Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 21, 1933, Page 6, Image 6

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    PGE SIS
fEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1938.
Medford Mail Tribune
MEvtryont la Setrtlwra Ortfae
Ruttt ta Natl Trlbuiw''
Daily bMpt sitordtf
Published bf
UEDrOBD PBI.Vri.NO CO.
SB-SM9 N. Hi BL
BOBEBT W. ftDHU WW
Irimd m weood elM sutler it Msdford.
Omcm. BDdtr act aura .
UBSTMIPT10N BATES
B U.fl In AitvaitM
Daily, ott fMT 9-0C
Dtil, ill BonttoJ.
Dftlli. eoa booUi 0
b. hirritf in Aiinne Medford. aibl
jMkwiirUl, Ontral Point, Pboenlx. Xaltat, Gold
BUI asd on BUhwtyi.
Daily, OM rar
Dtllf, ill Booth t.t6
Daily, om mood)., .80
AH term, caita la atfrioe.
official ptjMr or tM or Hedfori
Official paper of Jaeksos County.
tlEMBEB OF TUB ASSOCIATED PBE88
Ibt AjaodaUd Preaa la tieiwitely antltlad to
to um ror puouuuoo w saw,
tradlUd to it or atbarwU eradlUd In tnli papw
i .. i... I um mhllihul twain
AH rlfbU ror publieatloo of ipaelal dUpateMt
Barau aia ua rawico.
KEMBEB OP UNITED PRESS
MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU
Or CIRCULATIONS
idttftlilDf HtpreatntaUTti
If. C. M0GEN8CN A CO HP ANT
Offlm la Nc Tori, Chlco, Detroit, Baa
rraaelMO l-o AnftlM Sutua Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
Deer hunters oomplala they "are
hit by the cauatlo comment ol the
n.-eas." when a men le enot lor a aeer.
There Is nothing much to ey, except
thet It U better to be hit by ctustic
oomment, then e sort nosed bullet.
Bon. BUI Henley of Harney county,
la here attending the Pioneer meet,
and ehaklng hands, etc., etc., with
glrle, he used to take for buggy rldee
when they and Jackson county were
younger.
The Labor Department will soon
tackle the problem: "What to do with
the hitch-hiker?" The main thing
io do la to keep him hitched, and. It
he Just must hike, to leave hie wife
and baby at home.
Mrs. Rivera has warned saloon men
against selling liquor to her husband.
They ought to heed her request.
(SO Yrs. Ago col., Pendleton Eaat Ore
gonlan.) When editors spoke up.
'The potato orop of Oregon will be
gold mine tbla year. The epud 1
not a fashionable product, but the
money their growers will get Is as
apendable aa the returns on edlblee
brought to maturity with their agri
cultural nurse, wearing a necktie to
match his golf pants. The potato la
also Immune to wind, hall and frost,
and, futhermore, la coddled by no
moth. The g&rllo growers will also
be In the spondulicks this autumn.
There are not many garlic growers,
though they are not forced to eat
their own crop. The contents of their
bankrolls are not accused of halitosis.
T. Farlow of Lake Crk., Tueadayed
In town. He has hay to burn, and
throw at the cows, but the price of
hay Is so high he feels like eating It
himself.
...
The first candidate for governor
has appeared above the horleon, and
the primary election, only approxi
mately ten (10) months away. Some
may be so rude aa to euapect that
this comes under the heed of prema
ture self-starting. The aspirant agreea
to abolish all taxes, cut the expenses,
provide employment for all, and
scatter sunshine with one twist of
the wrist. He Is for economy, and a
great hand to get In arguments with
himself. He Is a Moses to lead Ore
gon out of the wilderness, and back
in again.
A hint of winter came yesterday,
catching the usual number with the
sauerkraut barrel empty, and the
woodshed bare.
Our higher education la grinding
out lower politics than expected.
SOCIALIZING TIIR DEPRESSION
(Albany Democrat-Herald)
HALSEY, Sept. IS. (Special.)
The Standard Beara of the local
Methodist church had a "hobo"
party Wednesday evening. Sept,
IS. The girls met at the church
at S o'clock dressed ae hoboes.
First they had to rustle a hand
out. They were given eandwlchee
at the Ben Holt home after split
ting wood. Then at the Charles
Btraley home they received some
welners after sawing more wood.
They then went to the Henry
Zimmerman home and ate their
"handout" on the lawn. They
were then told to follow the
highway and to "hitch-hike"
their way to the B. M. Miller
home, where they epent the night
In the barn. After a good break
fast the next morning the glrle
went to their several homes.
.
"OlRL MEET ACCIDENT" (La
Grande Observer). That's what they
all say when the shlvaree starts to
fade.
.
Herbert Hoover, former president,
visited the Chicago world's fair, and
31 guns were fired In his honor.
Hatred of him haa subsided. A year
ngo the masses were so mad at him.
they would have expressed their die
gust on the street corner of such poor
shooting.
1
Body Recovered
ELY, Mnn Sept. 31. (OP) TJ
body of Dr. Howard H. Bgelo, mult-
millionaire St. Paul publaher who
disappeared 10 days ago with two
other members of a canoeing party.
Sat recovered lala, mUTlM-
The Devil and the Deep Blue
COOTIITIOXS in Cuba appear to be getting worse instead of
better. More U. S. gunboat, were dispatched to Cuban
waters last night. Disorders are reported in various parts of
the island. One president has been deposed and two have re
signed, but the atmosphere ha, not cleared perceptibly.
What', the matter anyway t Why can't the people of Cuba,
now that the unspeakable Maehado ha, been exiled, get together
behind a new president and settle down t .
Well here's our guess. Uncle Sam is just about as popular
in Cuba, as Hitler is in France. Any new government known
to have the backing of the United States will be opposed by
the Cuban rank and file at least until the present revolution
ary spirit quiets down.
On the other hand, no Cuban government, opposed by the
United States can endure. Uncle Sam not only enjoys a pro
tectorate over Cuba, in the treaty granted right of intervention,
but is too strong, and has too much money invested in Cuba, to
allow any anti-American government a free hand.
So literally the people of Cuba are between the devil and
the deep blue sea. They don't want a government under Amer
ican control, and they can't have anything else.
Until their popular wants are subordinated to their necessi
ties trouble will continue. If
Cuba themselves there will be
intervention is bound to come.
Somebody Erred
'T'HE Cuban situation naturally worries the Roosevelt ad-
ministration. Not only in itself but in the moral affect it
will have on Latin-America.
Prom Tampa, Florida to the south pole, the United States is
popularly regarded as a cross between a money-grabbing profi
teer and an imperialistic buccaneer. Its professions of friend
ship are generally distrusted; its determination to control this
hemisphere for its own material aggrandizement is generally
believed.
Upon such a fertile field of distrust and suspicion, the seeds
of this Cuban situationavill fall, and serious results to American
trade with South America will be Immediately threatened.
President Roosevelt is of course entirely sincere in his desire
for friendship with all Latin-America, and willing to do every
thing possible toward that end. He honestly opposes 20th cen
tury imperialism, and wishes in no way to interfere with any
government, south of the Gulf of Mexico. He explained this
clearly and fully to the diplomatic representatives of the South
American countries, when the Cuban crisis first broke.
But the Roosevelt policies as then enunciated, assumed that
with Machada out and De Cespedes in, Cuban peace and tran
quility would at once be restored. That is why -De Cespedes
was officially recognized, and word sent out that the revolution
was over.
But in this assumption, the president (or his advisers) erred,
as subsequent events have clearly shown. Ramon San Martin
followed De Cespedes, and now the former has resigned.' A
genuine Bolshevik revolution is feared.
Unless this is checked, cither De Cespedes or someone
representing his general policies, restored, obviously the
American government must intervene, or admit defeat lose
face entirely which in international affairs simply can't be
done.
So the United States at present, is, as far as Cuba is con
cerned, also between the devil and the deep blue sea. It doesn't
wish to intervene, but Cuban developments demand it. Unless
a miracle oocurs, President Roosevelt's first venture into South
Americnn politics, will go down in history as a setback.
Business Starts Upgrade
KJEWSPAPER display advertising in 25 representative cities
' showed an average inorease of 16 per cent last month com
pared with August, 1932. Business, government and public are
eager to know just exactly what that amazing gain means.
That it reflects renewed confidence on the part of the na
tion's business there is not a shadow of a doubt. Business does
not spend good dollars on advertising unless it is reasonably
sure there is business to be had.
And yet a 16 per cent inurease in advertising volume does
not necessarily mean a corresponding increase In business for
the advertisers. The proof is in the pudding, which, in this case,
is the business done. And the proof is at hand.
There is no more accurate barometer of business than the
weekly report of freight car loadings, and that barometer's
latest reading shows the business mercury rising rapidly. Sep
tember started her brief career by running the business barom
eter up to its highest point in two years. The loadings for the
week were 105,327 cars in excess
week of 1932, and the highest weekly total since November, 1931.
Here is the corroborating
the newspaper advertising gains reflected business gains but
accounted for them, at least in part More car loadings can
mean only one thing more business done, more goods sold.
Those who have sought the
ness after a slight sag during August all came to the same
conclusion i general busiuoss oonditiops are better. R. E. S.
NEW YORK. Sept. St. (AP)
with an overwhelming majority of
the membership of the Mew York
stock enghange having accepted the
proposal to eetablleh a market In
New Jersey, the committee on organ
isation of the new exchange an
nounced today It had decided to put
Its plan Into effect.
Howard Proelck. chairman of the
committee, aald the committee had
received 09 1 acceptance from mem
bers of the exchange.
Brodle Coming Home
HELS1NOPORA, Finland, Sept. 31
(AP) Edward S. Brodle of Oregon
City. Oregon, the retiring American
minister, left Finland for home to
day, traveling on the a. 8. Helmdall
this can be done by the people of
no intervention. If it can't be,
of those for the corresponding
evidence proving not only that
reasons for this upturn in busi
FIFI DDRSAY PLANS
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 81. (UP) Plfl
Dor say, ylvaclous film . actress, ad
mitted to frlenda today ehe la plan
ning to marry Maurice Hill, who once
waa chosen by a maxaalne aa the
"handsomeat college student In the
mldweet."
The wedding, however, may wait
until Hill, the son of a weelthy Chi
cago manufacturer, completes hie
medical education, ehe aald.
Dogs Ransomed.
PORTLAND. Oro. (UP) Kidnap
ing has entered the animal field, po
lice reported aa they searched tor
racketeers who have been stealing
valuable Portland doga and holding
them lor "ransom." Aa high as ,3s
flH.n efl ox anjua
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
? Signed letters pertaining to personal aeajta and oyglene not to die
saae diagnosis or treatment, wlU be answered by Or. tirady U ft stamped
elf-addreased envelope u enclosed. Letters snoold be onef and written In
Ink. Owing to the large aumbei of letters received only tew can be ans
wered here. No reply can be made to q aeries not conforming to Instructions.
Address Dr. William Brady, 263 El Camlno. neverley Hiila, CaJ.
FIREMEN AND LIFE GUARDS PLEASE TAKE NOTICE
A correspondent writes:
Having read your article entitled
"Fireman Hold That Pose," must 07
it la very unfair.
Can your Dra.
Association show
so many letters
of commendation
not one but hun
dreds, w n o are
thankful for the
work these men
In Blue render.
These men in
Blue are trained
and experienced
graduates of
A m e r loan Red
Cross, and I have
yet to see one person Injured by ln
halatora. . , .
Ah, but some equally brave life
guards at Coney Island did not ap
prove of the use of an Jnhalator. I
quote from the newspaper story of
the tragedy:
The life guards (their names and
addresses are given) had brought a
man later Identified as so and so from
the surf. They stretched him out on
the sand and attempted to revive him
by the Schaefer method of artificial
respiration.
So far so good. But here the trag
edy comes In:
. Meanwhile Dr. had been
called from the Coney Island
hospital. When he oame down
to the beach with oxygen tank
and lnhalator he was ordered to
atep aside by the life guards, he
says, who shouted that the ln
halator was dangerous . '. .
The victim succumbed.
Now my correspondent Is confused
about lnhalators. The use of an ln
halator is a valuable aid In any case
of resuscitation. If It Is .available.
It should not and need not interfere
with or delay the application of
Schaefer's prone-pressure manual
method of artificial respiration, how
ever. In fact, without the uninter
rupted application of Schaefer's meth
od the lnhalator Is of no use at all.
An lnhalator Is NOT a breathing
pump or machine. It must not be
confused with pulmotors, lungmotors
or so-called resuscltators which are
offered by manufacturers as a sub
stitute for Schaefer's prone pressure,
which any bystander, even a child,
can apply Immediately in any emer
gency with more efficiency in re
establishing breathing than any ma
chine can possibly have, and with
less risk of Injury than Is associated
with any kind of lung or air pump
used for the purpose.
The lnhalator is merely an inflat
able rubber bag to hold oxygen or
better a mixture of 90 or more parts
of oxygen with 10 or less parts of
carbon dioxide. The lnhalator ap
paratus Includes a small tank of
compressed oxygen and a similar tank
of compressed carbon dioxide, with a
rubber face mask to fit snugly over
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
3y O. O. Mclntyre
PLYMOUTH, Mass., Sept. 21. And
some 300 years later another tiny
band of pilgrims landed. But not
from "the May
flower. This town
has always seem
ed the core of
the United States
the background
of native pride.
On way from
Newport Is New
B e d f ord, archi
tecturally bleak,
but an appeal
ingly sturdy fac
tory and fishing
city.
Also Buzzard's
Bay, of historical slgnlncnnce. Shops
on Us one main street heralding "Fish
Bait" denote the anglers' paradise It
Is. Nearlng Plymouth, the roadside
flowers with chintsy and wickery
PrlsclUa and John Alden tea rooms.
And Pilgrim hot dog stands.
Plymouth, aside from marking the
Mayflower landing, is the doorway
to the Cape Cod country, on whose
outer tip is the arty nook of Pro
vlncetown. We also saw . Orleans,
where Capt. John Smith landed on
his expedition to New England, and
Truro, where pilgrims found the first
drinking water.
It was from off Orleans the Ger
man submarine fired the only shot
of the World war in American waters.
Cape Cod Bay Is a ruffle of blue and
white, and on the short clusters of
fishing shark villages. The ao-easter
Is It so'wester? rain slickers of
cod liver ads, are numerous.
The Yankee twang did not become
pronounced until we edge! Into tne
home-spun Cape Cod coast. Here are
salty characters out of "Shore Acres"
and "Way Down East." The gliia.
red-cheeked, plump and corn-fed. The
men, lanky, blue-eyed, leather tanned
and sufficient proof the bobbing
Adam'a Apple has not passed from the
American scene.
The eentlmental veneration that
Plymouth so aerenly Inspires Is mi
raculously contagious. The tourist
Is touched instantly by a slightly
choking reverence for Its trees, quaint
homes with foot-scrapers and wealth
of honorable traditions. In a whlrU
Ing modern world. It offers nothing
newer than a hundred yean.
Naturally a chief purpose of our
visit waa to see the rock upon which
the pilgrims landed. No one ap
proaches it casually, for tt Is a sym
bol of the most beautiful fortitude
In American hUtory. It is notice
able that a glisten of tears wells up
suddenly among all tourists.
Youths, designated guides working
nose and mouth so the victim will
breathe the mixture of oxygen and
carbon dioxide.
The carbon dioxide Is the natural
stimulant to breathing, and greatly
contributes toward sucessful resusci
tation in any case of drowning or
asphyxia from any cause.
What the New York authorities did
about the ignorant officious life
guards the Item did not mention.
It is high time that this spectacu
lar vaudeville of calling the fire de
partment when resuscitation la need
ed should be stopped, and the appli
cation of such medical or surgical
measures be restored to the hands of
qualified physicians.
The trouble with these ignorant
officious ones is that if you teach
them some rudiments of first aid
they think they know it all, and they
even take advantage of their little
authority to brush aside physicians
In such emergencies if the physic
ians happen to be a bit too docile.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
' Thick Nails.
I found that by regularly filing
down the thick nails on my toe,
with a good nail file. I got complete
relief from the trouble. R. 8. C.
Answer Thank you. Sounds sen
sible. Fit for Reproduction.
Tou said that women reach their
strongest physical health and capac
ity for motherhood at 35 to 88 years
of age. At what age do men become
most fit for reproduction? J. H. M.
Answer I said a healthy, normal
woman should be at her best at that
age. Perhaps a man attains his acme
at 33 to 35. Experience has proved
that women at the age mentioned
generally have normal uncomplicated
confinement, whether it be the first
or not. Fishwife superstitions make
too many women hesitate to achieve
maternity.
Undutant Fever.
There seems to be an epidemic of
Malta or undulant fever in our part
of the (middle west) state. How can
one be sure not to contract the dls
eftse? Mrs. K. L. H.
Answer-riProbably the Infection is
carried in the milk from animals
that harbor the germ, whether of
contagious abortion or similar dis
ease. Possibly the Infection may be
carried also by the bite of the mos
quito or other parasite. All milk in
the area should be pasteurized, that
1. heated up to 145 degrees F. and
held at that temperature 20 to 30
minutes, then cooled. That is suf
ficient heat U kill the germs. If
In doubt, you may make the milk
safe by elmply scalding it bringing
It to a boll for an Instant.
(Copyright, 133, John F. Dllle Co)
Ed Note: Readers wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letters direct to Dr.
William Brady, M. 265 El Ca
mlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
of the rock. The pilgrims totaled
104 and 47 lost their lives that first
bleak, fearful winter. They sleep on
Cole's hill, overlooking the oalm bay.
I was Impressed by the manner in
which the American-born chauffeur,
John De Carlo, was emotionally stir
red. His handkerchief quickly went
to his eyes In shaken privacy.
Plymouth Rock Is now In original
position, about three feet from the
water line at high tide. It has been
moved often, and erosion of years,
coupled with constant chipping of
souvenir hunters exacted a toll that
would have eventually caused oblite
ration. Two-thirds are left. Once,
dropped, It broke Into three pieces,
now cemented. It weighs 7 tons and
a dozen could stand on its surface
comfortably.
The rock la sheltered under a Ore-
clan porch with pillars, probably 40
feet long and 15 wide. One looks
upon it through an Iron grilled square
in tne fashion of gazing into the seal
pit at a zoo. A Plymouth mason
carved on Its top the figures "1630."
Motoring through New England re
veals forlorn way-side stands now
abandoned. Finest homes have mea
gre yard displays of fruits, preserved
and fresh, painted wooden lawn
gadgets for decoration and the like.
But the latter are merely outward
emberlngs of ingrained native thrift.
Houses far back in the yard are snowy
wmte, relieved by shutters of green,
autumnal brown and Jet black. It
all offers a memorable and placid
study of a beautiful provincialism,
almost vanished.
Scituate, aplffy spa for rich New
Yorkers and Bostonlans, also looked
down at heel. It waa at Scituate my
wife threatened to abandon the tour
If I did not quit chirping " Kenny -
bun port," like a sudden skip up
stairs. Alt the time they pick on me.
All the time they do I When as a mat
ter of fact I'm more fun.
(Copyright, ld33, Mc Naught Syndi
cate, Inc.)
City C. C. C Bors Gain Most
NEW YORK. (AP) Recruits from
the sidewalks of New York gained
a pound each more than youngsters
from western New York estate dur
ing service in Civilian Conservation
Corps camps of the nrst New York
district. The average gain wsa 7 93
pounds, with a top gain of 33 pounds,
among 1000 youths.
.
Fruit rrrvrrrr Tented
RIO DE JANEIRO. (AP) Citrus
fruit exporters near here are expert
mentlng with a preservation liquid
which its Spanish inventor, Ortiz
Cabezas. claims will maintain fruit
in good condition several weeks with
out refrigeration.
1 .
Oregon Weather
Unsettled with showers north and
west portions tonight and Friday;
moderate temperature: fresh and
strong south wind offshore.
Heating costs can be reduced. For
com pie te hea ting service call Art
flcbmldU 418
Ye Poet's Cornei
Autumn In The HUla
By V. A. Davie.
When the summer daya ateal away.
And the woodland voice quaintly
trim.
And tiees, whisper coyly all the day,
we Know, 'tie autumn la the bills.
The mountains wear a deeper blue,
A glam'rous baza the valley fllla:
The landscape shows every hue
Because, 'tis autumn In the hills.
Shadowa deepen aa day decllnea,
And dreamy caatlea twilight builds:
Distant tlnkllnga, like vesper chimes
Proclaim, 'tis autumn In the hills.
No artist's brush the canvaa wakea,
Nor pen inspired, the prophet wllla
Excel the art, that nature makea
To ehow, 'tis autumn In the hills.
The gracious earth, from plenty's
horn.
Each woodland host, his larder
fills;
Prepared to brave old Winter's storm
After, 'tis autumn In the hills.
In fragrant beauty the flowera died,
And Jack Frost piles his maglo
skills;
To warmer climes the birds have bled
Finding, 'tie autumn In the hills.
Bright daya will come, new hope will
- bloom.
The eternal law of life fulfills;
Thus faith triumph o'er doubt and
gloom
Surely, as autumn In the hills.
Tie grand to end life's turbid dream,
With service, more of good than
Ills;
Leaving foot-prints along the atream
Glowing, like autumn in the bills.
The Hogue River.
(By Col. Robert A. Miller, Portland.
Oregon)
The River Rogue, as Its name will
Imply.
Ia stigma unsought, though you rea
son why.
And yet, aa It meandera untamed to
the eea
It la freighted with legends bold and
free
Of a pioneer age and a vanishing race;
But the spirits wander leaving no
trace.
The River Rogue, for all must agree,
Haa many a mood on lte way to the
sea;
For the stars look down as It steals
away
Into the night, but It laughs with
the day,
In a meadow far, and then through
the hills,
A vagrant, ' wandering wherever It
wills.
The River Rogue, like a Jeweled bride
Races afar on a turbulent tide.
And lute to the call of the sensuous
sea,
Where the tide go down, and the
rlvera a-lee;
And mystery la there, like a tale that
la told;
And the legends grow gray, and are
old.
The River Rogue, though tongued
with pride,
la embowered with beauty on every
side
And It has the right, as a river may
To sing Its praise In its own made
way:
And to wander forever with a aplrlt
free,
To mingle lte song with the song of
the eea.
25ATTP0BNGOF.
EXTENSION CLASS
Extension class in modern social
problems held lte first meeting at
the local Junior high school last
night, with as members In attend
ance. Dr. Taylor of the Southern
Oregon Normal school Is In charge
of the class.
The course offers two credit, at
the University of Oregon or Oregon
State college. The next meeting will
be Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock,
at the same place. The lessons will
start with the beginning of the In
dustrial revolution, and continue to
the present problems.
Attending the meeting last night
were Una B. Inch. B. R. Finch, H. W.
Oustln, Maybelle Church, F. J. Ban
ish, Florence Allen, Ruth Ella Dlck
ereon, Juanlta Demmer, Alice Pahl,
Carol Wall and Jerry Latham of Med
ford, Clarence Da vice, Floyd V. Bar
rett, Donna Bert of Eagle Point, Ber
tha Stevens, Doris Hitchcock. Edith
Bork, Loren Sowall and Lydla Smith
of Ashland.
GOLD PRICE REDUCED
95 CENTS FOR DAY
WASHINGTON, Sept. 31. (AP)
Today'a price for newly mined gold
was announced by the treasury as
JS133, a decrease of 93 cents as com
pared with yesterday's quotation,
Summer Doubles Vitamin
MADISON. Wis. (AP) Summer
butter Is approximately as rich in
vitamin A as that prodced in Maroh
and April, experiments at the Uni
versity of Wisconsin show. When
cows are turned Into pasture there Is
a sudden Increase in vitamin content
lasting through the summer and even
into the winter,
Card of Thanks.
To our neighbors and friends, the
Q. A. R., the W. R. C. and the "Daugh
ters of Union Veterans, 1861-65, Tent
No. 11, Medford:
We wish to express our heartfelt
thanks and appreciation for their
kind sympathy and assistsnce, also
the besutiful floral offerings In our
recent sad bereavement.
R. R. Ouches and Family.
J. S- Ouches and Family.
Because snakes in a Ban Antonio
reptile garden showed a preference
for brown rats, children collected 15
cents a pair for rodent delivered.
Students in India comprise 3 3 per
cent of the population. There are
Insull At Court
mm
Samuel Insull, former Chicago
utilities magnate, Is shown as h
appeared In court at Athens, Greece,
during hearing of the application
for formal sanction of his arrest. In
connection with American extradi
tion proceedings. (Associated Press
Photo.
Meteorological Report
Sept. 21,-1933.
Medford and vicinity: Unsettled
with showers tonight and Friday.
Moderate temperature.
Oregon : Unsettled with iowr rs
north and west portion tonight and
Friday. Moderate temperature.
Temperature a year ago today:
Highest 81; lowest 4a.
Tctal monthly precipitation .18 In.
Deficiency foi tpe month .09 Inches.
Total precipitation since September
1, 1932, .18 Inches. Deficiency for the
seaeon .09 inches.
Relative humidity at 5 p. m. yes
terday 81 percent; 6 a. m. today 42
percent.
Tomorrow.
Sunrise 6:58 a. m. Sunset 6:09 p.m.
Observations Taken at 5 a. m.,
120 Meridian Time.
4
-4 . yl ... vv
1 1 P PS
'II " 1
A -J
s s 5
BBS
I
01 tj
Boston 78 6a .02 Cloudy
Cheyenne 60 58 Cloudy
Chicago 50 Clear
Eureka H 66 50 Clear
Helena 72 48 T Cloudy
Los Angeles . 74 64 Foggy
MEDFORD ... 68 40 .08 Foggy
New Orleans, 96 72 .04 Clear
New York...... 80 58 p. Ody.
Omaha 78 60 Clear
Phoenix 100 70 .04 Clear
Portland 68 54 .16 Cloudy
Reno 72 38 Clear
Roseburg 44 .20 Cloudy
Salt Lake 90 58 Clear
San Francisco 70 56 Clear
Seattle - 66 62 J 3 Rain
Spokane 66 48 Cloudy
Walla Walla 52 .12 Cloudy
Washington, D.C. 62 Clear
Bright Spots
(By TJnlted Press)
American Power 6s Light Co. re
ports electrio output last week was
83,165,000 kilowatt hours, Increase of
18.3 per cent over like 1932 week.
The San Francisco bank declares
quarterly dividend of 6135 a share.
Pere Marquette railway reports Au
gust surplus of 632,090, against defi
cit of 6339,023 in August last year.
Burjola, Inc., declared dividend of
50 cento a ehare on common stock,
against prevlou paymelt of 25 cents
a ahare.
Loblaw Groceries, Ltd., reports Au
gust net profit of 646.600, against
643.366 in July.
Dun e Brad street. Ins, weekly
food Index rises S cents. j
SALEM, Sept. 21. (A) Judge W.
W. Wood of Harney county waa as
signed to hear cases In Baker county
In which Judge C. H. Mcculloch has
been disqualified. The assignment
waa announced by Chief Justice J. L.
Rand of the etate supreme court.
4
Dance, Lake Creek Orange. Butte
Falls orchestra. Sat., Sept. 23.
TELLS HOW SHE LOST
15 LBS. OF FAT
Rheumatism Gone Too
Here is a woman who was rapidly
putting on weight and who was trou
bled with rheumatism too. Read her
letter:
I started taking Kruschen Salt
because of the good It had done for
a friend of mine who had been crip
pled with rheumatism. At the end
of the second bottle I was weighed
snd find I am now only 148 pounds
(original weight 163 lb.), at which
I am so pleased. But I have also
felt my rheumatlem much le. which
has been so troublesome in my knees.
I must say I think Kruschen s splen
did weight reducer." (Mim) E. L. P.
Overweight and rheumatic poison
ing often go together. The six salts
in Kruschen aiat the Internal or
gans to perform their functions prop
erly little by little that ugly fat
goes; a lowly, yes but surely. You
feel wonderfully healthy, youthful
and energetic more so than ever be
fore in your life I
Kruschen Salt Is obtainable at
jarmin vsoon n jar iim iv:r
vccAs and eosa not mora aa too.
Flight 'o Time
(Medford ana Jackson County
Uisuiry from the rues ol Xbe
Mali Tribune ol 20 and 10 tears
Ago.)
TWENTY TEARS AGO TODAY
September 21, 1823.
(It was Friday)
President Coolldite expresses hop
for early relief to the farmers.
TnlttnrHnn rved On SChOOl 008X41
to prevent the conversion of the
Jackaon school Into a Junior high
school.
Sensational stokes divorce trial
starta In New York City.
Sudden interest manifested by citi
zens in high achool bond election
Saturday.
Fishermen rush to the Rogue to
catch a fish, before It becomes cloudy
from the recent rains. .
Horses at large In the Table Roc
district do considerable damage.
Farm work In the Sams Valley sec
tion alows up achool attendance.
Judge Colvlg and Cong. Hawley ad
dress the Pioneers' Reunion at Ash
land. Pears In the Willow Springs exhibit
at county fair to be sent to stato
fair.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
September 21, 1918.
(It was Sunday)
Robert J. Brevard shows the cus
tomary Medford spirit, and guarantees
91000 for the appearance here of the
New York Giants and Chicago Ameri
cana on November 18 on their way
to the Orient. Court Hall has gives
the use of the ball park, and special
trains will be run from all Southern
Oregon and Northern California
points.
The Mall Tribune carries a page
ad of Peerless tobacco, and a corncob)
pipe is given free with each package.
Ground broken for 935,000 club-,
house fcr the Elks.
Valley chess players organize.
New York vouth welkins across)
continent, reaches Medford.
Police arrest woman, who Insists
on driving on the wrong side of the
street, and the offender Is discharged
by the police judge, to the great dis
gust of the police chief.
PORTLAND, Sept. 21. (AP) Pum
neral services will be held here Sst
urday for Mrs. Betty Norblad. 61,
mother of ex-Governor A. W. . Nor
blad. - She died at her residence here
yesterday. Mrs. Norblad had lived in
Portland 13 years, moving here from
Astoria. She had been an Invalid for
40 years,
Swedish Massage
Corrective Exercises
Honrs t to 5
By Apnt.
Oscar S. Nissen, P.T.
Physical Therapeutics
Formerly Director and Instructor
Massage Dept., Boston City Hosp.
528 E. Main St. Medford, Ore.
Who is
this man I
FOUND unconscious
mumbling of jewels, robi
bery, murder, apparentlj
suffering loss of memorj
and without means ol
identification.
NESTA R1DDELL
claimed him as her hus
band but, strangely
enough, there was not the
slightest expression of af
fection or emotion by her
CAROLINE LEIGH,
convinced Nesta's identi
fication was suspiciously
casual, starts to unravel,
the mystery of "Jimmy
Riddell" and "Jim Ran
dal."
They are the principal charac
ters in the new serial by
PATRICIA WENTWORTH
OUTRAGEOUS
FORTUNE
The exciting story of a pretty
girl's struggle to free the man
she loves from the clutches of
an unknown past.
Starts Tomorrow
IN THE
MAIL TRIBUNE