1
P3TGE FOUR
MEDFOItD MUL' TRIBUTE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1932.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Cnrym tn Seutntrn Origai
nidi ht Mill Trikunt"
Dill CxMpt 6itordiy
Publiih by
KVDFORD fBl.VTl.NO CO.
.i-im n. m ft.
fill BE Kt W. KUIIL, Editor
L U KNAPP, Utntsw
As tnfopmOm fiewp-wr
Bntartd u Meond ties, mitt it M-dloni
Orif on, mim Aet of Much 8, 1 8 f P,
BUIfSCKIPTlQN BATES
Si UiIU In AdTtou
Dallf, yui $f00
Dillj, avuitb.. .ft
. Curler, la AAnau Mtdford, AtbUod,
JukMDtllU, CwitrU Point, fttwris, TilwL Uold
Hu! ana oo uiKbMjn.
Dill, Booth... I .16
DiUj, oat rur ... f.60
All tarm. cub 1b v.rtoea.
Official ptptr of tba Cit of Medford.
Official paper of Jaekwo County.
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MEUBEB OV UNITED CKKK8
UZMllKM Or ADltn BUKEAO
or CIUCUUT10NB
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rraodaeo, Loa Angalee, Seattle, Portland.
utMBta
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Parry
! , LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT
Dear Hoove:
' What In the bell Is the matter
with you, anyway, vetoing that bill
i to give all tiie boys 500. out of the
i TJ8. Treasury, when the bankers can
j roll In a wheelbarrow, any time they
j feel like It end help themselves. Darn
1 your hide I
$ You say this would ruin the coun-
i; try. Hal Hal I guess you want to
j " save It for the Democrats to ruin. If
1 you bad as much brains as an orphan
' goose, you would have made It 15000,
and th rowed In a aet of tires to boot.
I A lot of fine weather and smooth
i highways are going; to waste, bocause
J of your hard-heartedneas. I figure
J you are Just plain mean.
5 I have been across the continent
! twice this year, so far, and I have not
j seen a soul who was going to von
I for you. Of course, these fellows
; never stay in one place long enough
5 to vote, but they would linger long
t enough In one place to get 500, so
i , all you would have to do would be
t to time the pay-off so It would come
5 aftsr ejection day. Seel
j I sure hope you change your mind
i about this esoo proposition, aa many
of us have never seen that much
5 money, let alone have it in our Jeans,
I I bave been rambling since the
i auto became trustworthy for more
j than 6 miles, and have toured three
Republican administrations, and will
i; take an oath, and make an affidavit,
fi I have never yet seen a decent look
ing poorhouse. What have you got
to ssy about that? Just as expected,
so answer.
' I hope these few lines find you
well, and .don't feel too bad about
losing the gas tramp vote.
Yours for defeat,
H. O. BOW.
t Pfl.: If you should ohange your
: mind about forking up the (600,1 will
send my p-o. address, as no telling
' where I will be In another month,
; but will head south when It turns
cooler.
see
I have one drawback and that Is
ha at times gets so Intoxicated that
lie's actually cruel to me. (Roseburg
News-Review.) A .treat and dlabol-
V leal sufficiency.
i .
fi 60o per hour for highway labor, as
f! recommended by the governor, Is
N something like It. and a glimmer of
'i Intelligence In the solving of the
I economic woe. The 15o per hour, as
first proposed, was business suicide
' In the name of economy. The toller,
under the new order, will not have
to work all forenoon to et a haircut.
It also lessens the struggle to let
loose of a dime.
i .
PROVIDENCE OETS IM'SY
(Pleasant Glen Item)
The weather Is fine In our
part of Ood'a country. Have hd
lots of rain, but God knows
best.
The Idea Is still prevalent around
here, that a combination Heaven and
Utopia would be established, If a way
could be devised whereby money la
used when being paid, and whatever-you-happen-to-have-the-most-of
used
when paying. This Is described as a
socialistic notion, but socialism Is not
that nutty. The general plan la sim
plicity Itself. Ssy A works for B.
haying.. B forgets where he burled
Ma money, so he ssys to A: "I owe
you 127.17 wages. Here Is 17c. and
you can take a load ot hay for the
balance, and we are square." A owns
nothing that fits hay, no place to
put It, or a pitchfork to handle It.
B ssys okay. "Let the hay stay where
It Is. and run out end get a couple
of forkfuls when you need some gro
ceries." Now O owes A, and pays
him up with a couple ot cows, so A
drives them out to his hay for supper
and finds out thst hay has gone up,
which lesvea him no fodder, as his
wife has spent the last bale for a
fall bonnet and the kids' school
books. A now baa two cows and no
place to feed or mlik Inem. and nnt.i.
1ng to keep them a.'ive with. The
hayman again comes to the rescue
nd agrees to keep -.he cows all win
ter. If the owner will psy with w;:
all next eumme-, for t:ioir boaid and
pasture. Come sjving. and what hap.
pens. A succumbs to the flu, and
his widow sues the hayman for an
accounting of the money received
from the aale of milk train her late
spouse's cows. The court denies
Jurisdiction, and rules she still owes
the defendant the summer's work her
husband promised for the board of
the cows. Shs pays off the debt by
cooking for the haying crew, marries
the hayman, and he gives her the
cows In question as a wedding gift,
first paying the preacher with a
erlndle calf. And, so this was the
way the Civil War started.
Good
TTOE $3,500,000 gold mina development in Cifrry nnd
A Josephine counties, announced in the Mail Tribune yes
terday, is good news for southern Oregon. The announcement
coming from W. A'. Ilutton of the state mining board, removes
all doubt of its authenticity. The development work will be
done by outside capital, the Pacifio Mineral, Inc., of Detroit,
Michigan making the purchase, and financing the operation.
This development will give employment to many men, and
establish a greatly needed payroll. It should stimulate legiti
mate gold mining operations throughout this section of the
state.
e e e e
F eastern capitalists have sufficient faith in the mineral re-
sources of southern Oregon, to make such a large investment
under present conditions, local capitalists might well follow suit,
and abandon their attitude of skepticism and fear, which has
done so much to discourage mining development in Jackson
county.
Gold is the one soil product that hag not decreased in value,
during this depression. Measured by purchasing power an
ounce of gold today is worth more than at any time "during the
present generation. Finding raw gold is finding "cash-money,"
and results in the stimulation of all business throughout the
district, in which it is found.
EveryQne knows southern Oregon is highly mineralized.
Gold mining may not be a shortcut to IMMEDIATE prosperity,
but it is undoubtedly a step in that direction.
The announcement from Grants Pass should stimulate
LEGITIMATE gold mining operations throughout this section
of the coast.
A Word
"PIIERE is one thing we hope the voters of Jackson county
WON'T DO in the fall election. We hope they won't
follow the example set in the .May primary, and vote blindly
against anyone who happens to hold office.
The logic of this procedure runs something like this times
are hard, business couldn't be worse, those now in office haven't
helped much, so let's have a new deal all around.
TOW it is true that, regardless of party, there are a fair
sprinkling of incompetents holding down public jobs,
federal, state and local. But it is also true that the crowd of
aspirants, to succeed them contains about the same percentage.
It will not improve business, or fruit prices, to turn an
honest and intelligent man out of office and replace him with
a jackasg. But it is one of democracy's weaknesses that the
people, when they are excited and disgruntled, are prone to vote
against candidates rather than for them. They turn public
servants out ot office, simply because times are bad, rather than
the men they elect to replace them, have any superior merit.
e e e e e
llANY highly competent and courageous public servants,
have necessarily antagonized certain individuals in the
performance of their official duties. .They can't expect to
escape their opposition, but they oan expect and SHOULD
HAVE the support of the clear-headed and fair minded ma
jority. If they don't get this what reason will ANY public
servant have, for acting bravely and wisely in a crisis, if his
only reward is to be villified and abused and kicked out, be
cause he HAPPENS to hold office during hard timest
e t e .
A SUPREMELY important
lnnl citnta oriA naiinrtn
people as a whole, develop a capacity to discriminate, to pick
and clfooso, to reward public service when it has been compe
tent and honest and repudiate it only when it has been the
reverse, regardless of what material conditions surround them,
then sooner or later, democracy WILL FAIL1
Tho final decision rests with the people upon you Mr.
Jones, upon you Mrs. Smith,
else upon you, the pcoplo, and no one else.
It's YOUR job and v.o one can do it for you. It is YOUR
responsibility and no one else can shoulder it.
e e e e e
I TN'LESS you and you and you develop this capacity to
discriminate, to see through the smoko screen of design
ing politicians; to resist the blandishments of the rabble rousers,
on one hand; and the hynosis of the times on the other; to
think clearly and act justly, regardless of the noise and fury
about you--
TIIEN OUR AMERICAN DEMOCRACY WILL FAIL, JUST
AS DEMOCRACIES BEFORE IT FAILED, AND FOR THE
SAME REASON:
Because in the last analysis the people failed to develop
those qualities of mind and heart and character, upon which
successful self government rests ; and without which no form of
self government can permanently endure.
The Bridge Racket
DR1DGE players are. in for a headache. They have, after the
battle of a few months ago, just selected one or the other
of the systems, when a truce appears. The "CulberUon" system
and the "official" system seem to have merged under a single
management and are about to bring forth a new Ret of rules
that will be a combination of both. Hard-working bridge rlay
ers, having pored over books and learned how to bid one no
trump and arrive at a little slam in spades, and the rest of the
riddles, are to find out thaj it was all in vain. After all the
wearisome stress, there is to be a new and perhaps more intri
cate game. All that has been learned must be unlearned and a
new beginning made. New books must be purchased and studied
in preparation for the neighborly games of next winter. What
a life ! Oregon Journal.
RUSSIAN TRADE
SHOWS DECLINE
NEW YORK. July IS. Amtorg
Trading Corp.. commercial agent for
(he Russian soviet union, reports
that its purchases In the United
News!
to the Wise
factor in good government,
la 1n.,n1.,AJ Iia s TTTAca
upon you Mr.-and-Mrs. Someone-
Statea In ths first half of 1033
totaled S9.94S.0O0 against M0.5S3.000
over the earn period of 1931. a de
cline of tt per cent. Th corporation
sstd th shrinkage waa due partly
to lack of credit facilities her com
parable to those available In Europe.
Soviet buying In Germany Increased
and new long-term credit In Kng
Isnd. It was ssld, had attmulatrd
Russian purchases there In th last
tew months.
Portraits ol dittuctioo. The Peaa
iera, opp, Uolli tcsatet,
Today
By Arthur Brisbane
Mr, Ochs' Illness,
President Hoover on Beer,
Russia Collapses Slowly,
Plenty of Great Ones,
Copyright King Features Synd, Inc.
It is good news that Adolph
S. Ochs, editor and owner of
the New York Times, is recu
perating satisfactorily from a
serious operation performed
two weeks agq. Anxiety dis
appears with news of his. suc
cessful convalescence.
To all that have advocated,
as Thomas Jefferson did, the
use of light wine and beer as
an antidote to poisonous whis
key, it is interesting to know
that President Hoover, four
teen years ago shared the Jef
ferson theory.
Senator Sheppard, of Texas,
urged Mr. Hoover, then food
administrator, to stop beer
brewing because it consumed
"four million bushels of grain
monthly." We were saving all
food resources then,' grain,
sugar, meat, etc., for shipment
to our dear friends abroad,
that now refer to our govern
ment as Uncle Shylock.
At that time President Hoover
wrote Senator Sheppard "If you stop
brewing, the saloons of the country
will still be open, but confined prac
tically to a whisky and gin basis."
You will ' note that President
Hoover 1& 1018 foresaw prohibition's
results.
His letier also aald "It Is mighty
difficult to get drunk on two and
thre quarters per cent beer. It will
be esay enough If we force a substi
tution of distilled drink for It"
President Hoover had sound Ideas
on alcoholic mixtures In 1018, and
his wise words on beer as compared
with whisky and gin recall Thomas
Jefferson's letter, recommending to
the assembly of Virginia, & British
brewer called Captain Miller, Jeffer
son wrote: "He Is about to settle In
our country, and to establish a brew
ery. In which art I think him as skill
ful a man as has ever com to Amer
ica. I wish to see this beverage be
come common Instead of the whisky
which kills one-third of our citizens,
and ruins their famUles. He Is stay
ing with me until he csn fix him
self." An American architect, Mr. Ham
ilton, of Bast Orange, New Jersey,
shares, with two Russians, the first
prise In competing for a great Russian
palace to be elected on the site where
the Church of Christ th Redeemer
stood, before Russia tor It down.
Russia, to proceed promptly with
glgantlo atructur. keeps on building
Industrially,, and otherwise.
Our best minds say "Russia must
collapse because all her theories are
unsound."
It seems to collapse rather slowly.
And the discovery of great new Rus
sian oil flelda In the Ural, may help
delay the collapse.
H
George Bernard Shaw saya there
are "no great men or great women"
alive or dead, and "people believe In
them as they used to believe in
dragons and unicorns."
Shaw Is mistaken. There have been
and there are great men and women.
Pasteur wss one, Edison another,
Copernicus, Tycho-Brae. Kepler, Gali
leo. Descartes and Newton were six
others, coming by the 'way, from alx
different countries.
Every mother who devotes her life
to her children Is a great woman,
father who devotes his life and ener
gies to his family is a great msn.
Por In all "greatness" the chief Ingre
dient Is "goodness."
Th death of Thomaa Bat, killed
In Czecho-Slovakla yesterday when
his private plane crashed ) a greet
loss to th Industrial world. Born
ftfty-alx years sgo In Moravia, he was
the son of a poor cobbler, learned his
father's trsde and thirty-eight years
ago had a shop with fifty employes.
When he died, flying over one of
his msny factories, he dominated the
manufacturing of shoes throughout
th world, made gigantic shipment
to this country In spite of the tariff,
and was cslled In Europe "the Henry
Pord of Europe."
His death 1 a calamity. His life
proved that opportunity la always at
hand for those that combine courage
with ability.
Th case ot Smith Reynolds, only
twenty year old. who bid Inherited
twenty millions, married two women
and died, by suicide or the bullet ot
an assassin, drags along. The coro
ner Jury eaya he young msn wss
killed "by a person or persona un
known," not excluding suicide.
Sheriff Scott, of Winston 8alem. N.
C. says h will contlnv Investigat
ing. Pacts published aie painfully
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
Signed letters pertaining to per ion) bealtb tod hygiene, not to diaeue
diagncftU or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady it a aujnped tell-ad-dreased
envelope la encloaed. Letter anouid be brief and written is ink
Owing to the large number o! letters received only a taw can be answered
here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instruotlona. Ad
dress Or. William Brady tn care of The Mall Tribune.
IT WON'T BK
Many of us can remember a time
when intelligent people deliberately
exposed their children to mumps,
measles, whoop
ing cough, scar
let fever or chick
en pox, because
they b e i 1 e v ed
that every one
must have these
diseases a o o n er
or later and so
It was better to
have them In
c h 1 1 dhood and
get It over.
Today this Is
regarded as a crime, even In back
ward communities. Now and then
a child dies of one of these so
called diseases of childhood. Sensible
folk know, too, that no such Illness
Is "good" for a child, and accord
ingly the modern practice Is to try
to protect children from contracting
these diseases, and In an encourag
ing number of cases children are
growing up without ever suffering
from such diseases. Physicians and
health authorities nowadays do not
refer, to these dUeases as "diseases
of childhood." Childhood Is getting
a better deal.
Superstitions which were all very
well Yor medical profession and laity
SO or 100 -years ago are absurd today.
Before we knew anything about the
cause of diphtheria, pneumonia, tu
berculosis, cerebro-splnal meningi
tis, tonsillitis, whooping cough and
the other respiratory Infections, the
theory of exposure to cold and wet
had the virtue of necessity. The
doctor had to come to bat with
some sort of explanation for the
Illness, and what could be more
suitable than that?
Everybody had to be more or less
exposed to weather changes, drafts,
occasional wetting of the feet, damp
ness, raw winds or other discomforts.
Hence Ji was always plausible enough
how he came down "under the wea
ther." The cold superstition la by no
means discarded by the medical pro
fession as a whole, but It la fading.
Tho dumb public Is beginning to
suspect that the eminent medical
man's early bulletins In the case of
the prominent politician are dis
honest or else the eminent medical
man makes extremely bad guesses.
Occasionally some health officer or
physician still Insists that exposure
to cold or wet somehow "lowers re
sistance,' whatever that nay mean,
and advises that plenty of good
wholesome food, rest, sunshine, fresh
water and pure air will keep up
your resistance. Bui there Is no
scientific) ground for this. It la
Just an old Yankee notion. Apart
from Immunity, which ' la specific
and has no known -bearing on ex
posure to cold or wet, nobody knows
a thing about "resistance"; nobody
can even define such a state. It
simply doesn't exist. If you or I
Today's Guest Editorial
The Mall Tribune, thanks to the courtesy of the American Legion,
Is printing a series of guest editorials written on Important questions
of the day by prominent citizens In various walks of life. The Mall
Tribune offers these editorials as an Interesting feature but does not
hecessarllT endorse the sentiments expressed.
Number 17
By
JOHN E. EDGKRTON, President,
National Association of Manufacturers
Any government Is exactly what its
constituency -makes it or suffers It
through Indifference to become.
Whether he la conscious of It or not.
every citizen contributes positively or
negatively to the character of his
government. A good citizen Is one
who Is eager and diligent In the per
formance of all of the obligations at
taching to citizenship In a free gov
ernment aa he Is In asserting snd
exercising the rights vouchsafed by It.
So It Is that all rights, even the
"Inellenable rl&hts of life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happlnesB. pre
suppose and are based upon conform
ity with antecedent conditions, which
require that they not only be thus
earned but thst they msy be kept
earned by unremitting obedience to
the laws which constitute their foun
dation and guarantee. Hence, aoclety
through organized government claims
and exercises the right to deprive a
citizen ot his liberty or ot his life
when through established processes
he Is found guilty of hsvlng violated
certain laws set up to protect his
rights and those of others. Any citi
zen, therefore, who abuses any of the
liberties with which he Is clothed,
or vsho violates the law by which hla
rights are guarded. Impairs not only
his own securities, but those of oth
ers. It Is equally true that any per
son who neglects or refuses to per
lorm the duties Imposed upon citi
zenship In a free government forfeits
moral entitlement to the rights which
such a government guarantees. And
when Vie practice ot euch disregard
of or indifference towards obligation
become too general, the government
of auch a constituency soon ceases to
be free. This Is th very greatest
danger which threatens our national
security at this time. t
enlightening Including stories of de
bauchery, drunkenness snd wild liv
ing. They convince any doubters
that alcohol actually la sold under
our system of prohibition.
The trsgedy of th boy who Inher
ited twenty millions may help to
reconcile parents to their Inability to
leer wealth to their children.
Revolt Cuts CuNe,
NEW YORK, July IS. (AP) The
All-American Cable company an
nounced today tt had been notified
by the Brazilian government that
communication to and from all
points tn the state of Sao Psu'o,
center of the Brazilian revolt, had
I been suspended.
LONG NOW.
happen to have any immunity against
any one of the respiratory Infec
tions, there should be satisfaction
and comfort In the knowledge, the
certainty, that no amount of ex
posure to cold or wet or other dis
comforts can rob us of It. We have
this assurance not only from scien
tific experiments, but also from ail
human experience, I believe.
It will not be long now till all
the world recognizes that discomfort,
at the very worst, frostbite, la -the
only harm anybody can suffer from
exposure to cold and wet. In an
ticipation of this state of popular
enlightenment the old timers In
the profession had better prepare
to adapt their theories and teach
ings to a higher order of intelligence.
leBt the public laugh at their quaint
Ideas.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Civil Service Passed.
January 10 1 cook civil service ex
amination and waa sailing along
smoothly until the doctor discovered
a rupture, which prevented further
progress. As you suggested I had
Dr. give me the ambulant
treatment, and late In April I was
again examined, and altho the civil
service doctor ridiculed the method
of treatment he was unable to find
any evidence of hernia and he had
to pass me. I am certainly grateful
for your advice and for Dr. 'a
treatment. P. H. J.
Answer The civil service examiner
reminds us of the bumpkin who
didn't believe in giraffes. Our pro
fession harbors a good many euch
skeptics. By the way, I have re
ceived many letters from others who
are delighted with the cure of hernia
by the doctor who cured yours.
Life Guard Tells Vs.
I'd certainly like to know where
Dr. Ceila Duel Moaner received her
degree in medicine. I happened to
see your column regarding women
going swimming during the mens
truation period. Aa a lifeguard In
one summer I have carried over 10
such casea from the water, aufiejl-itx
from nevere cramps and pain. W.
R. A,
Answer Johns Hopkins. But when
you firemen or life guards get a
notion, what difference does it make
where the dumo doctora received
their education? Every girl or young
woman should rend and follow the
sane advice given in Dr. Mosher's
"Personal Hygiene for Women," pub
lished by Stanford Unlveralty Press,
Stanford University. Cal.
Ketchup.
I have been eating ketchup liter
ally at every meal. Will it harm
me any? C. P. C.
Answer Excessive indulgence In
any condiment is rather Injurious.
A dash of ketchup, mustard or other
such delight la all right occasionally,
but all wrong when used habitually.
(Copyright John TV Dllle Co.)
Since about 1890 there has been
going on In America a. constant de
crease of public Interest In govern---ment
until fewer than 60 per cent of
the qualified voters regularly exercise
their rights of franchise. The out
rageously high cost of government,
which is the inescapable companion
of Incompetency and Inefficiency;
shameless, audacious corruption with
which many parts of our political
system are generally known to be
saturated, and the manifestly Insa
tiable appetite of government for the
control and regulation of the lives
ot its citizens and their business, are
soma of the quite visible bitter fruits
of the lack of Interest in government
on the part of American citizens.
Furthermore, Increasing numbers of
the people are looking to public treas
uries aa children look to their dad
dies' pocketbooks for their support
end Indulgence. Fsr worse even than
economic conditions have ever been
ar the political condltlona w.hlch
have developed from tho apathetic
attitude of otherwise good citizens
towards their government. Economic
condltlona are not going to get much
better nor permanently eo until there
Is a decided revival ot public Interest
In government. When that takes
place, both the crooked and the in
efficient will be put out and kept
out of public office, and government
will again come to be regarded as' the
servant and not th master of Its
people, nor a charitable Institution
to tske care of those who are able to
take care ot themselves. Under suoh
conditions to be devoutly hoped for,
no sllen or other undigested Ameri
can will have the effrontery to claim
exemption from the obligation to de
fend with his life the flag of a coun
try whose rights and privileges he Is
seeking or exercising.
Tomorrow: Edward C. Elliott, Pres
ident of Purdue University.
French Woman Of
High Degree Opens
Ritzy Night Club
BIARRITZ Prance (AP) Another
lady of quality has Joined te titled
buft.nw8 people here, the Marquise
de Cass-Montalvo hTlng opened
rltry night club.
When the marquis was asked about
his wife's venture he said: "It's
none of my ustnea. Z go there
only as a customer."
The only otho real marquise In
biiAines here Is the Marquise de
San Carloa who not long ago became
a milliner.
i
Two losds 18-in. sreen slsbs, 14 SO.
Med. Fuel Co. Tel. Ml,
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jackson Count)
History from the riles ot. The
Mall Tribune of 9 and 10 Yean
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
July 13, 1922.
(It ws Thursday)
Clara Phillips, Los Angeles, held
for beating out brains of rival In
love with a hammer.
Espee section crew completes 10
dsy Job of fixing the Main street
croelng.
Ited Erickson ot Seattle, Wash
purchases half intereat In Modern
Heating and Plumbing company.
Grass fire on southwest flank ot
Boxy Ann sweeps 800 acres. Some
blsm a cigarette, and some blame
sparks from a fiery cross pit.
Brown and White purchase Page
Dressier Realty company.
Pord and Fordson Power exposition
reaches the valley.
A. V. Carlson's spray rig. during
noon hour Is robbed of all Its gaso
line, while owner is at dinner.
TWfiNTY YEARS AGO TODAT
July 13, 1912.
(It was Saturday)
Sen. Lorlmer, "the blonde boas of
Illinois" barred from senate seat.
Miss Bernlc Csmeron leave on
a vacation trip to Portland.
Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Emmens leaves
on fishing trip on Bogus.
Miss Jeanette Patterson and friend
to spend week on Mlnard ranch.
J. H. Cochran returns "from a run
over to Klamath Falla."
Autos will be sble to reach Crater
lake rim by end of next week.
Cloudbursts snd tornadoes roar
over middle west.
Mose Barkdull's dog, "Turk," re
turns home after two days' absence.
Jacksonville
JACKSONVILLE, July 13. (Spl.)
Miss Isflie Mc Cully and nephew, Geo.
Merrltt, attended a family reunion
of the McCully clan at Harrlsburg,
Ore. Harrlsburg was founded by Miss
McCully's uncles. They built the
first stores and mllia there and es
tablished the first steamship line be
tween Harrlsburg and Salem. There
were over fifty descendants present.
The dinner was held on the
InnH ..m.t-.H . . M.illo
brothers. One of the old homes built
by Ac McCully still stands. . ,
The history Class ot the Ashland
Normal summer school was visiting
the Jacksonville museums Wednesday
afternoon.
George Little, who has been 111 for
the past two weeks at the home of
his sone, Jim Little, is improving.
Ella Orth Cotohett ot Melbourne,
Australia, called on Miss Issie Mc
Cully Monday. She Is spending the
summer months with Mrs. James Pel
ton of Klamath Fslls. Her son, Jsmes,
is with her. Mrs. Cotchett la a na
tive of Jacksonville.
Miss Lee Gable of Los Angeles Is
visiting her sister, Mrs. W. H. Arnold,
east of town. ,
Mrs. B. C. Kerr, former resident
here, and her slater. Mrs. will Hurst,
of San Francisco are visiting at the
Julius Manke home east of town.
Mra, Arch Qulsenberry snd children,
Zoa and Roberta, arrived her Mon
day to spend the week with her sis
ter, Mrs. F. A. Henspeter.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hlldreth of
Portland and Mr. and Mrs. Evans
Hlldreth of Vancouver. B. C are
guests of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Can
trail. Charles Lyons of Ashland was a
guest at dinner Saturday of his son,
Leonard Lyons.
Mrs. Viola Flannagan of Grants
Pass and Mrs. Lydia Forsythe of Se
attle visited Miss Mom Brltt re
cently. Leon Hsnna left Saturday for his
home In Sen Francisco. He had spent
a week with his brother, Herbert
Harms, in Jacksonville.
Mrs. o. A. Weaver and brother,
Arthur Weaver of Portland are ex
pected Saturday to visit Mrs. Weav
er's dsughter, Mrs. Vivian Beach, and
family.
Mra. H. M. Williamson wss operated
on at th Sacred Heart hospital Mon
day morning. Mrs. Williamson Is do
ing nicely.
8am Reynolds was a Sunday guest
at the Ansll Ollson ranch at Bun
com. Mrs. George Trent of the Owen
Oregon Lumber Co. camp above Butte
Falls waa here Monday for aupplles.
Theron Applebsker and C. B. Dun
nlngton visited Cliff Dunnlngton at
Sterling Wednesday.
Missionary society of th Presby
terian church will meet the afternoon
of July 31 at the church parlors with
Mra. Mary Norval hoetess for th sft
ernoon. Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Llnd and
family of Portland called on frlenda
here Monday. They are former resi
dents. Miss Helen Kan to . improving
nicely from an operation at the Sa
cred Heart hospital Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard McKee ar
the parents of a daughter born July
4. named Znld Collen.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Dunnlngton
entertained at dinner Sunday for
Axel Amundsen ot Talent.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Flea snd daugh
ter, Virginia, we-e guests at dinner
Sunday ot Mr. and Mrs. 8. . Brill
at their eummer horn adjoining Sun
set on the Rogue.
Mrs. Jsmes Lawheed, who hu been
111 th past week. Is Improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hoefs of China
win visit his sister, Miss Alio Hoefs.
her In August. Henry Hoefs Is pay
clerk for the navy department and
Is being transferred to th east coast.
Recent callers at th Jmtl Brltt
horn wer D. I. Brower of o rants
Pass. Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Olbson of
Passdens, Cal., and Wilmer Hlgln
botham and sister, Ruby.
Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Oodward called
Sunday at the Carl Nledermeyer horn
on West Side.
Mrs. Kstts Collins of Medford. Mr.
Emma Plymsl stone. Mrs. Imma
Piymal Ms thews and Mrs. NelU LuvBogu river .uesauy morning,
ferKety
Livestock. ,
Portland. July 18. (AP) Cat
tle 80, calve 10; steady.
Hogs, 300; quotably unchanged;
easy.
Sheep, 1300; steady.
Portland Produce
PORTLAND, Ore., July 13 (AP)
Country meats: Selling price to re
tailers: Country killed hogs, best
butchers, uader 100 lbs., 7ft 8 Bo;
vealers, 80 to 100 lbs., 8g8H,c; lambs.
8o lb; yearlings, 5c lb.; heavy ewes,
3o lb.; caiiner cows, 3c lb.; bulls, t
ao'jc ib.
Onions: Selling price to retailers:
Walla Walla. Sl.16 9l.25 cental.
Butter, eggs, butterfat, live poul
try, potatoes, strawberries, wool, hay
quotations unchanged.
Portland Wheat
Wheat.
PORTLAND, Ore., July 13. (API
Wheat: Open High Low Clos
July -VA " .48 .46
Sept. .48 .48 Vt .48 .4814
Deo. .494 .49 .49 V4 .49
Cssh grain:
Big Bend bluestem .S7H
Soft white .48
Western white .47".
Hard winter .48 V4
Northern aprlng .48V4
Western red r... .46
Oats: No. white, 21,50.
Today's car receipts: Wheat, 19;
flour, 7: corn, 2; oats, 1.
San Francisco Butterfat.
SAN FRANCISCO, July 13. (TP)
Butterfat f.o.b. San Francisco, .18.
Wall St. Report
Stock Sale Averages.
(Copyright, 1933. Standard Statistics
Co.)
July 13:
60 30 30 90
, Ind'ls Br's TJt's Total
Today 38.5 14.9 67.9 833
Prev day 36.8 14.3 65.3 88.8
Week ago 38.7 14.0 56.0 86 8
Year ago .108.S 75.6 163.0 113.0
Bond Sale Averages.
(Copyright, 1932, Standard Gtatlstlcs
co.)
July 13:
20
Ind'ls
. 54.7
. 54.4
30
Rr's
63.3
62.0
63.4
100.7
30 60
Ut's Total
74.3 60.7
naa eo.4
73.3 69.7
101.1 96.8
Today
Prev day
! Week BgO 53.5
; Tear 8 Bia
NEW YORK, July 13. (AP) The
best rally In the atock market In
a month provided a break In Wall
Streets protracted period of gloom
today. Leadera pushed up about 1
to 8 points, as trading quickened.
The closing tone was strong. The
turnover approximated a . million
shares.
The list successfully pushed thru
Its upper resistance level ot recent
weeks, as the latest phase of llqulds
tlon appeared to be completed, and
traders were cheered by the Improved
prospect of an early adjournment of
congress. The Improved tone of com
modities also helped.
Today's closing prices tor 18 se
lected stocks follow:
American Can
. 35!4
. 74
American T. & T. .
Anaconda
4
8
6!4
6
1
4
814
19
Curtis Wright
General Motors
Int. T. Ac T.
Montgomery Ward
Paramount Pub.
Radio
Southern Pac.
S. O. of Cal.
S. O. of N. J.
Trans. Am
United Aircraft
Ul S. Steel
. 26
. 314
. 914
. 23
. 1.38
Corp't Trust Shs.
DOCTOR KILLED
By EX-PATIENT
WASHINGTON, July 13 (AP)
Dr. Victor A. Almone. medical of
ficer of the Mount Alto Veterans'
hospital, was shot through the hesrt
snd Instantly killed today by Frank
Csstell, former patient In the psy
chopsthlc ward.
Castell fired the shot apparently
without warning after entering th
physicians office at the hospital. He
hsd been awaiting the arrival of
another physician In an adjoining
hallway. Orderlies seized Castell,
but he offered no resistance.
He refused to give a reason tor
the shooting, or answer questions
by police.
1
Breaks Rlhs In Fall.
PORTLAND, July 19-. (P) R7
Terrell of Salem was brought to a
hospital here Tuesday suffering from
two or more broken ribs received
when he fell down a shaft at the
Amalgamated mine near Mehama,
Ore.
Picture frame made to order. Th
Peasleys. opp. Holly theater.
Auto glass installed while you wait.
Prices right BrlU sheet Metal Work.
Kelley of Oakland, Cal., were In Jack
sonville Monday and called on old
friends here. They ar former real
dents. Mr. and Mra. Randle Cadwallder of
Medford spent 8unday at th Otis
Flltcroft horn.
Mrs. Henry Hulburt left Sunday
for a few weeks with her huebsnd at
their mine above Copper.
Mr. Ester Knutren Is very 111 at
th bom of her mother. Mra. Ed
Russell, at Copper. Mrs. Knutren la
a sister of Mrs. Walter Scholer of
this place.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bar and
daughters, Jean and Betty, of Med
ford spent Mondsy eventng at -he
Fred Flck home.
Vivian Beach and Oscar Lewis
brought In a fine catch of fl.fc fmm