Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1934)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOltD. OREGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1934. Bedford Mail Tribune "C'eryoiM In Soulhirn Ortgos Rttdt thi Mail Tribune'' OaJif Kicc&t Salurdar i'iit)iiitifd tr ftfEDKOBD I'll I. STING CO. T6-3T-2& N. fir St. liUUKUT W. K1IIIL, Editor An Indepaodtot Ncvtpipcr Entered as setond dm Bittar it Medford. mcoo, noder Aet of Mart 8, UT9. SlbSLKiPIlUN HATES ttt Mill to Adianc Otiir, mw year 9 0U D.lii. td Boot hi S.I6 Dalir, or moDtb 60 Br Carrier In Alnic Mulford. Alb land, iviionrllin, CiiiUaJ Polflt, Pboacls, Talent, Gold iitil and oo (ilgimsn. Dill), om rear 98 0(1 Dalir. 1 months S.35 Dallr, one montii .. .00 All tarroa. cut, in anrancs. Official pf of the City of MedTorl OfflelaJ paper of Jdckxio County. MEMBLK OK TUB ASK')Cl ATEIJ PHfcHB Itetenlrd Vull Uud Wir ferric Tr AMccfcUfd Frtaa to wluilifly outled w (t ma for piiMlcatloo or all wtr oupaUne -rtdltrt to tt or othervUa ere-Jited to thla papi utd also to the Uwal new puhlltfied herein. All rights for publication of anecliJ dupatctea weld ve alto rem ted. "OfcMBKH OK (INlTKti PblEtU MK1IHKH IIF AUDI. HUUATJ OF CIHUULATIONB Adrerttna KMirMematliea M. C. MOUKXHBN COMPANY Offlcei In New York. Cliiraso, iMroll, flan Pranrlien Lot Anjielea tlratlU .'ortlaint Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perrv. Bandits last week entered a Mlchl irnn City, Ind., home and stole $63, 000. This ts a lot of surplus casn to have on hand In a home. If, deer season has been closed four days, and nobody chopping wood with a 30-30 rifle has shot a fellow cltlzen In the timber, looking tor a, cow, with a similar weapon In mis take for bear, cottar or buck. The Matter of Mileage COME of County Judge Day' friends are greatly Ineemed over the poison being spread in the country district against him. They are particularly worried over the grapevine report, carefully nurtured by hia opponents, that the county judge has improperly charged transportation mileage to the county. It is all right to be incensed over this sort of thing, but foolish to be worried. The same charge was made during the primary, but it didn't get anywhere. It won't get anywhere this time. 'T'lIE main reason is the people know Earl Day too well, to believe for a moment that he would make a claim for mileage, or anything else, to which he was not legally and rightfully entitled. A more honest and conscientious official has never held office in Jackson county, and the people KNOW IT. . More than that. The people aren't such easy marks as some of the politicians assum?. Many of them looked up this mat ter, during the primary, and found that Judge Day had not only refused any mileage which was not rightfully his; but in accepting mileage for travelling expenses "incurred while employed in the transaction of county business" he received not only what the law allows, and what other county officials received, but what the law DEMANDS! To make the matter clear, we quote the statute as follows: 27-3847. TRAVELING EXPENSES OP COUNTY OFFICIALS ALLOWANCE WHEN DEEMED ENQAOED IN COUNTY BUSINESS. County clerki, recordera of conveyance, , mm Mors, county Judge,, county comml&slonera and aherlffn and all deputies. In addition to tha compensation for their services provided by law shall receive their actual traveling expenses necessarily Incurred while employed In the transaction of county business and the performance of their official duties. County Judges and commissioners shall be deemed employed In the transaction of county business and In the performance of their official dutlea while attending sessions of county court, traveling to and from places of holding of court., Inspecting county roads, bridges and property and directing and supervising county work and business. The law does not say the county judge "can" or "may," it says he "SHALL." Personal Health Service By William Urady, M.D. Signed, letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dU esse diagnosis or treatment will be answered by lr. Ilrady If m stamped self-addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an twered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. Hllllam Brady, 80s El Camlno, Beverly Hill,, Cal. ABTIfMl'A AND EMPHYSEMA HELPED WHILE YOU WHEEZE HE most important position in county government is that of the county judge. His responsibility is great, his duties are many' varied and trying. Yet he is paid less than most of the other important county officials. Therefore he is allowed mileage while engaged in county business, and it is expressly stated that he shall be deemed em- P'0 in b"si"ess "mUhE TRAVEMJfc TO AND alibi that they thought they were FROM SESSIONS OF THE COURT." robbing a bank. whyf Nflt ony hecmifie t),j8 j ()ny fair am j11Kt blt something i, radically wrong. The 'because if it were not done, a county Judge living at the county seat (in Medford), or having independent means, would enjoy an unfair advantage over his poorer, or less centrally located opponent. In other words, where a candidate for county judge hap pens to live, or how much or how little money he may have in the bank, is not allowed to be used for or against him. IV HE lives in Sams Valley, or Bcllvicw, Applegate or Antioch, if he is rich or poor, has nothing to do with the ense. If the people want him for their county judge, and elect him, then the law provides that his necessary travelling expenses to and from work and while engaged in his official duties shall be paid by tho government he serves; and neither his financial resources nor where he happens to live, shall be allowed to work a hard ship upon him. Isn't that a good law a fair and properalawf Of course it is. And all Judge Day has done in this direction is to live up to that law, in both letter and spirit, as he has lived up to ail other laws. ... IN A desperate effort to get votes, his opponent has announced that if elected he will pay his own mileage expenses. Well, that is very generous, no doubt. But it is against the law, and if put in practice would really work against sound public policy. Moreover, such a promise made in an effort to get votes is against the spirit, if not the letter, of the corrupt praotice act. During his campaign, Governor Meier once promised that if elected he would return part of his salary tp the state. He never repeated that promise and when elected he never returned any part of his salary. The reason is plain. Such action is too easily interpreted as an indirect attempt to buy votes, and inevitably ats as a political boomerang. So instead of believing that the circulation of this "poison" is injuring Judge Day and losing him votes, this paper believes the exact reverse is true. For it not only shows the people how impossible it is for the opposition to say anything against him, or find any LEGITIMATE fault with him or his record; it shakes public confidence in the methods and character of his opposition. SAME HFHKt (Lake County Tribune) Folks In Lake view have more and bettor clothes than they ever owned before, they eat more varieties end better qualities of food, they own more cars, more radios, more Ice less refrigerators, more fumltue, go more inces, see more shows, attend more dances, play more bridge, spend more money and have more fun telling how terrible times are and what a helluva state of af fairs things are in now. Newspaper readers have started complaining they are tired of hear ing about the Lindbergh kidnaping ease. The gent charged with the !d:?,&plng feels the same way. The engineer of the tubular train that sped from the coast to Chicago Jn 69 hours, fainted on the Chicago depot platform, after It was til over. Jie would do well driving a topless Ad, from North Dakota to California before election day. An appeal has bten Issued to voters "in their confusion, not to fall to vote." Many of the voters will be so confused on election day they won't be able to decide whether to go flahlng, or play golf. The weather la getting wlnterish, but not enough so to justify youths in wearing three (3) sweaters and po hat. There was a lynching In Florida Friday night. Phess dispatches sol emnly stated: "The crowd swelled until In late afternoon several thousand persons were present. Political leaders Ad dressed the crowd to keep it quiet." This was too good an opportunity for a politician to make a speech, and he did not overlook it. No doubt they admonished the lynchers to go home after the lynching In an or derly manner, and not have any car vrecks. The esteemed Portland Telegram describes Its favorite candidate for governor, to-wit: "His feet are on the ground. "Hit heart la warm and In the right place." Take our favorite candidate. He has the above standard specifica tions. His arms dangle from his shoulders, and when he walks he puts one foot In front of the other. Mrs. Roosevelt At Funeral of Uncle T1VOU. N. Y., Oct. 38. (AP) Mrs. Pranklln D. Roosevelt today at tended the funeral of Valentine Halt, the uncle who taught her to plsy tennis and ride horseback, and at whose home she lived as a child. Hall, a top-ranking tennis player of a former generation, died of a heart attack Saturday morning, ag4 07 years. E L IS ALL IN Hetchy project, was hailed at cere monies yesterday at which Secretary of the Interior Harold L, Ickes gavs the principal address. CHICAGO, Oct. aft. (API The prove rn me nt today rested It OAse In the trial of eamuel Iniull and his IS co-defendants, accused of -nail fraud In the collapse of the I1W, 000.000 Corporation Securities com pany of Chicago. The end of the government's evi dence came with dramatic sudden ness as Dwlght H. Ctreen. United States district attorney, completed reading to the Jury the minutes of the last meeting of the Corporation Securities company In which It was unanimously voted not to fight .he petition of Prank B. Achoenman for I the appointment of a recelreT for the company. Herbert I. alctcslf, San Francisco Attorney, spent three years develop ing an unusual variety of petunlart through the ute of X-rays on thtlr seeds. North Carolina seasonal apple crop of 3,300,000 bushels la 87 per cent leas than the production of IMS, a state agricultural department survey hows. The 1034 KanKA corn cop, esti mated by sthte and federal evper'.s on the bests of September 1 condi tions, averaged only two bushels to tU ftcro plAutea SI FRANCISCANS GET Central Pt. Paper Endorses Judge Day We know Judge Day has done his Job well. We saw all too much of the oonfusion and experimentation of the Fehl regime and the differ ence Is plain to all. Earl Day Is a quiet, modest gentleman who Is car rying a big load of responsibility and doing It mighty welt. The voters should, not Interfere with such orderly, common sense ad mlnlsustlon of county affairs by putting In a new man at this time, no matter how much bull he may peddle about Illegal mileage and the likes. If Johnny would say less about aiich trivial things and more about his own record and capabilities we would think a lot more of him. Cent. Pt. American. In the earlier talks we reoom men4 cd Belly Breathing and vitamin A to them that suffer from chronic bron' chi Us, bronchial asthma, emphy. sema or bronchi' ectasls, Tn at does not Imply that persons Whoee breath Is short or diffl cult from heart disease, nephrl tls, anemia o other general condition may expect to get any benefit from B. B. or V. A. Urs. J. Meakln and R. V. Christie of Montreal, In a paper on the treat ment of emphysema, read before the 1U34 session of the American Med ical association, suggested that an Abdominal binder will relieve the dis tress that ao often accompanies the coughing In cases of emphysema. Then up spake Dr. Adolphus Knopf of New York, saying an abdominal bandage would be of equal advantage for asthmatic patients. Dr. Knopf suggested an exercise which is help ful for people who wheeze from any of the four causes mentioned In the opening paragraph. It consists of suplnatlng the arms end forearms and pressing them against the sides of the chest. In addition to this, the patient uses diaphragmatic respira tion rather than costal. Diaphrag matic respiration la what we low brows call belly breathing. Some years ago I didn't like very much what Dr. Knopf said About tho skimpy clothing of young women, which he considered a factor In the causation of tuberculosis of the lungs I expressed my disapproval of the idea In characteristic language. I was sorry when I saw how scurrilous It seemed In print, and I offered an apology. For I have always re garded htm as the very highest au thority on the lungs, and I still do so regard him. The kindly answer he mado to my note of apology made me all the more ashamed of myself, but It went to show that he was big enough to overlook small thing like that. Dr. Knopf went on to explain that the Improvement of the portal circu lation by dlphragmatlc respiration Is an advantage to wheezing patients. This term wheezing is my own, and not Dr. Knopfs. Way back In 1907, Dr. Theron W Kilmer of New York reported (Jour. A. M. A.) 500 cases of whooping cough In which an abdominal belt devised by him had proved helpful. It pro tected Against development of hernia. against vomiting, and against exces sive severity and frequency of the paroxysms. Such a belt la suitable for the patient with asthma, empy aema, bronchiestasls or chronic bronchitis. It la made of linen, 10 or 12 Inches wide, In ength 8 Inches less than the girth of the patient at the waist. In esch side a 4-inch strip of elastic webbing Is inserted. A! each end a length of eyelets Is sewed The belt Is put on over the under shirt, and snugly laced with a tape at the back. (For a child the belt is only ft to 8 Inches wide, and the elas tic insertions 3 inches.) The term diaphragmatic respiration used by Dr. Knopf la his own, not mine. I call It belly breathing. Even then I have to explain it to you laymen, lest you think I'm trying to make you breathe with your stom ach. Oh, yes, suplnate means to turn the palms up. Supine means lying on the back, face up. Pronate means palms down or lying on the belly, faoe down. Comment on the Day's News QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS nog Hygiene. Ia It objectionable to sleep In the same room with a large dog? The dog has A habit of licking parts of his body and then licking the face of a human being. P. C. D. Answer I slept last night In the same room with as large a dog as Tony the Wirish Terror Is likely to be. In fact he crowded me a bit for leg room. Poor fellow, 'he was lone some for the nice kind lady who makes such a fuss over blm, so T had to take him in. In any circum stance a dog or cat should never be permitted to lick the hand or face of a child or an adult. Even when petting or feeding dog or cat, one ahould Invariably wash the hands immediately afterward, before they stray unconsciously to the mouth and perhaps convey thither the micro' acoplc eggs of intestinal parasites. What tn Call It. When a person gets little shivery feelings and then headachy and dopy and then begins to have a sore throat and sneeze or cough and bleary eyes, what do you call It If there la no such thing as a cold? J. H. B. Answer Until you can find out what ails you, "Call It Crl." That's d laying fair. Send 10 cents and stamped envelope beating your ad dress, and ask for booklet "Call It Crl." (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dllle Co.) By FRANK JENKINS. TWO ENGLISHMEN, Charles Scott and Tom Campbell Blake, fjy from London to Melbourne, Aus tralia, a distance of 11,300 miles, in Just ten seconds less than 71 hours an average speed of about 10 miles an hour. That la faster than a plane was ever flown that far before, JUST about the time the London Melbourne fliers were getting ready to land, a new-type railroad train, built of aluminum to reduce weight and streamlined to reduce wind resistance, pulled out of Los Angeles over the Union Pacific's rails, headed for New York and hoping to make the run In 67 hours which would be much faster than a rail road train ever crossed this continent before. Were going tn for speed in a big way in these days. i Faces Death Penalty 1 ft . :. p:4 bit Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Oc Brady should send letter direct to lr. William Brady, M. D., 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cal. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre stride of those who have made life toe the mark. The sort that causes passe rs-by to halt and pivot. NEW YORK, Oct. 39. Diary: Came a Buddha Edison Marshall, the novel ist, brought from the cave of Chleng- taualng. So ca mming acrosa rvkfa.PVI town w - producer who J.iW 1 thought I might trZtftW . la?k ud an act or his play. But I know nothing of dramaturgy. And learned thla day of Steve T1I ton's passing, a fine soul. P Home to find , i Ted w o o d y ard :XJ had left some old mill buckwheat and black strap mo lasses and by and by A lady with an unasking air called and read prcse poem so beautifully I sent her to Harry P. 'Burton. Then with my wife to Ona Munson's tea to Ernst Lubltsch and on to greet Cart Belie from Shanghai. To dinner with Will and Jessie Hays and talked to George Longan. the Kansas City Star man, and his lady, who were taking a galleon ror Bermuda. And at midnight I began letter to Meredith Nicholson tn Paraguay, but decided to twist It into a magaslne piece, a Scottish trick. I vow. Thoe portable little 1-cent drink stands, with rainbows of colored bot tles, perambulating the East Side gutters, symholire to me the Ghetto's patience and thrift. I know two line elttrens, men of affluence, who began their merchandising career thus, fulfilling the East Side dream from Grand Street to the Drive. Many have reared famines rrom profits rarely more than W t week. The most lnxattably curious mlna I've ever encountered Is that of Ros coe Peacock. His passion for tne whj Is surpassed only by the Inter esting trivia he has accumulated. At lunch today I was trying to recall the colors for newly born baby boys, and girls. Instantly he provided this remembering rectpt: "Sailors don't i wear pink." New York Interviewers have found Henry Ford the most fidgety or celebrities. He Is a dynamo of un ceasing movement when facing a grilling. He likes a chair that is wobbly or has a swivel and Is in variably crossing and uncrossing his legs, wiggling his feet or fussing with his fingers. And he talks with the clipped-word breath les&ness ol a Floyd Gibbons. Reuben's as an after 3:00 a, m. roundup for the night-outers, con tinues to hold first place against most contenders. For more then lb years It has reigned. Certainly ful filling the catch line of Its slogan: "From a sandwich to an institution." For Reuben's began as a hole In the wall on upper Hroadway selling only sandwiches. The actory folk who want to be seen attract the occa sional stay outs who want to look. The Intimacy of the booths, the first name comraderle and other studied tranquilities Is a grand show for those who believe headlines make celebrity. In the manner of Peggy Joyce, Tommy Manvllle and the like. Bagatelles: Sid Solomon's coat sleeves have buttons almost to the elbow . . . W. C. Fields lost his en tire savings, a qusrter of a million. in a New York bank crash , . . Roy Howard has visited Hawaii three times In 18 months . . . Veloe and Yolande are the highest paid ball room dancers since the Castles . . . Oscar of the Waldorf never smoked until he was 65 . , . Mayor La Guardla doesn't care for spaghetti but Is a sucker for salami . , Sophie Tucker has the finest Individual col lection of perfume on record. Following a long drive Billy De Beck stopped at one of those gleam ing white towers to snaffle a ham burger. Lifting the Ud of the one served, he peered tn and must have registered disappointment. "Maybe you want It onioned?" suggested the counter man. That was precisely what he cravedl , (Copyright, 1034, McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) WATER TURNED INTO AT Personal nomination tor the most picturesque of the o:dtlme theatri cal producers Morris Oest. Two other picturesque men who incite collective neck craning when ; diversion tunnel of the Owyhee pro- mean sidetracking It Instead of kill EVERY new model automobile that Is built la capable of traveling faster than Any former stock model of the same automobile ever tra.ve.ed before. More evidence of our desire lor speed. THIS speed mania Is a funny thing. 1 You've seen dozens of drivers crowd the wheel all day, taking every curve at the highest possible speed, pushing the throttle to the floor on the straightaways, and taking long chances In passing other cars; striv ing In every way at their command to make speed and cut down time. Then, at the end of the day'a run. you've seen them fool away an hour or so, burning up idly the time they had worked so hard and taken auch chances tp save thus proving be yond doubt that It was mere desire for speed, and not saving of time, that antlmated them. Perhaps you've done the same thing yourself. Thomas H, Robinson Sr., father of the man sought In a nation-wide hunt for the kidnaping of a Louis ville society woman, is shown at his home In Nashville, Tenn. With his son and daughter-in-law he was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that .natre the death sen tence possible. (Associated Press Photo) nor of Oregon. As governor fc cannot only greatly assist the Administration, but he can direct Oregon's efforts for help In every branch in which the federal government oould aid. He knowa the ropea In Washington; he knowa who can accomplish the particular thing that la necessary to i be done. When he asks anything from. a department, or from the president. It wilt be granted. If It la anything that ought under any cJroumstanoes to be granted. We are all terribly concerned that the Impression may go out over the country that the administration does not have our support. We are all fearful that such an election result here, would show a lack of support, and work as a hindrance to the "new denl," which has for its object the helping of the "average man." We ask all of you to take an active, affirmative interest In thla matter. Each one of you has influence, and you can talk to your friends. Many I of you may not think you can do any good, but you certainly cannot if you do not try, and you certainly 'can if you do try. So In these few remaining days, let us be active, and help the presl- dent In every way we may, and in cidentally thereby elect the best gov ernor that Oregon has ever had, a chance to elect. Respectfully, Martin -for-oovernor Club, By R. O. Stephenson, mem ber of the executive committee. WHY? There seems to be only one answer that, as a people, we're Tond of speed for speed's sake. We like to go fast. YOUR old car won't go last enough to keep up with the new ones on the road, ao you buy a new one. That makes new business for tne automobile manufacturer, and new business for the automobile manu facturer makes new Jobs for auto mobile workers. It makes new sales for the auto mobile dealer. FOR TEN years or ao, automobiles keep getting faster and faster, and In time the roads w built for the old SLOWER care aren't smooth enough and straight enough to per mit the new and FASTER cars to do their best. So we build NEW ROADS Building new roads makes more business for the material men and the contractors, and that In Its turn createa new Jobs for those who work. TiH PLANES flown by Scott ana 1 Blake, tha Englishmen, are faster than their competitors' planes, So the manufacturers bave to turn In and build FASTER planes to keep up. More business and more Jobs. Communications Flight o Time A Question to Mr. Austin. To the Editor: In the Medford Mail Tribune of October 24, Charles Austin has an article headed, Milk Importance In American Diet Shown by Austin. Now, I would like to have Mr. Austin be more specific or more fully explain to the readers of the Mail Tribune the last paragraph In his article, which read: "Why not Oregon, my Oregon If there is a surplus of market milk this winter, the Industry Is largely to blame for it, because It Is hollering down the well." Now. Mr. Austin, you seem to think you have this dairy problem eolved if the milk producers will only take your advice and quit hollering down the well. Now, I was born and raised on a dairy farm, and it has been by chief occupation as a livelihood ever since. Now, Mr. Austin, if you can tell us dairymen which Is the biggest sucka., the state milk law. Including ihe Medford city mtlk ordinance and the milk dealer, or the milk producer, or the consuming public? W. N. CARL. "Farmer Bill" from Applegate. WE SHAKE and say It'e E SHAKE our hesds at speed, s dangerous. We laugh at ourselves because we travel fast and take chances all day to save few minutes, and then waste HOURS when we get where we're going. But speed mskea progress, ana progress makes more business and more Jobs.' So maybe there's A reason for it after all. 4- Ptand by the President To the Editor: The great object of the wonderful changes which the administration has made in our laws, has been, to quote the worda of President Roosevelt, to establish "greater security for the average man than haa ever been known before in the history of Amer ica." Unless the November elections over the Union support the president. there, la great danger, end certainly much fear amongst the people, that we will stop the development of these efforts on the part of the govern ment. The efforts are to make cer tain that every man who wants to work, can work at a living wage and better. To do this it Is necessary to match up business and labor require ments. One of the big things Is to establish a method, with' the power of the government behind It, to ad Just disputes peaceably between the laborer and the employer. But the administration's efforts have not been put forth alone on he labor question: thev have been out forth through almost every branch of industry. So too. the administration Is, In the coming session of congress, preparing to legislate for an old age pension system, based upon a sound financial basis. Thla will result In help for the needy, provided legally, and not de pendent upon what political party happens to be In power. The president desires the election of Congressman Martin as governor in Oregon. He needs Oregon's support and help. Congressman Martin was furnishing to the president great aid aa a congressman, but the house of repre3entatlves was overwhelmingly Democratic, and It was thought Con gressman Martin could do more iroori for tha administration as Oregon's governor, man ne could as congress, man. Congressman Martin was very enthusiastic In his work at Washing ton, and very happily situated, and having the support and friendship of the leaders In both houses of con gress. But he listened to the insistent urging of his Oregon friends, snd ao n.s term as congressman will exnir on the first Monday in January, when he becomes, with your votes, gover ned ford and Jackson Count History from the flies of The Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 rears Ago). TEN YEAR 3 AGO TODAY October 29, 1924. (It was Wednesday) Chief Interest In local politics is in the race for sheriff. Traffic officers start campaign for lighter truck loads on highways. Registration In Jackson county Is 11,783. Hudson and Essex autos announce sharp pries reductions. Henry Ford endorses President oolidge. Heavy rains flood Grants Pass and soak the valley. Tax levy in Jackson county Is cut two milts. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 29, 1914. (Tt was Thursday) Russia declares war upon Turkey; flood forces Germans across Yeer on western front. "This Building for Rent If Ore gon Qoes Dry" signs posted In busi ness district. Rain Is badly needed despite the showera of last week. Police Judge Gay warns doctors they will be arrested for speeding. Unless In cases of life and death." Jackson county Democrats "dis cover a conspiracy by Republicans to defeat leading Democrats." Republi cans deny the charge, claiming "w did not think of it In time." "Drama League" to endorse plan for coming season at the Page. Indict Huey's Pal ii ft. ' - ." "I T, . S . eV Abe L. Shushan (above), presV dent of the Orleans levee board and an Intimate political associate of Senator Huey P. Long, was In dieted by a federal grand Jury In New Orleans on charges of evading Income tax returns. (Associated Press Photo Funeral service will be announce by Corwter Funeral parlors upon thi nitval of hta eon. (Continues, t.om psge one) of the strongest In town. It will have a sympathetic majority In con gress. But Mr. Roosevelt will be far stronger with congresa than the le gion Is and he will have more thine, to offer the hungry boys la the house snd senate. He might be forced Into some sort of compromise ONTARIO. Ore, Oct. 29. -I API to pay it In five years "If possible." Water was pourlna through the Mg ' or something like thst. which would Political Broadcasts they promenade the avenue or other populous byways sre Whitney War ren, the architect, and Charles Dana Gibson, the artist. Each has the erect, enormous build of the Viking Ject today, but tt was foe construe nf l outright tlon ue and not for irrigation. However, no ei-aoldier should ly After some delsv In Installation of Any plans to spend his bonus yet p.imns. the water finally was turned " conservative need worry about Into the tunnel The water will be SAN FnANOISOO. Oct. 79 (p) San Francisco drink water from the httth Sierras today a 1100.000 'K0 drink for which the city had waited more than 30 years. A surge of water Into live immediate : candidate for governor reservoir at crystal Sptipc. markiAtf j oer the same station, ha will ts.k tie wiuic Uea of tin (real Hetchlat 1.90 p. m. Richard Newnerger of Bucrne, Uw school student And well known as a young writer for the liberal maga sines of the country, will talks over KMRD tonight at 6 a tn favor of Teter Zimmerman, the Independent Tomorrow. Warren wears the sweeping hat eno , t0 piKW1 tn(f b(in)EJ1 ol tne big canal so It will be In condition for the distribution of water In the spring of 193iV shoulder hair of the Latin Quarter His attire is the apotheosis of the mid-Vlctortsn dandy who used to breakfast at Sherry's window, lunch at the Fifth Avenue and dine at Dear Old Del s. Olbaon. whoeo mag nlMcentty shaped head won the praise .-f Rodin. I also of pstrictan mold He affect a high thoKe collar, ram bling Ascot tls and fawn-colored we--ut, Their silt it lbs triumphant what will happen to the treasury on that account Kilts A Cripps pa-wd away at 1,1s residence, 81 North Riverside, at 10 s m today (Monday). Most of the Insiders have been ex pecting alt along that Marrtner Ecc5 will get the federal reserve board chairmanship, and he may yet. How ever, some who live In the rnrifiea atmosphere ot tr-e htgheet new deal quarters are beginning to wluspr Mr Cr'.ppa as &orn at Columbus about the possibility that ex-Presi- Wis. June S. 18M He esme with bis kdent lw of the ABA may be akea family to Med J oca 33 years ata. to take tt Have Btst One Obligation-One Place to Pay One Small Payment Each Week or Month IF yorj have: a U of past due bills that yoo woaW Tike to pay ntf we can help you. We win advance yon op to $300 on your own siture and jeeurity do irxkror required. You will have but one obliobon one place to pay one small payment each week or month. Dont let your bills anmrnbti--don,t risk yw credit fcrt the money vno need from tn. PROMPT. COURTEOUS CONFIDENTIAL SERVKE. Oregon-Washington Mortgage Company P.rr 4.1 Smith Central. I.lrene No. W. T.. Thorns.. Mgr. BaavMBaaaaJaaibat -Itrrwaw skuas d