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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1932)
PAGE FOUR -IEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, "WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1932. Medford Mail Tribune "Ctvyww Is Southern OritM rtadt tht Hail r.ifcwm" DftUy Except Batnrday Publlihed try KEDFOBD fEINTLNQ Oa immi n. yif al ww f BUBEB1 W. HUUL, EdlUf t. L. KIMAPP, Uantcsf Ad lodepcnduif Niwtpuper Eetmd u Mcood elm uuh at tUdford Oncoa, atMKt Act ol Mrc 8, 1ST 0. BUffSCKlPTlON tUTM j Mill Id Adrinc Dilli. rev IT. 00 Dalli, month , .It Bi Carrltr. Id Adimot MedTord. AahU-d. laeksofifUU, Ceotrt) Point. PdmdIi, Taint. Oold Hill And OB Hlgtiwifl. DaJli. Bontb. ................. . .T6 Dall?, om rear f.50 All urm, cub u adTtoea. OfTldtl pipec ef tnt Qtf of Uadford. Official papar of Jaekmo Count. HEMBEB OP 1111 ASSOCIATED FKE6I Beeeinm full Uaaad Wlra Berrtiw lb Aaaoelattd Preaa J aieltiflnly aautlad to Hi um for pubUutloo of all oawa dlitPletia edited to It or othtrw.it credited to UU papai tod also to tha total oewt pumlihM herein. All rlcbta for publication of pedal dlipatebai berein ara auo reamed. H EUR EH OIT 0N1TBD PKK8S MEMHEK OP AUDIT BUUEAD OP CUMULATIONS Adteft.ii I nt ttrprtaaotattTea IL C. UOftENBE.N A COMPANY Office! to Nea Tort, LMcaco, Drtrolt, Si fraodaeo, Loa Ancclea. Seattle. Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthnr Terry With characteristic fervor, for things that do not nutter much, up state reform and welfare agencies are protesting a proposed atate fair bull fight, and great Is the ado, thereon and thereof. The bullfight la adver tised as educational and beneficial to the farmer. What the farmer needs Is education on how to duck the bull, when thrown by candld- dn'es, In love with them and their vote. A more enlightening and en' tertulnlng performance would be farmer knocking the bull out of a candidate with a pitchfork. A bevy of sohoolma'ams lunched together Tuea. and took a number of sly pedagogic digs at the President, and one was as mad at the economic situation as a transient Indigent, caught robbing a widow's clothesline. .mm TIMIDITY! TOUR FOOT! j (Roseburg News-Review.) .' I'm in love with a young wom an and she likes me, I am sure. But we both seem to be ttmld In each other's company. 1 have proposed three times and she has turned me down three times. m The Amerloan Bankers' association proposes "a six months efficiency campaign." It appears that things are': balled up bad enough right now, vltfrout more efficiency. A number of Democrats and pros pective Ashland postmasters twiddled their thumb and fingers at the De pression, and went to Portland today to hear their standard-bearer flay the "power trust." In keeping with the sad state of the times, they all Hitch-hiked. "The sports editor of the Portland Oregonlan opines that Prink Calll son, as head coach of the University of Oregon football team, will have no "startling Ideas." He will, tool One of his startling Ideas will be this: That a halfback will be Judged by the yardage he makes on the foot ball field, not the fraternity pin on his bosom. ' OAPTURBD BANDIT REGRETS CRIME (Hdllne Oakland Tribune.) But most of all he regrets the cap ture. e e The lady hitch-hikers headed south make a pathetic picture as they trudge along In the latest fall modes and early autumn furs. They are all struggling bravely to reach a baby, 1000 miles or more away. There never was a time in history when so many mothers were on the hoof. It Js not known why they did not tay -with their babies in the first place. The use of the Bible as a campaign Issue has apparently been averted In these parte. r. Bybee, the J'vllle'aerf. Inspected his alfalfa field Tuea. The alfalfa Is too green, being vividly so. Economy Is getting In some hard licks In the sticks. There ere v eral busted rear axles, due to saving 63c on the road tax, m m Scene causing the most concern Is where the body of a lynched poli tician Is thrown on the Capitol steps. (Variety.) If the movie producers were nott so finicky, the President would be lynched, and left on the White House ateps. m m m KVOfKINQ TUB POLIOS (Heppner News.) Several men were at the back door and In removing the heavy bar which fastens the door made some noise which awakened David Kembler, who sleeps at the store. David saw the flash of a flash light and Immediately went to the phone and called his mother, Orapea are being harvested, but It Is a trifle early for anybody to get caught. see Pour kids of tha oounty have whooping cough, the county doctor says. Among tha older folks, the whooping Is bad, but unfortunately la not accompanied by a cough. San Pranolsoo papers report tnt Charles Chaplin, the movie star, re mained up all night to kiss a bloDde farewell. This Indicates that tie father of the dinky mustache ta get ting ready to cut some romantlo di does, and the long vigil Is about what one could expect. s The evcnlnga are almost cold enough for the well-dressed malt to jult warln his bat, Why LaFollette Was Beaten 'I'JJE apparent defeat of Governor Phillip La Follette of Wii- consin in the Republican primaries, is generally reported in news dispatches, as a victory of conservative Republicans over the radical La Follette wing. This is true. The victor, ex-Governor Walter J. Kohler, is a well-to-do manufacturer, who opposed the La Follette program of "redistribution of wealth," and advocated a tax system that would attract outside capital to the state, instead of scaring it away. Yet it is very doubtful if Kohler would have been victorious on this issue alone. His great asset was that he wag an "out" trying to get "in"; while La Follette was an "in" trying to stay there. IOHLER conducted very aggressive and vigorous cam paign, saying very little about his tax program, and a great deal about the mistakes and errors of the La Follette regime. While in 'Wisconsin recently, the writer heard a speech de livered by Kohler, before a gathering of farmers. The rapid fire fashion in which the speaker shot holes in the La Follette ma chine, and pointed to items of waste and extravagance, in the La Follette administration was worth travelling miles to hear. The assembled farmers cheered, approval. ONE heard on all. sides that La Follette was going to be beaten AT LAST. The real reason, as we see it, was that the conservative business interests of the cities, and the socalled masses in the country districts, were for the first time in manv years, united behind a common purpose. Their motives however were far from the same. The business interests fought La Follette because they didn't. and DON'T like his radical theories: the farmers fought him because, after two WANTED A CHANGE. Neither could have won without the other. Such a union, of conflicting political elements, however, only occurs about as often as do business depressions; and this overturn of La Fol lette control in Wisconsin, was fundamentally due to the de pression of the past three years. ,. Who Favors the Recall? ISN'T there someone in Jackson oounty NOT A DIS GRTJNTLED LITIGANT, who will ome out publicly for the Norton recall f To date, as far as we can determine, there are only four residents of the oounty, willing to sponsor this aotion. One is a candidate for oounty judge who is making his cam paign almost exclusively on this issue. The other three are petition circulators. ALL OF THEM ARE LITIGANTS, OR DIRECTLY RELATED TO LITIGANTS WHO HAVE LOST THEIR CASES IN JUDGE NORTON'S COURT. MIGHT we suggest to these "recallers" that their cause would be greatly strengthened, if they would find some publio support outside of this restricted field. If they would find someone anyone WITHOUT an axe to grind, WITHOUT personal reasons for private revenge, willing to stand up and be counted, as demanding Judge Norton's removal. AND WITH SUCH A PERSON IDENTIFIED IT WOULD BE INTERESTING TO LEARN JUST WHY HE OR SHE FAVORS THIS RECALL. WHAT CHARGES HE OR SHE WISHES TO FILE AGAINST JUDGE NORTON, TO JUSTIFY SUCH DRASTIC ACTION. Such a development would go far toward clearing the atmosphere. C0R we believe we state undeniable fact, when wo declare that the people of Jackson county as a whole and the people of Josephine county also have been unable to see, and CAN'T SEE NOW, any reason behind this recall, but cheap politics on one side ; and the PETTY SPITE OF DISGRUNTLED LITIGANTS ON THE OTHER. That's all 1 There is not now and never has been any publio disapproval of Judge Norton. In fact, as such things go, we don't believe a judge has ever presided in this district, who has more COMPLETELY enjoyed the confidence, respect yes and the affectionof the people. e s e DUT of course in every case before a court, there must be a loser. There must also be an attorney FOR the loser. Yet this striking fact stands eloquently revealed. Among the HUNDREDS of losers in Judge Norton's eourt, only four, have been willing to work for Judgu Norton's recall. And of tha scores of losing attorneys (all of them naturally disappointed) not ONE has yet come forward, for this recall, NOT ONE has been willing even to SIGN the reoall petition. e e e e "OULD one conceive of any more convincing proof of the general esteem and respect, in which Judge Norton is held, not only by the bar in this district, but by THE PEOPLE AT LARGE. Only four defeated litiganta sanction this recall. NOT ONE attorney for those litigants, will endorse such action, even by their CLIENTS 1 CTILL the effort to secure signatures for this recall goes on at 10 cents per name. Who originated the recall no one knows. Who is financing it, is still a dark mystery. On November 8 the people of Jackson county, fortunately, will have an opportunity to show by their votes for the recall candidates, what they think of such tactics! Jenkins' Comment (Continued bom Page One.) any work. As money comes out of biding, It la retired If It Isn't needed. Thus the amkunt of money In circu it THIS system of estimating la ac 1 ouiale, hoarding reached Its peak soma time In June and has been de clining ever since. That is to say, hoarded money la coming out o( hid ing and going back Into business. What this means to tha future ol applauded and laughed their decades of La Follettism, THEY business you can Judge from the fact that eeob dollar of actual money In the banks means about tsn dollars In bank credit. That la, If tha blUlon dollara of hoarded mousy would com back Into uae. It would, mean about TEN BILLION DOLLARS of added bank credit, After becoming partially civilised, a Congo tribe got heavily In debt and took to tha Jungle again. We can understand that Impulse. Flor ence (Ala.) Herald. Nandle a Club Breakfasts the best la town 18$ te toe, Today By Arthnr Brisbane The Cost of Crime, East, West, and Gandhi, Do You Need Triplets? Raising Wheat at Home, Copyright King Features Bynd., Inc. A federal judge has said that crime in the United States costs annually between eleven thou sand and THIRTEEN THOU SAND MILLION DOLLARS. Every year crime costs the country more than the total sum we lent Europe in the war. An expert says racketeering costs Chicago alone one hun dred and forty-five millions a year. "Legitimate" businesses of many kinds, important branches of union labor, and many other lines of effort are victims and some times orig inators of racketeering. This country needs to clean house in more ways than one. Oandht begins the death fast that is to terrify BrltBln In aome mysteri ous way, and attain the Mabatma's political enda. He refuses to leave prison unless put out by force. In America aome of his friends, Imitat ing him, also wlU fast, but only for twenty-four hours to show friendly feeling. The difference between East and West Is Illustrated In Oandhl'a fasting. The dissatisfied weaterner starts a revolution or attacks some Individual. The protesting Hindu starves HIMSELF. If you want to mako an experi ment In child rearing, or If you would like three pete better than any three dogs, call on Mrs. Florence Serena, of Vandergrlft, Pennsylvania. She offers to give her triplets, two boys and a girl, twenty-one months oid, blue eyes and yellow hair, to anybody that will provide a good home, also a baby boy one month old. If desired. The mother has three other chUdren and Is very poor. That sltustlon might Interest the founder of Christianity more than all Wall Street's troubles. Thomas B. Campbell, with the ap proval of this government, showed Russia how to prepare and sow with wheat thirty million acres. At pres ent, working on his own big farm In Montana, he wrltei "We have Just finished harvesting oni of the largest crops ever produced In Montana, at the lowest coat of production In the history of our organisation, and, ow ing to the low price of wheat, this crop has been produced at a loas. The average price of wheat f.o.b. Hardin, Montana, all fbll. has been 33 cents a bushel which Included truckle; h wheat to the railroad." It must amuse Russia to see what happens to an American expert rais ing wheat In his own country. Mr. Campbell says "the almple way to solve the agricultural problem la to eliminate the cause; namely, that the farmer has never had the advan tage of the tariff on the portion of his commodities sold in the United States. Re has always been a buyer In a protected market." Mr. Campbell has a plan to help the farmer to which the government might pay attention. Meanwhile, one plan for farmers would be to organize, vote together and atlck together as do btg Indus trialists and KEEP CLOSE TO THE GOVERNMENT, Norman Thomas who would 'Ike to be elected president on the socialist ticket, points out the Interesting fact that sixty small towns In the United States are entirely free from local taxation because they own their own public utilities, gas, power, electricity, etc. One big town that can testify to the value cf publio ownership la Jacksonville, Fla. John H. Perry's Jacksonville Journal reports that cltl aena for IMS will pay aa tax levy eleven mills, the lowest tax In forty years. The 1033 tax rate Is cut In two. thanka largely to earnings of the publicly owned electric light and power plant. A philosophical' British lady, Mrs. Pawley. la kidnapped by Chinese ban dits. She writes "Please send me a powder puff, face cream and a lip stick. I don't want anything else but a bath." And asks that polios be kept away, because It they follow the bandits srmay be killed. She would like to be ransomed If possible, but says 'please don't bust yourselves." There Is a marvelous placidity In certain British women, and great courage. The British, always practical, have quieted the dangerous Mots at Bir kenhead, not by ahootlng a lot of men and making the riots worse, but by raising the amount of the dole for the Idle. The dole may have all the vices that respectable Americans attribute Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. signed letters pertaining to personal nealtb and nygtene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered Dy Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should oe brief and written In Ink Owing to the large number ol letters received only a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Ad dress Dr. William Brady In care of The MaU Tribune. EASE DOWN ON THAT HIOH TENSION Our neurotic readers will appreciate thla aa characteristic of my bound less conceit. When X was a callow sophomore In med ical school Grand ma waa fond of telling how In her girlhood In Bos ton the great Dr. Shattuck had told her that one of her lunga was gone with consumption. Well, sir, I came home with my new stethoscope one day when Grandma was feeling mis erable. She asked me to listen to her chest. I listened. She asked me If I heard anything on the off aide. I candidly confessed I couldn't hear a thing there. Grandma felt better at once. "Ah, dldnt I tell you? It Is Just ss Dr. Shattuck of Boston told me sixty yeara ago. Sure this boy knows as much now as he'll ever know" Then there was Auntie Blntle. I've always been thankful that ahe occur red In the course of my student days. I doubt I could have come off with my dignity intact from an encounter with her across the patient's bed. As It was, I retired In great disorder from a skirmish with Auntie Blntle over the first case of appendlcltle In our neighborhood. The family held out a bit too long against the doc tor's Importunities to proceed with the operation. The doctor used the Ice bags aa an application to the hy- pogastrum. At last, when the patient was In a grave state, the family con sented to the operation. The patient failed to recover. Auntie Blntle came round with the Inside facts. She told everybody that w.hen the "butch- cut the patient open he found the patlent'a lnaldes frozen solid. I heedlessly oberved that It Is Impos sible to lower or Increase the tem perature of the deeper tlasuea or or gans by the application of external cold or heat, so long aa there Is life In the body. But Auntie settled my hash by smiling around on the as sembled gossips, winking and telling them I d know more when I got a little older. For years X have been ridiculing the emug notion that the smart or Important people In this country live under high tension which Is a tre mendous strain on the "nerves," and accounts for so much "nervous" ex haustion or breakdown" among those who like to be considered smart or Important. I still think It Is good comedy but I am older now and more Inclined to admit there may be a grain of truth In the notion of high tension. Always heretofore It has made me chuckle to hear anybody, especially a phyalclan, advising an ailing peraon, to "relax." Now It sets me thinking maybe a little aclentlflc relaxation would help the poor goof, at that. But when I think of aclentlflc re laxation I am not thinking of what you are. Just what you Imagine re laxation means, heaven knows I'll bet you don't. X am thinking of beUy breathing. "My physician had great diffi culty In keeping my blood pres to It, hut It seems to have helped the British through a bad period. The Associated Press says "Senator Reed of Pennsylvania and Ambassa dor Edge Inform French authorities that the American people believe Ger many's recent move for armament equality was Inopportune." The American people believe noth ing of the kind. They believe that what Germany does is GERMANY'S business, and the same of aU other European nations. What Americana aak la to be kept out of foreign tights and plannlngs. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the Files of The MaU Tribune of f and 10 kear, Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY September 31, 1923. (It waa Thursday.) Oregon torn by "religious Intoler ance, mixed with politics." aay the New York Press. R. F. D. route No. S Is extended two miles. Youthful gang of petty thieves rounded up by police. Money available tor local farm loans. Local labor shortage not so acute. Evenings cool enough for over coats. Reckless auto driving on highway condemned. The Carlsbad of America Open All Year Under same management aa tha Richelieu Hotel "Fmmou It ttt Fornf Finest Mud and Mineral Baths and Mineral Waters in the World Miraculous Curative. Waters for Rheumatiim. Arthritis, Lumbago, High Blood Presiure. Nervous Fatigue. Stomach Troubles Rates (with meals) Cottages, . day. tU wk Hotel. U day. $30 wk. When in San Francisco Sfos at the Richelieu Hotel Van af firarr sure below (a moderattely ex ce stive height") writes a lady of years. "I began your belly breath ing last October and am atlU keeping It up . . . (recital of symptoms) ... I hate telling you all this but I want you to know how great my Improvement has been . . . end my blood pressure Is much lower ... so you could help some other poor cuss-tomer. I thsnk you more than I can aay." Belly breathing tends to lower high blood pressure, prevent cold feet, help you to ge to sleep nights, correct liver complaint, functional dlfflcul tlea of young women, and Induce healthful relaxation. If you want In atructlons, write and ask for It, In closing stamped envelope bearing your aaoreaa. no clippings. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Liver and Spleen Please tell me where the liver and spleen are located and their special use. (L. M.) Answer-The liver, weighing from 8 to 314 pounds, Is In the upper right side of the abdomen under the ribs. The spleen, weighing half a pound, la In the upper left side of the abdomen under the rlba. The liver secrets bile, necessary In Intestinal digestion, forms glycogen (animal starch) from carbohydrates (sugars and starches) In food, supplements the muscles as a reservoir or storage place for thl8 body fuel, forms urea from nitrogenous waste matter of the muscles and glanda and from nitro genous food (proteins), enables the body to utilize Iron and probably stores vltamlna. The apleen aupple ments the lymph-glands and the bone marrow In the formation of blood corpuscles. Removal of the spleen causes no lasting 111 effects, only anemia that lasts for a few months. Anti Gratitude of countless home own ers whose lawns and gardens, like mine, are Infested with ants. . . . (S. W.) Ana. Send stamped envelope bear ing your address and ask for Instruc tions for eradicating ants. Garden ers give the ant nests a shot of carbon dlsulphld. If necessary enlarge amall syringe, from half an ounce to two ounces, according to the size of the nest. Any druggist can aupply carbon dlslphld. If necessary enlarge ant hole with a stick to facilitate entrance of the liquid. And use a long spout oil can or syringe to keep the atuff away from you own nose. Sleeping sickness X live In a house where a person lives who has had sleeping sickness for several years. My S-year-old baby often visits this person and she Is fond of him and kisses him. (Mrs. L. W. B.) Ans. Encephalitis lethargies which Is called "sleeping sickness" In this country, Is not the African sleeping sickness (trypanosomiasis) due to the bite of the Tse-tse fly. It Is cer tainly not communicable after the acute feverish stage of the Illness has passed that Is, sfter the first few weeks. (Copyright, John F. Dllle Co.) Farmera pray for rain. Bootlegger who stopped car In front of police atation and went to aleep, fined asoo. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY September 21, 1913. (It was Saturday.) "Gyp the Blood.'1 "Lefty Lousle," "Dago Prank" and "Whltey" Lewis, New York gangsters. Jailed for plac ing Herman Rosenthal "on the spot," when threatened to reveal New York police graft secrets. Plot. to dynamite fish In Rogue river bared. WUltam Jenulngu Bryan, In Idaho speech, accuses Roosevelt of being 'a towering egotist." Valley Bull Moos era astounded. Beans from Aztec ruins grow In Tolo garden. George and Ned Vilas leave for O. A. C. to take a course in agriculture. A slight lull was experienced In social circles thla week, owing to the great tntereat taken in the Jackson County Fair and Pear show, the en tire city living up to Its reputation of hearty cooperation In any "boost ing" affair. Farmer Shoots Melon Stealer SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 31. Howard W. Rowswell, IB. died in a hospital today of gunshot wounds declared to have been Inflicted by a farmer who caught him and two other boys In his melon patch near Granger, Utah, 10 days ago. Dependable Merchandise at Sensible Prices Womens Apparel and Accessories ETHELWYN B. HOFFMANN Sixth & Holly. Tmw n er TfMrt. AMtvae Byron Hot Springs Contra Costa County. Cal. er Richelieu Hotel. San Franrisco Free Theater Tickets For Cross-Word Puzzle Fans To the first 35 correct solutions to this crossword puzzle, submitted to the crossword puzzle editor of the Mall Tribune, this paper will give a pass to Martin Johnson's fsmous t r"""f2 p 4 p p p i l 5 T- "" i W 7i " n 75 .. ! LJ 19 10 XI -22 1 m 27 T28 ;I3 EfcSMSaMaSWBSM HmmmWmm 1M lili 33 I It II r 1 1 f 1 DOiVN Native of the Dark Continent. Formal acknowledgement of achievement. Way of Iron Horse (ahbr.) Doctor of Letters (ahbr.) False, demf amatory statement. Editor of Arable newspaper (abbr.) F,pet1ltlon (ahbr.) Girl's name. Name of fearless defiant American. World's greatest and best known explorers. The act of binding oneself to tell truth. Part of "to be." Consisting chiefly of muscular tissue. Pronoun (Fr.) Exclamation (Sc. form). Bribe offered to paciry. Unit. River In Italy. Impersonal pronoun. ACROSS A wave of sensation (pi.) Note of scale. Conjunction. Roman numerals. Arabic bundle. Woman long throat-wrap. Natural art (abbr.) Mightiest mammals and mltlest humans. Like. Masticates. Suffix: Comparative. Where yon live (abbr.) Note of scale. Allied Institute (abbr.) Surname of greot explorers. Problematical enterprise (pi.) Preposition. Tired out. EMBER SAMS VALLEY, Sept. 21. (SpU From the expressions of Sams Valley Grangers, the program put on Sat urday night by the Juvenile Grange of Live Oak was fully enjoyed. The children, under the direction of their matron, Mrs. I. T. Galllgar. enter tained with a three-piece orchestra, songs and readings, and Included was a talk by the young Martin boy on the selection of seed corn. He closed the talk by exhibiting a large col lection of ribbons won as state, na tional and county prizes on his seed corn exhibits. Live Oak senior grangers accom panied the Juveniles and filled the of ficers chairs. During the business session a reso lution waa passed protesting the high price of gasoline, which does not comply with the general price of other commodities. The relief com mittee was advised to Investigate any reports of needy residents in this section. Watermelons were served as ! refreshments by the H. E. C. A. A 1 rising vote of thanks was offered Live Oak Grange for the entertainment. ! If you are interested In flying, see Mack Giffln at Peoples Electric store. 1 GUESTS "FROfTl ALL PARTS OF TH UUORLD... nteet at tk, 1 I Jm 1 1 L -s- J a g -ar!Z -L JlI HOTL '700 ROOMS NEW LOW RATES s2.50 WITHOUT J BATH FROM BATH FROM OfbM fen Ut9 ATTRACTIVE WJEKVY MONTHD" AND RESIDENTIAL RATES GARAGE SERVICE to and from our entrance WITHOUT CHARGE The Afeandra Held & on afTitetcd imt of Tre Epptey Hold Comrxmy'j ?0 hrt in fhs Middle Wpsr, Louisville. Pltihjua. h ait tra Hamilton croln of Hotels in California. E.CEPPLEY OURIES B. HAMILTON Resident tsfiadertliUnynglltstT OCA600rfE-&OMJ(cwAa- ffos &vr 441 ODRNER FIFTH & SPRING STREETS . . picture, "Congorllla," which Is the feature at the Fox Craterlan, Thura day, Friday and Saturday. Free paaaes will be given only to the first 35 people offering correct answers. To Retire Santiam Forest Supervisor ALB ANT, Ore., Sept. 21. (p) No tice has been received from national forest headquarters tftat M. C. Hall, supervisor of the Santiam national forest, will go on the retired lis February 1, 1933. He has been In the national forest service 37 years. Much of the development of trails, rails and telephones In the Santiam forest occurred during Hall's admin istration. Oregon Weather Fair tonight and Thursday; Using temperature Thursday and In west portion tonight; frost east portion tonight; gentle changeable winds offshore. Fender and body repairing, prices right. Brill Sheet Metal Works. PHONE 1300 For TOWING or Wrecking Service Anywhere Any Time Lewis Supty Service UJL KL I I'llllll jUamr I fl I 17, 1 - - ----- - - -