PXCrE FOOT!
BEDFORD MSIE TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, Oft EGON, SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 22. 1929.
Medford Mail Tribune
tllM N. Mr U
llillr, lunUr, WmUi
MEDCOSU rUNHNO CO.
not ft
KOHERT W. HUM, Editor
t. UMPTEB flMlTU, MsMW
An Independent Nripspr
Inured u eeeond clui nutter it Uedfero,
Orefon, under Act uf Marcn 8,
BUBSCHIMIUN BATUft
r Mall In Adruee:
Dsllr, wltn Bundir, feir ,
Dsllr, with Bunds;'; noma
Dallf, vllbout Sunday, rear ,
Dally, wltbout Sunday, montli ,
WmUj Mall Tribune, one year,...,
Bunday, one year
H Carrier. In Advance In Medfofd.
latuomlln, Central Point, ftuenli, Taleut, (hid
Bill and on Hlglnwi:
Daily, with Sunday, montb I .TO
Dally, without Sunday, month 09
Dally, without Sunday, one year f.00
Dally, with Sunday, one year 1.00
All termi, eash In advance.
IS AIR TRAVEL TOO EXPENSIVE?
.t'.so
. .'
. 8.60
, .85 1
. S.OO !
. i.00 !
Ashland,
MEMBER Of THE ASSOCIATED PKK8S
Beulrlng Full Leased Wire Service
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to
the use 'or publication of all news dlipatehes
credited to It or otherwise credited In this paper,
and also to the local news pubUebed herein.
All rlfhts for publication of special dispatches
herein are also reserved. -
Official paper of the City of Medford.
Official paper of Jackson County.
Sworn dally averaie circulation for all months
acdtnt April 1st, 1928, 41.71.
Advertising- Representatives
M. C. M00KN8EN A COMPANY
' Offices In New York, Chicago, Detroit, Ian
Tranelaeo, Loe Anieles, Seattle, Porluual.
Smudge Smoke
SOMB people think nip travel will never become general be
cause of its (.'renter expense. They admit airplane travel
will become safer, but they doubt if it will ever bo a mode of
travel adopted by the majority.
A little analysis will prove this reasoning incorrect, for two
main reasons. In the first place there is the element of time.
To nin people out of ten, time is literally money. To the man
who earns $"000 a year, bis time, roughly speaking, is worth $2
an hour.
Xow on an air trip from here to Chienjto, fur example, such
a person would save .10 hours in time or $1011; Deduct this from
the air trip cost and you have approximately $115 net. By rail
the cost for ticket and Pullman would be roughly $120, not in
cluding tips and meals, it saving in favor of our travel of $5.
THE second point is that te cost of operating passenger air
planes is decreasing steadily with the construction of larger
planes and various economics in operation.
In short, at the present time, if one takes time into account,
air travel is really cheaper than long train travel. In a few
years there is every reason to believe it. will be only slightly
more expensive, entirely disregarding the saving of time.
So as airplane travel becomes safer, it takes no Seventh
Sou of a Seventh Son to foresee the time when the airplane will
occupy the place the railroad occupied a tpwrter of a cenlury
ago the commonly accepted medium for fast travel.
Miscellaneous
Awards
At County Fair
PRESIDENT HOOVER REFUSES TO PLAY POLITICS
Division G Iloea and Honey -Department,
Clung 114
P. D, I.ofliitul, Central Pplnt:
Honey vintKiir, JhI. i ,
John Hreinini'i'. Central T"iint:
Honey vinegar, l!ml.
JumeH HUnvart, Metlfuril: Honey
extracted, lHt; beenwax, lat; lnglft
comb nm.'leuH, 1st; eoml fuumlu
tlon, Jhi; single eoiult nueleu, 2nd.
Hee. Kueperu association, KOKUe
river valley. Ashland: B!st dJHplay
Honey plant, lut; bee keeping
equipment, 2nd.
Mrs. Mark Wright, Medford:
Best display cooled foods, lut.
G. V. NicholH, Anhlnnd: Comb
honeyiP one specimen, 1st: extract
ed honey, 2nd; beeswax, one Hie
rltnen, 2nd: single comb nucleus,
three banded, 2nd; sinKlo comb
nucleus, Qolden Italian bbos, 1st,
Division II Dairy Department
f'Luss 115 Bnttor
Snider Dairy fc Produce Co.,
Medford, creamery butter, 1st.
Division I Community Eililult
IMKS 117
The following; granRca received
sixty dollars each for first 'awards:
(Jacksonville, Luko Creek, i-ive Oak,
Central Point, Kaulo Point, Sams
Valley, Talent, Kvans Valley.
Talent grange: Tomatoes, 1st,
, Rose. Smith, Hagle Point: Lar
l gest squash, 2nd.
i George Martin, Rogue River:
; yellow Dent corn, lut; Netted Gem
potatoes, 1st; rural type potatoes,
2nd; largest squash, 1st; table
beets, 1st; corn, best on stock, 2nd;
mangel murzels, 2nd; string beans,
2 ml; sugar beetH, 1st.
.1. W. Fish, Talent: Mangel mur
zels, 1st; rural typo potatoes, 1st;
iniiKkmelon, 2nd; special, pumpkin
pie. Isls
Clam TO Oornln
Arnold liohnnrt, Central Point:
Hi urdless barley, 1st; bearded bar
,.y, 2nd; federation wheat, 1st.
Kail Real, Medford-. Washing
ton My. wheat, 2nd.
Neulon ruueh, Hums Valley: Fed
eration wheat, 1st.
W'Inston-Kulem, N. C.'iih sdirch
Ing for u covered wugo'n to place
a it permanent memorial.
PORTLAND BOXING
The police dog that nobody
owned and was quite a problem,
has died and solved the problem
of what to do with him.
There was a thick smoke last
week, but it vanished like magic
before a wind from California.
F. Bybee, the prosperous J'vllle
serf of the soil, has been In the
saddle all week chasing steers over
the lea.
Bill Bates Is making his annual
threat to go hunting.
Several Frisco millionaires were
here last week, and looked it.
The mornings are getting nippy,
nnd the pancakes are coming Into
their own.
The brawn and beauty of the
community is drifting to the cam
puses, among the lot being the
Benjamin Gurnett boy. It is against
- the traditions of old Oregon for a
freshman to sport a mustache the
1st year. The boy Is young and
strong and he can stand it.
There is considerable talk of
making Central avenue a through
speedway.
Phil Harrison and Bill Folger
left the 13th to follow In the steps
of Magellan, Scott Davis, and John
Johnson, and circumnavigate the
ball, upon which we all cling so
tenaciously.
The Chinese pheasants, that the
farmers have been fattening, will
soon be roosting on the "No Hunt
ing" signs. . ..
By his remarks Frl J. Kort
Hall has not had his faith In the
Portland ball team knocked out
of him yet.
K. V. Carter of Ashland went up
to the metropolis last week and
told a scribe about the time the
British diplomat visited this neck
of the woods, and how his high
ness was removed from his warm
. Pullman compartment at Horn
brook, to let the chilly breezes
from Mt. Shasta whistle around his
legs. He 'did not tell what Alex
Sparrow said' when his highness
was hauled out into the orchard
of the Rosenberg boys, though It
was darker than the Inside of a
horse.
Everybody Is stepping a little
higher, as the spondulicks has
started to arrive for the Bartletts.
Reports are going around there
will be another wedding as Boon as
the maple leaves take on their
autumn colors, as they are needed
for decorations.
Brisbane's Today
(Continued from Page One)
since the World war.
It Is said: "England Is not lie
coming dry, but temperate. In
stead of spirits, the British drink
beer and light wines."
Such a program was once sug
gested for the United States, but
U s too late now.
Yesterday, Italy celebrated I he
fifty-ninth anniversary of the tak
lug of Rome by Italian troops, put
ting an end to the temporal pow
er of the people.
The fact that Roma continues
as usual to celebrate this anniver
sary, In splta of a recent agree
ment between the Pope and the
Italian government comes as an
unpleasant shock to the Vatican.
A laurel wreath, entwined with
the colortis or Rome, was display
ed last night by Prince Kouconv
pagnl-Ludovlsl on a tablet marking
the snot where Piedmonlese troops
broke through a breach In the Por
ta Pla.
In Jerusalem, trials of Arabs ac
cused of murder and robbery, have
started, six are sentenced lo one
and two year terms, no murder
proved. Simultaneously at Minsk
Russian Jewish communists, call
a meeting to protest against con
ditions In Palestine.
i A fight between communist Jews
and Zionists resulted when the
communists blamed Zionists, and
leaned to the side of the Arabs,
; The communists won the fight,
then passed resolutions condemn
ing Zionism, the British govern
ment, and tbe socialist internatlon
nl.
' The Yiddish Communist Dally,
Kmes, declared: "Undoubtedly,
the Arabs, being In the majority
In Palestine, have the sole right to
Palestine. "A house divided" Is
Russia.
-
ROSTOV-ON-DON (VP) North
Caucasus, getting ready for the
autumn wheat planting, hns or-
dored 1240 new tractors Imported.
All, except
Will come from
IN every test President Hoover rings true. In this) nnvy lobby
investigation there was an excellent chance to play polities
and issue a broadside against the shipbuilding companies for
spending money on special agents to represent them tit home
and abroad.
President Hoover did condemn this practice, snd rightly so,
but jn li is recent public statement he is very careful lo point out
that the mere spending of money is not a crime, nor is it neces
sarily improper.
The important point is just how that money was spent. Who
got it J How was it used ?
If it was spent legitimately merely to prepare the case of
the shipbuilders properly, then there can be no particular com
plaint. But if it was spent illegally or improperly, then the
President wants to smash the shipbuilders and smash them hard.
IT would have been very easy to have gained popular approval
by simply ranting about the expenditnr.es of the ship trust,
leaving the impression that such expenditures involved bribery
and corruption without directly saying so.
But the role of the demagogue President Hoover refuses
under any circumstances to assume. He is very careful to dis
tinguish between a legitimate and improper use of funds, and
carefully explains he merely wishes to determine, not why so
much money was used by the ship companies, but HOW it was
used. . -
AS we have previously explained, there is nothing inherently
wrong in maintaining what is known' as a lobby either in
this country or abroad. Oregon maintained a lobby at Wash
ington to secure a refund in the O. & C. lands, which was neces
sary and altogether proper.
It is not the organization of a lobby, but Low that lobby be
haves, that is the important point. In being careful to draw
this distinction President Hoover, as usual, is demonstrating
that while lie may be a poor politician he is every inch a Presi
dent and a statesman of the highest and finest typo.
Quill Points
Maintaining national prestige
means knocking Jones In the head
so Smith won't start anything.
The situation won't be hopeless
until a headline screams: "Bill
Jones Killed Nobody Today."
Brief summary of the situation
In Palestine: "Mamma, make Wil
lie quit." ,
An
If ho 'called you "my boy"
yesterday, and today calls yon
"mister," the stock ho was
hoMfrig dropiml about 44)
IKillllrl.
The hard part of tariff fixing
Is to bo perfectly fair In distribut
ing the unfulr advantages.
A normal, town Is one thnt
thinks Its population would be
10,000 greater if thri limits were
extended to take In the il8 poople
on the outside, edge.
MICHIGAN DEATH
ACQUITTAL
Americanism: .Prairie girls
painting perfect complexions be
euuse New York's climate makes
painting necessary.
When gangsters kill one nn
other to eliminate competition
that Is crime; when nutlons do it,
that is patriotism.
Yon never know Just how
moan you inn ho inn II you
beiiime dictator or got n Job
driving n truck.
A tourist Is a person who can
name every town where he had
a imni'ture or got' slung on the
price of a sandwich.
Wales will find a plnne Just as
troublesome as a horso. There's
no way to stand up when the
thing fulls.
new tractors Imported. I "tlMit tiros always go
00 German machines, I Iho vicinity of u tile
rom the United Stales. I trev."
Www.jri.rai.MyTs.n -V e - -"" -I -' j
ClorrcNt this MciitriHt1! "How
forluiinti'," srihl tlio motorist.
"Hint tire always go flat. In
Uicc slimltt
DETROIT, Sept.' 21. W A
Wood, Cecil Holt, ond Herbert 1
Sullivan were exonerated today of
the killing of Ambrose L. Hagerty
at Wyandotte, the night of Janu
ary 9.
Tho Jury's verdict of "not guilty"
which ended one phase of one of
the most Involved cases In the
blstory of Michigan jurisprudence.
was announced after less than five
hours deliberation. Tho verdict
eame on the fifth ballot.
The caso was given to the Jury
at 10:20 A. M, today, Just fifty
minutes after court opened. Judge
Maschner pervlously had occupied
30 minutes In reading his instruc
tions. In his charge the Judge
said tho "Wood-Hold-Hugcrty'
mystory would not have appeared
had authorities taken proper steps,
, Wood nnd his co-defendants
were accused of slaying Hagerty
during n pollen ambush arranged
to catch alleged plotters ugalnst
Wood's life. The state contended
they acted on a pre-arranged plan
without tho knowledge of officers
sent to protect them. The defense
countered with a claim of self-defense
a nil a challenge of the states
claim that It could prove the bul
lets In Hagerty's hody were from
guns carried by Wood, Holt and
Sullivan.
The alleged plot against Wood's
life was revealed to him by Cecil
Hott, said to be In the confidence
of tho supposed plotters. Tho plot
was alleged to be headed by Mrs.
Grace M. Wood, Wood's estranged
wife.
Mrs. Wood, Thompson and
pierce are now awaiting trial on
charges of assault with Intent to
kill in connection with their alleg
ed contract. During the trial the
state failed In Its effort lo subpoe
na them, all three going Into
hiding.
PORTLAND, Ore.. Sept. 21. MP)
Round one of tho unscheduled bout
between tiio Portland City council
nnd the boxing commission ended
today a draw because Krunli J.
I.onergaii, boxing commission
chalrmnn was out of tho city ami
could not reply to Mayor leorn"
linker's iiipreut a letter Inquir
ing Into the asserted excessive ex
penditures of the commission.
The letter, Robert A. Sawyer,
acting Boxing commission chair
man,, snlil today was addressed
perJonally to Lonergan ond awaits
the silt of his official knift.
Class S Individual Farm I3i
hlbits Geo. P. Martin, Rogue River, 1st,
and J. b Hlbberl, Medford, 1st.
Division J Vegvtahlcs and Cereals
Class OH Vegetables
John Anderson, Central Point:
Field corn, yellow dent. Snd.
-C. l- Smith, Central Point: Egg
plant, 1st; peppers, Chinese giant,
1st.
Mrs. Warren Patterson, Central
Point, citron, lBt.
Geo. Obcnchain, Central Point:
Watermelon, 1st.
George Beers. Evans .Valley: En
silage corn, 4 st., 1st; table squash.
2nd.
J. S. Van Dorfy, Medford: Squash
2 spec, 1st.
John Gldllch, Medford: Casaba,
2 spc., 1st; Persian, 2 spc, 1st.
H. F. Whetstone, Central Point;
Watermelon, Kleckley sweets, 2nd.
Otto Bohnert. Central Point:
Cabbage, 2 spc, 2nd; Rhubarb, 2nd.
Howard Grover, Medford: Pump
kin, 1st.
Reed Carter, Rogue River: Pep
pers, 2nd.
E. E. Dimlck, Rogue River: Tel-
low onions, 1st; Golden Bantam,
1st.
H. W. Sparks, Rogue River:
Sweet corn, 2nd.
Mrs. Ella Peters, Medford:
Lemon cucumbers, 1st.
H. Messinger, Provolt: Corn .
Best display on stalk, 1st; field,
White Elephant, 1st.
C. H. Smith, Central Point: Car
rots, 1st; beets, 2nd; onions, 2nd.
Kelson ranch, Sams Valley: En
silage corn. 2nd. -
FtaTTERINGl
r.
Tilt NEW YORXEtt
Clover KiU-Bridge
Fraatt Nm (Mi Britc Onurt Coa (on
mm) Ffwdom from Note KOrU
But AJo Am
Added Charm in Appearance
Ftrar Sty I co i
! NlWYOBKtR MANHATTAN
NEW YORKER "C FIFTH AVtNVB
AsPl Idan&fied br the Clovrr Stuped Rivets
I'll
KINO HILL, Idaho, Sept. 21.
M Search for tho assailant of 11
year old Marie West, found slain
in tho deep Snnke river canyon
near hero yesterday, today had
spread over southern Idaho. Her
body, with tho throat cut, and
showing signs of nn attack, was
lying In the shallow water of tho
stream, held to the bottom by a
rock. tied, to lior leg wltn wire,
Wanted
Smart Young
Men
with one dollar apiece, to open
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS at this
bsnlc nnd put ONE TI-'.NTlt of
their salaries Into these ac
counts, to hear Interest. To all
such young men positions as
wealthy and Influential citizens
can be eventually guaranteed.
ml
'Partners In Community
Development"
Sue tofel mc
Oru fiitfe, qi
jpipsd up'l?u can fitnd
&M iri amAixnn
MoimzHjl at 5 JL
COATS-DRESSES -SPORTSWEArOTI fiVTTLjJV
14 NORTH CENTRAL 1 KJ' Vl
w& -
NOW
They're Just
Like New;
Clothes I thought were "done
for" . . . now they're just like
new. I sent them to the City
Cleaning & Dyeing Works
and it seems remarkable that
they could put them back in
such beautiful condition. So
reasonable, too. Try them!
'We're Not Satisfied
Unless You Are"
City Cleaning 6
Dyeing Works
624 N. Riverside
Phone 762
II I
Your Price Is Our p
gOME folks still have, he old-f
idea that it costs a Inr f
be we!I-drcSScd. Of ten they uuagin, A
things in a high-class store We beyw
their means. '
The truth is that to-day money (, ,
"'"""t"' ye. Ihe lieiuht of
ton li no longer an inaccessible peal.
every woman ol good taste) gu
income, can wear the right clodies-i i
chooses the tiht store.
Milan appearance is not a ouestlnn f i.
tllUtlt von sneii,! Knt ,.f I.
, r . w vW you j-yjj
-aim n nere.
Our- fashion service Is equally ,
woman who has to watch exptnsts am
for the woman who doesn't.
Not only can (he woman of mojtst in
come afford to wear fashionable clotl.e
he simply cannot afford nut to wear ihta
when we price tlieni so reasonably,
4Your price is our price.
Ad
nenne s
W W W V V V V V V VtVVTTVTVVTTV')' V V V "l V VTT VT T
$Y. 'mMM --fit a
M Does the
r
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v. -f
J Tmnq ytv exnress
'I I.,.-a nrn ftiris Yliauuu-
.1 i.mnnmc 10 ure i'bv'
who mm uiuii3i.vu ,
this daintily decorated pattc
, r. t-l Pliice n
J mvlc Mining;
show it to )'ul1'
LARRY SCHADE
Yom Favorite Jeweler
cjiwio 1018
. AAA-!-
j. .;. $ ? v v v v
1 Ml .fe! "
i Tim 'i i.. nnr
'i ll tt
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"It U Co
San Franc
f L.M
troubles exist -
l1wn ta.es you--
...;rnrl nljces it m Bi,"Sc.v....-nU
, , I I ,,rtiirlcCY l
.u-llnfpl. lusthana nun j"--
UU..1U.-..J - ...linuici"--
.1 . .!...' a . Ulliliw -
tlie car ui '
City-near everything.
Service,
SAN I
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CLAD8IF1XD
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