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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1933)
P'A'GE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 10, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "CWVOM I SouthtMl OrlfM gust IM Dill Irlsune" Dolls IxoM Uuiiv tmirOUO fklNTlNU CO. li.ir-it n. rk il OBEHT J. "Ulk, IdlUC SB UtdspexkBt Neotpopor taunt m oemd eiw utw st ModfoM moo, sastr la Man I. I1T. lUBSCKIPTION BATE! HID la UM .... Oailr. mi (ur " Otllj. ttl BOOUS Otllj, one soU JlttumUlo, Coutrsl Poll, nvxnll, Iilut. Gold uui ua od auvh onij. t ,e Otlll, ill Bontbl.. Dull, e ejonUi. ...... .. so All torse, cue Id oatucs. OftltUJ eopor of uo Ctti X MBort. Offldsl poper of Jteuoo Covotf. UUIBE1 Of TBI sJSOCISTtD 'KOI rmItIiv ruU Louod Wtro gertlco Tbo tMocUUd Prca li uiluolnlt unities Is tho om for pubueauoe or on om ouiwwnw ertittut u tt or ouierotot eradlud lo UU HP ml all tA tlW IMll 01 DUbUllMd OOTClO. All rlf&tJ for puMletUoo of ipoelil eUpoteboi btrols on tuo reienea. HIHBEB, OF UNITED PKIS1 IUDIKP.H Or AUDI1 BUUEAO or CIKCUUTION8 Adrrrtlfins KtpreMOUUTOl It. C UOUENBCN A I.OMPANt Office, la Nn tori, Caleuo, Dolrall, ess 'riDdaea, Loo AdhUo, luUlo, Portlud. Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Perry. fhara m.V h SODIS lOCAl COnSOla- tlon In the Information that the 80 Yeoro War only lasted 39 years. "Bargain For Quick Sale Only 900. 193 auto, only driven 750 mllea. Owner need! money. Bee be fore rrlday. Phone r7-K. (Wanted exchange.) Wherein another optimist bites off more proiperlty than be can chew. 0 o It will toon be the law to work only J6 houre per week. It will be lot of fun to fool the government and work 42 hour. Might have to aneak up an alloy to ao It, but prac tically everybody hat been up an alley, aometlme, on an Illegal mis sion. ' The three leading atate offlolala re now engaged In a controversy over the purohaae of a boiler. With out fear of being auoceatfully killed, we will state there la no more hot air about thl than uiual. . 0 0 0 FIONF.F.R JOYS AND TEARS (Pendleton Kaat orcgonlnn) Mr. J. D. Seaman will have green peaa for dinner Sunday, A young lady loat her buitl the other evening at the akatlng rink. It consisted of newspapers, A young gentleman of Pendle ton awoke on Wednesday night last and found hla bed on fire. Cause not determined. One of "Whispering" Thomp son's mules tripped on ft rock ft few days ago, fell and broke hla leg. Thompson gave him away to Captain Bean. 0 0 0. Saturday was a torrid day, many recalling the chilly night last Janu ary when It required the sure-footed-ness of a Rocky Mt. goat to get to a hellralslng. Cherrlea are more plentiful than advice, and given away as freely. o Some of the plutocrats have recov ered sufficiently from last winter's vscatlon to depart on their aummer vacation. 0 y The American Association of Athe ists report a decrease in membership. Atheists and typhoons are the two things this valley has missed, altho at times either one, or both, would have been a pleasant relief. Atheism would never flourish here. An athe ist doea not believe In anything, and In these parta there are many who will believe everything. o AMPLE OP MEANNESS (Warsaw, Mo., Enterprise Tom Brill, proprietor of Brill's UUI and a former resident of the dry state of Kansas, has been engaging In some tantalising deeds the last two weeks. Every time Tom drinks a bottle of beer (somefew)he takes the label from the bottle and sends It to ft thirsty friend In the. land of the Jayhawk. 0 0 0 A bald-headed eagle was reported ever the airport Ounday, getting some pointers on flying. 0 0 0 It Is ft trifle early to get officially hot for ft deer, but Chinese pheas ants arc, being shot for Chinese Pheaaar.ta. 0 0 0 "What would happen It for a single day thor were no automobiles. In quires curious reader. Probably the seat plat glass window of the M. P. As H. store would stop a run ' way team of horses. 0 0 Waving pitchforks la reducing the attendance on the Bill Oore corner. oo FURTHERMORE, WHO CARES. Now with all the ante and with those kinds of bees and wasps which have adopted a communal life, these Is an entire giving up of the Ufa of the Individual for the Ufa of the community. Bach worker ant or bee or wasp works not for Itself but for the community. The worker collects food not for Itself but for everybody. It has no children of Its own: but It helps take care of the children of the community, which are all produced by the queens. Biologically, the com munal Insects are very successful. Their communities thrive: their spe cies persist and Increase. They live in all the landa of the earth eicept In eitreme .Arctic and Antarctic re gions, and on the summits of lofty mountains, and their numbers prob ably exceed those of all other injects. They have been cslled the moot suc- cesrful of Insect kinds. But are they happy? Nobody knows. (Nature Usgaiine Call in Uncle Sam! A KOTHER murder has been committed in Jackson county this time in the Eagle Point district. Fortunately the per son charged with the crime is in jail. But for the sake of argument, let's suppose he had escaped across the California line, during the night. Both our local and state police, and our sheriff's office would be powerless. His apprehension and arrest would de pend upon the police of California, or whatever state he hap pened to escape to. The government would take no hand, for no crime against the government had been committed, SUCH a situation brings into sharp relief what we mean by placing the government behind the war against organized crime. Crime recognizes no state borders, why should the lawt The D'Autremont brothers killed four men and escaped to California. Why were they finally caught and put in prison for lifet Simply because they happened to interfere with the U. S. mails, and therefore had the government after them. Our contention is, the law should be revised, so that all mur dercrs, regardless of where the crime is committed will have the government after them. Then "getting away with murder" might not be such a popular American pastime 1 The Grants Pass Crime A CCORDING to grapevine repor); from Grants Pass, ample funds are available "somewhere in Log Angeles" for the defense of the two juvenile gunmen, who recently shot down State Policeman Baucom, in cold blood. This report may have no more foundation in fact, than other grapevine rumors. Yet if the two killers ABE accredited mem bers of the Los Angeles underworld, there is no question what ever that their defense will be financed by the well supplied treasury of organized crime. The undorworld has its "war chest" and has its code. The first principle of that code, is to stand by brothers'in-crime, in their hour of need. If the defense fund appears, all doubt will be removed that the two gunmen were members of some recog nizd L. A. gang. If it doesn't, one can be certain they were merely a couple of youthful derelicts, pursuing crime "on their own." In which case, without money or influential friends, their defense will be unable to avert punishment, immediate and severe. OUT again for the sake of argument let's assume that the A defense fund DOES appear. "What then! Will the defense be perfunctory! Punishment immediate and severe t Not a chancel ' One of the best criminal lawyers in the state will quickly be available. What will he dot Toll the boys to plead guilty and take their medicine t Harcllyl He will do what all "good criminal lawyers do" who are paid fat fees to free the guilty and defeat justice. He will first get all the faots in the case, go carefully over the circumstances and the scene of the crime, then he will tell the boys to repudiate their confessions, confessions, he will say, were secured under duress, of course wrung from the "de fenseless children" by hard-hearted state police, employing the iniquitous 3rd degre, etc., etc., ... Then carefully, step by step, this high-paid lawyer will take these known circumstances, search them for flaws, and recon struct the entire crime more to his heart's desire and more in harmony with the peace of mind and longevity of his youth ful olients. It may be an "alibi." It may be a police "frame-up" to gain newspaper headlines and hide the real culprits and the department's inefficiency. It may be a clear case of mistaken identity. It may be a few faked birth certificates to show the killers were "under the legal age." It may be one thing or another. But if the problem should be really a tough one, then as a last resort it would of course be insanity congenital imbecility mental and emotional irresponsibility and a moth er or two would be produced, preferably in widow's weeds, to testify how one of the boys at least, when a baby fell on its head, and had never been.normal since. Needless to say it would take a long time to prepare this case. The more money the longer the time. When finally the trial arrived, every advantage would be taken of the fact, that American criminal law is based upon protecting the accused the criminal. o o o THE state would be handicapped from the start. Upon it TvftllM rant, the riurAn nf rtrnrtP will, that nnnnrrinr term so dear to the heart of all guilty defendants, "beyond a reasonable doubt." From tho start the judge might be con vinced of the guilt of the defendants, see through the flim-flam defense from the start but the JUDGE COULD NOT COM MENT, could not in the interest of justice and the truth let the jury profit by his greater knowledge of crime and greater legal experience. That would be g grave error although in Canada and England it is recognized procedure. Or grave errors against the state might be committed but nothing could be done about it. The state CAN'T appeal. The state can only "TAKE it." They do things differently in England and Canada. There the state represents the crown in theory, but the sovereign British people in fact, and any unfairness to the state is not tolerated. The state has the right of appeal, just as has the defense. The two sides fight it the entire procedure is to get AT A ND what would be the outoome in Grants Passt Well, no definite outcome for a very long time. Even if a convio' tion were secured, it would probably be two or three years be fore the sentence would be carried out. Just as long as the money held out there would be demands for new trials, appeals to state and perhaps the United States supreme court; appeals for pai-dons, this, that and the mcnt was FINALLY inflicted, appeared, everyone would have yilE pooplc of the United Slates will never effectually put down the crime wave, nor cease from providing a paradise for murderers, until two things Our entire system of legal and criminal procedure is CHANGED, Tho power and force of the hind the war aguinst organized crime. Of the two we regard the first as the more important. e k out on even terms. The aim of THE TRUTH I other thing until when punish its value would have entirely dis forgotten the reason for it. are done: federal government placed be Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal Health aod hygiene, not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, wlli be answered by Ur. Brady If stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be oriel and written In Ink. Owing to the large number qf letters received only few cut be nswered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to in structions. Address Dr. William Brady, Ui El Camlno, Beverly HlUa. Cat, FOL'B POUNDS A reader requests an article about the liver aod lte (unction. He craves to know whether a person can life without a liver. Liver? Oh. yea, I remember now. It's that large gland In the northwestern ab domen. About a pound for every 36 poun'da of body weight. Aa for living with out It, I do not advise you to try. Why Inter fere with these things as long as they don't bother ua? In the old days when the charla tans devoted considerable attention to the livers of gullible folk the lat ter suffered proportionately with bad liven. Nowadays It Is difficult to get even a moron anxious about the state of his liver, and the quondam nimble little liver pill Is recalled only when the customer hasn't the price of the article which some European clinic clerk, all decked out In his barber's coat, recommends to the peasants who patronize the free clinic. Incidentally, where do people get the morbid suggestions that make them sick? Not from anatomy, physi ology or hygiene. They get their harmful Impressions or misinforma tion from delving in symptomatology, pathology, bacteriology, etiology, di agnosis and therapeutics, the kind taught by charlatans, nostrum mong ers, fad healers, and mall order hum bugs. The liver Is the largest gland In the body, having, both external and Internal secretions. In a newborn In fant the liver weighs one-eighteenth of the body weight. In an adult one-thlrty-slxth of the body weight. The external secretion, the bile, ts produced In the cells which make up the structure of the liver, and It seeps In channels between cells (capi llaries) into the small branches of the bile duct or tubes which con vey It, as through twigs of the branches of a tree Into the two large ducts, one from either lobe, which finally unite to form the main he patic duct. This Is Joined 1 Inches along by the cyctlc duct coming from the gall bladder, and the bile flows on thru the common gall duct for another three Inches to empty Into the duodenum or upper end of the small Intestine three Inches beyond the lower outlet of the stomach. Re member that the gall -sac Is a blind pouch resembling and acting like a perfume spray bulb. It holds a table- spoonful or two of bile, which It NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre HBW YORK, July 10. Diary of a modern Pepys: Lay late, a soggy rain falling, and came to wondering It modern children knew the fun of -"Tf-1 looking for wiggle lr 1 I talis In the rain barrel. So up and talking to Will Rogers's Betty on the phone and reading a side splitting retort to a note to Gil bert White. Working until the sun popped out and through the town coming upon Clara Walsh WJ nd John Charles Thomas and he told me as hilarious tale aa ever I beard. So to Anne and Will Hamilton's and chatted with Emily Vanderbtlt, Myra Klngsley, Es mond O'Brien, Freddie Prince and the Ted Woodyarda. In the evening to dinner at the venerable Myers hotel along the wet ter front, and to ft theater, talking to the tandsome playwrttlng Kenyon Nicholson, here from Cslirornla. Af terward to see the new pharmacy Moe Ducore opened on Seventh avenue and many Broadway tycoons there. A Juvenile despalrUt called today discouraged over a rejected manu script that merely bore a penciled N O." I tried to explain that likely the Initials were, by coincidence, of a reader who neglected to insert the oustomary rejection slip. If this did not fit as an explanation certainly the editorial turning-down might have softened. The Atlantic Monthly cushioned rejections of impossible mas. with: The Editor begs to be ex cused from the ungracious task of criticism." , Ben Hampton once returned manuscript with this: "The sun al most breaks through. Evaporate a few plouda." This more than anything else determined Harris alerton Lyon to become the polished flctlonlst he was for t, too tragically brief span. Billing of the hoydenlsh Lupe Ve left and blatant Jlmmle Durante over the cooly restrained and cultured Hope Williams in a recent musical exploited a .brand of rowdyism that answers the kindly query: ''What's wrong with the theaterf Personal nomination for the most exhlltratlng personality on the screen that of Lee Tracy. The famous, huge green-eyed blsck cat, so long a comfortable dozer in the florist ahop window In the Hip podrome. la no more. "Blackle was IS and known to almost everybody In mid-town. The last four years we: rnt at the American Hospital on First avenue, where it was also a fa vorlte. Indefatigable Jack Lalt produces mil Brady, M.D. OF LIVES. ' squirts Into the duodenum after cer tain foods or medicines are swal lowedespecially fats and strong Ep som salts or other salt aolutlona. Re member, this is only a reflex contrac tion of the gall bladder, not an In creased accretion of bile. The gall bladder Ilea under the edge of the right lobe of the liver In the vicinity of Boise, but If It hurts you at all you ure quite certain to feel It In Dulutb or Bismarck at first. (On the other hand If It Is your appendix that hurts, you feel It first In Lincoln, and later If you continue to feel any thing, it moves down toward Los Angeles.) Gingerly returning to your physi ology, I find It will be necessary to conduct you a bit farther Into the anatomy of the subject, with particu lar reference to the circulation. In order that you may understand the functions of the liver. Watch for an other lesson shortly. It will be about "The Portal System." QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Wood Alcohol. It la safe to use alcohol denatured with wood alcohol for external appli cation for bathing the skin, in lini ments and the like? F. M. O. Answer No, enough of the vapor ized wood alcohol might be Inhaled to produce poisonous effects. Alco hol for bathlrfg or for external appli cation ahould be denatured with less dangerous poisons, of which a nunv ber are approved for the purpose. Llnea Rubra. After the birth of my baby I no. tlced a thin red line down the center of the belly. What causes this? Mrs. N. O. Answer It is a normal occurrence. , Sweating. Is or harmful to use to prevent perspiring under the arms, etc? Miss 8. O. , . Answer Both of the preparations you mention are harmless. A solu tion of half an ounce of aluminum chloride In three ounces of water Is generally satisfactory mop some of the skin once a day for three or four days, which will suffice for a week or more. Back In Training. Since I changed to office work I have grown soft and stuffy ... S. S. O. Answer Send a dime and a stamp ed envelope bearing your address and ask for "The Last Brady Symphony" exercise designed to keep you fit. (Copyright, John F. DUle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to ur. William Brady, M. U- 265 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Calif, more copy than any other newspaper man on the Atlantic seaboard. He averages 4,000 words even more than ttft devastating whirl-wind, Arnold Bennett seven days a week. The enormity of his output Is due In a measure to his two-fingered speed on the machine. He ts reputed actually to wear out a half dozen typewriters a year. And smokes cigars, cigarettes and pipe constantly while turning l( out. Thingumabobs: The Frank Hut- tons have, a 68-room apartment on upper Fifth avenue . . . The biggest drawing card of the circus Is now the midget lady who sat on Morgan's lap . . . Frank Fay began his stage career with E. H. Sot hern at the age of five . . . The Martin Johnsons were lost from each other five days recent ly In an African Jungle . . . Thomas Nast first used the tiger as a symbol of Tammany Hall ... He was once offered "a bribe of $500,000 to stop . Diego Rivera likes Ice cream with a side dish of chill beans . . . Adolph MenJou orders horleon tally -striped shirts by six dozen lots . . . Mustapha Kemal, Turkish dictator, rarely re tires until six In the morning . . . Frank Mason now has a yacht. Brooklyn la the only metropolitan area left for mlschelvoue youths to Indulge the small town deviltry known as "snapping shades.' Many old homes In Brooklyn have base ment dining rooms. While the family la enjoying the evening meal the snapper through the opened window gives the lower shade a yank and up It files with a whirr that scares the daylights out of everybody. The champ shade snapper of our ward was Bill Oeppert. He was gradu ated from tlc-tacktng where he got the hang of the beet ahades. We set out together to become newspaper men and did after our fashion. Only he owns a big newspaper and I'm one of his hired hands. When last we met we noticed each teetered as we stood on a corner talking. Sighed Bill: "The old rocking chair finally got us! " (Copyright, 1033. McNaught Sundl cate. Inc.) Jenkins1 Comment (Continued from Page One) But the big question Is will It STAY better? Is the present move ment fundsmentally sound, or le It a nosh In the pant The figures here quoted lesd to the belief that the Improvement that has been noted In conditions Is funda mentally sound and that It will con tlnue. That la why we are cheering. SAM rRANCISCO, July 10 (UP) Mrs. Ssrah C. McMann, 63. member of a pioneer family, was burled 25 feet through the air and Instantly killed when struck by an automobile here early today. Of the more than 1000 bills Intro duced at the meet recent legislative session In Nebraska, only 103 were enacted Into laws. C. C. C. Camps Are Model Beauty Spots soli,--ni-ioiiitj-Mwrwmtt jegKajrei 11 1 JfSSvwSfSCI-.J 2 ft iv ' iaz, -mm nm w rr jrw MMm k2K ;-teiL r-4 ic: - Visitors to the Civilian tonservattcn corps camps In the Me tl ford district, will rind them models of beauty and efficiency. Although the principal purpose or the forest camps Is work In the various forestry and road projects, the health and recreational facilities have not been overlooked. At the top are shown some of the army tents In which the men are housed. Center left, two boys from th middle went wash up In a cool Ore gon stream. Center right, a crew returns to camp after a day of road work. Lower left, two office tents, the smaller one used as a hospital and dispensary. Lower right, the lineup for mess with the boys stopping at the big coffee vat for a generous order ot Java. Cut courtesy Modern Engraving Co. Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson Count) History from the Plies of The ' Mali Tribune of 20 and 10 Year ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 10, 1923. (It was Tuesday.) Detour of Crater Lake road above McLeod la opposed. District Attqrney Rawlee Moore Is able to be on crutches after a rheu matic attack. Dry law Is Ignored In Jackson county, despite the efforts of Special Prohibition Enforcement Agent Sam B. sandlfer. Shasta Valley Oil Company la or ganized hero.' Dick Slngler, one of the star ath letes of the high scihool, starts work ing as a sub-clerk In the pc toffies. Bub Thelrolf has his hand In a bandage as the result of a skirmish with a skyrocket. He Is four years old. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Wh 11 lock are the parents of a new daughter. TWENTY YEARS AOU TODAY July 10, 1913. (It was Thursday.) Fletcher Stout of Jacksonville has passed a successful examination be fore tha state board of pharmacy. and Is now a full-fledged druggist. Fred Heath of Eagle Point traded In town. "Trimming the Trin-jner" at the lata; "From Hired Girl to Princess" at the star; and "Bevrare the Vam pire's Kiss." at the U. The Southern Pacific will run a special train for Medford Day at the Ashland Chautauqua. Notice Maaon There will be work In the third degree tomorrow night. (Adv.) Ralph Burgess returns from Re glna. Can., where he pitched In the Canadian league, but his arm and money gave out. Communications Wants His Ballot Counted, To the Editor: The Century Dictionary defines the word "hoax" aa follows: "A humorous or mischievous de ception, a practical Joke; usually a marvelous or exciting fabrication ov fiction gravely related as a test of credulity." In Judge Fehl's editorial of July 8 he refers to "the ballot hoax of Jack son county." Does Judge Fehl mean that a prac tical Joke has been perpetrated on the good people of Jackson county, and that there haa been no theft ot ballots, or does he mean that, while the ballots were admittedly stolen, the theft Itself was Just a boyish prank, a practical joke not worth fuss, ing about? If, as I presume, the latter la hti point of view. I fully understand why Judge Fehl now feels that the Joke has gone far enoueh. PEEVISH VOTER, who likes to hare his ballot correctly counted. (Name on File) Medford. July 9. Call the Sou t nern Oregon Credit Bureau They can veil you who part ma deots prompuy. m x ss -.. . 'V-' . -. "X, v V: - .ii ."" -uSiiigtS1f)k A v. . . - VETS' HOI OPEN T PORTLAND, July 10. (P) A spe cial dispatch to the Journal today from Washington, D. C sald General Hlnes, veterans' administrator, has predicted that the Roseburg national soldiers' home will be In use within about two months. "Within that time, he has Inform ed Senator McNary, the work of re rating and adjustment probably will have proceeded far enough for exe cution of plans for hospital and dom iciliary care, to call the new estab lishment Into operation." the dispatch said. "The non-use of such facilities is regarded as a temporary condition," the article continued, "likely to be succeeded by full use after the veter ans' organization has been ahaked down." Talent Melhoan received ft wire Thursday that his father was - dangerously ill In California. He was enroute home from a visit In Kansas and waa over come by the heat. The three Melhoan boya and their wives left Immediately for California. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Spltzer spent the Fourth at Crater Lake. Jay Terrlll, Doudly Estes and Ar chie Edmonsun spent the week end at Pish lake and each of them caught me limit on Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. E. B. Adamaon went to flftn Francisco Tuesday returning Thurs day bringing her grandchildren Bar bara and Richard Badger with her to spend their vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Skeetera and son Richard spent the Pouth st Kir by. Richard remained to spend some time with Grandma Payne. You Will Be Interested In t sound, profitable Investment In tht home-owned and managed Institution which offers .... Absolute Safety for vonr money! The Integrity of thnw who manage this association jour neighbors is harked by strict STATE supervision and the FKDrRAL Inspection made necesjary hv our affiliation with the Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland. n will gladly tell you more of this excellent home Investment. SOUTHERN Building 8c Loan Association Member of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland i Ladles of the Baptist congregation gave a successful picnic at Andy Wag ner grove west ol town on the 4th. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Parks and son Rolland joined friends from Ash land for a picnic dinner on Emigrant creek the Fourth. Talent came through the Fourth without a person Injured, an auto wreck or fire. Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Miller enter tained at a porch dinner at their home on the highway the Fourth. AMOK WITH KNIFE SAN FRAMOISCO, July 10. (UP) Joseph Castro, said to have been en raged by the asserted attentions of other men to his pretty wife, ran amuck with a knife and shotgun In a tent occupied by pea pickers six miles south of Half Moon bay Sun day. He was seriously injured when the knife he was wielding was turned against him. Castro started slashing at men, wo men and children, witnesses said, but Injured none of them. Joseph Mar tinez, field bos, at whom Castro di rected an attack, warded off the knife assault, wrested away the shotgun snd forced the knife blade agalntt Castro's face and chest. The man was taken to the San Mateo community hospital. Famous Forestry Expert Is Suicide NEW HAVEN, Conn., July 10. VP) Theodore Salisbury Woolsey. S3, In ternationally known forestry expest cited by General John J. Pershing for his services during the World war. shot himself to death today at hla home. Born In New Haven October 3, 1879, Woolsey was the author of several books on forestry.