Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 26, 1929, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PJGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, QKEC1 OX, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2G, 1929.
Medpord Mail Tribune
lull)-, Sunday, Weekly
PublWml by
MEDFORD 1 KIN UNO CO.
83-8T-SH N. Kir 81.
kOWCRT W. HI HU Kdlior
8. SUMP1T.lt SMITH, Manner
An Independent Ncwtpiptr
Kitttrrd u rtond ritn utter at llcdford,
Orrcon, under Act of Mirth 8, 1878.
81' BSC HI PTI ON UTKS
By Mill In Adranee:
Pally, villi Sunday, yeir 9T.60
Dally, with Sunday, ontb T5
Dally, without Sunday, year C.50
Pally, without Sunday, laanPi 05
Wetily Mall Tribune, one year 2. no
Hunday, one year 2.00
By Carrier, In Adiance In Medlurd, Aslilai,
Jarluomllle. Crntral Point, Phoenix, Talent, Cold
Hill and on Highway:
Dally, with Sunday, month $ .7ft
Dally, without Sunday, month 03
Dally, without Sunday, one year T.00
, Dally, with Sunday, one fear 8.00
All terms, cash In adtaiiM.
MKMltER OK TUB AHHUCIATKI) pHBSfl
Itreehins Full Leased Wire Sertlre
, The Afcwlaled Ptftt It eieliulfely entitled to
tint use for publication of all news dispatches
credited to It or otherwise credited in llil paper,
and alto to the local new puhllihed herein.
All rUliu for publication 9t apeclal dispalclie
liereln are alto reserved,
Official paper of the City of Mcdford.
Official paper of Jackiou County.
Sworn dally arerage circulation for ill month)
ending Octolwr , 1029, 4174.
Dally average dUtrlbutlou for alt months to
Ociohtr 1st. 1929, 41)11. . . .
Present press run 4810.
Appllrint for tntmbmhip In Audit bureau of
ClrcuUtion, recognlicd u auiolutt guarantee of
circulation.
Adrer thing Reprcsentitlte
' M. C. MOfJKNSBN COMPANY
OfrirH In New York, Chicago, Detroit,
Franelfeo. Lo -Angelei, Seattle, Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
. , By Arthur Parry
Five more days' and tho kids will
be uklng Hoap on autos. that their
necka need more.
A coterie of Uotl. graduates
complain that the alma mater
Kong, "Mighty Oregon." lacka mus
ical quality, and Is inappropriate.
Home of the scores Indicate the
latter.
"Tho Model Cafe opened Its
doora last Tuesday, and nt one
time there were seventeen people
on the floor" (Smith River
Notes.) Why the cook has his
thumbs In his suspenders.
' Funds are to be sought for con
ducting a survey of "the unrest In
Oregon." And, after they get the
quota, they will rest.
A Tale graduate has announced
that he will not touch a 1750,000
legacy, because a lady has a fond
ness for another. There are many
maids, but It is no trivial task to
get $760,000 In a bunch.
The Pantages case Is ended, and
nothing more exciting than the
doings of Almee Hemple McPher
son, can be offered by Los Angeles
nt present. .
An upstate autoist sneeced, and
motored Into a phone pole. The
hUme Is put on the sneeze, Instead
of the phone pole.
The havoc wrought by the clar-
arette Is depleted In "a 660 page
brief' issued by the Anti-Cigarette
society. 660 paged is necessarily
brief, and will be read eagerly by
thetqne. tobacco chewer and the
two pipe- smokers loose In the land.
Farmers with a surplus of
pumpkins, have given up hope of
anybody stealing them.
Comparative calm prevails over
city, as far as footbull Is concerned,
hut elsewhere In the land, and the
state,: the hysteria this thriving
metropolis knows so well, Is flour
ishing.. Beginning Novomber l,
every higheschool In the state will
luy claim to the stato champion
ship. . And great will bo the anger
thereof.
The footbull situation, generally
speaking, is not badly ruffled, but
the rifles, and the German cannon
In the city parks are nil oiled and
greased,
Last night a 8alcm player hit
the Albany coach so hard, he took
20 minutes to revive. The youth
ful hero paid a $26 fine and re
turned home.
La Grande accuses Baker of act
ing like a collcgo and Importing
players. Two of the Baker players
were alleged to bo orphans, with
parents living. The La Grande
Observer remarks, editorially, that
this Is a strange stato of affairs,
and Us contention will bo upheld
by the level-headed of tho stato.
The Baker Herald Democrat
prints a longer editorial on the
subject. The civic wrath bImIoh,
and 36-yard editorials fill tho air.
It Is noted that one of the Baker
players, from Corvallls, will be
allowed to play If his credits for
muslo are OK. The article did not
stale whether the music course
was vocal or Instrumental, but It
Is hoped It was Instrumental the
lesser of the two evils.
The Dalles has not won any
games this season, either on the
field of battle or the sporting puge
of the Oregonlan.
In college circles, all the players
so badly bunged up they can not
longer function, would have been
selections for All-Coast, U not All
American1 honors.
The Ash land -Med ford situation
Is the tamest In history. Generally
by this -time, the frontier Is closed,
and the egg shortage mude more
ho by bombardments. A little
spunk should he shown, and will
be as soon as one or the other of
the combatants shows some life
unrt paints a professor pink.
The - University of Washington
team cried Wednesday, so the
University of Oregon team Is in
for a tough session this ufternoon.
A bawling football team Is worse
than a wildcat with a sore throat.
Accounts of football games are
written so as to spare the feelings
of the losers, In accordance with
custom.
Hays a northern California
pa pert
"Our team was defeated but not
conquered, and played better than
the score, 86 to 6 against them,
Indicated. The singing of their
supporters was the best ever heard
and should be continued."'
BRITAIN MAY HAVE TO
THE unti-.fi'wish riots and
arc not a passing phase
colonists there but constitute a
project of a world home for. the
authority throughout the East
This is the opinion- of Frank
litical expert, expressed in the
Reviews. Mr. Simonds believes that llritain either will have to
abandon the Jewish colonization project or prepare for an in
terminable and costly era of violence spreading throughout
Mesopotamia and into Egypt and India.
Despite the fact that a difference over the AVailing Wall at
Jerusalem precipitated the first Arab outbreak, the cause is
not religious but racial,. the observer declares. Tho Arabs, now
in the vast majority, believe they will be driven out by the
rapidly spreading Jewish colonists and have determined to
fight to the last ditch.
"The present disturbance had its origin in the fact that
under the stress of war Britain
irreconcilable pledges," says Mr. .Simonds. "To the Arabs it
promised that if they would revolt against the Turks, Great
Britain would insure the creation of an independent Arab king
dom including Mesopotamia, Syria and the Holy Iand, that is.
the regions in which the ;ArlH
population. ; ,;
Concomitantly, the Uritish signed with the French the treaty
which gave Uritish approval to the traditional French claim upon
Syria. And finally in the Balfour declaration, Britain agreed
to assist in creating a national home for tho Jews in Palestine.
"In Palestine the steady
and the rising importance of the
sulted in Arab protest and, resentment. But despite ther
growth, the Arabs still constitute five-sixths of the population
and they have not the slightest
selves to be reduced to tho status
Besides the probability that
Arabs would result in sympathetic outbreaks throughout the
East, Britain must face the alternative of world-wide Jewish
protests if it curtails or abandons the Palestine plan, says the
Review of Reviews writer. "The
every indication of a continuing campaign of violence. The ob
ject is to impose enormous expense upon Britain and terrorize
the Jewish world to the extent that, it may bo necessary to
abandon the plan completely."
If married life is becoming leas intimate, there re compen
sations. To n modern husband, the hook-up menhs a radio con
nection, not a wrestling match with a frock. v
Mencken complains of America's "hostility to new ideas."
The probable explanation is that the ideas have nothing to ree
ommeud them except their newness.
Americanism: Earning $110
and paying on the first of tho
again'making ends meet.
School bonds afford a perfect
Tho poor kid must suffer in the
bonds when he grows up.
There aro just two kinds of people: good and bad. The dif
ficulty in classifying them is that they don't stav one wav or
the other very long.
Inventors too frequently overlook the obvious. Efforts to
solve the parking problem ignore the unlimited space in the di
rection of up.
The punishment of modern
they 11 be oltl fogies, worried sleepless by the wildness and folly
of youth.
"llritain iny surrondtT PnU'sliue muiuliitp." "But once
you Kt Imltl of n henr," siiid Davie, you can't turn loose till
he does.'
You can tell a bom gentleman.
swells and the big spenders in order to feel like n gentleman.
The number of marriages spoiled by divorce just seems great
because sueh fpieer arrangements
Correct this sentence: 4l0h,
to her fi4-year-old Santa Clans, "I
Education makes men successful. You know exceptions
Perhaps you aren't a good judge
Olives are those little things
just before the man sees the divorce lawver.
MUTT AND JEFF Among Those Able to
Sh Dimi IJi Seel PusuRe- op , PResewr. A fvwi'wto eueuiMs uu bg GEORGE
terJSffl VALLEYS) I ocAfc Ua. GENE TUNNED) I BERMRD SHAW
Krtpy ixf -ISk FATT PAUL JlUry 47 S "m0USH '. 4
ABANDON PALESTINE
raids by tho Arabs of Palestine
of the adjustment of the Jewish
lastiiiK menace to the Uritish
Jewish 'people and to liritish
II. Simonils, international po
current issue of the Review of
was led to make three totally
constitute the majority of the
increase in Jewish immigration,
Jewish communities, have re
intention of suffering them
of a minority."
any harsh action against tho
Arab has launched what has
and paying casli ; earning 45
month, earning ATt and never
example of double jeopardy.
school now and pay off the
, ' "
youngsters is certain. Soon
He needn't live among t tic
are called marriages.
my dear," said the bride of 2-
love you madly.M
of education.
served iu place of beefsteak
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D.
lltDod letter &erubtc to ptrwul beajtb and brcleu, not to dtieaw dlafootla or treatment, I
ill bo auaerd by lr. Brady If a itamped, Mlf-addrettix) enrelope li endued. Letter tbouid ba I
brM and rlltoo la tut Oulng to too larga nuabtr of lettera resetted, only fet ua ba amver- j
Brady, u cart w ua Mavpaptr.
OXE WOMAN WHO J4T
A womun would never be huppy
unless she could think how happy
rthe tou Id be if Kite could only jcet
some thing she
hasn't got.' Hired
men, I ak you,
ain't it the truth?
Now hereB one
who proves it;
"Dear Hlr: .
"Last March,
lifter Kolng on
orange Juice diet
for 12 days' and !
then a starchlesa
diet, I lost over 20 pounds and;
my health was broken. 1 went toj
a man advertised as 'doctor I
thought of course he was an M. t
D. At present cannot sleep al-l
though before I beffun tho dieting
I was a Tine dreamer.' I weighed
118 pounds; now I weigh Iff . . .
(Here the unhappy woman recites
a line of symptoms which we -charitably
omit plenty of feminine
customers are finding Just how
these symptoms feol these days.)
"This letter Is written illoglcally.
but I am in such a state that I
haven't much strength . , . run
a temperature ...
"This so called 'doctor put me
In a hospital and had a large blue
light apparatus . used, also osteo
pathic treatments, enough to kill
anyone ...
"Yours respectfully,
( ")
The fake "doctor" the unhappy
woman refers to has been heralded
widely through publications of easy
virtue and some of these publica
tions sharing in the easy money
continue to promote the faker and
his trick health advice even after
the disreputable scheme has been
exposed by honest publication.
Such is the credulity of the grand
old public. This poor woman, like
thousands of other gullible read
ers, assumed that the fellow was
really a physician becuuse tho pub
lisher promoting the humbug Is
careful to call the fellow "doc
tor." The big blue light probably acted
as a kind of Intellectual anesthetic,
enabling the fake "doctor" and his
aids to separato the victim from
her loose money with less diffi
culty. And. likewise with the rest
of the hocus pocus. j
In another sense It Is a sen nd nil
and a stench in the nostrils of i
any decent citizens that our gov
ernment here In America winks at I
this sort of thing right along
salves a pretty nasty conscience by
issuing from tlmo to time, through
some more or less obscure nnd un
known bureau; a cheap pamphlet
vaguely warning pcoplo to watch
out for such snides.
jrRSTION AM) iAXKWKUS,
Pants and Kyvti
Ts there nny danger to the eyes
In a baby wearing rubber pants?
(Mrs. M. A: K.)
Answer No more than there Is
In wearing pure copper or cast iron
pants. However, I advise the baby
not to wear 'em.- They're uncom
fortable, and a sorry utlbl for the
uaoy s nurse, a uaoy so maltreat
ed or neglected is likely to develop
eczematous conditions of the Irrt
tated akin, to say nothing of an
unhappy disposition. If you are
unwilling to change the baby's dia
pers when they are wet you should
turn in your baby and let some
one who cares have him.
Some 31 win Question
1. "Do you teach that there is no
such thing as a- "cold" but that
the Illness so named Is really some
respiratory infection?
2. That every alleged "cold" is
one of tho 21 respiratory diseases
you mention?
3. That most ot the Itleaso man
contracts aro respiratory infec
tions? 4. TJuit there are preventive and
curative vaccines or serums for all
of these respiratory Infections?
5. Will you please explain why
tho sicknesses from respiratory in
fection are more numerous in win
ter. (P. J.)
Answer. 1. .No, for obviously a
large share of alleged "colds" aro
merely manifestations of some
chronic minor noso or throat trou
ble. 2. v With the' exception of tho al
leged "colds" Just explained.
3. No. Surveys have indicated
that three-fourths of tho sicknons
doctors attend iny bo so classi
fied. 4. Oh, no. Unfortunately there
are only a few of tho respiratory
infer! Ions that are preventable
or
Be Absent Were
4
WHAT SIIK WANTED.
curable by such remedies, to date.
Dlptherla is so preventable and
curable; pneumonia, measles, scar
let fever, meningitis, infantile par
alysis, ure" other respiratory infec
tions that respond more pr less
to treatment 'with serums.
5. Mainly crowding and confine
ment itidoors, where the air is us
ually overheated arid excessively
dried out, and the ultra-violet of
sunlight In lacking.
f .
Quill Points
The cynic's comparison
"good": Good, gooder, meddler.
of
Virtue is cheaper. Two can go
to church as cheaply as one.
This age may just seem sinful
because it doesn't take the pre
caution of sneaking out behind the
barn.
Of course the meek shall inherit
the curth. The others haven't any
children to Inherit anything.
Opportunity knocks but once.
That subsequent knocking you hear
is done by your friends.
The new-rich family really
needs a big; liou.se. It's so much
easier to lildo old dad when
swell company comes.
If she seems to be in tatters,
don't let It fool you. She's wear
ing the newest in frocks. ,
A hick town is a place where
the white way is a perennial con
test between civic pride and some
ornery boy's slingshot.
You don't realize how mad a
man can get until you discover a
reformer's pet faults and piously
urge him to mend his ways.
"The stowaways will quit it when
they learn that nobody ever won
fame that way." What about
Jonah?
You see, each nation must have
some battleships to protect Its
trade routes from other battleships.
Hunters who wish . to protect
themselves from one another
might disguise ns tires. Nobody
seems able to hit a tire.
You can tell a profctssiotinl
man. -lie sneers all over the
premise when a layman pro
tends to know anything about
Ills Job. i . .
True, the wise old owl
nut all night. Hut he says
at intervals not "when."
stays
'who"
Mr. MacDonald says success de
pends on drudgery. Is that some
thing you can get in ten easy
lessons?
A popular philosopher says the
greater men become the more they
leave the details of home man
agement to their wives. It's a
comforting alibi.
Tho old days were much like
these, except that kind of stories
were kept at the livery stable and
that kind of books under the mat
tress. Correct this sentence: "My opin
ion of moral laws and censorship
would remain the same," said the
bachelor, "if I had growing chil
dren." ENCYCLOPEDIA CITES
OLD-FASHIONED DATA
NEW YOniC. (flV-Tho new edi
tion of the Encyclopedia Itritan
nlca says the chief industry of
South Bend, Ind., is tho manu
facture of wagons and carriages.
The publishers, stirred by criticism
in the South Bend Tribune, are
investigating to detormlne why no
mention was mnde of automobiles.
MAIL TRIBUNE
AILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
A cans
I. Foropean
iituanluluN
I. Mint folrnnitt
10. Kftrgreeii
Inei
14. I.eurnlsir
11. I'prtiiluliia; In
ton
18. Small Hlli! OS
el ('delicti
17. Maitrtrs
IV. I lined atit-
IMntMi iu t-rvrp
nln ili cur.
SI. Hut I l.othi
t2. I'urlk nf fret
51. Mnlt hrrcroxe
2,, I'lintpclfiit , .
S. ftvr'a horn
t'J, Ittmlf of Hi
metric a; atom
81, Old tlBKi
Si. hlml of d nek
:t.l. t:tont
6. Ilallr.l '
SS. A h rot her of
O.lln
59, Composer or
nullmr ,
41. Itests
43. 1'niiil of the
com pn 9ii
41. Jtomburded
46. I'erlud of tnil
lug
47. Compound
tilmr
4ft. Auricle
CO. Vosnelt
il. Tnkct as one'!
an ii
Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle
upicjAiLni
WoTblRleuAlslLlElMPy
1 IdM-!jeF prLlElG, 1 1T
i NTT ElRlM aRR I lAgTa
eHaIn A nEiLiPiZj
oisfi Peil l sHeWi S
nuIt sBe l i Apfo t:
s Le eJtHT n n sB J c
TAm E Rce "t HU L L
lgMii tpklJs eInIsie
M. html lea .
64. 'i'lie vfiole
9. Stinnnderera
63. Nrwt comb.
form
St. WhMrat
6. .Marginal notes
Si. Kmootli
6R. t hy In Illinois
OH. Kpl: poem
61). Variety of
rhalcfitntiy
70. I'rulset Scot.
;i. siIhtIuii ritr
; tM : li-fi
'7 . ' i s '9 o . ,
! -r -
2? Jo '$','- 31 """"" H 3
sT ' 34 J7 ; 37
r 4g - ?
Jmk
. .
-'.'i.'jt ; i
:?. :J;
FIRST ANNIVERSARY
SIR FRANGIS DRAKE
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 26.
Hotel Sir Francis Drake, San Fran
cisco, celebrated its first birthday
anniversary October '23.' ' When the
hotel threw open its doors to the
public a year ugo, more than eight
thousand people passed through
the building to view the new
$5,000.1)00 monolith, dedicated to4
the comfort'nnd convience of those
who come within Us portals as
guests.
Named for the daring swash
buckler who so narrowly missed
the discovery of San Francisco bay
In 1579, but who landed a few
mites north at what is now known
as Drakes bay, this stately and
beautiful twenty-two story edifice
Is worthy to rank with the finest
of Kan Francisco s new arcnitec-
ture.
Within the hotel, service nnd
beauty reign on twin thrones. Tub
Itc and private rooms alike have
been treated to the tasle of tho
discriminating traveler and per
manent resident. There's a warm
friendly hospitality that permeates
the house with the luxurious at
mosphere of ia private club.
During the past year, Hotel Sir
Francis Drake has earned for itself
an enviable name throughout tho; XKW YOttK (JP) James Branch
world. The efficient and genial j Cabell In his latest book, as he
management of Kent W. Clark. ; expresses It in an epilogue, gmd
former steamxhip man nnd man-! uates from and takes eternal leave
ager of the Oriental Hotel, Kobe. of the younger generation alike
Japan, has in no small measure! in life and letters. "After 45 or
contributed to the Immediate pop
ularity of tho hotel In all parts
of the globe. ( Ia W. Hucklns, its
president, finds pride and gratifi
cation in the assurance that his
'faith in tho present and future of
.san jrancisco nas neon so oenn
Itely sustained In excess of hit
fondest expectations.
With hearty enthusiasm the
management of Hotel Sir Francis
Drake renews its pledge that the
comfort, safety and satisfaction of
guests shall and must rise para
mount to every other consideration
within the hotel.
lit. Dhtnnt
II. I niter
13. silr up
1.1. WUe
Iff. Kllk lints
roiioii.
SO. slt-roiii?
3, Itrnrer
iC lirollnl In a
roitrn'il kellls
a At rltlitn
ft SO. I'lna l" itutt
SI, Small t-urs nf
plant leaves
5.1. Hllppflllllg
31. Censes from
In it or
86. l'ercolre
:i7. Spread loosely
4. Hurls
42. Shore bird
43, Itooni fur
stowing (foods
In a ship
48. or greater
etnturo
(0, Political dicta
tor 63. I utnlllnr name
for father
3. Withered Old
no man
SI. Imltntcs .
&i. Fluid rork
67. blunder llnlals
in. , iuilgo of
Israel
(to, nones
ftt. rurpoae
el. Distant: pre
nt
C7. French article
now a
1. Exprenilon of
aurrow
t. Hounded pro
tube ru uce
8. I'rcrcdcd In
ilnte
4. Cutcrle
U. Kxplnto
(!. Click bccllcx
7. Set up for use
8. Symbol fur
ttiutnluni
9. Muaihrrud
ET.I
OKF.GOX STATE COLLEGE,
Corvallls, Oct. 26. (Special)
Chamber of commerce secretaries
of Oregon cities are to gather
here in semi-annual meeting on
November 1 and 2 for a program
emphasizing agricultural develop
ment of the state, statewide ad
vertising, tourist and recreational
resources, and chamber of com
merce technique.
Seven Oregon secretaries are on
the completed program Just an
nounced. Including President Kent
Shoemaker (if the Hood Itiver
chamber. Others scheduled to take
part are Earl C. Reynolds, Klam
ath Falls; W. E. North, Kaker;
L. It. Merrick, Astoria; C. T.
Baker, Medford; L. K. Crumb,
tBend
and A. P. Davis, Marsh-
field.
Discussion of the dairy Industry,
poultry industry and agricultural
standardization are . the principal
rural subjects listed with Oregon
State college agricultural experts
leading the discussions.
JAMES BRANCH CABELL
IN GOODBYE TO YOUTH
thereabouts It is Inevitable that a
writer should cease to develop as
a mammal." Cabell is 50.
PREDICT TIN CURRENCY
FROM PAPER INVENTION
!i:UU (IP) Paper, which, It
Is I'liiltnpd. cannot be torn up and
will nut catch flro, has been dc
vlwil by a chemist named schoop.
Pulp ia coated with liquid metal.
Hank notes of the new paper are
predicted.
Do You Remember?
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY.
(From files o the Mail Tribune.!
October SO, J 01 0 '
President Wilson vetoes national
prohibition bill.
W a s li 1 n B t o n CoiiRrcasman
Bland declares General Pershing
knows nothing about world war
for he never got within 200 miles
of the front.
"W. O, Jenkins, U. S. consul, re.
leased by bandk when Mexican
government paya $150,000 gold
ransom. . " . c'.i (;
President Wilson recovered suf.
ficlently to resume portion of of
ficial duties.
Picking of Rogue River valle
apple crop concluded. ,
Huston Cox, colored porter at
Hotel Medford, pleads guilty to
bootlegging, pays 1100 fine and is
sentenced to 30 days In jail.
If. O. Nordwick sella ranch near
Bybee bridge to W. E. Morris of
Santa Ana, Calif., for $30,000.
TWENTY YEA IIS AGO TODAY
(From files of the Mail Tribune.)
. October j!6. 1909
Leaky plumbing does $200 dam
age to Hutchason department
store.
Ad: "Crisp waffles and
maple
syrup at limerick's Cafe."
Hear Creek receives $2900 for
1064 half boxes of pears, an aver
age of approximately five . cents
per pear.
Roncaster, England He La
Grange today broke the world's
record, flying a mile and one-half
in nne minute nnd 47 seconds.
President Roosevelt Teachers Ni
joro in darkest Africa.
Atty. E. E. Kelly and Bob Smith
prepare to appeal conviction of the
Walsworths for the murder of
James Mankin.
Ye Poet's Corner
HAPPY
Who could help being happy
In this wonderful world of ours,
If they would only turn to Nature,
The streamy,, the trees, the flowers.
Just think of what God has given
Us,
Tho beauty of it all;
The beautiful winding streams.
The trees that tower tall.
Then there are the flowers.
Which are beautiful to see;
Why shouldn't we be happy,
They are there for you nnd me.
The birds aro all about us;
i amR IMIIII mui ill infill,
io stop and listen to tnem
Is such a great delight. Y
So stop and count your blessings,
And quite your being blue;
And try to be happy, ' "J ;
As lovers of Nature do. ' 1 '
Nettie-E. Willm&n. :
NEW YORK, Oct. 26. OP)
Marcia Estardus, night club hos
tesst was awarded $75,000 in her
$100,000 suit against Harry K.
Thaw, whom she accused of spank
ing nnd biting her in his apart
ment at a New Year's Day party
in 1027.
Miss Estradus alleged that Thaw
the day of the party had torn
off her dress, bit her and paddled
her with a hair brush, although
defense testimony was that Thaw
had not molested the girl, hut
rather that she bad paraded about
the apartment in men's pajamas
and placed herself In a compro
mising situation with Thaw s sec
retary. RIVIERA TOWNS WANT
LARGER GAMBLING CUT
NICK -Iff1) Sundry town fath
ers along the Riviera aro klcklns
about the takeoff from baccarat.
They want a percentage of ca
sinos winnings instead of a fixed
sum per game. The republic now
gets 11 per cent of winnings; the
municipalities receive sums rang
ing from SS up from the banker's
roll when he wins.
By BUD FISHER
i