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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1933)
PSUH FOUR Hedpord Mail Tribune "EvtfrtM SsvtlMra Oratta lull IM Mill Ifltaa4 Dtife taKA satsrttr fieiwd n fcfEDroHD psintinu ca m-im n rn l fast t sobsst . mi at, tmur aa ualepaosaetNtesftpif dund Mood claa asusr st MeaJeri Owtin, ta H tun 1. 1HS, r Man la isteoet otiv, tot rw. 11.11 , l.ft Mil, BtUr, tee awaUl .(0 Ba rarrlar l AOTBMtt HMIfln. tttifl. JieuoorUla, Cuius! PoUl FbMaU, Tsltet. OeW Bill tno oo Blltimn. DtU, m I' M Dtllf, lU ouuiUa ......... ' Duly, oat aooUi .SO ' all Uraa. cub M seitaca omdil pepet sf lot Cits at aMfore, Official hw tf lactate CeenU. DnObD M in WWUVHIUI - KKtinnf run I4SH0 ootu tbt tiweutM Pn U utlialull tctiuto It tht uit for punlleilloo of til om dupalebet ertdiug- to K tt olMraltt ertdlua la out ptp tad ua) la tbt laeal om publlsned etrtUk ill rlttu lot pubUetlloa at Dedal tlaseUbai ttrtla trt tltt rtttnea. UISIBr.il Of ONITTD IUM UE1IBEK Of AUDIT BOBIAD or CUCULATIONS Adrtrttilni HtprtHOUUrtt II C. MOUENSTN 4 TAMPAN! Offlett la Net fori. Chlctio, rwrolt, Ita medico, Ut acedia, SaUlt. rortlud. ulwlll Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Parry. It la noted In the Portland papers, that there hava bean tome romantic ahennanlgana going on In the Port land city hall, and great la the front page publicity thereof. It aeenu that upon taxpayers' time a clerk held handa, and with taxpayera' money took a fair lady clerk out to lunch In fact waa more than active In enacting the role of Romeo, Aa uaual In affaire of the heart, one of the parttee concerned waa unable to keep hie aentlmental notlona off white paper, and wrote the beloved one accordingly. Now a loud-mouthed lawyer will not read It In a low mur mur to the aaaembled throngf It I alleged that the offending clerk uaed monlea from the Benevolent fund, In hie heart winning aortlee, and, ftom all the evidence and the letter, tt eem to have been well named. a A prospector came to town today, In reaponae to a call of duty, thua delaying the dlacovnry of a el 0,000 pocket, 1 wheat ought to make the far mera grin, though 37o wool only makea them amlle, aheeplahly, PIONEER PERILS (Pendleton Eaat Oregonlon) Samuel Hoon waa run over by a team Saturday near Walla Walla and hat hie right leg and three rlba on hie left tide broken. Peo, a brawny Umatilla Indian, became ur-fltr the Influence of liquor yeaterday and was arreated by Mao Wilton, three or four othera, and a club. A woman of conalderable age, accompanied by a young girl, appeared on our atreeta a few daya ago amoklng a huge pipe. It le auppoeed they have lately arrived. (SO Yra. Ago Col.) The fair city of Salem can't take It. for Salem up and heavea a tran elent Savior of the Nation, formerly eratorlcally employed here, Into the callabooee, because of hla chronle orneryneta. The gent, with o there, haa been indulging In organised pee terlng on the courthouse lawn, and calling upon everybody to move but themaelvea. The conetltuted author ities viewed hla monkeyahlnee aakanoe While flourishing In these parte, the gent never rose above the rank of John the Bantlat. belns eublect to rational momenta. Onre ha anoka I aloud, and opined that the US. army wee a trlfU wu much for the Jack eon County Rebellion, Ine., and aug geated that no rumpus be picked with Uncle Sam. Neither did he think much of Frederick the Oreat & Messiah taking the field In revolu tion. Now that he la In durance vile, maybe when he gate out he will hie to Eugene and ahow that burg, to aympathetle to agitator, what It means to be Infested by them, t Swatting flies and canning cher ries, are keeping the Older Olrls at home these days. - A man tried to get us in an argu ment about the Sales Tax yeaterday, so we aquelohed and silenced him by announcing, "The Salsa Tax ha been caat Into outer darkneee." Thla la a trick we learned from the poli ticians. They are alwaya catting worthy measures "Into outer derk neaa." It don't mean a thing, but sounds religious. - RE-MEN ORT BUST (Chattanooga, Tenn, Times) Bob McCamy could not attend court at Chats worth, Oa., yeaterday, the court waa advised. Judge Pitt man wanted to know why end de tailed Dr. H. V. Ruaaell to go to McCamy 'a home and find out. Dr. Ruaaell made an Investigation and told the court the story he received from McCamy. McCamy and several friends made a week-end trip to Polk county, Tiaaessee, and while on that trip McCamy'a frlende turned dentleU, berbera and surgeons and he waa the aubject of all their operations. The dentist friend, with a pair of maty auto plltra, extracted all of McCamy'a teeth. The barber friend cut off all hla hair except a scalp tock on top, ana thla ho treated with molaaeee to make It etend up. The aurgeon friend then made an Incision cn the arm and stitched It up with purpie tuning thread. Having trimmed McCamy up In the moet ap proved etyle, they all returned home, but McCamy waa Indlapoaed to offer himself to the public gaa after hav ing been the aubject of the skill of hit friends. When the report waa made to Judge Pltlman In court the Jurist had to rap tor order. A Great THE present pissing out of plums on the democratic platter, is more amusing than such post-inauguration, ceremonies usually are. ' For so many rewards are going to deserving Democrats, who have always prided themselves upon being such loyal disciples of Thomas Jefferson. The Democrat have been as orthodox regarding Jefferson, as the Republicans, regarding Lincoln: the Jefferson Day .ban quet has always been the high spot in demooratio, aa the Lincoln Day banquet has been, in Republican gatherings. Scratch 100 percent Democrat particularly at a banquet and you invariably discover a member of the party who traces his politi cal principles straight back to the founder of the party. Tet if one searched all political history, no administration more fundamentally and diametrically opposed to Jeffersonian principles, could be found, than the present administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt. THOMAS JEFFERSON's entire political creed was based upon the axiom that the less government the better. Presi dent Roosevelt believes the more government the better. Jeffer son believed in a feeble national government, Roosevelt believes in, and has secured, the strongest national government in the history of this country. Jefferson envisioned a free sovereign citizen, living his own life in his own way. To President Roose velt such a citizen is truly the "forgotten man." Jefferson was a stickler for states' rights, President Roosevelt is building up the most highly centralized nation in the world, with unprece dented powers in the hands of one man himself. 4 e e e e a AND yet how eagerly and gratefully, the faithful workers in the Jeffersonian vineyard, come forward to accept hon ors, from the one democratic president who had taken particular pains to knock the revered and sainted Thomas into a cocked hat! The situation is amusing such unconscious inconsistencies always are. They reveal the complete unreality of partisan politics, at the present time. Tet we have no doubt these same Jeffersonian Democrats will gather at the next Jeffersonian banquet, and pour forth the same eulogies to their founder, as they have in the psst, snd be aware of no inconsistency what ever. It's a great game this gsme of politics! New Worlds for Old WHAT the Jeffersonian Democrats fail to realize, what so many citizens fail to realize, is that we have been going through a peaceful but epoch-making revolution which has not only completely changed the two national parties, but has fundamentally altered the entire nature and set-up of this nation. We may continue to use the old party labels, but tho old parties, the parties of Jefferson and Washington, of Wilson and Linooln have gone, never to return. As far aa essentials are concerned we are already living in a new world, and with charaoteristio American adaptability, we are adjusting ourselves to that new world. Partisans on both sides msy still live in the psst; but we ss a people are living in the present, faoing a future as new and untried, as faced our forefathers when they lsnded at Plymouth Rock. Whoever coined the term "new deal," coined more than a campaign phrase; he set a permanent seal upon the period, in both this country and ths world, it will be this generation's inspiration and its epitaph. The Majority Shall Rule AS THE recent vote in Iowa demonstrated the American corn belt is no longer Dry, yesterday's vote in West Virginia demonstrates the tidal wave against Prohibition, has even bro ken the Solid South. True, West Virginia is not a part of the solid south, but the conditions which placed this border state in the Dry column for 20 years, art similar to the conditions which have so strong ly entrenched Prohibition below the Mason and Dixon line. ON July 18th Alabama and Arkansas vote on Prohibition. A few days later Tennessee votes. If as now planned Presi dent Roosevelt makes a public announcement at the Shrine con vention in Atlantic City, urging repeal, these three states will probably join the anti-Prohibition parade, and as far as the battle for repeal is ooncerned, it will all be over but the shout ing. If President Roosevelt should NOT make his appeal, the result in West Virginia indioates that by the middle of July, the solid south will at least be definitely broken. And with that outcome, national repeal may be delayed but can't be prevented. A3 far aa the radical Drys are ooncerned, they no longer face a theory but a condition. A complete reversal in public sentiment regarding Prohibition has occurred in the Fst few years, which is as sensational as it is surprising. Right or wrong the American people aa a whole are tired of Prohibition and want no more of it. As soon as the law allows they are going to vote it out. We know many sincere Drys who regard this as nothing short of a moral calamity. We do not share their view but we quite understand it. They can see nothing but a return of the old aaloon, and the intolerable conditions which accompanied it. Naturally they will fight such an outcome to the last gasp. WELL that is their right. Just as it is the right of those who want a "new deal" in the time-honored strugglo to sstisfactorily solve the liquor problem, and as sincerely be lieve the new deal will be better not only economically but morally, than the old one, to keep up the fight. This is a free country and we live under majority rule. What a majority of the people want, a majority of the people are entitled to have. It it as much a matter of good citizenship for those who believe in absolute prohibition to abide gracefully by the ver dict of the people, WHEN that verdict is made, as it wss for those who didn't believe in national prohibition to abide by that popular verdict, in its favor, when IT was made. 1 The anti-Prohibitionist will then be on trial; as the Pro- Game .tee hibitionists have been on trial the past 15 years. Unless the former succeed in bettering the economio and moral conditions of this country, as far as the liquor problem is concerned, then they will face the same popular reaction, the Drys are now facing. Whether we like it or not, that is the way the pendulum swings in a free democracy. Personal Health Service By William Brady, H.D. Sinned letter! pertaining to personal health and hyflene, not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped selNad dressed en re I ope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the targe number of letters received only a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to In structlons. Address Dr. William Brady. J65 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cel. CLASS B NEUROTICS ARE ALWAYS IN A DEPRECATORV MOOO. Most of the letters of remonstrance, at least the stoned ones, from mem bers of class B who do not approve of doctors telling the truth even In print, chal lenge me to tell 'em what Is the matter with them If It Isn't nervous exhaus tion. Then they usually Include a paragraph or two chiding me for my hard boiled attitude, my singular lack of sympathy. Another paragraph com pares me and my contemptible ways with the record of some great nerve specialist who has built fame and fortune on the credulity of a neu rotic nation. Some of the Impassion ed letters express the fervent hope that I may never suffer a nervous breakdown myself, even though such a fate might bring me patience and understanding. You see how consistent these class B neurotics are. They even want the rest of the world to believe that the mere fact that one hrur such sensi tive, weak or Jangled "nerves" gives one a higher wisdom, culture and understanding. This notion perme ates our entire national life. Even our courts temper the punishment of crime on such a ba.-'v that is. the honest man who is ought steal ing a trifle Is sentenced to a long prison term, whereas the big cultured crook who Is caught robbing widows, orphans, et cetera, rates a short so journ in custody with an Implied apology from the court and the peo ple and an assurance of liberty as soon as the public hysteria subsides. If It gives class B neurotics any satisfaction to Indite deprecatory mis slvea to me, I don't -mind, only I warn them that I get only a chuckle out of efforts calculated to give me a pang. For the benefit of the wives, hus bands, parents, children, brothers, sisters, friends, partners, associates, employers or employes of neurotics, nervous wrecks, Individuals with "nervous dlspostlon" or "nervous tem perament," "exhausted" nerves, or nervous system "run down from over work," business strains, domestic cares, and all that familiar old hok um, let us epitomize the essential facts; 1. Physiology, science, recognizes no such force as nerve energy, apart WHERE FLOODS Ca' !J m I PKESENt COODSB .. f-rS" a I OF YELLOW RIVEO. fi? I l T jr? J', WWAI RIVER- ..eVOW .Br- r V OP YELLOW Sj y'-'- S-N' jUV RVER BBPOPE KA1P6NS 95. SUC HOW 'Vr - V oLO 8D OF K Jft'Ov - ? YELLOHKIVEK. A? While the Yangtee river threattna serious floods within Its vaat valley the danger ol a still greater 'lood menaces north China wher. it la reported the Yellow river la on '.he verge of leaving Ita preterit course and returning to Ita old ehannel tr the aouth. Should auch an eventuality occur It would mean a dlaaater of the greatest magnitude for the old Yellow river valley la now Inhabited by tena of millions of persons and encompaeaee thousands of square mllea. ' FILM ACTOR AND k':rK Nt:,i"; WIT) Alan Dlnehart and Motelle Brlttone, film workers, applying for a marriage license In Los Angeles. They will spend their honeymoon In Honolulu. They met when cast In the same motion picture. (Atiocl itBd Prcit Photo) from muscular, organic, physical en ergy. 3. Therefore there can be no "ner vous exhaustion" apart from ordin ary physical exhaustion. - 3. Some persons who purport to have "weak nerves" are themselves deceived a proper medical examina tion or study would probably reveal what Is really wrong. Theses are class A neurotics. 4. Others merely use "nervosa weakness" or "nervous breakdown" as an alibi which enables them to Impose on the sympathy, kindness and forbearance of the rest of the world. These are class B neurotics. Whether an Individual case should be marked A or B Is up to the phy sician who has studied the case. But It seems to me that the neurotic whose reaction to this teaching is deprecation thereby qualifies for a B rating. What do you say, victims of nervous imposition I mean all you honest folk who have to put up with the behavior of a bundle of nerves? QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Varicose Ulcer Treatment Thank you for the great benefit received from your varicose ulcer treatment . , . two holes nearly gone, also pain has greatly sublded . . . (Mrs. 8. H. W.) Answer The treatment Is as fol lows : 1. Cleanse ulcer and surrounding sxin witn benzine. 3. Paint ulcer with 10 per cent solution of silver nitrate. (This first whitens, later blackens the raw sur face). 3. Apply a coating of simple boric ointment. 4. Cover this with several layers of cneesecjoth (surgeons' gauze). S. Over the gauze four layers sheet waaaing. 6. Over ths wadding place a rub ber sponge, the firmest obtainable, a little larger than the size of ulcer. 7. Bandage the sponge In place with a 3-lnch gauze bandage, snugly, not tigmiy. 8. Over all apply a linen mesh or a flannel bias bandage to give com fortable elastic support. Renew from 3 to 8 as often aa discharge or dis comfort requires. Get a new sponge wnen sponge loses its elasticity. Walk ing with this sponge dressing mas sages the ulcer area gently. Ed Note; Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Vr. William Brady, M. D.. 265 El Ca mlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. THREATEN CHINA ACTRESS TO WED NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre KBW TORS, June as Down tinder Brooklyn Bridge la s warren of mean, forgotten street. Dickens would bare loved. Turning abruptly from Park Row Into Frank fort st the old World sulUUng. one oootea sud denly' upon an other atratum a cluster of cob webby burrows with the look of finality. Old women, in sullen clench of the Bowery's rot gut, a n o r e In doorways, . and Tipping yellow mongrels run wild. Undsr every brKuje-arch hoboes and riff-raff clot In monosyllabllle talk, and at dusk brew their potion of Mulligan stew, mong one group hlpshot bunch-back regaled with mouth organ. Blowzy cafeteria., coffee pota and nlckel-a-cue pool halls are In each block. In one elbow glow feebly the green lights of the old Oak street po lice station. Amid all the squalor there teems only one hope, the clean white fane of Jerry UcCauley's VM alon on Water atreet. Under the bridge U a etep lower In despair from the Bowery, a few blocks away. Yet, like the Bowery, there' la that tame pretence of cheerfulneas, the effort to tight off the .demon, crouching at conscience, whispering of things undone. And opportunities muffed t No layman In the world haa done more flying than the famous Buro pean correspondent, Karl von Wteg and. Aside from hla dirigible trip around the world, he has flown all over Europe, America and the Far East. Although a. confirmed globe trotter, he haa all hla life suffered sea alcknesa, and that was hla reason for taking to the air. He believes most air alcknesa la caused, by tautness, those who relax and away, oopsle daisy, with the ship are seldom af fected. Von Wtegand haa apent 38 yeara In Journalistic service abroad and secured as many Interviewing beats as any man In the foreign eerv Ice. When the heiress Ellen Mackay be came engaged to Irving Berlin yeara ago ahe sent a telegram to her father, Clarence Mackay, announcing the event. The Ironic touch waa that In her haste ahe aent It Western Union. Before Pierre Cartler opened his avenue Jeweler; establishment hie best customer In Paris and London was the late J. Plerpont Morgan. One day the elder Morgan said: "Why don't you come to America?" Cartler bowed and when Morgan returned home after aeveral months of cruis ing a Cartler establishment glittered in New York. And that'a how Cartter'a waa born I A forlornly shuttered continuous movie on Third avenue explains It with this scrawled card thumb-tack. ed on the door: "We cloeed because the public didn't aeem to care for ua." Russell Patterson, the artist, gsve birth to the Ascot tie with the Ascot shirt he designed recently. This tn compaased a ahlrt, collar and Ascot of the same hue, In one piece and re quiring only a quick flip of a tie end tor the Jaunty effect. The Oay 90 stock la also puffing among veranda hounda on Long Island. Noel Cow ard's white stock, In the first act of his plsy, played a part In the revival, in the daya when the stock reigned the most consistent wearers were John Mason, John Drew, RAymond Hitchcock, Flo Ziegfeld and Clyde Fitch. Few humorists achieve the giddy nonsensical twists of Frank Sullivan. Like all Jeatera. he has owlish grave ness and rarely shakes the founda tions of life by 'laughter himself. I wss set off In a gal of chucklee to day by reading the blurbs on the back ot the Jacket of hla recent "In Your Ear." He had evidently culled them for the publisher and they ran high with praise of notables here and abroad. But the Impish Sullivan could not refrain from burying Innocently In quotation marks, and for no reas on at all, this: "We still have no word from you. . . Will be glad to aettle for Sas.00 Manager, Hotel Upton, Pough keepsle." After completing a ftve-mlle walk In the heat ot the day. Joseph Urbsn stopped at a drink stand and downed In quick auccesslon tour large beak ers of orange Juloe. Immediately thereafter he had to gallop after his wind-blown straw hat down the street. A he passed a negro porter sweeping a sidewalk, the darkey call' ed out: "Mister you sure glurktty glurkl" (Copyright, 1933. MoNaught Sundl- cate. Inc.) Communications Why Pay Two Salaries To the Editor: I haven't been here a long time but I am a taxpayer and it seems to me the people in southern Oregon are the most long-suffering snd spirit less bunch I ever ssw, I mean the tax psyers. Do you know what they are doing, they are paying salaries for a aher 1ft and county Judge to do nothing but campaign for themselves and an outlaw organization known aa thla good government congress. That la aU. The people are paying for two ahertffe and two county Judges really and yet you don't hear them march lng on the court house demanding their right. Why don't they? Why do they lie down and take ltf Ain't taxes high enough without paying double sslsries If either of these officlslt had Idea of theif duties to the people they would resign and at least relieve the people of thu terrible expense. I don't care what they are guilty of in the way of crime I know they wouldn't be tolerated aa county Judje and sheriff sny where else In this etsts or any other atate. I know where I com from such officials would Slavs been escorted serosa, the krita inne tae. A far as I ean aee everybody down here Is buffaloed by a small crowd of Had and nlt-wlU who think they are s lot of despera does too. They are nothing of the kind. Their leadera art crooked but yellow an dthe rank and file of that crowd don't know what Ita all about. Why don't the people waae up. najticularlv the tax payera ana ei least get this man Schermerhorn and Fehl out Imagine a anenn ao u Uct in bis dutlea he must be aus nanrt.rt hv tht) xovernor, demanding he get nil salary and hla successor be paid at weU. I don't eare whether he stole the ballot or dldnt ateal them. be ain't fit for the offloe ana u ne won't resign be should be forced to get out and get out now. A. r. UlaAXV, Rogue River, June VI. Ed Note: Mr. Black has not been here long enough apparently to real- lr . that the atate law allows me two officials mentioned totay in office until the alx months penoo. nas e nlred on July Ut. Both officials are also defendants In the ballot burning caaea now being tried. We agree the tax payera should not be called upon to nay two talarlea for two sheriffs. when only one of them Is performing the duties of that office, but u ine suspended sheriff Insists upon receiv ing his salary, there Is no wsy of pre venting him, as far aa we know. When the ballot cases are over the neoole of Jackson oounty will un doubtedly have an opportunity to ex press their opinion ot these two of ficials at the polls. , Wants Gov't To quit To the Editor: For the past two or three years we have been hearing the state ment that prices would never come back, that we are' on a low level and would stay there Indefinitely, After all klnda ot governmental interference and meddling with noth ing accomplished, except the expend' lture of a huge sum of money which the people will have to make up in taxee, Nature steps In and accomp lishes what aU the lawa and smart men were unable to do. We now have SI. 00 wheat. Anyone copverssnt with the wheat territory knew this waa bound to come. The vaat wheat territory composing Kansas, Okla homa, northwest Texas, eastern Col' orado and Nebraska, a total of 20. 000,000 acres, has the poorest crop since the early SO'a. Kansss, that In 1931 produced 20,000,000, fell to 70 or SO millions In '33 and thla year wlU probably produce around one-halt of the 1833 yield. Then w wake up one morning and find out there are no potatoes The east is pulling on the Pacific cosst states for a supply, a thing never known before at hls time of year, une ttaw vaney potato pro ducing territory, extending westward from Kansas City for almost 100 miles, is almost a failure. Straw berries that were a drug on the mar ket last year are finding a ready sale at S1.35 per crate. One might go on Indefinitely giving examplea. How long the ao-called smart men will try to raise prices by boot-strsp legislation remains to be seen. Now they propose to have a pro cessing tax on wheat which the mill er will add to hla flour and the baker will add to his bread and the con sumer win pay. They propose to use this money to psy a farmer to cut his acreage which Is class legis lation pure and simple. Anyone who has given this pro duction of agricultural products a study knows that It la Impossible to regulate the supply aa Nature etepa in and upsets all the dope. Farming la not an exact science like manufacturing where a factory can produce so many units. During the panic of the 80s the government did exactly nothing which they should do now. We came out ot that depression about '98 and up to 1814 had one of the most prosperous periods during the life time of the people now living. HARRY LECLERO. Medford, June 37. TAKING ANNUAL REST CENTRALIA, Wash., June 38. (UP) AU male resident of legal age. forbidden to shave by a elty ordlnace Invoked alx week each year, are In tently endeavoring here to Induce a virile hlraute adornment. During the period June 37 f Aug ust 7, each year, thla city reverts, aa far as styles are concerned, to pi oneer days. An annual "pioneer cel ebration' la In effect August 4,5 snd Membership in the Federal Home Loan Bank Means A Safer Place to Invest! Periodical Federal examination la given aa well as strict stat super vision . , . Greater safety cannot be secured 1 Your Money Is SAFE! SOUTHERN Building 5c Loan Association Member of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the Files ot the Mail moons of 10 and 10 (ean Ago.) TEN TEARS AOO TODAY June 2S, 19S3 (It Waa Thursday) The mercury drops to 93 yeaterday. Leon B. Basklna and family, and William Ham met t, and T. E. Daniel go to Prospect for the Fourth. Shelby, Mont., passes the hat, to ralae funds needed to guarantee Dempsey-Qlbbons champion bout July 4. Edison Marshall, local author kill three beara on hunting trip In Alas ka. Travel on Pacific highway heavier now at night, than In the daytime. Tourist resents being arreated for turning around In the middle of Main atreet. Sheriff Terrlll told him, "If you do It at home, you can do It here, 1 guess." Hot weather continues, and many are forced to go to the hills. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 28, 191S (It Was Saturday) No place to "get table board In city," strangers report. Dslly train to Butte Fall after July 1st. Perfect June day aucceeds rainy weather of past two weeks. Much hay is ruined. Hobo captured beneath the water tank, with four overcoats. Pear Show la planned for the faU by Commercial club. Medford may have a chance to aee Chicago White Sox and New York Giants plsy In September. TACOMA, Wash, June 38. (UP) The Felrce county welfare board ha discovered a way to eliminate "rack eteera" from the county relief roll. All applicants for relief have been forced to sign an order to financial Institutions to reveal their deposits. Sums from S40 to S100 have been aent In voluntarily by the 'Indigents' tearing court action, the relief board revealed today. RELIEF HEADQUARTERS ARE DAMAGED BY MOB VANCOUVER. B. O , June 38. (UP) Relief workers In the unem ployment office at Hamilton hall to night were repairing damage done by a mob pf 150 men who broke into the ofllce today and wrecked the place. Unemployment relief files were de stroyed, telephone connections sev ered ejid the entire office torn up, Tihey fled before the police arrived. Helped Catch Convict Lola Goodfellow (above), 20-year old former Oklahoma A. and M college co-ed, was eredlted by p lie for aiding In the capture ol Frank Sawyer, one of the escapee eonvlcta from the Kanaas atate penitentiary, near Blnger, Okla (Associated Press Photo) W v ! U f A . , t L I wuss-V,-. I