P'VOB-ETOirP MEDFORD MATL TRTBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, SATURDAY, It, 1930. "
BEARS HOLD
MARKET IN
FIRM GRIP
Adoption of Tariff Bill Brings
. . No Relief From Down
inward Tendency of Past
Fortnight Leaders Hit
' New Low Levels. ...
NEW YOItK, June 14. OP)
Ilisofur as the stock market wan
Inclined to tako notice today of
the senate's passage of the Hawiey
Hlnont tn riff hill lute yesterday, ItH
Interpretation was bearish. Stocks
continued the ilecline which tint)
been under way with .minor Inter
rupllonn ifo n fortnight, hut trad
ing was dull and highly profes-
slnul. I.osses of t2 to fs u share.
were numerous, with a few Issues
breaking more widely.
jrHcoreB of issues wero' depressed
to new low" for the year, hut there
was no recurrence of the urgent
Unuldatlon which appeared earlier
In the week. The total turnover
for the two-hour - session waH liut
moderately more than 1,000,000
shares.
Copper HuinorH Ileanl
, Unconfli-muhle rumorH that Hrit
Islv Oerman, and Belgian copper
Consumers were cancelling orders
fiir .American metal in retaliation
were heard uhout Wall Street, hut
received little encouragement In
copper trade circleH. It wafl point
ed out contractH already signed nre
not subject to cancellation.
'Several copper Hhares tumbled
to new low levelH. Anaconda drop
ped about S2 to $61, the loweHt
price for this Ibsuo since 11120.
Ariierlcan Hmeltlng, Howo Hound,
St. Joseph Lead and Phelps Dodge
reached new low ground for the
year or longer, Calumet and Arl
fcA'na lost more than $4. .
' III. Tel. Hit Hard
International Telephone wna n
conspicuous hear target.
.Hhares losing uliaut to to $10
a share Included Kaatmnn Kodak,
faorthlngton ' Pump, J. I. C'uhc,
American Tobacco B, and Ameri
can Vyle' Works. Public Service
of N' J., Consolidated (las, and
underwood Elliott lost $4. to $r.
Huch Issues us U, H. Hteel, Itadlo,
General Eeleotrlc, Rtone and Webster,-
American Can, Baltimore &
Ohio, Bethlehem Hloel, Internalnn
al Harvester and Standard of N, J.
sagged 3 tar-$." " ' ,!
Today's closing prices for , 1 B
selected stocks follow: .
Am. f'nn. ,
..,.,...1112
72
.'. 21IH4
61
1
Col. nag
Am.-Tel. and Tel
Anaconda j....,
Curtlss Wright
Claneral' llleotrlc (new)...
72
flenaral Motors 44 T4
Kennlcot Copper 41
Radio Corporation 40
Reading Ill
Sears Roebuck 7 f4
Ifiiitrd Air Craft : 60
U.'H. Steel i 1624
Mont. Ward 40
llit. Tel, and Tel. .-. 48 H
i, . r t
I STORY 1
(Contlnutd from Pg 1)
hturd Merrlum'a statement, uh
wll as by members bf the Mar
lon county court.
'Members of the board of horti
culture at the moetlnit. lnchulInK
Col. Alrd of Oregon City who out
lined the work of the bourn ut
length Intimated that there had
been dlneaea of a threatening na
ture -to large Industries In tho
srlato, . ,
'Questioning was carefully made
by members of the board of con
trol us to whether or not Mor
rlam's , statement, had ; roforrcd
specifically trr the fruit Industry
or whether they might not .have
been - In . reference 1 to some un
named Industry,- the latter being
the conclusion finally reached by
the board.
. MoitImiiI in lrovinco. -'
Secretary of Htato Hal lloss de
clared at the meeting thnt he con
sidered ; Merrlntn was in his
province1 In making the statement
he didt In Illustration he nssert
ed that n member nf the banking
Itonrd, were there shaky banks
Ih tho state, might have the right
fo make a statement to that ef
fect hut would have nn right to
specify the banks that were In
such condition,
Vote on the retention of Mr.
rlam was takeh ut' a privnte con
ference nfter the public hearing.
Fruit' growers who shortly after
the "Van Trtimp hearing here, at
which Merrlani made bis "mys
tery dleeasnV , ttatement. who as
serted they' would' nsk either for n
retraction from Merrlom or his
resignation failed to appear nt to
day's meeting. .
ih,' A. Hunks anil Howard lllll o(
Mev'ord wsSi present at lho Mer
rlam hearing and. ttir.it!"l 10
make a few remarks,' bit! , w are 're
fused recognition by the hoard on
the ground Hint any thing thny had
to suy In regard In the Mm Ion
county meeting pt which Morrluni
spoke would be hearsny and not
permissible. If oilier llogue river
growers were present they did not
make themselves known.
" TOM'H niVRft, N. J., June H
Lester Underdown, and Mrs.
Hattls Kvans were found guilty
today of the murder of Hubert
rjvans, me woman nusnnno, ano
were sentenced to rtlo In the flee
trte chulr.' The' Jury m'ade no
recommendation - for mercy.
"Bat Murder"
Odd Eight-Year
Olio KiiiihiilKM' ui'Mivc) on li'ljil for slaylnic of l-Ywl Ooslrr
iel(h In I, on AiiRclfM, Ih comfort cd hy wltv. .unci shown Mtk.
Ot'j-ltM'ri'ich In wliost Moiihvs NmiiIiiiIht I i (! In Hccri't coniikiH-
IIK'lllN. , . ,
LOH A Nf J K I KH (A'i A munlprj
ntory un wioril hh tlir iiiohI imiiKi-
Rfillvo rift Ion lt Im'Iiik plt-cfd to-
m'tlHM- In I ho I rlii I of Mm. Wnl-.
tiui'Ha ifHti'mirh nmi Mto Hun-1
hubor, her "nlutnton. HWffthciiil." j
Kretl Ooctcrrflih. wenllhy Mil-1
wmi Ium' u ml l jiM AnMi-li-H iniinufur-'
turiT, wiih fun ml dead In hln hoini',
here on th night or AiikuhL . 22. ,
1!I22. I
Mih. OpHtciTi Ich wiiM found un-
coiihi Ioiih In n t-Iowt. She told po- j
Ike when he and hor huclmnd j
hud ratiiriird homo Ihnt hIkIH u,
man nhnt iti'riirh and locked
her In tho cloHet. i
lOlKht yisai'H pafHi'd and tho oano
wnH ulmoHt forgotten. j
Then Hiiddonly Ilermnn Hhaplro.
Mm. (piitpmlch'H attorney at the
lime of the murder, produced on ,
nfflilHvIt which led to tho urri'Ht !
and roiifeHMlon of Sanhuber. now J
f rmed vnrlounly ' bat man" and i
"plinntmn Hweet heart."
C-C OFFICIALS
Exhibits of Southern Oregon
and Northern California
Products Will Be Ar
ranged. nieeung 01 v .minoer . v.
merco presidents and secretaries j
und others Interested In imilntaln
lug un exhibit or products of nor
thern 'raliiornlu und southern
Oregon nt the lun-Ameririin Itcii
procul Trade conference In Huc
rumento during tho week of Au
gust 25th. has been culled for 0:30
p.m., Ttlesduy, June 17, ut the
l.lthln Hiirltigs hotel, Aidilund, by
Hum II. linker of ttrnnts Puss.
Mr. linker Is chiilrmun of a
committee appointed by President
C. 'K. (lutes of the Northern Call-fornlu-Houtliern
Oregon Develop
nioiit association.
lM-esenl promises Indicate that
the meeting will be well intended
und acceptances have been re
ceived from l A. Wlnetroul, pres
ident und .1. It. llnrvey, secre
tary, tli'imts I'ums chamber of
commerce; fllcnn Ireland, presi
dent, mid f.. fl. Westfull, secre
tary Crescent (Mty Chamber of
Commerce; O. O. Alenderfer. pres
ident, ami C. T, linker, eecrctury.
Medford Chamber Commerce: .1.
A. Jiimt, secretary, Del Norte
county chamber of commerce: K.
M. Itiibb, preslditut. and K. C.
Reynolds, secretary. Klumnth l'ulls
Chamber of Commerce: W. M.
Ilrlggs. president nod tleorge 11.
( Motwcr, secretary. Ashland Chum
( ber nf Commerce; 11. V. Champ
, ncys. president, and tlcoriie Trim
mer, secretary, Yroku Chamber of
j commerce. .
Thomas- K. rennork, chairman
of the Del Xgrle County board of
rt'ipcrvisors and Vlcc-ire."ldcnl of
tho Northern California-Southern
.Oregon Development association
, D, M.. lw. nf Medford, and Ml
ttegina -.loiinson oi tne ''""
Tidings will also lie In attendance.
County Agent Howell of Josephine
County, und County A.tcnt H. l.
Fowler of Jnckson county, and
County' Agent Mux leonurd of
I el Norte county lo all probability
will iilno be present at the mort
Ing. .
Hun Color Ibiii,
AHIIKVII.I i: N. , June 14
(fl The I 'tilted Hint m circuit
PLAN
MEETING MARSHALL NOW
TUESDAY NIGHT LAKE 0 WOODS
outiri in oppinls toitiy ruled me. James Ibueiy. lis. one of the
Dcnioi ratio puny of Virginia hud ' first Instriictois In Oregon State
no rlirlil toar "negroes and other college, died at his home here to.
ruoosj' from Its primary. tiny urier a lingering Illness.
.. ....ii.' .".. ' .. .. ' "o was born in tlilroy. Cul., Nov.
! .? ,ir'-"3- """ ",1"1 l-"valli,
HAI.I..M. ore.. June 14.-WV- ,v,h bis parents while he was still
The numml reunion of the Amcrl- )n nf,lm.y. j, ,,. K.htwl ,
nn war mothers of Oregon will
be heil nt CbTinpoeg park Hun -
doy, with fl. V. Mulkcy nf
lund mnkirm-tbe iirincltiul nddrr
A picnic dinner will be served
Trial Bares
Romance
Sanhnher Ha Id lie met Mm Oes
tcii'olch while he wiih employed
in her husband's sarmont factory
In Milwaukee In mil and hud
lived la Hecrei rooms built In tho
attl.H of the o.'Hlfirelch honiew
Ihere and In Lm AiiKeleH.
one nlyht ho heard Mr. and
Mra. oeMierrelrh tiuarreliiiff. he
Hiild tn IiIh w I mi i'd confeHjon, and
feiirhiK the woman miht he hurt,
ho ran down and fired at OoHter
reich. They grappled, Kanhulior said,
and In the HtruKgle OeHterreich
was fatally wounded. He locked
AIth. OHloiTolch In a clouet and
retreated to hlH secret room In
the:" utile.
Khapfrn charged Mrs. OeHter
reich and a limn friend had at
tempted to "take him for n ride.
Hhaplro ' wuh premium a milt
iiKiiliiHt her for I'Jft.OOO nttorney'H
foes.
MANAGER FOR
Gray Unable Continue at
Resort Account Illness-
Visitors Flock to Popular
Retreat.
Tl, I nl.a tl,n '.t roMel
. mnn.mer to renluca
j,,,,,,,, (j,.t,yi ,v, W1g solved with
a bud attack of flu about two weeks
ago while on duty ut Ilia resort,
slnco which time be has been a pa
tient at tho Sacred Henrt liuspltal
in this city. Although he is now
on the mend and was able lo Hit up
at the hospltnl today, It will be a
long tlmo before his condition be
comes normal.
Tho new manager is L. V. Mar
shall, a member of the junior high
school faculty of Medford, who will
I'll I (hat position at least until next
full. Tho number of visitors nt tho
lake Is iticrouslng from day to day
und with the continuance ot warm
wenthor will soon be In lull swing.
Visitors to tho lake lire already
well taken core of In tho woy of
dining and sleeping uccoiuuioiln
llons and recreation facilities.
Tlnoiigli anuiiKiimentn tnnile with
I'ohI muster Win. J. Warner of this
city. Prcil 10. Wiih! of Medford. head
of the resort company, a new post
ofllce will be established at Hie
resort, whirl, will be located
in the store und hotel nt tho north
end of Iho lake, and with n mall
service once a week to and from
Medford.
This service Is known as an In-toriiK-dlnto
ono. with the mail pro
vidBtl by special supply, which
means (hut the new postmaster
must transpoit nil mall between
Medford and tho luku, and vice
versa, without cost to the govern
ment. 1
While Mr. Wahl himself will
bold the title of postmaster, some
employe of the resort company will
be In active oburgo of the office.
iur. Wahl. however, will transport
the man frm ..(fr(1 , ljk(, .
the Wneils once a week and will, on
the return trip, fetch mull from the
esint lo Medford.
Al 0. 3. C. IS
in dllNC. Ore.. .Tunc N. 0TV-
cq vuIM and
later taught In the
MAN EDUCATOR
! fut Methodist college which Inacr
Port-jhecaine the Oregon Agricultural
collcgo In which be taught for IS
year.
Birthday of Old Glory Recalls
9
17. K. MnrliicN Milutp the na'lonal lliij: at a tropical outjKist in the West IiuIIcn. Insert: Soldiers
of the Sea at Klin Dleo, Calif., 1 irinjc a ftunuil pi'CM'iiUitlon of tlic Stars and KtrlHH mid their ici
menlal ii1oih. The national flag Ih carried tn the right In this ami ill similar parades or formations,
Hlg'lieNt honors are nlwuy-s ncxorded "Old Glory" by nil of our naval or 11111)11117 forces cither tit home
or iiIhinuI.
Tho birthday of Old Glory, Juno
14. brings responsive thrill to every
patriotic American.
The first lag in general use by
the colonists consisted of thirteen
stripes, alternate red ,and white,
typifying tho ..thirteen cojonic
with a union bearing the crosses of
St. George and Hi. Andrew," where,
the stars in the blue field now
appear. It was called tho Grund
Union Klug, or First Naval Ensign,
and It was the immediate prede
cessor of the 'Stars and., Stripes,
which we so often call Old Glory.,
. Romance has trailed Old Glory
from the beginning.,. It harks back
to the days of Betijy Ro'ss, whose,
nimble fingers wrought with lov
ing care tho first sample of the
national flag, which was almost
Identical with the flag as wo know
It today. . ;'V
June 14, .1777 Is now. recognized
as the flag's official birthday. On
that date congress resolved "That
thpfhig of the thirteen United
TThirteen is IiMcIfcy in (DlREfiDRlA a
'. V
a K-v 5:.-
The Lucky
THIRTEEN
AlVanv Oimoctmt'HfwM
- ' Aftliland Tidinji
Attetlts Attorian
CwfffH fffff(r
Qranu Pait CevfJer
Klamath falli Htnld-Htwi
L Grand Obi trr cr
Mdrehn!d Cooi 8r T'mci
Medford Mmti Tribune
Orvcsn City fnterpWi
RmbMrt N9i-tfrw
Salm Capita. Jornr
. Th Dallfli Chrenicft
Stirring History
1 Ktates be thirteen stripes, alternate
I red und white; that the union be
I thirteen stars.-whlte in a blue field,
t representing a new constellation.'
I Thereafter numerous incidents
i relative to the new flag began to
J make their appearance In history.
'"At Portsmouth'," writes one
navnl authority, "Paul Jones at
tracted uhout him a bevy of girls
who formed a socnlled 'flag bee,
who with much patriotic enthusi
asm'' and many heurt thrills
wrought out of their own and their
mothers' gowns a beautiful Star
Spangled . banner, w h 1 c h was
thrown to tho breeze in Ports
mo'u'th 'harbor on July 4, 1777."
' AVory's history records that on
August 3, Colonel Gansevoort with
a command of 800 men were de
fending Kort Ktanwlx, near the
present site of Rome, N. Y when
word was received of the new flag
design. The garrison was search
ed for material to manufacture the
new flag, presumably the stars
A- '.W ,
WB X I sbe m
Thirtc An Mogensen Newspspcrs
cover 418,000 people in Oregon
46!? of the population of the
entire State! Here are more people
than there are in all Delaware, Ha
waii, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico,
Vermont, or Wyoming!
Money? Oregon newspaper readers have lots of it. They re
port 1J3S mora State income tax returns than the United
States average. And 15 more incomes of over $10,000 per
year than the United States average.
The above it a rep.oduetion rf a dauble-pag
the leading trade m
of 153 Years
and Stripes, which was displayed
the same afternoon from a flag
staff on n bastion nearest the en
emy. The, Stars and Stripes first float
ed over a fortress of the Old World
when Lieutenant O'Bannon of the
Marines and Midshipman Mann of
the navy raised the flag over the
fortress of Derne, Tripoli, on April
17, 1805.
"fly the dawn's early light" on
September 14, 1814, Francis Scott
Key saw the Star-Spangled Banner
still waving over Fort McHenry,
und composed the song which is
now the national anthem.
Both the flags raised at Tripoli
and at Fort McHenry had fifteen
stars und fifteen stripes, a flag
design that remained in vo.gue
from 1796 until 1818. Then con
gress authorized the return of the
flag to its original form of thirteen
I stripes, one 'star being added for
! each state entering the union until
i today there are 48 stars In the blue
f field.
1 r f . a
A ' A
1
V . -
P- S- Ivarv oitia.
faMllv In thM thlr
taa laeky markats
rsads e Moaaimn
Naw.poDar-S4.M0
lo S sxoat. ThoM
ll.la. In Solan will
a onalvtad In tha
naat aavofvMaiaai.
3 ad that appeared recently In "Printers' Ink" one of
giiinetTn the United States.
CHI CRIMES
BRING CRY
FOR ACTION
Criticism of Police, City Of
ficials, Crime Commis
sion Heard Churchman
Urges Mass Meeting to
Express Indignation.
CHICAGO, June 14. (P) The
cry for action in the hunt for 'the
slayer of Alfred, (Jake) Llugle
Tribune reporter, rose higher unu
higher today, hut. with no indica
tion rmm mithnrities of any new
clues or of any prospect of imme
diate results.
Indignation over the murder was
r.;.i ti'niwiniine itself ino criticism
of police, or the city administra
tion, even or the crime commis
sion which one. minister the Kev.
Piiiiin Vnrrnw classified as "a lot
of bunk." Dr. Yai'row, chaiimun of
the political action committee .ui
the C h i c a g 0 "Federation of
fhiiKOies: called for a mass meet
ing for the expression of the min
istry's "indignation" over crime
conditions.
Mimrt) wna nn luck nf nollcfi ac
tivity as motor souads cruised
through every part or tne city, matt
ing arrests; but, though the net
was drawn tight, the grist of ar
rests showed no well known gang
sters. Indeed, as nflicialH admit
ted, out of the more than COO men
arrested, only a small percentage
could be classified as gangsters.
Mostly they were nondescripts, ml-
m linrwlluma fl nil "lllimK."
Leaders of the Methodist, Luth-j
eran and Presbyterian demonlia-!
Hons announced thut within a week
i they expected to have a unified ex
pression of indignation.
"Peaches" Loses .
Suit for Doiver
Against "Daddy"
NKW YORK, June T4.
(P) The effort of Frances
"Peaches" Browning to force
her former husband, Edward
"Daddy" Browning, to give
her dower rights on his real
estate falhjd, at least teriipb
rarlly, when her- Complaint
wns dismissed in supreme
court today. She was given
twenty days, however, in
which to file a new com
plaint if she should continue
her suit.
4 4 4
Oregon's per capita wealth it 41 higher than the
United Statci average higher than either of the other
two Pacific states. The actual figure i $4,244.
How do they get it? Easy! Lumber production, farming,
fishing, and manufacturing. First state of all the states in
production of hops, second in pears, fifth in strawberries,
eighth in apples. One-eighth of all lumber in the country
comes from Oregon and there still remains one-seventh
of all the standing timber in the United States.
Oregon newspaper readers can buy anything if you can
sell it. And there it no better place to start than with
the Thirteen Mogensen Markets, where there Is one
automobile to every family and where every family eats
more than SI 6 worth of candy each year.
You can use all of these Thirteen Lucky Newspapers as
you would use one ordinary publication, one contract,
one schedule, one billing, one check.
tCMOCENSEN K CO lnc.
vSSe
San Francisco 564 Market Street
Dt.t,nei, Matas.an
0fFlcsaach slretaflc
ettr localad and a,lv
ansa d.
Who's the
Hero ? e
THE dcvil.mayarc chto
whw .only interest it the
throb of his motors and the
cxt record to smash, or, :
THE girl who loves him,
kisses him goodbye and tells
him that she won't worry a
minute, even though he 1
flying uncharted regions a
grisly thousand miles away?
You'll be surprised by the
whimsical answer given by '
Muysie Greig in her new
" novel. ;
A NICE GIRL
COMES TO TOWN
Starts Today
IN THE
Mail Tribune
Louise Rice, world famous graphologist
can positively read your talents, virtue
and fault, in the drawings, words ant!
what not that you (cribble when "lost
in thought".
Send your"6crIbblInr;s"or signature
for analysis. Enclote the picture of tile Mikado
head, cut from a box of Mikado pencil., and
ten cents. Address Louise Rice, care at ,
EAGLE PENCIL CO.. NEW YORK CTH
NtWVOSKi
tStloMttaa St
CHICAGO
MON.MI.MaonA.a.
DKItOITi
J044 W. Grand l.
LOS ANGELES i
Ol Sa. Serins St.
POKTLANDi
69 Broodway
SEATTLE :
01 twwnrt St.
i
f
YELLOW T(&ffikO(TlDDnng$
vrni the