MEDFOBfi Mllti TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, - OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY; 9, 1931; PS6B FTVB MEN PLAN rat hmittee Named at Meet- iig to Investigate Outside Marketing rossiunmes iui etter Price for Produce SHI PINI Radio Program KMED (Mall Tribune-Virgin 8tatlon) 8 to 9 LINDBERGH GET INF AT- Thursday I P. M. '. l 6 to 6 KMED Presentation; ! News and Markets by Mail Tribune. 6 to 7 Miniature Q o 1 f : i Where to Go; Porter Lbr.. 1 to 8 Happiness Train: Hutchinson Tree surgery. , Finding Air Course bv Stars A. .1 FOR AVIGATION -Happiness Train. even . . niinff nnil ahlnrtlne : bn. tor , from me - --- o a more favorable market outlined lust night at the I , ,he . JacKson uouniy ivmen'a association, held at the ral Point Orange hall. A com mmnosed ot John Ander- 1 . . -.1 wllliAnl Pari. ..minted to Investigate the Ju and shipping facilities to llllied by such a Plan , e movement ! .m the valley has grown lot dissatisfaction voiced by the rdina: the spread in L noid for butterfat and .the Jlesale price charged for butter the suuiiic"" L effort has been exerted for ,e time to acniev? .men descrme as a o change In prices has been mnced by the local creameries. Ijuthern Oregon a a i r y in n main that the price spread in ?on is much greater than that allfornia ono uu.o. while the creamery men hnVA nresented figures to that their prices are as high higher than tnose. pam liucern In other localities.. llssatisfaction has also been ex Lied by. Portland dairymen, i ra opening a campaign , for r - ... . . . . . . . . spread In Dutteriai ana ouncr PS. - .... landine merchants of Medford Ie refused to cease sales of oleo garlne unless more butter pro- are reaiizea oy wiw uuiijmcn amselves. flans for organlvulon of a co nnive creamery In tne Kogue er valley were also considered last night's . meeting . mil no on taken in this direction. Co-op FaUnrCH Cltea . . t a meeting of local creamery- fn held this morning It was inted out mat many cooperuiivc ianierles have failed. A survey seated ' showed that Bueh lamerles in Klamath Fans, Ceae, Marshfield and Medford e not able' to worn tneir propo- lons out In a profit-making ln- utlon. Every place in these nelghbor d communities wherever one of ise cooperative creameries has In existence it has been kved that the only man who ,de morify 'Wan"the : agUHlW Inst fthe creameries," It was lied, "and the. dairymen were losers." ' l .... , T Friday A. M v 7:65 to 8 Breakfast Broad- . cast of News by. Mail Trlb- une. 8 to 9 Treasure Box; West Side Pharmacy; Gold Seal. 9 to 10 Friendship Circle by i-coiiuiny uroceieria; Isaac a Store; Procter & Gamble. 10 Weather Forecast. 10 to 11 Liberty Market; Unique Cleaners. 11 to 12 Snider's Dairy; Bur elson's.. Ladies' Wear; Jacque Lenox. ' P. M. '-"- . 12 to 1 Monarch Seed; South em Oregon Electric: News Flashes by Mall Tribune. . 1 to 2 Sperry Flour; Med- . ford F. & H. Co.; Scientific ' Laboratories. ';' 2 to 3:30 KMED Presenta- tlon; World Bookman. 4:30 to 5 KMED Presenta- . tlon. '.', v. '. , ',' 5 to 6 Uncle Jerry; News' and Markets by Mail Trlb- une. 6 to 7 How Is Your Dog?; , Where to Go; Offutt Gar- age; Insurance Bureau. 7 to 8-Hap)ineHs Train; tha Jackson Go. Bldg. & Loan. 8 to 9 KMED Presentation. ' . t May Be Necessary When Noted Couple Undertake Long Flight to Orient Brisbane's Today (Continued from Page One) IThe people of Red Top district, 1st of Medford will meet at the ihool house tonight to complete fcaniratlon of a grange. . The meeting will be in charge County Deputy R. E. Nealon. ro expects the new organization start out with some 40 charter embers. . Eagle Point cheese and home id apple Pies will be served r refreshments. ' IH BABY NAMED BERLIN.-July 9.rW) President oover defeated Secretary of the reasury Mellon todny In obtain 's the first personal recognition r tile adonfinn ftf the ronnrntlons ... - - fjuoay. Tne name Hoover was given to Moy boy born in Zehlendorf. Pburb of Berlin! In gratitude for '-ericas beneficent action toward wmany. The parents said the lid would hhve been named Mel f " If It had been a girl. : . 8ALEM. Ore., July 9. (P) Two Hion dollars more has been paid ul of the secretary of state's of- "e the flrat alw 1011 F&n Was Ull id nut In 1 U 9 O nm. 'ltlon of warrant figures an 'onced todav hnw.d pcreaae was du tn th MrfHitinnRt foity expended from rh hlih. y fUnd whUh ........... I ..... . ...1 r nd one halt millions over two ,r ago. ARDY MOUNTAINEER CHAFES IN HOSPITAL d-ARKSntTUn rv-Eii ("RlmrirA' Unmplck ,un1t'neer, is striving to ac i Mu vclm,le" to hospital care ii . 1 broken ' mends. He re- that one time when he cut " 'ear With ... rr-...i. J? ,ewea up the wound hlm f 'lH awJearest doctor belnB 20 The price of steel, however, should not frighten Investors. That price depends on steel buying. Steel bying depends on new build ings. Men will not Invest in new buildings until old buildings are rented, or until Wall Street bar gains, that pay 10 per cent on the investment, shall have been ab sorbed. The brutality ot human beings. revealed in our crime wave, Is ap palling, Inconceivable. In Lone Island, a youth of 19, an other 26, are tottering around, their feet burned with hot Irons by "boot- lee-torturers." Their heads were also burned, and the eye ot one gauged almost out. Police say the two young men- were tortured for refusing to say what had become of two truck loads of liquor. A young Filipino applied the torture, under orders. - ; Perhaps you find comfort, ask Ina: "What can .you . expect ot bootleggers, hi-Jackers, scum'of ttre earth?" Not much, but what about the Wickersham commission, at tacking "the flogging of boys In United States Jails?" When government sets the nmnle of killing, with electric chair and noose, anu tne exuiiue of torture, with "Hoggings anu shackling in leg-irons," what can you expect from tne criminal i On Julv 8. 26 years ago yester day, two little automobiles named "Old Scout" and Old Sturdy" with comic curved dashboard started on a race from New York on tne -At lantic to Portland, Oregon, on- me Pacific. The .idea of the Oldsmo- blle company was to show wnnii automobiles tould do, and to em phasize the need of better roaas. "Old Scout" won the race in FORTY-FOUR DAYS, driven by Dwight B. HU88. ' ' ' Ab you read this, the same old car with the same driver is repeat ing the trip ot 26 years ago. It started from New York city hall, yesterday morning. Instead of traveling on railroad ties, through deep mud, heavy sand, over big stones, the "Old Scout" or this trip will roll along a continuous ribbon of smooth highway. Marvelous are the changes in our highways, many the billions spent on them within a quarter of a cen tury. And the country owes that to manufacturers of automobiles. In addition to sending "Old Scout" to repeat Its trip of 2b years ago, the Oldsmobile company should send one of its highly de veloped, up-to-date cars of today, .i.Hin. a rinv nr two later, to Bee how much It can beat the former 44-day record. AhnvA Seattle yesterday, two Toms airmen. Robblns and Jones, started a "non stop" flight of more than 6000 miles to iokio. iuy may take fuel from other planes in flight, but must not land. If they a Tnnanese naner will pay them 2B,000. A mother ship will give them fuel above Alaska and Siberia. ','. Twenty-five thousand dollars J the prize that Mr. Ortelg. owner of the Lafayette hotel In New York City, paid to Colonel Lindbergh for his hop to Paris. But Lindbergh had no refueling privilege or ar rangement. Professor Einstein enters anoth er realm of "relativity," writing to President Hoover protesting against the death sentences of eight young negroes In Scottaboro, Ala., about to be executed for al leged attacks on white women. President Hoover has nothing to do wlUi the matter, bat Dr. Ein stein probably does not know that. His sympathies are aroused, as were those of another great Oer ,.n Hoinrlrh Heine, a poet and also a Jew, who called our free- a wicked dream because n was proposed to tar and feather a white clergyman for allowing his daughter to marry a negro, By Oscar Lcidlng ' Aiwoclated Press Aviation Editor. WASHINGTON. JP) Celestial avigatlon may play a prominent role In the Lind'oerghs' visit to the Orient. ';..: The flying colonel and his wife will be able-to -enlist the sun by day and stars by night In ' fixing their position .and maintaining their course:' : .' V'-' ,-'. ' I ' -Whepxthe Lone Eagle headed for ParW, lie. navigated by dead reckon ing. . On the new adventure with his wife. th,ere- will be greater' wis dom 4o be drawn upon to qnewer.1 the qquestlon, -"Where are we?" , Both Able "Avlgatwrs.". , Both, as well as being able pilots, are able "avlgators," with special training In the use of' sextant, chronometer' and book of tables, the question, "Where are we?" tlon. ' .'Colonel Llnd'bergh wns Instruct ed In their 'use in April and 'May. 1928. by Lieut. Comm. P. V. H. Weems., now an lnntructor in navi gation at the U. S. naval academy. He had received one of his first lessons In learning position from mariners aboard the Memphis as It bore him on 'the Atlantic for' his nation's greeting after the Paris flight. Mrs. Lindbergh learned from Harold Qatty. who was trained In the 'Australian naval academy and who later -became a pupil of Weems. He was navigator lat year for Harold Bromley on an at tempeted trans-Pacific flight, and recently flew around the world with Wiley Post. : i - -. . ' ' Gutty Her Teacher. : She studied with Catty for two and' one-half weeks, earned; the recognition of "a very apt. pupil," and put her training to tet on . a transcontinental flight a year ago lost Easter.- Her husband said she "was of considerable help.";' Heading west over the Pacific, along the island dotted trail of the Aleutians, they may encounter great fog areas and cloudy- weatn Particularly If any long hons are. attempted, celestial nvigaiion may be necessary, In July fog covers the stretch from Dutch Harbor- to the Siberian coaut 35 per cent of the time. Over a widespread area from the Kuril to the tin .of the Aleutian (sianus, It Is prevalent 65 to .JO -per cent of ine turn;. , ., Copco Forum, employes' organi zation of the California Oregon Power company, enjoyed nn Inter esting meeting at the regular Forum luncheon this noon. R. F. Cook, sales engineer for the West Inghouse Electric Co. of Mansfield, Ohio, was -the principal speaker, and told some pertinent facts con cerning important revisions in the present wiring code. He also ex hibited the new Westinehouse "no fuse load center," which promises to greatly improve safety condi tions In the home and. Industry through the elimination of fuses. The use of pennies and other sub stitutes in fuses is proving n seri ous hazard and causing many fires, according to the speaker, who tpld of the many advantages, of. tills new type of circuit-breaker. Mr. Cook, who la making his first trip t othe Pacific coast, spoke of his extensive travels In the east and middle west, narrating some inter esting experiences In travel by air transport. . ' : Seth Bullls, -who has Just re turned from a trip to Yellowstone national park, told of' h!rj visit to this scenic attraction- and -wave some of the highlights of his trip .His description ot the Yellowstone bears and .other animal life .was enjoyed by his hearers. - ,. R. S. Daniels acted as chairman of the meeting at which .the fol lowing guests were present - R. F. Cook of Mansfield, Ohio, O. Boozier, W-wnlnc house ealesmniv of I'Ol tiuiKl. 6 re.. 11. P. Hoswnrth. of Tlcliwimth KalU and Hwb Urey of this city. FIRE FIGHTER KILLED : AS POWER WIRE FALLS PORTLAND, Ore.. July 9. ) Charles Brumhnll, 53, vu electro cuted yesterday when he fell on a 5C00-volt power wire while fitiht Ing a timber fire near Eagle creek on the upper Columbia highway, lie was a3istant to J. 11. Sehuman, forest ranger at Kagle creek. Bramhall and several other men were battling tho fire when a tree, burned down by tho blaxe fell across the power wlreB, tearlnK them to the ground. deaihIcwr on trial july 14th HAZE IN VALLEY CAUSED BY FIRE; DUST ALL E ',. ORKOON' CTTV, Ore., July 9. W) Howard MugnuHon, Woodhurn truck driver, will go on trial here July 14, charged with Involuntary manslaughter in connection with the death of four persons near here June 5. Mrs. Hoso Johnson, her young son,' her hrother-in-lnw and her mother-in-law were kilted and In cinerated when MagniiHon's truck and their automobile collided head on near hero, -4 Five hundred miles of new Rtato highways designated In Oklahoma in June brought the state system O. total to 6000 miles The haze hanging over tho val ley much of today is one ot smoke from the small forest fires of the past few days, the dust from the I eastern Oregon dust storm of early this week having nil disappeared from the valley, and conies chiefly from the largest of these fires, the one on state patrolled land yester day in tho Dead Indian district about eight miles above Ashland along tho old shale road and near the Lake o' the Woods road; and which burned over nn area. ufMtlO acres before being' brought under control early last evening. . District State Fire W a r d e n Thipps had received no additional details today from this fire, which was started about 2:1 fi p. m. yes terday by a smoker discarding a cigaret or cigar, and which the district fire warden's crew and volunteers from that section, to the number of 1!0 men, eomhatted and controlled. District Warden Thipps reported a new smnll fire starting about 'i o'clock this afternoon near Tolo, details of which were lucking at the time of going to prews. No new fires had been reported in the Crater National forest up to 2 o'clock this afternoon, and details were still lacking about the five smalt fires in the forest caused by lightning strikes early In the week and which were soon brnutrht under control 101 K?cpjHe Children Off the Street -JSAutos Kill 32,500 Yearly. " Very well, Indeed, you know this dinfcf and o "Junior" It certfully warned find ordered not to play in tha auto Masted street. Night and dey your thoufM era centered on the protection el your child. ELY-TOX Every Fly You See flies Kill 40,000 Yearly But haw can "Junior" avoid Ike dee, dealing Fly? Think el this lar rtJ menace . . . fly-carried discew. h is you solemn duty, in juitic to your little ones, to spray every filthy winged or crswUaf pett you ice, with the mott powerful in wet dcitroycr you can buy. OUKKEST, tUfST KA1H IV ItSt fOt THI FIAAFUb Laboratory -Tested FLY-TOX ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS TO PEOPLE levelopedatMtllon Institute of Industrial ;cjcarch by Hex Kciearcn rcuowinip, MOTH I f PlIA SOACH HllDNt MOSQUITO NEW LOW PRICES cnT.Vt DANCE Lithia Park Every Saturday Night " . 4 ADMISSION ' - . ' 10c per Dance or $1.00 for the Evening Music by Ike Porter's new Dance Band - -,v,- For Bnhhlngton (Dtatftil by JacbM Cwntv (.attract Ca. tint Strut mt Central Attaw.) Circuit Court. Lewis White, et al vb. Rnlnh Phelps, Chester Phelps. Injunc tlon. ' Mnrrln E. Plvmote. Dorothy A. Plymate vs. Ed A. EMes. Foreclosure. Rachel Mead as Mead-Furcn Motor '.Co., vs. E. U Wright. mnnev State vs. George Kilerf vwwm C. Marcell. Kobbery. . State vs. John Davidson, run is lary. - 8tate vs. Kenneth Orand larceny. '"' State vs. J. P. Thompson. Oh taining .money by false pretense, State., vs. 1'aul rnync. l.ron.' ... D. F. Kay as the Automotive as.nJ. v p. H. wlckham. . Chattel iui' - - Mrs. Frank Hammond vs. Chas. T. Nahss, et al. Foreclosure. ' Probate Court. . . w HnvB fdec). estate. . a . 1 1 , n.t ia nrnhnte. Bvnnklln. Doyle C. Frank ... ' the business numf of ."Frunklln's Orocery." Marie Blumenauer (dec.) tale. Admitted to probate. : Grand One of the new honorary colonels on the staff of Gov. W. H. Murray of Oklahoma is k. n. min-iiunn., a Dewsiaper correspondent. Part lot Martha W . siil l.'.Hliitu Transfers . r. t. inore et vlr to Charles A ti.,-h'rev. W. D. 8 A of SB .see . . tn a rt 8 Westt. ' ....t'ia ii .inhnsun et vlr to R e- . " ,. . l Laura C. Pryor ei vir w - Meade et ux. W. D. hlk. 11. Ashlana. llanrv I. Small to u,.ll W. D. All sec. j,i Q n 1 Westt. Ella W. PetenT to Emma Per .in. w n. Lot 10, hlk. S, Capl . i liiii LAA tn Medford, First National company to O. o Courtrldge et x. ueeu. ..i. 9i nli.ff Add. Butte Falls, w I. Vawter et ux to Darwin O Tyree et ux. W. D. lot '. " Olen Oak Subdivision. Medford. i ...., I Adams et ux to H. r,v. - W. D. Lot 11. blk 1 Laurelhurst Add. Medord. . cm Herrld et vlr to .D. twton. W. D.- Lot on Oeneesee T. it. Stott et ux to J. T. Tuffs vl n. Lot Si. hlk. J. Olen on a,.hrflvllnn. Medford. p. M. Kershaw et ux to Clarence rr m t ux. W. u. uinu a .,n SJ. 8. R. 1 West. Theo J. Fish, Jr., et ux to Martin V Hill et ux. W. D. a acres In t n tt torn. 38. S. R. 1 West. '0 Viotoa t ux to First Insur ance Agency. W, D Lot U I. bllj a i.",!u-r,l Place Add. to Medford ' Mary H. Martin et vlr to Everett L. Martin. W. D. Lola 1, z. 10, 11, 1J, blk. 41, Phoenix. smntt to Ed inn tM& swim? 11 000 GIVE Camels the liardpst test you can tliink of take ihem along on your vacation -into the desert, on the boat, in the woods, to . the beach. . Then you'll see why the switch to Camels in the new Humidor Pack is nation-wide. This scientific wrapping of germ safe moisture-proof Cellophane seals in ull the natural factory-fresh aroma-seals it in so lightly that wet weather cannot make Camels - damp, nor drought weather make them dry. It insures every Camel smoker at work or ts (Emm&Us at play the joy of expertly' blended fine Turkish and mild Domestic tobaccos kept always in prime smoking 'condition, throat friendly, mellow and cool. A special vacuum-cleaning process frees Camel cigarettes from the sling of peppery dust; the Humidor Pack guards them against being dried-out or soggy whether in sunshine or ram. As a favor to your throat try Camels join the throng ami switch over for junt one day then quit them ifjou cam. Tune In ;AMEI. Qt-AIITEII IIOIJIl aVnlurlml Morton liown.-.v nm! Tony Won Columbia BroatlraMlntf Hyotvm - v-ry nlilU x- Sunday Thn Humidor Park not only heopt your cigarette tafe from your tvet bathing mil but alto heep$ the sand ami fm out ui well j)JM..NO CIGABETTY AFTER -TASTE Ull, P.. J. RajMlll T.aitN Cavear, Cvavear. VaaMaa-Salata, It. C X