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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1931)
i T.' . ? .!..;.-. . t r' '... ... .... ...... j.. .- . ........ ... . .... - , A. X. JL' W " ' mm . i -J-L - - - -j - I ' " " I " j- : -. i mi mi iai ii ttm . , ,-t ttii sr" iiniii i i iiii'ii) aranuiiui-LJv: ( -Ull If IIIH1 i I I - - , niiiM. II 111 IUI II IIUI W LA1LHU tl lmm 5 r LEADS PLEASANT f LIFE ON ISLAND If -WASHINGTON, D. C Juno 27. v.Abd-el-Kiim, the lost of the enRlfflan leaden to attempt to lib l rate - Morocco from French rule. Is 'rounding- out four years of his exile on Reunion island. "Reunion Is not a Devil's ls-'"-.land,, npr Is It a St. Helena; It " si more, than BOO squaro miles of u forest and agricultural land, dot . ted with, busy villages and towns, and: enjoying a climate that Is t- comfortable the year round with the exception of a brief period during the. extreme hot, rainy -season' between November and April,J," Bays a bulletin from the Washington, D. C. headfluurtors of the Nutlonal Cieographlo, sooiety. zz-.-i4, Uninhabited When DlHcovered jj."Wlth Maritlus and Kodrlgues Islands Its only neighbors, Reun .fi iion. .is one of the most Isolated spots under the French tricolor. Madagascar, the nearest sizable ' hit of. land, .Is about 600 miles to tho west while the southern tip 'of India is removed about 2,700 Ijnllost . . Ij! '"Despite Its, isolation, however, ' tho -common term 'a place :of llv ' -Ing death' which is frequently flven' to places of exile and penal olonles, does not properly do 1 Scribe Reunion for the Island, has " increased In popularity with -the j! (centuries. . . V..'-When' a Portuguese navigator discovered Reunion In the early . ilart of the sixteenth century, It Z' was uninhabited. At the close of the elghtoonth. century, there were about 86,000 Inhabitants. Now i 187,000 Frnchmen,. Creoles, . nog- roest Indians, and a sprinkling of peoples from, many parts of the world call it. home. The Creoles are ..the, . , descendants - of early French settlors who married Mal-"-egasyi womom. French i blood of .,..... .. flnnii In thn Irnlnn of,. approximately three-fourths of the Inhabitants. ..,' - .: .,, Volfsno, Craters Form: HarborH ''Ulllpticat In shape,, and rising !T."to' vpjcanlo peaks, near Its :centcr, " the- coastal frjnge of .Reunion Is t,.rio't s deeply Indented as many .,.) Inlands of tho.Bea. Many of the V deeper Indentations are the crut i..:rs of extinct yolcanoes, on the ; Inland ';rm of which usually lies a I port. . .The, throe larger r pprt cities: : St. Denis, tho capital and - largest... city. . Bt, Pierre, Jind t. J , Paul, each have moro than 18,000 '!. Inhnhltnnti - ir J'When Abd-ol-Krlra roached Ite r union, In. 1920, , ho was practically felvcn the, freedom of, tho Island w but aFronch, soldier is a' constant "companion, to ,see that ho ' does ?'ho,t. bpard ,. ,a btfati Along: the coastals z6n, ,he may ussoclato ,'j4v(th the larger, part of tho Island's , population. , The 86 mllos of Ro i unjon'a rtillroad which connects -tlftVl1$net!tant cities and towns, hesrly'erctrclos tho lslund In this in Sxieei CMMs Favored Anew wWaaasaaBtxs3MaESBSBar By llk'liant Mnssot'k . ' :. '.. NKW l'OHK HlHtorlrnlly 1m fTiortnt aro the "Memoirs of I.- Prince von Bulow." , ... . tj in:: Fiirthormoro, they ; nro cram mef , with anecdotes, often amus- ' inH.,,, ... . . , , Uulow was In, high pfflco at Berlin . In tho years - before. Uio '"world' war. diirln which he con- itstitiy. was holding his , emporor . . hi rheck r - ' Called back to Horlln from dip lomatic service In 1897 to become . foreign minister, . be roso to tho 'post of, chancellor. In. 1U00. Tho t .first. volum of , his momolrs now published : In America,.- covers tho period to 1003.:.. .i : --- .Kalitf ami Itonxovolt KaUor Wllhelm II appears as " rsfli, tactless and Indlsorect, for ' ever' uttering sabrq-rattllnK sneoch ..es' or, writing . Impulsive note, somo of whli'h escaped tho minis i I Serial censorship. lint VTheoclore Roosevelt, the rroal- .dotit Of the United-States, oxer- i.iclsed a ' aulto particular fasclnn Juutlon. over ,tho. Kaiser,' wrote.- 'That's my man I" he used to o mv ". . Hn Minn hnaiin . corrOH' "fponalng' with Roosovelt very much ' in the way he aid witn me ciar. "' ''The., kaiser was everlastlngls- U. warning . Roosevelt ngnlnst ,. tlio Dischemlng plans of the Japanese. -llo was convinced that war be , ,wn Japan and tho United 'f 'Stato i was ..unavoidable and ' " hitnent," although Uulow was con stantly assuring him to the con- Buloiv mw "f $1 KENOSHA, Wis., June 27: (Special ) Nash announce nlour new and luxurious series of motor cars today. ' .i .i . . : Synchro-Safety-Shlft ? transmis sions, with spiral second gears, which make- second' speed opera tion as silent and pleasant, to the earB as high! speed travel; :;CQni nletelv Bound-proof Insulated- bod ies, and chassis, and! a remarkable new science .of . "silence' engineer ing" throughout lead . the host of mechanical and comfort advance ments, to establish," new essentials of luxurious motorlng.-at .no pjriee. increase, as ,th.:, f nature.; of . major. importance Jtn wvmpv hm-t eight groups and the six-cynnaer series.- . ' , , ,. ; ' C7VER so reminine and amazingly smart, the new sheer cottons lend themselves graciously to the spring mode. Backed by the most famous names In Paris, end aaoptea enthusiastically ..by .society , women at the smart, winter resorts, these fascinating - new fabrics bring us once more the picturesque modes of yester-year, The models above appropriate for the lea-time hours, reveal the charm of these winsome fashions fo'-the: modern girl. At tho left, a richly embroidered batiste Is shown In the. long grace ful llnea- fashionable for late after noon. ? in an, euii-Ti-ai bhuuw v. blue the frock adopts quaint ruch- Ings of organdie In the tiny sleeves and youthful collar. White or gandie hat and the new 8-button fabric, gloves, make It appropriate for garden parties or afternoon receptions. , . ..A charming air of sophistication Is expressed In the other model for spring time danctpg. It Is of black organdie "tremendously smart," says Parls-i-and achieves youthful gayety In the 'scattered sprays em broidered In roso and lime green. Tho novel-"gloves" of black or gandle Introduce a certain qualnt noBS, for they havo been ebpled from a palf of grandmother's lacy mltta. ' -. - IT TURNS OUT TO BE A 'SNAKE BITE' NOT PUZZLING ILL ItAHKlSllUna, Pa., Juno 27 (UP). Doctors- of tho Harrlsburg huHtiltiit .bcllovud today 'they had comely" dliignoscd. tha rtiyHtorlr eus ailment., which has connnuu HOLD CUE H, J. Kllngor, ylco-piesldontnnd ixoneral sales mnnnHer of the Chevrolet Motor Company, 'ac companied by several mombors of hl Detroit; statfi visited the Pa plfio coast - last v Week for a -two- Mark Kndois.' 10. Halifax, Pa.,, to any. conierenco wun ;iieiu.,.wv the-hospital for two months. '' ".' compuny in m. lOndoin was nam ttca last April ". when ho- was faund unconscious whllo flRhtlng a forest fire.- Ho was trrnted for Bmoke suffocation. He, showed no signs of Improve ment' and .soemod to bo a victim of hemolysis. In which tho rod j corpuscles, of tho blood aissoivo. ; Other physldnna dliiRnoBed me , nllmont as 'purpura hemorrhag- lea" and treated him accordingly.! He was delirious at times. Hem-1 orrhages broke out at- several; points , nnd his skin nt times flushed rod and ooxed blood. ltlood tra nnf unions were given and for scvernl days thereafter! the . boy milled. Uitor he wink .Suirk Into, a Bcml-enmntoso state. Other, dlaKiioscB wero nmdo ami, other trcatmonts -applied. . Oni. , day a , votoran physician reached the conclusion that 12nd-. ors had boon bitten by a snako, or a noxious insect.. So a form of trwitmont to ar rant such a condition Is now ho- Ingi, applied,' and tho physicians liallcva that thoy aio on tho Hunt track -at , Inst. V , ) , ' -.' '' .,. Federation Fights School Taboos On ' Married Teachers ' 1'flH'sWTr ., ' - r" S t M vtt l w I It 'iMSll i;' I f Vi. trary. Wllhelm "NmirastliTOlo" . ,w ,, Bulow told: Prince Hohenloo the on fcalser was perfectly sane, uui neu iv ,re mlicnlo. . - ; in ,")! held that Germany., was In- Evolved In tho war by Inefficient political leadership In 114, men- , 'ilonlns esnerlallv llethmann-lloll' v, wegg's ultimatum to Hlberla, "and - his clumsy diplomatic trentment ' Of IW'fH . ..',' llefeH-ces to txrd lns,ialo, 7 "over .which the Ensllshmnn threat- " oned suit, are , In the American .''version with the publisher's noto ,: 'Inserted.. In.. the. English edition. -' 1 The note reads: "The following text printed In ,'imall typo contains innccuracles I.and certain serious misstatements which call for correction. It Is to. i, tally untrue that Ixrd Ixinsdnle -firfii im trouble and offense be. toon hs kslscr and his English "'uncls'j or thf ,Klns Kdwafd VII 'ixprcsseil th views attributed to i.'itoiihr"' or (hat tord , Ionsdale was hnnkruut.'V' - !..- Bulow wrot thnt Hdward VII .rntiwi wnsmt -'the greatest llnr S n England." " ; . . uu mltitt 4Tertllnr gets results.1 . CHICAQO , (ffi The American Federation of ToiichciK Intends to keep tho school teaching profes sion open to married, women.' , . It Is conducting a nation wide survey to ascertain tho scope of movements to bar married women from uubllo school teaching tubs. nnd to weluli reactions of teachers and cltlicns to the move, Tho federation, says Mrs. Flor ence Curtis Hanson. Its necietary Is omiosed to What It terms "this unfair , discrimination." It holds that teaching qualifications should bo based entirely on character and ability, not on sorlnl status. 'We are continually receiving protests nnd Inquiries from nil parts . of tho, country concerning this and other repressive regula tiona for teachers," Mrs. Hnnon ays.: . "Resulntlons as to clothes, h vie Rolns. lateness of ovenlnt? hours nnd other personal habits are Imposed on teachers In some states "In their fight ngnlnst all this sort of restriction nnd repression the teachers have the support of the- federation, for Wti believe that character Is not a thing that can be .cultivated by restriction and regulations." Employment of mnrrled women as "substitute" teachers and then having them work the full school year at the substitute's 1 another thing the federation would wipe out. ... It Is Mrs. Hanson's opinion that the .reduction of salary costs through this means has been tho principal motive for the recent revival of the movement to cut mnrrled women from the active trnchlng Huts. 4 Rogus River Valley The. Scenic FOUR Li All four of, the paw Nasb groups designated as the 990, 980, and 960 serljos feature , tha ; safety transmission , with the Synchro shift jprlnclple,'. and spiral, . con stantly. . meshed second gears. As applied to all of the cars, this ad vanced. .unit is a signal contribu tion, toy. smooth, , noiseless and . ef-foi-lesa ..shifting of gears and to positive . driving i. control .at all speeds., i IV combines the! synchro shift, principle, which obviates the grateing of gear teeth In. shifting, with, helically cut. second speed gears,! In1 additions . it' glyea.-the drlvervtbe. vital advantage- of cur control, at all times by using the braklpgv power, of , 'motor coinr presslon ' ,p. traffic' emergencies, on pisilpperr . streets riand . .steep down-g-radca; i. ' f; .!- , : Other essentials of driving lux ury; Include .th' complete insula tion' of .the' hew. bodies against rumbling, squeaks,' .heat, cold and dust. '.and, the sound-proofing', of chassis wlth-'Uve. rubber- Insulation and,i xusblpnlngM"v.Jnter,lpr...,fnetl pnitr,'jrivereoT.wlth",.C;,iJ?H, plartic insulation. Insulating ma terlal Is nlso' appHed to all points' where., , the. staunch . wood parts meet the strong metal parts In the bodies. Body wood is treated with a new, odorless, chemical solution to guard it permanently against, tropic rot and the attacks at weather..:-... , Replacing the. four motor.- car groups . which won world-wide' ap-, proval for Nosh through such per. formance, advantages as twln-ig' nltlon, twin carburetion, nlneuna seven-bearing crankshafts, .light reciprocating v parts, automatic chassis , lubrication systems and other sound engineering features, the new Nash' groups retain these Individual superiorities and add tho alienee engineering to their proved attributes. To the existing excellence of the powerful, 116-horsepower Nash twln-lgnltlen eight, the new 9KU brings the refinement pf the safety, transmission, ,and the use of live rubber at every possible point, to a,bsorb . road shocks and cushion -every -driving- action. New, .5heayy-4uy.;. hvdraulic. shock, ab-.rbpwjjiia.o.ver'-slze ,' 4-wheeI braking . system with 10-Inch brake drums," slncje anchor shoe adjustment and ntwly,,, refined cable', and conduit operation; fin est camand-lever steering,, hlne bearlng, Integrally counter-welght-.ortcrankshOjft:- aluminum alloy pistons ;and rods, refined cooling 'system, and other Nash mechan ical features make up the great 5'iib 'power 'plant. ' , ... ...... . New essentials of luxurious itnjVcl Iri. Uio 9j80 series include the new "safety trans'mlsslort; twin carliureHon-t .which- advances tho mptor's power to 05 horsepower; cbrnplete ( Vsilence englneerin; i.nnBmli!iiii..and ..thorough Bour.d-proofing,aso bring tjie' rlew peak of value 1? th '980 series, whose big. roomy ..bodies-' and chassis are also thoroughly insu lated agnlnst sound. -, i. - - , PERFECTION OF HIGHEtt AHt TKAVEIi IS AIM (Cpntinued frum Page One) od'. ,"They burst, wiieii they reach a certain helGfct. '.' . . "The instruments "are contained in bamboo framewortf. .which breaks the fail. A red .flag Is.'at- M to d cBlne lubrication W with an. oil - temperature regula- : tewar 4 yK!" . ? " T'ttZ ifrgrTf?Itc,enc, "Oo:erva,.pns have been -made point; aluminum alloy plstpns and connecting rods; noiseless, ; per manently rubricated springs: and hcax-y-duty hydraulic shock ab sorbers ilnd a motor, silencer .and air cleaner, crnnkcase breather and gasoline filter, .. .. The lower priced 870 series has been' engineered lors , silcnco throughout and Includos Otc hew safety transmission and complete Nash "mechanical features. Th at 40,000 feet by this methed.'' :, ',. ii7T ' .' ) ,'ifT I U Senator PmliWsyHnrdfnE; 1 LANCASTER.;. Pa;,' June,. 27. (UP) U. S. Senator.:; James f. DavlB paid tribqte to' the' Jate President Harding In a apeech here as -'the-kindliest' and, sweet est soul ,that ever trod th Amer ican con'ilnent"., Davis" .wB "Sec retary of labor In Harding's cab inet. - - - . pftrsdls nt th world t Upper-H.J. KL1NGLER Uwer-E.W.FUHR Slono managers from tho Oak land. Portland, I.os Angeles, Sail Lake City, Orcnt Falls and Sent tlo offices of the company with members of their official family, were called In to Snn Francisco for the mooting, approximately 125 being in attendance. Tho meetings wero held for tho pur poso of acquainting tho fleldmen with complete and detailed plans of tho company fpr the lntc spring and summer selling seasons. E. W. Fuhr, Paelflo const re gional manager, was host to tho visitors while on the const. Those accompanying Kllngor. and taking part In tho speaking progrnms, were; M. D. Doug!!9, general parts and service man ager; W. a. I-ewellen, snles pro motion manngcr; and J. E. John son, mnnager of dealer account ing. The zone managers who led their respective forces to the San Francisco meeting were: W. J. Hums, Oakland; w. J. Richmond. Portland; V. F. Mlnnock, ls An geles; P. M. Seesc, Salt Lake City; A. H.. Carlson, Oreat Falls; aiul Hay i). Wilson, Seattle. Tvltwnpo Staiul Nearly Uirno LYNN, Mass., June 27. (UP) Nenrlng completion nt the. River Works plnnt of tho General Elec tric company here Is a huge tele scope platform to. be Installed at the .Harvard astronomical station at Woomfontoln &ou,th ; Africa. The platform, designed by John French, A General Electric engin eer, will revolve In any direction. Forgot Atxiut Ills Wlfo LONDON, June 87. (UP) C Wi Hmlttii n laborer, told the- mmr Islrste he had forgotten he had a. wife when ho was arraigned on ft , . jchurgo of desertion. fV T. 4r A ST Rl k(NG SERIAL ElY THE AUTHOR OP THE SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS THE WINNING OF BARBARA WORTH". THE CALLING OF, DAN MATTHEWS. JHAT PRINTER OF UDELL'S ; , ;) ! . LONG AGO TOLD. ,' " '5 - r'i- , ': vf. '."":... " -.-'Lr : ' ' .. .. : . - . i, .-.. . Jt t vv ,, - . " ' rf;i I w V listt t j yst . ' . ' "" ,'i ,l : HIS READERS AREnutn6S9rlby Ac millions irilll parts ''b'rttic'world'. His'dozm of novcK have been, sold more Widely and ih'gr&rer timbers thari' those of any other living autfior.' His "vivid allegories ajl$ ioVing'phVlosophy'' of life haveT gripped the masWl'-'HW'list!' '" , -. v . 'i'.' .."y'V.X':!: personality of HAROLD iB novel portrays better than any predecsof the" spirit and ;:'; NEVER PREVIOUSLY SERIALIZED c 1 1 Begins Tom Iii The v,,,.,..,. M i, . . times "and released six by t Mall Trtbuns ans r ?!0.n. w,nt,,d Bt in th. Western association. I JO.OOO pwpl. Tr, 4ay. Ulot Herkdey, Calif. j u