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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 25, 1930)
f OFrlbtK ! SELECTS DODGEj f AIKDI'OI.'I) M.M1, TIMNPNK. MKDKOUH. OI.'Kf ; Sl'NDAV. MAY .-. 1!:io. .1 . ..L ' Ml fffffgChooses New Dodge Brothers "8 PAGE FIVE T .rr (lit- :" unlv0 Ul"' imrncd flf'l'. 1 Ueuten lfU i.' uichai-ds who must b. uiid see that the little - U ot mo ceieoraieu T nureult K"-ul ot Solflldfiu I Micll'K""' are conl"li0" . .t..i,. u-iiv nt a moment's ... uichiirils ia the- on- fls officer of Selfr'dRG field uniiblc fur the functioning of '.1 4ft shins nf Ihp more - - - -- ,p. nucu - v fi-itsM-countrv mancu- innnnt Richards either "Lid or follows with hla nick- l... nil- mechanics in an y tnuisi'ul ....... ...... 'jti COlieCllUll ui uuiim, it is osary for Lieutenant Richards make many dualling trips to 19j from tile various airports lo ji cities proper in which the rticb arc nil made with tlio least iblc delay. Lieutenant Ricll- 5, hail (elected a Dodge Broth- i tlglit coupe. Through the courtesy of Dodge B,,ihera dealers inrougnouL uie dinlry. Lieutenant Richards is pniei with his favorite car rlraevcr he has Important ground mtfi to do. The famous cngin aring officer reports that hla Dtist eight waa invaluable to him the recent cross-country rugnt Mather field, California, and aring the spring maneuvers which lire held there. I pw- 5 , s - ' Mtti - - - - ' n Oregon Press Comment Upon Primary Victory of Joseph i.vL,l"J"""t '"" "'MIk1' ,,,'"""-,i a itiivIi:imi1 hr sh.-iilf Kulpli Ji-miiugs ' CliLs mrk fiim 1-Jiklii Motor iiiiiinv ri sP -irr i . ..... - 7 " "i-miiiii;'. mm. riiii, ,iaiiiir iki? I'limoni. Honor Guest Great Thinker Fibs to Wife About His Use of Tobacco j. P. Irvine, editor of the Ore Am Dully Journal will deliver the -win mmieHM lor tne senior nign Khool commencement exerclweH to ' held In the armory Friday fwnlng. June -at 8 o'clock. Mr. Irvine, during ' his early (hildhood lived in Jackson county. Sis father neioff a miner on what s now to rent creek, best known 't Jckus creek. The miner's w. in which the Ir1nes lived, is '"lcil nix miles west of Jackson ville anil Htni Intact. He recent ly visited the old home. In com- wny with Judac C. M. Tlionuis M K. A. Fleming of Jacksonville. When they alighted from the Wo. Mr. Irvine went directly to ie canin and told his companions nteresting early history connected wewiin. He also showed them main trees and other landmarks, an-numling (he cahin, as though as only yesterday that he had "M'-li his Itovhnml rl:iVM in I huso Dpy Hurrmiinlings. Irvine was burn In Mini uunty, O rem i n mwl wnu iwlm-itli'il ,ul'o lnihlit.! schools of that coun- liO also hnldx H M . A.M.. and U. ( ro,,a f ro , n w i 1 la me 1 1 e flivci-Hlty, Kulern, and the hunu-degrcL- uf LL..U. from Oregon "tale college.- . Am occupations, ho t.-iniht Hi-himl. " telegraph operator and rall ;"ad Nation ugent at Corvaltis.for 7 yeaiv. n boot and shoe mcr- '"t In the same city for three 's. :tnd was a stockman and '"yuan near Sprague, Wash., or f0Ur yo.iri( Tm,e. (tublishing it fur some uiicr which he accepted an nd bccuine vhlof rwidtiHiti writer !Jn. lJe Oregon Daily Journal of e has been editor since the .aWllnc nf ,l. 1.... At TrowbrlilKe. Mr. Irvine Ih n tri-ni invr nf the ;'ut-'Jf-(loors and an enthusiastic ""Her rr .Me,f0.( linri southern """n, has written ninnv ftritilliltlS ;n Journal tolling of the ro "L'fM. Mcenrry, climate and other -inuigos of this section and wmiiy of the hjHpltallly and ''Kif-NsivcneHs of the people. V"'- Irvine highly enjoys his A" t Medford und renewing ru,l"HaiHcs with his many Accurate an he may be about relativity and other mathematical matters, Professor Kinstein, one of the world's greatest thinkers, con sistently fibs to his wife about the number of smokes he has had dur ing the day, Mrs. Kinstein dis closes in an article to The Ameri can Magazine. The professor is allowed only two pipes of tobacco dally by his pliysielans and Mrs. Kinstein is charged with limiting him to that amount. "I often ask him," she says, detailing his eccentricities, "how many pipes he has smoked. He always answers, 'one.' Sometimes he forgets his training as a mathe matician and says one' when he should say t,hree'." "And," continues Mrs. Kinstein, "he has a great aversion to teas until he comes down from Ids study and finds there are inter esting guests. When 'I tell him that tea guests are present he becomes as nearly angry as I ever see him. " 'I'm going away.' he declares. 'I'll leave Berlin. There are too many people there. It interferes with my work.' But presently ho comes down to tea and if the people are interesting, ho enjoys it very much." Mrs. Kinstein says that her hus band is an addict to-whistling in the hath tub when he is not en gaged in his heavy mental labors. "Upon rising." she relates, "he slips on his black and white bath robe and goes to the piano, where he plays while his bath is being made ready. On the way to his bath perhaps he thinks of an idea that has come to him during the night. Ho is not absent minded. His brain is there. lie is thinking, hut he is not, thinking of what he is doing at the moment. He never remembers to close the bath room door. Never! We must al ways close It after him. "And in the bath room he whls ties and shaves. Hut he uses no shaving soap. Only the usual soup. Friends give him all kinds of shaving soap and my husband says: "Yes, It is nice of you. I take your soap anil thank you very much, but I will not use it. Two kinds of soap make life too complicated.' It is one of his pro found convictions that one should take from life only that which is necessary. For him two kinds of soap are quite unnecessary." Kinstein, his wife declares, re ceives three or four hundred let ters a week. Many of the letters come from America. .Most of them request autographs and the professor's chief irritation is the frequent autograph request con taining twenty-five or fifty cents. "They think to buy me'.'" he rages, and throws the money Into a box, the contents of which are regularly turned over to a fund for poor students. The professor, according to his wife, is devoted to his violin, hut he dislikes the sound of it in the living room because he thinks the rugs and hangings interfere with the tone. He plays often ln the bath room and the kitchen, where the floors are of stone. "My husband thinks that he must have solitude for t ho sake of his work," 'Mrs.' lOlnsleln con cludes, "but I know that he needs company. In summer when wo have been t h ree days a way fro m Berlin, you should see hla face light up when he hears that a vis itor Is coming. A woman must never forget that some of the things a man thinks about himself are not true." Celebrates Thirtieth Anniversary Faced with the possibility of Jospeh being elected governor, there is reason to believe that the "stay-at-home" voto of the pri mary contest will get out In Nov ember. I'ndoubtedly many of them will foi get party lines an cast their ballots for the Demo cratic nominee. Whether or not this defection, will be extensive enough to give Oregon a Demo cratic governor remains to be seen. Dalles Chronicle. Predictions are being freely made that Joseph's election means a Democratic governor in Novem ber, but we rather doubt If Bailey can defeat the Portlander. Jos eph's utilities and power platform will probably exercise the same nppeal in November that it did In May. He will receive the vote that Is always Republican, no mat ter the candidate, and us a cam paigner and vote getter, he is far ahead of Bailey. Morning Astor ia n. One outcome seems certain a minority candidate has been chos en for the Republicans and thu conservative majority will not sup port him under any conditions, for they distrust him. The party is split and torn in factional fights as never before. Despite organiza tion and money, the chances are that Oregon will havo u Demo cratic governor. Salem Capitol-Journal. If Joseph Is the nomtmQ what I of the fall election? Can Joseph ! ! carry with him to the polls any j I considerable part nf the Norblad i and Cnrbett vote? Or will it be! so opposed to him that it will j prefer to turn Democratic? There : j is no discounting Joseph's ability . ; as a campaigner and anyone who ' thinks that his nomination on the j j Republican ticket means a sure ; victory for the Democrat. Bailey, ' i is not giving due credit to Joseph. , Astoria Budget. 1 But don't get the Idea that it's , going to be easy for the Demo- j , crats now. of course, if some ! of the shell-shocked Republican i regulars drag out an "Independ j ent" . c a n d 1 d a I e. they make ; it a lot easier for Bailey. It Isn't going to be easy to find a good j man as an "independent" saeri i fire.. You can bet your last dol- lar the astute Mr. Joseph will do i everything possible to keep the , appearance of harmony within the party. But whether even with a ( seemingly reconciled party he can make himself acceptable to more : i ban 1 LTi.OUM Oregon voters in i November remains to be seen. ! (live him credit for being an ex ! traordlnary organiser ami cam ' paigner. Against the substantial, 1 sincere hut unspectacular persou- ality of Bailey will be arrayed the I personality of one of the most I brilliant, versatile and ruthless political practitioners who ever I enlivened the affairs of a great 1 state. Kugeno Guard. V.V-W-;'.. Xv ! LONDON, May 24 (JP) Waving I American flags, 156 Gold Star j mothers and lit! veterans of the j ,7th division arrived in London to- j : day on a pilgrimago to tho gravea , ; of their sons and "buddies" buried j j in Kngland. Lnndlng from the i steamship Republic at Southamp j tun the visitors came to London by ! train and were given a great ova j tion at tho railway station. JEFFERSON ELIMINATED IN SCHOOL BAND TEST j FLINT, Mich., May 24. UP) jJuuges in the national high school band contest here today selected from a group of twelve tho six i bands that will participate in the class A finals tonight. Jefferson high of Portland. Ore., the only Pacific coast entry, was one of those eliminated. That Prohibition Poll 1 4 7-1 ; : - :j 4 v 1 - ..c4m yJx:i - V Harvey S, Fireitone OFF FOR FISH LODGE I LISBON, May 24. fl) Com pulsoiy sclmoling has been Intro duced in the Portuguese army, X2 i per cent of the recruits having ! hern found illiterate. WASHINGTON. May 24. (JP) President Hoover and a large party of guests left the White j House at seven a. m. for a week lond at the president's fishing pre serve in the Blue Rldgc moun . tains. j The president was accompanied I by the largest guest delegation uf 1 lln- year. A possible clue to the seeming discrepancy between apparent pro hibition sentiment over the coun try as a whole and tho conditions as denoted by the Literary Digest's straw poll Is indicated in a bulle tin of the Methodist board of tem perance, prohibition and public morals Just Issued. This shown that five notably wet states, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Connecticut which have an aggregate of 28.5(1 per cent of the country's population had furnished, up to the time the bulletin was issued, 47.01 per cent of tho poll, while five notubly dry states, Texas, North Carolina, Ok lahoma, Tennessee and Georgia, with 13.79 per cent of the popu lation, had furnished hut 3.30 per cent of the poll. In other words, notably wet states, probably because of their nearer proximity, have up to now furnished more votes In propor tion to population than notably dry states have done, a condition which reflects no discredit upon tho methods of the poll but which ban had an effect. The gradual r,eqout Increase ln the proportion ate dry strength as shown by re cent' tabulations may bo similar ly attributed to the fact that moro returns from tho remoter districts are now coming along. One nf tho humors of the Di gest's poll recounted in tho cur rent number of that publication has to do with a check poll un dertaken by the ultra-dry Savan nah, tin., News. Tho Novvh start ed from the promise that tho re sults of the Digest poll as far as they concerned Savannah must be wrong, since tho News believed t here was no such proportion of wet sentiment there as tho Digest poll was showing. So tho News began publishing In its columns a ballot with an abbreviation of the Digest's three questions and : in order to Insure against repeat I ing it insisted that all ballots vol . ed must be signed, j What was the dismay of the I News to find results of Its own i poll showing Savannah wetter than the Digest poll had Indicated. As j It had publicly announced tho be ! ginning of Its poll, the News had 1 to go on and Its figures got wet ter anil wetter. Suddenly tho newspaper found itself a target for verbal and epistolary brickbats from some of the dry advocates of Savannah, who accused It of treason to the cause and charged that one man had forged av large number of wel ballots and voted them. The News, moro than ever dismayed, Investigated the- story, found It false and published affi davits proving It false. Always, extremists In nny cause Tracing Its history from a small lire shop in Akron to ono of the world's greatest industrial giants, tho Firestone Tire & Rubber com pany is celebrating its thirtieth annivorsary. It has been frequently said that In all the Industrial his tory of America no more brilliant chapter is to be found than that written by Harvey S. Firestone, In the original Fi rest one 1 1 re shop tlie dally production capacity was a dozen tires a day, and Mi. Firestone personally ' helped turn out this production. Today, with the great expansion programs Just completed nt Akron and at t he great Western Firestone factory tiij Los Angeles, and increased faclll-j ties at tho Firestone tire plants in Canada and Kngland. the capacity Is 80,000 tires and tubes a day. Th e t h I rt let h a n n i versa ry sees the Firestone company operating Its own cord fabric mills at Fall River, will believe what they waul to be lieve and reject contrary evidence, however conclusive. Hxtremo weiH and extreme drys nliko continue to assail the good faith and com mon honesty of the Digest In its poll. When It Is nil over peo ple of this type on both sides will continue to bellow Just what they want to believe, all bough thoro Is every Indication that tho Digest's poll Is both honest and glvlpg in the main a true index. Kugeno Register. New Bedford, Newbnryport, Massa chusetts, with a total of 201,000 spindles and the tremendous year ly capacity of 4 5,000,000 pounds. . Another notablo Firestone achieve ment Is the development in Liberia on the west coast of Africa, where rubber trees are now bearing- on the first cultivated acreage of a huge 1,000,000 acre plantation. Reaching to another part of the world, Firestone maintains buying offices and a big .plant in Singa pore. The Firestone Tire & Rubber company was organized by Mr. Firestone in Akron in H00. In l!o: when Henry Ford decided to build . a car he gave Firestone an order for 2.000 sets of straight-side tires, which was the largest order for tires ever pinned up to that time. The fact that every employe of tho Firestone company Is a. stock . holder Is declared to bo a power ful factor making for unusuallj high production efficiency. Mr. Firestone has played a leal Ing part In advancing motor trans portation, being credited with pro ducing the first straight-side tiro, the first rubber non-skid trend, the first commercial demountable rim. the first patented gum-dlpplng process and the first balloon tiro, according to R. C. Tucker, vic presldent and general sales mana ger of the Western IlreBton or ganization. Copyright 1930 by Oodse Brother Corporatloi LAST CHANGE DODGE BROTHERS SIX J'Ultl.l.V, .My :.4.(P)u)-t"-i ' t.ixl. ,-;,, H here, many of them lt( 'c 1,1 America, havo added an "rella In a pr.a cum part-I M to their eiiuliiment. On rainy I the driver whlnka Iho urn-1 ,; ' fr"m itn raek and escorts j 'ne ti the front door. xvnvt-i- . . .. ...... a1 AUHiraua. .May ... 1. Driving aRnlnxt crooka. the .New .Smith Wales is en- r"'IK a l.i. ,. i.i.,u ..... i,.,. II n r'l offenae fnr conV,.te( n or to be found talking tn ' " 'ieneral raids cleani .t out iHrivorld haunts and broke up r,,light district. ''VKVa. Mav 24 (IPt Swilll nntfd ,h j-.,,... f Va- that tho Geneva opium con- """ win hereafter be applied "'e Spanish protectorate in foeon. ,si,n rBacrved thi ter "fy from operation of the pact n"n .he ?$nr , !,:, AND UP, F.O.B. FACTORY here's a two-fold guaranty of value There are two ways you can definitely appraise the value of the fine, roomy, low-priced Dodge Brothers Six. You can see its beauty, feel its comfort, thrill to its smooth, vigorous performance, test the positive surety of its weather proof internal hydraulic brakes, and sense the quiet ness and strength of its Mono-Piece Steel Body. And beyond these things is the knowledge that you can bank upon the dependability of any Dodge Brothers motor car. 5IXE-S AND eiBHTS UPH0LDIN8 evenv tradition of dodbb ne-PE-NOAaiUTY Westinghouse dectric Range THIS IS THE LAST WEEK TO GET FREE A 26-Piece Set of Community Plate Silverware or a 24-Piece Glass Luncheon Set 804 ll EAKIN MOTOR CO. 16-18 South Fir Phono 304 With the Purchase of a WESTINGHOUSE or HOTPOINT ELECTRIC RANGE This Offer Ends Saturday Night, May 31 PEOPLE'S ELECTRIC STORE lr 15 Months to Pay Your old range accepted as part payment. Seven JJCiy oiyie. l ; 590 to 675 HL' ...... a h f.rtnr MKWVVfci rr 212-14 West Main Phone 12 . 1 , ..