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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1934)
, ?JGE FOTJTf LOCAL STUDENTS E Sessions to Open in Eugene . and Portland June 18 for Six Weeks' Term Out standing Educators Added tTXrVSHfllTT OB OREGON Eugene. '(Apl.) Among those from Medford who hava Inquired about the Univer sity of Oregon summer sessions aro Laura N. York, Grace Turnqulst, Jua nlta Demmer, Dorothy Plttenger, Orao O. Rld and Mildred X. St. John. A great deal of Interest has been shown In the University of Oregon summer sesslona In Eugene and Port land, which will open on June 18 for the six weeka term. A number of fea tured courses will be offered, and sev eral outstanding educators from other institutions have been added to the : regular staff of the university, It Is announced by Alfred Powers, director of summer sessions. - Courses Offered In the Portland session, courses In education will be given by Dr. Jay 0 Knode of the University of New Mex ico and Tegular members of the uni versity faculty. Dr. Merle Ourtl, Smith college will offer courses In American history, and Professor Bernard Hin shaw of Illinois Wesleyan university will teach olassos in drawing and painting. The work In sociology will be under the direction of Dr. Carroll D. Clark, head of the department o: sociology at the University of Kansas. Courses will also be available in tho following departments: anthropology, baoterlology, botany, chemistry, eco nomics, English, French, German, health education, Journalism, music, philosophy, physical education, physi ology, political science, psychology and publio speaking. Classes will be held In Llnooln high school. Teachers Cllnla Feature Publio school teachers and others intereated In aiding children who have learning difficulties will have the op portunity of taking part In the reme dial teaching cllnlo to be held In con. nectlon with the Eugene summer ses sion. The clinical sohool will be con ducted by Dr. B. W. DeBusk of the university faculty, assisted by Miss Lillian Rauner of the Los Angeles puhllc schools. For the fifth suocesslvo year the University of Oregon has been desig nated by the Carnegie corporation as Its western center for instruction ox teachers of art In the publio schools. Dr. Eugen austsv Stelnhof, director of the National School of Decorative Art In Vienna, will be the visiting director, Other visiting instructors In tho Eugene session will be Miss Marlon Horton, traveling librarian for tho Los Angeles city school library, who will give oourses In library methods, and Dr. Joseph von Bradlsh of the City Oollege, Now York, who will of fer work in German. School for coaches Of particular Interest to men will be the coaching school to be held during the first two weeks of the ses sion at Eugene, Basketball and base ball instruotlon will be In charge of William J. Relnhart, varsity coach In these sports. Football will bo taught by Prince O. Calllson, Oregon coach who has already earned a national reputation, and Instruction In track and field events will be given by W. D. (Bill) Hayward, veteran track coach. The offerings of the Eugene session will also lnolude courses In .business administration, drama, economics, education, English, history, Journal Ism, Latin, law, mathematics, muslo, philosophy, physical education, phys ics, political science, psychology, ro mance languages, public speaking and sociology. At both summer sessions Interest ing programs of social events have been arranged to care for the recrea tional needs of those In attendance. Full Information on any aummtr session of the State system of Higher Education may be obtained from the offloe of the director In the Oregon building, Portland, or at the Univer sity of Oregon, Eugene. Ben Eckholm, 48, local orohardlst, who yesterday noon swallowed a spray solution in mistake for wtaer, was resting easy today at the Sacred Heart hospital, according to Dr. J. 0. Hayes, attending physician. His con dition Is not regarded aa serious. Prompt action by Eckholm saved more aerloua consequenoes, aocordlng to Dr. Hayes. Ha did not swallow a large amount of the poison, but aa soon as the first mouthful passed his palate realized his error and rushed to this city. Very little of the fluid reached his stomach. Once under medical oars, he was glutted with milk and eggs, given a vein antidote and the atomaoh pump used. The rpray la composed of cyanide and bichloride of meroury, and la widely used by orchardlsta aa a dis infectant for pruning shears. It la colorless like water. Eckholm waa carrying a bottle of water as well aa the poison at the time of the mis take. Portland P. T. A. Candidates Win PORTLAND, Ore., June .(API Three candidates backed by the Par ent-Teacher association won places on the Portland school board In yes terday's election In which the llghU eat vote since 1030 was cast. Those elected were Roy R. Shields, attorney, formerly of Salem; Miss Jeasle M. Short, mathematics Instructor at Reed oollege, and Stuart R. Strong, Insurance man. Georgia Livestock PORTLAND, June fl. P) Cattle 35; calves 10; slow, unchanged. HOGS: 600; steady; feeder and stocker pigs, good and oholoe (3.00 3.3S. SHEEP: 400; steady; yearling weth ers. t3.7B-S.35; ewes, good and. choice, $1.75-3.35; common and medium, S..7S-3.00. Portland Produce PORTLAND, June 6. (P) Butter Print, A grade, 33 'Ac; parchment wrapper cartons, 34o; quantity pur chases, 'Ao lb. less; B grade, parch ment wrappers, 33c; cartons 3 lb, BUTTBItPAT Portland delivery, A grade delivery at least twice weekly, 31-32o; country routes, 17-lBo lb.; B grade or delivery fewer than twice weekly, Portland, 18-19c; country routes, 15-lOc; O grade at market. EGGS Paciflo Poultry Produoers' selling price: Oversize, lQc; fresh ex tras, 17o; standards isc; mediums ido doaon, (oartons 1 cent higher.) Buy ing price of wholesalers: Fresh spe cials, ISc; extra 15c; extra mediums lo; medium firsts llo; pullets 13c; undergrades 13c dozen. COUNTRY MEATS selling price to retailers, vealers 00-100 lbs., 7c lb : spring lambs 13-lto lb.; others un changed. POULTRY Colored hens, 13-130 lb; others unchanged. NEW POTATOES Shatter White, $1.76; Oarnet $1.35. STRAWBERRIES Improved Oregon $1-1.10 orate. CANTALOUPES Imperial Jumbo, $3.76; 30o, $3.50; standard 45s, $3.40, Yuma, $3-3.40 crate. CHEESE, milk, old potatoes, wool and hay, unchanged. 1 Portland Wheat PORTLAND, Oro., June 8. (AP) Wheat: Open High Low Close July 7BH .10 !4 .78 K .70 'A Bopt. .79 .70 .70 .70 Cash: Big Bend bluestem, ir, dark hard winter, 13 per cent, B3; 11 per cent 77; soft white, western white. hard winter, northern spring and western red, 78. Oats: No. 9 white, $34. Corn: No. 1 E yellow, $37.60. Mlllrun, standard, $16, Today's car receipts: Wheat, barley, 3: flour, 6; oats, S. 10; Chicago Wheat CHICAGO, June 8. (AP) Wheat: Open High Low Close July 1.0014 1.03 .00 ,0Vi Sept. 1.03 1.03 1.00 I.OOli Deo. l.OSH 1.04 1.04(4 1.0114 Silver. NEW YOnK, June 8 (AP) Bar silver firm, 14 higher at 45. San Francisco lltittcrfat. SAN FRANCISCO, June 8. (API First grade huttcrfat, 3314o f, o, b., San Francisco. 4- TAKEN BY DEATH Bessie Mabel Jones, wife of Zdwart Jones of nenr Jacksonville, poasrd away at the home of her father, W. A. Chllrlreth, In Jacksonville at 1 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, suffering an illness of several months. Besides J , . i 1 1 1 1 f, ' , i mi 1 1 , ' l - (T.-'M'f:' art - a f ill r . . V i , j:; km m m h W-v4 her husband, she is survived by one!suranoe. daughter, Kdna Newman, also of Jack, sonvllle: her mother, Mrs. McCredey of southern California survive. Mrs. Jones wa born In Jackson : county, January 8, 1830, and with ( 'txemm trm Minstrels Open Performance THE CALL Th Call of lh Open Road Uckont motorbu to tU wtrf TenturNoma life of camptng out, for Its Mghwayi and byways lead to iuch restful, icenlc tpoU u that shown in the upper left. At the right Jack Holt, Columbia Picture, .tar, InTite. Tiijtors to W. Western Auto equipped camp. Holt, who .tar. in the current Whirlpool and the forthcoming "Black Moon," 1. Men In the lower left enjoying his faTorite .port, which is .o popular at this fame of year. The "siren " in the circle U typical of the relaxation that i. found at the other end of l-'T.k0 i loW n.ht ' W"! A lenian adrises Holt to check hi. battery as well as other part, of the car in preparation for an outtu. - the exception of a short time had resided continuously In Jackson county. She was a momb.r of the Baptist church In Bundon, Ore., where she was very active In church work. Funernl tervtcca will be held at the Conger funeral parlors Friday at a p. m. Rov, W. H. En ton will have charge of the services at the chapel and Interment will be made In the Sams Valley cemetery. PROBE BEER SALE The state liquor Cftmmlsslon Is now investigating the sals of beer laat Saturday to a 18-year-old California youth, it was revealed in Juvenile court this morning at the hearing of Joe J. Bradon, 18, of McCloud, C1H oharged with reckless driving. Bra den entered a plea of guilty to the reckless driving charge and waa fined $35 and casta by Justice Coleman. Bniden told the court he had vis ited, with two companions, a Pacific highway resort and had drunk a arse glass ol beer and a small one. ' The lad told the court the beverage : had no effect on his driving. A state trooper Informed the court the mat- 1 ter had been reported to the state ' liquor commlwlon. Two sutoa were more or leas dam aged.. Braden'a father was In court . and said the loss waa covered by In-! The accident occurred In ths Bprrydale district. Bradrn and a boy acquaintance came to this city from McCloud to do some trading and remained over to see ths 8hrln parade. tbtbbsb, sebfch, OF THE OPEN ROAD Pioneer Gown Is Worn By Deputy In Jubilee Spirit Miss Nydah Nell, ohlef deputy of the county clerk'a offloe, ap peared for work this morning, wearing a gown her grandmother wore in pioneer daya, and that her great-grandmother w o r a before her. It was a black creation, with a wasp waist, ruffled skirt, and a white collar. Miss Nell looking very demure, was the center of feminine Interest, A pact was made yesterday among the women workers of the clerk's office, that In keeping with the pioneer spirit of the Diamond Jubilee they would wear pioneer costumes the balance of the week. Miss Nell waa the only one to keep the agreement. Miss Nell Is a member of a well known southern Oregon pioneer family that played an Important part In the history of Jackson county. Phone 1300 for Towing or Wrecker Service Anywhere Anytime Lewis Super Service 17 rmso -msimsosY, at Crateriah ALL TEE COMFORTS OF HOME MAY BE FOUND at The Broztell A Distinctive Hotel r ... 'At IT 13 EASILY accfMlble to shop ping anil theatrical renter?, churches. Mhnule. parks and transportation lines. Ladles trare ling wit hont eirort Mil appreciate the atmosphere of tecorlty and ret tt offers. Every room with tub and .hower. Room With Bath $1.50 Hotel Broztell Fifth Ave. & 27th St., N. Y. J. SIOARMAN, Manacer. Iffl'ThO fall a nr. Jt, ix '2112 .a I fa -rare , 1934 Thursday Surgery Aided Guinea Hen PALL MILLS, Va. (UP) A success ful Job of plastic surgery has been performed by J. A. Peake, Fall Mills poultry man, on a guinea hen. The hen got her bill entangled In a wire fence and tore It off. Peake glued the bill back and It has grown Into place. Texas Beautifies Yard! AUSTIN, Tex. (UP) Texas munic ipalities have entered upon a prac tical campaign for beautified yards and home gardens. Austin, Temple, San Marcos and many other places are offering reduced summer water rates to encourage home gardening. A Worn Out Battery or Generator may ruin that vacation trip. SEVEItlN Buttery Serv. Phone 300 1533 N. Riverside ix- T7IVE big men can relax in utter comfort on the deep cushions of the Ford V-8. Wide seats keep elbows out of ribs. Ample leg room keeps legs from being cramped. Why? Because Ford measures roominess in terms of usable body room. Sot in terms of the distance between bumpers, which means nothing when you come to analyze it. The Ford V-8's very engine construction gives you more body room, as the diagram explains. Cylinders are "doublcd-up" saving space, not strung along in a line to waste it. raw THE CAR WITHOUT A PRICE CLASS" roBD BAniO PROr.P.AM-W.rina'i PiniTlrnl.n.i SunJ.r snd Tnnred.T See the New Ford V-8 Cars for 1934 Now On Display C. E. GATES AUTO CO. WEALTH AND PLAY COMING FOR IVIAN TMO .WMF 1 IlflUUUII UUIUM Thousand-Fold Increase In Riches and Universal Spread of Leisure Are Promised by New Methods BOSTON, June 8. (AP) Scientific discoveries are laying the foundation for a thousand-fold Increase in the world's wealth and a universal spread of mote leisure, said Howard W. Blakeslee, science editor of the As sociated Press, in the commencement address today at Massachusetts Insti tute of Technology. "It used to be said there were 13 men In the world who understood the Einstein theory of relativity," aald Blakeslee. "But X have yet to hear of even one economist who understands the economic paradox. Made Own Paradox. "The paradox Is largely produced by scientists. They made the extra wealth and leisure whose distribu tion just now puzzles the world. Their simple and straightforward approach may help In the distribution, and their new discoveries certainly will be a facto-, in the settlement, Blakeoiee pointed out that a biolo gist In keeping Informed on current scientific progress would have to read 183 scientific articles dally, and he called attenton to the service of the press In disseminating information. "You, as scientists, may never use the daily newspaper to tell your story, although It la becoming one of the best media. The fact that the press is free insures against sinister Influ ences depriving you of the opportu nity for publication In your own field." Synthetic Dresses Next, Blakeslee told of process, developed In this country, for converting alcohol 100 per cent Into acetic acid at low cost. "This Is an understanding move. Also a direct step toward synthetic dress goods of greater beauty, higher quality and more universal dependa bility. It is a step toward making textiles and more of other things di rectly out of trees." A plan is being worked out, Blakes lee said, to develop power on a tropi cal Island from the sun and the sea. 'Another group of scientists," he said, "Is studying the use of our rivers for Irrigation of a new type. Canals, they say, are too wasteful, but as new structural materials develop, water can be piped In closed conduits for great distances. Current Affects Weather. "This idea may have some Imme diate appeal If the Japanese current keeps shifting as oceanographers say it has this year. Some meteorologists attribute the drought In the midwest to this shift. MI know of another scientific re search which claims to be making YootefSr- cramp See how moch lass spaca I, occupied by ths V- 8 engine aa compared with tha ordinary ".liM or 'fight." Lea pac for tha enftlne means mora .paca for the paMenaers. The Ford V-8 front seat is adjustable It quickly and easily adapts itself to a six-foot two husband or a five-foot-two wife. It ends forever that source of strife. Before you buy any car at 7y price, drive the Ford V-8. SEE YOUR NEAREST FORD DEALER $ 515 Bixth and Riverside, Phone 141 some progress toward the unheard-of feat .of pumping fresh water directly out of the ocean." ROTARIANS HEAR VETS AID AGENT Albert Absher of Portland, Teterans placement representative, national re employment service of tho U. 8. de partment of labor, gave an Interest lng talk before the meeting of the Rotary club held at the Hotel Med ford Tuesday. Absher revealed the two functions of the re -employment service, to sup ply the CWA contingent with help, and to furnish men for the local em ployment committees, Of the 6th re-employment district, composed of Jackson and Josephine counties, according to Absher, 827 unemployed have registered. A total of 869 unemployed have been placed on Jobs during the same period of registration. In the state of Oregon, out of a total registration of 103,000, 90,000 men and 13,000 women have been given work. f E SALEM, Juna 6. (AP) Dellmors Lessard, Portland attorney, today won the draw for the Democratic nomina tion for state aonator from Multno mah county, following a tie vote for the nomination with Austin F. FTegel In the primary election. The drawing, held under statutory provisions In the case of a tie and before the secretary of state and the candidates or their representatives, wdb made by a disinterested party by picking the slip of paper with the winner's name upon It from a hat. S Pilots . . . Stewardess . qnlet cabins . . . Lavatory . , lay and night schedules. IViHrs. Portland - $14.58 2'4Hrs. Seattle - 23.40 VA Hrs. Sacramento 15.78 2Vi Hrs. Oakland - - 26.58 2 Hrs. San Francisco 20.58 5Vi Hrs. Los Angeles 39.53 S3 Hrs. San Diego - 43.53 Fas teat service to Chicago. Detroit, New York, 'Washing. ton ana the East. 10 Off on Round Trip Fare Includes Lunches Aloft MUNICIPAL AIRPORT, TEL. 241 Uottl.i Poital snd Wtitfrn Union Offlcal 8 . ( p. m. , ColumM. K.tworV Roomy , . Both 5 IXi M mi. . V