninety degree
weather has got to come they uy,
and the mure courageous are prac
I ticing what they preach.
( Dr. Darlington is appearing pub
I licly these July davH in a costume
he had adopted for "health and
I comfort."
It consists of a- washable tan
i poplin suit, with loosa trousers and
I a coat cm like a Russian smock,
button! uk across the right shoul
der and down the side, having ;u
two inch standing collar, a cotton
union suit, shoe and socks.
"A man's hips aren't built to.
hold .anything up," says Dr. Dur
llngton, "and the tight belts he
wears now are Just about ns
ridiculous as a- woman' corset
used to be. tie's got to get rid of
) belts thnleonsii'lct his stomach."
j "I hold my trousers up with
f what Calvin Coolidge culls 'gal
j loses' and the collar on my coat Is
j loose anil easy. In time, when
people have grown used to the
Islght of men's tierks, we can elim
! inate the collar altogether.
"The wistful looks thai men up
holstered In tweed and starched
collar cast In my direct ion con
vince me this reform 1 coining to
iday.
Stuart Chase wages hi war
'against men' clot he on the
I beaches, lie wear no lop to his
swimming suit.
I "Occasionally I'm asked to leave
(the beach," he says, "but more
often I find in a few days that the
lother boys are doing the same
thing-und leaving their suit tops
in t heir lockers.
"Men won't he acquiring ntom-
ach and chins when they can be
so easily seen. . They'll take better
care of themsulvea If they wear
lcHH clot hen. They'll be more
comfortable and therefore health
ier, and there's no quest ion that
they'll work better,"
Mr. Chase advocated a costume
for daytime wear that consists of
a linen doublet, knickers, socks
and sandal.
SUB-PAR TO LEAD
SKATTLM, July l!. (P) Shriving
four Htroke off par on 'the morn
ing round, Nell Christian, Portland
lirofesHlonal took a three stroke
i lead at the end or (it holes In the
I Pacific northwest open golf tour;
' nauicnt on the Ingle wood course
today. Christian scored a brilliant
:i for th 18 holes, briiiKing hLg
total to 2 1. The remaining 1 sr
holes of Ihe championship were to
be played till afternoon.
Fred Morrison, Los AngelcH pro
fessional was second low wilh 221
while Morlle Dulra, 1'iicomii pro
feHloiial, and Dr. O. J'. Willing,
I'orl land amateur nnd defending
champion were tied for third with
'I'll. Morrison cracked one off
par this morning to count a 1'i
while Dot ra and Willing made the
round in perfect figures.
Johnny Jones, Seal t le profes
sion!, ii I mo collected a par 73 to cop
fourth place with -'LM.
LOOM ANOI'.LKS, July !!. ot
Lieut. Harold Kromlev planning a 1
rum stop flight from Tho ma.
Wah.. to Tokyo, soared away on
the first left of his flltfht, Los An
gelen to Tiieoma, al 1": I a. m. '
tod.iy. !
I The gleaming, orange -colored
monoplane got
.ay in a befiollful
takeoff and soon di. ppeared nvei
the foothills of ran Kernaudo va)
It'.
nrpjAMn Ni ,
J XmA III II Jl A
Boy's Prank Cuts
Price of Melons
for Enterprise
V
I .A OltANltn, Ore., July l!l
when a small buy at
j Kniei'prise, Ore., inlehiev-
i ouslv erased from a store
I window part of the pricf mi :
watermelons, he precipitated $
! u price war that sent tpmia-
tions from :t cents to an 4-
i CVell CMIlt, (
The hoy erased the "half :
I- cent." mark frnni the win- 1
3 t
! J''',,,'". '.iT,.,.,'i",T u.
,n .,.. ..-m.
Wult'rnu'lons Knlil :it n fn-
ri..u ,v., n,i i.y rvnine m.
j Kiitt'rpi'isf stock liiitl Imm'ii
i 1'""""" xh""s""- .
"L;
,
SOUGHT AS AID
Oregon Poultrymen's Assn.
Sees Means of Utilizing
Part of Product Cockell
Elected Vice-President of
Association.
COltVALLIS, Ore.. July. 1 it. P
Higher tariff on dried eggs as a
meii ns of encouraging establish
ment of drying plants in this sec
tion of the country to absorb small
eggs and eggs of good quality
which; however, are unmarketable.
Is sought by the Oregon I'oultry
men's association. The association
adjourned Its seventh annual ses
sion here yesterday, after election
of officers. Lloyd A. Lee of Sa
lem was elected president.
-v chines competition was dls
ciiHsed by the poultry men in rec
ommending higher tariff on eggs
ami processed eggs. A committee
of the association will wait on Rep
resentative Hnwley and other mem
bers of the Oregon delegation and
wfll discuss the tariff question
with him.
Fred Cockell of Milwaukie, Ore..
was elected vice-president of the.
association: J. A. Hussell, Corval
Us, and A. II. Dowsett of flresham
were elected members of the ex
ecutive committee. V. L. Knowi
(on Is secretary-treasurer.
Cnckell. member of the Htate
livestock sanitary board, warned
the poultfymen . to he on guard
ngalnst infectious bronchitis in
their flockn. This disease, ha Hald,
Is serious In California and has
been found on one' farm In Ore-
The association was told that a
contract had lit en made with a do-,
tecllve agency to protect flocks
agilnst thieves. The contract is
similar to those used in protect
ing Jewelry stores or banks.
THAN IN 1926
WASHINGTON. July 1 i. ffl1)-
The Dollar bung hi more in June
than It did three years ago.
'The bureau of labor statistics
announced today the purchaslm.
power of the J uue dollar wus
lo:t,7 as compared with 100 in
ItlL'li.
It purchased less tne.it, htater
nnd cheese In Juno than It did
three yeurs ago, tho bureau said,
but In other foods It re pi o-i ntcd
ILL (I in punbasing po.-r, as
compared with I'.riti.
The biggest change ,in the pur
chasing power was In rubber, of
whit h more than t wire as iiiin-h
could be bought for the same
money, In drugs the doll ir cui'd
get almost hiilf as much again.
Fuel and lighting materials led
the price Increase. In June over
May, with advances reported for
California and Kansus. Oklahoma
crude petroleum, fuel oil nnd.uaso
llne. Among farm products, price In
creases were reported for Wheat,
corn, beef steers, calves, lemon),
oranges, and onions. There weiv
derre.iMt's fur hugs, sheep, lambs,
live poultry hay and wool.
Ross Batei Injured
t'OUTLANi. ore., July lft. (Vt
ItoKH I'liH'H, IS, was In n hospital
here today ufferlnK trom serious
injuries received lute hist nfgit
when his automobile crashed Into
a telephone pole on tlx Columbia :
highway near Deer Island.
Ryrlle Creel; - Construction work
on new st hoo luilMIng prn'u-eHM- ,
in K rapidly.
OREGON PLANTS
DOLLAR WORTH
IRE IN JUNE
ARKANSAS
' MM IN
DRY RAIDS
Seventy-Five Per Cent of
Bootlegging Done By Wo
men Is Claim of Prohi
Head 14 Arrested
Drive Just Begun Ex
pect Arrest Hundreds
Day of Chivalry Over.
TKXAKKAXA, Ark., Julv
iVI') On his nivtnlxn lliat 7
19.
f bootlegging in Arkansas is
done by women, S. M. fluiiey. dep.
; uty pruhibilion adminisi rat or for
the western section of the state,-
already has arrested 14 women,
I and declares ihe drive has just
I begun.
"Our raiders have been given
i instructions to be hard-boiled," ho
said, "and before we are through
f hundreds f women are going to
' find themselves facing a federal
Judge."
: ( iurley assigned 1 " per cent of
j bootlegging la his state to women,
and said half of those so engaged
I operated as agents for their hus-,
! bands or men friends,
j "The days of southern chivalry,
I are over so far ns women violat-!
! ors of the prohibition law are con
j cerned," he added.
''in the past, prohibition of fie-'
' lals. especially In Ihe south, have.
b(en inclined to look askance at;
the woman liquor vendor because
federal judges have not favored
sending them to such Institutions
a Atlanta and Leavenworth prls-;
ons. Now, with the new prison,
for women at Aldorson. W. Va., the;
situation lH changed." '
WASH INC TON. July 10. (7P J
The -prohibition suggestions made
by i hair man Wickursham of th
president's law enforcement com
mission. In. Ihe letter read to the
.governors' conference at New
London, conn., continued today to
engage the attention of wet and
dry member of congress.
In some quarters, meanwhile, tt
was regarded as clearly establish
ed that the president had no in
tention of complying with the de
mand of Senator Carnway. dry
Democrat of Arkansas, for tho
chairman's resignation on the
ground that he had "sacrificed his
usefulness."
That conclusion was drawn from
a statement by Senator Watson of
Indiana, Republican leader, inter
preting the tetter ns urging "that
the states do their full duty fn en
forcing the 1 3th amendment."
LAKE COTSESSOR
PORTLAND, July 10. (fP) Al
teged issuance of checks upon tt
non-existent uccount to n total of
$tiin today put C. C. Muhun, til,
Luke county assessor, behind the
bars of the Portland jail. Mahnn
lives in Lakeview. He was arrest
ed on a vagrancy charge.
Mithan was arrested In front of
a downtown hotel as he was leav
ing for home, lie had been In
Cortland six weeks, nnd, police
said, Issuing checks on the Ijike-
view bank to pay his way. All
I cheeks came back marked "nc
I count closed."
Will' Rogers Says:
HEVF.IMjY UIU.K, Oil.,
.July liussia lias cjillod
hntiii! her iliploinnls from
('liiiin.,.. China lins calli1!
Iiinrii liiM's from Huswia. If
t Ii e y Ii n 1
I) o t h d o n i
that be f ure
Ihe ariiim'ttl
siarli'tl llit'D1
would h n v o
Ihm'ii ho firpu
metit; That'
why (liploiiints iloiv t iturnl
liccausf it's a riistoni thai
thy M''o to hi' brought nafe
ly homo bofori1 tin1 trouble
Htarts. Thero nIiouM bo n
new rule snyiiigT " If you start
i war while you nre your
eouiiLry's official Jiamlionp
to some other country' , yon
have to stay with any war
you start.'
Then (liplomjits would soon
bruin to di. Yours,
AVlfTi H0KRS.
I