Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 14, 1934, Page 4, Image 4

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    PA'GE FOUR
Medpord Mail Tribune
"Enrysna III Soitntra Oreies
ftuu tht Mill Iilbun'1
Dull CieeW Satordal
PUiti) Of
UZDFOIID FU1NIINO CO.
I It
BODKliT IT. BUHL, Hits!
Afl InfepenJeot Nmww
(otsrad as ikodD U Blltef at Hadlort.
Okiod, win ct o( Marco , lata,
UBHCUIPTION RATtS
Bf Mali si AdraK.
oiuj, o .
Pallr, 111 Bombs '
Dally, ose Bouts
Bj Carrier Id Adranea aladrord, AablaDd,
JarkaoorlUa, Cuntrel Polot, rboeoll, Talent. UoU
Bill and on Bltlian.
Dall, one rear ?
Dallr, eU swnlbe ".IS
Dally, OM Boots .... e0
All tirn. eoeS In adieues.
orridti par im ati of Mastoid.
Official paper of Jeckeoo County.
elEMBKH OF Till ASSOCIATED PUIS
Mitn full Leaaad Wirt Berrta
. no AMceUtad Preaa k ueturiraly eoUUos le
Hit qm for publleitloo ol ill otn dlipalcJNe
credited to It or otherwise eredltad In lots paper
tad Alio to to loot! octt publlahed herelo.
All rights for publlealloo of iptdtj diapauses
oerelo vt tlw reaened.
HEMWiU Of UNITE!) fm
UEMBEI Or AUDIT HUHEAD
Or CIRCULATION!
Adrerthtnt IteprtttnUtlTM
U. 0. M0I1ENSHN B COMPAMT
Omtse lo Nev Tort, Clilcaio, Ottrolt, las
rraoetseo Loo AnfilN Seattle Portland.
MEMER
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Perrv.
Anyway, ths 6an Francisco Com
munliti, In Jail, who Ysfused to est
or talk for one whole torenoon, had
the right Idas, aa long aa It lsstsd.
Bavaral hay purchaaed new cara
with which to keep the aama old wolf
away from the garage doora.
Democrat ahowed up laat evening
In their aweeteat amllea and cleaneat
cor.iri, due to the arrival of their
gubernatorial nominee.
o .
Th! la the "era of change." A
Northern California motorlat backed
Into a awltch engine on a crossing,
Initead of using a Pordenberg butt.
THEORIES.
A little leaa for you, and
A good deal more for me
That la the rule of conduct
Wherever men may be;
While a little lesa for me
And a good deal more for you
Would make a new religion, and
Would prove the old one true
But men are merely shouters
Great theories they boost
And no one thinks of practicing
The ones he aire the most,
(Old Poems.)
e
The government has launched its
campaign, "for brlichter, better and
bigger homes," to rush back too, after
the Saturday night dances.
JOB. FOR DOCTOR.
(From a Letter)
Dear Sin Walter got to wear his
dark glasses only a couple of hours.
Ha was In our yard when Bertha
Backus, a 20-yeex-old daughter of Hel.
nle Backus, a constable, came up back
of him and grabbed him by the hair
and hands, turned him around end
hit him In the face. You see how she
spoiled bis glasses as she knocked
them clear off him. If you want to
make her pay for them they have
property and plenty of money. We
are seeing an alderman this morning.
...
Prospects for rain continue ellm.
Borne want to prey for It, and aome
want to fool the weatherman, by
talking about a county fair.
...
The new fell hats that give the
ladles "a surprised look" have arrived
The hats do not cost enough to cause
the "surprised look" to appear on the
face of the payer, Instead of the
wearer.
see
CANOPUS.
When quacks with pills political
would dope us,
When politics absorb the livelong
day,
I like to think about the star
Canopus,
Bo far, so far away. '
Greatest of vlsloned suns, they say
who list 'em:
To welsh It science always must
despair.
Its shell would hold our whole dinged
solar system.
Nor ever know 'twas there.
When Temporary Chslrmen utter
speeches.
And frenrled henchmen howl their
battle hymns.
My thoiiRhts float out across the cos
mlc reaches
To where Canopus swims.
When men are calling names and
making faces,
And all the world's alangle and ajar,
I meditate on Interstellar spaces
And smoke a mild seegar.
For after one has had about a week of
The argument of friends as well as
foes.
A star that has no parallaa to speak of
conduces w repose.
(Chicago Tribune, 1010)
SFDAlaA. Mo, Aug. 14. (API-
Horses of Chllrts Mccormick of Port
Isnd. Ore., won all awards In compe
tltlon for Junipers at the Missouri
state fair here lsat night. Her Hln
duatsn was first. Rusty second, and
Bachelor third.
Cm Mall Tribune want ds,
More Government Interference
HERE'S another case of the government interfering in
business!
After the first of the month if you want to buy a machine
gun, you must first get a permit from a federal commission.
Then, you must have your finger prints taken. Third, on the
already high price, you must pay a $200 sales tax.
Yes, that'i interference with the sacred right of the individ
ual and the corporation doing business, at they wish to do it,
and have done it, lo these many years. It is also regimentation
making free American citizens conform to certain rules and
regulations. It's a body blow to
e e
BUT isn't it a good thing for
We tTiinlr if is. W hslievs
Naturally the munition makers don't like it. They manu
facture machine guns, and have found them highly profitable.
What is done with the machine gun is not their affair, whether
it is used in a foreign war or used in bank hold-ups is not their
concern. This is a free country. There is a market for machine
guns. If one corporation doesn't make them, another will, why
should a meddlesome government interfere!
e e
ONLY one reason because
stone of the gangster's
last set himself to work, to stamp
abiding, peaceful citizen, NEEDS a machine gunThe rugged
individual who buys one hereafter, will have to be registered
and identified, before the lethal implement is delivered. There
will be few purchases under such a regulation.
e e
QUCH regimentation and governmental interference will re
ceive the approval of public opinion. Because it is a blow
PLAINLY aimed at violent crime.
Yet other forms of governmental interference, and regimen
tation, have the same END in view the elimination of dis
honest practices, and destructive methods, so that honest
business may have a better chance, and this may be made a
better country in which to live.
But it is not so easy to SEE that.
The Big Business Highwayman, the petty grafter and the
little chiseler, don't buy machine guns, to sprsy out compe
tition j nor do they go to work in
when they put over a midnight
distinguishing them from honest
So while an anti-machine-gun
jobbing law isn't. And it probably won't be, until the people as
a whole, see the subtle moral connection between the two.
Heroes
THREE C. C. C. men, fighting fires in the state of Washing
ton. VflarArrlnv vara Kiif-n.l 4a dftath
This shocking tragedy, brings into sharp relief, the valiant
work being done, throughout the year, by the members of the
Civilian Conservation Corps in protecting and preserving the
forests of the Northwest from destruction.
Although this has been a dry summer, apd usually under
such conditions by mid-summer the valley is filled with smoke,
until yesterday, no forest fires of consequence had been re
ported in this part of the state, and the small blazes had, thanks
largely to the C. C C. camps, been promptly extinguished.
Not only have the C. C. C.
trails, and clearing out inflammable underbrush j they havo
been subject to call night or day,
equipped fire department.
There is real danger in this work aa the tragedy in Wash
ington clearly demonstrates. But trBgedy in Southern Oregon
is unlikely for the C. C. C. work is so much farther advanced
here than it is to the north.
And the absence of wido-spread destruction in our forests
this year, can be largely attributed to the establishment of
these C. C. C. camps. They have more than paid for themselves,
in actual dollars and cents, in this direction alone.
Work on Wis undercroaslng near
Ashland, which Is being reconstruct
ed to eliminate a dangerous road haa
ard, la progressing rapidly, Lewis
TJlrloh, msnager of the local offices
of the National Reemployment Serv
ice, atated today.
The temporary track has been laid
on a new trestle around ths project.
and la now In use, Ulrlch stated, so
that exoavatlon can be made under
ths orlgtnal track. Thirty men, work
ing under the Coffman Construction
compsny, are employed on the pro
ject. The new section of the isr'i
way will be openm within t..
months' time, Ulrlch said.
HAVANA. Aug. 14. (AP) A Itrike
of Cuba's poatal and communications
employee grew more serious today as
treasury department workers, some
bus and trainmen and a group of
dockworkera threatened to Join It.
Dockworkers, who walked out sev
eral months ago and were later re
employed, were riled over ths arrest
of 33 Jobless companions, who tried
to force companies to take them back
yesterday.
Barrow's Betrayer
Receives Pardon
AUSTIN. Tel.. Aug. 14 (API For
lending Information that led to the
slaying of Clyde Barrow and Bonnie
Parker, the southweat's worst out
law couple, Henry Methvln, their for
mer crime companion, la free from t
Texas prison sentence.
Governor Mlrlsm A. Ferguson
granted ths condltolnal pardon, ,
MEDFORD MAIL
rugged individualism.
e
the country!
most, rtennle will Affrne.
e e
the machine gun is the corner
arsenal, and Uncle Sam has at
out organized crime. No law-
armoured cars, or wear masks
job. There is no visible way of
law-abiding citizens.
law is popular, an anti-stock
of Peace
boys been busy building fire
with a well-drilled and well-
T
LURES TOURISTS
Tourist trafflo on the coast high
way Is showing a tremendous gain
thla year, according to hotel men,
garage and camp ground operators
and others catering to ths traveling
public. Some places between Eureka
and Marshfleld estimate the Increase
as htfth as SO per cent over last year.
Hotela and camp grounda report all
accommodations taken many nights.
According to one hotel man, "the
tourists are coming from many east
ern states, Ohio, Illinois. New York
and Pennsylvania being especially
well represented. Most of them are
''r '" and expensive csrs. They
i :'. 1..C or-' i-i e-rn-ui, it!";is and
pay for t:..,. : ..ul a murmur."
The Redwood highway Is also In a
noticeably prosperous condition with
campgrounds well filled and eating
places wen pstronlred.
GETS SUPERIOR RATE
Rclwrt H. pychr,r, director of the
ClTillin CotiaerrfttJon corpa, InnpfctM
Camp Upper Roftuc tt Union Creelt
Friday mornlryt. The Inspecting party
included the following official from
Med ford: Major Clare H. Amutrotw.
district commander; Kerl Janouvh,
dlatrtct tiperrlor; Lieut. Doug!.
district avinpron; Lieut. oule, district
adjutant, and Jeeae DeWltt, district
ranker.
Prom report reoelred after the In
apctlon, the camp reoeiwd a rating
of superior. This speaks well for
Med ford and Jackson county, as the
entire company la composed of local
sperlenoed men enrolled from Med
and Jackson county.
Oet your crovlu at Hubbard Bros
li to 13 aL
TRIBUNE, MEDFORD.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
Signed letters pertaining to persona health and hygiene not to dis
ease diagnosis or treatment wUI be answered by Or. Brady U stamped
self-addressed envelops Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in
Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an
swered. No reply can be made to qnertes not conforming to Instructions.
Address Dr. WUIIam Brady, 269 El Camlno, Beverly II 1 11a. Cai.
BEWARE OP CLOSED CAB.
A large proportion of all automo
bile accident some engineer! who
have studied the question estimate
86 per cent are
unsxpl alnable.
What makes a
good driver who
la aober do a
queer thing such
aa driving his
car off the road
to crash against
some obstruction
or driving It into
another car to
cause a wreck?
Asleep at the
.Lv,..tl(.3.'Mi wheel? That It
probably a common cause of such
accidents. Z met such a driver one
spring afternoon, saw his car atr&ngely
weaving from one side to the other
as he approached, got aa far off on
our side aa possible, but he hit head
on Into our midship and smashed ua
plenty. "Sorry," he said when we
counted up the property damage, and
d Ivors cuts, bruises, fractures and
shocks. "I must have fallen asleep
I have been driving all last night
and all day today." Subsequently the
beggar swore that he bad tried to
avoid us, but we had come at him
on the wrong side of the road and
without giving a signal. When a
driver feels drowsy at the wheel and
finds It difficult to resist the desire to
sleep, he can save time as well as
peril to himself and others by stop
ping off the road and Indulging In
a short nap. After the nap he will
feel refreshed and alert and can con
tinue hla Journey in comfort and
safety.
It costa more now to Insure a car
on all forms of risk than It does to
supply ths car with gaa and oil. Un
fortunately folk of the stripe of the
wretch who wrecked us do not carry
any Insurance? They should worry!
This Is a free country.
In fifteen cities engineers studying
the question found that practically
every motorist Interviewed had no
ticed strange spells or feelings when
driving, which might be due to slight
carbon monoxide gassing. I have had
such experience several times, a sud
den sense of Incapacity to drive care
fully and fear of continuing In traffic.
At first this worried me, for I feared
It might presage something like syn
cope, apoplexy or hydrophobia or pip.
But the second time I realized It was
monoxide. Opening the windows and
letting the wind blow through quick
ly dispels the trouble. So now, no
matter how strong the force of the
wind, I ventilate the Instant I feel
even a suspicion of such a spell.
On highways In Connecticut In
mid-summer engineers who tested the
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK. Aug. 14. H. O. Wells,
always Indifferent about American
humor, Is said to have exploded in a
volcanlo fit of
laughing
at breakfast In a
Washington hotel
on a recent visit.
So much so that,
when hla waiter
stepped toward
him anxiously, he
pointed to a par
agraph In Bugs
B a e r ' a column.
And burst out
again.
N o American
humorist, with
the exception of Ring Lardner, has
achieved Baer'a ability to hide away
Innocently In some rambling nota
tions a Une barbed with laugh pro
voking T. N. T. that will rock the
reader. What la more he does It, al
most without fall, 39o days a year.
It has been so long ago that not
many remember that Bugs Baer'a
hilarity had Its genesis In sport page
drawings. They were grotesque vlng
dlngs and amusing but his metier Is
the unpredictable and cocke-eyed dis
sertation on any topic that comes to
mind.
Baer Is a strapping near-six-footer
temperamental as a diva and a thorough-going
family man. When he
can be Induced to alt at a banquet
board, his sallies leave diners pros
trate. George Rector once told me
of hunting up Baer on the night of
hla first arrival In Parts. The hu
morist was In longue suit reading
Splnora.
Bert Levy, vaudeville cartoonist,
was recently trundled In a chair to
a cartoonists' dinner In Los Angeles,
where he made the wittiest speech of
the evening, and was returned to his
sick room. For years hla whlstllng
rartoon skit was as well known In
Europe and Australia aa In New York
He had been wrestling with a st range
malady for eight yenra through the
sheer force of Indomitable courage.
He was one of the first men X ever
saw wearing a Vandyke.
At Llndy'a they were discussing an
unpopular figure In the Broadway
parade. Someone asked George Jes
wl'ii opinion. "It would take only a
minute." he aald, "but why waste a
minute?"
The cafes, night clubs and smart
ateliers once had a claay clientele
known aa "Cuban spenders." They
were the wives, sona and daughters
of the rich simar and coffee plant
era and nothing was too expensive.
Jewelry merchants found them bet
ter cuMomere. Of course, for the
mnjortty fortune has vanished. The
old regime Cuban aristocracy now
Uvea mostly In hrownstone boarding
houwa In the West 80s the sort
where "paying guest" droop on
stoops at night. And look far away
Tbs ulUow of John J. McClraw has
OREGON, TUESDAY, 'AUGUST 14, 193-1.
air In can as they came along the
highways found traces of monoxide
contamination In SO per cent of the
cara. They found dangerous concen
trations of carbon monoxide In 7 per
cent of all the cars on the highway.
In these cars generally a broken gas
ket between manifold and exhaust
plp wherever that may be, an open
seam In the muffler (must be Con
necticut cars have to have mufflers
even In summer time,) the muffler
pipe terminating ahead of the rear
wheels, or leaky spacea around the pit
accounted for the dangerous amount
of carbon monoxide In the car.
Symptoms of carbon monoxide
gassing from any source: Tightness
across forehead, or slight headache,
with flushing of face. A little more
causes headache and throbbing In
temples. Still more causes severe
headache, weakness, dizziness, dim
ness of vision, nausea, vomiting, col
lapse. Any time a driver or passenger feels
suddenly "queer" It is a good plan
to open wide the windows and replace
the bad air In the car with fresh air.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Tonsil Tissue.
Tonsllfl treated by diathermy. Doc
tor did not finish the Job. He said
the rest of the tissue was healthy.
Should I Insist on having them com
pletely removed? R. A. C.
Answer Why remove healthy ton
sils? Food and Hay Fever.
Please name the foods one should
avoid eating during the hay fever sea
son. J. K. '
Answer So far as I know, diet has
nothing to do with hay fever. Send
a stamped envelope bearing your ad
dress, and ask for hay fever mono
graph. Binge It.
I am a professional musician and
would like to find a way to remove
unsightly hair from the backs of my
hands. H. w. N.
Answer Singe It off, over a gas
flame.
A Nervous Relative, EhT
I am one of your ardent admirers.
Keep up your fine educational work.
I Inclose dime and stamped addressed
envelope for your booklet "Chronic
Nervous Imposition." E. O.
Answer I am on the lookout for a
vacant telephone booth where we can
hold a meeting of the nervous wrecks
or former neurotics who like my
teachings.
(Copyright, 1984, John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letters direct to Dr.
William BraCv, M. D., !65 El Ca
mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal.
gone back to the acne of her hus
band's first diamond triumphs Bal
timore to live. Perhaps the least
known of wives In baseball heroes to
the public, she was nevertheless a
keen student of the game. Many
Giant players did not know her by
sight. Yet she sat Inconspicuously
at Innumerable games and her ad
vice was almost Invariably accepted
by her husband. McGraw had at one
tme an enormous fortune but much
of It was lost In unfortunate in
vestment. There's no place so gay aa mid'
town Just before everybody arrives
for work in the morning. There
are the brass sign polishers, always
whistling at their chore; the porters
ad why are most porters bandy
legged? filled with sudden smlllngs
and bright greetings. Truckmen, go
ing by with early loads, exchange
banter with the sidewalk sweepers
and polishers. Policemen going to
their posts often Indulge In special
pleasantries. It's a brief Interlude
soon wiped out by the furious swoop
of later crowds.
Madison avenue is to bv a store
that caters exclusively to the pa Jama
and lounging robe tastes of dandles.
Every garment will be tailored with
pajama prices ranging from 913 to
950 and robes from 940 to 9193. Lon
don has several such shops. The
Increased use of such apparel Is due
largely to their exploitation In stage
roles In recent years and the Infor
mality of attire by hosts of cocktail
partlca. Haberdashers say the well
dressed should have 34 pajamas and
a dozen robes.
On an upsweep of Riverside Drive
laat evening I observed that a dark.
low-hanging cloud over the Jersey
palisades was actually the first I ever
saw with a sliver lining. "Take a
long squint." eynlclred Harry Sllvey
from a reur seat. "It may be your
last."
(CopyrlKPt. 1034. McNaught
Syndicate, Inc.)
s
(Continued from Page One)
business experience with the motion
picture Industry. His associates say
that, at a recent private gathering of
buMneat men. one told Kennedy :
"Now. tnke the motion picture in
dustry." Whereupon Mr. Kennedy
broke In and said: "You take them.
I've had them."
German circles here have what ap
pear to be creditable Information in
dicating that Herr littler win very
nhortly cut off his right hand man,
Dr. GocMt'j.
Incidentally, Der Fuehrer will al
ways herrafter be known as Der
Furore.
Cst Mali Itibuus tul sJs,
Comment
on the
Day's News
Br FRANK JENKINS
WE. LAMM, of ths Lamm Lum
e ber company, of Modoc Point,
addressing a Southern Oregon service
club ths other day, made thla state
ment regsrdlng business conditions:
"I believe ws have passed ths low
point of ths depression and ara In
ths recovery period, but I believe also
that recovery will be slow. It will
be alow for these reasons:
"Uncertslnty as to what will hap
pen next.
'Government Interference In busi
ness. -Stagnation of credit.
"Political and economic confusion
abroad.
"Widespread labor unrest."
UNCERTAINTY always holds back
business expansion and we
must have expansion If ws are to
hove recovery.
Business expansion Involves taking
risks, and people Just won't take any
more risks thsn they have to. If
they feel that by waiting they can
lessen the risk, they will WAIT.
IT MAY be, for example, you would
like to build a bouse. But build
ing a house Involves the risk that It
may cost more now thsn later, or
that you won't be able to earn the
money to pay for It and so may lose
It. And so on.
So you wait until you are & little
more certain aa to what you will be
able to do.
As a result of all this waiting, few
houses are being built. .
M-
GOVERNMENT Interference In bus
iness adds to the uncertainty,
for men with courage enough to go
ahead don't know what the govern
ment will PERIMT them to do.
So they wait.
BUSINESS cant expand without
credit. And credit is stagnant
stagnant being a big word meaning
"standing still, without current or
movement."
Credit Is atsgnant because those
who have the money are afraid to
lend It and those who have the abil
ity to use money profitably, so they
will be able to pay it back when It
cornea due, are afraid to BORROW.
More uncertainty, you see. And
more waiting.
IjOLrnCAL confusion abroad adds
to uncertainty here, because bus
iness all over the world Is tied to
gether. Ruin of one country loses
markets for another.
Europe and most of Asia are tn a
hair-trigger stats of tension where
ruin can come to almost ANY coun
try overnight. That would mean loss
of markets and disruption of bust,
ness for us.
So, you see, we WAIT, Walt to see
what will happen.
A ND so It goes with lsbor unrest
al Business expansion, as already
stated. Involves spending money and
going heavily Into debt. Peoole won't
spend money and go heavily Into
debt as long as they have reason to
fear that all they have risked, In or
der to expand their buslnes, may be
LOST because of an unjustified
strike.
So again they wait.
TP HERE Is reason to fesr unjustified
A strikes, becsuse of the obvious
success of unprincipled, radical agl.
tators In Intimidating honest work
men. There Is nothing to fear from hon-
est, sincere working people In this
country so long ss they act on their
own fair Judgment, but when they
are misled and Intimidated by radi
cals whose only purpose Is destruc
tion of what we have built up In
this country, there IS reason to fear.
The recent strikes here on the Pa
cific Coast have proved that.
SUMMING up present conditions,
people everywhere are waiting to
see what Is going to happen wait.
lng until In their Judgment the risks
are less end It Is safer to go ahead.
There Isn't much that can be done
about It certainly not much In the
way of passing new laws, for every
new law that Is passed merely ADDS
to the uncertainty. Ths most ef
fective thing the government could
do to restore confidence and atart
thlnga going ahead would be to an
nounce that It win do NOTHINO
MORE at all until we have had time
to digest and assimilate and work
out by the process of trial and error
the many, many new things ws have
already undertaken.
'fHU Is s young and vigorous coun-
1 try. Its people WANT to go
shesd. They don't like to stand still.
They uren't that kind of people. In
time, ttvlr natural desire to go ahead
and do something and get somewhere
will bring us out of this period of
waiting and uncertainty.
But this writer believes with Mr
Lamm that wh'ls recovery Is un
doubtedly under way It Isn't going
to come upon us wrh an overwhelm
lng rush,
We will regain our confidence by
the slow process of seeing that esch
month thlnps are a little riettrr than
they tre tht month before, anl so
ACTOR'S FAMILY WITH HIM IN COURT
JV I'-f'f
' K' fit
Ceorflo Bancroft, film actor, shown with hit present wife, Mrs.
Octavla Bancroft, and their daughter, Georgette, In Lot Angelet
court where he was a defendant In a separate maintenance suit brought
by Mrs. Edna Brothers Bancroft, the actor's first wife from whom ht
tald he believed he was divorced. (Associated Press Photok
In time we will get over our fears and
regain the courage to step out and
do something.
Harvesting of J. H. Hale, Elbert a
and Tuscan Cling peaches of the
Rogue River valley Is now under way,
and will be completed within the
week. The crop Is moving fast, and
la of good quality, according to Hor
ticulturist Lyle P. Wilcox.
Good returns are being received
from shipments to Los Angeles mar
kets, according to the county aide
and growers.
Picking of Jonathan apples Is ex
pected to start about September 1,
and Newtowns about September 15.
Wilcox estimates there will be from
400 to 450 cara of apples In the val
ley. A strong demand and good price
la anticipated, as eastern states this
year have but half a crop.
Picking and packing of Boscs,
D'AnJou and Cornice pears started yes
terday. The heavy flow of pears into
the packing plants will cause night
and Sunday work until the peak is
passed.
The tomato crop of the valley
started moving to the canneries to
day.
W. A. Gates, tomato expert, figures
that the pack will run In the neigh
borhood of 100,000 cases. Some dam
age has been sustained from "wilt1
and hall. Gates estimates that this
loss will run between 10 and 13 per
cent.
6T. LOUIS, Aug. 14. (AP) Two
prisoners at the St. Louis county hos
pital were freed early today by two
armed men who forced attendants to
give them the key to the prison ward
on the fourth floor of the hospital.
William Olln Perkins of Newburg,
Mo., held for bank robbery, who has
a br-ken right leg and was carried
down the stairs by one of his de
liverers.
The other prisoner was Paul Mills
of Overland. Mo.
Benson Studio Opens Sept. 1
Eve Benson Dancing Studio win
open Sept. 1st. Most attractive dances.
Technique for beginners and advanced
Visits West Parks
fV -
Arno Camfnerer, director of ns
tlonal parks, made sn extensive
trip through the playground srest
of the Paclfle atstes. (Associates
jress Photo!
Now I Eat
Onions
No I pft Stomarh
Thank to Hellaiu
TWt it en best wir to prove ttit ptomp
isrltftf 611 a fir. That is to try it for
jrourulf. Pcii-ani n perfectly harmleu yet
pripfi fempt re'ne fm in ever cai?.
SitKt 1897. Tnal it Drool 25c N R A
BELL-ANSMrf
OR INDIGESTION CjjEVB3i
Ka V,cA,j ' ti
Flight o Time
(Med ford and Jackson Connty
History from the Hies ot Tbe
Mall Tribune of tu and 10 Yean
8
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
August 14, 1934
(It was Friday)
Alienists declare that "Infantile
complements and transitory mania"
of Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb,
Chicago thrill killers of a 14-year old
boy, no sign they are not legally
sane, and responsible for their acts.
State experts testify both suffer from
"delusions of grandeur, and enlarged
ego complexes."
Civic club of Central Point will
hold a "social."
Applegate school to open Septem
ber 8.
Grain yield in Sams Valley Is abovs
expectations, despite the "drouth."
iwuu.un vv JJIUV1IMSU uy
Owen-Oregon Lumber company for
DC A. iniiiuua,
Oregon deer huntlrur wMnn im
closed until September 20, "rain, or
no rain," by proclamation of th
governor.
TWENTY YEARS AFO TODAY
August 14, 1914
(It was Saturday)
The charee atralnst Mr, p n e-Kai
for running down a bicyclist In front
oi MCBriaea store, was dismissed, as
the accident was due to confusion.
Thursday was the hottest day of
the year with the mercury at 104.5
degrees.
Belgians declare situation satisfac
tory, with German advance checked
at all points. President Wilson dis
approves of loans to any warring na
tion "violating neutrality of Bel
glum;" Russia's entrance Into actual
fighting expected to end war In two
months.
Many farmers protest establishment
irngHiion districts.
Tjnn T.anrfnn oi .
ww j.nea a ana
costs In the police court Friday aft-
U1 ,umm,K on a motorcycle
on Riverside avenue. Lawton's de
fense was that his machine could
not run less than 20 miles an hour.
Price of lemonade in the city la
increased from in Mnf . u
owing to the high cost of lemons.
wsiica now cost $11 per box.
KNOW
YOUR
ROOFER
PHONE 1
FOR FREE ESTIMATES
Big Pines Lbr. Co.-
DKPFNDAni.E BT.DO. ADVICE
EYE STRAIN CALLS
FOR GOOD GLASSES
Have Your Eyes
Examined
Moderate Prices
Dr. G. Gaston
EVE?lflllT srr.cuusT
I.lcened In Orctnn end
Haalilnilon, n.)
Main end Rhcrtlrie
Opiimlle lluhliard Bros,
fparts nine. Trl. S83-R