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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1929)
1 t ATL 'TRTTttTNE, MttDFORD, 01?KOOy.-'MOXD'AY, OCTOBER 21, 1920. PAGE Til RICK y .1 ANNOUNCES MEETi Waterway Interest Calls Hoover West ' For Celebration of Ohio Canalization Mother. of . University of Ore gon Hturtent from Medford, will meet with Mr. Walter. M. Cuuk, j pi .-rtitit-iii ui mu vi ctim .Ilioiiu'i at ttii'fi with other officer, of tho or ' Kimixntlon here early, afternoon und evening: of October 28, It is . jinnouwed by Mrs. 15, li. Hnm morut. who Is In cliarfto of ar rangement; for the Boasion. Ac companying Mrs. Cook will, bo Miu F. J. Hill, president of the Portland grouii of mu.lers, und MIhs Marlon Phy, Eugene, who is executive secretury for the, state organization. Dr.,' Arnold Bennett Hall, presi dent of the University and Alfred Powers, dean of the extension di vision will accompany the officers nnd will take part in the meeting herot Mt is announced. Dr. Hall will talk on university work and policies during the session. Both Mrs. Cbok and Mrs. Hill will h. speakers at tho meeting. Mrs. Hill wilt deliver the prin cipal address and will outline the objectives, and aims of the state wide club. Mis. . Hill is known as a brilliant public speaker, nnd she and Mrs. Cook have hundreds of. friends throughout the state. The officers und , Dr. Hall and Dean Powers are planning an ex trusive tour throughout the state for the purpose of assisting mother's clubs in organization. It is tho hope of Dr. Hall that every community of any size will have an active club formed for the pur pose of maintaining greater inter est und closer contact with, the work now being done on tho cam- pill. - v ' Km in here the party will go' to ' (SiiinlM Pqsy, .'Kvseliurg; tjml then to- Marshfleld, before returning to i Eugene and. Portland. . j! f3Tr;-.'iv-.-:x ur union .sunn sihuim, , 4:.JT;.i.f I y ' Cii" ' " ' " ill . . I 8 AID OF Daily Meteorological Report October 21. 1S29. ' Medford nnd vicinity: Fair and mild tonight nnd Tuesdity. OreRon: Fair and mild tonight and Tuesday. ' " liocal Data o resldciu Ifoover will detllmte a tnarkcr (hiwrr rlirlil) at Ciu i-lmiull Tuesday to mmiiitMiinnilo ' Uhi fuiii',l('tiiii r Oliin liver, caiiallmtkut. Above Is slmun a Ul'l -nl Ohio dam. Willi looks. Itehnv Is a view or the OIUo llic PrrMitlcnt will see while. KiH-aklne at dim Iniinll. CINCINNATI (P) Tho complo-1 claimed the territory for Louis tlon of an inland 'Waterway sys- XIV of France- .. v tern, a development-to which He is.). Great Britain Belzed the 'terri hcnrtlly committed, calla President j tory durini? tho French and In Hoover to his first journey beyond dian wars of 1755 to 1782. Amer the Atlantic seaboard since his in- lean colonists jmshlnir westward nuKuration. - challenged the British, and the Here, tomorrow he will dedicate , treaty of Paris a'tter the revolu a marble shaft - commemorating tion gave the land to the United tho completion of tho Ohio river : States. . canalization. Tho canal system, Mr. Hoover might recall that nearly 1,000 miles long, extends the flrs president, George Wash from Pittsburgh to Carlo, III. ! ington, descended the Ohio in It cost Sllo.000.000, and is ln-il770; that in the fruitful days he- tended to restorolhe river to Its i fore the civil war tho old river 'I emperature (dega.).. OS - 38' Highest (last 12 his.) 70 l!8 Lowest (last 12 hrs.) 37 38 liel. Humidity (pc.)...: 31 !I0 Prenipltatlon (In.) 00 .00 j Btate of Weather Clear Clear i Lowest temperature; this morn ing, 3!i degrees. . . pioneer Imnortanco in transporta tion. Tho United States army en gineering corps built 49 locks and dams in the river. The president will speak here from hallowed ground, tortured by tho conquering ieet of three na tions. None but the' Indians knew it before Sleur do La Salle dis covered the ' Ohio in 1670 and teemed with commerce; that the bugles of war in '61 marked it as the lino between north and south. Itamsay MacDonald, prime min ister of Great Ilrltaln. Mr. Mac Donald also, was Invited but de clined because his slay had been scheduled. From Cincinnati to Loulsvillb, whew; ho will speak, the . presi dent will travel by steamer,-, the central 'figure In a river pageant. From the Kentucky city ho. will return by rail to Washington, but James V. Good, secretary of war. Walter F. Brown, postmaater gen eral, and other officials will go with tho flotilla to Carlo, arriving there October 25. Before arriving here, Mr. Hoover will participate in the dedication The canallzationmonument stands , of the Edison laboratory at . the, in Eden park. jX-ord Motor company In Dqlrolt Originally the dedication -.ceremony was plnnned for October 1 5 but Jtho president requested the date he set at October 22 to per mit him to receive and entertain Total precipitation since Scptem lior 1, 1!2!. 1.14 Inches. Temperatures a year ago today: Highest. 08; lowest, 20. Sunset today, 5:21 p. m. Sunrise Tuesday, 6:82 a. m. Sunset Tuesday, 5:19 p. m. Observations Taken at 5 A, M. 120th Meridian Time r CITY 9 am V 2 ? 3 2s Baker City . Bismarck ........ lloiso ; Denver Des Moines , . Fresno Helena Lob Angeles a.. Marshfleld I'hoenlx Portland Itcd liluff .: Jtoscburg Halt IaTtc Son Francisco Santti Fo Spokane ' Seattle AValla Wullh Wlnnli-'i'g .... O, GS 54 60 62 .... 66 88 68 .... 110 .... "0 .... 90 74 .... 84 .... 72 .... 68 .. 88 66 ....61 .... 62 7 34 38 40 40 36 56 18 70 38 60 52 54 42 4S 62 38 46 56 5 I 30 Clear (ldy. Clear Clear Clear Clenr Cldy. Clear Clear Clear Cldy. Clear (?lear Clear Clear Clear Clear Cldy. Cldy. K. ANDEHSON. ' Temporarily In Charge. Noted Actress at I sis Tonight Mathllde Ilrtindage will be seen in the role of I-ady Ilroderlck In "Men of the Night," at the Isis tonight. She has been on the '' flcrocn for tho past nine or ten years, haR appeared with William Faversham in 'The Man Who Lost Himself." (n "The Career of Knth erlne Bush" for Famous J'laycrs ljislty: "IJnngerous Business" and "My Boy," for First National; 'Htranftrfra of the SS;ht,".'.'frt; Me Irw, with I'ola, Np,Krl In "Tho Cttarmer." etc. y ' Klamath Pelicans Maligned Bird, ' Says A. C. Allen; Do Not Destroy : Trout But Act As Lake Scavengers He will go there direct from Wash ington. , During , his trip, down tie river. President Hoover's, boat, probably the .government steamer Mississip pi, will tie up over night along the Indiana shore. , . J'elicans of Upper Klamath lake have recently been mnligned In tho newspapers by a man who did not give his name, his statement being "ascribed to a Klnmafh Falls visitor ut the Heathman hotel. Ho recommended un open season on pelicans, stating that "one pelican will destroy more fish than 60 fishermen." Our authority for tho assumption that pelicans have had the worst of It Is A." C. Allen, member of the Oregon state board of horticulture. Mr. Allen, who now lives at Uocky Point nnd has been a resident of southern Ore gon continuously .for 25 years, Is Intimately acquainted with the bird life of Upper Klamath lake, on which ho has spent - many month each year at hls summer homo. "If I do ay il," said he, "I be lieve no nian knows conditions af fecting wild life on this Inko bettor than 1. I have photographed the birds, animals" nnd fish, both 111 slllls'and motion pictures. I have written about the denizens of the lake nnd studied them. I am tho author of two books: "King of tho Wilderness" anil the "Little Shep herd of Lava Lake." Also I have written an article on the mysteri ous duck malady that has killed ?o many waterfowl In the Klamath lake region. This article will suou come out in Field and Strenm. ISM THEATRE! " ; , East Main. Near Bridge Admission 10c and 15c "My personal o1jp rvntlonn, 1 will Mlate positively tlntt no white pelican (nnd tluy are the only pel lean on Klamath lake) can catch a healthy trout at any time. I don't believe n pelican rouM catch a truitt If Imth the Itlrri nnd the trnut were put in a tank ten feet In diameter and two foot deep. Certnlnty the peltcnn onnnot catch nne In open water. Any man who claims it has never watched a pelleun fish. "The pelican In extremely slow. If ho noes n flh Jump ho lumber over tn the, jpot, imllH down, ex tends his feet before him to net nrt n brake ngd h mushes into . the water. "He then foolishly look nrnunrt for the finh. What kind of a flxh would no. there? 'The pelican never dives. He can Only 'tip up,' open Mm heak and hope to bin) heaven that nmc thin Rem In it. More often than nut he Beta nothing he geu a piece of tule. which he rtwallown. The only fish he can oaten In a dead or pick one. useful ns a scavenger to eat up the thousands of sick and dying suck ers and chubs. "I have watched, from a very cIoho point of observation, the famous 'drives' of pelicans. I photographed- them for Fox mo tion picture news. The unknown man who was quoted in a news paper article jumped at conclu sions and did not see the drive as it happens. The pelicans do not form a 8emi-ctrcle' or 'string out In a fan shape.' .They gather Jn a bunch. Tho front of the bunch maintains a line of remarkable straight neKH, almost like a com pany of Holdlei close up to that Hne. forward slowly, tipping up and gulping when they ralso their bonks. They dn not drive toward tho shore except by accident. They usually are out on , the shallow 'banks' and tnipt In any direction. "The fish they are after are small chub, suckers and a fevy bull hea ils (not catfish). They get a few, not many und do not store all they can in a pouch they have.' 1 have never yet seen fish stored In the pouch below tho bonk. Kven If they did the only fish they catch arc chub and suckers and If the anonymous 'Klamath Fails visitor' knew as much ns he pretended then he would adhilt that today Klamath lake Is alive with chub and suckers and the groat, won derful trout Is almost a thing of tho past. No harm can be done by allowing the pelicans to cstch ten times the chub they do cutch. COMMEETOSCAN CHEST EXPENDITURES There hns been so mo sugges tion that the officers of the com munity chest should have a com mittee to investigate thV-cxpcn-1 dlturcs of the various Institution sponsored by tho chest, Kuch a committee has been appointed by I'res'dent Hngnn, consisting oif B. E. Harder, K. C Corn and V. 8. Uolger. It will bo their duty to disclose any duplication of effort and un- necessary expenditures made by 1 the various 'organizations' In the Those In rear neBl npy win ne Known a They swim ! Iacl 1,nainff committee. ! T Masquerade at Rialto Theatre Last Times Tonight 'Men of the Night' , With OARETH HUGHES , WANDA HAWLEY ' HERBEftT BAWLINSON- A picture you can't afford to mitt! COMEDY PATHE NEWS "And the cause' of the pusslng of tho trout Is not tho pelican, or any other bird. It is caused directly by the wanton" destruction of the fish by 'fish hogs' uldcd by the deadly motorboat. f have seen, ttmo ufter lime, certain . 'ftsliermen' slaughter the fish by the hundreds of pounds. It Is a Svoll-known fact that it used to be no Job at, all for one motorboat to take a. couple of hundred pounds of trout a day. J havo seen the- tules filled with trnut which had been thrown away, I have een strings of them left to rot In boats And ubout the shores. , I have seen men trying to give away their Illegal catch of I Of) pounds or more. Tho game wardens were powerlepn because of tho motnrlmats. The fishing frnin tnntm hnrt IM uMIo In ninllnn Homlotilm1,,noulu h Inhibited . n ng limit should be cot down. "IJut the pelicans do not catch (trout or game fifh. They can't do "This will be evident to anyone : lit! It Is Impossible! They are who watches the pelicsns. Ilesldes, J flf,ftvangers. And as for their beau- vemity, one ('legists of i un here a mi ml'tn nvder of Smnfnnl unU iy JUMl a" inP "hw who of the k-Hdlng ichthy-i.w.alrh lhp "nowy birds sail he rnited State, c.ime , " ""T ,h J"1'-, No! , 1,"r umber of years ago. He '.'Klamath VW w.rji talking was sent in-by the government tor s'tt le thin very point ft bunt the , pcllcanK. lie- "pent weeks In study 1 'ng them, be killed a number of; the girds and examined their In sides, and he did not leave until MOl726milioit - Tart lined venrlv . Marking the first pliiylng ot a dual role- on the-speaking screen, "Masquerade the nll-tulklng Fox Movictono comedy drama Is at the Uialto. . "Miisipjeratlt:" adheres In nil es sentials to the Htory,t "The Itrass IJowl." from which It was adapt ed, ami tho well known tale loses nothing by its translation Into a talking film. - .Alan liirmlngham performs a rplcnriid piece of work In the double part of a wealthy bachelor and the famous crook who resem bles him so closely ns to fool even the bachelor' servants. I-eiut Hy mns Is charming as the girl In the case, and "notable Impersonations are also given by Clyde Cook. Far rell Macdonald find Arnold 'Lucy . It Is estimated that the average Mn! dove nt fly higher tliun'OO h had witif fied himnelf on the i point, lie told rue Hint the pell- j A f f rnnn nevr raiiKlit n trnut nrrpi I I ..ml Unit was K.-iily tn ill... Thrri'. I S f VAfOKUB I V fnif. fnim thnt Klalomi-nt nnd my I .,J53L.....U II own ut-iwrvntlon, tho H-ican I. y"'w'' "f v tH mmmm I'iO.VTUAU POINT. Ore, Oil. 21. I Special )-tT1ic uransa siijipcr on Piidiiy cvonliiR was a grand sur-i-csa. with nlviut I-'.". In ultrmUinco, netting te- ocoiitimii; conuiiitton $.r7. The menu was excellent ami showed tho ability ot I lie Kiamie ladles for, you know,- the way to win the heurt of a man Is throiiKh his Htomueh. Hoatl Suiervisni'8 Tetherow and Perry, the comity court and tho whole," county budget conunltteo were en hand to receive that which siiBlalns life. Tl o followiiiB niosraiu was ren dered: ' llcaillne, "Can Anybody Tell Why?" .Mrs. Mary Catey. KondliiK, "Ho a Booster" Jliss lather bathrop. Iteadlns, "The Old, Old Story" Mrs. Kva Smith. Duct, "Uillahy" Miss Doris nichardnon and Mrs. K. II. Stroll nif ler. Kncore, "Smiling Through .ifo." A short talk by Mrs. A. T..I.a- throp, declaring that one of the oiustnndhiK remarks made by Miss .lulln Spoonor of Portland at tho P.-T. A. convent Ion at tirants Pass. was the right of rural equality of children. Mrs. Latrhop also be lieved that Mies Thomas, field su pervisor of public health iiurslni;, was one ot the' hlsh lights of the convention. In conclusion Mrs. la- tlirop read a lioem, "To the Mien of America." The last line runs: "Answer You breeders of men." .Sonff, "MooMuht and nor.es" Miss Alberta Bouncy and Miss Dor- ney and Miss Dnrothy Hammoml hncoro, "The Kock Candy Moun tain." . Commissioner Alfonl of Talent Kavo a short lulk on roads, saying that poor roads are tho lault of short funds. ( It. E. Nealon came In and re quested a vote of thanks, and we think he ouiiht lb have it, tor ho said if road men would put In moro time at less expense we would get results. ' In conclusion, Judge Sparrow is starting on a now role, as health unit , demonstrator) and said that every , family should have one or two children ryear. . During the grange session three candidates started on the mysterl our road. tf "Kor the good of the order" Mns tor Anderson read a list of Cen tral Point business firms which are making very liberal donations to ward the building fund. Bio. Sparrow rend two commit nic-atlons, one on tho big carnival of l.lvo Oak grandge. October 23, nnd tho other, a cordial invitation from tho American Legion to take part In a patriotic parade at Med ford on Armistice day, November 11th. Then came Will Perry of tho Kaglo Point district with a few re marks on roads nnd tho behavior of tho county court. Bio. Harry Ward, .still woak from a faint ing all, claimed ho did not steal any chickens. Bro. Mllltelsacclt gave a short Btory. As a final work of tho grange, tho secretary was instructed to send ft word of sympathy to- Mr. and Mrs. Otto Bohnert In tho loss of their infant son. Among tho visitors presont won Mosdnnies Mlttdlstaedt, Perry, and Ward and (irovor, all from Eagle Point. Nee dies s Suffering iTim iiliilTiiiiTr I n n f rcpf Kdlson linnlversiiry week got away to a good start lust night In the speelnl program put on In the Kirst Methodist church. Tho large congregation was in titntly interested In tho moving pictures, telling tho story of light making from prehistoric times to the present day. H. I,. Bromley, of Copco, super vised the installation of a beauti fully Illuminated cross, a back ground of silver decorated with purple and gold lncandescant bulbs. Tho people reHponded happily to tho platform leadership of tho pastor, Alexander O. Bennett, and reverently listening' to some of tho stories of the Gospel, Illus trated by colored picture repro duced' from great artists' paint ings. ' Vocal solos were sung by Mrs. C. H. I'nsko nnd A: J. McDonough A delightful organ program by Mrs. Mattie .Huenergardt was ap propriate to the celcbratloriul uo-casiun. The next time a headache makes you stay at homo . Or some othor ache or pain pre vents your keeping an engagement Remember Bayer Aspirin! For there is scarcely any pain it cannot relieve! and relieve promptly. . 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