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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1933)
PBE FOUR 'fEDFORD IfSHi TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESD'AT, JUNE 1, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Evaryene M Serthara Oreaeaj Rudt Um Hill rr.luae" Dilli tiH lawdat MlnruBI) PBINTINU CO. it-if-ts n. ru l ct iobeut . num. tut EMvad ee eecssd elm BUMe. Mad'enl. Oretoa, Odder Act Uuet I. Hit. UB3CKIPT10N tA'n St Mall -la Adnata Dilli. m ret 11-00 Diiir. u Bonim i.ra Dallr. OM moots . "0 Re Carrier, (a Adrlnej Medforfl. Aablaod, Jattaoorllle, Central Point. Fboeali, Taleot, Bold Hill Mid OB Uleiwui. Dellr, coo rear " Dallr, ill SMOtht S-Zo Dallj. oo nonlb 0 All terna, eaab lo tdraoca. Offltlal par Ibo Cll of Medrord. Officii! Moor Jaciaon Couslr. UKMBEB Of TOE AfWOCIATEU "UEfSB Beccltlng rull Luted Wtre Berrleo TiA Auocll'ed Preee b isclinlrelf entlllod la the um for puhlleatloa of ill hh dlipautjef credited lb If. or otberalae credited lo tola paper i aiui ta the loral mn oublljlHd eereln. AU rlchfi for puhltealloo of epeclaj dUpatebea nereis ire aim reaenea. elEMIIEH Or UNITED PRESS MCMIIBH OK AUDIT BUrlBAD Of CIUCUUTION9 Adrertlalnf Kermeotitlrea M. a M0I1P.NSEN e I.0MPAOT Offlcn III Ne Vore, Chleiio, Detroit, fas rruclrco, Los Angelee, Beiltlo. Portland. Ife Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Among the freaks produced by th Depression, and more deserving of pity than censure, Is the Brat Bolshe vlkl spouting drivel In a seml-ldlotle manner. If anyone will also lose their minds and listen to him. The Brat Bolshevik! Is too old for his parents to paddle, and too young for prison guards to do It. Stable money Is now on tap, and no barn to spend It In. One of the fried chicken eating candidates for governor, claims 8000 votes in Jackson county, 6200 of the Totr are Imaginary, non-existent, and visionary. The heat arrived Monday, and coats were peeled, like the hide on the back of a defenseless babe's back. Radio Is now proposed as a cure for the alfalfa weevil. It will b In teresting to note Just what effeot a Koiky mountain soprano will ljave on a pasture. A match between the roadside weeds, and a bass solo might be enlivening. ' The press reports tell of another "substantial citizen," who allowed a lady to keep his purae containing 13310, and she skedaddled. A recent case of carbon-monoxldo poisoning In Chicago left the patient unable to do any arithmetic (Lit. Dig.) The case of carbon-monoxide poisoning we know about, left the relatives figuring on the undertaker's bill. 0 0 Clinch-bugs are reported In the corn, and the back seats of new 1933 autos. "CURRENT HEAT WAVE SOURCE MYSTIFIES" (Slakiyou News.') Like as not the sun has something to do with It. e e Mad Jack Horner, , Stood on the corner, Prom the fall of 1930 until day be fore yesterday. 0 Every once In a while a 39-year-old girl shows up with enough rouge smeared on her face to shame a 16-year-old girl. The latter think It all ehould be put on at once, or not at all. 0 0 A heat spell Is now upon us. caus ing something to be fanned besides prejudices. 'A heat spell Is never a success until somebody sticks a fin ger In an electric fan and yells for a doctor, Instead of lower taxes, or bet ter fishing. The heat also affects labor This could be encompassed by building a courthouse In the middle of a hay field, and yelling: "I'm abused. Come to court I" There don't seem to be as much ardent patrlot lam to swep up the hay fields, as there was to sweep out the court house. A Grand Assembly of the Hay Pitchers Who Came Over on the Mayflower, might be called, to hear a late edition Messiah confess It, and end the dearth of w'orkors. There would bu cheering at noon, to keep the tollnrs from hearing the dlnner toell. What the hay needs Is more shade and politics. e a WBBDS The tall grass waves In the door yard; It swarms In the dim psths; It Is mstted In thick mats that strangle the roce-trees, and clumps of It gloat over the bed where pansles bloomed. Only the waving of mesqult answers the wind through the pas ture; waving of the yellow arms of ths mesquits, and rattling of the fertile pods of tsrweed, straining to Impregnate the amrth. Undisturbed, mice, birds and Insects infest the wilderness of sward. The fields are not fallow and rich, lite fields are not smiling and portly. The fields are not as a mother who rears her fair children. The fields are not garbed as a contented work man, but hide In tatters and tutu and are Infested, like the hstr that covers a wild man. Still the trees of the orchard, wretches In poverty, pray to the sky, but the sky answers not; only the sun replies; and no mulch cellars around their hungry roots prevent him from robbing them of food and drink. It is the face of the garden that Is accusative; for neglect has wrinkled It; dry cracks, like frowns, hard clods, Ilka horrible warts, cover It: Its white bare spots are eyes brim ming with reproach, and the thistle, featsned upon It, Is gleeful and scornful of men's work. vlngersoll Rssj'eatau Of iimuj SDOS LSATS It to atones, prions fit, . A Grave Mistake AN UPSTATE church hag declared a boycott upon merchants who sell beer. Members of the congregation are urged not to patronize them. Very foolish. And a policy which, if persisted in, will do the dry cause great harm. FOR one of thn strongest instincts in the American people is a sense of fair play. And one of the fundamental principles of this government, is that the majority shall rule. At the last election a majority of the people of Oregon voted wet, they voted to repeal the dry enforcement laws. A major ity of the American people through their representatives at Washington, and under the leadership of President Roosevelt, voted to legalize beer. Those individuals therefore in this state, who are selling beer, in accordance with local regulations which have been established, are entirely within their legal and constitutional rights. They have just as much right to sell 3.2 beer as any other commodity, CERTAINLY until the higher courts rule OTHERWISE. TO declare a boycott against such individuals therefore is not only legally wrong, but violates every principle of fair play. People who still favor prohibition, and oppose repeal, are entirely justified in doing everything in their power to retain the 18th Amendment, and defeat repeal. They have every right to organize, to publicize, to try in every proper and legitimate way, to bring a majority of the voters over to their view. ' ; But THEY HAVE NO RIGHT lo boycott merchants and penalize them, for merely doing what the law and public opinion has given them the legal right to do. This is wrong in principle, and we are sure, will prove disastrous in practice. , THE American people, we repeat, believe in fair play. If such a policy of illegal coercion and boycott is persisted in, it will drive scores of citizens neutral on the liquor question, or even sympathetic with the drys, into the camp of the out-and-out wets. The rank and file of the American people are going to up hold majority rule and insist upon a square deal. Boycotting law-abiding citizons who are merely selling a commodity, which they are entitled to sell, and which a majority vote has sanc tioned, is NEITHER. A True Roosevelt IN DEFYING congress and the political pressure of the veter- ans bloc in their effort to defeat his economy bill, President Roosevelt has shown he is in every way worthy of his distin guished name, f The late T. R. had a favorite motto: "Be sure you an right, then hit the line hard." In demanding that pension beneficiaries assume a just share of the financial sacrifices forced by this unprecedented depres sion, upon the American people, the president is sure he is right, and IS hitting the line hard, He is entirely willing to rectify injustices in the original out of veterans' compensation. He has already done so. He is not only willing but he insists, that no veteran of the last war, or any war shall suffor from disabilities incurred in service, without proper compensation. But he is NOT willing that the pension abuse should con tinue unchecked, or that veterans who did not suffer from war sorvice were even, benefitted by same should be support ed by the already overburdened taxpayers. IN THIS stand we believe the president is everlastingly right, and we also believe, he has the American people as a whole, solidly behind him. The fight is not yet over. But this much is certain if Presi dent Roosevelt sticks to his guns, refuses to weaken, whatever the immediate outcome, in the end he is bound to win. For the American people will then realize they have in the White House the type of man they want there a president who is willing to acoept political defeat even sacrifice, if need be, his public career, rather than be false to a fundamental principle in which he believes. The American people will stand behind such a president to the very end. The Medford Mess ""PHE trial of the first of the persons accused of stealing ballots in Jackson county has progressed far enough that the evidence reveals a most amazing state of affairs. The lead era of the "Good Government Congress" organized to carry out one of the most diabolical plots ever attempted in order to hold control of publio offices. They planned and executed the breaking into the courthouse and stealing the ballots of the last election in order lo prevent a recount. Testimony of par ticipants has shown that h. A. Banks, County Judge Fchl and others who wore leading the "revolution" in Jackson county were in on the plow though they did not handle the ballots them sclven. Here indeed is a situation which strikes t-i the foundation of "'law and order" w.hich Banks was accustomed to rave about. The group had secured the ulection of a county sheriff and the county judge. Apparently they knew if the recount of ballots proceeded their sheriff would not be able to retain bis office; ponsibly other skullduggery in the election might have been uncovered. Obviously' the thing to do was to destroy the ballots and prevent the rsoount. This was done. 117HILE the trial is not concluded, enough evidence has been introduced thoroughly to discredit the whole campaign of Banks and Fold and their cohorts. They were political schemers trying to gain control of the court house for selfish ends. Had they succeeded the end might easily have been virtual anarchy in Jackson county. The fight of the decent elements in the county was costly and strenuous, for no one stands to gain in feudism of that sort. The fact that individuals were willing to stand up to sustain the real forces of law and order deserves the hearty commendation of the remainder of the state. They have performed a conspicuous public service. Now is the time to purge the infection with thoroughness. The wUlTul group who organized and fomented the trouble should be completely and permanently discredited. Until that is done the peace of partial victory won by the' Banks verdict of guilty may prove only temporary. (Salem Statesman.) Personal Health Service By WUDxtn Brady, HJ. Signed letters pertaining to personal Health and bygtent. not to disease. diagnosis at treatment, will be- answered By Or. Brady if a tumped, sell addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be Brief and written In ink Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be anawereo hrra. No reply ran Be made to queries not conforming to instructions Andreas Or. WllUsrn Brady In cava of The Uau tribune. A HUNDRED BEHKIES FOR A TOOTH. U I ever do havf nervous break down, which I may do If aver I'm In grave danger of being caught at some a o( my akuUdug- gery, and suffer from Insomnia, I'm going to de bate 'with myselt this problem to keep me awake: Would the chap who of fered his king dom for a horse have been aat ' isfled If they were tempo rarily all out of horses and offered mm instead a flock of wives or clear deed to a bouse and lot In an exclu sive residential section? A considerable proportion of the population has received medical ser vice of one kind or another for noth ing or for a song. These people can't bear the thought of any change in the practice of medicine or In the pocket of the practitioner. Because Old Doc Goofy allowed every one to take advantage of him his patient's children forever resent being required to pay for medical advice or skill. What do I think, one correspond ent asks, of a doctor who demands a fee of $200 for the treatment of hem orrhoids? Prom the context It is plain that the patient Is cured and quite satisfied, only he feels the doc tor charged too much. Dentists have made better progress In educating their clientele. Lots of people don't mind paying a dentist a hundred berries for a tooth. The dentists have a system. Physicians have not yet aystematlud their busi ness., They're too Intent on the sci ence and art of medicine to give proper attention to business. There are still some physicians who. tho In dire need of funds to meet the most essentia, requirements of living, actu ally hesitate to demand payment of accounts regularly every month, as all buslnes does. Some doctors rather pride themselves on their neglect of this carelessness. There are Just two reasons for such Indifference or pre tended Indifference the doctor is living on wealth Inherited or married or he Is seeking to gain a reputation for kindness and eventually a large practice. One element In modern medicine, the brass specialist, employs busi ness efficiency with a vengeance. This Is how the racket Is worked: An attractive, well trained secre tary receives the patient, gets all necessary data and retires to mke Communications Sees No Better Method To the Editor: A long time ago a very wise man wrote, "Wine Is a mocker, strong drink Is rsglng and whosoever Is de ceived thereby Is not wise." The American people are not wise. They are deceived by the crowd that want prohibition repeal. They are samefully deceived by false statements relative to abuses under prohibition. No sincere effort has ever been made to enforce prohibition, yet In spite of lax law enforcement there has been much lees drinking and much less crime and debauchery. The old liquor trade was In league with every known form of vice and was a serious men ace to all free Institutions. We have every reason to believe that the new liquor' trade will be Just as selfish and mensclng. It Is already formula ting plans to teach our youth to drink. "The saloon Is dead, Is a favorite slogan but it means nothing. If we have legal liquor traffic there will be more drinking and Inevitably more crime and lawlessness. We are deceiv ed If we think there Is a better meth od of control. The fact Is no method ever tried anywhere anytime has In any degree controlled the traffic ex cept prohibition. We are deceived if we believe the country will be benefited by the rev enue. The revenue will come, but for every dollar thus taken some one will pay five dollars to repair the damage wrought by the traffic. This Is history and history repeats. We have been deceived and betrayed by both major political parties who in their platforms pledged against the re turn of the saloon but give no auch assurance in the repeal amendment submitted. After repeal wl,at? Forty eight varieties of control and chsos and confusion. Many are so far deceived they ire willing to vote with the breweries, dis tillers, retail dealers, gamblers, crooks, bawdy house keepers and all kindred lawless elements. These are the people who will profit by repeal, and with the rich who hope for reduced income tax es are the principal ones working for repeal. We would not cast slurs at honest people who stand for repeal but we say i they are deceived and . re not rightly 1 interpreting the facts. i Wake up Fathers and Mother and . all good people and vote to save our boys and girls and protect our homes ; tf all people opposed to boose will do their duty there wilt be no repeal. A. W. AHEPHtRD ) Route . Medford. JOINS LEGAL GROUP "Every man wants a son. and t have one" with this statement Kenneth DenmtD, one of Um younger members ft i -X Inquiry about the Individual's rat lng, etc. Then ft young medical as slstant takes the patient's history. Then ft self-confident young woman in a uniform such as nurses wear, prepares the patient for examination. Finally the big shot himself, all dressed no In something like a glori fied barber amock, glances over the data, feels the spleen and the e pi tro chlear lymph nodes, auscultates the bases and sends the patient to the hospital, the operating-room, the lab oratory or to one of the other emi nent specialists who share everything with him. What, all this on tick? No, no, children. That efficient secre tary In the anteroom collects $78 be fore the patient gets Into the consulting-room at all. The same phy sician practicing as an Individual, under his own name, Instead of "clinic" would never demand cash In advance from honest patrons, and In stead of (75 his fee for the same ser vice would be more likely $10. But you know what Barnum said. QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS. Birth Mark. Daughter born with birth mark 'on cheek. It became raised after she was 3 months old, and Is now get ting slightly larger she Is 1 year old now. We understand radium treat ments will completely eradicate the mark. Is this true? Mrs. S. 8. L. Answer Radium treatment is the best in some catei. In any case the earlier the treatment Is used the bet ter the cosmetic results will be. Leave It to the doctor to decide which treat ment Is best. Beer and Athletics. A 15-year-old boy is anxious to be come a good athlete. He has been taught that tobacco will affect his wind. Unknown to the boy, there has been discussion In the family whether 3.3 per cent beer would be good or bad for him. One member, tho not a drinker, thinks It Is narrow-minded to imagine there is more harm In It than In soda water . . . R. L. W. Answer A glass of beer yelds less energy, strength or vigor than a glass of milk. Even for aged, feeble folk it Is an individual question whether such alcoholic beverage la advisable. Any one who argues that beer la advisable for young persons, particu larly young persons with athletic am bitions. Is Just too gullible. (Copyright, 1033, John P. Dlle Co.) ' Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady, should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. I)., 2ft,1, EI Cft mlno, Beverly Hills, Cnltf. of Medford'a legal fraternity, an nounced to the world this morning that a boy, weighing seven pounds and one ounce, was born to Mrs. Den- man yesterday at the Community hos pital. The little boy will be called Donald. He is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Bolt of Freewater and of Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Denman of Corvallls. At torney Denman is assistant In the office of Evan Reames, this city. Csll the Southern Oregon Credit Bureau. They can tell you who pays his debts promptly. Pierce's Hot House tomatoes at your grocer's. The quality is fine and the price Is right. PRICES ADVANCING - mm 4SjS Cre mo. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF., 9: 15 A. M.JUNE 12, 1933. -KOKE CHAPMAN CO., MEDFORD, ORE, BUY NOW IS TO USE GOOD JUDGMENT, CAREFUL ANALYSIS OF THE STOCK AND COMMODITY MARKETS FOR THE PAST SIXTY DAYS INDICATES THE TREND. PRESENT PRICES CANNOT BE MAINTAINED, INCREASED COSTS OF BASIC MATERIALS AND LABOR MUST FIND THEIR REFLECTION IN THE COST TO THE ULTIMATE CONSUMER, THE GENERAL FIREPROOFING CO, class or SEnvicr dc$ircd POM1BTIC CLK rciCGRAM PULL RAIT OAT L ITT IP OEPfRftCD HIGMt " NI6H7 " NESMGf ICTTCB NiGHl WttKCNO " rllr. J; MhttrwtM m-wm will kr &aen,tld an B full-rat fywrJTBTiaratcaa. mmmm f 5cm1 tktfoliXnt aaoKtf. mijed a IM Irrma on haxf, eei an hrnhg crW to PORTLAND, ORE., JUNE 12, 1933. PEOPLE'S ELECTRIC STORE, MEDFORD, ORE. PRICES ADVANCING STEADILY. RECOMMEND IMMEDIATE PURCHASES. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO SECURE PRICE PROTECTION ON THIS RISING MARKET, C. R, BACH, MGR. FOBES SUPPLY CO., WESTINGHOUSE REPRESENTATIVE. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, June 14. Looking about furtively first and feeling pretty much the simp, I ducked Into one oi Broadway's de- , 1 shows last even- I mS In(f 14 mu s . cular collv-wob- les which winds up with degage e x h i b 1 1 1 on let hawking exer clsers, make-man pills and sundry In vigors tors. One hears that Valentino crum pled on a dance IS rV' ' lon an Pr8tlnB gttBw table cried: Til O. O. Mclntyre give a million to llvel" Argument is advanced he would be with us today had he cleansed his system with a Juju held aloft. Admission Is gratis, but the privi leged must be attentive to the flap doodle. A restless listener turned to look back at the street. The voice of ft speaker rasped: "He won't give me what I give him courtesy. And he came In free." When someone swooned to the floor and there was the mur mur "A plantl" the wrath of the speaker at the Implication was beau tiful to behold. - I found myself a sudden target for a shot of perhaps deserved venom. After lingering awhile I turned to go. Pointing, the speaker yowled: "I sup pose that big shot Is going to ft $50, 000 conference!'1 Then In snarling grin: "He has nothing or he would not be here!" I slunk out blazing I Among fading figures on the Broad way horizon with the departure of Jimmy Walker Into exile Is Hector Puller, once scroll writer and orator to the city. Although a talented for mer dramatic critic of Indianapolis, he was the personification of the popular concept of an English actor with stick, spatterdashes and rolling voice. Engrossing New York's scrolls of welcome at $300 per scroll to visiting notables, he gave beau geste to receptions at city hall. Often, too, he spread culture lobster bazaars by reciting to select circles Shakespeare and Swinburne ad Infinitum, his fa vorite being "Faustlne." Don Skene, Ralto wit, upon being Informed a certain unpopular base ball writer had Injured his heel slid ing to a base, observed: "If he hurt his heel, I'll bet he aches all over." It was Skene, too, fleeing from a hor rible first night, who was collared by an officer In headlong dash to inquire his haste. "Arrested for resisting an opening," he murmured. About the most scholarly critlo to visit, New York la H. T. Parker of Bos ton. So polished and erudite Is his prose It Is a Back Bay tradlton he writes his reviews first In Latin, after wards translating them Into English "or publication. 1 I have Just completed an experi ment in hosing the dogs In an area way. Billy, the Emeritus, did not take to It. Baring his fangs he tore Into the stinging stream, but the Scaly ham rolled and barked Joyously and at times stood still and turned himself leisurely to and fro to get the best effects from the cool spray. I'm be ginning to believe he has a lucid Interval now and then. Few actresses can tremble so de lightfully on an abyss of sin with out making the plunge as Peggy Wood. I had never seen Miss Wood on the stage until recently. It was a refreshing experience. She brings back the charm of ft girlhood now almost mythological. She needs no fresh acolyte to hymn her naivete having been highly bespoke by critics 5E 1C1 m sT .::'::: WESTERN UNION mwcOMS cast TON. Miaieerr Denies Romance - i IH -iV - a, J Ruth Googlnt, Fort Worth, Tex, loclety girl, denied that her friend, thlp with Elliott Roosevelt amount ed to a romance, but said the President's son was a "very nice boy," Young Roosevelt Is estab. Ilthlng a Nevada retidence prepar atory to divorce proceedings. (As sociated Press Photo on both sides of the Atlantic for this especial charm but the stage has been so afflicted with hard-bitten creatures. Inhaling cigarettes ankle deep and shouting shady amours In glnny husk, I cannot forego a lusty cheer. I Wonder how a modern revival of "Sis Hopkins" with, say Peggy Woods, Lillian Glah or some other tremu lously starry-eyed slip In that re membered, to me at least, role of Rose Melville, would fare In the scorching curl of modern sophlstlca' tlon. This was meaty theatricals at the cross-roads and there was one poignant moment when "Sis' was saying farewell to Eldey don't Inter rupt I'll lose the thread bound for the city when I always blubbered right out loud. Tear after yearl It was the same choke causing that lit tle achey constriction when I read of distracted -parents broadcasting kidnapers: "Please be good to our child 1" In those days I had a notion tbat some day I'd pack up the telescope, leave the only girl and light a abuck for the big city myself. And, by gum, I did! Jenkins' Comment (Continued from Page One) ATELY a part of business to the buying in anticipation of a rise that is based on Informed Judgment lead ing to the belief that demand ex ceeds supply, and the selling in an ticipation of a drop that Is based on informed Judgment leading to the belief that supply exceeds demand. T HAS nothing to do with SUCKER BUYING AND SELLING on the stock exchange. Sucker buying or selling of stocks ISN'T based on Informed Judgment of the markets, tl Is based on noth ing more than tips tnd hunches. It Is Just plain gambling no more In telligent, no better Informed, than rolling dice In a crap game. Speculation of that sort Isn't good for business, never was, and never wlU be. HERE IS J. c antirvn. met MBjsjBwpja'SMaMa'ssM LrafiifiNfi i I h ituninfii i i Flight 'o Time (Medford and J season County History from ths Piles of fht Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 fears go.) TEN VEARS AGO TODAY June 14, 193S (It Was Thursday) President Harding urges people to lesrn snd ting the National anthem. New high school bond Issue Is wide ly endorsed by local citizens. Rumor that there Is an empty room In the old school Is branded a false and malicious tale. A sudden hall storm hits fruit in the Ferrydale and 401 orchard dis tricts, but the orchardlsta were cov ered with hall Insurance. ' Half-holiday tomorrow so all can attend the auto races at the fair grounds. Traffic officers to start arresting autotsts who have not yet procured their 1923 licenses, due last January 1. Fishermen report they still have no luck In Rogue River. Mose Barkdull catches a 14-pound sucker. TWENTY VEARS AGO TODAY June 14, 11)13 (It Was Saturday) Town wildly excited over Bud Anderson-Leach Cross fight at Los An geles, July 4. N. T. Oraundau of San Francisco writes Court Hall, "I am a friend of both yours and Bud, but Cross la very good, and might win." Mr. Hall poohpoos the Idea In a ring ing letter to the editor. Horace Bromley, Fletcher Fish, Theodore Fish, and Robert Wilson at tended a social dance In Ashland, "motoring to and from." t R. D. Hoke says outlook good for a cannery here. 0. E. Gates receives an Overland model T-89 for display only. Germans of the valley celebrate the Jut Ilea of the Kaiser 's ascension to the throne. "Wnen Strong Men Sigh," at the Isls; "15,000 Feet of African Scenery" at the Star. Baer's Baby Brother Buddy Baer, brother of Max Baer, hopes to follow In Max's footstepi at a pugilist He weighs 247 pounds, stands 0 feet 4'2 Inches and hat been working out In Oakland, Cal. 'Associated Press Phntr.t EVIDENCE 177 -A ACCTG. INFMN. TIME FILED - 4 J 'J ' '