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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1930)
Medford Mail Tribune Second Section Six Pages Second Section Six Paget Twenty-Fifth Year MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, .1 UTA" 2, 1SKM). No. 102. CRATER LODGE HOST TO DADS OF UNIVERSITY Executive Committee Holds Confab As Guests of Manager Price Ham mond Is Appointed. CRATER LAKE LODGE, Ore., iluly 2. (Special.) As part of the celebration of the official opening of the Crater Lake National park, July 1. the executive committee of the University of Oregon Dads were entertained at Crater Lake lodge over the week-end of June 28, 29 and 30, as guests of R. W. Price, manager. While at the lake Mie committee held Its semi-annual Meeting, with Paul T. Shaw, Port land, presiding. Trips to the water and climbs to the various peaks nearby occupied the dads during tho day, while the evenings were taken up with the business of the organization. Mem bers of the committee were accom panied by their families. The fall meeting of the Oregon Dads, which Is one of the out standing events of tho year at the University of Oregon, will be held on October 25,' it was decided at the meeting here. This is at the time of the Idaho-Oregon football gaino, and a special stunt Is being planned for this game by the dads. J. O. Frock, Portland, was appoint ed to head the stunt committee. , Elections for the new officers of lie organization and for the execu tive committee will take place In the falb President Shaw appoint ed tho following nominating com mittee:. O, L. Price, Portland, chairman;; R. B. Hammond, Med ford; J. R. Ralcy, Pendleton; Carl ilaberlach, Tillamook. These will present their nominations at the October ?5 session. A special meeting of tho execu tive committee has been called for Sunday, July 13, in Portland, at u breakfast at tho Benson hotel. At this time the Dads will moct with Dr. Arnold Bennett Hall, president of tho .University of Oregon, to take up tho various business which they were unable to complete at Hits meeting. , r A - reaolut4ttiH-wfts-T?nscdy lit thfr conclusion of the mooting thanking Mr. Price for his hospitality to tho Dads organisation, which was also entertained at tho lako two years ago. ' Celebrating the Oregon Trail Centennial ' O. W. Whitley, traveling evange list -of Berkeley, Calif., will preach at tho Volunteers of A me ilea Mis sion hall, 13 North Kir street, at S p. m. Wednesday. His theme will be, "The Signs of the Times." v Captain Ethel Walsh In charge of the spiritual work of the Med ford post of tho Volunteers of America extends a cordial invita tion to the public to attend the meeting. ANTI-FAG PETITIONS HAVE ENOUGH NAMES SALEM. Ore., July 2. W) Secre tary of State Hons has checked tho initiative petitions for the anti cigarette bllt and found them suf ficient. The petitions have been accepted, assuring the bill a place on the November ballot. I. 'Mvt' II IT !28fcss3i OPENING CROWD IDEA WEATHER L LAKE LURES ness since Juno 26, the official .opening was Tuesday, July 1. j Judging from the splendid wrather conditions that have prevailed for the past week or ten days, the date ' might have been the latter, part j of July instead of the first part. I Contrary to many reports, ihe-o I Is no snow at the rim of the lake and only a very little on the trail to the hike's edge. j Mirny people walked down the pi c trail to uio water io enjoy trips t Uni to tho Island and phantom ship find it much more to their likinit ! held a meeting at the lodge on to ride to the water's edse rather j J line 29. Those who attended the than walk. j meeting were: Miss M.irlnn Phy. Two women were the first to I Private secretary to President Ar retrlHtrr at th lodcn this vear ' Ul Hennett Hall of the L'nlver- They were Mimes I-ouise Pelouhlt j suv of Oregon: Mr. and .Mrs. J. C. Medford vlslto) with classmates t of lloston and L. W Montague -tf ' Stevens and daughter. Mr. and; Crater Uike, having motored from ter. They left Tuesday morning for Medford and will remain then several days beforo going on to Eugene. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hildreth of By Mynia Rush.) CRATER LAKE. Ore., July 2. (Spl.) Although the lodge at Cra ter Lake has been open for bu in the largo launches. Olaf and Sam' Manerud of tho Bang's riding academy of Eugene, arrived at crater Lake yesterday with 12 horses, to he used nt hi traits this season. Many people Mrs. O. Laurguard and Miss Ituth Medford. Newton. j 11. W. Price entertained .us guests' SYNDICATE HAS EYE lor a couple of days this week Mr.. riinrur IITII ITICO ami Mrs. It. K. Keller of Portland, j UN EUGENE UllLlllEo Mr. Keller is tho proprietor of the Benson hotel. j ECOENE. July 2. (P It de- Constanco II. Hitchcock and veloped today tho city of Eugene Paulino Spencer of Eugene arrived ! has been approached by repre at tho lake Monday after a six-! senlatlves of the Chapman com- ChaltaiHioKa, Tenn. They register ed on June i!fi. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Clemeson of Medford were guest of It. W. manager of t tie Crater I.ak- last Sunday. I Edward M. Miller, automobile i editor of the Orogoniau, and Bay j Conway of the A. A. A., spent June) 27 and 2S nl the lake. VlsUtnu It. i W. Price and doing some pho-jday trip over the Skyline trail by pany, Philadelphia syndicate, oe tography nf tho lake. j horseback. They were met by siring to purchase the municipal The Oregon !'ds' committee (ieorgi I'. Ilileheoek nd daugh- light and power plant. Independence Rock, IVyo, Independence Rock, Wyoming, landmark on the Oregon Trail an historic shrine before which Boy Scouts from all over the country will gather July S, 4 and 6 to pay honor to the Covered Wagon Pioneers. This encampment will be unique aa the largest ever staged by Scouts at a point so re mote from civilization. It la 62 miles southwest of Casper. Troop 21, Wood mere. Long Is land, will be the first Boy Scout unit to set a monument on the Oregon Trait Already funds for this memorial to the "Unknown Pioneers' have been ra'jed through the sale of Oregon Trail Memorial half dollars. The program Include Indian pageants, a stage coach hold-up, the unveiling of a tablet to Kara Meeker and another to Father Do Sraet. The Independence Rock celebra tion Is part of the "Covered Wagon Centennial" which President Hoover asked the nation to observe in his proclamation of February 21st, and which is sponsored by the Oregon Trail Memorial Association. Man of Fifty at Efficiency Peak In All Respects Except Muscles DETROIT. P) Cheering news; first from the Industrial world and now from tho medical profes sion has co mo to tho man of f0 who feels his ago a bar to effici ency and a handicap to his posi tion. . ; Not lopg ago Henry Ford wus quoted as saying: "If all the men of r5 slid over were removed from Industry, there would not ho bruins enough to carry on." The older men, Ford pointed out. aro an In disponwablo balance lo tho-youngcr and moro vigorous workers. And now Dr. A. J. Pritlon.- Chi cago physician,' who' appeared be fore the convention of tho Amor- The all-important principle Mn making jelly is the same in roasting HLLS Bros coffee Add thb warm sugar to the hot Bruit syrup a UttU at a timt to be lure of perfect jelly. Hills Bros., by their paten ted, continuous proc essControlled Roasting insure evenly roasted, full-flavored coffee because they roast only a few femnds t s firm. No other coffee tastes like Hills Bros, because none is roasted the same way. tftvb frm tlx tftgimst wmemmm p0tk. Bssilj ftnti with tin kij. L4 fbt Food Element Revealed as Poison To Kidneys By Michigan Scientist ANN A RKOIL Mich. W) Cys tine, a little known food element In proteins, shows In somo unusual experiments at the University of Michigan, how healthful food may become dendly poison. This substance Is white and crys talline, one of the amino acids In meats and other protein foods. It has been fed to rats by Prof. L. U. Newburgb, in the study of causes of nephritis, a disease of the kid neys. He found, as did Lafayette Men del, that It Is a necessity to henlth of the rats. An Insufficiency did harm to them. Hut It could also be lethal poison, and Its good and bad effects depended altogether on the amount eaten. ( W hen it was red uced to t h ree parts In ten thousand of the diet, tho rats fulled lo grow well. Twice AT DIAMOND LAKE DIAMOND LAKH. Ore.. July I. (Hpl.) Itonistratlon frum Med ford At Diamond Lake. June 22nd to 2Rth, Included the following: Iker. a Ivan K. If. H. Janes. Verl G. Walker, K. Kershaw, Mr. and Mrs. Waddell. .Mr. and Mrs. If. F. W. Spllver, Kenneth Jerome and fam ily, J. Couzens. J. A. Colwell and boys, Harold V. Isaac, Ituth Isaac. Virgil Martin. Billy Carless. Frank Bcmuth and family. Hill Cunnlns h&m, Sandy Green, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Gritsch. and J. J. Grltsch. Registrations from vicinity of Medford Included: Mr. and Mr. George W. Tloss and Oeorge fiichroeder. Ashland; Florence Hiif nott, Josophlne Sin nott. K. K. Metzgcr and family. Dr. P. rt. Shoemaker and family, Itose burg: W. IH. Ferguson. Gold Hill; H. M or nan and party, Grants Pass. SALEM MOTHER ILL ON GOLO STAR JOURNEY PARIH. July ?. tft Mr. Jen nle lnndgraf of Salem, Ore., a member of the 'H" party of gold star mothers, today was confined to 4he hotel at Lille, following a heart attack. Mrs. Iandtcraf was stricken last night after he had visited her son's grave In Fhtnders. Her con dition was described a "not im mediately serious." ". i - i - - 1 - - - - - - the NEw'M X ' .. ; . : lean Medical association here, ssys he believes American industry "makes a serious mistako in dis carding a man when he reaches the age of 45." "When this Is done." Dr, Brit ton says, "the ten years of a man's liTo In which ho attains his maxi mum efficiency aro being thrown awtiy. Tho ago of maximum' ef ficiency begins at 35 and continues lo rr, and the greatest degree of efficiency Is attained in tho last ten years. . .. ' , ' Ul'Vom the ages of 4ii to 55 a man delivers moro in judgment, stabilityuml loyalty, and. (irOVery virtue excoptrnuWUlifriTiigllity and sheer muscular'pOwci"." ' that amount wns just health. It - became harmful when In creased to six to ten parts to nno thousand; at five per cent It was poison v at 10 it killed rats In a few days; and nt 20 was quick death. Professor Ncwburgh sought tho substances In proteins anil tho amounts that may cause nephritis. "It may be difficult," ho said ,"to believe that an essential food stuff is capable of damaging tho kidney. Yet he concluded that precisely this can happen. The length of time Is also important, and the amino acids vary In effects. Professor Newburgb points out that the character of proteins dif fer in casoin, beef muscle, beef liver and seeds of cereals and vegetables. These characters aro more important than concentra tion or length of feeding. DURING A QUARREL MOTOR OIL LONGER-LASTING, "CRACK-PROOF" ,. . VANCOUVER. Wash., July ii.- tP) Alex Beletskl, 48, FclldH. Wash., who authorities said was! shot and wounded sorlously last night by his father.' Charles Belet skl, 87, was near death in a hos pital here today. Sheriff E. W. McCrite. Clark county, said the elder Beletskl shot his son during a quarrel. The son Is said to havo beaten bis father. Following the shooting the father walked to a nearby river where his other son was i swimming, told him he had shot j Alex and then threw the revolver into the river. ALBANY GIRL INJURED BETWEEN AUTOMOBILES SALEM. Ore.. July 2. (P) Miss Allle Worrell of Albany was pain fully Injured on a Kalem street yenterdny when she whs caught between two automobiles, one of which was backing from the curb. She received lacerations on tho limbs and body and It was fear ft leg whs fractured. 2000 ARE EMPLOYED IN SALEM CANNERIES HAI.BM. Ore.. July 2. 0P A urvey made Tuesday ahowa that about 2000 persona are employed In Kalem cannerfei. t in, n, Twi oar f I MIE Texas Company ngaiu tlnnon stratcs its leadership in llic petroleum field with the introduction of a vastly superior, new product a motor oil that lasts longer that is crack -proof a motor oil that meets exactly every requirement of the high speed automobile engine of today! This new oil revolutionizes lubri cation values as completely ns the new and 6efcrTcxaco Gasoline, the original "dry" gas, revolutionized motor fuels in the Spring of 1926. An Oil Without Prcceilcnt There have been oils that gave, remark able mileage. There have, been oils that flowed freely at zero. There Iipvc burn oils tiiat kept your engine completely free of wax and carbon troubles. Hut never until now have all these advantages been combined in anyonesinglclubricant.That motor oil is ready for you today. It is the ncwTexaco longer-lasting and crack proof. Itoad tests laboratory tests have proved it. Available in all our 48 States Fill your crankcasc with this new crack proof motor oil today. It will more than pay you, not only in greater value for your lubrication dollar hut for your car dollar as well. It is manufactured in five grades: C, I), E, F, and G, corresponding in body to Society of Automotive Engi neers (S. A.E.) viscosity ratings. 30y a quart everywhere (35 for grade G). T It K T K X A S COMPANY lirfinrn nf n rnmplrlm linn of Ttxarn Pmtrolrum PnHurlt inrlwllng iinmlin, Mntnr Oil, InHiutrial Lubricant!, Huff road and Marin Lulirli anlt, Farm Lubricant, RoadAiphalU and Atphatt Roofing, V1i I JE ,Y