Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 27, 1932, Page 4, Image 4

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    PrGE POTTO
ilEDFORD llim TRIBUNE, aiEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1932.
Medford Mail Tribune
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OffleM III N Toil, UiImio. Detroit,
mnelKO, Loo Aoula, Hauls, Fortius.
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Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Perry
The Florida Experiment Station
lut Saturday mllkod cow by tele-J
arson. This bit of ciontino smart'
nam help out tho farmer, but leave.
the farmer's wife lust as ousy in tne
red-hot kitchen. It would be some
thing worth cheering, If by sending a
night message, the noon mrai wouiu
be cooked lor tne nay num.
Dear Nancy Lee:
I am a man of 29 and am In lore
with a girl of 27 who it married.
What ahall I doT (Roseburg New
Review.) Look out for that chin
hleh wire clothesline In the back
yard
A New Jersey maid, 14, was found
by the police, locked and chained in
a, closet, witn tne ooor nauea onus,
and double bolted and locked. The
sollce can find no motive for the
Imprisonment, It looks like her Maw
had made up her mind an was not
going to the dance.
' GOOD IN TUB WOHST OF. OS .
(sr. Bulletin)
Capone has his Ideals and fol
.' Iowa them In prison, It la re
ported ihat he la friendly toward
all other prisons: but dope
peddlers and white slavers. He
was In the comparatively 'clean
business of beer selling (with
Incidental murder) and tax
evasion and he wants no associa
tion with what he calls "rata."
The fall campaign wilt be opened
In these parts, by charging that this
burr; Is the biggest little "Sodom and
Gomorrah," In the land.
''BETTOR. PRISON DISCHARGE
PLAN" (Hdltne Chlco Enterprise.)
herein It seems that work haa start
ed on the wrong end of the proposi
tion. e
Who can remember the good old
days, when a kiddle coaster could be
parked on the sidewalk In front of
the kiddle's house, without being em
berzled by somebody In alleged dls
tressf . e
Chsslng butterflies In a righteous
and ferocious manner la the order of
the day. Usually the chaser waa
kicked In the head by a mule, before
he finished the eighth grade, or was
bitten by a chipmunk In his Infancy,
and la more to be pitied than cen
sured. to
The heat has taken the lead aa a
aubject of conversation, among the
Older Girls. It la generally agreed
that the way to keep cool, Is to
Ignore the heat." If snubs had any
Jurisdiction over the weather, the
pears would have chilblains.
The Lark Girls are all vocalising
on the. Rail Fence circuit. They are
accomplished feathered sopranos. Lit
tle Tlllle Lark was badly frightened
by a strange haw Tuea. eve.
Fears are felt that Prosperity will
be back In time to Inflict a horse
race program at the county fair.
TUB COMPLETE 8IZB-UP
(timporla, Kan., Uaiette)
The Democrats In congress have
passed their relief bill, The president
haa vetoed It. They were after the
veto and not after relief In passing
this bill. They wanted the veto to
be used aa a campaign argument
against the president. They have got
It. Now let them use It. It la a
dcmagoglo weapon and It will prob
ably kick back.
A party that would run the risk of
putting auch a vicious bill on the
statute books risk only checked
by the veto has precious little busi
ness running the affalra of this
oountry. During the course of a long
and useless Ufa the writer hereof haa
found many Democratic measures
and many Democratic atateamsn
wholly worthy to which and to whom
the epubllcans were wrongly op
posed. But nevertheless there Is In
side the Democratic party that dirty
little rotten spot the will appeal to
demagogy to make a vote which on
the whole makes the Democratic
party a dangerous custodian for our
national government.
Thee lines are written not without
the chilling knowledge that the Re
publican, party haa faulu of lu own
and lota of them. But they are not
these particular Democratic faulta
and we endure thoee Republican
faults with groaning and trepidation.
An Inventors' elub, composed
chiefly of miners and colliery work
era, haa been formed In Durham,
county, England, to aid poor In
ventors to place their work on the
market and to protect then rlghta.
Rabbi Wise and War
TNR. Stephen 8. Wise, observing big twenty-fifth anniversary
as rabbi of the Free Synagoguo, made public confession,
in sorrow and in a spirit of penitence for the great sin of my
career that of taking sides during the World War." Dr. Wise
asserts: "Never again will I give support to war, to any war
whatsoever, whether called just or unjust . . . Though I bore
no arms, I gave the. fullest measure of my private and public
support to the United States
World War. I will never do so
There speaks a noble Christian gcntlemnn firm in the faith
of his teachings and beliefs. But when Dr. Wise advocates
passive resistance, it is not possible for the rest of us to ignore
the dangers which constantly threaten society and against
which any such idealism has as
Were Dr. Wise king of the
men see with him eye to eye.
be. Unfortunately, we are in
as yet to appeal with success to
ness and peace among nations.
For the thirty thousand or
to have lived upon this earth,
bounteous measure, yet he has not succeeded in eliminating the
lust, greed and selfishness which are still powerful influences
for evl in habits of living. Though nineteen hundred years
ago a new philosophy of brotherly lova was born upon tho earth.
there has occurred within the last fifteen years the greatest
man-made holocaust in the history of the world and that
among Christian people.
Granted, the time has been short forthc attainment of an
ideal to which Dr. Wise gives sincere expression and one which
all might wish to enjoy. Yet for the present there appears to
be the necessity of utilizing radical and forceful measures for
the protection of life and the
nation. C. B.
LEAGUE ECONOMIC
F
TARIFF TROUBLES
European Countries Sur
rounded by Maze of Bar
riers Erected for Revenue,
Protection and Prohibition
GENEVA (M) When the League
of Nations convokes the world eeo
nomto conference planned ri'y the
recent reparations parley at Lau
sanne, Its members will have a dlffl
cult time seeing the forsst through
the trade trees.
Tariffs, admitted and hidden, are
In force throughout thousands of
miles of European boundarlea and
business on this continent haa be
come a sort of Olymplo steeplechase,
but with scaling ladders needed to
reach the top of some of the hurdles.
Tiers of Barriers
Tariff walla range through reve
nue producing, protective and pro
hibitive patterns and are reared
higher In several countries by the
additional precaution of currency
restrictions. In still others a cap
row of "quotas" crowns the barrier.
A map In relief showing the various
hindrances to trade relations in force
throughout Europe resembles the tin
with which mothers used to cut
fancy doodads out of gingerbread for
Christmas, One must look closely to
espy Austria at the bottom of an
especially deep hole.
Many Boost Tariffs
Starting with Norway, which re
cently authorised duties as high as
400 per oent, those nations assessing
high Import duties against commerce
are England, France, Italy, Germany,
Holland, Sweden. Denmark, Finland.
Latvia, Poland and Austria.
Atop their tariff barriers, other
countries placed quota restrictions
and prohibitions, whereby the respec
tive governments anticipated the Im
port needs of their nationals then
prorated these amounts among the
exporting nations, many times using
an arbitrary scale to determine the
percentages.
In this group are France, Holland.
Latvia, Poland, Oermany, Denmark,
Belgium, Switzerland and Bulgaria.
Csechoslovakla Is content to re
strict Imports by means of quotas,
Hungary taking the same method of
legalising what la to all Intents and
purposes a prohibitive tariff directed
against various nations to the advan
tage of other exportera. I
Combinations Halt Trade
In the list of business hurdles the
third classification embraces curren
cy restriction statutes. In this divi
sion are Greece, Spain, Portugal, Tur
key, Hungary, Csechoslovakla, Latvia
and Oermany.
Of this group Turkey combines re
stricting eiport of currency with a
quota ayatem for imports. Spain and
Portugal unite tariffs and money re
strictions. Combinations of the three princi
ples of currency restrictions, quotas
and high tariffs are found In Austria.
Oermany, Denmark, Latvia, Eatonla
and Jugoslavia,
Ruaaia'a "tats monopoly on both
Imports and exports solves the knot
ty problem for thst nation.
The Dalles To Pit
8000 Bbls. Cherries
THE DALLES. Ore, July 87. (API
The Dalles Co-operative Growers'
association tou.,v announced readi
ness to start women and girls pit
ting eight thousand barrels of sulphur-brined
white cherries. The crew
will be rapidly increased to ISO and
the payroll, a boon to local retail
business, will last beyond Christmas.
Phona Ml. We 11 haul away your
refuse. City Sanitary Service).
Two loads 19-ln. green slabs, 14.50.
Med. Fuel 00. Tel. Ml.
Portralta of dlatlnctlon. The Peas
leys, opp. Holly theater.
ana the allied nations in the
again."
yet failed to provide protection
world and could he make other
what an Utopia the world would
a stage of civilization too early
a sober sense of justice, forgive
more years that man is reputed
civilization has advanced in
'
homo and the defense of the
MEXICO'S RADICAL
TREND HALTED BY
CURB ON STATES
Republic -Turns to Right
After 15 Years in Test
ing Lettish taeforms-r-Bai-ance
Struck, Is Belief
MEXICO CITY (AP) While other
Latin-American governments have
been talking about or experimenting
with varying forms of socialistic laws,
statements by Mexican 'off lclals have
indicated .that this republic Is turn
ing toward the right after 19 years
Of teatllng leftikt reforms.
Although declarations by President
Ortla Rublo, members of his cabinet
and other leaders have not been def
inite as to the future, there have
been plain statements hat Mexico
for the present would ourb radical or
semi-socialistic expertmeuts.
Proud of Revolution -The
country haa been proud of the
fact that Its "revolution of the peo
ple" led all others and that Its plain-
spoken, somewhat radical con.tltu
tlon of 1B1T was one of the first of
that character.
But government officials now seem
satisfied that a balance has been
struck between capital and labor,
riches and poverty, religion and the
state. Future policies, therefore, are
likely to be predicated upon that be
lief. Highly significant was the presi
dent's recent circular to state gover
nors. In It he told them to head
off legislation "tending to Interpret
social situations by, or In the direc
tion of, Ideas foreign to the constitu
tional forms which govern us."
named On Legislation
The circular contained a direct
order not to permit passage of any
more legislation like the Hidalgo and
Vera Orua appropriation laws which
Vera Crua expropriation laws which
to confiscation for public purposes.
Tnia is not the tln.e," said the
president, "to present to the nstlon
or to the world a spectacle of disinte
gration in our system of government
by acceding, with little Judgment,
not to general demands, which th
federal government must satisfy, but
10 specific ones unrepresentative of
the general need."
Alberto J. Panl, aecretarv o; the
treasury, followed this with a state
ment ahowlng how harmful the Hl-
aaigo and Vera Crua laws wore to the
national credit. He said that their
passage had been the direct cause of
a drop In tho peso from 8 to f to
4 to I against the dollar.
Union rollca Denounced.
A real bombshell came from Gen
eral Abelardo Rodriguez, secretary of
Industry, commerce and labor. He
denounced many trades union poli
cies aa unpatriotic and harmful to
the public, a doctrine which It would
have been Impossible to enunciate a
year ago.
There waa a sharp retort from
leaders of organlred labor, but the
general answered promptly. He re
Iterated his opinion on strikes altho
this favorite weapon of labor haa
been nurtured by the federal govern
ment within recent years.
Following thla. the national revo
lutionary party, the government's po
litical organisation, refused to be
drawn Into the controversy between
workers and the Southern Pacific
Railway of Mexico. General Manuel
Perea Trevlno, president of tfie party,
ruled that the dispute was outside
th, purview of the party.
ROSKBURO. city council plans
construction of garage and machine
shed to replace city barn destroyed
by lire.
Two mllea of grading completed on
a mllea Wallula cutoff Sand sta
tion to State Line highway. HermM
ton Herald.
John W. King, OoUlaboro. N. C
aaked $10,000 for personal damsgrs
rauaed by the alleged explosion of i
a cigarette, 1
Today
By Arthur Brlibana
Bloc Against the U. S, A.
Poor Old Capitalism,
Men Die Strangely,' ' .
Copyright King Featurea Bynd., Inc.
Karl H. von Wicgand cables
from Berlin to Universal Ser
vice about the " anti-Arnericnn
bloc," just perfected in Eur
ope. Germany has joined and
it includes France, Gre,at Bri
tain, Italy, Belgium, Poland,
Jngo-SIavia andjlumania.
Mr.' Von Wiegand says
"British Foreign Seer etary
Simon and Premier Ilerriot of
France have planned to isolate
the United States if Washing
ton refuses to cancel '. war
debts."
Boycotting is easy, some
times unprofitable. Eight mer
chants might unite to boycott
their best cus'tomer and hot be
happy when the customer stops
buying, ' ' .
Canada, according to the
Now York Times, agrees to
dropvano quarter of its coal im
portations from the ' United
States if Britain in 'return will
buy Canadian lumber.
At this moment, the United statu
buys from Canada more than Is
bought by the whole British empire.
Ten lines In a new tariff bill and
the United States would buy from
Canada NOTHING. Boycotts are
dangerous. This one may be good
for our country.
Success haa been too easy In the
United States. Difficulties might do
us good.
. The "United Farmers of Canada,"
through their Saskatchewan presi
dent, demand "an end of the capi
talists system," the farmers say:
"Competitive production, for profit,
under private control, la In Its dying
hours." '
It might be well to watch Russia
for a while before deciding. The
frogs got rid of the dull log, their
ruler, and acquired for king a long-
legged bird that devoured them.
They wished they had not com
plained.
Capitalism Is not perfect, but It
has been a fairly good-natured old
ruler. It certainly has Increased
wagea, bath tubs, automobiles, ra
dios and vacuum cloaners. It' might
be wise to try it a while longer.
M
When men decide to die, usually
decision mora or less cowardly.
they do It In strange ways. One
Jumps) Jnto a volcano, taking a girl
with him. Another goea.over Niagara,
some Jump In front of .locomotives,
some hang, ahoot or drown them
selves. Roscoe Griffith went about
It deliberately.' To ambulance doc
tors, called by his wife, to find him
eating a hearty dinner, he said:
My wife la mistaken, gentlemen, . X
have taken no poison." ' And he
smiled.
They took him to the hospital.
he walked from the ambulance to
the door, and fell dead.
So many pleasant things can hap
pen, ao mar 7 interesting things
are' aure to happen, "gigantic trou
bles" meet so quickly that t Is
silly not to wait aa long as possible
and see.
..
George Bernard Shaw. 7fi yeara old
yesterday, does not like to have It
mentioned. - When he Is 06 he wilt
be proud of his age, and tell every
body. He says "I am overworked
and have been all my life." That
la why he retains good health at
78. Mental work keeps the body
"fit." Men, like trees, die at the top.
.-a.
The Russian, Oorguloff, who mur
dered President Doumer of France,
says that he wants to be executed,
and the French will probably oblige
him. He wants to "leave thla earth,"
and predicts disaster for all of us.
He liked the old earth so little that
he wanted to be sent In a rocket
to the moon, before he killed the
French president. -
Those that etpected to .find In
Oorguloff's crime a new proof of
Bolshevik wickedness are disap
pointed. It turns out thst he mur
dered Doumer to rebuke Bolshevism
"In the name of an enslaved Rus
sian people."
Rudy Vallee la studying law,
against a time when "I shall sing
no more." He will find that very
profitable crooning Is done In his
new profession.
Jenkins Comment
. (Continued from Pit on )
proportion of Income Ukn bjr tuies
throughout the United But?
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, fit. D.
Signed letters pertaining to personal beaitn and hygiene, not to disease
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady U a atomped self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should oe brief and written In Ink
Owing to the large numoar of letters received only a few can be answered
here. Ho reply can be mads to q'terles not conforming to Instructions. Ad
dress Dr. William Brady is oar of The MaU Tribune.
DIATHERMY FOR PA
My friends (oh, yeah?) who prac
tice nervous Imposition never fall to
suggest. In their protests, that eome
d a y I may uf-
fer a nervous
breakdown m y
Mlf, and then I'll
have tome sym
pathy for those
w.h o experience
the tortures of
hell from t h
condition. But I
have sympathy
for the thousands
who suffer from
nervous Imposition. That's why I do
all I can to stop further Imposition.
On the same basis, I suppose I'll
never have true ympathy for one In
the throes of childbirth until
At that, I heartily concur in the
notion that a doctor ought to have
a sample of some of these afflictions
In o-der to understand them thor
oughly and feel the right kind of
sympathy for the victims, yntll my
appendix, without Just cause or prov
ocation, went gangrenous Z had al
ways thought that patients suffered
more or less when they underwent
the operation. I know better now.
U having bursitis qualifies one to
sympathize with victims of the trou
ble, I am prepared to shed tears of
compassion for any poor geek with
such a shoulder.
Seems as though the sovereign rem
edies for. these common afflictions are
always discovered shortly after I have
got over an attack. It was so with
poison Ivy I still grit my teeth and
turn pale with distraction when 1
think of the long, long nights of in
tolerable Itching I coped with Just on
the eve of the announcement of the
nw one-shot or two-shot toxin cure.
It Is so with subcromlal bursitis.
Shortly after mine wore off in the
spring, after a long, dreary winter of
restless aching, the diathermy treat
ment was introduced.
Don't ask me wlfat diathermy is.
AU I know Is that it Is some kind of
high frequency current which la not
heat, but in its passage through the
body tissues raises tho temperature
of 'the tissues in a way Impossible
to achieve by means of external ap
plication of heat in any form.
Prior v the development of med-!
ical aiarneriAy ana nere i wisn to
warn readers that It Is not safe to
entrust the application of sucti a
remedy to any other than trained
medical hands the bursitis sufferer
had to choose one or the other alter
native to endure the pain till the In
We are neither better off nor worse
off here In Oregon than the aver
age, but have merely been taking
our medicine rather bitter medi
cine, though tt is along with the
rest of the country.
A NOTHER thought:
The proportion of our income
taken by taxes this year will be
abnormally large because while our
Incomes have shrunk materially be
cause of depressed business condi
tions, the total ot our taxes has
shrunk very little. If at all.
The tax shoe, for that reason.
Is pinching a great deal harder now
than It - will pinch In the better
years In the future when our In
comes will be larger.
Communications
Merger Tactics Deplored. -To
the Editor:
Your editorial concerning the war
between Oregon's big schools Is most
Interesting. We all deplore the lack
ot sportsmanship and squareness. It
can be prevented cut out politics
and play the game fair.
However, no victim should be de
nted the right to defend themselves
and their properties, for which they
have sacrificed and built up tor more
than a half century.
The vicious Zorn-McPherson bill Is
merely a gesture In the name of econ
omy. No one doubts that Corvallls
Interests are the real sponsors.
To give Oregon an unsympathetic
superintendent at this time would be
a real disaster.
I do not favor either one of the
school heads, althmigh one at least
could not be suspected In an entan
glement to wreck the other Institu
tion. . ,
The hoax perpetration showed how
far the backers of this measure wju!d
go. The only fear Is the master
minds of this wreckage win escape.
They dare not come out In the open.
condemn the offender by all means
in this regrettable war. The defend
ers sre fighting only for their exist
ence. Tours for a square fight,
MRS. W. H. HARRIS.
Cottage Drove, Ore.
TALK SCHEDULED
NKW YORK, July 37. (AP) Oov-
ernor Franklin D. Roosevelt will make
his first political talk since he ac
cepted the democratic presidential
nomination on July 90 at Albany.
Aoceevelt headquarters announced
today the governor would speak on
that date from t to 1:30 p. m. east
ern standard time, the address being
broadcast over the WEAF-NBC net
work. Although this will be tho f!r. no.
llllcsl talk dnce the coivention. i
Roosevelt headquarters said tt would !
be "Informal" and was not ccnaid
ered aa the formal cpenlng gun nf :
tn, campaign. Te subject will be !
the democratic orneranj (
INFL'L SHOULDERS
flammation spontaneously subsides,
which may happen In r.ix weeks or
six months or to submit to opera
tion for the removal or drainage of
the affected bursa.
Diathermy changes all that. With
rare exceptions daily medical dia
thermy for the first two weeks, and
treatments once or twice a week
afterward, will give bursitis sufferers
grateful relief and cure the bursitis.
The applications usually take half an
hour. The relief from a single treat
ment lasts for many hours following,
so that the victim can enjoy a good
night's rest, whereas without dia
thermy he Just tosses, about or sits
up and plans heinous crimes.
Again I warn readers to be sure
the physician who applies diathermy,
medical or surgical, Is a man of good
professional standing and hence of
responsibility.
- QUESTIONS AND ANSU'EBS
Along Comes Pal.
In the Brady Baby Book you coun
sel parents not to have an only child.
What Is the best time for the brother
or sister to arrive, that Is, what should
be the difference In. ages? Mrs. J. C.
Answer. From one to five years
after the Big Noise. If no pal ap
pears on the horizon before the ex
piration of five years, time to adopt
one. A lone child in any household
is a sad affair. Such a child doesn't
get a square deal.
Science, Eh?
On the strength of your teachings
and my own experience I havent
possessed any headgear for the past
three years I claim going without a
hat the year round is healthful. My
science Instructor claims that sinus
trouble will develop, if not now, then
later In life . . . M. J. M. ,
ncwer. The science teach' er prob- i
ably gleaned that from oh, well, J ;
suppose we columnists must preserve
the esprit de ot;rps. There Is no more :
scientific ground for this notton than I
there is for the old fogy notion thst!
one contracts some vague undef triable
respiratory infection from getting the
feet wet. It is always good hygiene
to go without any clothing whenever
It is comfortable to do so.
Girl With a Mole.
I am 19 and what good looks I
might have are spoiled, by a irole on
my chin with hairs growing in it
. . , B. G.
Answer. Physician skilled in dia
thermy or electrolosis can remove It.
Beware of submitting to such treat
ment by any other than a reputable,
responsible physician. ,
(Copyright, John P. Dille Co.)
THROUGH TEARS IN
PAY CUTTING DAYS
i HOLLYWOOD Filmland make
believe occasionally takes a gallant
turn. Investing the colony with glam
or that Is more than tinsel.
The other morning came news that
M-O-M, last of the studios to fed
the financial pinch, 'had ordered
sweeping salary cuts up and down
the line of talent. x
It waa not pleasant news to an
Industry that has found these recent
times unucomfortably close-fisted.
Hollywuod, Its mass mind as sus
ceptible to sieges of gloom as the
Individual temperaments ot Its artists
reacted.
That night there was one of 8 Id
Orauman'a Chinese theater "world
premieres," and Hollywood boule
vard, as though touched with the
wand of prosperity, looked like the
old home town on circus day but
no, the old home town never looked
like that.
There's an old and ever-new ex
citement about these Infantile ges
tures of this one-time "Infant Indus
try.': Amusing, yes, this brilliant,
gaudy parade of finery and beauty
and ostensible wealth, yet exhilarat
ing even though you know that It's
all a ahow. Maybe It's because you
know there's no other show In the
world like it.
Those mobs, cheering, jelling, star
ing, blocking the streets, fighting the
police trsfflc lines, straining for
glimpses of the fabled kings and
queens, princes and princes of a
realm that really never was, mobs
swimming In floods of white light. In
waves of crowding and Jostling: those
llmouslnces, nickel-plated and shiny
with uniformed chsuffcrs: those
stars, in colorful creations. In furs
and Jewels and flowers, stepping
lightly over rich carpets to the micro
phones for their "Hello, everybody . ."
The forecourt of that blrarre the
ater, a forecourt transformed over
night Into a rich garden with freshly
transplanted treea and shrubs and
shining flowers, with violet "moon
light"; the tides of chatter and noise
and merriment ebbing and flowing
again, ebbing and flowing; the star
ing, tne pointing, the homage lt'a a
thousand-ring circus, and you need a
thousand eyes.
Depression? Salary cuts? "Not to
night, thank you. "laughs Hollywood,
plessed with Itself, flinging Its
fling.
Tomorrow, sleep-hungry eyes (for
Orauman will have those fantastic
prologs of his. and 'Strange Inter
lude" In no ehort aubject) will scan
new columns of red Ink. and morn
ing headaches will not be helped by
checking the check book . . .
But tonight Is tonight . , , and
Hollywood Is Hollywood . . .
Picture frames made to order. The
ressieys, opp. Holly theater.
Reel Estate or Insurance Leave it
! Jones. Phone T8,
Broken windows glsaed by Trow
bridge Cabinet Works.
Flight o Time
(Medford and . Jackson Count)
History from the Ftles of The
MaU Tribune of W tod 10 ear
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
July 37. 1932.
(It was Thursday.)
George A. Codding of this city,
leading candidate for state command
er of the American Legion.
City aiid county in turmoil over
Klan-backed recall election of sher
iff. Ofriclal charged with ineffici
ency, malfeasance, smoking cigarette
and declaring that prohibition "is a
fizzle and getting worse every min
ute" Incendarldm blamed for forest fires
in Oregon.
Judge Colvig get a write-up In the
Portland Journal.
Associated Oil truck at Riverside
station catches fire when attendant
tights a cigarette.
Sheriff Terrlll, object of Klan re
call election, faces accusers at Ash
land, and admits he smokes cigar
ettes, "aa It helps my catarrh," and
confessed that "I ran three old men,
wHo Insist on raising hell around the
county Jail nights, to their front
gate."
TWENT f YEARS AGO TODAY '
July 27, 19913.
(It was Saturday.) -Senator
Lodge of Massachusetts as
tounds nation by declaring "poor do
not need sugar."
Portland mayor and police chief In
dicted for "outraging public decency.'
. Good prices assured for Rogue River
pears, says W. P. Gln.
Los Angeles woman beggar discov
ered worth $300,000. County phys
ician declares "the continued monot
ony of counting nickels and dimes
caused the woman to lose her mind."
William J. Warner, chief clerk of
the postofflce. is promoted to assist
ant postmaster.
The ice cream sociable of the Chris
tian church, scheduled to be held on
the Wold lawn. Is transferred to one
of the Deuel rooms on Main street.
Carl Y. Tengwald Is named ser
geant of Co. and Verne Marshall
Is made a corporal.
FEHL CIVIL CASE
(Continued fross Pags one.)
cpunsel to submit the final evidence
to Miss Jessie Mastln, court reporter.
Judge Latourette returned to hold
court on his home bench today.
Decision In the case will not be
forthcoming for a month or six
weeks. Both sides will present briefs
In lieu of final arguments.
Fehl. contended that he was en
titled to commissions for services
rendered and promotional work on
the Holly theater and that he was
a supexlntendent on the Job. He also
claims that the lot upon which the
theater la located was purchased on
a partnership basis, and that certain
credits on the note were unauthor
ized. Nledermeyer, Inc., contends, that
Fehl was employed as foreman and
was paid at the rate ot S10 per day
for 230 days; that he provided money
for the construction, was not a
partner and has been fully paid for
services rendered.
Nledermeyer, Inc. served notice
th?y would file, within two days, a
complete schedule of all money ex
pended In building the Holly theater.
OF
FOR SCIENCE USE
By F. B. COI.TON
(.nrititen' Pre.. Srienre Writer)
WASHINGTON (AP) Instruments
more sensitive, more accurate and
more enduring than their human
operators will unlock secrets of the
earth's magnetism 'during the com
ing International polar year.
Delicate needles, giant loops of
wire spread over the ground, and
powerful radio vdvm hnt intA'A
P will record automatically new
mc-ia nooui tne strange electric cur
rents that PlaV throtlirh and imimn
the earth which Is Itself a gigantic
magnet.
30 Nations to Take Part.
They will make mntlmimi.
all over the world from August. 1933,
io August. 1033, giving scientists for
the first time an Unhrrtfe.n nii.t,,N
of nature's electrical behavior at 70
different places of the earth's surface
during an entire year. Thirty or
more nations will take part In the
researcn.
One machine, poking continuous
radio wave Into the sky. win record
the ever-changing heights of the
Kennelly-Heavlslde Isyer. the billow-
Ing "blanket" of elartrtotll
air that "rellects" radio waves and
regulates the quality of radio re
ception the world over.
Another, the decllnnm.t. i. .
compaaa that records each day all
me umcrrm Directions In which It
points. Although the compsss always
points more or leas due north, its
actual direction la constantly chang
ing because of the variations In the
myeterloua magnetic forces that at
tract It northward. Scientists want
to know mere about how and why
these forces vary.
A third electrical "sleuth" will
shadow the InvtMbie. but powerful
magnetic force that constantly hov
E
(Continued trom Pege One)
Tills survey haa for its purpose the
Interrogation of drivers whose curs
have not yet been equipped with 1033
plates.
' The governor said he assumed this
survey which, he said, la being done
at Pray's instance, Is for the purpose
of advising the executive later of tho
actual conditions confronting owners
of cars who at this date continue to
operate with old plates.
Misleading Rumor
Governor Meier described reports
that he planned another respite as
"simply t.nother of the series of un
founded and misleading rumors that
have muddled the license situation
to tho expense of the state and the
motorists."
State police are interrogating mo
torists on six points. The questions
asked are: Do you Intend to purchase
a license? If not, will the car be
stored? Are you working, and what
kind of work? If not, when do you
expect work? Can you purchase a
half year license, or a quarter-year
license? '
Markets
Livestock.
PORTLAND, Ju'y 27. fl) CATTLE
40, calves, 10; nominally steady.
HOGS 160; stesdy.
SHEEP AND LAMBS 700; steady.
Portland Produce
PORTLAND. July 27. (AP) New
potatoes northwest, $1.25 cental..
Butter, butterfat, eggs, live poultry,
country meats unchanged.
Onions, potatoes, strawberries, wool
and hay quotations unchanged.
Portland Wheat
PORTLAND, Ore, July 27. (API
Wheat :t
Opeti High Low Close
July .46", .48 .461$ .48
Sept. .47'i .49i .47 .4814
Dec 50'i .52 .50?! .52
Csh whgat:
Big Bend bluestem . - .. .60'
Soft white .48
Western white .48
Hard winter . .47"i
Northern spring .47
Western red 46 k
Oats: No. 2 white, $19.50.
Today's car receipts: Wheat, 27;
flour, 0; 'hay, 1.
San Francisco Butterfat.
SAN FRANCISCO. July 27. ' (P)
Butterfat, f.o.b. San Francisco, 21.
Wall St: Report
Slock Sale Averages.
(Copyright, 1832, Standard Statistics
Co.)
July 27:
20 20 20 90
Ind'ls BR's Ct's Total
Today 45.0 19.0 88.1 45.1
Prev. day.... 43.1 17.9 63.8 42 9
Week ago. 39.2 16.1 59.0 39 t
Year ago -.106.9 73.5 162.1 111.4
' Bond Sale Averages.
(Copyright, 1932, standard Statistics
Co.)
July 37:
20 20
Ind'is RR's
20 60
Ct's Total
77.1 65 1
76.9- 64.7
75.4 62 0
1013 94 9
Todsy 60.1
Prev. dsy. 59.8
Week ago 66.3
Year ago..... 84.7
58.1
57.5
54.5
98.7
NEW YORK, July 37. (API The
stock market surged up to the best
revels or ths summer recovery todsy,
resuming the advance which had
proceeded for five consecutive 'ses
sions until yesterday's slight set
back. Bullishness was stimulated bv a
brisk upturn In the wheat market,
and a weekly electric power produc
tion report ahowlng a little Improve
ment over the previous week. Brokers
reported a marked Increase In publlo
Interest, and a number of the long
desertcd commission house board
rooms were again well filled.
Today's closing prices for 16 se
lected stocks follow:
American Can ..... 3714
American T. u T 8214
Aiiaconaa ....... 5
Curtis Wright 11,
General Motors 91:
Int. T. Si T
Montgomery Ward .
, 64
. 1'i
. 274
, . 6(4
, 10'4
24".
. 29
, 44
. HH
. 27 '4
, 1.49
Paramount Pub ...
Radio ......
Southern Pac. ..
S. O. of Cal
8. O. of N. J. .
Trans Am
United Aircraft
U. S. Steel
Corp't Trust Sha.
COW KJLLING CASE
Clark Barr, who appeared for ex
amination In Judge O. O. Taylors
court this morning on a charge
of wantonly killing a cow. belong
ing to Fred Dorn. Applegate rancher,
waa bound over to the grand Jury
on ball fixed at giooo.
Barr was represented by Attorney
T. J. Enrlght and two other wit
nesses appeared in his defense. Jesse
Barr and Ariel Barr.
The atate. represented by District
Attorney Oeorge Codding, called tne
following wltneee: Oeorge E Car
rier, A. E. Collins. Charles B. Wolf.
Fred Dorn and William Dorn.
era around the earth, and will note
how It varies In strength at different
points from hour to hour and from
day to day.