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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1933)
PAGE FOTJtt MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune -tnvrMa Swum Oness IlK UK mil IllHes" bull turn msnm PiaiiisMd Dt muruuu FBiHTlNO oo. H-lf-ll n tu IL torn It IUIUKII1 . UUL, CdlUt m cua uiur u Hastate Set s tUn t, IlK. lUBMHIFTION lATEt l tUU U idnim Dalli, SOS fHI HOU Dalli, lb SWDttM lit Dallf. OM SJOOUl tu R Cutim. ta Adraoea Madford. AsBlsa. JacUomUle, Cautrtl Point PtMaU. Talent. UoU Hill and M Hkmraia. DUI), see raai M- Hill, tii Manila 1. 1 B OUlj. Mt 0DU1 10 All lOTSS. Bit IB SdreSt. CXfkiu sapa of lb CUj of Madlord. Official swa of lun Oouou. MEMHKH Op- fHI B8X'IATeU 'UESI UMtinnt roll UiMd Win Brrlet rbt Aaaodalad rTaaa to aielusliall Intlttoo tu trto oM for PUjlIIUtlOB of ell am dUpeurjte or m!1 Lad it It or ouwtIm endued lo irda eepti and llfA U UM ISCftl Otn CNlMUftOd O0TI1& All nests fof ouhlleeUoe t poelil dbeeleow erels oft elao nunta. . HEMBRH 0 UNITID fUXSI hubcu Or A0D11 BUKX10 Of CIHCQUTlONI AdnrtUInt HepreatoUtltea It a MUliKNHEN I '.OMPANT Ofncae IB Ntt fori, Queer), Detroit, las rrtoeUeo, Loo Antelaa, leittlo. Poniard. VIUIII Smudge Pot By Arthur Parry There teems to be movement on foot to reduce the egg supply of the nation, by throwing them at the late huaband of Almee Semple McPheraon, now In regular vaudeville. . - Who can remember when all the publlo official! were direct descend enta of Jesse Jamea and people were tired of believing the truth? Oregon Democrat are reported aa seeking a. candidate for governor, but aj jet have been unable to find an all-around failure that eulte them. The week-end was normal, and no body ran Into anything but debt. The R. Grover boy la making good headway as a butcher, and will soon be able to weigh his thumb, with the ease and grace of a veteran. People have atarted to sneeze, the leaves to fall, the Chinese Pheasants to associate with country Leghorns, and the rural turkeys to fatten on grasshoppers In the threshed whest fields. These are all unfailing algns of autumn, along wltn the Informa tion that the high schoot football team will be In worse shape than the farmers. X am going to wear a white hat, gloves, white satin slippers, silk stock ings and a bridal bouquet. Do you think that Is all right for a June bride? (Love ARony Col.) Better slip on a dress girlie I The Vaklma "revolution" was evi dently knocked In the head with a pick handle before It got to the court bouse steps, but Is not a very genteel way to quell an uprising. It halted a lot of lying before the liars all looked aa tired aa If they had been plowing. It also halted the female agitators from telling everything they know, and a whole lot they don't know. Ford Parks and wife left for their home In Idaho Thursday." (Paisley Items) They should curb themselves. tt begins to look like some people are standing behind the governor, who ought to be out In front where he can watch them. . Rattlesnakes are abroad In the hill regions, and are very antagonistic They all rattle before they strike, a point they have In common with the 4d. t Movie magnates desire to know "what la the matter with the movies." Just aa a rough guess. It seems to be Wesley Barry, the boy-actor, who Is no longer a boy, and having a hard time being an actor. TUB COW Summer la over, the old cow said. And they'll shut me up In the daugh- 17 enea To milk me by lamplight In the cold, But I won't give much for I am old. It'e long ago that I came here Clay and slim as a woodland deer; And now there are bones where my flesh should be. My backbone enge like an old roottree And an apple anatched In a moment's frolic . U Just so many days of colic I'm neither a Jersey nor Holateln now, But only a faded sort of cow. My calves are veil, and I had aa lief That I could lay me down as beet, somehow, they always kill my halves', Why not take me when they take my eaives? Birch turns yellow and sumac red, I've seen this all before, she said. I'm tired of the field and tired of the ahed. mere a no more grass, there's no more clover. Summer Is over, summer Is over. (Hellyer). Blaze Destroys Big. Lumber Plant 8PRAQUE. Ont., Aug. 30 (T A major fire, tne second within a fear, caused damage estimated at 1750.000 today aa It burned almost to the ground the McFadden Lumber com' pany mill. BOOO.OOO feet of lumber In the yards, and the hoitu of Post' master p, J, juncbart. Its Up to You, Now! TIIE most important part of the N.R.A. drive is now on. The manufacturers and merchants have done their part or are doing it. They have formulated their codes, and the stores are flying their blue eagles. Wages have been raised. More people have been employed. Now it is up to the party of the third part, to come forward and do its bit. The party of the third part consists of the consumers the buying public the rank and file of the people. Obviously factories can't hire more men, and produce more goods, if they are forced to pile up their products in storage. Merchants csn't keep on buying those goods and employing more salesmen, just to watch the goods accumulate on their shelves. The final goal of this entire movement is the consumer. Unless the products reach him, the movement stops, the entire N.R.A. structure falls. Or to express it in another way, unless the increased buying power thus created is IMMEDIATELY employed generally ntilized this phase of the administration's New Plan, collapses like a house of cards. SO THE final "push" to put this N.R.A. campaign over, and pull this country out of the worst depression in the world's history, once and for all, is definitely and finally up to the people. The people of the country alone can make this nation wide drive a success they have their economic fate in their own hands. To accomplish this they must no longer wait idly by for "something to turn up" they must "BUY N0W1" This doesn't mean an orgy of spending, of course. Nor does it menn injudicious spending. It doesn't mean thnt those having a hard time to make both ends meet, should throw discretion to the winds, and spend more than they can afford. But it DOES mean, putting an end to this buyer's strike. It docs mean, that every one, who needs certain things, and IIAS THE MONEY WITH WHICH TO PURCHASE THEM, should buy them now. It DOES mean, an absolute end to the practice of putting the family cash into the old sock, waiting supinely for the rainy day, instead of putting that money to work placing it in circulation. WE CAN hoop up these N.R.A. codes until the cows come home; we can plaster every store and residence with blue eagles galore; but UNLESS the people themselves, do their part, and support this campaign, with thoir own resources in a nation wide buying drive, all that has been accomplished to date will be so much wasted energy and effort. SO THE final phase of the N.R.A. campaign rests, directly under the slogan, "Buy, and Buy NOW I" The structure of the N.R.A. is a triangle formed by the- manufacturer, the retailer and the consumer. The manufacturer and retailer have done their part. It is now up to the consumer to do his. UNLESS he docs his part, the entire effort fails tho triangle will 'never be completed. So Buy Nowl Not as a gesture to hoop up business, but as a patriotio duty to put this country back on its feet economically, and save it from disaster. Why Is It? Following an audit which Is said to have cost the taxpayers of Jackson county 12500, the office of county clerk, It la further aald, waa found to be short 6 cent while -the sheriff's account waa lacking In the ataggarlng amount of four-bits. And ao endeth an other chapter In the turbulent affairs of our southern Oregon neighbor. It has alwaya been a source of wonder and curiosity to us why, when the people of a county have willingly and cheerfully elected a alaff of offlcera to conduct their affairs, so often react against their own Judgment to cast suspicion and aspersion upon the employees of their choice. It would seem that too often, merely because they are publlo servants, employees of the county and atate are subjected to criticism to which, more often than not, they are not entitled. Most men are elected to office on their records aa honest and conaclenclous citizens. Ninety-nine out of a hundred carry thla principle Into their publlo services yet are continually harassed with accusations of Inefficiency and sometimes actual dishonesty. Why Is It? Dufer, (Ore.) Dispatch. TI7IIILE our oontomporarys estimate of discrepancies is not " strictly accurate, the query it poses is a pertinent one. Why is itt Why are we bo disposed to believe ill of others, particularly when they hold public office so ready to assume the worst, so reluctant to believe the bestt In short why do we behave like human beings t Well, probably because we are I As to the general distrust of publio officials, this as we see it, is a heritage of the past. Government as a wholo, particu larly local government in the larger oities, has been a record of corruption and graft. There have been vast improvements during the past few decades, but the tradition still lingers. Government in southern Oregon has been, for nearly a gen eration, exceptionally clean and honeRt. As such things go, our local officials have been far above the national average. But the inherited suspicion has remained. And this suspicion has been worked upon by a small group of self-seeking and unscrupulous politicians day in and day out for many years. This has been done for one purpose alone to secure political power and we regret to say the people at least many of them, have fallen for it. Given this ingrained suspicion, constant agitation stimulat ing it and the peculiar situation our contemporary refers to, follows as a natural result. Eliminate the self-seeking politician the desire of the outs to get in, and their determination to do so by fair means or foul and there would soon be a return to normalcy, and an attitude toward publio officials which would be reasonable and sane. Such an attitude would assume neither wrong doing nor right doing, but would grant to the individual in publio life, the same consideration granted to the individual in private life a square deal. Such a square deal would involve a refusal to believe wrong until evidence of wrong had been presented a refusal to believe ono side of a ense until the other side had been heard. PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. W Herb Parks of Canada defeated Mickey UcQulri ol West Salem, two falls ovit of three. In the main event of last night's wrestling program here. Parks weighed 10, and Mc Oulre 197. Bulldog Jackson, Klamath Palls, defeated Jack Mitchell, Longvlew. Wash, in the seml-wlndup. Dorry Petton, S!t I.aka City, won the piellnilnary from Karl Martin, Austria. They are middleweight. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. mined letters pertaining lo persona! aeaila and oygieoe not to dis ease dlainuels or treatment, will be answered oy Or. diady u a stamped lelf-addreased envelope u enclosed. Letters mould be orlef and written In Ink. Owing to the Urge o umber of letters received only taw can be ans wered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. Wullsm Brady, lii El Camlno, newlej Hilts, Cat - QUEER EFFECTS OF SHORTAGE IN BLOOD SUGAR, A man aged 42 years began to have spells of blurred vision or double vision along toward four o'clock every afternoon. Some times he seemed quite dazed and behaved oddly. When he bad (TWIT v-J .'Sawr ill mens speii oe - would do thlnge BUbUinablUBMJ HID afterward have no memory of having done them. Such con duct on the part of a man in al most any field soon puts him on Queer Street. In this Instance a physician studied the case and decided that the man bad hysteria. Oh, well, we doctora all make mis takes. Sometimes we operate on them. Sometlmee we Just bury them quietly. The spells of "hysteria" gradually grew worse. On several oc casions the man lost consciousness completely for an hour or two. Then a physician with newfangled ideas took it Into his head to give the man a blood sugar test while he was In one of the spells. This showed that the poor fellow's blood sugar wss way down to 20 m.g., whereas the normal Is around 120 m.g. (If you don't understand the Bymbols no matter, you understand the numer als). Doctora call such a low blood sugar level "hypoglycemia," and I't spells either grave starvation, com pete exhaustion from prolonged or unaccustomed muscular work, or Just an excessive secretion of Insulin In the pancreas. In thla case It was simple to rule out starvation and overexer tion. So then they operated. Might aa well go In and see what you find, as long as the patient la right there in the clinic where you can have scalpel Into him In two Jerka of lamb's tall. Chances are he will be rather pleased at the prospect of hav Ing an operation. It will make a great story for him to tell the folks back home, A atory he can recite for years, with varlatlona to meet the circum stance!. The exploration of thla man's In terior corroborated the diagnosis of hypoglycemia or hypertnsuUnlsm. The pancreas was found to be only one half the size of a normal pancreas (abdominal sweetbread) and It allow ed evidence of chronic Inflammation. No part of the gland waa removed, but the capsule waa atrlppod. The patlent'a blood augar roee In level the day or the operation and remain, ed slightly below normal thereafter. He waa advised to take food regularly NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclnryre NEW YORK, Aug. 39. Very few writ-1 era of note live In New York any more. Time waa when the most dis tinguished resld- MHrpsWl ed in Greenwich 17 t I Village or Wash- 1 n g ton Square. It was believed a close contact with editors and pub lishers was nec essary. This has proved a fallacy. Top-notch nov elists and maga zine wrltera come to town once a year, but usual ly to catch a u&a stsmer xor Eu rope. Often they do not even call at the editorial rooms. Nearly all have their literary agents transact their affairs by mall and telegraph. Any number. Including Heming way and Louis Brofleld, reside In Europe. Scores live on the Pacific coast more Indeed then on the At lantic. A few live In Boston envi rons, notably Ben Ames Williams. Harold Bell Wright In Tucson may not come east for three yeara at a stretch. Oouverneur Morris sold fiction steadily from Tahiti and there Is, of course, Pearl Buck's amaalng success from far away China. Vlcki Baum did well by herself from Germany for a long time. Editors have scouts who rueh to those who can deliver the goods, wherever they are. Expert chefa rarely amoke because of the fear of dulling their highly senaltlred taste. Oscar of the Wai darf was no exception until three years ago his 84th year he began smoking a pipe. Hla Interest became so keen his collection of pipes Is now regsrded aa the finest In the world. Incidentally, Lucius Boomer, di rector of the Waldorf, la, next to Dr. John Plnley of the Times, the town's most Indefatigable walker. It was not unusual for him to walk fron) the old Waldorf to Mt. Vernon. George M. Cohan Is the most tireless stroller of the theater, averaging at least alx miles dally. The most spectacular of the rural speakeasies, masquerading as a "coun try club." has been running full tilt tvo months near picturesque hills of Mt. Kisoa In Westchester. The proprietors are also pilots of Man hsttan's most pretentious hideaway. The "speak" waa originally a half mlllon dollar manor moved etone by stone from an Kngllsh Tudor estate. There are terraces, formal gardens, swimming pools, dance floors, four restaurants and a tremendous bar. So enormous la the pstronage, es pecially on Saturday night. It's nec essary to keep eight atate troopers on duty until 6 a. m. to control traffic. In a mid-west h.v.el ahere we once lived was a girl of six Uo could be 1 sjik:.,.jiaS3 lM between meals and also In the night, and on that regimen be has bad little further trouble and has kept at bla regular work, but be Is gaining weight on the extra nutriment be baa to consume to keep his blood sugar level from falling low enough to bring on the apells. Theie are a great many persons who suffer peculiar apeila of weak neea. confusion, stupct or restlessness several hours after a meal if they do not Happen to partake of some fooa fruit lulce. milk, candy, any car' bohydrate (starch or sugar). They are likely to have similar -llstress In the wee sma' hours unless they have something handy to take In the night Ideally a little orange. Queer spella occurring about 3 a. m., have prob ablv been misinterpreted In a greet many cases, as apoplectic and the like, or even as epileptic, when In fact they were merely hypoglycemic and re quired only some carbohydrate food for quick relief. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Rubber Soles. Have received a great deal of good from reading your column these many years. My dentist admlta you are rieht about brushing the teeth. One thing you say I would note an ex ception to. You aay crepe or com position rubber soles are aa health ful aa any others. I have found that if I wear them when It la warm enough to cause feet to perspire much they cause my feet to acald and cracks form between toes. Leatner eoies wm not do this. E. W. M. Answer Perhaps other readers with experience will confirm or deny your observation. When excessive sweat ing of the feet la troublesome. excellent remedy Is to pour a table spoonful of diluted formaldehyde so lution Into the shoe, so as to wet the whole Insole and the lining, then drain It out Into the next shoe, and let the ehoes dry out 24 hours before putting them on again. Such treat ment about once a month will control the trouble and prevent odor. For this purpose mix the standard For maldehyde solution with water, one part to three or four. Raw Egg. Ben Told raw egg white la beneficial in cases of stomach ulcer. If this Is so kindly let me know how many should be taken each day. J. Z. Answer Egg white cooked Is always more digestible than egg white raw. (Copyright, 1033. John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should tend letters direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D.. 265 El Ca mlno, Beverly HUH. Calif. perfectly described as a brat. Cruelly wicked, she tried to drown kittens and stick pins In her pet dog. Ber bursts of uncontrollable temper were amazing atudles In human fury. 'My wife and I often wondered her finish. Today we learned. She Is a nun. There is something of a grand de scriptive writer in a truckman who called at Leon Oordon'a studio for a nude the artist waa keeping for a friend. The truckman's receipt resd: "Re'c'd 1 smear of a frail In birth day clothes.' Barbara Hutton's engagement ring from her prince waa a smoked pearl and Jewelers report a run on amoked pearla for engagement rings. New York! The most Industrious street beggar of the time la One Band Ike. On his back Is a bass drum with cymbals which beat and clash, due to a wired connection, when he kicks his heels. In one hand he carries a tambourine, In the other a clarinet which gtrea the effect of alx plga atuck under a fence. No one can so enliven a city block. He tells me he averages 14 a day. Marine artists are seldom expert nsvigators In sail. Two of the not able exceptions are Rockwell Kent and Stephen Btnler. They manage their boats with the graceful casu- allsm of old salts. On the other hand, only men who have known-the aea Intimately Conrad, McFee et al hare ever been auccessful In turn ing out fiction tales of the deep. (Copyright, 1933. McNaught Syndl cate. Inc.) Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackaon County History rrom the Flies ol The Mali Tribune of to and 10 Yeare go. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 19. IMS. (It was Wednesday.) Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Heath leeve for Olympla. Wash., to attend a dla trict meeting of the Rotary. Qov. Pierce vlslte city on Inspec tion of Irrigation district. Survey shows that 7.M1 autoa and 0.351 people cross the Main etreet crossing every day. Figures submit ted in city's fight for Sixth street crossing. Slightly cooler weather prevails, and the prediction la for a thunder shower. Congestion In schools worries school board. Farm conditions on mend through out nation. Clttrena file protest with county court on spending 11000 per month for prohibition enforcement. Cltl mna Informed that "liquor must go." TWENTY YEARS AIO TOD Y Amutt 3'l. 1913. (It waa Friday.) Fred. Hopkins sella hla entire crop EOF 5-2 IN TWILIGHT Th banutormlng oolortd Roum of DftTld bAMball team clowned their way to a 6-3 Tlctory over the Med ford Rogues In a even-Inning game at the fairgrounds Monday. Favon, touted aa the "Babe Ruth" ol the bewblakered Invaders, was held hit lea by McLean and Lake, who as sumed the pitching burden for the locals, swanson and Hoifard of the Rogues hit for the circuit. The Rogues will play host to the Jacksonville Miners next Sunday at the fairgrounds, In a benefit game. the entire proceeds of which will go toward defraying the cost of medical care for Luke Lang, who suffered a broken arm in a game at Ashland recently, and George Harrington, who lost two teeth In a Klamath game. A dance at the fairgrounds pa vilion Sunday night will also be by way of a benefit for the ball players. Statistics on last night's game fol low: .Medford. AB. R. R.PO.A.B. Dunn, 2b.... McLean, p-ss. Loom Is, rf. Lake, p.., 34 3 5 18 14 House of Davids AB. R. H.PO.A. Benette, rf.... , Oursley, ss.. Hicks, 3b.. Barker, lf.... . Pavors, 1 b..... McQueen, cf Thompson, 3 b Gray, c ....... Manager, p Williams, lb. 39 8 0 18 6 1 Batted for Favors in 6th. Summary: winning pitcher, Man ager; losing pitcher, Lake. Home runs Swanson, Hoffard. Two-base hlta Barker. Struck out By McLean 1; Luke 3; Manager 3. Stolen bases Joanls. A win and a loss were recorded by Camp Kerby CCO baseball team over the week-end. However, the loss was of consequence while the win was over a team Camp Kerby had defeated twice before. They dropped a heart- breaker to Applegate CCC for the league championship, 8-7, on the Jacksonville diamond Saturday, while Sunday they traveled to Provolt and were a 7-1 winner. The game with the strong Applegate squad was all that could be desired In a ball game: good pitching, tight fielding, and plenty of long poking. The score was 2-2 at the end of the third, 6-4 at the end of the fifth, but the seventh Inning both teams went on a spree and brought the total to 8-7 with Applegate on the long side. Kerby'a pitcher, LaMear, allowed 8 hits, while Applegate's Concsnnon wss nicked for ' 9. Errors showed 6 for Applegate and 2 for Kerby, but the former's hits were longer and well bunched. The Sunday game with Provolt proved the easiest of any of the three gamea with them. Much of the sec ond team waa used and this game gave Captain Klncart a fine chance to look over his reserve material. La Mear hurled for the locals again and Roberts was on the mound for Pro volt, The hitting for Camp Kerby was well distributed, while Hanson gained the losers' only blngle. Women'! bowling record for this section of the etate. and possibly the entire state, was broken Friday night at the local Elks' temple when Mn. Roy Prultt defeated her husband In a series of alx games, her score In one being 353. Mrs. Prultt's score for the six gsmes waa 1385 and Mr. Prultt'a 133S. of Winter Nellls for better than 13 per box. Goats In the Antelope district re!! rocks down hill to bresk fence and enter alfalfa field. Frank Amy haa returned from a summer spent at Union Creek, and reports that 40 autoa en route to Crater Lake passed his camp last Sundsy. Vilas brothers Ned and George leave for Mt. Shasta, whose anowy summit they will attempt to ascend. .Jacksonville asks county court to dredge Jackson creek. Delroy Oetchell and party of friends return from an auto trip to Crescent City. CaU Mrs. Mamie Isascs Riddle and young son Harold have returned from a trip to Portland. Mr. and spending a Mre. Mose AUord are vacation at Pelican bay. The Onklssed Brkle' at the Star: "Sam Rldei the Range Alone" at the It: and "Too Much Johnson' at the Dgo. Paul Janney leaves for North Ykl ma. Wash., where he will do some work foe the department of agriculture. Swanson, 3b Joants, c Haight. ss Hoffard, cf Williams, 3b Christian, Smith, If....... QUEEN HELEN'S DEFAULT STIRS UP CONTROVERSY FOREST HILLS, N. T Aug. 39 (UP) Miss Helen Jacobs, who Sat urday siioeessfully defended her na tional singles tennis title against her townswoman, Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, of Berkeley, Calif., today Insisted that she harbored no resentment to ward Mrs. Moody because of her de fault In their match. "Mrs. Moody's withdrawal was a matter entirely for her own decision." Miss Jacobs said. "If she felt that her physical condition justified ber withdrawal, then we should feel that way too. She alone knew her own condition." By STUART CAMERON t'nlted Press Sports Editor NEW YORK, Aug. 39 ( UP) Helen Wills Moody's default to Helen Jacobs in the final of the national women's tennis championship Saturday pro vided the sports world today with Its greatest controversy since Chicago's famous "14 count" in the second Tunney-Dempsey prizefight. The controversy lost none of Its heat because It dealt with the sup posedly polite game of lawn tennis. The incident was debated on subway trains, on putting greens and between sets of tennis wherever sports fans gathered. Mrs. Moody was seeking to tie Molla Mai lory 'a all time record of eight titles. To tie the Mallory mark she had to beat her long time California rival, Miss Jacobs, who won the championship last year when Mrs. Moody did not compete. Miss Jacobs took the first set 8-6, forcing Mrs Moody to exert herself GIANTS FOR SALE (By the Associated Press.) There must be something In the makeup of a ball player that sets iuui mire wun vengeance, ourcains his batting eye with a piercing ultra red, when he stalks back into the home grounds of a former employer who once tied th. tlnipflr ts. htm and theoretically atamned him "through." John J. McGraw had one embar rassing exnerience of th kfnH that. stands out above all others. Now It's ine turji or Mcaraws successor .at the helm of the Giants. Bill Terry, to see the chickens come home to roost, beating their wings like eagles. With McGraw It was the case of George Washington Humer. now an oil well salesman In Texas, but then a journeyman outnelder, who was sent to the Cardinals In 1938 and bounced right back to hit three home- ruua in one crucial game at the Polo grounds snd knock the Giants out of that pennant fight. With Terry It's ancient Bob O'Far rell. also of the Cardinals, who was sent awav last fall ami. hnHia of pltchera in exchange for a young earner, uua Mancuso. yesterday, at the Polo grounds, the old fellow roused himself and hit two home runs, the last one In the ninth In ning. tOUChlnff Off a Seven. run h... rage that snowed the Giants under. " o, orougni tneir third straight defeat with one tie In the past four games, ana completely upset Terry's pitching staff, with a terrific double header looming ahead. In addition tn vwnlria. e-y.M ., three times, they blasted two of Ter ry, oeat piicners, Bud Parmalee and Hal Schumacher. thumping Lefty Watson Clark, who a uin8 neia in reserve as a starter in the doubleheader crisis. They left Terry with but on. .t.rtir,, ni.t,.. Carl Hubbell, for today's double- iteaaer. . VINES SEEDED FIRST FOR TENNIS SINGLES NEW YORK, Aug. 39. (p EUs Worth Vine. Jr . th mllnnsl .h.. pion, and Jack Crawford nf Aiutraiii wno oeieneq mm for the Wimble CE2HLLY For A QUICK HOT ECONOMICAL FUEL DRY PINE FACTORY BLOCKS Phone No. 7 Now TIMBER PRODUCTS COMPANY End No. Central Ave. A Good Firm to TrjrTe With to the utmost. Mrs. Moody came back to take the second set 8-3. From time to time she was seen to put her band to ber back. She had been , bothered by a slipping vertebrae. Then, starting the third set. Miss Jacobs ran off three games in a row. Mrs. Moody walked over to the umpire and announced she was defaulting. Miss Jacobs ran up and attempted to place her arm about Mrs. Moody's shoulders but Helen stepped away. Mrs. Moody was seen to reject a pill which ber opponent offered. The crowd In the stands sat for a moment In silence then broke Into a hum of excitement which was echoed and reechoed today wherever tennis news is read. Here are some of the arguments heard from Jacobs supporters; Mrs. Moody, facing certain defeat, quit cold, choslng to lose by default than on the merits of her game. Mrs. Moody could have double faulted or served setups on her serves, and let Miss Jacobs' serves go by un touched. A tennis player, man or woman, good enough to reach the finals of a national championship, is a trained athlete one would keep up the fight even in the face of prostration. There has been bad feeling between the two California Helens ever since both came Into national prominence, and Helen the first saw a chance to give the "other Helen" a hollow vic tory, and did so. Miss Jacobs, like Mrs. Moody, was somewhat out of condition as was indicated In the fact she took pills and water repeatedly during the match. don title, today were seeded first In the domestic and foreign lists re spectively for the national tennis singles championships beginning Sat urday at Forest Hills. HOW THEY 1 STANH (By the Associated Press.) American. W. L. Pet. Washington 81 43 .659 New York . 73 50 .590 Cleveland 66 63 .516 Philadelphia 61 63 .496 Detroit 63 85 .493 Chicago 59 67 .468 Boston 53 73 .424 St. Louis 46 81 .363 New York .... 71 48 .607 Boston . 68 55 .553 Chicago 67 56 .545 St. Louis . 66 57 .537 Pittsburgh 65 56 .537 f Brodklyn .. 50 68 .424 Philadelphia 50 70 .417 Cincinnati ... 48 77 .384 s DOVER, England, Aug. 39 (API The English channel waa today con quered for the first time this year when Miss Sunny Lowry, 32-year-old Manchester, England, girl arrived at South Foreland after swimming from Cape Oris Nez, France, In about 15 hoilrs. She landed, still going strong, at 10:15 a. m. (1:15 a. m.. PST). She started at 6:36 p. m. Monday, (10:36 a. m. PST). Three other swimmers, one of them the American, Charles Zlmmy, a leg less aspirant to channel honors, start ed a race across the channel for the Dover town gold challenge cup. The othera are Mercedes Gleltz, an Englishwoman who first swam the channel In 1937 after eight failures, and E. H. Temme, another Briton, who In 1937 did the distance In 14 hours, 29 minutes. The Dover cup will be awarded the man or woman who swims from Dover to France In the shortest time this year.