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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1934)
! MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1934 TAGE TTTREE TRANCE 'JITTERY' E (Copyright, 1034. by tha Associated Press) PARIS. Oct. 30. France's (ears or danger from aerial warfare waa in tensified today by disturbing events In Europe. The funeral of the wartime pres ident, Raymond Polncare, revived the memories of the World war while the London -to-Melboume air race reminded the French of their vul nerability from the air. The whole problem of national defense was taken up before par liamentary commissions with ft dls J russion of the naval budget In the chamber of deputies finance com mission. There, Naval Reporter Jacques Stern gave ft dark picture of the future by telling how the United States. Italy, Germany and Japan all proposed to enlarge their fleets. France, he said. In trying to economize proposed trimming 20, 000.000 francs from Its 1034 naval expense, which, with Premier Dou mergxie'a economies, will be 2,800, 000 .000 francs ($1.1 65,000,000 ) . Fear of ft German air armada devastating France is hastening plana for defense. Maneuvers demonstrated recently that ft fleet of bombers could In vade France and spread much oi Paris In ruins. Defense fleets show ed themselves almost helpless. T. J. Enright, local attorney, was placed In the city Jail last night, charged with operating a motor vehicle while under the Influence' of intoxicating liquor. Enright was arrested by city police shortly after 8:30 o'clock, after he had hit parked ear from Seattle, Wash., on Crater Lake avenue, according to office ra. Enright was on bond awaiting further court action, having prev iously been arrested on the same charges. TO (By Arthur W. War nock) Special gratitude Is expressed, on the part of the Medford Gleemen, for the kindly co-operation shown them In their musical work, to the Jackson county commissioners, consisting of Judge E. B. Day, chairman, and R E. Nealon and Ralph Billings. Ever since the court house has been fin ished the commissioners have given the Gleemen the free use of the au ditorium for their rehearsals and business meetings. The courtesy Is deeply appreciated by the Gleemen. Of course. It really means that over, head expense in the way of ft suit able hall to carry on the Gleemen work Is avoided. The county commissioners realize that the Gleemen Is a non-profit civ ic group that Is trying to raise musi cal standards in the community and whose efforts deserve recognition and encouragement from an educational point of view. Thank you. Mr. Com missioners, every one of you. The campaign to sell associate mpmbershlps In the Gleemen, for this season, will take on an Intensive sale this coming week. H. J. Fleischer, director in charge of the campaign, has added to his canvassing staff the well known J. W. Kirkpatrick, Ernest L. Scott and H. N. Butler. Mr. Fleischer also suggests that If you are not personally called upon and want to do your part In this laudable civic work that you can get your Associate memberships easily by dropping Into any of the music stores In Medford. Pnone 042 Wet) nau) away TOUi refuse City Sanitary Service TONIGHT FOIID Sl'IN'DAY EVE.I.G HOUR Hnl ( familiar ihrme. with ma rllfl rendition. Symphony Orrht-tv Ira of vnir. Tonljrht'i tololit DALIES FIl.WTZ 5 to 6 o'clock K0IN T AS SIGNS LIFE TO SCIENCE WHEATMEN FIGHT FREIGHT BOOSTS PENDLETON. Oct. 20. upi The proposed Increase in railroad freight rates on wheat wu the object of a vigorous protest from Umatilla coun ty who Joined in a mass meeting here last night. Speakers declared an Increase of 3 cents & bushel on the rate to Port land would cost growers of Umatilla county about 9121,000 a year. Tne ranchers agreed to subscribe 50 cents a. thousand bushels for a campaign to attack the railroads' petition for high er rates. The eastern Oregon wheat league sponsored the meeting here last night and county grangers sup ported the action. PRESIDENT PAYS VIRGINIA VISIT WILLIAMSBURG. Va., Oct. 20. (AP) Three centuries old Williams burg welcomed the nation's thirty second president today, showed him six yeara of progress In its transfor mation to colonial originality and heard him urge upon rising genera tions the attainment of a "broad, lib eral, non-special tzed education" to fit them for the "change and develop ment" of present day America. Coming here by special train from Roanoke, where he dedicated a new veterans' hospital late yesterday. President Roosevelt was saluted and cheered as he motored by scores of Rockefeller-restored 17th and 18th century buildings. He was honored as no other Demo cratic chief executive had been be fore when he received an honorary degrees of doctor of laws, with Gov ernor George C. Perry of Virginia, from the 241-year-old college of Wil liam and Mary. E ON STOCK 'GYPS' WASHINGTON, Oct. 20. (AP) A relentless campaign to curb stock swindlers and their worthless securi ties has been Initiated by the securi ties and exchange commission. A successful Issue to the campaign will mean the elimination of value less and fradulent stocks from ex I changes. Further, It was revealed to- j day, the drive In some instances will ; eliminate or drastically remodel the , exchanges themselves. Some of the commissioners are so : angry at the situations disclosed to i them that they hud pledged con tinuous, and, Insofar as possible, an Irresistible cleanup drive., Snow at Crater Lake Nearly six Inches of snow had fallen at Crater Lake national park at noon Saturday, the storm having started about two a- m., according to reports . received in Medford. 11 w iv- v r ; ' f JSv , V I y i iy vv O 1 . Ir4 T!?' f 1 SRORXS SSL John C. Hawkins, 24, sentenced In Los Angeles to hang for murder, shown signing a document giving permission to Dr. Robert E. Cornish, Berkeley clinical experimenter, to apply his life-restoration process to him after his execution. (Associated Press Photo) EN FOLKS ALL GO HUNTING PENDLETON, Ore., Oct. 20. (AP) Uklah, whose 150 residents call each other by the first names, was the village primeval today, women and children doing all the work while the men hunted. It was the annual deer-huntlnj day for the men of the little Blue Mountain town. The hotel, store, postofflce and other places of business were oper ated by the feminine sex while the men, with rifles ready, stalked the fleet deer. Only one business place did not open and that was ft garage. Since no women wished to dirty them selves with grease, any motorist :n distress could be his own mechanic, hitch-hike or Jolly well revert to the horse and buggy days. TIRE TIE FOR SEED LOANS CORVALLIS, Oct. 20. fPi Farmers in seventeen Oregon counties have been given an additional month in whiCh to apply for federal seed loans. and oats has been added to the list of crops on which seed loans may be obtained. i The counties In which the addi tional time Is effective are Merlon Linn, Lane, Benton. Polk, Yamhill, Clackamas Washington Columbia. Wasco Sherman, Jefferson, Gilliam. Morrow, Umatilla, Wheeler" and Mult nomah. Counterfeiters Sentenced PORTLAND. Oct. 20. (ffy -Convict ed of counterfeiting and of passing counterfeit one dollar coins In Pen dleton, Donald Carl Harris, 38, was sentenced to seven years In prison and Carl Leslie Janner, 33, received a five year sentence when they ap peared before Federal Judge James Al ger Fee late yesterday. E MONTGOMERY, Ala., Oct. 20. tiP) I Samuel S. Leibowitz. New York at- torney, tonight held releases from all nine defendants In the nearly four-. year -old ScotUboro case naming his as their counsel In further trials and ap peals to higher courts. Hey wood Patterson and Clarence Norrls, two of the nine negroes njw under sentence to die on December 7, today again signed releases naming Leibowitz as their attorney, after earlier in the week designating the In ternational labor defense. The negroes were convicted In Mor gan circuit court at Decatur last Do cember of attacking Mrs. Victoria Price aboard a southern railway freight train on March 25, 1931. Thy Alabama supreme court has confirm ed the sentences and the next move in their behalf Is in the United States supreme court. In addition to signing releases, the negroes wrote Governor B. M. Miller asking that he "see that we have no more visitors from the communic lswyers." IN HECTIC WAY NEW YORK, Oct. 20. ( AP) The bells of St. Mary's pealed Joyously today as the brawn Gaels from California trounced Fordham. 14 to 9 and scored another victory in their football feud with the New Yorkers. A capacity crowd of nearly 0.-'. 000 Jostled Into the Polo grounds for the third renewal of what has come to be one of the most color ful of intersections! gridiron rival ries. Battled to ft standstill In the early stages of ft furious, savage battle, the Callfornlans first drew up on even terms with Fordham, then uncovered a vicious drive In the last two heats to take the lead and hold It. The Gaels out-rushed Fordham. 408 yards to 144. They gained 1 10 yards in the air to Fordham's B7 and completed five out of 18 aer ials against three out of sixteen for the Rams. Fordham gave the big crowd ft thrill midway In the opening quar ter. The visitors drew up on even terms with the Rams in the sec ond. Mattos, a sub back, shot several forty and fifty yard passes, but shifted his tactics when his heaves either were blocked or Incompleted. He stormed around end and through tackle to Fordham's nine, then flung one to Erdelats on the one yard line. Mattos took It across and Keran converted. Coach Slip Madlgan turned on the heat in the third and with Mattoa leading the attack, the Gaels buck ed, smashed and passed their way down the field until the end of the quarter halted them on Fordham's ten yard mark. Mattos flipped ten yarder to Erdelats on the second play of the fourth, for ft touch down. Melster kicked the point. Fordham battling gamely against the powerful St. Mary's line, but having little luck either with its running attack or lta passing, added Its last' two points shortly after wards when Mlsklnls, the Ram's big center, blocked an attempted Gael punt, the ball rolling across the goal line for an automatic safety. E PORTLAND. Ore., Oct. 20. ff) A stolen automobile recovered here was identified today as belonging to Gov ernor C. Ben Ross of Idaho end wIV. be started homeward tomorrow. Police salo Robert Leekemby, 23. and Robert Barber, 21. admitted steal ing the car In Boise, Ida., and driving It to Portland. The two are bound over to the county grand Jury on charges of com mitting five robberies In the Port land vicinity. An Insurance company report iden tified the car as that of Governor Ross and arrangements were made to return it to Boise. PLACE KICK NETS STANFORD CLOSE EDGE OVER DONS i .I. - KEZAR STADIUM. San Francisco, Calif., Oct. 20. (AP) Its power halted for three quarters by a fight ing University of San Francisco football team, Stanford grabbed ft 3-0 victory out of the tire today by ft place kick In the game's clos ing minutes. Monk Mosrrlp, Stanford's place kicking end, lifted the ball between the standards from the eight yard line after ft mighty Stanford drive had advanced the ball from the Indians' 20 yard line. It was the second consecutive time Stanford beat the Dons In the closing minutes of the game, last year's 20-13 victory having been won by a touchdown Just before the final gun. With less than 10 minutes ot play remaining, Stanford's drives be gan to work aa the Indians took the ball on their own 20 yard line after a San Francisco punt had rolled over the goal line. With Bobby Grayson and Bones Hamilton doing the work, the ball was advanced to near mldfleld where Frank Alustiza. Stanford's ace punt er, broke away around left end and dashed to the Dons' 10 yard line. Hamilton plunged through to the Dons' eight yard line and with one down left Moacrlp dropped back to score n perfect field goal. His prev ious try from the 30 yard line In the second quarter fell short. A desperate University of San Francisco team took to the air after Stanford kicked off following the field goal, but It could not get far aa the Indians tightened. A fumble on their own 20 yard line cost San Francisco the ball and the game ended before Stanford could knock at scoring territory again. RIOTERS JAILED PORTLAND, Oct. 20. (&) Declar ing their actions were "vicious and cowardly." Municipal Judge Long sen tenced two men to sixty days In Jail for throwing rocks at windows of non strikers during the textile mill strike here. The two who were sentenced wers Robert Stllger. 22, textile worker, and Homer Brewster, 20. a barber. Two other men, Ray Good, 21, and Eddie Spina, 10, accused of beating non-strikers, got a 30-day sentence for an attack on ft woman worker. A 50 CENT TURKEY DINNER will be served t FIHfiT M. R. CHl'RCII, TUESDAY at fl:3rt. Oood program FIELD SEEDS GRAY WINTER OATS KAN0TA OATS COMMON VETCH HUNGARIAN VETCH COMMON BARLEY BEARDLESS BARLEY HANCHEAN BARLEY FEDERATION WHEAT HYBRID WHEAT BLUE CLUB WHEAT BLUESTEM WHEAT RYE GRAIN RYE GRASS ORCHARD GRASS TIMOTHY CLOVERS Many other seeds not listed above. Come in and compare the quality of our seeds with any in town. You will find them priced right. We have a mixed lot of Vetch, Oats and Wheat selling for $2.00 per hundred. Good mixture for either hay or cover crop. We also have land plaster, sulphur and sul- phate of ammonia. Morton Milling Co. Jackson Street on Railroad BABE PORN AFTER RICHMOND. Va., Oct. 20. (API-i The posthumovis birth of a baby girl ten minutes after tier mother had died at Memorial hospital was reported today by physician. The child, weighing seven pounda and five ounces waa normal In every respect, aald Dr. L. K. Jarrett, the physician In charge. Dr. Jarrett said that although a similar case was reported recently that posthumous births are so ex ceptional that It Is unusual for more than one to occur throughout the world In a year. ALAINE'S at Noe and Savior's (II) No. RUerslde) Alure Permanents $1.75 Better Oil Permanents 1 $2.50 and up SPECIAL Shampoo and finger wave 75c Tel. 515 for Appointment MEDITERRANEAN ' AFRICA SOUTH AMERICA WEST INDIES CRUISE 96 DAYS JJ PORTS from NEW YORK Jen It EmprtM-LirtraHa A fascinating new cruiic... tfi first tvtr to circle eastward around Africa.... Fiva continent!. ...visiting historic Aiedittr. ranean ports Palestine, Egypt, Aiombasa, Zanzibar, Dat'Es Salaam, Lourtnco Alarques, Durban, Capetown, Bvenos Aha, Montevideo, the West Indies. ...25 ports in a score of ne w landt The Emprtsa of Australia noted for roomy comfort, ideal for cruising through tropic seas. Farts from $1350 (room with bath, from SS700) including standard shore program. WORLD CRUISE no DAYS Jj PORTS frem NEW YORK Jen. 10 EnqirttS'liritain 2 Span the world aboard this famous ship. Visit the Mtdittr eantan at the season's height, India and Ceylon in their perfect month. Set Siam, Angkor, Java, Bali and Chin, including Petping.... Japan In cherry blossom time. Enfoy the luxury of she, speed and SPACE of the Emprcif of Britain. Alort space per First Class passenger than any other ship afloat. Full site tennis and squash courts. Olympian pool. An entire sports deck. An entire sun deck. Fares frem $2150 (Apartment with bath, from S380O) Including standard short program. Set your own Travel Agent or W. H. Deacon, Otn t Agent Pass r Dept., 6t6 i VT. Brdy., BR. 0637, Portland J MEDFORD'S TIGERS The Medford High School's Tigers are on their way to another championship. Football as it is played in this section is more interesting and exciting to watch than many of the games played by university teams, due largely to the fact that the fire and enthusiasm our boys put into their play outweighs the greater proficiency of the highly trained college elevens. ' Plan to attend the games played by the Tigers. Give our boys your whole, hearted Support and cheer for them. They're out there to win for Medford. Medford National Bank MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE FUND NOW! OUR YEAR-END SALE Our Fiscal Year Closes Oc tober Slst. We must clear our shelves for in ventory. e T 'i v ftein l Everything PRICED TO MOVE Take Advantage of These Savings BUY NOW! BRAND NEW FIRESTONE TIRES Prices As Low As $3-65 Year-End Sale Prices on other sizes 4.4021 $4.45 4.50-21 4.90 4 75-19 5.20 32x6 H. D 27.30 30x5 Truck type.. 14.10 30x5 H. D 16.00 Western Oil, 13c qt. FIRESTONE HEATERS Hot water type completely installed, only $g.50 Thermostat Extra ANTI-FREEZE It's (Ims (or ANTI-FMKKZE In your radiator. YenrF.nd Rale prices F1HF.8TONE anll-frertF, quart 65 Super-Pyro, Quart 25d PURE PENNSYLVANIA MOTOR OIL In t lallnn containers. tal....Cc In A fallon containers, ai 6Mc In SO gallon drums, sal eoc Ford - Chevrolet Reline As Cfi A C Low As 40.3 MAGNEX BATTERIES 13-plate, rubber box battery an exceptional Value at $4.25 SPARK PLUGS 3 for $1.00 A FEW NEW ZENITH CAR RADIOS As Low As $38.90 Installed SPECIAL VALUE! i" 13 Ot. Can CLEANER i 7 Oz. Can WAX ri Regular Price, Both 1 fir- T7T.Tr, nninti 79c Polish Cloth FREE! Phone 620. Ninth and Riverside COMBINATION OFFER Firestone Specialized LUBRICATION and a CAR WASH Both Regular $2.50 Year-End Sale Price $j.95 Here's what you get Thorough, TUIitte wash Job. Firestone's famous Specialized Lubrication t'pholstery thorvuihly tscuum cleaned . (Hits cleaned . Tires cheeked, hattery checked