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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1934)
MEDFOHD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON'. SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 2."). Ifm. PAdE THREE BARBER BOWLERS PROTEST VICTORY ELECTRIC STORE Discord has entered the Elk bowl lng tourney In the form of a protest entered by the Highway Barber shop tearr. over the match Thursday night wnlch the peoples Electric atore won by a two-to-one margin. The barbers claim one of their players was shang hated by the "Buckhounds," degree team of the lodge, forcibly taken up stairs and put through Initiation rites which left him unfit for bowl ing for the next six months. The action of the Buckhounds was aided , abetted and encouraged by the Peoples Electric outfit, It is at leged in the protest. The Barbers have challenged the Electricians to a return match with a 8100 side bet and Captain O. O. Alendcrfer of the latter team has ac cepted the challenge, provided the Buckhounds feel the protest Justi fled. St iid e baker took two games from ths Strang team Friday night, Scores Thursday night: Hluay Barber Shop Baylor 153 J. V. Watson 157 Webster .. 139 Blerma 162 h. Strang job Handicap 88 189 149 200 165 195 131 147 190 196 137 88 88 490 522 465 499 501 264 Totals 866 1015 S60 2741 Peoples Electric Store Alenderrer 134 148 158 440 Gill 188 206 158 522 Olmscheid i 156 137 157 450 Boone 132 188 138 458 P. Kelly 171 157 118 446 Handicap 138 138 138 414 Totals .919 S74 867 2730 s WEED TEAM 33-0 ASHLAND. Ore., Nov. 24. (AP) Coach Don Faber's Ashland high Lith Jans scored a 33-to-0 victory over Weed. Cal., in the final game of the season here today. The field was wet and few passes were tried. Ashland gained 25 first downs to five for the weak Native Sons. TURKEY TOURNEY Ti Members of the Rogue Valley Golf club will continue competition today In the turkey tournament which Is being held over- the week end. Men players who started Saturday may compete again today by repay ing the entry fee, and many are tak ing away fine birds fo. their Thanks pivmg dinners. The , men's tourna ment Is a point-par event. Women members, will start a blind bogey, also with turkeys as prizes. at 1 o'clcck this afternoon. The women's ringer tournament, which will continue during the winter months until about March 1, Is be ginning today at the course. A. A. A. Made in Medford. Quits that will please you at 130.00 to $45.00. Klein the Tailor, 128 E. Main Upstairs. Plans Jobless Aid ft Nil STRIKING STUDENTS BURN EFFIGY L -V I if OF After engaging in fisticuffs with police, more than 500 striking stu dents of the College of the City of New York burned in effigy the figure of the school's president, Frederick B. Robinson. Student strike leaders are shown speaking before a student crowd In protest against the expul. sion of 21 undergraduates who demonstrated against a visit of students from fascist Italy. Note that one side of the double-headed effigy repre sented Premier Mussolini. (Associated Press Photo! I SENATE BLOC FAR ON SILVER ISSUE WASHINGTON, Nov. 24, (AP) Dl vergent views on the way to get more money Into circulation showed the senate, "monetary bloc" split In several directions today after con- ierences with Father Charles Coughlin of Detroit. Interviews with the three senators who conferred with Father Coughiln disclosed that each had his own idea for dealing with the situation, but that none was very enthusiastic about the plans offered by the oth ers. They were generally agreed on only two things that money is too valu able and should be regulated by the government. . All took Issue with Senator King (D., Utah.), head of the silver bloc at the last session, who recently ex pressed the view that the money sit uation was "satisfactory" and that no new legislation was needed. Behind jwrt WMgM (Contlnueo f.jm page one) ten billion dollars, they contend. You can easily Bee what the ex penditure of any considerable por tion of this sum would do to breathe the life into the thoroughly deflated and gasping heavy Indus tries. A study of the situation has Just been completed by the Social Science Research Council, financed by the Rockefeller Foundation. It has not yet been published, but is being used as a guide book for future government policy on the subject. The housing possibilities also are tremendous. The United States nor mally spent about three billions a year on home construction prior to 1929. This Item now Is down to 300 millions a year (one-tenth or normal). Mr. Rocsevelt's economists have figures Indicating we could easily spend upward of two billion dollars next year on housing. Just catching up with what they call normal requirements. The trouble with all these en thusiastic plans ts the same as the experience with alt New Deal help so far. Expectations Always out-strip realizations. As one wise old Jour nalist here snld recently: "These things always flow like lava." Don't expect too much. FLIGHT AS CIA IT SHANGHAI, China, Nov. 24. (AP) A red tide of communism, rolling slowly westward with General Chiang Kai-Shek's soldiers pressing Its rear, today forced missionaries throughout South Central China to evacuate their stations. The unnumbered thousands the Nanking government calls "red ban dits" were streaming Into South Fu kten. South Kiangsl, Hunan and Kweichow provinces, and dozens of Americans and other -foreign mission aries In the path of their advance moved to safety elsewhere. Missionaries also were evacuating posts in Szechuan province, further to the west, as Chiang Kai-Shek's rour-year campaign bore fruit, accord lng to Nanking advices. In the crack ing of the communist fountalnhead In Kiangsl province. Estimates of the number of the migrants, many of whom the na. tlon's mlltary leader hopes to win win back to the nationalist govern ment causo, reached 100,000, the van guard of which already has reached. west Hunan province. The missionaries, fearing Irregular, it lea as this stream of humanity swarms westward, have evaded its path and proceeded to pplnts outside the affected arsas. (Continued from page one.) ora filed in. led by Foreman Lent. "Have you reached a verdict?" ask ed the Judg?. The response waa Inaudible. A bailiff took the paper Lent hand ed htm. He read: "We find the defendants not guil ty." Crowd Sympathetic It was a blanket acquittal. A cheer went up from the crowd of spectators, only faintly quieted by the banging of the clerk s gavel. Some of the defendants broke out with "hurrahs." Some - of the crowd rushed to congratulate the defeena- ants. Papers were thrown into thft air. The turmoil pervaded the sedate trial room. But the senior Insull heard the words acquitting htm with no change of expression. It had been feared that the verdict, guilty or Innocent, woulrl bee too great a strain for a heart ai'. ment he suffers. Still unsmiling, he arose and push ed through the Jubilant defendants and attorneys to the rail of the Jury box. He shook hands with each of the Jurors. Lent, the foreman, along with trw rest of the Jurors, refused to discus the verdict. Juror Talks Strong rumor, however, was that thev had taken three ballots In ttv two hours they were inside the Jury room. The first was nine to three, the second eleven to one. and the third 12 for acquittal Another charge Involving the same company Insult's Ill-fated corpora tion securities company la pendluG against him. U. S. District Attorney Green declined to say what plans trie government had for pressing that. Before they retired to the Chicago club for a celebration, the defend ants made brief comments on the verdict. Mrs. Insull, waiting in her hotel for the verdict, heard the verdict by telephone. She said: "I am tremendously nappy over the acquittal of my husband and son.' Stanley Field, the famous Chicago philanthropist and an insull director, was brief. He said. "I am very much appreciative of thla verdict." Only one of the Jurors would com ment. "After the first two weeks, we had no doubt that the defendants were Innocent." -4 E PROTEST HITLER WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (AP) The United States revealed a fourth for mal protest to the Hitler government today, charging -discrimination" and continued "unsatisfactory treatment of American holders of German bonds. The note, delivered to the German foreign office yesterday by Ambaasa dor William E. Dodd, asserted the relch wan attempting to "cstnbllsh a new principle" In regard to debts. This government labeled It "lnae ceptablo and dangerous." An extended controversy with Ber lln has centered upon the treatment accorded American holders of German medium and long term obligations. including "awes and Young bonds. Thrte times previously formal pro. tests have been lodged against the according of more favorable payment term to bondholders of other nation alities than to American, Skld off lllihnay city police re ceived reports that Mtrjory O. Mie Mlllan. 37, of Rosevllle, cai., waa driv ing a car north on the Pacific high way near Ashland at 1 p. m. Satur day when the- vehicle skidded off the highway into a ditch. The car waa but ullsthtly damaged. IN LOS ANGELES LOS ANGELES, Cal.. Nov. 24. (AP) Thousands of Los Angeles street car riders were left standing at the curb today as a strike of employes of the Los Angeles Railway corporation was called. Early this morning service was In terrupted on several lines but as the day wore on the company had about 200 cars operating. The service was, to all outward appearances, about normal on the main lines, with most of the cars packed to the steps. The walkout was voted at a mass meeting called at 2:30 o'clock this morning in the Labor temple. Orders to cease work were given to 2500 street car and motor coach employes, Officers of the Amalgamated Asso ciation of Street and Electric Railway Employes, which called the strike, said 2150 workers had walked out. Railway officials said less than one- half the 2500 workers had quit. ROCKPILE CLOSED FOR LACK FUNDS PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 24. (AP) Big ones will continue to be big ones at the county rock pile until after the first of the year, and meanwhile the county prisoners will have a longJ ChrUtmas holiday. To save 15000 to take care of defi cits In other departments, operations at Kelly Butte where county prison ers make little rocks out of big ones will be suspended until after the first of the year. f . From Foots Creek Mr. and M-a. Vencll Creveny were Medford visitors Saturday from Foot Creek. They fov merly resided In Medford. Use Mall Tribune want ads. Dr. Frank P. Graham, president of the University of North Carolina, it chairman of President Roose velt's economic ecurlty advisory council, which It to formula to a 10. pomt program to protect the na tion's unemployed and dependents, MARRIED WOMEN CFHTAI5 the JJKW, AH-AN'l-:ii, prnii method for IVmlnlnf llrslrn. Hernia mm if4 tir rlnrlnr, prut fit bj ttnmfii r Tr ry whrrr vthn ne ll la prefrrtnr t ninini rim. $nfr, nnn-lrrltntlnjtt In Ipf ml?. I : v-t-llmt loo for )llaor Yaglaal Irrltnthm. 'irl 1HTWK tndar. May had ll ; Ithrr Jrty, Cone or I'oivdrr (ora ' MONEY BACK GUARANTEE j V;e- i i -"ft Store 1 CERTANE is SAFE ' SILVERWARE for THANKSGIVING Holmes Si Edwardi Sterling Inlaid Service for 6 J I j I Guaranteed fi t fi Service for 6. $1 .50 w . w mofoKo.ot $30-25 "Quality Jewelry Honestly Priced" PRESIDENT CHATS "EMPEROR" HUEY JUST BORED WITH EDSEL FORD, HFiR! nnnn wm iiLniiu uuuu ml 11 u 1 WARM SPRINGS, Oa , Nov. 24. v?i President Roosevelt and Edael Ford.' automobile manufacturer, got togeth er today for a business talk which brought "very hopeful and optimistic' report from Ford. i It was the first meeting of the Wo since the row between Henry Fof'l j and the administration over subscrih- , ing to the NRA automobile code bit there waa no sign today of hard feel ings. "We are very hopeful and optimistic about business conditions," said Fo.'d. "It Is certainly true In our industry and I hear favorable reports all ow the country. In stepping up our pro duction to 1.000,000 cars in 1035 we are confident we nave come-out or tlic j drbuth and are headed for sustained recovery." i Ford, whose visit here waa to per sonal friends, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Pearsons, of Detroit, met the pres. dent at the open air swimming p--o' where Mr. Roosevelt goes every dr for a plunge and some watr polo. C f Ml 4 -V 1 v , MYSTERY SHROUDS v. i4 feSSfV SLAIN CHILDREN CARLISLE. Pa.. Nov, 24. (AP) An attractive blonde woman, be tween 20 and 25 years old, tonight was taken twice to the room In a Carlisle mortuary where lay the bodies of three unidentified chil dren, found dead on a mountainside. She first entered the room ac companied by a young man. Both were well dressed . A few minutes later, obviously under great strain and close to tears, she was led In again. They were the first persons taken into the room of death for two hours. i I A short time earlier, police an nounced a mountain fanner told them he waa bringing In his sister- in-law, who la estranged from her husband, to view the bodies. He told police the couple had three children whose description might fit the girls in this tragedy. Don't forget the4 Elks Thanksgiving Eve dance. Wed., Nov. 28, for Elks and their Invited guests. As Senator Huey Long's 44 "share-the-wealth" bills passed the houee of Louisiana's legislature, the "klngfish" was ao unconcerned that he lapsed Into boredom at the speaker's dais, and buried hit thoughts In a newspaper. (Associated Press Photo INDIANAPOLIS. Nov. 24. (AP) A legislative program embracing four major points. Including Im mediate payment of veterans' ad Justed certificates, waa approved here today by the national execu tive committee of the American Legion. Mapped out by the legislative committee, the four major legisla tive objectives of the Legion are : Legislation providing for immedi ate cash payment of adjusted serv ice certificates as a part of the ad ministration's relief and recovery program. Assurance that at no time shall widows or dependent children of deceased veterans be without gov ernment protection. Laws carrying out the Legion plan for unlveranl Bcrvlce in time of w-ar. including conscription of capital, In dustry and man power, to be used for the service of the nation with out special preference or profit. Provision for fulfillment of the Legion's recommendations for nat ional defense, including the military, naval and aeronautic branches, GILINSKY SHINES IN GONZAGA GRID GAME GONZAOA UNIVERSITY, Spokane, Wash. (Spec.) Although along with the rest of the regulars he was off ths bench only enough for a brie work out. Max Olllnsky, sensational back continued his brilliant all round work as the Qonzaga Frosh easily routed Whltworth college 58-0. The VeranllIB 155 pound Medford boy sprinted 70 ynrcla off tackle for a score the first time he carried the ball, threw four passes all completed, one for' a touchdown, and booted two conversions out of two trys, as the strong toy Bulldogs continued their undefeated march. Don't forget the Elks Thanksgiving Eve dance, Wed., Nov. 28, for Elks and their Invited guests. YALE EXPEDITION UNEARTHS TEMPLE OF ROMAN DIETY NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 24. (AP) The discovery In Dura "The Pompel of the Euphrates," of a temple dedi cated to the great Perslon god Mith ras most Important deity of the Ro man army, was announced today by Yale university which, with th French academy. Is excavating the ancient city. The seventh year of excavating Dura also brought to light a Roman temple to Zeua and a temple to the Phoenician god, Adonis, and his eon sort, Astrate. the first discovered tem ples of the deities. A head of Astarte the Goddes of Love, with two doves on her shoul ders, was discovered in the ruins. Dr. Michael I. Rostovtzeff, sterling professor of ancient history and clas sical archaeology, said: "The moat important discovery of the sanctuary of Mithras cannot be exaggerated. "Mithras was the greatest of ths rivals of Christ In the third century A. D." The temple of Mithras was found excellently preserved, Rostovtzeff, one of the scientific directors of the ei pedltlon, said. BEATEN TO DEATH SAN QUENTIN. Calif., Nov. 34. (AP) Striking with the swift fer ocity of a wild animal, a Ban Quentln prison negro convict beat and kicked another to death today In the big yard because of what authorities said was a d la puts over a college football game. Oregon Fuel Code WASHINGTON, Nov. 24. (AP) The NRA today approved for a 60 day period a schedule of "reason able costs" for the handling of coal, wood and sawdust at retail In sev eral Washington and Oregon trad areas. lilts Trailer Reports filed with city police Indicated that a car driven oy W. A. Scott. 32, of Jacksonville, ran Into a trailer on tha JacksonvlUa highway at Bybee corner Saturday evening, in a minor accident, Th trailer and accompanying truck wera reported to be owned by Alfred Ash ley, also of Jacksonville. N f .f - ...... WlLMt ' ashday Lines her yard a ' - i ;; ; 11 ' ' ' .: - ' DAMP WASH the new home washing service takes washday out of her home off of her mind MOTHER LOOKS 50 010 TONIGHT, I'M WORRIED ABOUT HER. SHE AlWAYS 100KS THAT WAY 011 WASHDAY. COMtON ... LIT'S PUT ou FOOT DOWN AND MAKE HIR SEND THE WASHING TO THE IAUNDAY and it only costs for Each POUND LC Additional Pound BUNDLE : mmks ' TF you're on of those women who is slaving away, doing the washing ev ery week, better stop and see whether you're "doing right" by yourself being a washday drudge. And here's the way to do it. After the clothes are on the line drag yourself to the mirror take a good look at your face. Don't be shocked when you see the tired lines around your month tho circles under your eyes. Remember you put them there yourself when you were doing the washing. And if you think you're saving money doing this menial work making yourself old before your time that's another big mistake. For with Damp Wash the wonderful new home washing service you actually spend less hav ing your washing done by the laundry. Give yourself a beauty treatment with, Damp Wash MEDFORD DOMESTIC LAUND1R Today thousands of women In this town are making washday their "play day." These women take one day every week to enjoy themselves do the things they want to do. And that's what you'd better do if you want to "keep young and beautiful." For Damp Wash is really a beauty treat ment for your clothes a beauty treatment for you. Phone and tell us which day you want us to call for your bundle. We'll wash your clothes, thoroughly, carefully, in rich, foamy suds of purest soap. We'll rinse them in gallons and gallons of sparkling clear, rain-soft water. We'll return them ready to iron. And think of this. You'll only have to pay 62 cents for a big 13-pound bundle, and 4 cents for each additional pound. Isn't that enough to make yon get washday out of your home right now? Of course it is!