Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 12, 1932, Page 4, Image 4

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    PX6E FOUR
MEDFORD MXLTJ TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON", MONDXT, SEPTEMBER 12, 1932.
IIedford Mail Tribune
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Official Dtp at U CH! f Mtdforf.
Official pep of Jaetoo Coootr.
WEMHr.ll 0 Till iiSOCUTCV PSKSS
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Um dm Cm publleatloo tf til oeea dlspstAr
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HEMBra OV AUUIl HUBIAO
Or OSCULATIONS
idrtrtlitnf BcpraMOUUrae
It C. UOGtNStN i CUMfANT
OtTIUJ Is Nra Tort. UUeifo. Detroit, li
rruclHO, Lot AdHlM, Stsllla. Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
Since Scripture quoting U the order
of the day. oornlder Job, the 88th
chapter, KOth end 21st verse, which
red follows:
"The glory of hi enortlng le ter-
rlble.
"He paweth in the valley, end re
Joiceth In hi trength."
The esteemed Portland Journal de-
elree to know, "what fill our prls
one?" Offhand, many people attrlb.
ute the congostlesi In the prlaone, to
the fact that o many people get
caught.
There hae been a decree In auto
accident In them part. Thl Is
probably due to the morons behind
the steering wheel not turning the
corners until they get to them.
"The Communist Party of Oregon"
Is having a little difficulty with the
Astoria police, over the "right of free
speech." It may puezle a number of
Americana, with hair on the back of
their necks, to learn that there le a
"Communist Party of Oregon." and,
furthermore, that there is a ''Young
Communist Party of Oregon." Ho
doubt In due course of time, the
name of the Columbia river will be
changed to the Volga. The oommu
nlstlo faith seems to flourish best
around Portland and Astoria, where
ships are handy for a return trip to
the beloved Russia and Finland. An
other purale Is why thle neck of th(
woods has no branch of the Com
munist Party of Oregon. There are
any number around here who . will
Join anything once.
Oreg Campbell, the 6-toothed Scot,
negotiated his No. 1 birthday last
week. "I will never feel any better,
and have less." said Mr. Campbell
when Interviewed.
The next thing will be "the reduc
tion of the cork-screw curves" on the
main highways. The gimlet turns be
tween here and Cent. Pt. ehould be
tralghtened out.
BERLIN, Sept. 9 The political out
rages today, with one exception, were
all minor In character. A Relche
bsnner official was found dead In a
ditch with several bullet holes In his
heed. There were also several cases
of bombing. (Press Dispatch.) A
dull day In Der Vaterland.
The beauty and brains of the val
ley are getting ready to return to the
eampl. Some of the brains won't be
able to make It, owing to the Depres
sion, but all the beauty will.
e
Sarly fall Is upon us. A number
of our Nature student hsve wan
dered out Into the brush lately, and
had a revery.
J. C. Barnes, the Andrew Mellon of
the Cabbage Patch, gat a haircut and
7 arguments from the Batea Boys, on
the 10th Inst.
The fair sex are flaunting the
mutton-legged sleeve on their fall
fall gowns. To a casual observer, the
sleeves seem canary-legged.
The co. tressurer la on his feet
again, after being ransacked by the
nu.
e
"Dear Miss Page If you were hav
Ing dinner at some frlend'e home
and should spill some coffee, to
whom should you apologise the
hostess And what should you sayr
Sunbeam." sr. Call-Bulletin.)
Most anything but what you think.
Sunbeam.
P. McDonald, a former Medford
boy, Is fsclng councllmanlo honors
at Ashland.
a
The O. Fabrlck boy ha returned
from Calif., where he went on a deer
hunt. He eaw no deer, and no other
careful hunter saw him.
In spite of all the panic arw pov
erty, not a hind-tire has ataged
combustion on the Main Stem.
A man from Colorado arrived Sun
day night, and was cussing local
graft, corruption, vice, and Injustices,
with the best of them thl afternoon.
Bird from the pigeon loft of the
Lakehurst, N. J, naval air station
averaged 43.8 miles an hour in a
600-mlle rare.
When the naval'airalup Lo Ange
les was decommissioned for federal
economy, she hsd a totsl flying time
of 4342 hours.
FI-ORENCE oiling operations un
derway on nlne-inlle sector north
out of here.
www
Wanted A New College Coarse
XT7ITH the boys and girli starting; for school and college, we
" wonder, it it wouldn't be a good idea to diicard lome of
the dead lang'iBges and substitute a compulsory course on clear
and independent thinking.
For clear and independent thinking is, after all, largely a
matter of habit. And habit is a matter of carlv training. As
one looks into the future, particularly the future of this
Democracy, nothing appears more neoessary than this quality
imbedded in the warp and woof of American political and social
life.
IP WE could turn out every year, from our schools and col-
leges, an army of young people, who had acquired this rare
habit, we could have no better insurance against the downfall
of our form of government, and
For the great danger of this
deplorable weakness of this quality and attitude of mind, on
the part of the rank and file. There is so LITTLE clear and
independent thinking. So much that passes for thinking is not
thinking at all, but merely the blind acceptance of opinions,
bred in an atmosphere of prejudice and passion,
a e e
TTRUE the dead languages have a place in our cultural life,
and an important place,
every high school and college
ability to think clearly and independently, we would not worry
about their faint knowledge of
Greek and Latin.
For education is primarily
prepared for life, means to be
place in life.
And nothing is more vital toward this end, especially in a
Democracy, than the ability to think clearly, and form one's
opinions, in that atmosphere and ON THE FACTS, regardless
pf what other people way think
With our eduoational institutions turning out such a leaven
every year, what a bright future, and what a splendid destiny,
this free government of oura would be certain to enjoy 1
Don V Blame the Politicians!
THE people of this country as a whole, are sick of professional
politicians and tired of partisan politics. They are weary
of the hokum and hooey, that oharacterir.es political campaigns,
and long for a period of reason and common sense.
They blame the politicians, failing to realize, that NOT the
politicians but they THEMSELVES, the people are to blame.
All this whang doodle and blah-blah, is put out by the rabble
rousers, for one reason and ONE REASON ALONE. Because
the people fall for it, or auffioient number to make such
nonsense, politically profitable.
Let the people as a whole, once acquire the habit of clear
and independent thinking, of seeing through the camouflage
of noise and fury, and discerning the realities behind it and
this "hoop er up boys" flim-flam, will disappear over night.
. But not until the people the rank and file DO THAT, will
it disappear.
CO political reform, like qll oth'er reforms in a Democracy,
depend in the last analysis, solely and exclusively upon the
people themselves. We can have clean politics and good gov
ernment, the moment the people acquire the capacity to distin
guish between what is REAL and what is UNREAL, between
what is TRUE and what is FALSE, between what SOUNDS
good, and what IS good, and NOT UNTIL THEN 1
So wo return to the proposition above, the crying need in
this community, and every other, of clear and independent
thinking. Once get that, and most of our political troubles end.
We acquire good government, the only way it can be acquired,
by producing a body politic, capable of knowing good govern
ment and demanding it.
Roosevelt and the Klan
TT have received a scare head pamphlet, in a plain envelope,
with the following banner;
"GOVERNOR ROOSEVELT JOINED KU KLUX KLAN
TO SECURE GEORGIA VOTE."
In the four pages, there are letters, affidavits and statements,
all calculated to show that the democratic candidate secured hia
endorsement in the primary of that state, by playing in with
this ancient, and almost forgotten, secret order.
The Klan is not an issue in this campaign, here or anywhere
else. Religion is not an issue this year, thank the Lord!
Tet because the Klan WAS an issue, J2 years ago, and also
an issue four years ago, some unknown man, or group of men,
are trying to revive it, this year.
'T'O us, such an attempt appears contemptible and absurd,
as it does to all fair minded people-but it doesn't so ap
pear to some of the politicians, and the deplorable thing is, judg
ing the present by the past, they have the better of the argu
ment. WHY? Once more we return to the text of today's dis
course. Because so many people don't think these things out
olesrly, in the excitement of a presidential campaign they
don't think, they feel, and therefore respond to ancient preju
dices and passions, and vote tmoordingly,
Too bad, too bad I '
But there is one hopeful sign. Study the political history of
this country, and one will find, that today there is more clear
and independent thinking on the part of the electorate than ever
before. It's a ilow process, at times a discouraging one but
experience is a great teacher, and as time goes on, there is
reason to believe we will eome closer and closer to the demo
cratic ideal.
CORVAXLIS Portland Dredging
Co. received sas.616 contract for con
struction of bridge over Mary's river
at thl place.
KLAMATH PALLS tM!y A. Pies
er recently purchaeed Interest In lo
cal Buster Brown shoe atore.
MILWAUKII Oregon Bridge
Dredging Co. submitted low bid of
isi.sei foe paving Milwaukle-Ore-gon
City section of road In Clacks
ma county.
the decay of its institutions.
country, as we see it, is the
but if we could be CERTAIN, of
graduate having acquired the
the beauties and complexities of
preparation for life. And to be
able to take an active and useful
or other people may say.
e
PORTTjAND Survey made of pro
posed new market and store building
sue to be located on J. H. Rankin
property at 39th and Broadway and
Sandy Bolevard.
HOOD RIVER Cannery plant of
Apple Orawera association opened
for pear pack.
OAKRIDOB Bids called tor sur
facing nine mllee of Willamette high
way from want end of Black Canyon
almoat to this placa.
Today
By Arthur Brisbane
We Have Money Left,
Four Things Necessary,
England Pays, On Time,
Make Your Idol, Then Bow
Copyright King Peatuni ynd.. In.
The Cortes,' Spanish parlia
ment, takes a vacation after
working steadily for fourteen
months. It hss been a busy ses
sion. ' The grandees of Spain,
who would have thought it
could never happen, have lost
their lands, psrtly because they
would not sympathize with the
revolution, partly because they
are grandees. The order of
Jesuits, wealthiest and most
powerful in Spain, has been
suppressed, and all of its pro'
perty that could be found, in
eluding all real estate, confis
cated. Other church properties
have been seized and vested
rights of clergy taken from
them. This is all in accordance
with usual revolutionary prac
tice, as ip France 135 years ago,
and recently in Russia.
In the upheaval, Catalonia
has won her autonomy, as Ire
land got hers in the big war
crisis. Catalonia, like Ireland
has been fighting and weeping
for centuries. Catalonia 's
"wearing of the green" song
was "Weep, Weep, Catalonia."
Many tell' us 'that our kind of
olvlllaation, or "Industrial exploita
tion," a some call It, la nearlng an
end.
Stuart Chase, forceful, Intelligent
young man, who wrote good book on
Mexico, tell you in his book, "A New
Deal," that "drastic revision of our
entire economic structure' is neces
sary. Also, says he. "We are living
on our economic capital, where other
ages have lived on economic income."
Our children will have a bitter bill
to pay.
No worm of the 'dust should con
tradict a deep thinker, but to one
auoh worm, hope appears without the
unpleasant necessity of tearing every
thing to pieces. We may be living
on our capital, but It 1 not exhausted.
Last week the government asked sub
scriptions to seven hundred and fifty
million of treasury notes at three
and a half per cent Interest and four
hundred million of certificates pay
ing only one and a quarter per cent.
The ottering waa oversubscribed six
and a half times, seven thousand tour
hundred and twenty million dollar,
the totel offering. That 1 a good
deal of money.
More Important' Wian our available
cash are our undeveloped resources.
In material, wealth and brains. All
that Americans have ever had, auto
mobiles, houses, bath tubs, radio sets,
electrlo washers, etc., could easily be
supplied and multiplied by ten. There
is NO LIMIT to what this nation
might enjoy, If It could do four
things:
First, replace covetous neat with
emulation, meaning by that word a
desire to render public service.
Second, Instil honeety, by fear or
coaxing, In public officials.
Third, make the people take an In
telligent Interest In their government,
every day In the year.
Fourth, and most Important, solve
the problem of distribution, aa the
problem of production has slready
been solved.
a-
Nicholas M. Schenck, asked what
wa the matter with movlrg pictures,
replied "There la nothing the matter
with the moving picture Industry
that good pictures will not fix."
Similarly, there I nothing the mat
ter with this country that good com
mon sense would not tlx. There Is
no need of "drastic" ANTTHINO,
revolution or other old-fashioned de
vice. Ocod government, common
sense and lnduatrlal sclenc. plus
public education, will do the work.
Bngland pays off, sharp on time,
her debt to France, two thousand five
hundred million franca, about one
hundred million dollsrs, borrowed of
French bond buyer, about one year
ago. The British, taxed for this psy
niir.t. must remember with a little
bitterness, that money lent to France
by Englishmen, when the franc waa
worth more than nineteen cent, wa
repaid In franc worth lee than four
cent, eighty per cent cut from the
amount due to Kngltah lender. The
English, carelessly,' bought bonds
"payable In franca," and had to take
franc, whatever they might be worth.
-
We made many foolish mistake In
our Idiotic pouring out of American
money to any nation that would take
It, during th war, and to anybody
that would borrow It, after the war.
But at !et. w made our bonds pay
abl la dollar.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, H. D.
Signed latter pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to alaeaa
diagnosis or treatment, will M answered By Dr. Brady li a stamped sell-addressed
envelop I enclosed. Latum ehould D ortef and writ tan Is Ink
Owing to the large number of letter
Dra- Ho reply can D mad to queries
dne Dr. William Brady la car of Th
MYTHS OS WHICH THE MARKING) SUPERSTITION
THRIVES.
I seen your article on Non-Explod-able
Superstition, writes a Call for -nlan.
I beg to say I know of four
cases of marking a follow . .
young man sell
lng books hsd
lost an ear
an accident. Ke
rang a doorbell
and Mr.
waa atartled so
on seeing the
young man that
when her son was
born h had only
on ear . . They
owned a large
dog. One day the
dog came up behind her chair and
put hi paw on her hand where it
reated on the arm of the chair, and
when her child waa bom It had a de
formed hand . . . One armed stage
driver left package on the porch and
stopped to tell Mr. and Mrs.
he had left th package. When the
child was born to this couple his left
arm was missing and he drove horaes
a did the stage driver . . . Mr.
ran a store and he hone meat of his
own butchering. One day he came
home with a spatter of blood on hi
cheek. HI wife waa s'artled because
re thought he had been hurt, and
When their eon was born there was
red msrk on one cheek . . My mo
ther burned her foot when young, o
that one toe drew down under the
others. I was born with both feet with
toes drawn down that way . . .
Well, now, folks, without alluding
to the Caliiornlan's obvious Ignor
ance of embroyology and other
things, Isn't It all pretty silly stuff
for grown men and women to retail?
Especially the one about the family
dog putting his paw on the expectant
mother's hand might have been more
Impressive If It had been some strange
dog. perhaps a rather mad one with
foam on hi mouth and fire in his
eye and all that sort of hokum. But
to ascribe any such congenital defect
or abnormality to the affectionate
gesture of the faithful old dog Is
well, It goes to show how much these
superstitious people will strain the
fact to make a story, a story cruelly
and viciously calculated to keep Ig
norant expectant mothers In a con
stant atate of anxiety or terror lest
some such "marking" occur to them.
Only Ignorant people take such
superstition serloualy. If our com
mon schools properly taught our
youth then every schoolboy and every
schoolgirl would know aa much aa I
do about such matters and no pros
pective mother would ever worry a
little bit about the "marking" super
stition. It Is not only people who say "they
wa," "I seen" and "he done" that
are readily deluded about this and
Tou may remark that It matters
little In what the debt I payabl.
If It I not paid. But, at least, they
OWE us dollars.
Japan ha prepared a treaty with
the new state of Manchuria, called
Manchukuo, In It new self-governing
clothes. Japan'a cabinet has approved
It, and her "heaven-born" emperor
will do the'eame, sine his army ap
proves. Wise mlkadoe keep close to
their armies giving them the final
decision, for they are, to modern em
perors, what the samurai, "two-sword
men," were to the nobility of ancient
Jspan. When you hav a powerful
army on your aide you are safe against
the riff-raff.
China rage, aa the League of Na
tion, which forbade Japan to make
a separate Japan-controlled nation
of Manchuria, rages also. But raging
does no good In the face of determi
nation. Japan, making a royal Chinese
vanchu boy her "ruling" puppet In
Manchuria, then politely bowing to
him a to an equal, merely copies
the respectable ancient idol makers
that carved out their Idol, from wood
or stone, then bowed before It.
1
Jenkins Comment
(Continued from Page One I
EAST MONET. And we'd all like
to make essy money.
But listen: The real progress of
the world was aided IMMEASURABLY
MORS by that boy back in Indiana,
year ago, who cut wood nd sold It
for ft dollar a cord and labored In hi
spare hours in the stone quarry at 10
cent an hour than by this other
msn who bought Southern Pacific
stock at S8 a share tnd sold It a few
weeks later for 134.
It Is HARD WORK, and not gambl
ing, that carries clvlllaatlon forward
from year to year and from genera
tion to generation to new helghta of
achievement.
HOOD RIVER George T. Morrison
opened bowling alleys In Electric
Kitchen.
Bids called for grading seven-tenths
mile on Lobster Vslley road. Cor
vallta Oatette-Tlmas.
Work of towing gravel to Siuslaw
completed. Port Umpqua Corler.
Reedsport.
PORTLANd"-J. Ham submitted !'w
bid on Improvement of East 98th
street from ast Broadway to Hancock
street.
Phone Ml. We n haul away your
refuse. City Sanitary service.
Real t'tate or I run ranee Leave it
to J ocas. photM 79,
received only a tew can be answered
not conforming to Instruction. Ad
Mall maun.
many other superstition affecting
health. Plenty of high school and col
lege graduate arc Ignorant and cred
ulous concerning such matters. Pre
clou little human anatomy, physl
ology and hygiene I taught In high
school er college. Th quack and
nostrum Interest see to that, for they
prefer the picking a It Is now.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Dee-Lighted
I followed your advice and had my
tonsil removed th modern way and
believe me It is wonderful. Dr.
made a very nice job of It. X am a
firm convert to this new method and
I am very grateful to you . B. H.
8., D. D. 8.)
Am going today tor a final inspec
tion of my throat, after having had
my tonsils removed successfully by
diathermy. Had throat troubl 72
years and must say my entire life has
been changed by thus getting rid of
my trouble. Dr. took excellent
care of me. HI fee wa lea than
would have had to pay th other way.
(Miss H. F. C.)
. Answer Thank you. I am always
glad to learn the name and address of
a physician or specialist who ha
ability or skill In any particular line.
That 1 th way I compile my lists
What a doctor' patient think or say
about him meana more than any rou
tine hallmark of professional stand
ing.
Gallstones.
Please name the foods which con
tain chloesterol, the substance found
in gallstones, (w. D. D.)
Answer Yolk of eggs, cream, liver,
brains, animal fata, olive oil, pea.
beans, wheat. These contain consider
able chloestrol. Other food contsln
insignificant quantities.
Gritting Teeth.
My 5-year-old daughter grinds her
teeth at night. Many people aay that
is a sign of worms. She is nervous
and restless day and night. Her appe.
tlte Is poor. Do you think she need
a tonic? (Mr. L. a.)
Answer-Many children have worms,
whether they have any symptom or
not. careful investigation ha proved
that gritting the teeth In leep la as
likely to occur In children who have
worms aa It la In children who have
n't worms. The grinding of the teeth
may be due to local Irritation which
call for the advice or services of the
dentist, or to some reflex Irritation,
for Instance Irritation of th bladder
by excessively acid urine, which calls
for the advice of the physician. Some
time a largely vegetable and fruit
diet will aufflee to correct thl ex
cessive acidity. Such a child should
have the benefit of exposure of the
naked body to sunshine, and perhaps
a course of cod liver oU.
(Copyright. John F. Dllle Co.)
PENN RESOLUTION
OF CENSURE VOTE
0 SPOTLIGHT
(Continued Item Page One)
The large Portland auditorium
seating more than 8000 persons was
crowded to the highest balcony with
the most colorful crowd It ha ever
contained. Ranged on the main floor
were rows upon rows of legion dele
gates, each state group designated
by placards on staffs along the aisles.
In the first balcony the atternatea
were seated, likewise, with their state
name cards. Little room waa left for
the thousands of Portland resident
and visitors who had hoped to wit
ness the legion business session.
Loud applause and the trhtstle and
clatter of noise-making devices greet
ed speaker after speaker aa the first
day's program was expedited by Na
tional Commander Stevens. An am
plifying system carried the speakers'
voices In great volume throughout
the large auditorium. Flashlight
bulbs of photographers gleamed like
fl rentes.
Mrs. Louise W. Williams, national
president of the American Legion
Auxiliary, pledged the cooperation of
her organization and William D
Lyons, chef de chemtn de fer of the
Society of 40 and a. legion fun-making
order, told how hla followers hsd
added fifty thousand member to the
legion during the past year.
Commander Steven lauded the war
time accompliahment of th navy In
convoying troops to Franc In In
troducing Josephu Daniels, secretary
of the navy under President Wilson.
Applause greeted Daniels' appear
ance and Interrupted hta speech aa
h referred to the navy's part In th
world war.
Laughter topped Daniel when a
wag on th convention floor ahouted
a mention of prohibition.
Daniel had Jnat commented that
the United State army had gone to
France "to make the world safe for
democracy." Even Daniels smiled
when someone Immediately added
"and the 18th Amendment."
The first mention of the bonus
brought generous applause from th
crowded hall. This occurred when
Daniels declared that "when w tailed
leaders told ua 'when you return wttn
victory all we hav will be your."
And now. he said, "when In our need,
we ask for deserved and Just "adjust
ed compensation we are denounced
as selfish, unpatriotic lobbyist or
eommumst trying to tear down th
temple of freedom or a ratdera of th
treasury."
FOREST OROVK Figure being se
cure f-r widening of Tualatin high
way between her and Portland.
Expert Piano Tuning this arek
only, leave order Baldwin Ptsno
eVUopp. M a. Otap. raetv 1U.
Flight 'o Time
(MedforS and Jackson Count)
History from th rile of Th'
HaU Tribune of N od 10 lew
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
September IS. mi
(It Wa Tuesday)
Eastern papera editorially flay Ore
gon' "Compulsory School Bill."
Jesse Wtnburn of Ashland and Naw
York City buy IT box scat to the
county fair.
Work by students In th orchard
cuts down school attendance.
Jackson County fair open in naw
buildings with record crowd on th
opening day.
Coal strike settlement, causes Sec
retary of Labor Davis to aay "Pros
perity I upon u, for at leut tan
year."
Oklahoma lawyera renouncea Ku
KluxKlan and la promptly tarred and
feathered by group of masked men.
The Ladles of the Invisible Eye. whip
a Texas mother.
Increase In attendance of 100 over
last year In Medford schools.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
September It, 19U
'(It wa Wednesday)
Noted Brazilian visit city.
Material arrives for paving 1 1th
street.
North Dakota cltlten shoots law
yer, when Jury acquit him.
Theodore Roosevelt, Bull Moose lead
er visit Portlsnd.
Medford socialist to hold social at
Smith's hall. No outside speaker.
Cow stealing trial dropped.
The white wife of Jack Johnson,
negro heavyweight champion of the
world, ostracised, by her own, and her
husband people, commits suicide In
Chicago.
Autolst reluctant about loaning
machine to carry scientist to Crater
Lake, and editor want to know:
"Where 1 your public spirit."
B. E. F. LURE
REDS AND CROOKS
REPORT DECLARES
(Continued irom Page One)
It was Mr. Mitchell's lob to
furnish this information and he did
the best he could. "
R. B. Ellison, who said he wa na
tional organizer of the khaki ahlrta,
of America, and former contact of
ficer of the bonus army. In a state
ment here, termed the Mitchell re
port "a political alibi."
Mitchell' report of the crowded
two month' history of th bonus en
campment said ex-convict and com
munists led th first groups to ar
rive. Later, a better element came,
but largely departed when congress
adjourned. The best estimate of the
army' am were given at 8000 to 15,
000 when congress adjourned, and
eooo to 8000 at the time of the "riot"
on July 28.
A total of 363 were arrested by no
lle during their stay for various of
fenses Including "disorderly conduct,
parading without a permit, assault
on private property and Mlicltlng
alma."
Of th 839 found to hav been con.
victed In the paat for criminal of
fenses," th largest group of 13S were
for larceny and theft, 95 for drunk
enness among 19 other offenses.
CANADIAN WHEAT
PROSPECTS GOOD
WINNIPEG, Man., Sept. U (API
Western Canada la successfully har
vesting it comparatively large crop
which will, in all probaalllty be even
higher than last year, S. B. Ramsay.
chief commissioner of the board of
grain commissioners told the Cana
dian press today. Ramsay Is leaving
wasy ror Europe to check over the
feeling In trade circles there u tn th
standards for the-' grading Canadian
grain.
MAIL CLERKS SAVED
N PLUNGE
SACRAMENTO, Cal.. Sept. 13. (API
Five railway clerk were carried
soma 1.300 feet today in a twisting,
plunging mall coach from th South-
em Pacific railroad near Crystal lak.
into a canyon. AU were hurt, but
none injured serloualy.
Derailment of seven mail and ex
press coaches, occurred at 3:39 a. u.
No paasengera were injured.
Report received her Indicated the
locomotive struck a defective rail.
further palming It. permitting th
mall and express cars to leave he
track.
COURTHOUSE ARCHITECT
FILES SUIT DENIAL
Answer was filed today by 3. Ct.
Link In the suit brought by A. M.
Runts, laborer, for approximately
400. allegedly due him In payment
for work on th county court house
project.
Link In the answer denies "each and
very allegation, matur and thing in
me earn complaint.
CORVALUS Benson s Bake Shop
opta4 uiUfc Second street.
TODAY'S VOTE IN
MAINE EYED AS
NOVEMBER SIGN
Eight States Hold Primary
Pol! This Week Prohl.
bitlon to Fore In Michigan
and Washington Races
(By the Associated Teresa)
Voter of ten states as farflung aa
Washington and Maine writ their
tory of x'a thl week.
Main waa first, hc'-dlng It state
election today, two months ahead of
most of the country. Eight states
follow tomorrow with primaries, the
week' procession ending with th
Georgia primary Wednesday.
State where primary election will
be held tomorrow are: Arizona, Colo
rado, Loulelana, Michigan, K w
Hampshire, Vermont, Washington and
South Carolina.
In some of tomorrow's voting na
tional Issues and national figures are
Involved. In others. Interest concen
tratea upon state affair. All are be
ing watched by national republican
and democratic leadera to see If they
may not give some Indication of what
November holds.
The republicans, through their
stat chairman, forecast victory for
Burleigh Martin, their candidate for
governor, by "more than 35,000
votes." Louis 1. Brann, th demo
cratic candidate, believed he would
win by 30.000. Brann favor repeal
of the prohibition amendment. Mar
tin was non-committal In hi cam
paign talks.
Among tomorrow's primaries th
prohibition Issue arises In Michigan
in the effort of two former congress
men, Crampton and Hudson, to win
republican renomtnatlon. Each wa
an active prohibitionist, and each wa
defeated two year ago by an antl
prohibitionist. Prohibition echoes also from tai
atate of Washington where Senator
Jones, authr of the "Five and Ten"
law which put new teeth in prohibi
tion enforcement, Is opposed for re
nomination by Adam Beeler.
roosSttrain
off tonight on
campaign jaunt
ALBANY, N. Y., Sept. 13. (AP)
Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt start
his western campaign tour tonight.
An hour before midnight the presi
dential candidate' pecial train will
roll away on a fast schedule that will
take Mr. Roosevelt to the shores of
the Paclflo and back again In three
weeks.
The first stop wUl be Cleveland,
early tomorrow. From there th
campaign epeeial will roll down thru
St. Louis, Jefferson City, Mo., Kansaa
City and on to Topeka, where Mr.
Roosevelt will make the first major
speech of the tour Wednesday, speak
ing on farm relief.
After Topeka. Mr. Roosevelt will
deliver major campaign addresses at
Portland. Sioux city and at one
other point yet to be designated.
While the governor wa at his Hyde
Park home yesterday hi close frienda
disclosed that he looks upon the wes
tern tour aa an opportunity to study
at first hand eco'homic condition in
the western states.
The governor conferred with Judge
Eobert W. Blncham. tmhiuhii nf t.h
Louisville Courier Journal and prom
inent in Kentucky politics, and Hom
er Cummlngs of Connecticut, former
national democratic chairman.
Judge Bingham said that he ex
pect a Roosevelt victory In his atate.
Mr. Roosevelt motored hack tn
Albany last night. Today h will put
tits miKirs in oraer lor p.! tnree
weeks' absence and meet hta son, ,
James, who will come from New Eng
land to Join him for th trip.
Early tonight the governor will glv
a birthday nartr for hla min.
Miss Marguerite Le Hand.
UVALDE. Tex, Sept. 13. (API
John N. Garner, democratic vlce
presldentlal nominee, plana to Join
Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt it
Kansas City Wednesday morning and
go to Topeka. Kaa., where the presi
dential candidate wtu deliver a
speech on agriculture.
Charles s. Hand, whs ku hn -
slating In arranging a campaign tour
tor uamer, said the Texan would
leave hla home for Kansaa City tat
today or tomorrow.
PEAR EXPORT RATE
CUT NEXT WEEK
Th reduced exnort nn
announced last week and welcomed
by valley growers and shipper, will
become effective September 3, A. S.
Roaenbaum. aeneral ant f
Southern Paaclflc. reported todav.
following receipt of Information from
the Interstate Commerce commission.
The reduction provides for a S1.3J
export rat from here for shipment
peua to otner countries.
Fender and bodv rntrtn o-i
right. BrtU Sheet Metal Work.
August coal arterial eisnfl y,
Med. Fuel Co, Tel. 631.
REEDSPORT Tufc a l.t inrtft
feet of new nine im u.mn. .
rasemor nearlng completion.
TILLAMOOK kiwi. am.
near anks to thl plac to be con
strut tad.