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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1930)
PXQE SIX MEDFORD MXTL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OttEOOX, .WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1930. A 1 E EASE HAS Passenger and Flying School Project Will Use Facilities ; Local Airport Toyvrr Lot Goll. Regulations Favored ' With Fee. ' Crater Lake Visit In 1884 Recalled By Recent Guest wmes OF The city ,-counoll tout night In structed Hh airport commltlea to negotiate a lease with the new 126,000 local company, The Ore gon .flying Service, Inc., for uho o( the. airport an the base (or ita passenger carrying service and (ly ing instruction school, to be sub mitted to the council at Its next meeting; favored, passing an ord inance governing the conducting of the midget golf courses, making them sanitary and the like; re quiring them to pay a license fee and instructed that the measure should be , drawn ; by . ItB license committee;'' decided to readvertlse for bide for the city to put In 11, OOOlineal feet of sidewalk where the property owners had not acted, and listened to protests against the noise- emanating from the Hfone dog hospital in the north end of the city; and the temporary storage yard for slab wood at Col ugibuu nd Kim streets, and took sojne action on both. ,'a number of other matters were discussed and acted on, including a Pra of the owner of the C'hlld ers building, made through Attor ney Frank DeHouza, that the license fee for his dunce hall be reduced, as. he regarded the present license a unreasonably high, In view of the taxes he had to- puy on the entire building. ( Will Heguutr Midget Courses t All the councilmen were agreed that' the midget golf course's be licensed -and regulated a to sanitary- and. other conditions, and in structed the Aloense committee to draw up an ordinance embodying these provisions for submission at tle next counoll meeting. .. ..it was agreed that the fee should tie Itlo. for every six months, (or each . ill-hole or less course, and HAV for each additional 9 holes. The councilmen also expressed themselves unanimously thut each midget couie must have modern toilet facilities; that the measure should provide regulation (or the proper Jc6nduot o( such a course, and requiring owners to avoid truf fle congestion on any street or alley near their courses, and in can traffic congestion or other matters should eventually require tbe' employment of a speolul pol iceman, the owner or operator of such a course should be required 10 pay for such employment. ,ln general, although the mayor and councilmen thought, that the ixesent miniature golf course was' conducted In a satisfactory manner, nbd had for its patronage orderly tvowda of players and onlookers. Tue main complaint of neighbors cigalnst the oourse Is caused by the fact that the course lucks toilet ?clltles and causes some traffic ngestlon. The city officials, however, fore Hfe that with the increase of the popularity - of the present - midget course, and another new tfne soon ti be In operation on North River side, to snfeguard the. public the etty must adopt rules governing tftotl courses. Dor Hospital Nuisance . "rrotests of the residents in the Immediate neighborhood of the dog hospital in the far north end of the olty Is an old story to the city council, but the latest protests are- more- pronounced. . ' Attorney Frank Newman appear ed at lust night's meeting In be hulf of the people living in the neighborhood, flanked by a amull delegation of protestors. ' Mr; Newman declared that the nW hospital was a continuous nui sance, Charged that the confined dbgs howled day and night, said people In the neighborhood could nbt sleep, that the dog barks and Irowla 'even disturbed residents Mocka awsy, and all In all that i . What you do in popping com j. ; is always dont in i casting hills bROS coffee ' -h ' .-",.-' ,; j ., , A Uttli t 0 tim in the tapper and tVff kernel tf corn tsf popped evenly. By routing Hills Bros. (Coffee Jut ftwUs t tim every berry it routed evenly. This pat ented, continuous procest Con fX)llcd Roasting gives Hills Bros. Coffee flavor no other coffee has. I ' ' . sVms fntt tit Mitmsl Mrs t. Btill $itmi arta tit I. lMh lit jtJimmtm. f,M0. (By Myrna Bunh) CRATER LAKE, July 16. (Special) An intoreHtlng vlnltor at Crater Lake recently was EdT win .P. Hrnnch of Melnourn, Fla. This' visit waH hi second at Crater Lake,' the first beinK in 1HX4, one. year preceding William Gladstone Hteel, known as the "father of Crater Lake."1 - - Mr. "Branch "and three compan ions made their way through the mountains to Llnkvllle, now known as Klamath Falls, then proceeded through Fort Klamath to the lake. In a short talk' which Mr. Branch gave the guests at the Ho tel, he prexented a very interest ing description of his experiences. His Impressions of his first visit were vividly described, and he em phasized that, although the im provements in methods of trans portation had made his ourney more comfortable und rapid, he still received the same thrill of forty-six years ago. "To me Crater Lake will re main etHrnnl," Mr. Branch said, "and although the roads are changed and there are many com forts at the rim, they have not altered the lake." r Ah Mr. Branch was preparing to leave' by stage for Medford he re marked that the comparison be tween his farewell to Crater Lake In 1HS4 und 1930 was indeed great. At the end of his first visit here, they ,were forced to tie a log to the back of the wagon which car ried their supplies, to keep It from running away down the rough rocky road. Mr. Branch admitted however, that It took quite a vivid imagination to call the trail a "road." "the people In the neighborhood can stand It no longer." He charged that the hospital was also used as a pound and a dog boarding house.- The council voted that the mat ter be referred to City Attorney F. P. Farrell. to Investigate thor oughly and recommended to the council what steps should be taken to abate the complained of nui sance. ' ProtcKtA vs. Wood Yard In the discussion of the protests against the Valley Fuel company storage yard for slab wood at Columbus, and Kim streets, It de veloped that Mr. Frldutte, operator of that concern had purchased the ground for the storage yard, thinklhg.it was outside of the city limits, and further that the stor age of the slahwood was a tem porary affair, as the wood there would all be sold and hauled away to the home for fuel by next May. Because of ih Is and the fact that the council fire committee through Its chairman, Kugene Thorndyke, reported that the stor age yard was not deemed a fire menace, and that the owner of the nearest house to the piles of stored slubwood was present and stated that he had no objection to the storago yard, the city offlcails were Inclined to think that no great harm had been done by the pres ence of the storage yard, other than unsightlyness, especially as Mr. Frldetto stated that all the hauling und storuge of wood had practically been completed, and referred the matter of the protests to the city planning commission. Ouq Hlddt'r For Rldmvalks Only one bid having been receiv ed for laying of 11,000 lineal feet of Htdewulk by . the city, where properly owners had failed to put It 111 themselves, and charging It up against, the property, the coun oll after , some discussion decided to readvertlse foV bids. ''' J ' . The pne bid was that-of George Prlddy, who bid 17 cents a foot. Although the other Bldewalk con tractors had all been notified and asked tn enter bids they did not I do so. The1 city officials, however,! In order to avoid any possible criticism In the matter, thought It j wise to readvertlse und muke an- other effort to get other contrac tors to bid, . I Cliff Edwards to Broadcast Tonight on M.J. B. Program Cliff Edwards (ITkelele Ike) will again appear on the M. J. B. Cof fee Dornl-Tasse Revue, a. program originating In the Los Angeles stu dlos and heard locally over KOIN mrr rc. Kduanis from 8:30-9:'00. George Olwen and his music will furnish the dunce numbers fcr the revue. , Cliff ICdwurdit Is world famous for his recordings and has a back ground of vaudeville, the Follies, and talking pictures. He will sing on this week's revue, songs from his most recent movie successes also some of tho old. favorites. STORY 1 (Continued from Pago 1) VANCOUVER, B. C; July 10. (P) Colonel Hohcoo Turner, Unit ed States flier, hopped off nt 7:00 u. in. today from a farm - hear Lad nor, 20 miles south of Van couver for TiaJuuna, Mexico. Accompanying . Colonel Turner on the flight Is a six months' old Hon club us mascot. Turner Is seeking to establish a new speed record fcr border to border flight, and hoped to reach Mexico In seven hours. organisation from Its Inception ut Hpokane In 1917 to date, and sug gested that the organisation affili ate with the Pacific coast division of the American Association for the Advancement of Hcience. Prof. Besse said the IS years of organis ation had proven their right to live, by tho old they had given by sci entific lnvestlongatlona) work for the fruit Industry of the. Pacific Northwest, ' . i -., j . darloton l4iuds Science IMward W. Carleton, president of. the Fruitgrowers league, limited to 10 mlnuteH Jn describing tho inception and growth" of nclentlflo fruit-raining In this section made It in hla allotted time, and did a good job. Mr, Carleton declared that scientific methods and study had made. possible Intensified fruit production. Leonard Carpent?r,a member of the winter pear committee, told tho gathering of the market expansion progrum In Detroit last year, and the plans for the coming season, David R. Rosenberg, recently re turned from Chicago, told of the plans of the Pacific Pear Growers council, composed of members from the fruit districts of the Pa cific coaflt, describing the prog ress and alms of thut body. During the program musical numbera were executed by Prof. Granville Jackson, and the session was enlivened by a' story now and then from the staid presiding sci entists. - ' ' i 1 ' 1 1 4 Colonel Turner flew low over the local airport about ton o'clock this morning so that a check could bo mude hy officials. - He Is mak ing a non-stop flight. EGYPTIAN MOB STONES GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL ALEXANDRIA, Egypt, July 16. WP) Several thousand Egyptians assembled outside the government hospital today and belted It with stones. Order' was restored with grcnt difficulty. N GSLAND BLAST HELD War Echo Heard in Location of Key Witness Admits Fire Started at v Work Bench, But Denies Any Sabotage Attempt. WASHINGTON, July 16. P) j Ht III looking for the Cause of the war time explosion and fire which destroyed huge stores of ammuni tion ut Kingsland, N. J., govern ment Investigators have located after a twelve-year search the, missing key witness In the case. He Is Theodore Woznak, who was employed at the Kingsland ammunition plant, and subse quently became an Important fig ure In Germany's defense against America's $40,000,000 sabotage claims for this disaster and the similar one at the Black Tom ar seninl of the Lehigh Valley rail road. Quiz KcfuHcd Affidavits filed late yesterday with the German-American mixed claims commission said he had been found at Tupper Lake, New Vork, in cumpuny with an attor ney for Germany, who had refused to permit American agents to question him. Woznlak was Interrogated Im mediately after the disasters, but when the adjudication ' of the clalnm began after the war he could not be found. Arguments before the commission were ended, and then tho case was reopened by the Germans. They suld Woznlak had appear ed at their headquarters and ad mitted tho Kingsland fire started ut his work bench, but denied he had caused It or been engaged In a Kahotugo program for. imperial Germany. H T U. S.M6YMENT HEAD IS STORY 2 (Continued from Pag 1) at Portland 28 '4 cents per hundred. In case this Is not reduced to meet water competition the Medford rale could not exceed 87 cents per hun dred, or a reduction of 3 cents per hundred over til present sched ule.' m Other class and commodity rates will be reduced proportionately, It Is expected, and the Intermediate territory will be In a more favor able position, so far as rates aro concerned, on account of the deci sion. Officials Qf the Medford chamber today expressed (trallflca Hon at the commission's decision and await the expression of the transportation companies as to their future action. Use fjprtnsr Walrr. t.OttlHVILhK, Ky.. July IS. -Wajer from the spring where' Lincoln drank as a boy will be used for christening- lh -- new cruiser I-oulsvllle Heptemher t at Puget Bound, Washington. SAl.KM, Ore., July .10.-f-'W)rT Frunrls i. Jones of WnahlpKton, p. C, director of the United HtateH employment service, will be n visitor In Oregon between July 20 und 25. nccordlnK to Informa tion received by C. H. Oi-nmi stutf luhor commlsHlpner nnd fedt4t d'-' rector of labor for Oregon,, jones will arrive first In Portland and will visit Salem, Eugone andMod ford where free employment or flces are located. ; IS ADVICE FOR RELIEF EAST LAKHINO. Mich., July 10 (?) Agricultural experts nt Michigan State College offer a new form of farm relief to those who nre worrying about the price of wheat, Keed to livestock, says a statement Issued by four depart ment heads. At present prices, wheat Is worth $5 more a ton as a dairy feed than as a commer cial cerenl, the experts n-tert. . I Te Wonderful inoco ate . prvortDread I Fransetta Another Ideal Jwrnmcr Qake Keeps Indefinitely Fransetta cookie-cake has "IT." Choc olate shortbread as delicious as any chocolate cake you ever tailed. And an ingratiating chocolate creamy center that adds jusl the right tajte delight. It keeps indefinitely. Order by name from your grocer. Gncofihc Qyltany 1 rou-Biu. famous Qookie-Qakes TRU BLU BISCUIT CO. Spoknf. PonUnJ. Sttitlt Store Hours 8:30 to 5:30 Saturdays 8 until 8:30 Jltuuit& tOWlUIVUU JLMJ Uj, m n r -THE STOPE FOR EVEBVBODV BUTTERICK PATTERNS EXCLUIVELY AT MANN'S THURSDAY WILL BE Remnant Day Hundreds of Yards of Seasonable Fabrics in various lengths. Remnants of Silks, Rayons, Cottons, Lin ens, Nets, Cretonnes, Sheeting, Scrims, Marquistet and Woolens On Sale BELOW Thursday COST ! MAIN FLOOR Cotton Remnants Remnants of wash goods including ginghams, percale, voile, linen, suitings, pique, dimity, lawn, cotton broadcloth, and many other cotton mixed materials. A marvelous opportunity to buy material for aprons, children's clothes, blouses, etc. Silk Remnants Desirable lengths in beautiful quality silks including flat crepe, crepe de chine, rayon crepe, georgette, ABC silks, rayola slip satin, crepe-back satin, brocaded rayons, printed crepes, etc. .And every one of these remnants a bargain Wool Remnants Woolen remnants in lengths suitable for children's dresses, women's and miss es' skirts, jackets, etc. Included in this group of woolen remnants are flannels, tweeds, kasha, wool challie, wocl crepes, and mixtures. Many of these lengths will make a school coat for some miss? . . , ' ' Domestic Remnants Included in this great sale of remnants are dozens upon dozens of choice do mestic pieces consisting of lengths of sheeting, pillow tubing, plisse crepe, : linen toweling, nainsook, dimity, and muslins bleached and unbleached. You'll find plenty of uses for these pieces. , ' ; ''(,' Drapery Remnants Many desirable remnants of fine quality cretonne, scrims, nets, dam asks, and marquisette in good lengths suitable for drapes, chair covers, cushions, pillows and fancy work will be found in this group, but they will go fast, so be here early tomorrow and get your pick. : SEE REMNANT WINDOW! NOTICE.... Miss Hattie M. Ford Special Representative From the DOROTHY GRAY SALON New York City NOW in Our Toiletries Department She Is pspprlally qualified through her long experience In New York lo Rive you expert advice In the heat methods of keeping your face and throat beautifully young. There la no charge lor her alrvlrea. Tune in on KMED for Miss Ford's Talks Thursday Friday 11 to 11:15 2 to 2:15 Sale of Furs $25,000 4 Stock of Harry Barron, Expert New York Furrier, on Display and Sale AT MANN'S If you have not already seen this display of beautiful furs, do ao it once, because it is the most complete line ever shown in Medford. The glorious coats and ' scarfs of Mr. Barron's collection are among the finest made. Every garment a masterpiece of the furrier's art. GLORIOUS FUR COATS $97.50 to S350.00 ADORABLE FUR SCARFS $42-50 to $175.00 . We guarantee all Barron Furs