Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 28, 1933, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, BEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1933.
FEDERAL
ARRANGEMENTS
IE
Preliminary arrangement for the
opening of the southern Oregon term
of the federal court. In trU city next
Tuesday la now underway. Bum
monlng of Jurors and witnesses la
now under way by Deputy United
States Marshal Cal 8. Wells. The
federal court Is expected to be In ses
Ion for the better part of two weeks
It la expected that Federal Judge
J. Alger Fee will prealde.
The calendar for the court term
will be arranged, after arrival of
the court and officials here.
Most of the cases have their origin
1n Klamath county, and Include a
murder Involving William Tupper, an
Indian, chawed with alaylng a trlbea-
man during a drunken quarrel last
August. Five criminal casea ana live
civil cases are scheduled.
Federal official are expected to ar
rive Monday afternoon and Tuesday
rriornlng. These Include United States
District Attorney Carl O. Donaugh.
recently appointed to the post, nd
well known In southern Oregon,
United States Marshal Jack Day, In
attendance here the paat three terms
Of the federal court, and starts.
I
IS
. Hearing In the case of Hollls Pos
ton, Oreen Spring Mountains youth,
charged with hunting without li
cense, waa poatponed this morning
by Juatlce of the Peace William R.
Coleman. The trial waa scneauieo
for this afternoon. Voting Poston Is
mt 1lhrtv on 1260.
A! Poston, the father, charged with
assault with a dangerous weapon, ana
h.i imrf.r si son bonds to await the
action of the grand Jury, has ao far
been unable to turnisn nonae. ra
la alleged to have struck a state po
liceman with a rifle when undergoing
questioning laat Sunday, relative to
hunting without a license.
Poston last winter waa frequently
Hated aa a bondsman for "Congrees-
men ' from tne rinenurai area.
MALPRACTICE IS
: ALLEGED IN SUIT
The damage suit of Onorge Davlea
, against Dr. C. T. Sweeney for 138,000
lor alleged Improper medical atten
tion to a fractured forearm, Is under
way In circuit court today, the morn
ing session being devoted chiefly to
the selection of a jury.
Davlea allegea In his complaint that
In August, 1033, he sustained a frac
tured right forearm, and that it
failed to heal properly under the
treatment of Dr. Sweeney. Loss of use
of the arm Is also alleged.
Davlea la represented by Attorney
Arthur I. Moulton of Portland, and
Allison Moulton, and the defense by
Attorney George M. Roberta.
LIVEN ELKS UP
Next Thursday evening, October 6.
E, O. ("Jerry") Jerome, past exalted
ruler of the Elks lodge, will preside
over the special meeting, which will
open with a big feed tit fl:30 o'clock,
which will be accompanied by plenty
ol free beer.
Mr. Jerome Mid today that all
plant for the program .have not been
completed, but that the Elks' band,
under the direction of P. Wilson
Walt, will furnish several numbers,
and Mr Walt la also in charge of
other musical selections for the eve
ning. An old-fartiloned buck-hound ses
sion Is to be held, Mr. Jerome said,
and all membera of the lodge are
expected to be In attendance. The
dinner win be served under the su
pervision of P. C. Blgham.
L S0W1
Trial of C. B. Casebeer. a resident
of the Ashland dlatvlct, charged with
unlawfully placing nails on a high- i
way. la scheduled to be heard this
afternoon in Justice of the Peace L.
A. Roberta' court at Ashlsnd. Case
beer la alleged to have placed the
lulls and tacks on the "Old Conklln 1
road," causing Perry Ashcraft to
puncture a tire. The district attor- 1
ney'a oflk-e reports that a contro
versy la raging over the road and a
compromise la sought.
BUFFALO SLAUGHTER
OTTAWA, 8Pt. SB. P) The
alaughter of 3.000 buffaloes In Wain
wrlght national park. Alberta, nas (
been approved by the government.
Tendere are being requested for pur
chase of the hldea during November i
and December, j
The anlmsla to be killed sr. Boo
bulla, two years of sge; IM bulls,
three yesrs old: 300 cows, three years
id. aV4 ed bull tud gsjfc I
Held In Child's Death
b r -
1
Parrln P. Quleenberry, grandfa
ther of Nadlna Vogal Love, six-year-old
Kanaaa City, Kaa- girl
who waa found alaln laat April, waa
arrestsd for Investigation In con-
nectlon with the child's death, (Aa,
oclated Preaa Photo)
E
NEW YORK, Sept. 38 (AP) Lou
Gehrig, first baseman for the New
York Yankees, Is going to be married
Saturday or maybe Tuesday.
His bride Is Miss Eleanor Twltchell,
27, of Chicago. Her aunt, Mrs. A. H,
Austin of Fteeport, N, Y., said last
night the wedding was set for Satur
day.
But Oehrlg's mother, Mrs. Chris
tina Gehrig of New Roahelle, said
the wedding would be Tuesday She
said It would bo an elopement.
I am glad," aha said, "that It la
not going to be i fussy wedding.
Lous rather and I eloped."
L
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 38. (AP)
Walter H. McCredle, under Whose
management Portland baseball teams
won flvo Coast league pennants and
under whost coaching many young
baseball players rose to national star
dom, will return to the diamond
again next season as manager of the
Portland club, succeeding Spencer
Abbott, who has resigned to take ef
fect upon Vie close of the Portland
Seattle aeries this week.
McCredle appeared happy at the
oh a nee to come back to the club
where he had spent so many years
aa player and manager.
DIVORCE IN JUAREZ
HOLLYWOOD. Sept. 38. (UP)
Richard DU, veteran screen aotor,
and his estranged wife, Winifred Cot
Dlx, Issued a statement tonight an
nouncing they were divorced last
June 3 In Juarea, Mex.
Mrs. Dlx, former San Francisco so
cialite, was granted the decree on a
complaint charklng mental cruelty.
Dlx was represented at the hearing
end agreed on a property settlement.
HUNTER KILLED WHEN
GUN SNAGS ON FENCE
ALBANY, Ore., Sept. 37. (API J.
D. McCune. 0, former hotel proprie
tor here, was killed near the Albany
College campua Wednesday when his
shotgun discharged aa he waa climb
ing a roadside fence.
BEND, Ore., Sept 38 ( AP) Mil
dred Sperry, 39, lost her life here
today In a flra Wilch awept through
her apartment shortly before day.
light. Her body waa found a few
feet from the second floor window.
through which she probably had
hoped to eacape.
CROWN
LEADER
EGG
MASH
$fl90
Per 100 Lbs.
IT'S
GOOD
TRY
IT
Buy It At The
MONARCH
SEED & FEED CO.
p'. P
Ancient Mayas Traveled in Style;
Had Concrete Highways 410 A. D.
By r. B. COLTON
(Aaaoclsted Preaa Science Writer.)
WASHINGTON IJPtlt an Ameri
can motorist could be transported
back 1,500 yeara to the time when
the mighty loat empire of the Maya
Is believed to have flourished in
southern Mexico, he could eully have
toured In hla car over first-class con
crete roada.
These roads, better than any built
In modern America until the coming
of the automobile, still crisscross the
region which la now deserted. One
of them, running more than 00 miles
straight across country, haa been sur
veyed and explored for the first time
by an expedition of the Carnegie In
stltutlon of Wsshlngton.
Roads Easily Traced.
Though built about the time when
Alarle the, Ooth waa sacking Rome
witn his BsrDsrian hordes, in 410 A
D., the roads still can be easily traced
through the Jungle that covera them
and the ruins of cities thst they con
nected.
Expert say the Maya roada are
fully aa good aa tha famous high
waya of the ancient Romans. The
one explored by the Carnegie Instltu
tion expedition, headed by Alfonso
Villa, runs In practically a straight
una 13 ;4 miles from Tsxuna to Cobs
30-Foot Road.
Tha road Is from 30 to 34 feet
wide, rslsed from two to eight feet
above the level of the aurroundlng
country. The old Maya englneera dug
down to hardpan along, the road's
route, and built retaining walla of
large limestone blocks set In mortar
on either side to the height to which
they wished to bring the road sur
face.
Between the walla was first laid a
layer of huge boulders, two to there
feet long and weighing hundreds of
pounds, with the spaces chinked with
smaller atones. Successively smaller
layers of stones were laid on top of
the boulders, then a layer of fine
broken atone rolled or pounded Into a
bard, level aurface, and finally a
smooth coating of mortar cement.
Along this road Villa's expedition
found what la probably Amerlca'a
first road roller, a atone cylinder 13
feet long, weighing five tons, and
antedating by 1,500 years the steam
roller of today. It probably waa roll
ed about by slaves or war captives
or the Maya In road surfacing.
The roads must have been built for
human foot-traffic only, scientists
believe, for the Maya had no wheeled
vehlclee as did the Romans, or bur
den-carrying anlmala aa did the Incas
who built roada In South America.
4
Pioneer Salmon
Broker Succumbs
SEATTLE, Sept. 38. IIP) John
Francis McQovern, salmon broker and
resident of Seattle for 40 years, died
here todayi after an operation and an
attack of pneumonia. He was asso
ciated with his brother, Edward B.
McQovern, In McQovern 6o McQovern,
for many years. Hla widow, Mrs. Caa-
ale McOovern survives.
PENDLETON, Ore (UP) Twenty
four miles of mountain road. 151
mllea of telephone line. IB miles of
horse trails, three mllea of drift
fence, two dwellings and conalder-
able miscellaneous work are amonz
Vie accomplishments of tha O CO.
camp at Frog Heaven, In the Uma
tilla national forest, so far this year,
ROT
TTTHY WORRY thronfh the slipperiest months of the
T yer on smooth-worn, bald-treaded tirei?
Smart drirarv know that they need new tires mora In
fall and winter than any other time In the year they
know that nw mbher wears almost ftttV at will In
oold weathar, whioh means It will still be almost new
in tb spring they know that it costs money and may
be dastfarmn to wring oot the last few hundred miles.
That's why ft pay to bay otw Goodyear aw. By
aetual teat on wet pa ram en ti, Cw
tana asW far regardless of
and 77 quicker than smooth worn tires. They
yoo blowout protection in every ply
mom avary PT la built with that patented ply
SMferial. Strnertwitt. And they gtra mr$
WtVarv today than Goodyear Tires srer
fare before.
Gel la oa todays low prioaa believe it
or not, most Goodyear eost Uu todey
than they eoat a year ago Read tha
prioaa and yon II aires It certainly
pays to bay tires right now..
WANT STIU LOWER PRICES?
Husk? Goodysar P-sthfiodert are bat"
fr then the tires jjm
ol sofltothar makes. $t55
Jam era hoy them " W
twhty for low as sw
MEDFORD SERVICE
"YOUR TIRE SHOP" C. C. FURNAS,
Main and Pacifio Highway.
MANUFACTURED ON THE PACIFIC COAST
maai em i iy maaaasawMsawaii.
UnlU'ri states with Its paved roinH
of southern Mexico, for they had concrete highways, too. The atr photo
graph above shows where two hard roads built 1,500 years ago cross each
other In country now Jungle-covered. Below Is a carved stone which Is
believed to have been a rood marker. Sketch shows how highways were
built,
NORWEGIANS TRYING
WHALE MEAT FLOUR
OSLO (p) Whale meat In a new
form has been experimented with
aboard Norwegian whalers In the
Antarctic. If expectations are fulfilled
the product may prove as valuable to
Norway aa whale oil.
Newspapers here report that whale
meat Is dried and ground aboard the
whslera. The "flour1 is shipped to
Norway and used to produce a fine
quality of meat extract.
EAGLE POINT GRANGE
PLANS DANCE OCT. 14
EAGLE POINT, Sept. '38. fBpl.)
Ray Harnlsh, chairman of the ways
and means committee of the Eagle
Point Orange, calls attention of the
Grangers ot the fact that a dance
will be given at the Grange hall on
October 14. Old-time dances and
good mualc will feature the evening
Small admission will be charged.
SHOULDER BROKEN BY
FALL IN .NIGHTMARE
EUGENE, Ore., Sept. 38. (UP)
Robert Mills. 13. was in a Eugene
hospital with a broken shoulder to
day because the German trench he
was climbing over in a dream turn
ed out to be the window of an up
stairs room. The accident happened
aty his home in Cottage Grove. He
was asleep when ha walked "out" of
the house. '
ttp yemr car fmUktr
make or design
AM I iT OF , JL J
awe i i i at.. S,4y
had nothing on the aiulent Mayas
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Halght, in., are
the parents of a son weighing eight
pounds, 44 ounces, born Wednesday
at the Community hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwlght Horton of
Rogue River are the parents of a
daughter weighing seven pounds, 13
ounces, born Thursday at the Com
munity hospital.
25 SHEEP KILLED WHEN
TRUCK STRIKES BAND
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., Sep.t 38
(ff) Twenty-five sheep were killed by
a truck driven by Austin Hlatt, on
the Klamath Falls-Ashland highway,
Going down grade, Hlatt ran into a
band of sheep at a curve.
Engineer Big Apple Man
HAMPTON FALLS, N. H. (Up)
Twenty yeara ago, Walter D, Farmer,
successful mining engineer, decided
to go Into the apple-raising business.
Today he Is one of vie biggest pro
ducers In the east. His expansive
orchard here contains 13,000 bearing
trees and 18,000 young treea which
will bear later.
Fork Scratch Worth $68.
AUGUSTA, Me (UP) Amy Clark
restaurant worker, was awarded
about 68 for a scratched finger suf
fered In clanlng a fork.
ALL-WEATHER
Supertwist Cord Tires
SIZE PRICE Sept.1932 PRICE TODAY
4.40-21 7.05 . 7.20
4.50.20 , 7.45 7.60
4.50-21 7.85 7.90
4.7519 . 8.55 8.40
5.00-19 9.15 9.00
5.00-20 9.40 9.30
5.25-18 10.30 10.00
5.50-19 12.00 11.50
jmM
WT DO OUR Pa.gr
STATION
Prop.
Phone 14
OLD AGE PENSION
INlSICOlTIESpoRTlDlFING
Revision of Act Passed By
Last Legislature Demand
edGovernor Meier Giv
ing Problem Attention
SALEM, Ore. (UP) Revision of the
old age pension, act, passed by the
1033 legislature, Is being demanded
by Oregon counties as January 1,
date of effectiveness, approaches.
Already harrassed for funds, coun
ty courts have appealed to Governor
Meier for some relief from granting
not more than $30 a month to quail
fylng applicants. The legislature left
to the counties financing of the pen
sions. It will be Impossible for most coun
ties to meet the pension require
ments, even If additional taxes could
be levied and collected. Judge Vlstor
Moses of Benton said in a letter to
the governor.
Cost Benton 930,000
There are 743 pensions In Bentou
county eligible to receive pensions.
Moses figured. That would cost the
county approximately $30,000 a year,
ft would not be possible to raise more
than $8,000 by taxation and stsy
within the six per cent limitation
required by law.
The governor said he Is giving the
pe nslon problem consideration. It
Pill probably be discussed at the spe
cial session of the legislature, with
another method of financing possible.
Bankruptcy looms for many counties
If the law remains In Its present form,
officials claim.
Pensions After 70
The pension act provides persons
more than 70 years of age and with
out other Incomes may receive not
more than $30 a month from the
counties. Pensioners must be of good
character, and long-time residents of
the state, property valued at not more
than $3,000 may be owned without
disqualifying pension application.
Attorney I. H. Van Winkle held In
a recent opinion that county clerks
have no alternative but to grant a
pension to each applicant who quali
ties. A court can use Its discretion
ae to amount of the pension below
$30, but is prohibited from evading
the spirit of the law by making it ex
tremely low.
BABY KEEPS HERSELF
AFLOAT UNTIL SAVED
CHOWOHILLA, Cal. (UP) A self
posstssed young lad; la Norma J tin
II aT7 Yt if tr
Ibe ovdiaavry floor lamp makes a good reading
light for one person bnt the rest of the room Is
left very much in the shadow. A new lamp is
now being made by several manufacturers that
not only gives an excellent reading light bnt in
addition, floods the entire room with adequate
. rectM light excellent for bridge, children's
games and the regular activities of the family in
the living room. No more glaring, unprotected
lights to cause eye-strain and other ills are neces
try becamse thta new lamp gives the most perfect
type of general room illumination yet devised in
addition to perfect reading light. See it at your
dealer.
Swain, 14-months-o!d daughter ol
Mr. and tin. W. O. Swain of Win
ton. Wall visltlnj- with bar parents at
tha A. W. Turner ranch here, she
(ell Into a water tank. She waa found
floating in the tank. She suffered but
slightly from the cold water and ex
posure.
f
STAR GETS 4 ACES
PORTLAND. Ore. (UP) Dr. Cliff
Baker of Portland, Ore., who lost out
m the finals to Charley aSeaver of
Los Angelea In the California amateur
golf tourney this year, haa made four
holes-ln-one.
Here's his list:
Two at the 135-yard-hole at the
Cowlltr Country club, at Kelso; one
at the Coweeman Country club, Kel
so, on a 125-yard hole, and one at
Alderwood Country club, Portland, on
a 125-yard hole.
. Baker started playing golf four
yeara ago at tha advice of a doctor.
LOfl ANGELES. (Up) Ray Benle,
flute player on the steamship Lu
cerne, is an excitable man.
He told police when he heard some
men conversing In a low tone in a
- TURKEY FEED -
CORN
TSls is your opportunity to buy EXTRA GOOD
QTJAtlTV Eastern Yellow Corn at the right price. We
will be glad to quote you prices on Corn in load lots
delivered to your ranch. See us before you buy.
Millrun ... per sack $1.00
Rolled Barley per sack 90
Ground Barley per cwt. $1.20
Egg Marsh, best quality per cwt. $1.85
FEED GRINDING
and FEED MIXING
Let us figure with you on your Feed Grinding and
Mixing. We can do you a real job of grinding and
mixing at reasonable rates,
F ! Samson Co
Phone 833.
asaaaaaaaaaaw-aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa'
THE CALIFORNIA OREGON
POWER COMPANY'
beer parlor ha feared a robbery and
rushed Into the .street, where) ha
threw a $20 blU Into tha gutter.
After a two-hour search for the
money, detectives gava up whan Ban
is couldn't recall tha exact location
of the beer garden.
' Undergoes Operation K. Bsylor of
Tslent underwent a major operation
this forenoon at the Community hospital.
When Your Head
Feels ' Stuffy ' .
Apply Vicks Nose
Drops and again
breathe dearly!
This new aid In
preventing colds ia
cspeciallydesigned
for nose and up
per throat vwhere
3 out of 4 coidi ort
Use in time and
avoid many cotda
altogether.
PART OF VICKS MAN
FOR BETTER CONTROL OF COIDS
$1'50 PerCwt.
In Ton Lot
229 N. Riverside
ia4
m-n it mi in