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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1930)
prciE SET JMEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OT?EfiQNT, SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1930. FEAR RACE WAR FLASHLIGHT BY REPRISALS IN ELECTRICITY TO ifAQTfDM PI I IRQ INDIAipiDiSPLAM State Troops Guard Against New Mob Violence Sob juries' Blamed By Prose : cutor for Lynching To Be a Quiz. 'MARION, Inri., Auff. fl. (P) Htnto police aided local offlccrH Uniuy In KunrdinK nulnHt frowh nutbroiikH of the mulj violence Which ThurHilay night was climax ed by the hanging uf two nog roe druKod from their tlln In the county Jail. Keur exiBted fur pon Klble retaliatory action )y young tH'Rroes for death of ThomaH Khlpp and Abe Smith. Colonel George 11. Ilea ley of IndlanapoUw, In command of two companies of the Indiana national guard arrived from Camp Knox, Ky lant night by plane In advance of the troops. Yesterday and IuhI night passed quietly except for curious throngs which crowded the courthouse Kiiuara where the mob lynched Shlpp, accused of fatally shooting Claude Deeter, 23, of Kalr mount, and Smith who admitted attacking AUhh Mary Hall, ID, of Minimi, Deeter's girl companion, MIkh Bull was to have selected her engagement ring today. J li nt end nhe will attend the Funeral of her fiance at his father's home til Jfafrmount. Prosecutor Harley Hardin who Jins announced he will summon the county grand jury September 1 to Investigate the lynching, express ed the opinion the record uf Grant i county Juries In fulling to convict, or in fixing lenient penalties, was I a dominant factor. In rousing the mob to fury. He suid, "I lieu id . several persons In the crowd re mark, If wo don't do something they'll Just let them go free.'" CLICVKLANO, Ohio, AitR. 9. (P) The clouds of acrid smokw that curl to the ceiling when newspa per photographer' flashlights boom a greeting to celebrltifiH will Boon be u thing of the past. A new photographic flash lump, electrically operated without smoke and noise, or odor. Huh been de veloped by (Jcnerul IClectric engineers. Because the new lump confineH the flush entirely within the bulb, eliminating fire hazard, It will make possible the tuklng of flushligbt pictures in places heretofore prac tically Impossible to photograph such as In theatres, airships and under water. The lamp consists of an oxygen filled bulb cnnluintng a specially coated lilument which flashes quantity of aluminum foil. The lump operates from the regular lighting circuit or from dry or star- uge butteries. A new bulb is uhmI for each flush. IZ TAKE HIGH TOLL IMIOKNIX, Ariz.. Aug. 9. (P Willi six dead and 12 missing in Arizona ami Sonera, Mexico, tor rential rains which have drenched and flooded tin- southwest for two days continued today with lessened force. Four persons were killed at Nognlcs, HonAru, Thursday morn ing when n cloudburst made 500 homeless and inflicted 200,0Utt damages in the Mexican town and Its twin city of Nogales, Arizona. The engineer and fireman of an castbound Santa Fe train were killed Thursday evening when their train went through a storm weakened bridge a mile east of Joseph City, Ariz. Twenty-nine passengers were Injured slightly. With advent of fair weather last night at Nogales searching parties begun systematic combings of the wreckage In a hunt for any addi tional victims. Ten . persons still are missing on the Mexican side. 1 BIG LEAGUES Chicago Cubs Only Team in West to Win Game Senators and Athletics Continue Victories Giants Gain. CHBW13LAH, -Vnsh.,' Aug. 9. (A) A dozen or mure families were ;out of their homea today! while men Joined crews of several hundred to fight a 8200-acre fur M fire that menaced this region. The blaze, -five days old, sprang Into a conflagration yestorday be fore a brisk northwest wind, leaping down a valley it licked ap several miles of a magnesitu! company's tramway, several miles of high power electric line and , destroyed at least one farm home. I The fate of other homes, hemmed ffl, was uncertain. ! T V T. Hmlth, deputy Htnte fire Warden, said It wns possible about 3200 neres were afire, but It was Impossible to tell the conflagra tion's extent. 'Farmers nnd their families col lected at the John Huvnge ranch, believing the fire would not reach there, but a few hours later they ydre driven away, jrom tne ueer I'nrk side or, the blaze came reports one home! was destroyed nnd at least half! n dozen others wero threatened. I r .Eight men were lost for several hours, but at midnight they work ed around the flames to safety. At first It wns feared they had perished. Ira Maudlin, a fighter, wnw badly burned. JACKPI WED 3RD WIFE T SALINAS, Oul., Aug. 0. (P) Jade Pick ford, screen actor, was today making preparations for his third trip to the altar, this time with Miss Mury Mulhern, New York stage actress, with whom he filed notice of intention to marry at tho Monterey county court house yesterday. Three days must elapse In accor dance with California law between tho time notice of Intention Is filed nnd u license secured. Tho couple announced no definite plans, but it was learned they would be married 'somewhere on Monterey peninsu la," presumably at Del Monte lodge, as soon as they secure the license, Tho groom-to-be gave his age us 33, and Miss Mulhern said she wns '22. Hoth gave their residences as Hollywood. Plckford's first wife, Olive Tho mas, actress, died In Paris several years ago, and he was divorced from his second, Marilyn Miller, also nn actress. Miss Mulhern appeared In the cast of "The Trial of Mary Dugan" In New York. She has not been In moving pictures. i, i . - PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 9. &) Workmen widening Union avenue were under orders to refrain from molesting a corner of the dismnn Ud Woodward building todny. When nil but one corner of tho building had been torn down, Woikmiln discovered a mother robin calmly r en ring her young. A board wait nailed to ft corner Joist nnd nest, mother and young were moved. Workmen transferred operations to another building pending the time the youngsters rench high school nge. T Ity Orlo KolM'rtAun, Associated l'nw Sports Writer. Another east-west warfare i on In full hlimt in the major league, and if the opening day's results are any criterion then the eastern clubs are due to see their percent age column rise several notches. Ten games were played in the intersectiona) combat yesterday, with the western tenm able to al vage only one of the conflicts. The Chicagu Cubs kept their section of the country from being completely whitewashed by defeating the Hos ton Itravi's 0 to 1. Home-runs by Clarence Itlair and Charley Grimm, coupled .with effective pitching by liny Hush, gave th champions the gfime. 'Huston's single run was the result of Walter Merger's 28th home-run. Keeping pace with the cham pions, the WaHhlngton Sena torn came from behind to defeat the tho Cleveland Indians, 5 to 4. George Pipgras and Harry Hice put together some effective hurl ing and batting, respectively, to give thf Yankees n 5 to 3 decision over the Browns. Plpgras held the Itrowns hlllesH for five Innings and then gave only five while Hice c counted for three runs with a sin gle, home-run and base on balls. I'he Hed Sox, aided by a six-run rally In the first inning, degeated Detroit, 8 to 0, to break the Tiger' ix-game winning streak. With Babe Herman smnckingth? ball for two home-runs, a double and a single In four times at bat, and Glen Wright and Jake Flowers adding a pair of circuit drives, the league leading Robins enslly down ed tho St. Louis Cardinals, II to fi. The Giants" gained a half-game on the Cubs and Robins when they were called on to play the pirates twice, and won both, the first 9 to 1 and the second 7 to 2. Lloyd Waiter experienced his best day at bale since reutrnlnr; to tho game, gelling four hits In five tlmew at bat In tho first encounter, but did not play in the second, Freddie Hrlckell, a recent acqui sition from the Pirates, played a lending part in the Phillies' H to 5 triumph over the Reds. The for mer Pirate singled and tripled in five times at bat nnd made a bril liant long running catch of Du rocher's drive. The Athletics found little trou ble with Chicago, whipping the White Sox B to 1 and 4 to 1 In a doubleheader and thereby Increas ing their lead in the American lea gue anoihcr half game. Hob Grove hung up hlB ISth victory, ns Al Simmons nnd Jimmy Dykes drove out home runs. Shores bested Ted Lyons In the laet game, letting the Hose down with three hits. With Rod and Gun In Rogue Valley By Erneit Roitel and Dick Green DUCKS MAKE IT 4 STRAIGHT ON MORS PEEVED BY BEARS HAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 9. P) Trans-America headquarters late yesterday Issued a statement call ing "the present market net Ion" of the corporation's stock "unjus tified ami deplorable." The statement was evoked by heavy selling which drove the big bank holding corporation down mroe than 'i n share on the Snu Francisco stock exchange. It rim m1 at $li. BRITISH POLO STARS SET SAIL LONDON. Aug. 9. (A) Six men who hope to bring back to Hngland from America the West chester Polo Cup after the Inter national matches in September left here today. They sail from South ampton later today aboard the Aquitanin. The six men nre Captain Tre maynu, Louis Lncey, Pot Itoark, Aldan Roark, George and Guin ness. Cnptaln Treninyne told the Associated Press British chances for recovering the cup "nre very good indeed; our team Is tho best available and will be well mount ed." Gerald Raiding, seventh member of the Rrltlsh team, sailed on the Muurctunla August 2. One Linotype Operator Works Typesetting Machines for Seven Newspapers in Six Different Cities ? . WH1TB PLAINS. N. V., Aug. 9 (- From r, single keyboard In White Plain linutypv machine were operate in wt ettlew of - .r i fwvafar vjrtiiwip'nMy set up In I In ! smMhed '.by linotype "machines inj nlx.wther plants of the Westchester 'County Vubllshern. Inc., which publishes seven newspapers In the: rountyv i. The teletypesetter a romblna 1 plon of the linotype and machines) now used by press associations Ini landing their news from city toj cjty.1 Combination!! of holes, ench combination representing a let-, 1er or figure, nre punched In at 'heavy composition tape at thoj master keyboard. This tape, run ning through a distributor, sends elect rtcul Impulses over telegraph wire to receiving et In sn ot her rUy m-hlch repunche the tottrr rwuhtiuilUTui In tape. Thl ihn W run through th lerlrV fc)rtKftt-it m linotyp. n 4 r W Mvf t mAlrti-M from which "the shwtf H W4 t molded exac(l) as it iM fumn. It had been used on short hook upe before, but Inst night was the first lime It hud hn used In tunl rotnposltlon for papers in w id fly separated elti The Iden of the tfletypcnMter was put forward In IflL'fl by Frank K. (liinnett, puhllhcr of n chtiln of newspapers through the east. Fights Last Night One of the most Interesting spots In .Inrkson county Is th( Chinese pheasant farm established north of Med ford along the Crater Lake highway by the Jackson County (flame 'Protective assy:lntion co operating with the state game com mission. Over 1 1 00 birds have been hatched nnd 24 0 more are expected before the season la over, bringing more birds into the coun ty at one time than ever before. Quite a number have left their coop and have been foraging for themselves for sometime, and others nre remaining close to the mother hens. The game farm covers nn area of approximately 40 ncres and is being directed by F. Arnspiger, father of Olin Arnspiger.. IIo came to Med ford n few weeks ago from Coberg. Ore., to begin duties, nnd reported yesterday that mortality rate In the birds has been reason ably low. 12a eh hen hatches from 15 to 2 birds, removed from the hatching pen In a few days to epec ially built coops, from which the little pheasants find their way in daytime to run around in grass un til darkness arrives. (By the Associated Press.) iportland made ft four straight i from Seattle by winning last night. 3 to 1. Mails' six-hit pitching and two first base Seattle errors won for Portland, which made lis runs off Kuether in the seventh. Hollywood's aecond period drive today had found one of its major obstacles In San Francisco's Seala, who held a three to one margin In the week's series, and were only ono game behind the Stars in standings. Han Francisco took sole com-' mand of second place last night, by knocking veteran Emil Yde out of the box in the sixth Inning to take the game, 7 to 3. Turpln hurled for the winners. j The Missions and Los Angelea found themselves in a third place tlo as a result of the Heda 13 to 11 win yesterday. Four pitchers worked on each sld;;, as the Angels lost out in the Reds' five-run eighth Inning attack. Sacramento took Its third of the They nre active and wander far from the coops, but always find their way back. Mr. Arnspiger last evening was pointing out paths in the grass caused by their ac tivities. In three or four weeks, the birilH take to their wings, and forget to come back, foraging for themselves. The coops are spaced approximately 200 feet apart to prevent broods from intermingling and endangering their successful growth. Kven the young birds, hardly out of the shell, reveal their wild instincts when approached, short legs carrying them at re markable speed away from sus pected danger. Over a dozen birds have ' been lot through the presence of linwks. Several were taken yes terday and the destruction Is apt to continue If the hawks t Hem solves are not destroyed. Mr. Arnspiger has taken several shotM at the raiders, but they have neveV come within sufficient range'to be ondangered. The pheasants, old enough to leave their coops, have been finding their way Into n cow pasture adjoining the pheasant farm on the north Hide, and It 's there that the hawks have the most success in making away with the game birds clutched In their claws. Hawks are not the 'only danger menacing the welfare of the farm. Two or three cats are cred ited with the death of n limited number of pheasants, but Mr. Arn spiger succeeded in eliminating this danger through the use of box trap.s. lie has also caught a skunk on the premises. Due to the largo number of birds that will remain on tho property after the season Is opened. In addi tion to the many that will scatter all over the valley, plans are being considered to make the property on which the farm Is located and a portion of the surrounding coun try a game refuge for at least year, to give the pheasants nn op portunity to propagate of their own accord. If the plans are carried out. the game refuge Is expected to mean much In Increasing the number of pheasants In the val ley in thi future. Together with arrangements underway to make the farm permanent, enough bird.s are expected to make .Jackson county famous for Its game bird hunting, ns well ns for its deer hunting nnd fishing. There is lit tle doubt that the farm will be op erated agnin next year. (My the Associated Press.) HAMltl ltO, Oermany. Hans Se h oe ninth k n oc k H mi t I ai d w ig Hay maun, Ocrmnn heavyweight champion, 1. championship. CIHOAOO. Marshall (Oary) Leach, Oary. Ind., outpointed K. O. White, Chicago. (10): Kddie Han. Poland, outpointed Herb Peterson, Chicago. 110). WINHTON-SALKM, N. C Jack Gross. Philadelphia heavyweight, knocked out Jack League. San An tonio, (10). a It Is nn particular Joy to be !n charge of the game farm, as far as the heat Is concerned. Mr. Arnspiger live In n tent In the center of the property and reaps the full benefit of the hot summer sun as he makes three daily trips to the coow, a portion of which nre located In grass and the others on green pnstmv. The birds In the green pasture nre said to grow better than those In the dry grass, which also carries with it a cer tain danger of fire should careless smoker come on i he premises. However, the heat does not seri ously bother Mr. Arnspiger n long as the birds do not suffer and reach curly maturity through his care. The Jackson County Game "Pro tective association, through Its game committee, deserves the cred it for the establishment of the farm, In keeping with its general good program, always planned to aid the sportsmen of the eountv. BASEBALL Fir Ground . Jaclfcfiomitie Pirate VI. Coquille i Sun., Aug. 10 Great Wild West RODEO at Chiloquin Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 9th and 10th. Big ball game and Horse races. erles lat night, i to 4. Uevlvl j eroe tenth Inning error allowed the I wlnn."g tally to get In. ruining the day for Daglia. an giving Klynn the victory. I I Baseball Standings (By the Associated Press) Coast. V. L. PC. Hollywood 10 9 .640 San Francisco 15 10 .600; I.os Angeles 14 11 .&(i0 MlHslonn 15 11 ,&50 Oakland 11 14 .440; Sacramento 11 14 .440 Portland 10 IS .400, Seattle 9 10 .300 j N'atlotiul. ! W. U PC. I Brooklyn C6 41 .017 Chicago 02 44 .r85 j New York 00 40 .600 : St. I.ouls 53 52 .505 j Pittsburg BO 54 .4S1 Hositon 50 57 .407 Oinclnnntl 44 67 .4110 1 I'hiladelphln 35 CO .3.17 1 American. j W. I.. PC , Philadelphia 75 37 .070 Washington 05 43 .002 New York 05 40 .680 Cleveland 50 54 .50!) Detroit 54 57 .480! Chicago 44 65 .404 j St. Louis 44 67 -3!C Koston 38 72 .345 IDOCSPEARSNOW i Ati fiDcnnw m n : All UILUUH III. v PORTLAND. Ore., Aue- 9- W Dr. Clurence W. Spears, foothall coach and head of the physical education department at me liii-.'..,-aitv Oreeon. today possessed a license to practice medicine in Oregon. The license was grume" by reciprocity of West Virginia. As Dr. Spears was a newcomer in . Oregon, It was necessary for him to appear before a bourd of examiners for an interview. LEAVE BRITISH ISLES LONDON, Aug. 9. iP) Young Strihling, American boxer, leftj London today for his Ceorgla: home and a holiday. All he would say was "I had a good time. The British public are great and I hate to go home." The tighter said his father was handling his business1 arrange ments and he hoped he would be put into a ring with Max Schmelin?. Oermnn boxer. FLYWEIGHT CHAMP IS EASY WINNER HOLLYWOOD. Cal., Aiwr. 9. (&) Midget Wolgast, recognized in Pennsylvania and New York as the world's flyweight boxing chumpion, today had furthered hi drive to obtain a top rating In this mate through virtue of his easy 10 -round victory last night over Canto Rob leto, Pojuidenu, Cal., nlugger. Dancing about beautifully, "Wol gant o far outclassed his oppon ent that the fans booed the fight at times. Robleto was willing to come to close quarters and slug it out, but his clever opponent had other Ideas. Robleto took consid erul of a pounding through most of the fight, although he didn't appear to be hurt at any time. Wol gast got every round. Redhead In Golf t'linmp, CHlCAdO, Aug. 9. A) Tho western Junior golf championship ha.s been taken away from Chicago to St. Louis by redheaded Charles (Chuck) Collins. Playing a steady game, Collins yesterday walloped Rill Chambeis of Chicago, & and 4, in the 36-hole final at Floesmoor. jCollins got out f in front at the end of nine holes of the morning round and never was in dunger. . r In aqlfled Advertising gets results. Lw Rli llll WW SSt,dL-M mfl "GUARANTEE .JNSURES BETTER UMMER MOTORING AVOID CARBON TROUBLES" THIS SIMPLE NO COST WAY A clean motor gives more mileage, has more power, does not knock and runs cooler. ..it insures pleasant summer motoring. No need to put your car in the shop to have the carbon removed. You can chase dangerous carbon out while you drive by using Gilmore Blu-Green Gasoline . . . and it costs nothing extra. Try this guaranteed gasoline for a few hun dred miles ... it adds new life to your car. Insist on it at Independent Service. Stations everywhere. Now on sale through 2500 Cream and Red pumps on the Pacific Coast. 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Crater Iiiil;e Highway SPOKANE AI'TO CAMP Paeifie Highway. WONDER, OREGON HAYES MT. SKR. STA. Redwood Ilis-'lAvny Sl.ATE CREEK SER. STAt Redwood Highway CENTRAL POINT, OREGON NIP & SIP SHOP iene Rowland, Proi.