The Weather
Forecast: Fair tonight and Saturday;
somen hat cooler Saturday.
Temperature
H1ffltet yesterday B7
Lowest tills morning - 60
1EDF0KD' MAIL TRIBUNE
It's Vacation Time
Hare the Matl Tribune follow yoa
on your e mmer vacation. Better
than a letter from home. Telephone
1& or drop a postal firing your old
and new address.
E
Thirtieth Year
(Eighteen Pages Two Sections)
MEDFORD, 01? EG ON, FRIDAY, JULY 39, 1935.
No. 101.
jnJ L
S)
1
Atevs ilDENIALOFCOIN 'I ufe in prison IBANKS finNSPlRAHY;
Wml CAUSES ACTION f DECLARES MOODY
",n" ' "" " ' l 1
By PALL MALLON
(Copyright. 1935, by Paul Mallon.)
WASHINGTON. July 19. New deal
era In the higher altitudes here have
tittered for week about the my they
took a e n e r a, 1
Johnson In as
works progress
administrator for
New York, it
seems that, after
leaving NBA. tl-.e
general got un
der the hide of
Belief Boss Hop
kins (lf not ako
the President
himself) by go
ing around the
country bellow-
PAUL MALLON
boondogcllng In the relief adminis
tration.
The boys on the Inside say It cvas
Mr. Hopkins who conceived the Idea
of shutting up his critic by absorb
ing him. Mr. Hopkins went to the
President and urged that Johnson be
recalled to the colors and put In
charge of the world's largest boon
doggling center. New York City.
The general swallowed the bait and
landed In New York to show those
fellows up there how to administer
relief.
It was not long until Johnson Im
plied that perhaps some boondoggling
was necessary. At any rate, ho an
nounced that, as some planning had
already been mapped out, he would
not attempt to do It all over. Ills
fate as a boondoggling kibitzer was
not definitely established, however,
until the list of New York City pro
jects approved by Mr. Roosevelt was
given out. Since then, tho sleeve
laughing hero has been concealed
with difficulty.
As an Indication of what General
Johnson lias found to be a good re
lief project (with the president's ap
proval), his list contains an Hem of
31,600 "to furnish recreational lead
ership" for nurses and Internes In
hospitals. Formerly some new dealers
hsd assumed the nurses and Internes
were having a fairly good time. In
fact, certain hospital critics have In
sinuated occasionally that ihey wero
having too good a time. However,
anything that was lacking before can
certainly be made up with the 31,
500. Most of the projects are . designed,
however, to disclose Information for
which the world long has panted In
suspense. For Instance, there Is 7.
350 to Investigate the title of old
streets and highways In Queens;
$130,000 for preparation of a subter
ranean map showing the contour of
rocks under the city, to show what
Is holding It up; 29.400 for a card
history of every lot tn Queens; 527.
750 to determine the effect that
buses have on the speed of passen
ger transportation; $34,650 for an in
dex digest of all aeronautical maga
r.lnes; $44,100 to "mobilize neighbor
hood resources for the promotion of
wholesome behavior among children."
Do not let anyone tell you that
the new deal has forgotten the sup
reme court defeat It suffered In the
Schechter Poultry case. Johnson's
new boondoggling Includes $178,500
"to investigate the entire live poul
try Industry In New York city."
If you look into Johnson's list
very closely you will find some other
relief projects which are badly need
ed. For instance, the first Item Is
$208,680 to find out what Is In the
air In New York. Visitors have oc-
(Conllnued on Page Nine)
SIDE GLANCES
by
TRIBUNE REPORTERS
Passersby eyeing speculatively the
boat in front of a rummace sale with
a closed lid. but open hasp, carry
ing this Inscription: "Don't let the
monkey out." Very provocative and
maddening to the r,mll boys.
A long tan California touring car
standing in ther middle of Central
street near Main, the motor running
briskly, and not a soul aboard, or
near, excepting Irate, honking mo
torists trying to get by.
Roily Beach giving a reporter
reams of information about the
Dokte meet Monday, and making
t.e discourse so long Decausc men j
It wouiu mens .irounii, "is
of a "local" rating.
Roy Craft relating out of one aide
of his mouth about how he iwd to
roll cigarettes with one hand while
riding on a freight tram In a htgn
wind, and out of tlie other fide de
manding the fan be turned off so
he could get tiie one he waa work
ing on wrapped.
Earl Foy nonchalantly flicking
ashes Into a full waste basket in
different of rrul:s until he flia
fcvered h;s hv hat ftb.v.i', u go up
in fames a:ng with trie waste
Is'''' j
" -4
Suit in Supreme Court Is
Planned to Test Govern
ment Rights to Set Up
Bureaus in States Is Word
WASHINGTON, July 19. (AP)
Senator Long (D., La.), today served
notice on the administration that a
suit would be filed In the supreme
court to test the right of the federal
government to enter into states with
educational and other bureaus for ex
penditure of PWA money without
consent of the state.
Taking the floor during debate on
the AAA bill to "talk on the Issue of
the day," Long referred to news re
ports saying his state had been de
nied further PWA grants, and com
mented It served to let the cntl
Long congressmen from that state
know they would not "get their 30
pieces of sliver."
After a brief discussion of the
amendment that Louisiana would re
ceive no further PWA grants because
of recently enacted state laws. Long
said:
"I have been advised that Loufsl
ana will file a suit In the supreme
court which it will win to contest
the right of the federal government
to set up boards within a state with
out Its consent."
W. U. FINED $500
FOR DELIVERING
PROTEST 'WIRES'
CHELSEA, Mass., July 10. (AP)
The Western Union Telegraph com
pany of New York today was held In
contempt of court and ordered to
pay a fine for "publishing and de
livering" telegrams of protest to the
district court affecting cases involv
ing alleged radical pending before
It.
Telegrams from the New Theater
league In New York, from an Ameri
can youth congress in Cambridge,
Mass., and from organizations In
Chelsea concerning an actor and a
Chelsea resident arrested at differ
ent times several weeks ago formed
the basla on which Judge Samuel It.
CutLer summoned the company Into
court.
The various telegrams alleged the
defendants were held on "framed"
or "trumped up" charges and de
manded their release.
SALEM. July 19. (AP) Concen
tration of more state departments
In Salem rather than construction of
a proposed state office building in
Eastslda Portland was urged by Gov
ernor Martin In the state board of
control meeting today.
The subject was brought up when
a report for such a project showed
a saving of about $300 a month In
rentals. The branch state office
building would house the motor ve
hicle department, the state police ana
other departments. Whether the
board would approve the project was
not determined.
The board, however, did Instruct
Dan Fry, secretary to the board, to
prepare briefs showing the cost of
the proposed structure, present rent
als now paid In Portland and other
data. The proposal to erect the
building was presented by the East
Portland Commercial club. Fry in
formed that leases on the Oregon
building, in which a large number
of departments are boused, would not
expire for three years.
STREET CAR EMPLOYE
FIRES UPON ST
COUNCIL BLUFFS. la.. July 19.
(AP) Two persons were reported
1 wounded by gunfire from a non
' striking street car employe drfend
ing himself aaln&t a crowd of plck-
cts st the Council Bluffs Street car
f barn early today.
First reports said six shots were
fired by the tram worker as he raced
i from his automobile to the car barn,
! and James Damson and Richard Stev
c;..'o:i. strikers, frlj mounded.
Part of tiie Red Sf ip kr.ujwi as.
foul bay it's on the Egyptian slcic
MARTIN IN FAVOR
RETAINING STATE
BUREAUS IN SALEM
DETROIT, July 19. (AP) Morton
Ward Goodrich brought his trial for
the murder of 11-year-old Lillian
Gallaher to an abrupt end today by
pleading guilty.
Pale and trembling, the one-time
trap drummer in beer garden orches
tras stood before Recorder's Judge
Henry S. Sweeney a sentence of life
Imprisonment at hard labor tn the
Marquette branch prison was Im
posed. REED WILL FACE
BURGLARY TRIAL
IF
Shasta county. California, through
Its ahcrlff, W. W. Sublett. haa filed
a hold warrant, charging burglary
against Albert W. Reed of Denver,
Colo., serving a life sentence In state
prison for conviction of the murder
of Victor Knott, Ashland policeman,
on the night of November 18, 1PJ2.
Notification of the action of the
California authorities has been served
upon the warden of the state prison,
and District Attorney Georg'j A. Cod
ding of Jackson county.
Paul McQuade and Lee Jackson,
fugitives. Indicted with Reed, In this
county for the murder of Knott,
are also named In the California
hold warrant for burglary. They were
companions of Reed on an auto trip
from Denver, Colo.
A plea for a pardon for Reed was
recently filed with Governor Charles
(Continued on Page Four)
KILLS OFFICERS
MIDDLEBORO, Ky., July 19. (AP)
Thirty deputies with bloodhounds
combed the eastern Kentucky moun
tains today for a 77-year old moun
taineer wanted for killing two Lee
county, Virginia deputy sheriffs.
The officers. Arch Remond, 45, and
Robert Bailey, 66, went to his Vir
ginia home, three miles from the
Kentucky border, and arrested his
son-in-law, Luther Poore, on an em
bezzlement warrant. Green Allen
Brooks, the man wanted, fired on the
officers with his rifle as they led
Poore away.
The bodies lay In the dust an hour
before Sheriff R. p. Giles of Lee
county arrived. He organized the hunt
for Brooks.
The mountain man apparently
slipped out the back door of his
home and fled to the hills less 'than
300 yards away.
IN HONOR OF MELVIN
The memory of Al Melvin. generally
acclaimed as the greatest athlete ev-r
to graduate from the Med ford hl;h
schol, will be honored by naming the
new football field on South Oakda'.e
'Melvin Field," If a petition to tnat
effect being circulated today la suc
cessful. Melvin, a football, basketball, base
ball and swimming star, and a .c
markable tennis player, was acciden
tally killed at Yuba City Junior col
lege near Marysvllle, Cal., In the
spring of 1931, when he slipped while
hl?h Jumping, and broke several ver
tebrae in his back and neck.
500 CATHOLIC FAMILIES
LOSE HOMES IS CLAIM
BELFAST, Northern Ireland. July
19. vT Tiie Iri&h News, official na
tionalist papr. said todav 500 CV.h
ollc families have lost their homes
through disorders resulting from
Orangemen's celebrations of the an
niversary of the battle of the Boyne
Hugh Faloon. 60. shot In the stom
ach yesterday in a new outbrea of
r;e d!ordrs kt Portado -n. near Bl
fat. dld today, the cgatn viitlai
Assistant Attorney General
Says Statement Sent Out
From Murderer's Prison
Cell Viciously Libellous;
Assistant Attorney General Ralph
E. Moody, here today to collect rec
ords and data In opposition to the
granting of a pardon to L. A. Banks,
former local agitator now serving a
life term in state prison, character
ized a statement, purportedly Issued
by Banks from his cell, In which the
convict charges, a "conspiracy" to
send him to prison, to deprive him
of property, altenate the affections
of his wife, and poison him, as
"viciously libelous bosh, both by
Banks, the author, and the publisher
of the paper In which it was pub
lished." Headlines on a story published to
day In a local weekly, say the state
ment "was released from the con
victed murderer by Mrs. (Ariel B.)
Pomeroy, and sets forth conspiracy,
charges Levens was poisoned."
It la further alleged In the state
ment that Attorney Frank J. Loner
gan of Portland, chief counsel for
Banks at the Lane county murder
trial, was "lax;" that Levens, now
deceased, and then assistant attor
ney general, "made the statement In
the presence of persons now living,
that Banka was framed,"
Assistant Attorney General Moody
Is declared In the statement to be
"one of the leading spirits in the
conspiracy to drive Banks from
Jackson county."
Wife Quits Visiting
The convlct-llfer states in the art
icle. Mrs. Banks has discontinued
(Continued on Page Three)
PASSlGERlLLED
OHTCAOO, July 19. Tp) One pas
senger was killed and 40 were in
jured when a 73th street atrect-car,
crowded with children bound for a
south side beach, crashed Into the
steel support of a railway subway
today.
The crash amputated one child's
lerg. The paaseruer fatally Injured
waa a man, not In j mediately Identi
fied. A half donen ambulances rushed
the screaming victims to the Jackson
Park hospital, where attendants said
seven passengers were severely in
jured. The car, filled to capacity, leaped
the track as It neared the subway
eaat of Greenwood avenue. Fire broke
out along the roof, but firemen ex
tinguished It quickly.
MOSCOW U. CANCELS
SUMMER SESSIONS
MOSCOW, Idaho. July 19. (API
American students who came here for
the annual summer school session of
Moscow university were informed to
day It had been cancelled.
The explanation given the collegl-
! ana In a last-minute decision was
I that the teaching staff waa urgently
needed elsewhere.
rind Miners Bodies
VAN LEAR. Ky., July 19. (API
The bodies of John Gool and Prank
Tuzy, last of nine victims of a coal
mine gas explosion to be located,
were recovered today.
McNary Bonneville Bill
Stirs Capital Politicians
By NATHAN ROIlhRTSON
Associated Press Staff Writer
WASHINGTON. July 19. (AP) A
capital still agitated by the power
struggle found food for thought to
day In a situation which firms the
republican leader of the senato of
fering a bill to carry out a ni.iju:
I'hase of the Roosevelt power pro
gram. It waa uktn as a trllng nw in
dication that the electricity contrc-
versy like so many other issnos In
j recent years Is one on which neuhcr
party always dnes up solidly. pr and
con.
! The setting was a White House con
i ference at which Senator MrNary of
Oregon, senate minority leader, agreed
, to Introduce a bill providing for the
administration of the Bonneville dam
project In Oregon and the sale of
power generated there.
Sale of power under the Tennesee
Valley project has been one of the
chief focal points for attack on the
; administration In the courts and
' from some political lenders. It had
' ben haikd by republicans of the
1 wore cpnjcrvaUYt promis
Cloud Cavalrymen
Stage New Stunt
In Russian Army
MOSCOW. July 19. (API
Cavalrymen of the air went into
successful mimic action by para
chutes near Moscow last night.
Three groups of Infantrymen,
each group consisting of 36 sol
diers, each man carrying full war
equipment, were dropped from
airplanes behind hypothetical ene
my lines In war games.
Their descent from the sk was
made under cover of darkness.
They re-formed in platoons and
attacked an "enemy" village, set
ftre to It, destroyed two railway
stations, and then succeeded in
forcing their way back to their
own lines.
CHAMBER'S DRIVE
ENDS NEXT WEEK
Although many of the workers in
the membership campaign being cun
ductd by the Jackson County Cham
ber of Commerce failed to report yes
terday, those who did brought In ad
ditional memberships. It was an
nounced by B. E. Harder, president,
this morning.
Most of the teams aro only working
mornings, but an attempt will be
mado to complete tho campaign some
time during next week.
New memberships submitted to the
Chamber of Commerce Include: C.
N. Culy, George Hcnsehnan, Unique
Cleanera. Medford Tent and Awning
Works, R. G. Fowler.
Two additional memberships were
taken out by Perl Funeral Parlors.
The first two days of the campaign
have so far produced between 30 and
40 members, It was announced by
Chamber of Commerce officials, and
it la believed, that this number will
be more than doubled by the tlr.ie
all the commlttco members submit
their final report.
PORTLAND, July 19. (!) A. Milne,
Portland contractor, was low with a
bid of 13l,061 when proposals were
opened by tho Federal Bureau, of
Public Roads today for surfacing aee
tlons of the rim road In Crater Lake
national park.
The work will be done on the north
and eaat section of the rim road
from the Junction with the Lodge
Diamond Lake road to Cloud Cap.
The section is 12.3 miles long. In
cluding a one-mile spur to Cloud
Cap View Point.
Edelfson & weygandt of Portland
waa second in the bidding at 142,
886. A. C. Greenwood and P. J.
Dunsault, both of Portland. Joined In
a bid of 164,313. Bids ranged up
ward to $163,956.
BROTHER OF FAMOUS
SPEED FLIER DROWNS
GULFPORT. Miss., July 19. ( AP)
Walter Wedell, brother of the late
Jlmmle Wedell. world famous air
plane speed champion, was drowned
In the Gulf of Mexico 15 mllesoll
Gulfport at 12:20 p. m., today
when his airplane went Into a tail
spin and crashed In the water. He
was reported to have been traveling
alone.
WASHINGTON. July 19. fAP
President Roosevelt plana to motor to
Annapolis, Md., tonight for a week
end cruise on Chesapeake bay.
ing campaign issue for 1936, as an
instance of government competition
with private business.
In some respects the Bonneville
project Is similar to TV A. in others
It is different. The Tennessee valley
experiment is a broad scale plan for
virtually rebuilding an entire section
of the country. Bonneville is confined
to navigation and power.
But while soil erosion, fertiliser
production, colonization and other
collateral features of TV A are absent
from the Oregon proirram. Its power
angle closely aparallris the situation
in the Tennessee valley.
In both cases dams were erected by
the federal government aa navigation
aids, with power a bl-product. A dis
trict rour held the sa!e of power by
the TV A illegal, but the derision re
cently was ovrr-rulfd by the circuit
of appeals at New Orleans. The case
Is expected to go to the supreme
court.
McNary has been an Important
factor in the development of the
' Bonneville dam from the outset.
' Frlf-nds of the republican loader
-, aid ther was no olit!al signifl
1 cau'.e la als introduction ol Uw 0UL
MILNE'S BID LOW
ON PARK RIM ROAD
UTILITY DIVIDENDS
IS CUARGEIN QUIZ
Associated Gas & Electric
Furnished $700,000 in
Effort to Defeat Holding
Company Bill Is Claim
WASHINGTON, July HO. ( AP) A
senate lobby investigator charged to
day the Associated Gas and Electric
company had paid no dividends to
common stockholders for years yet It
had "taken the good part of a year's
dividend" to spend 700.000 in an
effort to defeat the holding company
dissolution bill.
Previously, the lobby committee
had received testimony from William
A. Hill of Boston, an attorney for the
Associated company, that the ulti
mate consumer would have to pay
tho cost of the campaign against the
utility measure.
It also heard U. E. Beach of
Ithaca, N. Y., securities manager for
Associated, testify that he Instruct
ed company managers all over the
country last week to "destroy" all
their records bearing on opposition
to the legislation.
He said he "didn't want the rec
ords found In case of the Investiga
tion" by congressional committees.
Senator Gibson (R., Vt.) made the
statement about the company after
developing from Beach that It had
paid no common stock dividends.
Gibson asserted the holding com
pany must have passed the $700,000
(Continued on Page Nine)
HAROLD GREY TO
Harold b. Grey of Medford, who has
been associated with the fl. E. R. A.
offices here, haa Just been appointed
aa director of tho division of labor
and management of the central of
fice of t the Works Progress adminis
tration here, it haa been announced
by Tom W. Dclzell of Klamath Falla.
himself appointed supervisor of the
Works Progress administration for the
fourth district a few days ago.
Three Klamath Falls men were
named with Grey, Kenneth Perry as
engineer. Nelson Reed In charge of
personnel, and F. E. Thompson will
be engineer In charge of the division
of projects and planning. The finance
dlvlalon will be under the care of Vic
tor Balrd of Marsh field.
The list completes Delzell's ap
pointment for the present, he said
yesterday. The work to be accomp
lished under the Works Progress ad
ministration will be suitable for work
by professional and semi-professional
unemployed, as well aa various man
ual labor enterprises.
BOY WITH BROKEN NECK
NUMB EXCEPT IN ARMS
GRANTS PASS, July 19. (AP)
Floyd Clark, 21, Glendale youth
whose neck waa broken In diving In
too shallow water near bis home
Wednesday evening, waa conscious
and rational In a hospital here this
morning.
He Is able to us his arms, but all
the rest of his body Is numb, at
tendants reported. Ills condition re
mains serious.
PRISONERS GAS BARRAGE
FOILS PLAN FOR ESCAPE
DAYTON, Tenn., July 19. (AP)
Hoping to escape in the con f union,
prisoners in the Ktiea county Jail set
fire to an Insecticide with which they
were spraying cells.
The burning chemical gave off a
gas which sent them marching sub
missively to the Jailer with thront
burning and tears streaming from
their eyes.
BASEBALL
American
R. H.
St. Louis 7 11
New York 6 10
Andrews. Knott, Thomas and Hem
sley: Gomes1:. Brown, Deshong, Mur
phy and Dickey,
R. H. E.
Detroit , , 9 12 2
Boston 7 11 1
Bridges, Hogsett, Rowe and Coch
rane: Ostermueller. Wilson. Hockctte
and R. Perrell. j
R. H. E.
Chlcaeo ..... 7 13 0
Washington 2 6 0
Kennedy and Sewell; Hayes, Pettlt
and Bolton.
National
R. H. E.
Boston 6 13 2
Pittsburgh 6 13 1
Belts. Cantwell and Hogan; Lucas,
Hoyt and Grace.
R. H. X.
Philadelphia 0 5 2
Cincinnati . 3 7 0
Hyl. lohnwn and Todd. Nelson and
Lombaardi,
aa
-4
" JS'if
I
1 "m
torn
The fulled mates Circuit Tnurt of
Appeals In Boston rulrtl processing
and floor taxes collected under (he
agricultural edjuMmriit act uncon
stitutional. Judge George II. Bingham
(middle) dfswnted In the opinion of
Judge George K. Morrrl (top) and
Scntt M lUon (bottom). Associated
Press Photo,
PROCESSING TAX
RECOVERY SUITS
IS
WASHINGTON, July 19. ( AP)
The senate, today adopted an amend
ment to the AAA tax bill prohibiting
suits to recover processing taxes.
except where the processor shows
he has not passed on the tax to the
consumer or producer.
The vote came after the question
had been debated most of two days-
Protests that denying the right
to aue for tax recovery was "un
American" and "dishonest" were
mado by supporters of the compro
mise measure finally adopted.
Administration forces originally
had asked that none of the processors
who have paid more than $000,000,
000 of AAA taxes be permitted to
fUe recovery suits.
The vote favoring the compromise
was 61 to 23, while the tax recovery
cuntruvetsy engaged the senate,
Frank J. Wtdcman, assistant attor
ney general in charge of the tax di
vision, disclosed that suits growing
out of the AAA levies had climbed
to a total of 359. The total had been
reported as 153 a few days ago. be
fore the circuit court of appeals at
Boston ruled the taxes unconstitu
tional. . Small (ira lire
The fire department was called
shortly before 3:00 o'clock this aft
ernoon to extinguish a small grass
fire at 690 South Riverside,
Maryland Pund: Bid 18 28; asked
n.ei.
Quarterly Income shares: Bid 1 34:
uked 1.18.
4
i
I
Income Shares
120 NAMES LISTED
ON PETITIONS FOR
Majority Shown From Med
ford Trial 'Reeked With
Prejudicial Conduct' Is
Claim Made in Petition
Malorttv of thft isn n.m. nM .v,.
petition for an Investigation Into a,
pardon Dlea for L. a. R.nk rw,
local agitator serving Ufa in ,tat
prison lor in murder of a pea of
ficer, are Hated from Medford, with
18 Klvinir Salem and Portland .H-
dreases.
The Detltlona were fllerf In th.
ernor's office.
The Dreambl to th. n.tmnn
culated In thla city la aa follows:
"We the undersigned, fre think.
Ing, citizens of the state of Oregon,
respectfully petition your Excellency
for on exhaustive Investigation of th
Unjust conviction on aiwint riiiopu
murder chareea of a nrnmin.nt im-
sen of Oregon, under conditions and
in a trial recKing with prejudicial
conduct, denying fair and Impartial
trial wherein lustlca mnxt h n-th-
out purchase.
when all the mechanisms for the
production of tusttpA f.n h i..-
of glaring technical defects, to func
tion in the manner prescribed by ths
Constitution of the State of Oregon,
and the fundamental lawa enacted
thereunder, then, and In that event,
we resort to petition for the power
of Executlvo Clemency, which a com
plete reconsideration of the case of
Llewellyn A. Banks will clearly show
For reasona arising nut. nr tt..
case, that screams out with mob
hysteria, animosity, fear, greed and
nl.imi, we uirtner requeat your
granting such hearing In the Exe
cutive Chambera as the relation of
all the facts of the case require, with
in fifteen days following presenting
thla petition to your Excellency."
The official list Is:
ftlchard J. Neuberger. Portland.
C. A. Melvin, Portland.
David C. Epps. Portland.
Bertha Van Dolah. Portland.
Mra. Mary Shand, Portland.
Albert Slaughter. Portland.
Byrn O. Carney. Portland.
Oco. M. Clevenger, Portland.
Peter Zimmerman, Yamhill.
J. E. Bennett, Portland.
Frederick H. Schmalz, Portland.
Walter O. Redmond, Portland.
Kelley Loo, Portland.
(Continued on Page Nine)
TH
TO PLAY HERE SUNDAY
When the Broadway rlmn.
celled their game with the Medford
itogues, tney at the same time can
celled their Monday and Tuesday
gamea with Klamath Palla, so the two
teams got together late this afternoon
and arranged for a game between
themselves at the falnrrnnnri
for Sunday at 2 P.M.
ine Klamath nine Is now on top of
the hean In tha Rotithm
league scramble, with their winning
vi wie pennant assured.
Hum Urecg Visits.
Humbodlt "Hum" Gregg, formerly
associated with radio atAMnn trurn
here, was In Medford today renewing
urn acqusimsnces. He. with his wife,
is now visiting In Aahlnd. "Hum"
stated this afternoon that hs has been
In radio work for the last several
years In San Francisco and New York,
and la now located in the bay city.
SANTA M0NIGA, Cal., July
18. livery morning some state
court declares, "So and so tax
declared illegul."
If this keeps on everybody
will get back everything they
paid in. In other words, the
way the courts are going now,
they may declare the whole de
pression and everything con
nected with it illegal, and that
it all has to be done over again.
Say, that judge sure give Eu
ropean fortune hunters fits.
It's generally men that do it,
but this time it was a girl who
led our rich young hopeful
astray, which proved that the
young American male can be
as sappy as the female.
Yours,
i H. HtNauaM Sj4lttte. la.
kS
r