Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 07, 1933, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SEE
Uedford Mail Tribune
"Ewyom III Southern Orooa
RuH Iht Hill Itlbum"
Dill. Except atturdtf
PublliM or
Minroiiri rWNTiNu CO.
is h ru il
BOBEBI W. gUHU Editor
as lodeptodMt Nmpapar
Entered moos clM suitor it MKtford
Ortfon, eoder act of Uvea 1, Ufa.
suBurmnioN ratee
r Mill In Adiuea
Dtllr, ant year IB-00
Dillr, ill nontto.. J. 16
Dillr. om moots. . 60
By Carrier lo Adfioca Mcrlford, aiblind.
JukMirrlUa, Cnul Point, PboeDU, Taieot, Gold
Bill ud oe Blib.ijT.
Ilillj, om rtix e00
Dsllr, III Booth! (.15
Dillr, om month .80
All term, cub In Sonne.
Official piper of tin Cltr of Utdrord.
Offlelil paper of Jicuon Conntf.
MEMBF.B or THE ASSOCIATED PHE88
lUeilrlM IMll Lewd Wire Berries
Ttt AiMdlUd Prtn If ueluhelf onUtM to
the um for publleitloa of ill om dlipitebei
credited to It or otbenriM eridlud lo loll piper
ud ilje to the locil nevf published hereto.
AU rlfbti for publication of epedil dUpetcboi
herein ire mo ruened.
MEMBER Of UNITED PRESS
MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU
OP CIRCULATIONS
AdTertltlng RepresenUtlief
X. C MOGENSEN COMPANT
Officii lo New Tort, Chluso, Detroit, lu
rrioclies Los Anfelea Seitllo Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Artiiut Perry.
Chilly autumn evenings bring in
Increase In crime, and citizens are)
advised bj polloe agencies, "to realst
holdup nun, If It can be accomplish
ed with certainty of success." Once
upon a time a citizen resisted a hold
up man, and was able to crawl about
' a, block, before ceso'ng all earthly
svetlvlty.
"
Country turkeys, that have been
banging around the kitchen door all
spring and summer, are now foraging
In the wheat fields, as close to the
highways as possible, where they are
handy tor auto Indigents.
.
People have resumed Journeying to
the courthouse to pay their taxes,
Instead of Joining a revolution,
lynching the mean district attorney,
or throwing their Bibles at the court,
PIONEER EDITOR SPEAKS TJP
(Pendleton East Oregonlan)
We have heard a rumor or
two that a young gentleman
would visit our office and treat
us to a sound threshing. That
young gentleman Is welcome to
visit our sanctum and II we faU
to treat him well and do him up
according to the latest Improved
method, then he csn take us for
a saw buck on a tramp.
(50 Yrs. Ago Col.)
O 9 .
Fort Arthur, Wash., boast a se
gull that Insists on flying upside
down, and to date nobody has been
able to explain the weird conduct,
Maybe the sea gull has been listening
to a radio comedian tell about the
time he took a ride on a ferry boat,
and became disgusted.
BOO-HOOET
(Portland Journal)
Mrs. Donald Moore la a snake
charmer, and when hev circus be
came stranded in S'.n Francisco
she applied at the Volunteers of
America for shelter. She was ac
cepted, but when she aald aha
wanted to bring her two snakes
(pythons), the matron exclaimed,
"Your what?" The girl replied,
"My two pythons. The ones I
charm In my circus act." The
matron told her ahe waa sorry,
but the snakes could not remain
there. "I'll be going, then," the
girl said. "Where I stay, my
anakes stay. We've been together
a long time. Besides, they're
hungry and must eat, too." It
was a case of woman's loyalty, a
loyalty that transcends life It
self. Right now thsre are any number
of Oregonlans tn the same sad tlx
aa the lady snake charmer. Like her.
they are completely out of luck
both good and bad. The lady enake
charmer, being that, and therefore
worldly wise, Is better equipped than
Jiey. She will worry along through
the winter somehow.
The metropolitan dally, now so
aob-alsterly solicitous for the future
of the lady snske charmer and her
reptiles, opposed the late Sales Tax.
It waa Intended to provide state
funds to duplicate federal funds for
the relief of the needy, and this op
position transcends commonseiue
itself, Just like the alleged loyalty of
the lady snake charmer, "transcends
life Itself." The loyslty could have
been copied to the benefit of the
worthy poor and Jobless. The lady
enake charmer can eat her snakes.
If hard put, which never aha will be.
The Oregon needy can find no nour
ishment In a Journal editorial, or
the wlndjammlng of the grange mas
ter, or the stato treasurer. Unless
eome signs of relief appear shortly,
that Is sbout what they will be re
duced to. ere winter comes.
Now arises the question which hit
the Worthy Poor the hardest, the
Depression, or Us offspring, the
Demagogues.
In ths event the Bales Tax comae
again as a medium to raise funds for
the needy and the Jobless which It
probably will victory can be assured
by providing two anakea (pythons)
to each beneficiary. Thus there will
be something to cry about, and win
aympathy and support, and votes.
Prions M2 We'll nsm sway
refuse Ony aanitarj Service.
foui
Gasoline Goes Up
' JtiJS price of gasoline has been raised one cent. No one likes
that. But the raise was
The gasoline companies are
adopted shorter hours, put
creased their overhead.
The only way to meet that
We can t have our cake and
wages and not pay for them. The NRA program can be put
over successfully, ONLY if we as a people, are willing to ac
cept a higher cost of living.
Not only higher prices for gasoline, but higher prices for all
commodities are certain. It is the other side of the picture,
which we can't escape even by doing the ostrich act, and putting
our heads in the sand.
As a matter of fact it is a small price to pay for a return
to normal well being and prosperity. In the last analysis it
is a sales tax, but as all the sales tax opponents, are 100 percent
for the New Deal, we fail to see how their opposition can be
renewed, under existing circumstances.
There SHOULD be no opposition, assuming of course that
the increased price represents a fair price that it involves no
profiteering. It is the price that must be paid to make the
NRA, a success, and thus win the final victory over the depression.
Profits Will Be Controlled
A TIME goes on this question of profiteering will become
more and more important. Economic conditions have
radically changed, but human nature hasn't. That in certain
quarters there will be attempts to transform a small increase
in overhead, to a large profit, must be expected.
Fortunately the Roosevelt
NRA machinery provides for
venting them. Increased prices will come under the careful
scrutiny of the powers that be in Washington, and the hand of
the law will come down heavily, on the head of the prospective
profiteer.
What will this mean eventually t Well in the field of public
utilities, in fact in practically all Big Business, including oil,
it will mean federal control of profits, a control similar to that
exercised by the various state public service commissions.
The die-hards won't like that. There will be a terrifio howl.
But once more that is the price we have to pay for our salva
tion 1
It Was Ever Thus
THOSE interested in ancient history will recall thqt the
democratic party in its platform, scathingly flayed republi
can imperialism and the Hoover practice of sending gunboats
and marines to maintain order in
The demooratio party pledged itself to stop this abuse, and
not intorfere with the government of any country, outside the
confines of the United States,
internal differences in their own way.
Well Cuba is outside the confines of the United States. Uncle
Sam enjoys a certain protectorate, but this has been repeatedly
scored, as a tool of the American sugar trust, to out out compe
tition, and fill the cash boxes of the sugar barons.
Ted we observe a democratic administration dispatching the
Atlantic fleet and a large force of marines, as well as the secre
tary of war, to the Havana harbor.
To protect American property and lives is the official ex
planation. But this was the same explanation used, when gun
bonts and the marines were sent to Haiti and Central America.
All of which merely demonstrates once more, that the pro
priety of certain foreign policies, depends entirely upon whose
ox is gored.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyte
NEW ORX, Sept. 7. A wandering
minstrel blowing sourly on a clarinet
tor luncheon diners across the way at
Chatam Walk hat
somehow touchec
off a stinging
nostalgia for the
old-time act of
vaudeville. The
curtain went up
on an ordinary
room scene. Re,
member?
There were
muslcsl Instru
ments all about
on aoattered
atanda with sil
ver starred plush
-MMn.iS.il th r o w s. A
man n velveteen smoking Jacket
opens with: "I put an ad In the
paper for a smart boy to work around
the atudlo. It's t o'clock and no
answer." A sudden knock. "Ah.
there he la now I"
A negro with puff aleeves, big red
bow tie, Camera shoes and a fright
wig dashea In and rushes right out
again. Then la coaxed back, removea
eight vests and lights a cigar that
begins to sxpel stars like a Roman
candle. His first Imitation Is In a
clarinet of a cow choking cm an
apple.
Then he plucks a whisk broom out
of his hip pocket and brushes the
ashes oft his ceglsr. He makes a
violin sound Ilka sn old church or
gan and aay "Howdy, folksl" The
wind-up of the turn Is an Imitation
of a minstrel band coming down the
Main street playing "The Turkish
Pstrol." A riot ot noise.
Hap Ward, old-time ahowman, has
stunt that produces ths sums ef
fect on every actor of Importance
He mentions seeing them In their
current play. e thought It a wow
but murmura solicitously: "But, say.
what waa ths mstter with you?" In
variably the answers run from "Just
received bad news" to "I was almost
blind with a splitting headacho." In.
variably an alibi.
And Charlie Russell, the western
MEPFOBD MAIL
bound to come. "
all under the NRA. Tbey have
on more men, and thus have in
overhead is to boost the price.
eat it. We can't pay higher
administration realizes this. The
checking such abuses, and pre
Latin-America. .
but allow them' all to settle their
pointer, used to teU of an old desert
miner who traipsed Into Tucson with
out his psrtner of to years. He was
thoroughly disgusted. "We bad Just
made dry camp," he explained, "when
a pack rat bit off his thumb right
up to the second notch. The way he
carried on you'd a thought It was
a grizzly."
Kugene Field, during his hrlllllant
ooiumnlng days and never has col-
umnlng sttalned such effulgence I
in Chicago, hsd a childlike love for
prsctlcsl Jokes. In his office he hsd
one chair and that collapsible, The
more dignified the caller the more
he would maneuver to Jockey him
Into the chair.
Thingumabobs: Anna May Won;
Is doing a Llmehouse picture at Bal
ing near London. . . , Bird MUlman
of the clrcua la running a turkey
ranch near Canon City, Colorado. . .
Babe Ruth usee snuff while playing.
. . , The Will Hamlltons are In Lon
don until late fall. . . , Marie Corelll,
who wrote "Wormwood." 'the best tale
of a Paris abalnthe fiend, never aaw
Paris or tooted absinthe. , , , Paris
expstrlstes, driven out by the fall
ing dollar, now have a colony In
Shanghai called "Du Dome Runa
ways." John J. McOraw, despite rigid dis
cipline when commanding the Olants.
often relaxed Into brief clutches of
humor. There was the time when
the team was training In Merlin he
received a letter from a Texaa long
horn who wanted to Join. McOraw
wrote him gravely Matthewson had
slowed up, Chief Myers was In a ter
rific slump and that Donlln was not
doing so well there was a chance.
He wound up asking the Job seeker
what position he could play. In a
few days came back a letter enclos
ing a photograph with the Informa
tion: "I play a atooplng position."
In earlier days there waa a big
league umpire named Byron. He had
a poetlo way of trilling decisions. A
musical "strra-lke" end a cedent "Yo-o-o
are out I" After a time the rib
bers begin referring to him aa Lord
Byron. There was one double header
game where the tana were particu
larly annoying. They Jeered at the
umpires walk, his voice, and imi
tated other mannerisms. Pinslly Lord
Byron could stand It no longer, and.
Jerking off his mask rushed to the
atsnds shouting: "Cut out them per
sonalities!" There waa a sudden sil
ence, and finally a booming voice
TRIBUNE, MEDFORP,
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
Bigoea letters peruunmg to personal ueaitsj ana aygiene not to dis
ease diagnosis ot treatment, will be answered by Dr. ttrady u a stamped
elf-addressed envelope w enclosed. Letters mould rte anef ant) written tn
ink. owing to the large number of
wered here. No reply can be made to
aauress ur. wuiiam uraay, xoo El camino, rJeverley uuls, Cai,
A DECAYED TOOTH IS NEVER CLEAN.
One of the prized curloa In my
scrap book la a testimonial from
state dental society to the value of
column in pro-
motlng p o p u lar
conservation of
the teeth. But
that was given
before . I began
agitating the re
linquishment of
the t r s d e mark
"Doctor" to prac
ticing physicians
exclusively. -Once
In a while I go
bang against a
dentor who gabberflasts me by agree
ing that It would. be Just aa well tor
dentists If the business or professions!
use ot the title were left to physic
ians. But seldom do I find a dentist
who will consent to be quoted as In
accord with my view about brushing
the teeth. I do not blame them
either. If I were a dentor I'd be
Just aa careful about letting the pub
lic think I had any "radical" Ideas.
A Kentucky dentist submits this
criticism of my Uttle monograph on
the care and preservation of the teeth,
which I am glad to send any reader
on request Inclose a atamped enve
lope bearing your address ar.d do not
send a clipping:
"I agree heartily and In full
with all it teachings. I have
pursued such a course In my own
life for many years. I was sub
jected to appendectomy, and still
the same 111 health continuing,
until I changed to a diet Includ
ing a liberal proportion of raw
vegetables and fruits, melons, ber
ries, etc., and now at mature age
I am In better health than ever
before. I use a dry brush with a
tumbler of water for mouth toilet.
Have used no dentifrice for yeara.
If your little monograph on the
conservation of the teeth were In
the handa of the millions of sick
and they would follow Its tech
Ings faithfully, ours would be a
happlor, healthier people, and In
firmaries, clinics and health re
sorts so-called would begin to
dwindle instead of being on the
Increase.
In iny humble opinion after
SO yeara' experience and observa
tion as a practltloneer of den
tistry, most human Ills are due to
Improper diet together with lock
of proper exercise, rest, fresh air
and pure water."
Here are some of the suggestions
for the conservation of the teeth: '
1. Have a good dentist, and
visit him regularly for Inspection
and any necessary treatment. ,
2. See that your mother has
fresh fruit and ot leaat'one fresh
vegetable, relish or greens HAW
every day before you are born.
high up and far back screamed: '
out them grammarl"
But the prize mot of the Polo
grounda was when a very cocky play
er was retsined as a substitute bat.
ter. He was a show-off. Ons day
when a one-sided game reached the
last hslf of the ninth Inning, with
a score of 14 to 1, he was sent In
to bst. The umpire glanced at him,
removed hla cap, and yelled: ."Huttln
now batting for exerciser'
(Copyright, 1033, McNaught
Syndicate.- Inc.f
Jenkins' Comment
(Continued from Page One)
raw off the range, here at Lakevlew.
When they get rid of the .rider
which they do with rather startling
regularity they go right on.
Several of them went right through
the heavy board fences around the
arena, and headed back for the des
ert and freedom.
It's a good ahow,
f
1ST
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 7 (API A
police hunt waa on today for a man
who demanded 880.000 from Cardinal
Dougherty.
Although It was reported at first
by police that the demand contained
a threat to bomb the cardinal's resi
dence In lower Merlon township un
less the money was forthcoming, Csr-
dlnal Dougherty sold:
"The only germ of truth In the re
port Is that eome mentally deranged
party made a demand for 890.000.
There will be no threat ot death by
bomb."
e
LOGGER MS WIFE,
SELF AFTER QUARREL
PORTLAND, Sept. 7.i-(AP) Mike
Clsnowlta, 48. a logger, after besting
his wife In an argument over 825.
shot and killed her, then turned the
weapon upon himself. Inflicting a
fatal wound. Mrs. Ulanowita died
while being rushed to the police
emergency station. Ulsnovlta died
shortly after being received at a local
hospital. Until last Saturday he had
been employed by an Oetrander, Wn.,
logging company. The couple had
been married ten years.
.
Plan Walnut Control.
WA8HINOTON. Sept. T. m A
hearing on a proposed marketing
agreement for walnuts grown In Cali
fornia. Washington and Orejron to
day ws scheduled for September 18
in Washington.
OREGON, THURSDAY,
letters .-erelved only a tew can be ans
queries not conforming Co Instructions.
8. Provide a daUy ration of cod
liver oil for every expectant
motber, and a weekly ration ot
lodln.
4. Provide a dally ration of cod
liver oil for every baby from the
age of two months to the end of
the first year.
5. The eating of fresh raw
vegetablea and fruits la natural
exercise, message, nutrition for
the teeth. IncidentsUy It keeps
the teeth clean.
0. Untile the baby has teeth to
chew with, see that he gets eome
kind of fresh fruit or vegetable
Juice dally.
7. Every child or adult should
have from one pint to a quart
or more of fresh, pure RAW milk,
or Its equivalent In other dairy
products eklm milk, buttermilk,
cheese (all kinds), butter, eggs.
8. It Is fine to chew some wild
rice, whole wheat or other raw
grain when you crave something
to chew.
8. In young or old It Is health
ful to gratify and cultivate a
craving to eat such rsw vegetables
aa carrots, potato, turnip, cab
bage, onion, tomato, peas, beans,
parsnips, cucumbers.
10. Ordinary washing of the
surface of vegetables, fruits to be
eaten raw Is sufficient. First with '
soap and water, then rinse with
water. This washing is too often
neglected, especially when people
eat such fruit as apples, which
may be contaminated by unclean
hands or retain traces of poison
sprays.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
I tried to have some capsules ot
reduced Iron put up as you recom
mended. My druggist said IS grains
of reduced Iron at a dose would have
drastic effect. He said one (1)
grain la the dose tor reduced Iron.
Mrs. C. B.
Answer My advice Is that you take
15 grains of reduced Iron after each
meal, if you are going to take It at
all. That dose may be taken In two
capsules. It msy do no good, but In
any case It can do no harm.
Ground Beef.
Is chopped or ground beef sny leas
digestible than beefsteak or less de
sirable for children L. J.
Answer No. It Is advisable, how
ever, to have the meat ground In
your presence. Do not accept meat
that has been ground )n quantity
and kept In readiness. Such meat
Is more liable to be contaminated
with botulism.
(Copyright, 1933, John W. Dllle Co.)
Ed Note: Readers wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letters direct to Dr.
William Brady, M. D 2li5 El Ca
mino. Beverly Hills, Calif.
ON EAGLE CODE
CHICAGO, Sept. 7. (AP) A code
for bankers, setting up a permanent
code committee and seeking a degree
of uniformity In Interest rates and
service charges, was adopted today
by the American Bankers' association.
A minimum wage of 818 to 815 a
week was fixed, with the exception
that apprentices must be employed
for one year at 80 per cent of the
wage set tor the particular bank In
volved. ,
The code was presented the bank
era' convention by Ronald Ransom
of the Fulton National bonk of At
lanta, code committee chairman.
The permanent code committee, It
waa recommended, will determine
maximum uniform houra of banking
for various localities, a clearing house
district, or a federal reserve district
being used aa a basis.
BY
T
SALEM", Sept. 7. (AP) The su
preme court yesterday affirmed the
decree of Judge Norton of Josephine
county in the case of Milton Wiley,
now serving a life sentence in the
Oregon penitentiary for the murder
of John Simeon.
Wiley originally entered a. plea of
guilty but later filed a motion asking
this be withdrawn and a plea of not
guilty substituted. Defendant based
his motion on the claim of newW dis
covered evidence. The state court
held with the circuit court In finding
no cause for a new trial.
MYSTERY DEATH
BAKER, Ore. Sept. 7. V-Dave
Brlchoua was In Jail here today, fac
ing a charge of first degree murder
in connection with the slaying here
August 29 of Mrs. Albert Koehler.
Brlchoux. who returned here vol
untarily from Placervllle. Ida., with
officers several days ago, wss arrest
ed Isst night when authorities here
received Information from Salem that
a palm print found on a bottle with
which polloe said Mrs. Koehler was
believe dto have been struck, was
Identical to Brlchouxe palm print.
me cony of Mrs. Koehler was
found the morning after shp hsd been
slain, when neighbors cslled to visit
her.
SEPTEMBER 7, 1933.
GROUNDS SELF FOR RELIEF
f4 Sv' If
gl w v f'iM
After specialists on the Pacific coast told Martin Bodker, Tacoma,
Wash., dairyman, they could afford him no relief of his nervous and
muscular system which seemed to be aggravated by wireless wavei
he tried ai. experiment of his own. He grounded himself and found
that the waves which had set his nerves twitching no longer bothered
him. He Is shown In Loa'Angeles where he discovered that his con
dltlon was relieved by placing his wire-wrapped cane In a container of
water and eictina as a ground for a radio set (Associated Press Photo)
E
IGNSOF
PORTLAND, Sept. 1 (AP) Under
tone of the egg market here was
showing some definite Improvement,
lending new encouragement to the
trade and producers.
Prospects for a better market were
now declared, definite by those who
follow the situation closely. Prices
were unchanged for the day.
Consumption and demand from re
tailers have been more pronounced
since labor day and the quality of
receipts was beginning to show some
Improvement.
The Pacific Co-ops announced the
following pool prices for the week
ending August 31:
Extras 21c, standards 10c, browns
21c, dirty extras 16c, firsts 17c, me
diums 17c, dirty and brown mediums
15c, pullets 12c, dirty and brown pul
lets 10c, crax 12c and seconds 10c.
A general Improvement was appar
ent over the country In the cheese
market. While prices were generally
unchanged, the demand has Improved ,
and the market has taken on a heal
thier tone.
Continued strength was apparent
In the local market for broilers..
Barely enough were coming in to meet
the demand.
No Improvement In the demand for
country killed beef was seen. Market
was slow and prices Irregular at low
levels. Choice lambs were In good
call.
Watermelons were down to lo a
pound wholesale. Dealers hope the
price will move them.
Dollar . canta'onpes. advanced to
around $1.10. They were moving
steadily Into retail channels.
The peach market was fully steady
at 65 to 90 cents. Receipts were right
to meet the demand. Consumers ap
parently were realizing they cannot
expect the disastrous prices of a year
ago.
Heavy supply of tomatoes waa re
ported, and they ranged around five
cents lower. Local receipts were
larger.
Malagas and Rlbler grapes were off
and .were quoted down to $1.60 whole
sale. Corn was about steady at 65 to 60
cents a sack. Receipts were ample.
1
Livestock.
PORTLAND, Sept. 7. (P) CAT
TLE: 80. calves 40; active.
HOGS: SO0; weak to 10c lower.
Lightweight, good and choice, 84.85
5.35: medium weight, good and choice
84.90-5.35; heavyweight, good and
choice, 84.50-5.00: packing sows, me
dium end good, 83 23-4.00: sdaugMter
pigs, good snd choice, 83.80-4 00; feed
er and stocker pigs, good and choice.
84.00-4 75.
SHEEP: 1000: fully stesdy.
Portland Wheat
PORTLAND. Ore., Sept. 7. (API
Wheat:, Open High Low Close
Sept. .88 Uj .68 '4 .68 .68
Dec. .724 ,724 .72', .72!4
Cash wheat No. 1:
Big Bend bluestem
Dark hard winter, 13 pet.
II pet.
Soft whit
Western white .
Herd winter
Northern Spring .
Weotern red
Oats: No. a white. I3 so.
Corn: No. 2 K yellow. (24 50.
Mtllrun, atsndard. (17.
Today'a car receipts : Wheat. 43;
barley, 1: flour, 1: oats, 10: hay, 2.
Portland Produce
POSTl-VSD, O.:.. t-pt. 7 (API I
BUTTER Prints, extras. 33c: stand
arils, iie.
Market?
BUTTERFAT Portland delivery: A
grade, 20c lb.; farmers' door delivery,
20c per lb.; sweet cream, 6c higher.
EOGS Pacific Poultry Producers'
selling price: Oversize, 25c; extras,
23c; standards, 20c; mediums. 20c;
pullets, 16c dozen. Buying price by
wholesalers: Fresh ' extras, 20-2 lc
doz.; mediums, 16c doz.; undergrade,
10c; pullets, 10o doz,
LIVE POULTRY Portland deliv
ery: Buying prices: Colored fowls. 6
and 6 lbs., 13c; over 6 lbs., 12c.
Spring pullets under 3& lbs., 14c;
roasters, over & lbs., 14c; young
fowl, over 3' lbs., 9c; under Z
lbs., 16c. Broilers, l'4 to 2 lbs., 16c;
2 lbs. and up, 13c. Stags, 9c. Roost
ers. 6c. Pekln ducks, 10c; colored
ducks, 6c. Geese, 6c lb.
CANTALOUPES Dlllard standard,
$1.10; Yakima standards, 75 -95c;
crate; The Dalles, 75 -90c crate.
Milk, cheese, country meats, onions,
potatoes, wool and hay, unchanged.
Chicago Wheat
CHICAGO, Sept. 7. (AP) Wheat:
Open High Low Close
Sept. .84- '-84 - ja
.83",
Dec. .88V4 -88 .86H
May .92 .92 .90
.91
San Francisco Butterfat.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 7. P)
Butterfat f.o.b. Son Francisco 22-23 VS.
.
Wall St. Report
STOCK SALE AVERAGES
(Copyright, 1933, Standard Statistics
Company)
Sept. 7:
50 20 20 90
Ind'ls RR's Ufs Total
Today 92.9 50.2 85.3 84.9
Prev. doy 94.1 50.9 86.8 862
Week ago 95.5 53.8 90.1 88.1
Year ago 72.3 38.9 1 10.0 73.9
3 yrs. ago..169.8 122.0 225.2 171.9
BOND SALE AVERAGES
Copyright, 1933. Standard Statistics
Company)
Sept. 7:
20 20 20 80
Ind'ls ER'a Ufs Total
Today 75.1 78.9 82.5 78.8
Prev. day. 75.0 79.1 82.7 78.9
Week ago 75.5 80.8 83.9 80.0
Year ago 69.7 72.8 85.9 76.1
3 yrs. ago 94.5 109.1 100.8 101.5
NEW YORK, Sept. 7. (AP) With
traders uncertain as to forthcoming
economic developments and price
trends, there was only faint Interest
displayed In the stock market today.
While a few tsues were steady to firm,
most listed equities were Inclined to
sag. The close waa easy. Volume
dwindled to" approximately 950,000
shares.
Today's closing prices for 32 se
lected stocks follow:
Al. Chem. b Dye -- 133
Am. Can gnu
Am. & Pirn. Pow. 127,4
A. T. & T. I2fiit
Anaconda
Atch. T. & S. F
Bendlx Avla.
16 "4
. 85
. 17i
. 37 4
. 26
. 23 14
. 44H
. 3
. 3'i
. 78
38H
. 32
. 39',
. 18
. 61 '4
. 3314
. 33 '4
. 474
, 10s,
8H
28 4
. 3714
. 3914
. 40'4
. 7
45H
36 14
(114
Beth. Steel
California Pack'g. .
Caterpillar Tract.
Chrysler
Coml. Solv.
Curtlss-Wrlght
DuPont
Oen. Foods .
Gen. Mot.
Int. Harvest.
I. T. Ac T.
Johns-Mon.
Monty Word
North Amer
Penney (J. C.)
Phillips Pet
Radio
Sou. Pac
Std. Brands
St. Oil Col.
St. Oil N. J. ...
Trsna. Amer.
Union Carb.
Unit. Aircraft
U. 8. Steel
IIEAI.Tn, HAPPINESS. PROSPERITY
OSCAR S. NISSEN, P.T. I
Physical Treatments, Swedl.h Mn.nage!
Corrective Everrlses
Hours p. m. Tree Conciliation
s? F. Moln. Mwlforfl j
Flight 'o Time
(Meorord end Jackson County
aistory from the files ol the
Mall Tribune of 80 and 10 fears
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
September 7, 1928.
(It was Friday)
Mercury goea to 104, and la the
wannest day of summer.
Trlgonla oil well now down 2304
feet.
Forty-nine core of pears were ship
ped out of the city last night for the
east.
Lady autolst hits a pedestrian who
escapee Injury.
Forty-four thousand, four hundred
and one visitors at Crater lake thla
month.
Irrigation for the Griffin creek dis
trict fully discussed at meeting.
Japanese of vslley thank citizens
for relief funds for earthquake vic
tims of the homeland.
All box seats for county fair sold.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
September 7, 1913.
(It wss Sunday)
Schools of city open with an at
tendance of 1171.
A Hsmbletonlan stallion will be
sold at auction at Main and Fir
street Wednesday to the highest bid
der. Burglara rob two dental offices dur
ing the night, and the net loot la a
dime, police report.
Tuesday will be entry day for the
county fair and pear show.
The daughter of the president, Mlsa
Eleanor Wilson, en route to Boston.
Is denied a lower berth.
Sollcltora for members In the so
cialist party, raid the rural districts
of the county with scant success.
"Her Husband's Wife" at the Stan
"Once a Lady, But " at the It; "The
Fight at the Lazy X Ranch" at the
Isls. Paths Weekly No. 32 failed to
arrive in time for the usual showing
at the Star. -
1
TO BE EXTRADITED
NEW YORK, Sept. 7. (?) Aaron
Saplro, New York lawyer and pro
moter, well known on the Pacific
coast, arrested here last July as a
fugitive from J ustice In Chicago,
where he was Indicted with Al Ca
pone and 23 others for conspiracy,
surrendered at Tombs prison today.
Governor Herbert H. Lehman yes- '
terday granted the Illinois applica
tion for the lawyer's extradition.
CE
McBRIDE. Mich. (AP) McBrtde
or Custer Is a town divided against
Itself.
Though the town uses the same
city hall, the same fire department
and to oil outward appearances Is one
municipality, It has two names. On
one side of Division street Is Mc
Brtde. On the other is Custer.
The mlx-up developed in 1878 when
two persons laid out towns on oppo
site sides of the road.
HONOLULU (AP) Hawsll Chi
nese still smoke their opium, but
the practice Is dlminlahinir. Thla.
says C. T. Stevenson, head of the fed.
eral narcotics bureau. Is because the
older generation dies or returns to
the Orient and the youthful Chinese
do not scqulre the habit.
Stevenson estimates that consump
tion Of smoking ODlUm In Hawaii has
declined from 3000 B-toel cana
monthly in 1021 to 500 cana now.
FALLING SNAG KILLS
WILLAMETTE GRADUATE
SALEM. Sept. 7. (AP) A foiling
snog fatally Injured Dale Monroe, 31,
of Mehomo, at a logging camp near
mm tny late yesterday. He died
soon afterward at a hospital In Mill'
City.
He was groduated from Willamette
university with high honors this
spring. In the logging camn he was
working as a whistle operator.
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE
WITHOUT CALOMEL
And You'll Jump Out of Bed fa
the Morning Rarin' to Go
sour sod sunk and to. world
funk. Am i .wmJlow . lot of mlci
tww sod traorut ood full of iuniun."
y " Th ' " the
edi nd mm novrauit doarn't tH Ht
! "'T- Th r" 'or lour doXindiJt
'lr. It should jSJrSj
eP.roar stomoeh. Voo b... a
Bound of hu. .-r
i . j .r'i1 "tkij ina auk ym
bSn.12 .t.?P" Th',eoBui .onderful.
bM lJVm-"'l..r,rt., smodri
nm It coons to di.Iqci th. b. flow trr.
Litu. UHU r '"J "T, pli"-A,k Csrtefe
suat,2is at irui stone, 0ia3lC.ai.Cei