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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1930)
II : PRELIMINARY WATER EVENTS Ity AI:iii .1. fiould, AtMM'iafrd Press NporlH Kditnr tKV LONDOX, (.'(inn., June 20 -(T! Harvard i-wept back Inlo lie rowing picture inirt morning jwiih two smashing victories over Yale in tho nre-! liminiiry races of their iiiinuiil ro g a t t a cm tin? Thames river. Thi C r i in son freshmen, in a hrllllant e 1 i mux tO nil Undefeated si'iiKcm, wnllnped the Kll yearlings hy three lengths. IIarvnrd'n Junior vnrwUy trow got i ho J n in i on tU iiinl led nil the wity In a hard fought duel ALAN- GOUCO lt,i crosH I he finish a good ihiee iMiut length to the .ti;irtei'H of V ' Moth races were rowed nvor the hniddJe two milcM nf ihe varsity nurse, down Ht renm. 'I'he Har vard 1 renlimun eignt covered toe SitiMimoe In 11 minutes, 2 4-" sec- nds. rowing agonist a stilf heiul wind. 'I'he 10 1 i yi-urlings were linu-d In II: 1 7:li-r. 'Che victorious 'rim. nn ".lay- fvce;-' were I'hM-Knd in t I : i - it. n. I the IIluo Junior. in 11:10:3-5. Yule Yarslly Favored. The twin KotlmrU, hnwever, fail- A to shake the general confidence ' ih:it Yalo would eaiitnre tho blue; ildiim prize nf the iHgalta hi the) om-mile varsity pull downstream this evening, 'i'he KM s ruled top heavy favorites for the hit; race, M-heduled to start at G:Ito p. m.,j rest.) The regatta had for its hack -1 ground probably Ihe most eolorrutj :md expensive dispbiy of pleasure-: i nifi in its history MillinnM of dollars worth of yjichts, cruiser and craft of all lesri iptlon were mussed over a ood six-mile stretch, Including nearly all of the full four-mile arsity course, In a record-break ing Jam. Conspicuous among them were 1he'lstrfte1y"1parw, - the - glistening hulls of the four America cup itndldiiles, Woetiimoe, Yankee. Knterprb-e and Whirlwind, alone representing close to $4,o0fl.no( in mhlned co::t. TO BENEF1EL POST KroEN'B. Ore .Iiini' 20. P) imiiw of tho I'Xtunrti'il lllni'iw .lark V. lirnffii1!. cnnluate m.'in 'Kfr of tho llnlve'-nity ot Or.'Ko-i. Hip inti-i'im oomlnlttce of thp ex- "Utivo council, i:ovcrnlns hody ot student affairs. to(liiy had voted to fontinue hiH leave of absenco dur- u the onsulnj? y'a. At the saint, time Ihe committee appointed Hugh K. ltoon. profe.-:-or of ptw, as aetlm: Ki'a(luiitp man- ;'s'r. It was announced hy .latni'H i'. l-lezendorf. chairman of the fi nance committee and chairman of the interim committee. la view of the inrl eased scope iiffairn, It was decided also at tins litne to make certain needed adttl- lians to the staff. 1!. II. Holmctt. present aetini; radualo.manaKer. will act In his 1'i'rmei' capacity as assistant rail- aate manager ami N. Thomas Stoddard, former president of the student body, will become a ma :i.slsuitnt Kraduate inanaeer. I'aul Auer, recently nppolnte.l amptroller of the university, wi.l issume tho position of treasurer "f the associated students, suecee'l inff I.ouls It. Johnson, compirol- 'Ar emeritus, The best money can buy A nttiincM.Rnn-h Budweiser Barley-Malt Syrup UCHT OR DARK RICH IN BODY ViOT BITTER 6 DURING SICKNESS RETURN PETITIONS TnurinniinDTO JUSTICE ROBERTS DONS ROBES UnltJUtVt,Tn J' R0rtB 0f PhUadelphla. nowect member of the Umtod States Supreme Court, hown In judicial robes. Old "Boys" of Indian Wars Meet In Veterans Association Confab I'OIITLANU, Ore., June 20. (I'M Three young old men, who com- i posed Ihe active membership of th ' Indian War Veterans of the Pa-! cific Northwest association, whoop ed r up at tiia .Masonic temple; here today and "refit" and re-1 fought all lha Indian wars which pieceded and followed the settlin,; ol' the Oregon country hy white, men. Joi n V. Culler, a past Riund commandrr of the group, w;is ihe' first to ai?pear at th? meeting, lie ! was accomiKuiied by .Mrs. Anna C'ul-! len, hiH wife since isr.lt. Cullen was U2 years old today, and in his French Minister of Finance During War Dies Poor Man and Discredited PAUIS. Krnnce, .lune 20 (JP) A woman from across the linll ami his valet of 20 years today watched over the body of Luelen KloU, French warlimn minister of fin a:u"i, who died yesterday discred iled and in greatly reduced circuiu slances. Ueath came at t lie age of 02 while Klutz, who signed the treaty of Versailles, was lining shaved. Although he bad only cenlimes where once be had trances, he had Circulators of toe liosuc Itiver fishing constitutional amendment petitions are united to slop work at once and brim,' the petitions lo luadiiuarlers of Kie HoKlie Klvcr committee In Ihe Medl'ord National hank huildina. It was announced hy members- of tho committee this mornliiK. The committee members nre anxious to have all thu petitions In as they are ccltim; ready to file them with the secretary of Mate for plaeinir the amendment on the November election 1ntll.it. The city of .Medford has boon so thoroughly canvassed the eoni initUo believe!' everyone has been aiven an opportunity to siKh the petitions. It. howev. r. there are any registered voters, who have not sinned Ihe petitions, and de sire lo do so. they will find them at local hardware ttores and at the committee headquarters In the National bank bliildinu-. All wtitlons should be return ed to headquarters net later than Monday. The commllt"o members slated sev. ral days' ai-'o that a sufficient number of names had been tllellt obtained to insure piaoc of the amendment on the lMltot. FISH ARE SAVED AS CREEK HERS FALL KAIIlUNr: ll:i:i:K "re., .tune SO (Special) Tom Kin. aid and iw helpers from IM'" "l" .? i .hi. iveeL (.iking the i small fish from the pools of water Otlong the en el; all.) tiallMeiii" (hem to Ili.Blle KIWT. I water I" rnridly drying up hi; hot weather and many of the fish! are dying. ; Several (honsuncl have been re-, moved 9-om this creek nnd (lulls. TK- q f j farmer shareholders nf the Olos-: her Valley railway In Irela re-, centlv rejected Hie offer of the irov ernmenl to buy the railway on the, basis of $. n share. iu iiLnuquniii luu , MEDFWIDMATTj words "Kit as a fiddle and ready lo lit n whole tribe of Indians." Jo3 (Irowiiung, soon to be 9i, came Into town for the "msetin' " from his stock ranch down near Albany; Joe, waving a jaunty cane, lecalled his experiences in the In dian wars and named every officer, date, tribe and battle accurately from memory. Private Samuel O.ilton, oldest of the trio, bearded and gray, trouped into th 9 assembly hall from Wood land, Wash., and was chided by the other two "hoys" for being lute. "Thought I couldn't get here, eh?" Private Cation remarked. kept the habit of his days of power of huviug his to ii so r call instead of going to 1:1m. In l!)liS, alter having reputedly lost, heavily in the New York stock marliet. Klutz, suffered a collapse and shortly afterward was charged with issuing bad checks. He re signed his scat in the senate to escape criminal charges, but after being pronounced sane was sen tenced to two years in prison and u fine of 50 francs. The sentence was suspended. t BY CRATER LAKE I'NI VKUSITY OK OHECiON. Ku Kene. Carrying delightful and en terlainlnf! gliniiiscs of Ont'Kon into all parts of the United States. "Ma rooned in Crater Lake," a volume of short stories written by Alfred Powers., dean of the extension di vision of the University of Oregon, Is alieady proving a marked suc cos.'i, according to reports ol' the publishers, the Metropolitan Press. Orders for the book, which con tains six highly Interesting tales of this state, nre now coming in from all parts of the United States, especially from libraries, some of which are ordering several copies. Stalling with n clever story, "Ma rooned In Crater Lake," In which a hoy, left by accident lit nn inac cestihlo point on Ihe Inko shore, finally signals the lodge by means of n kite constructed with the aid of postage stamps, tho stories Inke the render through many adven tures und lo many absorbing places. EELS LOST SCALES DUE 10 DE PIHNcKTON' --(Pi Scienlista who hold thai the tools make the man have a surpporting argument in eel studies hy Prot. William Iler ryniau Seotl of Princeton. "Tools" In tl.is Bcientifie sense nre neehanlsnis such as hands. Dr. Seotl, seeking to learn why Ihe lamprey eel has lost Its scales, tiac-s Ihe cause to the eel's mouth. "The sucking, disollke mouth," he 'ays in n report to the Ameriem Philosophical aociely, "set with rows of horny teeth. Is a special ization which no other vertebrates have acfiuired. "II Is Ibis development llleh so modifies and disciiises Hie life l:is Iiii y." GAME 0FFICWLS WILL ATTEND K. F. FISH FRY KLAMATH FALLS. Ore., June 20. (A') Harold Clifford, state KJiriui warden. .;i tin me Commift niuners Wilford Atln. ('.rant Paws Harry Poole. Kiam.ith Kails, and former Commiwdoner Mike Lynch. i;dwoml, will attend the annual fis:!i fry nf the Klnm.it h nnrtn men' nH-oeiatlnn at the fish natch cry here' 'Sunday. TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, BOKtlARA (P In line with their policy of converting . royal palaces into public institutions, the soviet authorities have turned the palace of the former Emir Bok hara, now nn exile in Afghanistan, into a sanitarium for mentally de ranged women. The palace. In days gone by, was one of the show places of Bokhara. 1 Within the spacious grounds which 1 are surrounded by high mud walls, ' is u great open-air swimming pool i where the emir and his multiple; wives nnd concubines used to dis- j port themselves. j When the emir fled from Bok hara in 1X20, he is said to have taken with him to Afghanistan $10,000,000 in gold. 5000 camels and 100 concubines, but he left all the furnishings and art objects in his palace intact. The rooms, in which ho held his court, gaudily furnished with a bizarre mixture of Persian, Chi- nese, Kussinn, English and Oermnn ' tr.i pingH, have been converted into a museum. There the local ! proletariat may see something of the extravagance nnd luxury in which the rulers of Bokhara lived In tho past. PATIENT LIVES IN TANK By AID OF RESPIRATOR CAMP.K1IX1H, Mass. (VP) Ef i fortless breathing Ih accomplished ; by a respirator perfected by Prn , fessor I'hilip Drinker and A. 1. j Shaw of 1 lurvurd. j The patient is placed Inside an lair tight tank. A suction pump j creates a slight vacuum about the I patient's body. j Air rushes through the nose and throat into the lungs, expanding ! them to fill some of the vacuum about the body, and so to equalize pressure. This breath Is forced out by re versing the pump. This respirator has been used continuously on one patient for three weeks. JOPLIN, Mo.-(iP) A legendary Spanish treasure cave In Marlon county, Arkansas, south of hero In the Ozark hills, is being explored to find a source of gold reported to have been removed from the cavern years ayo by Osage Indians. George and .lake Ttnuman, bro thers who explored the cave In their youth, declare the treasure Is buried a mile from the entrance. It was 200 years ago, so the story goes, the Spanish explorers entered the cavern, known as Dated cave, and hid to escape attacks of Ozark Indians. According to legends the Spaniards concealed the treasure and then were massacred. T APPLEGATE COUNTRY APPLI30ATI3, Ore., June 20. (Spl.) The national forest servicn has put on two more lookouts In the last week. Clarence Huck left Monday to take Mr. Neff to Wag ner lookout. Mr. Neff has been ut this post for a number of years. Cnl Winuingham was stationed at Whiskey (Peak. Mi. Wlnnlngham is living in a tent as the lookout houso was burned down last fall. He is trimming the trail so lumber can be packed to tho top of the peak. Tho forefit service expects to start bunding the new house In July. niO JANEIRO (yp) In the past four years 405. 622 Immigrants en tered Hrazil, according to figures in President Washington Luis' re cent message to congress. Portuguese, naturally, were first with '142,788 entries nnd Japanesr next with 4.r.30K. It Is estimated, however that within five years Jitpnnefc will be close to, if not ahead of, the Portuguese. HoW tho peoples of Kurope are turning to South America for new homes may be Judged from the other nationalities in the list. There were 35,24.1 Italians, 26,963 Spaniards, 24,21 Lithuanians, 21. 131 (lermnns. 21.112 Poles, 18,860 Rumanians. il,27r Syrians, and tiIM7 Jugo-Slavs. (1. II. Iiurp;ln. the Knullsh novel ist, who Is In his 75th year, hus Just finished his century nf novels wllh "The Woman Without a Heart," and has started planning his hundred nnd first plot. American motor vehicles, radi apparatus and household appli ances arouse! great Interest amonu; the thousands of Chinese vo at tended the recent carnival and fair Klven by nn International society at Tientsin, China. Nearly n year was required hy Ihe liev. Arthur I Kitohlnft. bish op ol'the L'pp'r Nile. In hut lasuj tour of his diocese, which covers 2(14.(100 square mllrs In Kftypt. nnd) hna a population of 4,000,000. ORKliOX, FRIDAY, JUNE 'JO, Arthur de Pencier and Trevor Beckett and their 1921 Chevrolet in which they traveled 10,000 miles from Ottawa, Canada, to Florida and thence to the Pacific Coast over the southern route. They have spent seven dollars on their 1921 Chevrolet in repairs since they started their transcontinental trek. They are planning on driving back to Ottawa in B Bhort time in . pr car. Embryo Natators Agitate Water In Red Cross Tank Instruction U'b a "splash, splash, splash I here" and a "splash, splash there") in the tank at Merrick's Nutalo-j Hum' today with the registration I for Fled Cross swimming classes i totaling 2S1. Hoys and girls, who shiver all the thought and those who duck with instinct, were getting ac quainted with the water this morn in the the entire mechanism GENERAL fp ELECTRIC ALti-STCCl. ItKFItlCKIUTOR MEDFORD ELECTRIC STORE 33 North Central Avenue Phono 90 Dealers for , THE LAIDLEY COMPANY Distributor Tenth St. at Taylor, Portland, Ore. Disciples Of The Open -3 fs " vy" ing. Tho girls' beginning class goes inlo Ihe water at 0 o'clock In the morning. The boys have their turn at trying lo swim at 10 o'clock und at 11 both try to conquer the water. Tho class in Junior life sav ing Is also taking examinations nt this hour. At 7:30 p. m. tho adult begin The Monitor Top you will recognize it in an instant by its attractive modern design. Within its steel walls the entire mechanism is hermetically sealed from dust, moisture and rust sealed from everything that causes trouble, worry and expense. The Monitor Top is your assurance of effi ciency, your protection uguinst costly repair ' bills, your guarantee of economy. The Monitor Top is an exclusive feature of Ceneral Electric Refrigerators. Come in, and let us show you how inexpensive they are -to own. Road ners, who find It cfpiiilly hard to stay atop, come Into tho water. Thirty-five new members joined this group last night, bringing the total up to 119. Tlipre were AU new members registered in (ho begin ners classes for girls and boys this morning. A class in senior life Raving is held at 8 p. Mil. The classes are in charge of Jean Kherharl of the : University of Oregon. lie is assist ed by Miss Golda Boone, who con ducted classes during lied Cross swimming week lust year. The classes will continue until Wedncs- dny, Jnne 25 SEGALLED) itt Not not rj Priced PAGE FIVE HOLLY THEATER NEAR END JULY Present plans point toward tho opening of tho new Holly theuter here the latter p.irt of July or arly in AuKiist. Workman ftri new completing tho structure ant interior decorations are underway. Chai rs. hi m I la r t o those placed In the itroadway theater opened at Yreka. -Oal., last night, are be in; installed. The chairs have deep cushions and high cushioned backn. Nearly 2.000 seat.s were purchased by Walter Levereite. proprietor of ihe show house. 1,200 for Medforl ami the remainder for his Yrek.i show hoiiMc. Theater experts from Seattle, connected with the Nalionul Thea ters nssociation. will be in charga of t he finishing touches In Med ford. under the direction of Louis Kbert, who just completed slinilt.r work iu tho northern California city. ' Mr. Leveretto has not yet select ed the manager for the local estab lishment, but the selection will be douhtlessly confined to a . local man, aided by a staff of other Med ford men. The opening picture su fur also has not been selected. RE-ELECT DIRECTORS SARDINE CREEK DIST. ISA Ft DIN R CHERK, Ore., June 20. (Spl.) Annual school meet ing was held at' the AlderbrooK schoolhousc Monday, and the clerk n ml director re-elected, nnd MIps Curltu (Jifford of Medford re-hired as teacher. The Ideal man, nr. described by a number of Ixindon women art students, should bo tall nnd dark, a wood dancer "with Intellectual leanings," send flowers, treat hia wife as an equal, and never wear red neckties. 1 STTEELL one owner HAS PAID A CENT FOR SERVICE 0l99ti j-i.-.. j 1 3 " f' in !l'l IT