Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 22, 1935, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHi
MEDFORD MATL TRIBUXE, MEDFORD. OREGON. THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1935,
MEDFOKiJTRIBUNE
"Kvrryonv Id Southern OregoB
Honda the UaU Tribune"
Dnilj Kxrept Saturday.
Published by
MKDKURD PRINTINfl CO.
25-37-20 N. Kir 8t. Phon IS.
BOH BUT W. RUHU Editor.
An Independent Newepaper.
Entered as iKond'CliM mat'er at Med
ford. Oregon, under Act of March I.
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Offices in New Vork. Chicago Detroit
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Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
Uy Arthur Perry
They will bury Will Rogers, be
loved American, way. no -fame
aa a humorist, and fortune aa
a film comedian, and the affection
ate regard of a nation. By a quirk
of fate, he died with hla aviator
friend, Wiley Post, on the tundra
wastes near Point Barrow one ot
the lonelleat areaa on the surface ot
the earth. He never took himself
seriously, and laughed as much at
himself as his fellow-men. Thla wa
nrobablv the key to hla world-wide
noDUlnrltv. for deep In Its heart
i .... U. tlma frtf t.h
.IlUIIlBIllLiY lino O'.anw t....w
trutters. of which there are far
too many. There will never be an
other Will Rogers, any more than
there will ever be another Shakes
peare, see
The "bottle neck curve" Is blamed
for a high percentage of auto acci
dents. Now and then a bottle, and
a neck, cause an accident, before
they get to the curve.
ess
Douglas county offers 4500 reward
for lite arrest and conviction of any
careless cigarette, or juat as careless
lightning bolt found starting a for'
est fire. The price la high enough
to tempt a firebug to catch him
self, and leave a profit after the
lawyer Is paid. There ta also the
chance a chicken-hearted Jury win
return a verdict of not guilty, with
a warning not to do It again,
e
It Is about time the price or
everything, having nothing at all
to do with a hog, went up because
the price of hogs did.
e e
It la now announced that "the
union of farmers and labor will
be a weapon for political good." The
weapon will be created by grafting
a, bnsebnll bat Into a pitchfork
handle.
see
The practical prosecution of a
practical Joker, who set (Ire to the
hula-hula skirt of a Legion conven
tion merrymaker, resulting In his
death, la planned.
see
The group of weatner expert, who
a week ago cheerfully proclaimed
that summer was over are now
sweating their words.
e e
Notice has been served that In
vaders of watermelon patches will
know the gun la loaded.
see
Owney Patton, the Irish Dude,
atarted the 7:ird Inning of life the
first of the week.
e e
Federal funds have been allotted
for a census of the physical fitness
of girls between 10 and 31 years of
age. The statistics will show they are
too weak to wash the supper dishes,
but strong enough to dance all
night.
see
EX-omrio mother.
(Coos Hoy Times)
WANTED Steady girl or woman,
experienced with children, com
petent housekeeper and plain
cook, to take charge of home
and fnmlly for employed par
ents. Board and room and $3 a
week.
e e
During the depression, according
to his testimony before the senate
lobby quia, Howard C. Hopson netted
3. 187.064.01. Note the final penny,
at the end of the formidable string
of figure. iTc saved them, and the
dollars took care of themselves,
e e e
Vigilantes In Sonoma county, Cali
fornia, long pestered by visiting and
homc-icruwii agitators, applied tar
and feathers to their tormentors
It seems gents claiming to be Com
munist were having a fine time
raising hell while feeding on rellei
beans. They would not work, and
wanted no one else to. The cure
Is rough, but the victim Is weaned
from his soap-box, most effectively.
e a
Slot machine bandits, operating in
Clackamas county, have been cap-1
tured. It la reported that after steal
ing the mechanical yegg, they stop
ped to piny It. and the sheriff caught
up with them.
see
Clrcat Britain threatens to apply j
"economic pressure" to Italy to !
thwart war with Ethiopia. Premier
Mussolini, who Is passionately de
sirous of the conflict, reports "Italy
will fight to the last man." If ar
rangements coutd be made for Mua- i
sollnl io be the first man to fight,
peace would come. As long as ne
can stay si home and make speeches
and shQ his teeth. thre Is no hon
MEMBER
There Will Be an Earthquake
HERE'S a sure-fire bet for the "I told you so" cult. Instead
of fiddling around with such uncertainties' as credit infla
tion ; war between Italy and Ethiopia ; and the adjournment of
congress, let them concentrate upon the prediction there will be
an earthquake in the United States next' year, which will shake
this country to its foundations, from Key West to Seattle; and
from San Diego to Bangor, Maine.
Defining the earthquake as "political" will not alter the
seismical nature of the upheaval, nor the essential accuracy of
the prediction. Prophecies along this line simply can't go
wrong. A political "temblor" of devastating proportions in
North America next year is as certain as sunrise. Those who
place their money on such an eventuality, can discount their bets
at once with any SMART banker.
It's duck soup for the sure thing prognosticators, 120 mil
lion Americans can't be wrong. Mussolini may retire from
Addis Ababa with his tail between his legs; congress may remain
in session until Christmas; deflation may set in before Thanks
giving; but NOTHING on the surface of this cooling cinder,
above or below it, is going to prevent the great political earth
quake of 1936.
AND it will BE an earthquake. Just as such cosmic disturb
flnppR urn flnnsprl. hv thfl fflultini? of rooks, the poolinff-off
of the earth's crust, the sudden shifting of strata structures
beneath the surface; so this political disturbance will be caused
by the faulting of certain party leaders; the cooling off of cer
tain political enthusiasts; the sudden subterranean shifting of
political opinions.
The exact extent or the net
cal upheaval, no one can now foretell; but that it will occur on
the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November 1936, and
that the extent and net results will be known 24 hours later, is
as certain as the arrival of Santa Claus from the North Pole
on the following 2oth of December.
SOME good citizens are disposed to deplore this certain cata
clysm and wish there were some way to avoid it. This is
a perfectly natural reaction. But it can't be done. At least not
without resorting to drastic measures whose destructive effect
would be far more serious than the results of the phenomenon
itself.
Moreover there will be compensations.
For many years the two major parties have been bogus
parties, synthetic parties, merely tho "outs" and the "ins"
with no real or fundamental issues between them. The party in
power has tried to stay in; the party out of power has tried to
throw the "rascals out", tho vital differences between them
being only the differences between tweedle dum and tweedlo dee.
The unusual extent and violence of the approaching political
earthquake will be due to the fact that this period of make
believe has passed, the era of dead calm is over, unless all
signs fail, November 1!KIG will mark the birth of two new politi
cal parties in this land of the free and the home of the brave,
a liberal and a conservative party.
jNE may curse out President Roosevelt, as one may wish;
but no fair minded observer can deny he had made the
Democratic party a truly LIBERAL party, and the Republican
party a truly CONSERVATIVE party.
It has been a painful and to many a disturbing process, the
processes of birth arc seldom anything else, but the net result
will be all to the good.
For the country needs two real parties, parties based not
upon habit, or tradition, or merely the desire for power, but
parties based upon GENUINE DIFFERENCES in principle,
methods and belief.
That is what wo have now and thoso who duii't clearly
realize it, certainly will, before November 1936 rolls around.
There is going to be a political upheaval greater than this
country has witnessed since the Civil War period. Life long
Republicans are going to becomo Democrats and life long Demo
crats arc going to become Republicans, so fast and in such num
bers that not even such an experienced and hard boiled prophet
as Sam Wythe will dare commit himself until after the votes
arc counted.
It will be disturbing just as a flash of lightning and a clap of
thunder, are disturbing; but like them, it will clear the atmo
sphere and pave the way for a period of settled weather, and
constructive progress, under clearer and more certain skies.
(Continued from Page One)
but If he does he will have to decide
what the mating age la and whom to
shoot. A suggestion has been made
that he start off with old maids past
eighty who have not yet realised.
apparently, that there Is a mating
age.
Hitler and Mussolini are understood
to have faced this problem early In
their game and decided that It was
too big for them. They side-stepped
It by merely offering bounties and
encouragements for marriages and
babies at any age.
The baby angle was avoided by
Mr. Taussig, as there seems to have
been an overproduction In that In
dustry In the past, from an economic
standpoint. At least tnere are millions
more of ex-babtea now than there are
Jobs and the problem cannot be solv
ed by plowing them under.
This Is at least one point on which
Mr. Taussig's problem differs from
that of Messrs. Mussolini and Hitler.
It Is understood that many serious-
minded educational lenders, who can
not see as far as Mr. Taussig, are
now looking daers at the national
yonth movement. Aubrey Williams,
executive director of the movement,
hinted at this underlying dtstrust
when he pointed out at the confer
ence here that it "could very easily
become a questionable undertakm; "
results of this nation-wide politi
the fact that. If the government la
merely going to subsidise education
of the poverty-stricken, It already has
an agency equipped to handle the
subsidies ( the bureau of education
In the labor department). Thla move
ment la an entirely new set-up. with
fresh state directors and new staffs
In each state, drawing salares and
paying office expenses. These admin
istrative costs", If saved, would afford
a lot of lunch money. They might
enable the federal government to feed
all the 700,000 high school students
who dropped out last semester In
stead of the 312,000 It now proposes
to feed. (Incidentally, the high
school principals are to decide which
313.000 children are to be fed and
which 488.000 are to be denied).
But no sympathy will be wasted
on the foremost educators who are
doubters. They are Just too darned
uneducated to know that "politics"
Is a highly Important subject .even
If not Included In the curriculum
of most universities which fancy
themselves to be up-to-date.
Note Mr. Taussig Is the most phe
nomenal of all new deal phenomena
a Wall Street brain truster. He was
one of the original group of Inner
economic advisers to the president,
and worked from his office at 111
Wall Street. His specialty was Cuba
and sugar, an accomplishment based
probably in part on the fact that he
Is president of the American Mo
lasses company. He has never been a
professor or an educator but long
has worried about the youth going
fascist or communist or both.
Ills clubs are: Radio of America.
MacDowell. Authors. Down ton Ath
letic. Ciroller, St. Regis. Advertising.
Orest South Bay. Brenwood Country
and Bay Shore Yacht.
Only one person has been arrested
for violation of the ordinance for
bidding persons to hltrh-hike in
Athens. o. since it ss passed in
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dlseuse
dlugno.ls or treatment will be nnsitercd by Ilr. Ilrad.v If a stamped self-ad-dresfced
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.
OuIiir to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered.
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr.
William Brady, 205 El (.'amino. Beverly Hills, Cal.
VOLUNTEER Cl'IN
Sunday, May 19th, we called for
thousand guinea pigs to volunteer as
subjects for a little experiment. Vic
tlma of renal cal
culus, stone In
kidney, nephro
lithiasis, gravel
to register for the
race. Knowing
from other i
counters that It
wouldn't do to
let 'em cut loose.
I said: "I warn
you beforehand
you'll be barred
If you attempt to
tell me your
symptoms or get my opinion of your
case. It la well for some of you to
know that I have an automatic
chucker . . .
Well, 361 candidates sought to reg
later as guinea pigs. Of these, 312
were barred for attempting to tell me
their symptoms or get my opinion.
The remaining 149 automatically sift
ed down to 84 good guinea pigs be
cause 65 of 'em felt that the least I
could do was to pay the postage.
Pigs Is pigs, and a matter of
guinea or thruppence doesn't make
them anything else. That reminds
me the birds who raise the loudest
squawks about my failure to answer
their requests for one thing or an
other prove quite frequently them
selves at fault, as we dig up the un
deliverable answer self addressed
"City," or some such Ineptitude.
From animal experiments we are
led to Infer that Individuals who do
not get sufficient vitamin A are like
ly to develop urinary calculus, kidney
stone. Other factors may be con
cerned, of course, but there la con
sklerable evidence that this same
shortage of vitamin A may be an
equally Important factory of kidney
stone In man. That's what I hoped
the thousand human" guinea pigs
might settle for us, but 84 guinea
pigs are not enough to settle any
thing. Along with an optimal ration of
vitamin A that Is. much more than
Is essential to maintain health the
victim of kidney stone or gravel
should follow a diet which glvea a
preponderance of alkaline ash, and
that Implies excluding from the diet
meats, fish, eggs, refined cereals,
prunes, plums and cranberries: items
which are particularly advisable .are
milk, peas, beans, all fresh vegetables
particularly those edible raw and en
tire, all fresh fruits and fruit Juices
or beverages particularly tomato and
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
ONE can hardly pick up a paper
these days without reading of
strikes or threatened strikes. Through
the whole present pattern of business
progress runs this thread of labor
unrest.
w
HY?
There are many answers.
Racketeers, some tell us. Communists,
rWMnHIIL)WT'
1 H N.VV
LFT YOUR TEMPERATURE
. .t -1 T rrtJ T'S
DROP v-r"-'
. n Y-T-TT
"FROSTY blue i i"
lwic.li CALVERT
;uHr'nfulr'?wJcreJufl"
' 3 Jijhes lemon juice
; full of finely .h.4 Cr
fill
Of RllSt m,nC"' ,
LmV .oJ vc immeJ.icelr f
w.nt totnjoritifull flivor.
A PIOS WOV8 WORK
the citrus fruits (except prunes,
plums and cranberries which happen
to contain a type of acid not readily
oxidized In the, as la the acid of
other fruits). Items notable as leav
ing a highly acid residue are oysters,
oatmeal, egg yolk, chicken meat, rab
bit meat, crackers, rice, peanuts.
Items notable as leaving a highly al
kaline residue are lima beans, dried
beans, string beans, beets, raw car
rots, raisins, almonds, potatoes, cab
bage, bananas tomatoes and tomato
Juice citrus fruits and their Juice,
Unfortunately, many of the foodB
containing the most vitamin A hap
pen to be Items on the acid side. But
fresh milk, cream, butter, American
cheese and crea mcheese, carrots, es-
carole (endive, chicory greens), apin
ach, tomato, orange, well ripe yellow
banana, green peas, green peppers,
are good sources of vitamin A and all
on the alkaline side.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
filnss Eating
If glass Is eaten unknown to one
self will it cause some serious result?
Does cancer start in some such way?
(C. J.)
Answer. No. There Is no truth ln
the legend of poisoning with ground
glass. If bits of glass are swallowed
they may do Immediate harm, but
no subsequent ill result need be
feared.
Wheat to Eat
We steam our whole wheat for a
cereal, and store the left over wheat
In the ice box. Then we add this
cooked wheat to waffles, muffins, etc..
and we think it improves all these
ordinary recipes. Steaming about an
hour cooks the wheat Just right,
fluffy, separate grains, not gummy.
(Mrs. C. B. A.)
Ans. Thank you, Ma'am. What
sort of disguise do you wear when
you go to buy wheat from the farmer
miller or feed or seed store man. so
he won't think you are dotty? They
are pretty dumb, as a rule.
Introspection
T believe I am a healthy person
ana nave no symptoms, except . . .
kindly tell me what this may indi
cate. I have a home tester and I
tested It and found It was alkaline.
(Mrs, B. S.)
Ans. I advise you to toss your
home tester In the rubbish can and
consult a physician.
(Copyright, 1035, John F. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
coimminlcnte with Dr. Brndy
should so ml letter direct to Dr.
Will in in Brady. M. 1).. iG$ El
Cum I no. Beverly Hills, Cal.
others assert. Wicked, grasping em
ployers grinding the faces of their
workers is another explanation.
The answer depends largely upon
the viewpoint of the one giving It.
NONE of the reasons here suggest
ed, in the opinion of this wricer,
gets to the bottom of the strike sit
uation. Racketeers, in many places, hove
something to do with promoting
strikes. There can be little doubt of
that. Communists have as much to
do as they can with keeping strikes
going, for the more disturbance there
Is the better the communists ire
pleased. And here and there a grasp
ing, short-alghtcd employer a.ds fuel
to the fire.
1 "What? Whlfksv
t"ln tho tropics Iff a
favorite for cheating
tool oft with LALVbKi I
t
THE MT! CLEAR HEADS
rnni nrr with nflivTi
u...--.x..iMwuamm.MMmLmmma " ' -aril ,-ai
tool Off Wlttl LALVbKI 1 i3 Fx ". HP,
i t A-Yl I A: v. ; ,
x Available In Oregon
QUARTS '2.55
(Cods No. 3691
PINTS M.30
(Cod. No. J6CC)
But the real reason for the epidem
ic of strike that la sweeping the
country is dissatisfaction on the part
of people who work with conditions
at present existing.
WHY the dissatisfaction?
Well, primarily people who
work for wages have the feeling that
they are getting nowhere. Wage In
creases come along. Hours are added
to the working week. But the extra
money thus earned buys little in the
way of added necessities and com
forts. Increased wages are offset by In
creased costa of what the wages have
to buy.
A
GAIN we ask: Why?
It Isn't an easy question to
answer, but here la something to
think about: Public spending is going
on at a greater rate than wa ever
before dreamed of In this country.
Public spending. In one way or an
other, has to be repaid by TAX
ATION. Taxes have to come out of th?
pockets Of THOSE WHO WORK.
ryou work for wages, you have
been told by the politicians that
you will pay no taxes that they will
see to that; that the wicked rich will
have to pay all the taxes.
How about it?
When you buy food, how are the
prices you pay as compared with the
prlcea of two or three years ago?
(Ham and bacon, for example).
Why. they are HIGHER, of course
very much higher. The money in
your pocket won't buy as much as It
used to.
f
WHEN little pls are killed, there
Is less pork for people to eat.
When cotton Is plowed under, there
la less cotton cloth for people to
wear. When wheat Isn't raised, there
Is less bread for people to eat.
When there is LESS of anything, ft
COSTS MORE.
WHEN heavy taxes are laid upon
Industry, these taxes must
be passed on to SOMEBODY, or In
dustry will go broke.
Who is the somebody? Why. the
consumer, naturally. There isn't any
body else for this added cost to be
paseed on to.
The consumer is ALL OF US.
IT sounds grand tolTsten to a gifted
orator tell of the ' government
spending countless billions and thus
creating prosperity for everybody
without anybody having to work, but
it isn't so nice when we have to PAY
these billions in the form of higher
prices for what wc buy.
First President
Of Greece Passes
ATHENS, Aug. 22. (AP) Admiral
Paul Coundourlotis. first president or
the Greek republic, died today. He
was 60.
Described as "the grand old man
of Greek politics," he took office af
ter ex-King George II fled the coun
try in December. 1923. During the
first half of 1924 the republic was
established and the new constitution
was published. He held office until
1929 when he rtlred.
The "urochs," or European bison,
is said to exist today in small num
bers in t he forest of Btalowieza, a
national reservation in Poland.
coollna?"
3 - to - l
heat
1 tiirM
Will Rogers
A Tribute by
O. O. Mdntyre
(Continued from age One.
He called Ziegfeld "Mister Zeeg-fleld '
then as he did to Ziegfeld'a last
lingering days when he looked out
for him and later for the Interests
of hla widow and daughter.
Some years later Rogers and I rode
herd In the same syndicate outfit.
We saw each other usually when
he came to town or exchanged tele
phonic Insults. X loved and admired
him as I have few men. We have
bunked at political conventions and
sat on the dais together at many
stupid banquets In the days when
such things were not the terrific
bore to me they are today.
I have visited at his manv acred
ranch In Beverlv and seen the ten
derness and devotion that he ex
pressed for his wife, two sons and
the especial apple of his eve. his
dauehter. Mary. I never knew him.
nor has anyone else, to do a mean
or petty thing. His honesty was as
natural as the pine springing to the
sun. i
Such rugged forthright men. Just
as Lincoln did. come but once to
a feneration.
Rogers' charm was largelv in that
ounllty I should call unpredictable
Few men did thlna-s as he did. There
was a time wMklna on the street
with him In Kansas Cltv that he
turned suddenly Into a rather second-rate
clothing store.
"Want a brown suit.' he blurted
to the surprised clerk who. of course,
recoenlzed him. He tried out three,
decided on the third and transferred
his pocket possessions. He could get
more mileage out of a necktie than
anyone I have ever known. He sTm
plv put one on and wore It out.
So I suggested a new tie. He rif
fled through a dozen or so on a
rack, nervously snatched one of the
modest designs and. tossing the dis
carded one to the young clerk, grin
ned: "Tnke that home to your Ma.
It's better than a soup bone."
T have seen Rogers In tears, too.
because one of the smart alec profes
sional hooters In New York had
written something that hurt him.
something unfair, savage and with
out Justification. Yet there was no
rancor, no stinging Invective of
which he could be the master. He
had spent years in the hurly-burly
of the ranch house.
But he simply read It. choked up.
recovered and talked of something
else more pleasant. He came to my
apartment often with Irvln Cobb
and Amon Carter, or Texas, and they
formed an unbeatable trio In yarning
and riposte.
Cobb and Carter lounging back
in easy chairs and Rogers walking
up and down, twisting. turning.
Jiggling things on the desk, peeking
into the kitchen, tearing up match
flaps always like a fighter on edge.
He never seemed fatigued: a day at
the studio or a night of rehearsal,
nothing slowed him up. In fact, 1
remember his wife Betty saying one
day: "I have never heard Will say
he was tired.
And when one thinks of the
amount of work he did, the things
he accomplished, the Incessant fu
rious pace he set, one wonders how
he spanned more than a half cen
tury In top physical form.
I Baw him last February 3 of this
yenr at a small dinner party at the
Will Hayes in the Waldorf. Betty
was there. The Joseph P. Kennedys
and my wife and I. He was as al
ways In fine conversational form,
Science says Calvert cools by
"quicker radiation of heat
from body's) surface"
CCIENCE now confirms the instinctive good
judgment of tropical countries, where whis
key is i 3-to-l favorite over all other types of
distilled spirits! It finds that CALVERT actually
lowers body temperature . . . by driving hcac
from the center of the body to the surface
where it dissipates evaporates, leaves you cool,
fresh, rrfriyrattJ!
So call for CALVERT ... the whiskey that not
only leaves you cool tonight, but also, collected
tomorrow ... the whiskey that, enjoyed in
gentlemanly moderation, lets you greet to
morrow with a smile! Clear thinkers are CALVERT
drinkers. Use good judgment. Buy better whis
key. Call for CALVERT!
FREE! ;
or 1mi
ADWdCalvert
hesitating and darting about like a
wren in a hedge-row. tsuaaeniy n
Jumped up, glanced at hla wrist
watch and said he must be off. H
was to speak at a dinner, as t re
call, of real estate men. He slouched
out. turned In the doorway In that
head-tucked-under-the-wlng manner
of hla and called "So long, folks."
j I did not know, of course, that X
was never to see him again In thla
world.
We drove Mrs. Rogers around tna
park before delivering her to her
hotel. The talk, as always, was about
Will. She and Mary were going oa
a winter cruise in the Mediterranean.
Before she left In a few weeks, ah
was to go to Chicago and Will was
to fly from Beverly for a week
end and to aay goodby. "It will be
a aort of brief honeymoon," ahe aald
tremulously. Their love was great
and splendid as any I have ever
seen. .
So they are burying Will Roger
today that Is his bruised and bat
tered body that was only his shell.
His brave spirit goes winging onl
(Copyright. 1935. by the McNaught
Syndicate, Inc.)
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
history from the files of -the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 Tears
Ago).
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
August 22. 1925
(It was Friday)
Tom Murray, leader of the escaped
Salem convicts. Is captured In a hotel
room at Centralla, Wash., offering no
resistance. The desperado ta returned
to the state penitentiary.
Rain falls over state, with frost re
ported from Klamath county. Pruna
crop damaged. Snow falls at Crater
Lake, making the lodge fireplace a
favorite spot. Forest fires in this
county extinguished by rain.
Ashland woman, sued by guest pas
senger following a wreck, announces
that she will post notice In auto:
"Anybody riding with me does so at
their own risk.'
New York druggist reports "new
cure for baldness."
Wealthy Dayton, O., manufactures
Is accused as bank robber and place
under arrest.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
August 22, 1915
(It was Saturday)
Mercury goea to 101 degreea and th
heat Is Intensified by heavy paU of
smoke from forest fires.
The Epworth League holds a hay
rack ride and bonfire at Phoenix.
Mrs. Wlnfleld Bailey leaves on visit
to San Francisco fair.
Stephen T. Mather. JimH nf th na
tional park service, to visit Crater
iaxe in September,
Commercial club to launch cam
paign for deeper harbor at Crescent
City.
New dance pavilion at Gold Hill t
be opened tonight.
Seventy-four thousand, seven hun
dred and fifteen acres signed up fof
Irrigation In the valley.
Twenty Killed In
Hangar s Collapse
BRASOV, Rumania. Autt. 32. fAP.
Twenty workmen were reported
killed and 30 in lured torlnv hn Mm
steel frame of a new airplane hanger
under construction here collapsed.
Authorities said they feared still
more bodies were crushed under tha
debris. The architects were arrested.
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Hat make Uia educator Ucrg la ' 1933. Tlii ca. na dj&iulMrfd.