PXGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUyE, MEDFORD. OREGON, MONDAY, MAT 1, 1933. VIedford Mail Tribune "Ewyof In Southirn Ortgon Reads tin Mall Trlbuna" Dally Exeapt Stturdv PubHihcd bf HEDFORD PBINTINO CO. 6-Sr-I H. Fir Bt. ROBERT ff. RUIJL, Editor An Indepawlant Newtpapcr Entarcd u mcdim! clui natter it Uadtord, Oregon, coder Act at Uircb 8, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION BATES B Mill -In AdTuei DaJlr, dm rear .......... .9B-00 Daily, als month! J.T6 Dill, one month 40 By Carrier, la Aduow Medford, Ashland, Jacksonville, Central Point, Photnli, Ttlent, Oold Bill and on Hlfhwa. Dillj, one year...., 6.00 Dally, ill monttu 8.25 Daily, one nonlb .60 AU terna, cub In aduw. OffldaJ paper of the City of Mtdord. Ofriclal paper of Jackson County. UEMBEH Or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BeeeUlnc Pull Leased Wire Service The Associated Prett la eteluslHty entitled to the use for publication of all new dlipatenee credited to It or otherwise credited In this paper tod alio to the local oewi publlthed herein. All Hints for publication of special dispatches herein are also re erred. MEMBER OP UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Advertising Represent tltes M. 0. HOGENBEN h COMPANY Offices tn N York, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco, Lot Angeles, Seattle, Portland. Mlul Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. "The New Deal" ha . started to function In these parte, due to the people being eomewhat timid about further playing of the Joker wild. Thli la the flrat of May, according to folks who have calendars, of which there was an unparalleled drouth the first of the year. People who pos sessed no calendar suspected It was May, due to the presence of Decem ber. No oeremony attended the rip ping off of the leaf that was April, though the calendar-blessed cltln felt as proud, and was as full of pomp as If smashing a brand-new ocean liner In the snoot with a bottle of pop. Sen. Borah, denouncing the presl' dentlal proclamation calling upon one and all to cease hoarding gold declared, "If I had oo00 in gold would tell the government to go to hell." Most anybody with S0000 in gold would feel the same way, and then beat the government to the destination. INTERESTING, IP TRUE (Wilmington, Calif., Times) The crust of the earth Is about eighteen miles thick before we come to the molten . center, and that- Is where Hell Is located tn the center of the earth the r . bottomless pit," according to Evangelist J. S. MoOonnell, who preached on the subject, "Hell Discovered Eighteen Miles From Wilmington" In Odd Follows haU. The first lumbago this year to get out of hoeing the garden, was report ed this morning. Despite the way France has been acting diplomatically, she will get a 14,000,000 pound loan from Great Britain, to maintain the franc It all proves that orneryneas like crime never pays. "We ploked up a little paper, the other day, printed by the convicts In a penitentiary, and it was almost en tirely devoted to good advice." (Ed Howe Mag.) More light on human nature, Ten Iowa, fanners are under mili tary arrest, for conduct unbecoming a fanner. They yanked a Judge from a bench, because some of his rulings, In accordance with the law, confllct ' ed with their own notions. Among other Indignities, they left him at the cross-roads without his pants, probably on the theory that Justice, being blind, might as well be naked. One of the participants bore the name of Sokoloskle, which explains no doubt In a large measure his atti tude towards an established Ameri can Institution. The Joy of no longer being In his native land, where he had to behave himself, was too much for Mr. Sokoloskle, et al. t a Joan Crawford, film queen, has filed a ault for divorce from Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and the nation will be able to survive the unhitching, If It has good luck. "Mental cruelty" la charged. The mental cruelty started the day the fair plaintiff became pop-eyed trom trying to look like Qreta Oarbo, the sad and foxy Scan dinavian sister of the silver screen. This paper has a new columnist, one o. O. Mclntyre. He operates from New York City, of whlcn he writes entertainingly and hi therefore too far away to take a shot at, when a disagreement over a snippy comment arises. He Is his own boas, If you don't count his wife, so there Is no use demanding he be discharged for disloyalty to either major polltloal party, or failure to please everybody, on a topic that don't amount to a damn anyway. He gets I2OO0 per week, and has nothing to do but pound out his dally stint, without first washing the Journallstlo dishes, and making the Journallstlo beds. Fame and fortune started for him. he blographlcally confesses, because he always walked past his first boas fast. The boas, recognising the value of a awlft pedestrian, over a scribe with a wlft lead pencil and a swift brain, made h'lm the youngest msnsgtng editor In Ohio. Vour corr. employed the deception of walking fast past his first boss. It did not work. The boss invariably caught us around the comer In a cigar store shaking dice with a blonde lady cigar clerk, to whom the boas bore no consuming hatred. If we had It all to do over again, we would not walk fast past the boss we would sprint, spurt, or dssh. Then today, Instead of being horrible example of a reporter, who always walked alow past the boss, and everybody else, we would be a nationally known former flaahy foot racer. 1 EPtgQLQNT The Fight Must Go on GET just what we vote for. We also get as a people, 7 just what we deserve. Whether or not Medford and Jackson county return to normal peace and prosperity, or whether the internal strife which has given this community such a black eye and rendered any normal business activity impossible, continues, is directly up to the people. The newspapers can help. Various organizations can help. Proper leadership is necessary and can also help. But in the final analysis, the job can only be done by the rank and file, by the force of public opinion, by the people THEMSELVES. WE ABE convinced the people of southern Oregon want no return of the agitation, that disrupted this community so long, that led to violence and bloodshed, that turned neighbor against neighbor, friend against friend, and rendered any con structive accomplishment impossible. But we also know, that certain destructive forces responsible for this condition, are reorganizing, are holding frequent secret meetings, are fully determined for their own selfish purposes and for their own political and pecuniary benefit, to tear south em Oregon wide open again and bring about another reign of terror. ; ' -. There is absolutely no doubt of thiB. The number and tenor of several anonymous communications received by this office the past two weeks, are alone sufficient to establish this fact. NO SUCH attempt would be made, unless in certain quarters, thnrA WAS! nrtntiloi, ninnA ValiJ It ! J:..: j i v v.v fvgfuioi DUjvi responsible for the old reign second offensive, and strange as the discontented and the misinformed, they are now receiving financial and moral support. True this support represents ized and militant minority. munity is to be visited by another catastrophe, this organized minority must be met and just as militantly opposed by the ORGANIZED MAJORITY. "CTERNAL vigilance is the price of liberty." Eteifnal vigi lance is also the price of maintaining an orderly govern ment under the law, and it is this eternal vigilance on the part of the people of this community, as a whole, that is demanded now. Once more the people of this community must wake up, be alive to the dangers that confront them, and serve notice on these forces of lawlessness and violence, that further disruptive and incendiary activities will NOT BE TOLERATED. This can not be done unless the complacent assumption that the pillaging of the court house and the murder of George Pres cott, ended the "civil war" in Jackson county is abandoned. It should have ended it. Under normal conditions it would have ended it. But conditions in southern Oregon are not nor mal, and until the depression really ends and good times return, they will not be normal. TTHE great danger now, is the great danger that existed many months ago, publio indifference. The disposition to "let George do it," to let things slide, the feeling partioularly on the part of the "good citizen" that he himself has no duty to perform. The good citizen HAS a duty to perform and to perform now. mat duty is to be eternally vigilant, to stand squarely behind our law enforcement officers and agencies, and show them that in the performance of their duties, thev have the people of this section of the state, this mess is oleared up, root, stock Ihe Mail Tribune dislikes to and would not do it, if it did not is still critical, and that to inform the people of the fact is a duty to this community, which name, could neglect to perform. Either Law or "THERE is one significant feature of all the anonymous com munications above referred newspaper stresses the ballot theft case, and snys little or noth ing about the liquor disappearance oase. They all maintain, the liquor serious as the ballot case j and eonclude therefore, that the Mail Tribune is "unfair," urges prosecution of the ballot cases be cause it involves its ENEMIES: opposes prosecution of the liquor case because it involves WE DON'T agree that the hnllnt ftnsn hut nftan all , a li not important. In fact for the sake of argument, we are perfectly willinp- to treat the two cases as essentially Mail Tribune toward them is essentially the same. 'THIS paper does not and NEVER HAS, opposed the prose- cution of this liquor disappearance ease. If anyone will present this paper evidence showing who was responsible for the disappearance of this liquor, such evidence will be presented to the grand jury and every effort made to bring the guilty pany or parties to justice. But we can't do more than that. No newspaper and no indi vidual can do more. As we have repeatedly stated, we live tinder a government of law. No newspaper can take the law into its own hands, nor can any individual. It is up to a grand jury to indict for a orimej it is up to the courts and the petit juries to oonvict for a crime. A grand jury investigated the liquor case and returned no indictments. A grand jury investigatid the ballot theft cases and DID return indictments. Had the grand jury returned indictments in the liquor case, the Mail Tribune's attitude toward that case would be precisely the same as its attitude toward the ballot theft cases. That is VIGOROUS PROSECUTION, EXONERATION OP THE INNOCENT, PROMPT PUNISHMENT FOR THE GUILTY. But until there is enough evidence to JUSTIFY indictment in the liquor case, we fail to see how anything can be done, or what publio interest is served by continual political agitation concerning it. IT APPEARS clear to us, that the forces of contention and strife in this community are trying to do with the liquor UCUlUU lb, UCI lUUlViUUtUS of terror, are the leaders in this it may seem, from the ranks of a minority but it is an organ And we repeat unless this com resolutely behind them, until and branch, once and for all. revive this issue at this time. KNOW that the local situation no newspaper, worthy of the Lawlessness to each one asks why this disappearance case is iust as its FRIENDS. liquor ease is as serious as the tl.r-t j n Hint 10 o junuer 01 opinion, ana similar, for the attitude of the case, what they did with the a time ring the changes on it, they may feather their own political nests, by misrepresenting it as evidence of a miscarriage of justice, and thus justify their own lawless activities. . WE OPPOSE THIS AND PEOPLE IN JACKSON COUNTY OPPOSE IT. . There is only one way to treat crimes, big or little, whether they involve friends or foes. That is to turn them over to the proper authorities and deal with them in the regular way, as prescribed by the law and the Any other course merely from which this community is it leads to individuals and organizations resorting td violence, taking the law into their own hands, with lawlessness, bloodshed and the death of innocent people, as the inescapable result 1 Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, sell addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink Owing to the large number or letters received only a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady1 In care of The Mall Tribune. THE HABIT OF GETTING OUT OF JOINT. Nine years ago both arms of a girl then 31 years old were dislocated at the shoulder In an accident. But when X-ray pic tures were made some time after ward both shoul der joints were In place. Several times after that, while doing ordinary things, the arms would come out of the sockets, she says, particu larly the left arm. As a rule. before the doctor arrived they snap ped back Into place, and the doctor concluded that they had not been really dislocated after the first time. This has happened hundreds of times, the lady avers, and as there Is no reason to believe the case com plicated by love we may concede that It has happened a score of times, in nine years, for I am sure a lady never lies more than that except for love. At any rate, every time It happens it causes much pain and embarrass ment, and once or twice the lady has narrowly escaped serious accidents be cause of It. After each dislocation the arm and shoulder Is painful for days. She has learned how to snap It back herself, but at thirty ho hum. my notion of Utopia Is a world where everybody, having once at tained 30, stays 30 forever after at thirty, as the present world la arranged, a girl hates to think of spending the rest of her life snap ping her shoulders back Into joint. The doctors told her the shoulders would be all right In time. Yet some how the young lady yearns to con sult somebody or do something about It. When the shoulder joint is dislo cated the capsule or ligament which completely encircles the joint Is nec essarily torn or stretched, and some times this capsule remains loose, as probably In the case described, ao that slight movements of the kind which caused the original dislocation will throw the arm out of joint again. After several repetitions of this the Joint Is very readily dislocated. It becomea a bad habit. Formerly various shoulder cap har nesses were used to restrain the Joint, but with Indifferent effect, and for a live girl of 1033 such treatment would be as appropriate as & nain sook petticoat with lace ruffles. The sensible course for the young woman Is repair of the torn capsule or tightening of the relaxed or stretched capsule. This Is an ortho pedic operation, but any physician AKRON NOTES DANGLE YEAR IN TREE Letter attached to a handkerchief parachute and dropped from the Ill-fated dirigible Akron In 1932 while It was flying over Bremer ten. Wash, were found In a 8eattle tree by Midge and Ted Miller who are holding the packet. Addresses on the letters were legible and the Miller dispatched them. One of the envelopes, addressed to Mr. Orrella Barton. Lakehurst, N. J, It shown. (Associated Prat Photo) notorious Dahack case for so long as a smoke screen behind which BELIEVE ALL FAIR MINDED government under which we live. leads to the deplorable situation with such difficulty emerging- Brady, M.D. who Is qualified to do surgery can treat the case as successfully as - the one who limits his practice to ortho pedic surgery. The arm must be kept In a sling for three weeks after the operation. Passive movements ma nipulation by the ' physician or nts trained physical therapist are be gun in the third week, and active movements or exercise In the fourth week. In five weeks the patient Is able to return to work. Where It Is Impossible to undergo such treatment, a light appliance which reminds the patient to hold the shoulders back, and discourages slumping, drooping or forward hunch ing of the shoulders, tends to pre vent recurrence. Or without an appliance, constant endeavor to main tain tail erect posture . shoulders hack, chip Inside Imaginary stiff col lar, crown of head trying to touch celling, hands clasped behind, toeing In, belly proud as Hl-LIng says. Brac ing yourself In this way la a good habit to follow anyway, say Just a moment or two at every hour struck by the clock. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Soap In Your Eyes. When washing your face If you get soap In your eyes does It Injure the eyes tn any way? L. M. Answer No, Just Irritates. Rinse away the soap before you open your eyes. Movie Habit. How many movies per week can a normal girl of 14 see without hurt ing her eyes? Is it possible to harm one's health by the continual chew-. Ing of gum? Romayne P. P. Answer Modern movies do not strain or Injure the eyes. Gum chew. ing does not Injure the health. Tuberculosis anrl KlMlnjr. I kissed a girl not once but many times In an evening, and only after ward did she tell me, "Well, you might aa well know I have T. B." Is it dangerous? What can I do? J. B. Answer A likely way to contract the disease. Report to your physic Ian at monthly or bi-monthly Inter vals for examination. (Copyright. John P. Dllle Co.) Orepon Wool Up PENDLETON, Ore.. April 39. fAP) Announcement was made here to day that E. J. Burke fe company, wool buyers, have purchased the Anton Vey wool clips of 193G and 1933 at prices said to range from 40 to 80 per cent higher than the prevailing price last year. The clip la at Echo and contains 150,000 pounds. Special Olant Pansles, 35c dozen, nogue Valley Floral Co., Tel. 1040. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Msy 1 Diary of a modern Pepys: Up In a pearly mist and, appropriately enough, a photo card of Rube Goldberg going under Niagara Palls. Also howdy letter from Powder River Jsck and Kitty Lee, the ranch Folk. Then her pllng along with Dick Berlin and Jockeyed him Into buying breakfast Sherry's. , Home where came a bed O. O. Mclntyre maker from whom we articled two especially built beds with resdlna lights and book racas, something we longed for mightily. 80 off to A. Van Beuren's, the motion picture man, and George Bye, Bugs Boer, J. P. McEvoy and Konrad Ber- covlcl there, all gentlemen well met Flovd Gibbons and Tommy Mil lard for a dinner of soupy hash with pimento and driving to Brooklyn to put Millard on the barque Bremen for Geneva and. Lord, nis noncnamutc As Indifferent as I to a ferry ride albeit his 119th crossing. To bed reading Zwelg's magnificent story of Msrle Antoinette and her futile king. In a jerry-built Joss house in Mott street a frall-volced Chinese girl lec tures for sightseers at 35 cents a head. She explains the process 01 prayer and some tenets of Confucius. After the talk she pilots customers to a rear exit It Is bad luck to leave through the same door of entrance and they grope through a dark, tortuous alley. It's scary, or at least It was to me. Bool Anna May Wong, In an unguarded moment, promised to act as a China town cicerone, but we never got around to It. I am told that on Miss Wong's occasional visits there busi ness comes to a full stop In cafes, joss houses and fan tan parlors. News of hef arrival spreads In that myste rious grape-vine fashion so peculiar to the quarter. Everywhere are peer ing eyes, even to white wives behind shuttered windows. She Is their own who has captivated another world. Personal nomination for the slyest twinkle on or off the stage that of Mrs. Messmore Kendall. No figure In the Broadway hoop la so successfully bowed out of the picture In the past few years as Texas Gulnan. She went nut like an elec tric light. No one Jcnows why. Va rious stories circulate night club business was bad, Texas feared prohi bition reprisals, a gang of chieftain tumbs-downed on her enterprises or fahe thought a late season in Montreal and Chicago would re-charge her cus tomers with fervor. Next to her, the lute Wilson Mtzner's evanishment from the White Way was the greatest puzzle. No one believed he could re main away more than a few weeks, but he was absent nine years with short visits growing Increasingly apart. "I got punch goofy hanging around," he once told me. Addison Mlzner In his rollicking volume "Too Many Mizners," tells ol calling on his brother. Wilson, fol lowing his marriage to the rich and celebrated Mrs. Yerkes. Wilson, un derwear clad, lolled In a satin cano pied poster when Addison barged in. "Kick a few valets out of the way and draw up a gold chair," he sighed with self-congratulatory despair. " Thingumabobs: Mrs. Charles Fru eauff's horoscope adorns the celling of the dining room In her 21-room pent house In Washington Square south. . . . The late Ralph Barton'a Paris bedroom was entirely of black as a method of fighting Insomnia. . . . Adelaide Wilson, whose latest book is a literary gasp. Is a daughter of Frn cls Wilson, the actor. . . '. Tallulah Bankhead Is a chain cigarette smoker. . . . Preston Gibson, social butterfly of both continents, Is a patient at Saranao. . . . None of Zazu Pitts' dining room dishes match. . . . Mrs. Adolphe Menjou's Jelly and preserve shop In Hollywood Is called "Kathryn Carver's California Shop" . . . Carol Walnwright, after a circle of the world, has opened up an art studio. Swaying on a lumbering bus top. I always think of Homer Davenport, the cartoonist. He found this metro politan platau the most delightful sanctuary In the crowded city for clearing mental cob-webs. Gaze up at the charabanc roofs after the dinner hour you win see men and women you never expected to see. perched there I At a dinner the other evening Mon tagu Glass, holding up a thin two pronged raspberry fork, observed: "For the blcuspeds only, I suppose I" (Copyright, 1933, McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) I Communications Thanks From Salvation Armr. To the Editor: The Salvation Army wishes to ex press Its appreciation to those who so kindly helped us to make our play a success. We went to eapec- j rally thank Miss Lulu Wilson of the ' city water department for aelllng a ' great number of tickets for us. i We also wish to thank the Aromrr ' for the use of loo chairs. ADJ. H. OALLAHTJE. Dinctng class and play hour fo. ehlloren S to 5 yeara on Thursday. 9:30 to 11 a. m ; el per month. Kv Kastle Dance Studio, across from Rox. thetter. Don't extend credit to Mr. New Customer until you find out from the Southern Oregon Credit Bureau how be paid the other fellows. t PERMANENTS 11.50. t2 SO. 4. 15.30 j oowman'a. Phone 57. I Special Olant Panles. 25c dozen itogu Valley Floral Co,, Tel. 1040. P3? Jewel As Security '-4 ,? 1 i I The world famed Hope diamond has been offered by Mra. Evalyn Walsh McLeanrestranged wife of the former publisher of The Wash tngton Post, as security for a loan which she hopes to use to save the newspaper for her sons. Mrs. Mc. Lean la shown wearing the famous stone. In response to many inquiries Congressman Walter M. Fierce has advised Attorney Frank DeSouza of this slty that no action has been taken thus far by congress for the suspension of the annual assessment work on mining claims prior to July 1, 1933. Mr. Fierce advises that several bills are now pending in congress which, if passed, would suspend the work for the current period. He also states that It Is not likely that this legislation- will be passed unless it la ln eluded in the program of President Roosevelt. Strong protests have been made against the suspension 6t the assess ment work on the ground that addi tional labor would be furnished if the assessment work Is required to be done. Others take the viewpoint that suspension should be effective lmnfed lately because of the expense involved to clailri owners, and in or der to relieve them of the necessity of incurring expense In protecting their mineral rights. I am very much Interested In this program," writes Congressman Pierce, "and desire to forward what ever is most beneficial to the mining interests of Oregon. I will watch the bills now in committee and will lend my Influence toward the moratorium as It seems to be the concensus that suspension of work would be the most helpful." GRIFFIN CREEK P.-T. A. SEES COPCO PICTURES An interesting program of Copco movlea was enjoyed at Friday nlght'a meeting of the Griffin Creek Parent Teachers' Association. Among the films shown by H. L. Bromey, Copco advertising manager, were pictures- of Vie recent lake caravan and views of the "cean-up" at the famous Sterling mine ten days ago. A fine program of movlea, music, folk dances and other features followed tfie regular business session. New Dry Chief A. V. Oalrymole. San Pnni. attorney, was appointed national prohibition administrator by Presi dent Roosevelt- (Associated Pres Photol FUNERAL PARLOR West Main at Newtown Sympathetic, Friendly Service Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the File, ot Thr Mall Tribune of 80 and 10 Vear. Ago ) TEN VEARS ACO TODAV May 1, 1923. (It was Tuesday) Salem and other Oregon cities plan boycott to curb "rising price of sugar." An airplane passed over the city this morning at 11:30. and attracted wide attention. Two minor auto smashes occurred, when the driver stopped to watch the bird-like ma chine speeding northward. Showery weather. The ,11111 and dales are a mass of wild flowers. Auto camp booklet la Issued, and will be given to touriBts. Medford forms a Rotary club with 25 members. Local moonshiners sent kj Multno mah county rockplle. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY May 1, 1913. (It was Thursday) City orders all wooden sidewalks In city to be lowered to the grade of the concrete sidewalks, "and will tolerate no needless' delay." April weather was kind to the pears, weatherman reports. Paul J. Ralney's motion picture of "Wild Life In Africa" to be ahown at the Nation. Running out of the street, upon the curb and striking a light pole caused a new Ford car driven by Dr. Emmons on West Main Wednesday afternoon to upset, spilling the doctor and a boy companion onto the pave ment. No Injuries were sustained. Aside from a badly bent front axle and a shattered lamp the car was not damaged. A huge windshield escaped Injury. H. H. Frazee leaves for Canada, where he plans to take up a home stead. Murder In Ditch RIVERSIDE, Calif., April 29. (&) The body of a woman who officers believe was a murder victim, found In an Irrigation ditch early today, was Identified later as that of Mrs. Emma I. Kemp, wife of a Riverside orange company foreman prominent in fraternal organizations here 1 Joan Files Divorce LOS ANGELES. April 29. Suit for divorce from Douglas Fair banks Jr., movie actor, was filed to day by Joan Crawford, the screen's adh:g portrayer of the "modern irl." who charged "grievous mental cruelty." Texas Solon Passes WASHINGTON. April 29. (API Representative Clay Stone Brlggs ot the tenth Texas district, died today of a heart attack. Funeral services will be held Tuesday afternoon at Syracuse, N. Y., the old home of Mrs. Brlggs. Inquire about our new 6 percent and 10 percent CASH discount on all purchases. Ethelwyn B. Hoffmann Real estate or insurance Leave It to Jonea Phone 798 Constipated 30 Years Aided by Old Eemedy "For thirty years I had constipa tion. - Souring food from stomach choked me. Since taking Adlerlka I am a new person. Constlpattlon la a thing of the past." Alice Burns. Sold In Medford by Heath'a Drug Store. DINTY MOORE'S 8 LITTLE GIANTS OPENING THE NEW FAIR GROUNDS PAVILION. SATURDAY, MAY 6 When You Are In KLAMATH FALLS Stop At The WTLLARD HOTEL Cheerful Service Modem Surroundings Central Location Al Dining Room We Invite Zonr Patronage Rates $l.BO Dp WILLARD HOTEL 3mt mm4 Slaia. KUuurk rails SliBKRT AUSTIN. Met. o