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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1934)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, MONDXY, JULY 9, 1931 PXGE FOUR Medford Mail Tribune "Cmrona In Southara Ortgos Run Uil Mall IrltiiM'' Dillr Biwpt Batordsf Publllhed bf HEDKOllD rUINIlNO 0. ii-ir-te .n. Fit sl Pi"" BOBEilT W. BUHL, Bdltor An lodepeodcot Newipapar enteral h aeemxl elm mtiui at tilford. OrdOB, under Act of Hare 8, ltl. CH8CHIPTI0N BATES Br Man In AdiiKt du, om 7tu Dallr, ill Bonthl Dallr, om month By Carrier in AdTtoee Medford, Asbland, JacrjonilUa, Cantral Point, PcoenU, Talent, Oold Bill and on uwasra. Dally, ona jaar.... Daily, all months Dally, odi month AU ttrma, eaab lo adranea. ..16.00 .. I.ao Official tapar of tba City of Medford. Official paper of Jaekaoo Countr. UKMBEH Of TI1E ASSOCIATED PBESI Btcelilnl Pull Uaied Wire Stnlte T1 Aiaotlated Preaa la eitlutltely enlltleO to tba um for puhueatloo of all oen dlipaubaa credited to It or otbenrlio credited lo thla paper .1 .- ,k. miKllthul haratn. All rlfbtj for publication of apeelal dlapatebea BSfaiB are auo racneu.. HKMBEB OF OM1ED PBEBB krEMBEK OF AUDIT BUBEAU OF CIBCULATIONI Adrertlilng BepreaentatlTea If. a MOUENBEN t COMPAKT Offlcei In Nn Tore, Cblcaio, Detroit, Bao rranclKO Uoa Angelea Seattle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. LETTER TO MB. WILLIAM N. CARL. Friend Bill: In last Frlday'e papr you Mart looking lor an argument, and aik the following questional Firsts-Who dominate and con trol! Rogue fiver at the present time? Second Who should own and control Rogue rlvor? William, the answer to both these queries la easy, towlt: You and I hould worry. I am, however, In formed by one of our brightest law yera, that It Is "the sovereign posses sion of all peoples." Prof. Relmer atates It was created "by a process of erosion, extending over hundreds of years." They both are probably right. It would be nloe If It flowed oham pagne, Instead of spring water, and It Is hoped you will do something about title when you get to Salem, of course, without a deputy sheriff attaohed to your coat-tails. You must admit, BUI, that the river has done well, considering the chanoe It had. Just starting from a rain drop that fell to earth before the ploneera atarted across the plains. You Inquire "who should control Rogue river?" The present manage ment seems to be adequate, but they really should prohibit amateur poet from wrtlng pooms about It. There Is room along Its banks for all the power plants, and all the fishermen. You know, Bill, a 000,000 horse-power dynamo oosts more than a 1-man Ilshpole. It takes 800 skilled me chanics the better part of a year to produce the dynamo. A native of Borneo, wearing nothing but a fl atting, in no especial rush, can stroll - h,mhM forest, and create a ri.hnols m 10 minutes. So there Is quite a differential between the dy namo, which contains more wire than your fence, and the flshpole. You know, but won't admit It, Bill, that one healthy corporation on Rogue river Is more of a financial asset than a fisherman. You don't like corpora tions, and think they are "domlneer Ttuv also have another bad fault. They are prompt with their pay daya and tax remuianoo.. You are also mad at the "capital istic form of government." I don't think much of It either. A bunoh of Portland politicians and professional friends of the farmers oould not make a worse mess o( It. Both hypnotlae the farmer Into cutting hU own throat, when a awlft kick where It would do the most good would be plenty. One side is right now armed with baseball bats, and the other with tear gas bombs, looking for "a peaceful settlement of Industrial problems." Both are better weapons nifr.hfnrk. A Government by capitalists Is bad enough, but to be desired In preference to one, in of agitators, who can't talk English. The trouble with the capitalistic gov ernment I Its greed. Let me ask you a question. Bill. How many times have you Jilted a chance to be a mil lionaire? vmi ftteA mention your "Ideal form or government. - wnnv uu jm v. the last two years of the Coolldge rein, when everynociy was ouay ! In the money, and counting It, and nothing was allowed to Interfere with the spending. If memory serves right. tt am, nniittclana were saving the farmers like you with "the debenture plan" whatever that was. i manuun this Just to show that as long as thsre are farmers, somebody will think up a them, lust before election. There Is no Ideal form of government, i.t. airf rv hhml unless a Dlaa Is worked out whereby everybody can be a Secretary of sometning or a aepu.j D-aiw Alt the nemoeratlo big bugs are now running around the country making speeches, telling now um eii itrtt. This la not an "Ideal form of government." but It ought to be a pleasant one. it mey are paying their own way. It Is Okay, but If the country Is buying the gasoline, and the rr. tickets, the oratory Is not worth It. You might look Into this, when you get sentenced to the legis lature. tvi! mil f mint rinse. HntM the vain rtirin't eatrh Voti with anv hav down, and you had a good time at romona. 00 lAjng Ps i Let's not writ any more letters, V mum nT Editorial Correspondence CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 5. two questions: "What do you think of KOoseveiti" "How is business t" With the trip about over at least its eastern portion, we could count the out-and-out Roosevelt supporters on the fingers of one hand. An overwhelming majority of Roosevelt, have no use for the N.R.A., P.W.A., A.A.A., etc., eto., and given an opportunity intend to vote the straight Republican ticket. Nevertheless, we don't conclude from this experience, that if a test vote were held today in President Roosevelt and his policies would be repudiated. The reason is a large majority of those we have contacted have been Republicans, and belong to thnt class of conservative business men that naturally opposes change. They are what might be termed "persons", they don't represent the "people." There is no doubt that popular enthusiasm lor iwoseveu and his policies has waned. Such a reaction was inevitable. But our conclusion at the present writing ia that the presi dent is still popular with the American rank and file, and if a plebiscite were held today, the verdict 'would be to retain F. D. R. and give him a free hand to work out his New Deal program, during the next two years. 0 As to business, we have yet Wall Street deny that general business conditions are better. We have inquired of lawyers, doctors, newspaper men, pub lishers, hotel clerks and managers, insurance agents, garage operators, service station attendants, iron and steel executives, bankers, eleotrio light and power executives, a vice president of a laree bakine concern, the president of a nationally known bolt and nut f aotory, and a couple of automobile men. Every one said business has improved materially over a year ago, and if the improvement continues, they will not complain. On the other hand, there was no real enthusiasm over the siiuation and there was considerable scepticism expressed re garding the future. This scepticism is based principally upon ine sensational increase in the national debt, the fear that while business has improved, it must improve at a faster rate, if serious monetary inflation is to be prevented. Tf fflllr-rl nnnn to sum un the would fall back upon something "ftanornl tmainoqo finnrl it.innB business confidence, has only been partially restored.". While in Buffalo we were given a startling example of what this depression has done to some A great many years ago, we friend whose father -was one Their estate covered five or six acres in the center of the city's residential district and probably represented an investment of half a million dollars. In the there .were paintings and objects d'art, and tapestries, a music room and gallery which boasted a beautiful pipe organa sum mer house in the woods nearby which might have been mistaken for the Petite Trianon at Versailles in short every luxury and elegance that money might buy. While in Buffalo we inquired become of this family. "Jump said he. We jumped in and were soon now slightly rusty and the worse within I ' Those five aarcs were covered with houses, crowded close tocether. and oonnected bv drives, not only surrounding but literally ohoking, the original residence, in the center, which looked as though it had just passed through the battle of the Mnrne. It seems an auction had been held in the "manor house" that day, and oven the balustrades, and the carved oak panels in the musio room had been sold. The owner of the house is dead, his grandson is shovelling bolts in a faotory owned by an old family friend. So "from shirt sleeves to Bhirt sleeves" isn't so far off as an Amorioan Booial and economic symbol after all. Prom Cleveland. Ohio to Rookford. Illinois in one rump the longest of the trip, without miBhap or any inoident worth recording. Aa on the outward trip we escaped Chicago, just touching the outskirts as we turned northwest. The day was hot and muggy, far more oomlortaDie driving at ou miles an hour than standing still. Our return to the drought made when we loft it. The forooasts a month ago, of dire dis aster have not been fulfilled. Good rains in our absonce have roplonished the pastures, in many cases saved the grain, while the oorn fields look uniformly fine. We have already inter viewed on of t'ue chief rural ealamity howlert we met the first part of June. A heavy rain last night, had put him in excellent humor, for he planted a large field of corn and sorghum, only a week or ten days ago. This acreage originally sown killed and the cattle were turned planting. Last night's soaking rain at in 24 hours, will bring up this the pasturage on easy street for This ram may null me out" to make any money. I doni the state who will. - But conditions are bo much better than 1 ever thought thev could be a month ago that I can't complain Prices for farm products muRt in this part of the world oan be tion. I fail to see what the Roosevelt administration has done for the farmer. A lot of fine have been kept." (It might be noted that Winnebago county at the last presi dential election went strongly publican, about two to one.) ' sees Note in the press dispatches that Secretary Wallace served with a summons while travelling from Washington, threw the papers in tlio deputy sheriff's faoe. That incident doesn't augur very well for the successful progress of the administration's farm program. If the secretary's nerves were not on edge, he would hardly have lost hia temper in that fashion. And if his farm program were suooecding, hia nerves would probably not be on edge. sees On the outskirts of Chicago we ran by scores of flashy look ing road houses, fried chicken B0 cents, big glass of cool beer, 5 cents, whiskey and gin ten conta per drink. Aa far aa we can make out, there is even ltss effort in Illinois to provent tho return of the old timo saloon, than in New York. Here in Rookford, there are numerous bars in operation, the only restriction being one can't stand at the bar and drink. They get around this by having hinged stools in front of the bars, which can be used if ono desires. There arc also plenty of retail liquor stores, while drug stores, cigar shops and grocery stores deal in wines and beers and if they want to pay the license they can also sell hard liquors. At a luncheon club today an old time friend snid that for the first time in his life he saw a young woman staggering along one of the residenco streets, yesterday, with about seven sheets in the wind. She was alone, reasonably well dressed, and several times narrowly avoided On this trip we have asked those we have met, don t like the eastern part of the country, to hear anyone OUTSIDE of situation in a few words, we like this: havfl materially improved, but of this country's very rich men. visited at the home of a school of Buffalo's multi-millionaires. rambling stone Tudor House, of our lunclicon host wnat naa in the ear and I will show you at the impressive iron gates, for wear. But what a change belt confirmed a prediction we to oats and wheat was drought- in to clean it up, for a aeoond least an inch must have fallen new corn in short order, and put the rest of the Bummer. . aaid he, but I don t expect know a fanner in this part of improve a lot, before farming anything but a losing proposi promises were made but none Tor Hoover, and is normally Re falling down. No one yvcut to her assistance. Men and women fed and stared. The narrator pathetic Sacramento River pears, local market here at two-bits a box. The peara have an unusu ally brilliant color, rose red and pale yellow there being seven or eight in a box. We thought this rather early for Sacramento pears but the clerk said it wasn't. California grapes are also in evidence. The same clerk said the pears were selling better than the grapes, because the former were of good quality, the latter were a trifle green and Incidentally we never witnessed or listened to such a noisy Fourth, of July, as the one writer as perfectly childish and absurd, we nave no objection to attractive fireworks in the evening, but this early morning bombardment lasting throughout the day, strikes us as both dangerous and inane. We were surprised to find so few places in the middlewest, which like Medford, have prohibited the sale of firecrackers, etc., in the The family nerves were pretty the exception of the youngest. attitude toward July 4th is undoubtedly a siga of old age. On the other hand, how many of the noise makers had the slightest idea of why they were racket. Not one in a hundred we were not noisy enough already 1 Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatments will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can bt an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 205 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. WHAT KIND OF FOOD MAKES FAT? Even It one should attempt to out out eating aa a business or a social sin or a pastime or a habit and re- turn to eating tor the simple pleas- 4 ur of satisfying the demand of the b o d y for food, It would be difficult to obtain the proper food. All food comes from the land or the sea. If we used the food as It grows, we should suffer few Ills or defic iencies of nutrition. But when the manufacture, preparation, refinement and cooking la done, the product is altogether different from the original food, In many Instances. It does not entirely appease hunger, for the ob vious reason that It lacks elements that the body demands. And so one eats and eats and after a number of years succeeds In getting fat. Nearly every day some one Inquires with anxiety about the habit of eat ing raw starch, raw potato, raw car rot, other vegetable, cereal or manu factured food product. Far from being harmful, such a oravlng Is rather healthful and should be fully gratified. Kftt a handful of raw wheat every day; It's a fine health habit. Or pass up the sickly salads with their nauseous dopes or dress ings and take instead a handful of sticks of carrot or wafers of turnip or slices of crisp cabbage. Any of these Is good eating raw, and you will , find that when you choose such natu ral foods for a while Instead of the highly seasoned salads, your taste for and enjoyment of the flavor of the food Itself Increases. Thla Is much like changing your taste for coffee. Even if you have takon coffes heavily laden with sugar and cream for many years, and believed you actually hated the stuff without cream and sugar, if you will take only the clear black coffee for a week you will learn to like It In that time. Physiologists at present agrca that some fat may be formed from pro- tain food, tho m ordinary circum stances the fat atored In the body is derived mainly from fats and oils In food and to less extent from the car bohydrates. Carnivorous anlmsls fatten more readily on fats or oils: herbivorous animals and perhaps man on carbo hydrates. In man or other animals on a NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, ju.y 9. Dairy. Out to a spread for the Sultan of Jahore. who resemble our leading Jeweler back home. And through the park thought of "Coop's Coop" aa a name for Ryley Cooper's p e n t house. So Join ing my wife at a S7th street cor ner and to drop In on Maybelle Manning and Margaret Moor. Home and i letter from An drew Freeman of mm fering exchange of a North Cape cruiser for a weekly lecture on shipboard. On lecture and there would be the cry of "Mrm overboard!" Talking to Harry Bur ton, the magaElne editor, about our slavery on middle west garettes, but what fun w had I To Kitty and Measmora Kendall's at Dobba Ferry tor a dinner to Gil bert and Dodo White, from Paris, and among other guest Mra. Joseph Ur ban, Conde Nast and Maurice Fasclo. the architect. Nor did I know until tonight the Kendall ar th Ken dall so oft mentioned In Arnold Ben nett' Journal. Large estates on Long Island have what they call play-house. They arc bsrny constructions with the bar a the center attraction. Table tor plnc-pon, bridge, MaJ-Jong and, of course, a roulette wheel. The play house pays tor Ueelf in aavtng the wear and tear on carpet and furni ture In the more elaborate castles. Ons of the newer racket on Broad- way It the phoney restaurant. It la V particularly the latter scof regarded the spectacle as very small ones are selling in the sour. It s quality that counts. recently passed. It struck the city limits. "Bang, bang, bang I" much on edge that night, with We don t deny it such an making such an unearthly wager. . . . And as if America R. W. R. Brady, M.D. mixed diet, altho carbohydrate (sugar or starch) Is more easily burned to provide energy and warmth for the body, we know that when nn excess of food Is taken the carbohydrate is largely converted Into fat and de posited In the tissues as surplus fat. It Is In the cheap, plentiful, delect able and easy to eat carbohydrates that we carry our eating to excess. Just for Instance and perhaps to correct some popular misapprehen sions, let's compare the proportions than one-third as much carbohydrate terials in some familiar food Items: W P T O M White bread 35 Whole wheat bread 38 So-called glu 9.1 1.6 63.2 1.4 8.7 0.9 49.7. l.S ten bread ..98.3 0.8 1.4 4S.8 1.8 Raw Wheat -10.0 12.25 1.75 71.25 1.75 Haw potato 78 8 0.1 18 1.8 Cooked potato Same as raw, some of water driven off. Crackers 7.1 10.2 8.8 72.4 Raw carrot 88 1.1 0.4 9.8 Raw cabbage 91.5 1.8 0.8 5.8 but 1.6 1.0 1.0 Per cent) W, water; P, protein; F, fat; C, carbohydrate; M, mineral. Note that potato Is not nearly so "fattening" aa Is bread. That Is, potato contains only a little more than one-third as muc hcarbohydrat (starch mainly) as does bread and only one-fourth as much as crackers. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Flashes, 4 I will be 53 years old. In September and have hot flashes half a dozen times a day and several In the night . . . Mrs. B. H. Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for mon ograph on menopause or "change of life." The most effective treatment I know for this harassing complaint Is a course of hypodermic Injections of the hormone called amnio tin, which your physician can give. This has brought grateful relief In a great many cases. , Sarsparllla. - How about taking a weekly dose of sarsaparllla (double extract) for the blood? A. 8. J. Answer Sarsaparllla Is a flavor some persons like. It will have the same effect If you take It for the bones or the muscles, and so would vnnllla or chocolate. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note:- Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 268 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. opened with a flourish and the ex cellent food la-ao ohesply served It 1 packed from the start. When It h.u run along at capacity for a month or so, a sucker 1 found to buy. He soon discovers a white elephant. The promoters were selling the food be low actual cost aa a build-up for the gyp aale. Peraonal nomination for the most beautiful coiffure among aotresaes that of Edna Beat. Sutton and Beekmsn Place, tho.' fashionable strips razored out of tough East Side slums, now have a rival in what Is known a The Turtle Bay section, whloh 1 on East 48th street beyond Third avenue. Kath arine Hepburn's resldenc there add ed plume to the neighborhood, which consist of many old brick houses with Queen Anne fronts and walled gardens in the rear. Achmed Abdullah, now that Louis Joseph Vance and Vance Thompson have gone where all good wrttera go, I the only factlonlst In America at present to sport a monocle. Sinclair Lewis affect one only In playful mo ments, but Abdullah's ts worn with consummate dash and aplomb. On the other side, E. Phillips Oppenhelm Is a consistent monocust, as I Som erset Maugham. O. yes, Whistler wore a monocle. Katharine Hepburn, Incidentally, since her. M John Chapman call It. "ducking" in "The Lake." seems to be conducting herse'f with admirable self-effacement. In a national maga rJne she has con f eased she waa the victim of a too quick promotion. Her exploiters wanted to put her over In a hurry without the proper ground work. She suffered from auch blast ing cynicisms as Dorothy Parker's "emoting from A. to B." gag. atlas Hepburn Is an enormously talented and vital young lady. Her followtnn I definite and devoted, and with her sensible outlook I bound to be great ly enlarged. Charles Prohman, more than any 'other theatrical producer, was con- clous of the disasters of over -exploitation. When he mined a nugget for the etage h made Information difficult to seoure and the plan paid handsomely. His Mars never became window-worn. Bagatelles: Charles Dale of Smith and Dais, bom In New York, uvea In a mid-town hotel so he can watch traffic from windows . . . Corey Ford is in Alaska, fishing , . . Mary Roberts lUnehart has deserted her Wyoming ranch this summer for a North Cape cruU . . . William MacHarg, novelist, has deserted New York for his old home In Chicago . . . Osoar of the Waldorf breakfasta on plain lettuce salad . . . Mrs. Pat Campbell swooned dead away at her first puff of a cigarette , . . Matt Brush has char tered Roy Howard's yacht. Broadway's most accomplished heck ler staggered Into the flea circus after the theater and stood watching the performance with a spray of flit un der his arm. And then teetered out, the rascal. (Copyright, 1984, MoNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) Comment the on Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. NOTE thla dispatch from Washing' ton: "Slipping again Into the role of 'lone wolf," Senator William E. Borah of Idaho, Republican, started tonight on a one-man crusade against bureau cracy and monopoly under the new deal." itELL, the new deal has made one IT man happy, anyway. Senator Borah would rather be carrying on a one-man crusade against ANYTHING, not much difference what, than to eat when he's hungry, or drink when he's dry. THAT suggests a question: 1 What phase of the new deal. If any, do .you like LEAST, and regard as most worthy of criticism? Or are you among those who re gard the new deal aa a sacred cow, not to be criticised under ANY CIR CUMSTANCES, but only to be praised? There are such, you know. "TPHIS WRITER, speaking only for ntmseir ana not seeKing to lniiu ence anybody else's opinion, likes least the tendency of the new deal and the new dealers to lead us all to believe that It will never again be necessary to WORK HARD, but that all that 'will be necessary to fix everything that needs fixing Is to pass a law. YP IT were possible, you know, to I fix everything that needs fixing by the simple process of passing a law, everybody would be rich and nobody would be poor. And. before long, we would all get too lany even to feed ourselves, and so everybody would starve. rpHERE'S a lot of talk In the air aoout working less and having For Youn? Vacation!... May We Suggest That You Have the Mail Tri bune Delivered To Your Vacation Address Every Day That You Are Away . . . Thereby Keeping Abreast of the Times at Home ... p Let The Mail Tribune Be a Daily Visitor While On Your Vacation Medford Mail Tribune 60c A Month 3 Months for $1.50 (By Mail) more leisure, and In ever way en- loylna life a lot more, and doing leas to EARN our enjoyment, tBan ever before In the past. But listen: Every civilization that has fallen In the past has begun to fall about the time When everybody has begun to think principally of quitting work and taking life easy. SO LETS not get the Idea that nara, Intelligent work Is a curse, to be avoided If possible. It ISNT. Hard, Intelligent work, in which one becomes so deeply Interested as to hate to see quitting time come around, is one of the greatest of hu man blessings. Believe It or not. ' WE ARE TOLD, whether It Is true or not. that the depression Sas wiped out a lot of fortunes and made it necessary for a lot of people to go to work who didn't have to work before. If that Is true, the depression hasn't been wholly bad. A bl leisure class which means a lot of people who can live fat with out work never did any nation any permanent good, and never will. (ContLnuoa trom Page one) Butcher! went to him and nromlaed him the time. It was arranged for Borah to sneak on a national network on or about October Id. Plans means nothing to Mr. Roose velt. His Itinerary provided definitely that he would not go ashore In Haiti, but, when he got down there, he d cided he wanted to. go ashore, and did. One of the varsity brain trusters walked Into the treasury the other day and approached the policeman at the door, asking: "Where 1 the freshman team?''' The policeman did not request any further lndenttflca- tlon, but responded at once: "Room 80." That Is where Mr. Morgen thau's new freshman brain trust hsnga out. (Copyright, 1934, by Paul Mallon.) a The Brooklyn Dodgers went through one stretch thla season In Which they failed to make a single double play on ground balls In 14 games on the road, The University of Washington had probably -Its weakest track team In several years this season. The Huskies won only one meet that against Ore gon State. After IS years of pitching, Elmer Shea of the Stockton, Cel., state lea gue team this season pitched 31 scoreless Innings. The early Roman emperor, Lucullua is credited with having Introduced cherry trees In Italy. Just Call The Circulation Department, Phone 75 And We'll Do The Rest Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Connty History from the File of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 tears Ao.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 9, 1024. (It was Wednesday.) A visiting Callfornlan Interviewed aays: "The Rogue River vauey neeas revolution," ana is piayiuuy in vited to start one by the Craters club. M Helen Bullle leaves on a trio to New York and England. Carl Y. Tengwald and family leave on an auto trip to British Columbia. Radio la Installed at Boy Scout camp at Diamond lake. Rir.ri0M nt lfthnren and earrjenters continues, and orchardlsta worry ovor harvesting of crop. Unity Is urged among cities of the valley. Mrs. W. B. Blddle, Crawford Lem- mon and Fred Wahl subscribe to fund to keep a Boy Scout In woods for two weeks." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July . 1914. (It was Thursday.) T4rl0if. HllrfMH fllttlTM for the TSl- ley Is predicted by a visitor, whose name la kept a secret. First forest fire of year on Poor man's creek. A bill for a full month's salary for City Recorder Pose was allowed by the city council last night, though he took a 10 days' trip In June, with the militia to Fort Stevens and this was made the basis by Councilman Porter for a motion to grant & week's vacation on pay to all city employee paid by the month. The proposition was promptly knocked In the head. Kansas society of valley holds pic nic at Llthla park, Ashland. Bids opened for paving of Paclfto highway between Ashland and Phoe nix. Prosecutor Kelly dealarea "I will fool no more with lazy husbands. They promise to go to work, when in Jail, but start loafing Immediately they are free. Their wlve defend them, and then complain because they spend their money foolishly." ALBANY. Ore., July 9 (AP) Word reached here Sunday of the drowning of Dr. Archie H. Hogatt, about 45, a . Salem, Ore., chiropractor, late Sat urday In the Willamette river eight miles northwest of Harrlsburg, Ore. Dr. Hogatt drowned In an attempt to aid Jassalln Hockensmlth, 16, to reach the shore after she was caught In the strong current. The girl finally reached the bank after being carried nearly half a mile downstream, but Dr. Hogatt was unable to breast the current. , Frank Wykof f, world record sprinter, has resigned ea Instructor of biology at Moran school, Atascadero, Cel., to Ul- tka nhn.lj.al .r1ll..Hnn Hnarfc- ' ment at a Carpenterla, Cal., aohool.