r
ford Mail Tribune
Second Section
Six Pages
Second Section
Six Pages
Twenty-Fifth Year
MEDFORD, OR EC! ON, SUNDAY. .1 1'EV 27. 19:10.
Xo. 126.
GOLD SPOT OF
JOSEPHINE IS
TO BE TRIED FOR BROADWAY. SHOW
KENTUCKY BEAUTIES HONORED
24 CITIES OF
STATE REPORT
PIGS WORD OSC IN THIS STATE
r
FEED WHEAT TO ROAD FLAGMEN
GOAT PASTURE
I FARMERS
MODERN ZED
DEPOSIT GAINS
The Glory of 'Dry Diggin's'
Has Departed, and Ghost
Town Attracts No Atten
tion From Cushion-Cal-
loused Tourist.
f: RANTS Pass. .Inly 20. (P)
When the afternoon sun casts its
slanting .shadows upon the ore
looked hills of Josephine county
there comes from beneath the
shade-colored pines a herd of goats
to crop thp scrub oaks in a Bully
wanned clearing.
To the trans-continental tourist,
rinh Ion -calloused nnd mile-mad,
Ihe -presence of the goal means
nothing; the scrulwiakH mean no
thing; the gullies mean nothing:
ihe neat piles of rock mean no-,
thing. I
But to the old sourdoughs of this
necrion who oan vividly recall the
tlmo when the mining camps be-j
longed to the quick and thp dead.
thp little old sun-buked spot means;
much.
For the place Is Dry Dlggins.
When the old sourdoughs knew
it. talked of Ir, loved It, It pro
duced gold. Today as the tourist
tee.s It, It produces mohair.
Hack of the sun-baked present.
1 JViidden In the roots of thp scrub
4 oaks and madroncs Dry Digglns has
u record of wealth. Kach gully Is
a grave of a Chinaman, each clus
ter of gathered granite a hand
tooled monument to those yellow
workmen who greatly assisted in
writing western romance into the
hills and rills of southern Oregon.
Dry Digglns got its name, like
fli-aw ('reek, Touse Creek, Starva
tion Creek, Hutcher-knife Creek,
and ti number of other points be
cause the name hest told what It
represents,
Dry Digglns was given Its name
simply because It was dry digging.
In Its dry state the hillside repre
tented nothing more than clay and
granite.. Saturated with water it
glistened Uke.acrps of diamonds. ,
"ft has been said U can race' its
discovery to the fact children of
miners In the neighborhood used to
go to the hillsides after a rain to
gather gold. Once the sun blasted
away on the clay and granite for
an hour the pan would yield no
thing. '
Once miners gained the secret of
Its wealth water was piped to It.j
and there was washed from Us sides
thousands upon thousands of dol
lars. Observations made in the
WUSIIf.l Ul III" (lln:t li'ri im- mini
tandiwnrk of w.irkmcn flown.
Kvery crevice in the soft crumbling
rooks has been roiioweu, every iraii
hft by wintpr streams, panned and
spanned., Tons upon tons of gran
ite and clay were moved in the
era of gold glimmering clays.
Rven though its history Is filled
with adventure, realization o 1 1
wealth, disappointment or failures,
the same, fate that blazed mining
r.imp fame in VIrnwntown. Waldo.
KerhyviUe. and. a score of other
wideopen places passed by Dry Dig
gins with a nodv
The miners toiled upon its hill
sides for- the gTld' but they went
other places to ponder In the alco
holic mists of such dives us Hilly
Xagel's joint or the place kept by
old Dutch Bachellor. l'rnylng Kyan.
a character who used to work on
the railroad and nrench In the pur
ple twilights of the summer days,
used to make regular calls to Dry
Digglns.
Like a meteor in the western sky
Dry Digglns showered Its gold
llnted light across the mining world
ihen slowly dimmed In the horizon
of mankind's memory.
For years the place that once re
founded to thp tune of picks and
pans slept In the silence of a ghost
town.
. v i in ii i.i nit- nun mi"
Hum Necessary
DENVER, Colo., July 2C. UP)
Whiskey nnd brandy aft necessary
medicinal agents In the practice of
dentistry were npproved hy the
American Dental association on
ihe eve of the closing of Its seven
ty. second annual convention today.
"Tiny" Hewitt Cornier Pitts
burgh and Army fullback, has hpen
added lo the grid coachins staff at
Alabama.
SERVICE FOR
ALL SIZES
L. C. S CHAFER 0
Basement Medford Bldg.
The only Exclusive Electric Motor
Repair Shop In Southern Oregon.
PHONE 90-J-2
Electric Motor Repairing
Rewound motor for tale or rent
Assoitatvit I'ivhs I'hutu
Earl Carroll (left) and Jimmy Savo, a comedian In his latest
Broadway production, 'Vanities," and two chorus girls were held for
trial on police charges that two scenes In the show were Indecent and
obscene. The producer and comedian are shown In court after fur
nishing ball for their freedom.
I
u
ATTACK OF BULL!
UOSEIH'ltO, .Inly 2tl. (P)
William Frank Khcltnn, fcl. North
Myrtle Creek farmer, died today
from injuries received yesterday
when he was attacked by a bull.
Id bad released the visions but)
from Its pen so it could go to
Water, and was attempting to lead
the animal back to the pen.
He bad put a rope over the
hull's neck when it attacked him.
lie seizrd the animal's horns to
prevent It goring him. and was
twice thrown heavily to the!
glUiund. his onf- ltulph, "WitnesHed
the attack and drove off the en-'
raged animal with a club. Shel-
ton was unconscious anil died
from .a fractured skull.
COltVAT.MS. Ore.. July 26. (7P1 '
A resolution suggsiing a poultry I
demonstration train be taken thru
Oregon to better acquaint poultry
men Willi modern anil efficient
methods of the industry, was'
adopted by the Oregon Poultry,'
association at the conclusion of its i
annual convention here late yes-
terday. The plan is tu'nperatc the j
train on a similar schedule to that
used by the recent "dairy special.'
STOOLS FATAL
F,
HOCI1KSTKII. X. V.. July 21.
(P) Toadstools gathered to sup
plement the slender food supply of
t he a 1 most pen n i less fa m i ly of a
disabled and unemployed World
War veteran today caused the
death of two girls.
Josephine Ptirnn, six, was found
dead in bed early tills morning.
Her sister f Jrnce, It, died several
hours later in St. Marv's hospital.
COUNT
THE
MAIL TRIBUNE
YELLOW
BOXES
ON COUNTRY ROADS
AND HIGHWAYS
It' A Good Way
To Check Country Circulation
niio iiptim nr
imllo mum ur
PROSPECT HUNTER
lMlOSP K CT, ( ) re July 2 1 .
(Special) One of Tracy Uoothby's
horses was found dead last week,
just off the Crater Lake highway,
n ea r 1 n i on C reek . It had ev i -dcntly
been shot for a deer. Mr.
Pool h by a ml h Is t ea m ha d been
employed on the fupco drilling
project at the junction of By bee
Creek a nd Jtogue 1 liver on the
Diamond Lake road. Some camp
ers frightened the horses no badly
witli their Pourth of July celebra
tions that they escaped from their
pasture anil started for their home
a t I led I !Ia nket . The rema ining
horse was finally located in the
forest, about two weeks later.
Marks on the ground indicated j
that the horse, after being shot, j
had made his way off the high-
way. where he had fallen. He
struggled to his feet several times!
and tried to go on with his mate.
I i is mute had evidently stayed j
with him to the end. then necm
ing to u nd erst and that the high
way was unsafe, sought to reach
his home through the dense forest.
PKN'DLKTOX. Ore. July 26.
(p This city is now assured a
new airport close to town to handle
all Utnils of air truffle. The city
council last night passed a resnlu
tin favoring entering Into an agree
iiient. with the chamber of com
nierco to purchase a tract nearer
the illy for construction of a new
field. The old field is three miles
east of Pendleton.
.Malayans Uke Perfumes
WASHINGTON (Pi There is no
bear market on perfumes and cos
metics in Hritish Malava. Kxporls
of these products this year may
eclipse the high record of last
year when the Malayans doubled
their 1I2H exports from the t'nlt-i-rl
States.
7C
! Animal Husbandry Expert, i
Says Eastern Oregon!
I Growers Now Buying
I Feeder Pigs to Fatten On !
Low Priced Crop. j
O R HO O X ST A T K C I A A J( 1 K,
Corvallis. July 2C. With wlie.lt
at Its present low price, now is a
good time for wheat growers and
other farmers with pifts to realize
a profit from their cereut In the
form of pork, according to A. W.
Oliver, assistant professor of ani
mal husbandry at Oregoli Slate
college.
W h ea t this yea r for the f I rst
time in several years has gained
prominence as hog feed. Professor
Oliver sas, and some Oregon farm
ens are even buying feeder pigs at
their present high prices to feed
them the grain. Animal husband
ry specialists here emphasize bow
ever, that it is doubtful if it will
pay stockmen or farmers to buy
more pigs in ordT to feed them
cheap wheat.
Wheal has practically the same
value as food for hogs that barley
has and both are about the same
price now. While ground wheat
will put weight on the porkers, it
is recommended that It be sup
plemented with some protein food
such as skimmed milk or tank
age. It Is estimated that it takes
4fiu pounds of wheat alone to pro
duce 100 pounds of pork, but that
by using 200 pounds of milk the
same amount of pork can be pro
duced with about 300 pounds of
wheat.
While wheat has always been
fed to hoga in small quantities in
some localities. Professor Oliver
points out that the price of It '.n
some years has not made it profit
able and In most cases It has been
a losing proposition, ltecords kept
by the animal husbandry depart
ment since If 10 show an average
loss over the 20-year period nf 2S
cents per hindred pounds of
wheat to hogs over what the mar
ket price would have brought. The
same figures show a profit of one
cent n. hundred pounds for barley
fed to porkers.
"The ratio is now favorable for,
converting wheat Into pork," Pro-;
fessor Oliver declares. "The troub-j
lo is In getting feeder pigs since j
their production Is from five to
nine per cent below normal. Some ;
are being shipped to Oregon from j
the middle west, bit twith even an !
average corn crop In the corn belt .
demands there are likely to take I
care of any surplus." j
ROCKETS 1 TO
WASHINGTON, July 2fi. fP)
Mapping weather of the air ts
successfully ns weather of the
earth's surface now is charted is
seen by Dr. Chure O. Abbot.
Smithsonian secretary, as a possi
ble achievement of high power
rockets.
Commenting on experiments of
Prof. Robert H. Ooddard of Clark
university, who has been granted
Guggenheim .support in rocket
work, he stressed the value of
moderate-height measurements to
aviation.
"Itocketfi at all principal air
ports," ho said, "will be making
dally measurements of tempera
tures, pressures, wind velocities
nnd fleet rlcal conditions.
The
Fruit
Of Your
Dollars
Yon nre losing Dollars all
llic tiino your money is
idle you nrn producing
dollars when your I'iiihU
mul pnrniii)4S arc here, nt
eornpfMiiifl interest.
'Partner in Community
Development"
Therefore the State Hires
Them Instead of the Con-
tractor to Insure Courtesy
to the Public -- Stage
Travel Heavy Problem.
S.M.KM. July 2i!. wV) A U-niilo
stretch of tlie Oregon -Wucdi I ik Ion
highway, between Athena and Mil
ton, t'matilla county, is a fair ex
ample of the problem heavy stage
traffic is placing before the state
highway department, It. H. Ual
ilnek. assistant state highway en
gineer, in charge of maintenance,
reported to bis office.
A state force is now at work on
thai stretch of highway, widening
l he shoulders three feet on each
side, making a 2t!-foot roadway In
place of the 20-fooi width. It Is
estimated tlitv cost will be about
(27,0(10. Mf 9
Like all standard state highways
in (ireKnit, the main paved roadway
is only I ti feet wide. With the old)
shoulders, two feel 4.11 each side. It t
was 20 feet wide. The large motor I
trucks and stages are eight feet
wide, making it necessary for them
to veer from pavement to graveled !
shoulders whenever they met an-1
other vehicle. Those having dual-
pneumatic tires on the rear, as
many do, it is said, almost con-)
tinuoimly have one lire on the
.shoulder. This means a constant
sucking, aand consequent wearing
out of the shoulder at a rapid rate.
Slum bier maintenance, Italdock
said, is constant ly becoming more
expensive.
The slate crew on the Athena
Mlltnn section Is laying shoulders
of quarry rock and binding It with
volcanic ash. Next year an oil top
probably will be added.
Italdock said the department is
constantly modernizing Its work to
ea rry o n reconst met lo n with t he
least possible inconvenience for
traffic: and Is developing new meth
ods eacli year. Oiling operations
have been perfected so vehicles are
ww&ly n -contact with the" newly
laid oil and practically no com
plaints aro received from motorists.
One recent improvement Is the
employment nf slate-paid flagmen
on Improvement Jobs of flagmen
employed by contractors. There was
a tendency among the latter to show
discourtesy to Ihe public, Huldock
said. This l not tolerated by the;
department with flagmen on Jts
own payroll. I
AS STATE LIBRARIAN
SALT-'M. Ore., July 2fl. M)
Miss Harriet C. Long, a Wiscon
sin woman, la tho selection of the
trustees of the Oregon state li
brary to succeed the late Virginia
Cleavor liacon as slate librarian.
H was announced by Governor
Xorblad today that Miss Long was
elected at tho trustees meeting
yesterday.
Taken Cigars
POKTLAXO. Ore., July 2(1. P)
Ten cigars from Iho manager's
di-Hk comprised t he loot missing
today from the office: of the Mult
nomah I i on Works. A burgla r
broke In a side window to enter
last night.
Brevity
Is the Soul
of Wit
I
DR. I. H. COVE
H In ton wnrnt tn rend
leriKfliy OfH. If you liavn any
loolh troiilile ronifi to my
nlefi rofil offices ami rerelve
1 1 1 liest ik'iilal servitw Dial
money ran liuy.
Dr. I. H. Gove
Dependable
Dentistry
235 Eait Main, Upttjlra
Phont 872-J
1 tex w Mil f
TV P I
Gov. Flem D. Sampson awarcllna commlsslom aa "colonelt" to
tola Sibbrcl (left) of Lexington and Cleo Snyder, at the capltol after
Miss Sibbrel had won title of "Miss Kentucky" In ttate beauty con
test. They will represent their state at Galveston, Tex., beauty pag
eant In August. .
TOSSI
OFF EIFFEL TOWER
PARIS, July 211. (P) Willi the
coming of summer tourists, police
again are worried hy the practice
of throwing two sou pieces from
the top platform nf the Klffel
tower.
At the foot of the structure Is a
small pool and a coin may be toss
ed Into It from one side of the
platform. The danger is that cross
winds may sail the copper discs
onto tho crowded foot paths, ball
istic experts puh.ttng out thnt
coins falling from a height of 1000
feet might cause serious Injury.
The official altitude therefore, is
that visitors may throw away their
money In Paris if they tike, but
not from the Kiffel tower.
SALKM, Ore.. July 2fi. P) Col.
W. It. Mart ram, manager of t he
state flax Industry, has received a
letter from HelfaHl, saying that a
hill prohahly wilt he introduced In
the Irlrdi parliament to permit the
importation of flax products from
(trefoil, notwithHtandiiiK tho fact
that they ore partly processed by
prison labor.
If this Is done. Burt ram says, It
will have a very Important bearing
on the Oregon flax Industry,
Fined for Still
KOHHI.timi, Ore., July 2C,. p)
.loe l-'arqiuiluu wns fined $HM0
and sentenced to !h) days In jail to
day when he pleaded guilty to pos
session of n si 111. Ho was arrested
yesterday.
Of course you don't
know it, but you may be
j sitting on a volcano!
Title defects come to
light most unexpectedly
and when they do there 's
j trouble a-plenty for the
; property owner if his
title is not insured. If it
is insured the company
handles any litigation
i and makes good any loss
I , which may result.
f
Jackson County
Abstract Co..
! 121 E. Sixth St. Phone 41
mil J'le.. I'holo
KA I .KM, Ore., .Inly 20. !)
Representative W. C. llawley, one
of ihe authors of tho tariff hill
recently enacted by congress, who
has returned lo his home here,
believes relief of the unemploy
ment situation by fall will be one
of the early results of tho meas
ure, lie does not think, however,
that unemployment Is as serious
as reported, and attrlhules tho
high unemployment estimate to
the- census,--
"The census came at n slack
time of the year." ho said, "when
naturally a high unemployment
figure would bo noted. Hut most
of It was temporary, nnd by this
time a great number of men out
of jobs at that lime aro back at
work."
RUNS TOY BOAT 4 MPH
HKATTLB, Wash. (, What
bo liellevos Is the smallest gaso
line engine In the world, has been
built by Daniel Calkin, of tho Uni
versity of Washington.
Calkin built the motor, which
he CHtimnlcs develops about one
sixteenth horsepower, lo run a
small toy boat about .10 Inches
long. it operates on the same
principle as an outboard motor,
and travels about four miles an
hour.
The three-Inch flywheel makes
about 1000 revolutions a minute.
An eyedropper In used to fill tho
gasoline tank.
Calkin spent about 600 hours
building the molor, but In money
It eoHt him only ahout 7ft cents.
If You
8
on your
Investigate Our
and keep your
Medford Investment Co.
Phone 1224
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
H. S. DEUEL, President
FRIOO L. HEATH, Sr., Vice-Pres.
HAMILTON PATTON, Sec'y Mgr.
Pendleton Forges Ahead of
Klamath Falls Medford
Remains in Sixth Place,
Tho Showing Decrease. '
HA MOM. July 26. (?) Of thirty
Oregon cities, each of which hi
hank deposits of one million dollars
or more, all hut six participated In
the phenomenal Increase of $11,
4(i2.o"l.9 In Oregon deposits dur
ing Ihe three-month period from
March 21 to June 30, this year. This
Ih shown by an analysis of state
ments prepared by the stute banlc
department on the calls of thode
two dates.
Portland's total of $164,7 1 f.,563.
r3 In deposits is an lncreaje of
$7.1!)3.3,JS.4fi over the statement of
March 27. Salem with deposits of
$ t l.SSH.927.75, and ICugene wlih
$7,r,tit),7l9.71, show Increases of
$rftri,(;x3.r4 and $r.40,210.l3 respec
tively. These three cities retain
their places In the order named as
first, second and third In the list.
I 'end let on has forged ahead of
Klamath Kails for fourth position,
having Increased Its deposits $ r 4 f. , -!
M . 0 a to a total of $3,402,673.44.
Klamath Falls In fifth place has a
total nf $t;.2f,4,372.05, an Increas of
$335,647.65.
Medford remains in sixth place
hut Is one of the six cities thit
has lost deposits, showing $5,409,
3.46.00,4 decrease of $58,298.35.
Oregon City stays In seventh
place with $3,872,659.88, a Jump of
$1!HS,659.L'9.
Baker, while Its $3,593,871.06 H
a decrease of $36,429.29, Is not dis
lodged from Its rank of eighth. 1
Corvallis, with $3.454. R63. 78, an
Increase of $96,228.81, crowds Rosn.
burg out of ninth Into tenth posi
tion. The latter city lost $51,203.4!,
and showing a total of $3,354,638.
19. The Dalles rose from thirteenth
to eleventh In rank, passing both
Marshfteld and Albany. Its depos
its of $2,944,210.06 have grown
$131,799.09, -
Astoria Is perhaps the sensation
in the list, having leaped from fif
teenth place to twelfth, passing hot
only Marshrield and Albany but
also I-a 0,rande. Astoria's total of
$2,908,601.39, ln an Increase of
$274,901.77 In the three months .
Marshfleld tn thirteenth place
has deposltft of $2,715,316.93, an In
crease of $20,164.66.
McMlnnvllle, In sixteenth ' place
as before, shows $2,687,389.55, a
growth of $149,831.87. V
ELDERLY PRINCESS
WOULD BE HAPPY
PAHIfl, July 26. P) The 73
year old Princess Amade De
Llroglle, today registered tn court
a family suit to prevent her from
marrying Don Luis De Bourbon,
cousin of King Alfonso and 42
year old son of the Infanta eulla
of Spain.
A statement by the princess at
torney created a sensation, It said:
"I realize that many person. think
my marriage, with this much
younger man ridiculous but I want
to spend a few happy years before
T die.
Want
'
money
Preferred Stock
funds at home
125 E. Sixth St.
J. H. COOLEY
B. B. ELLIOTT
W. H. LVOIARD
W. W. ALLEN '