Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 19, 1931, Page 7, Image 7

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    Medford Mail Tribune
JoIdSwtion !
(four Page
Second Section
Four Pages
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1931.
No. 117.
mnULUV YORK-TO-BUDAPEST FLIERS
r II 1 1111 III 1 r?V?CT
( Sot
HUM IUI, .11 nI v v ; ''5?iii?23
m HrK FS :egl1
M Pastor Give Por- gPV'""-
W'l 'X'
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j'SAi''' .... """""""'S.wSV"".., A'
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' YORK " g ' -
id Pastors Give Por-
0f Pay to Help Out
i
L salaried Ones-tna
!fte Pound Social.
.,60, 18-(UP -The
;ul benefit and social, or
,, '-pound party, for
Utrlsne" vi.,o i--- --
Lpeared because his sal
tan mcreaseu.
vhereoy uw muio
.u Merivmen are as-
isull percentage of their
, ui been aaomeu u,
a, renference of the Meth- ,
itopal church,
a i line with the gen
ment to raise the stand
mlnlsterlal remuneration,''
I John Thompson, pastor
Ciicago temple.
ilready have a moauieu
tllat equalization process
hi the Rock Klver con-
t- be continued, "we aiso
ui might be called a min
ing In Chicago lor Metno-
fcukere. As superintenaeni
City Missionary society, I
bH t minimum ok ei,u
Lunate to every active
who has a family.
Lol months ago a move
nt launched in the Rock
Mference for a voluntary
Liton by the higher paid
fci up to two per cent- of
fxmt to be distributed
he pastors and mission
the poorer districts; Vlr-
iJl agreed to co-operate.
srer the country this move-
to under way, with confer
either voting a compulsory
tent, as In California, or
It voluntary, as here In
Sim conference. I expect
presented on the floor
neit llethodlBt general con-
it Atlantic City In May,
i? leders from Chicago."
I(41at salaries in Chicago
l!,000 to $12.0PQ .r
lis. .
Ul, July 18. (UP) Itnliun
f losllng on the Job. Their
miction of eggs, says an
mwiomlo expert, Is a con-
' (actor In Itillv'a world
a
'be war Italy was a
Wrter of nnnllr and
fwihe la a large Importer.
-wis have been growing
B"v year with a conse
Opresslng effect; upon
"xle balance.
1 Ibe War ltatv ptfnnrteri
rml tS,J13.3sr, lire, while
EWM only 4,005,930 lire.
' nports were more than
feater than her im
ll export or live and
ortry was approximately
greater thnn Imnnrl.
'irst two months of this
'rum 16.044,138 lire for
fn. compared to 12,007,
' 'or the corresponding
1930 And tt not i o it
nme ratln nf
r for both live and dress-
"'i. purchases of live
v 111 199 tn in fttj AVE lira
months of 1931
II ON 1;
EFALLS OFF
AP PIONEERS DEATH
BRAVE JUNGLE BY GAS
ALONG AMAZON O'ER
Orientals in Experimental
Colonies Brazilian Tropics
Vast Development Wild
Land Awaits Workers
SHADOW
HOVERS
NEVADANS
Five Await Execution in Le
thal Chamber, Including
Two Women Both Vic
tims Shot in Back.
Associated Pre$9 Photo
Capt. George Enders (left) and Alexander Magyar (right), New
York-to-Budapeet filers, are shown above with their plant. Both r$)
Tormer nusina-nungary army omcers
PENN. PRISONS HAPHAZARD AIR
FIND WORK SHOPS OVER SEA
RIOT QUASHERHURT AVIATION
Convicts Too Tired to Start
Riots, After Eight Hours
of Work, With No Time
to Conspire.
Theatrical Flights Descried
By France Aeronautical
Chief Urges Safety De
vice Uses.
HARRISBURCl, Pa., July 18.
(UP) Peiihsyivatirarpi'lsoners are
too tired to riot, according to State '
Welfare Secretary John L. llnnna,
who attributes hard work for the
prisoners as the most effective de
terrent on prison outbreaks.
llanna said that 878 men in four
slate institutions are regularly em
uloved at trades for which they
are fitted. Others are given tem
porary work or lire used on con
struction .projects at the prisons.
While contending that over
crowding has been a leading
cause of riots In other states and
that. Pennsylvania temporarily
faces similar conditions pending
construction of the new eastern
penitentiary, llanna held the pris
on work program is balancing the
overcrowded condition to keep dis
turbances among prisoners to a
minimum.
Eight hours a day of healthful.
hard labor keeps a man close iu
normal life and leaves him con
fortably tired at night with little
inclination to conspire for rioting,'
Hanna Bald.
Nothing, however, can be said
to be a sure preventive."
Mars 'liirow Off Atoms
VICTORIA, B. C, July 1S-"
(ijp) A discovery concerning Woll
Rayet attars is reported from the
Dominion Astropbyslcal observa
tory, Little Saonlch mountain. The
stars have been kept under close
observation to learn more of the
peculiarities. Conditions on these
stars, It la stated, are such that
streams of atoms lire continually
being thrown off their surfaces.
The utonis ate shot off In enor
mous numbers and with speeds
often as great as 1,000 miles per
second.
PARIS, July 18. (UP) Trans
Atlantic riiglHB -of the- haphazard
variety are a mehace to aviation's
future, according to Prince
Lleorges l-ilbesco. aeronautical fed
eration president.
I protest against flights which
do not serve the cause of aviation
said the prince. "Only properly
prepared long-distance flights by
duly qualified pilots using suit
ably equipped machines can be of
vulue to the future ot aviation,
he added, deploring "stunt'
flights "by people who often have
less common sense than a cluck
en."
"As mesident of the federation,"
he continued, "my only Idea is
to nrotect aviation."
Asked If trnns-Atlantic flights
could be of any value to aviation
he replied In the affirmative; u
ho suld. "they must have a
efficient of safety suitable to the
radius of action and fur above tne
usual. If proper security Is in
nured and the machines are
aiMilmied to fly the distance re
quired, trans-Atlnnlle flights i
be of Incalculable value."
NEW ORLEANS (UP) The
last great frontier of the world,
weird Jungle lunds along the Ama
zon river in South America, Is
being converted into experimental
colonies of Japanese citizens, who
are working out a gigantic agri
cultural project, supported by
their government.
Details of the colonization were
brought here by RyoJI Noda, Jap
anese diplomat and first secretary
to the embassy at Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil, who hns Just completed
30 years' service In South America.
PlantluK Virgin Soli.
At present there are over 1000
Japs In the heretofore unsettled
country, engaged In planting rice,
cotton, nurseries and other tropi
cal products, Noda said.
There are three separate coio-
ies of Japanese In the remote
area, according to Noua. A group
100 families has been estao-
shed In the state of Para. Brazil,
the town of Acara, some 20U
miles up the Amazon rrom me
itv of Para. At the settlement
of Maues. In the state or Aimv
zonas. Brazil. 860 miles up the
Amazon, Is another colony of 30
families. And far up the Amazon,
to the south, on the Rio Madeira,
irlhiilnrv clear into Bolivia, is
eolonv of 600 Japanese men
who have married native women
Wnrlc In Mines.
The group of 600 In the Bolivia
section was brought to the country
by an American mining company
operating In Bolivia, ine inca "
tamgtn which used Jaualiese la
bor, Noda said.
Mi. who Is rameu lor n
explorations .and books mat "
has written on them, suld that
it will ho manv Benerations foe'oro
ivllizatlon Is able to penetrate me
dark regions ot the country bacn
t . ih nin. Branca, whero wild
and savage tribes that use blow
guns and poisoned darts still ronm
at
COUNT
ii.nii Drove HIiiIh Into Stream
WAYNKSBUltll, Pa.. July 18.
,ltl) The heat was so intense
here recently that a flock of birds
nearly drove bathers from Ten
Mile creek. Klocks of birds from
nearby fields came swooping down
on the stream. They hovered near
the linnk nil day.
THE
YELLOW
BOXES
-Real Proof That
Country People
Read the
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When it comes to all
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NAVY DIRIGIBLE GETS ITS FINS
However, there are vast accesslblo
hinds which can be ueveiopou
now he believeB.
Survey Korea la Rich Country
VICTORIA, B. C., July 18.-
(UP) Survey of the Peace river
country or British wiumoia nan
revealed a supply of 9,000,000 tons
of high quality bituminous coal,
nig pulpwood supplies, nificer
gold, water power and plenty of
available passes, one so low no
snowBheds are required. Premier
S. F. Tolmie of British Columbia
renorts in sneaking of the recent
survey conducted by the B. C. gov
ernment in conjunction witn ine
Canadian National railway and the
Ciinndlnn Pacific railway.
RKNO, Nev., July IS. (UP)
The nhiuiow of the lethal gua
chamber today hangs over three
men and two women In Nevada
who have been accused of first
degree murder, for which the
maximum penalty In death.
Ounplny figured In four of the
murders ami a knife In the fifth.
All of the victims were men. Two
others slayings occurred this year
but the "Nevada code" of non
interference In private feuds and
the "law of the range" brought
freedom to both victors in the
quarrels.
A Jury freed Frank Blondln,
miner, for shooting and JUlIlng
George Indiana, sheephprder, In
the , lonely Pyramid lako section
during an argument over grazing
rights, and a coroner's Jury exon
erated Bill Graham, Heno "big
Eliot" In sporting circles, for slay
ing F. R. McCracken, during i
gun duel In a Douglas Alley speak
easy. I
The two women charged with
murder are In the Klko county
jail awaiting trial. Although one
slaying occurred in Wendover and
the other in Midas, Nev., there-it
a. strange parallel . between the
cases both of the men victims
were shot In the buck, both women
were alone with the victims whon
the shootings occurred, both claim
the dead men committed suicide
and in each Instance' the officers
claim suicide would have been Im
possible. Beautiful Rita Thurman, Is
charged with shooting Ray Mon
see, at Wendover, Nev., after their
return from a country dance.
The second woman, Mrs. Mury
Young, was bound over for trial
on first degree murder charges in
the slaying of her hUMband, Del
H. Young, miner, who was found
tml ln the doorway of -his cabin
with a bullet in his head.
In Las Vegas, Nevada's southern
metropolis, two men face death if
convicted. Louis Potter has been
accused of killing J. A.. Lewi,
placing the body In a truck and
overturning the truck to make it
appear an accidental death.
John Hall, 52, In charged with
shooting and killing Jack O'Brien,
prospector. He was killed during
an argument.
L. CeJas, Mexican, Is held In the
death house at Carson City pend
ing an appeal in his case. .
Associated I'reaa I'ho
Huge fins 40 feet wide and 105 feet long are to help guide the new
navy dirigible "Akron" through the air. Here workmen are shown
equipping the airship with the fins at Akron, Ohio, where it is under
construction
OIMHDB
QUICK
WALES WILL
PAY VISIT
10 CHICAGO
British Crown Prince Plans
to Attend Chicago World
Fair in 1933, With Side
Trip to Canada.
TMTTSBURCIH, July 18. (IIP)
Quick courtships ami runaway
marrlagei were blamed by a Judge
and a minister for the Increase In
the divorce rate In Plttsburirh In
1M0 and the first six months ot
1U31, as compared with 192a.
In 11I2S there were 1.383 di
vorces, in 1930 there were 1.43S,
and 710 in the first half of 1931.
This was at the rate of 1,430 for
the year, according to Department
of Commerce statistics.
"Quick courtships and runaway
mnrrliiKes are the cuuse of many
separations," Judge Frank 1'. 1 1
lerson said.
ltev. John Ray Ewers, of the
Kiist Knd Christian church, said,
"Banne should- e( published be
fore marriage, no enough time
could elapse between engagement
and marriage to lilBirre the coup
les they were not mulling a tnls
tulie." j.
Decrease In marrlagesr, In Ibe
same period, generally was attrib
uted to business conditions.
SAFETY GLASS ON
ROYALTY AUTOS
LONDON, July 18. (UP) Auto
mobiles owned by King George
are now fitted with sa(ely gluss.
Many people huve wondered
why, until now, the king's cars
have not been fitted with safety
glass.
Advisers of his Majesty .feared
that side windows of safety gluss
might prevent the people from
ftcelmr tlio klmr properly, due to
discoloration. The udvlsers are
now satisfied that safely glasB Is
as clear as the ordinary type, .
4
And If It is a fact that halt
our American criminals are feeb
Icmlnded, their lawyers are smart
enough to restore the bulanee.
I DullnH News,
LONDON, July 18. (UP) Th
Prlnco of Wales Is expected to
visit the United States and the
Chicago lOxpoBltlon In 1933, the
United Press has learned. The
visit probably will come as a short
break In. a .lengthy Canadian so
journ. . f ...v. i
This Is the view of people In
authorltlvo positions. They be
lieve thut the Prince's next trip
will be to Canada, where he owns
large cattle holdings. It has been
six years since he visited tha
Ur.lted States and his last visit to
Canada was made In 1927 when
he was accompanied by Prince
George and Stanley Baldwin and
his wife.
Non-Oftlclul Report
While there was no official con
firmation of the Prince's proposed
trip, official quarters intimated
that such a trip was not Improb
able and that he certainly will
visit Canada soon. '
It Is understood that Wales wilt
receive an official Invitation to
attend the Chicago Exposition and
thnt Ambassador Chas. G. Dawea .
will propably extend the Invita
tion. Ambassador Dawes and -ths
Prince of Woles are close frlbnds.
During the past year the Prince
of Wales has said on Beveral oc
casions that ho would like to visit
the United States again.
Canadian Trip
A trip to Canada would,: no
doubt, result In Increased British
Empire good wtll and a vtilt" to
the United States would strength
en the ever-growing closeness be
tween Britain and the United
(Continued on Page TwoV .
Tarpon Itnttlctl Olio Hour
JACKSONVILLE. Flu., July 18.
(UP) J. C. llollowoy lunded a
63-pound tarpon, near here, after
a battle of one hour and 10 minutes.
Famous Arizona Lion Killed
HAFKORD, Ariz., July 18.
(UP) "Old Slinky," known as the
thuusand dollar lion of the (Ira
hum IiIIIh, will terrorize rnnchers
no more. He was killed this
summer by Wiley Shirley, gov
ernment hunter. The Hon, hunt
ed for months, was an astute
beast, It being estimated that ho
killed J1.000 worth of livestock
before falling victim to Shirley's
gun.
M
mj ttkfhoncd w would be then at tiif
A COURTESY CALL
ANY disappointments and sometimes embarrass
ment result from "just dropping in" on folks.
A telephone call is so quick and reassuring that most
people think of it not only as a courtesy due others,
but a real convenience to themselves and it costs little.
Anyone, anywhere, any time from your own telephone,
or from public telephones conveniently located everywhere.
Home Telephone & Telegraph Co.
of Southern Oregon
Listen to thb Nash
Paradb op Proobbss
and Max Btndix, Official
Bandmaster of the Qncan
to) J World's Fair, and his
Band. CoasMo-Coasl.Tues-day
Evenings ortr NBC
Network, o.oo Eastern
Daylight String Tim
NEW NASH
Announced June 28th
Marvelousl QUIET
because it is
SOUND-PROOFED
in Body and Chassis
From $795 to $2025 ; ; . f. o. b. factory
Unusually low delivered prices, $1016 to $2350
Mead Motor Company
Corner Eighth and Barltlett Phone 990 ,