Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 17, 1935, Page 8, Image 8

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    PXGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUXE, MEDFORD. OREGON, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1933.
F
BY 28 F
CRATER LK. AREA
CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK,
Nov. 16. (Spl.) A review of the
1936 forent fire season In Crater Lake
national park reveals a marked effi
ciency In present-day flge-flghtlng
methods. Although 28 fires occurred
In the Crn tor Lake area, only four
acres were burned. Including a mini
mum amount of timber.
Records, compiled by Chief Ranger
J, Carlisle Croch, show that 26 of the
36 blazes were caused by lightning,
two by debris burning and one by a
smoker. Indicating that Nature In her
electrical moods was the main enemy
of the forest lands. The fires were
widely distributed over the 350
square miles of the park and empha
sised the importance of the motor
way or fire-road system threading
the area providing accessibility to all
parts of the park by motor, which
otherwise could have been reached
only by foot.
The chief ranger's figures reveal
that 307 miles of motorways and
trails were traveled to reach the dlf?
ferent fires. Of this total IBS miles
were over motorways ut an average
speed of 20 miles per hour and 22
miles by foot at an average of slightly
over one mile per hour. Thus fire
fighters were enabled to reach the
scenes of the different blazes In the
shortest time possible and to extin
guish the flames while they were still
In Incipient stages. A few years ago
before the construction of the motor
ways, the story would have been far
different fires would have covered
acres before they could have been
reached, park officials pointed out.
' The Crater Lake national park ran
ger staff has been especially trained
n fire fighting as a protective meas
ure for the many thousands of acres
of virgin timber In the park. The
efficiency of the rangers Is reflected
In the results of last summer, offi
cials emphasized. . t
BROWN HELD FOR
Bert Brown, 04, woodcutter on
the Weybrlght ranch In Jas-kson
ville, was bound over to the grand
Jury by Justice of the Peace W. R.
Coleman yesterday on a charge ol
assault white armed with a deadly
weapon. He failed to post bond of
f 1 ,000 and wns committed to the
county Jail. Ho waived a prelimin
ary henring.
Brown wns charged with stabbing
George Hilton, Jacksonville city mar
shnl, on the left side of the face
and In the left arm late Friday
night on k street In Jacksonville,
following an argument.
3
Do you Need Glasses?
Sec Dr. R.M.HOOD
OPTOMETRIST
TP. 283-R Sparta Bid.
40S E. Main St. Mdlford
Skillful Service
Reasonable Prices
3
Start Saving
MEDFORD FEDERAL SHARE EARNED 4 DIVI
DEND COMPOUNDED SEMI ANNUALLY on JULY
1st. In addition your Savings are insured for safety
up to $6,000.00 by the Federal Savings and Loan In
surance Corporation.
Mirtlirr ynn dcMre lo m rrt,ularlv rarll
month or lo makf lump urti ImrMmrnt,
jou will find nil. of Dili Anrlntlon's Invest
rnfnt plum lo tult jour nr.d.
MONEY TO LEND
For repairs, Improve
ments, and new con
striirtlon on our direct
reduction monthly pay
ment plait,
r
E
FOR STATE HOUSE
The new state capltol may event
ually have a- larger area than the
old site of about seven ceres.
This Is the view of Representative
Olenn O. Taylor who was back at
his deputy United States marshal's
office in federal building here yes
terday after attending the special
session of the legislature that ap
proved a compromise measure for
the erection of the new capltol on
the old site.
"Personally, I should have Hkeo
additional ground," Mr. Taylor said,
"but It Is generally overlooked that
the measure provides for trhe old
site plus any gifts of land that
might be made.
"Wilson park, which la owned by
the city of Salem, Is Immediately
to the vest of the capltol site and
It la possible that this land, com
prising about six acres, may be
given to the state by the city. The
capltol site would then have about
13 acres."
The house, Mr. Taylor said, nan
to choose between the old site and
Candalarla heights, no other choice
being presented to it. The house,
he stated, was opposed to the
heights location because of its re
moteness and the cost of improving
and modernizing It.
Obituary
Mrs. EUii C. Brown.
Mrs. Ella C. Brown, formerly Mrs.
Han scorn, passed away at her home.
320 King street, at 11:30 a.m. Satur
day at the age of 60.
Mrs. Brown was born at Monda
min. Iowa, January 14, 1869. At the
ape of 20 years she was married to
Qc'Orge Hanscom, who passed away
In June, 1809. To this union wore
born three children. Mrs. Ruby Price,
Miss Llnnle Hanscom and Mrs. Grace
Oalbraith, all surviving. By her later
marriage two children were born.
Viola Moore of Central Point and
William O. Brown of Port Angeles.
Wash., who is now enroute to Med
ford. Also three sisters and two brothers,
Lizzie Lapworth, Emma Walker, Rose
Case, William and David Case, all In
the east.
Funeral services will be conducted
by the Rev. D. E. Millard at the
Conger chapel at 2:00 p.m., Tuesday
with Interment In the Siskiyou Mem'
orlal park.
C. E. Velln
Word has been received of the
death yesterday afternoon of O. E.
Velln or the Willow Springs district
In a Salem hospital, where he had
been confined for the past week, at
the age of 74 years. The only rela
tive of Mr, Velln living In the west Is
Mrs. M. u Patterson of Portland
niece, he having been preceded In
death by his wife, who passed away
In 1023.
Mr, Velln had been a resident and
highly respected citizen of this valley
for 23 years, having come here from
Portland In 1006. His passing Is deep
ly regretted by a largo number of
friends as he was very well known
throughout this vicinity.
Coo Relief Light.
MARSH FIELD, Ore., Nov. 16 (AP)
Coos county's quota for WPA work
relief rolls and available for Jobs,
relief Tools and available for Jobs,
P. E. Thompson of the district WPA
office at Medford reported.
Low Spud Crop
BOSTON. Mass,. Nov. 16. (API
The smallest New England potato
crop since 1928 was predicted today
In a Joint report of the United States
and Massachusetts departments of ag
riculture. ' General rardonrd
FRANKFORT, K, Nov. 16 (AP)
With a pardon Oov. Ruby Laffoon
today saved Adj. Oen. H. H. Den-
hardt from trial on two Indictments
that followed the national guard oc
cupation of Harlan county during the
August primary.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
For A Home
There's nothing more worth
while savins for than a com
fortable home of your own!
Start saving now for this
important goal. It is a satis
faction to know that your
savings arc insured with us.
talk
look Tor
Thl Kmhlpm
EDERAL5AVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
Gift For The
i
3' $
:-1 T
f 1
Deliver to the Whit House
one 1250-pound cheese!
Five-year-old Dorothy Jean
J nd in, dressed in the fashion of
1800, wraps up a mammoth Wis
consin cheese and tics a big red,
white and blue bow on it to be
R resented to the President during
ationnl Cheese Week, November
10 to 16.
The huge' cheese Is a duplicate
In size and form of America's first
mammoth presented to Thomas
Jefferson in 1802 by the Republi
can Ladies of Massachusetts. Wis
consin's gift will bo presented at
the White House November M,
in a ceremony identical, ns nearly
as possible, with the one in 1802.
Drawn hy six white horses, oh
a white sleigh, the giant cheeRo
will proceed through the streets
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 10. (AP)
Sltlnoy Miller, woocisnwyer union trus
tee, plendod guilty In circuit court
today to charRcs of helping bent up a
non-union wood cutter.
y s s ft
THE ntoilcrn nntnnn control!! 41 of fht? nation's IndHlrtual
ttcultii. .she l the henrf Irliuy or 8i'r of the sino.non.non.non
of lire Inirraiiif tit forrp hi llir I nllrtl St a If. 4lie roiii1ltiitr
fwm 30"r to ftr'r or Hip rtiHtmnoni or Invent input hoimrt nnd h
ni,tki4 up a nitijorltv or jthirklinMiT In mailt lurRp corporation.
There nre ns innny nutneii millionaire an mm.
lth nil thl wealth In her nnmr, It I wit urn I t lint he thould wlfh
to pi un for It itltrltnilton.
In ttie illioiil of tlirlr proneily, nunirn of mr.m folloH the nmo
plun Hint men lisne loutul ilrlruhp.
1 ne. hiitnP-liKp met hod rnipMnert tn trnt orK.inirnttnn as
exenitor nnd trmtee nppnil lo (hrlr Rood Judgment,
We think It ft Mould he tl-r;titlon lo ou to know that your
rarer till v dmun will, (ully rpri"liis ur wuiiet nnd nnmlnjc n n
onr eenitor, I properl riled nw.i In oitr Mlekeeplnn.
If ton hnp not et tnken tare or thl duty (o ournelf and tluxe
who tome nfler jou. we Iinlte jou tn dlnt It with our Trnt
OffUer.
The First National Bank
A Departmentized Bank
COMMERCIAL-SAVINGS-TRUST DEPARTMENT
SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS
White House!
en' I ,A
r :
" a i I h
of Washington to the front door
of the White House, marking the
climax of Cheese Week activities.
The 1250-pound mammoth is
the gift of the National Cheese
Institute whose membership com
prises all major members of the
industry. The National commit
teeman from Wisconsin, as an
intermediary between the White
House and the National Cheese
Institute, worked out preliminary
details for the delivery, of the
cheese to the President through
Marvin H. Mclntyre, assistant
secretary to the President. The
Cheese for the White House, made
from more than 12,000 pounds of
the finest grade Wisconsin milk,
was made in Weyauwega, Wau
paca County, Wisconsin, by Ray
mond J, Patton, a master chwse
maker. CORVALLIS, Ore., Nov. 16. (AP)
A committee appointed by the mayor
recommended that the new Corvallls
armory be locatrd on the city park
and county fair grounds site.
v v A i"
;ion
POLICY OF F.D.R.
HELD VITAL NEED
(Continued Ytom Page One.)
relief should be confined to cash
allowances to these authorities to
the extent that they are unable to
provide for their own funds."
3. "The spending for visionary
and un-American experiments should
be stopped."
4. "This horde of political bureau
cracy should be rooted out."
8. "The provision of the conatl
tutlon requiring that expenditures
should be only in accordance with
appropriations actually made by law
should .be obeyed. And they should
be made for specific purposes."
6. "The budget should be bal
anced, not by taxes, but by reduc
tion of follies."
7. "The futile purchase of for
eign silver should be stopped."
8. "The gold standard should be
re-established, even on the new
basis."
9. "The act authorising the pres
ident to inflate the currency should
be repealed."
10. "The administration should
give and keep a, pledge to the
country that there will be no furth
er Juggling of the currency and
no further experiments with credit
Inflation."
11. "Confidence In the validity or
promises of the government should
be restored."
"Economic security, social secur
ity, or any other security cannot
be found without first restoring
these primary policies of govern
ment." Hoover asserted.
Turning to the course of mone
tary affairs under the Roosevelt
administration, the former president
said :
"The dose of lnflatli now In
jected Into our- national blood
stream by the new deal Is already
three or four times as great as that
of 1927.
"They say also It can be con
trolled. But will the politically con
trolled reserve system prove any
more successful? Stated In Its mild
est form, this Is gambling with
vthe fate of a nation.
"Should these controls fall, this
democracy will not survive the
shock." ,
Bare The Good
Mr. Hoover titled his address "The
expenditures Imposed upon the peo
ple by the new economic planning.
Its consequences, and some remedies
It requires." He said at the outset
that he was not criticizing all that
has been done In Washington and
that "whatever Is good should be
continued."
He noted that opponents of the
economic planning were divided
Into two groups. One. he said, feels
that such a catch-word cloaks "that
Incarnate passion for power, the
Insidious end of which Is the de
struction of liberty and the rise
of the regimented state. The other
She
Has a
WILL
of Her
Own
Why Shouldn't
She?
This
Bank Acts
m Executor and
Trustee under
wnu.
m Trujt or agent
for the owner of
mortgagee and
other necurltles,
m Tnwtee under
Awlgnmenta made
for benefit of cred
itor, and In every
Trust capacity.
group holds that "the new 'nat
ional planning' la an attempt or
a collegiate oligarchy to sanctify by
a phrase a muddle of uncoordin
ated reckless adventures In govern
ment flavored with unctuous
claims to monopoly in devotion to
their fellow men."
"My own conclusion." he said,
"U that the new 'national plan
ning' contains any or all these ele
ment, depending upon which new
dealer Is doing the planning for the
day."
The only consistency he could
find In the various branches of the
planning was that each "has the
habit of carefree scattering of pub
lic money."
new inctudid in
EmDrrss-Brtain
Itinerary revised to meet
changed international con
ditions, replacing Mediter
ranean Ports.
Now.. .Two additional days
with attractive shore ex
cursions from Cape Town
to the diamond districts of
Kimberley and Johannes
burg and Durban's Zulu
land, at no extra cost, by
special arrangement with
the South African Govern
ment railways. Sailing date
from New York: January
7 (instead of January 9)
PORTS AND COUNTRIES:
MADEIRA...
LAS PALMAS.
( n lb. Casuy Island.)
CAPE TOWN ind DURBAN
INDIA. I'-IAM. JAVA, BALI
THE PHILIPPINES.
CHINA. JAPAN. HAWAII,
CALIFORNIA, PANAMA
CUBA, AND HOME.
Enjoy the extra comforts avail
able on the EmpTtst of britoin,
the largest World-Cruise ship.
Entire cruise, ship and shore,
under the experienced manage
ment of Canadian Pacific
Wortd't Greateit Travel Systtm.
132 Days. $2,150 un (Apart
ments with bath from $3,800)
including standard shore
programme.
Get details of revised itinerary,
ship's plans and fare schedules from
YOUROWN TRAVEL AGENTor .
W. H. DEACON, Gen'l Agent PVr Dept.
16 S. W. BrolwT. Phone BR. 0637. Portland.
DO YOU
CASH
FOR THINGS YOU DON'T WANT .
PVERY month . . . every year , , every housecleaning . . . you've been
" putting something else aside in the famiiy storeroom, intending to "get
rid of it", or "give it away", or maybe sell it to someone in need. But you
forget. And it keeps accumulating. And you have nothing but a crowdod
storeroom! We 'ro asking you not to delay another minute! Sit down right
now, with a copy of our Classified Columns Section, and see how many people
want to BUY the thing3 you've discarded. You'll be amazed to learn that
you can convert all those things into IMMEDIATE CASH ... or maybe
exchange thera for things you need. Use the Clnssified Columns because they
spell MONEY for you . . . and if you don't see the opportunity you want
ADVERTISE
Here are the
RATES
Per word flrt Insertion .2c
(Minimum 2."Vc)
Each additional Inwrtlon,
per word - ...lc
(Minimum iSr)
Per line per month without
copy rhauR.'s $1.2."
Phone 75
FOR WANT ADS
Back In Orrfon ucaln for Thanbsitlvlni! shipments, this belnf our
fourth year. He linve been topping the San Francisco Market, also
local sales. Also honest weights and grading here and prompt returns.
Ship to the firm Licensed and Bonded by the state of California to
be safe. Reference: Hank of America, California and Montgomery St.,
San Francisco. California.
Will Be Receiving Turkeys Nov.
21, 22, 23 at Davis Transfer
SOUTH GRAPE AT MEDFORD
For any Information call Medford 309 or Pari, Transfer.
ALBERT MICHELI, Representative
A
JtEAREST TO EVERYTHING
HOTEL
Ml
New in dress, beautifully finished rooms, with colored
tiled baths and showers, located on Sen Francisco's famous
Powell Street opposite Union Square Rcstaur.nt Coffee
Shop Cockt.il Room Circulating Ice Water.
RATES J'"50 - ,0 - -50 ' '00 slNG1-f
( l!.50 . 3.00 . 3.50 . 4.00 OOUBU
GARAGE SERVICE AT ENTRANCE
POWELL AT OTARRELL
HARVEY M TOY, MANAGING. OWNER
"MEET ME AT THE MANX"
A AND THESE ATTIC STOW
AWAYS ARE AS
AS OLD GOLD
IT COMES TO
TURNED INTO
KNOW OF A
BETTER PLACE FOR
TREASURE HUNTING?
WE WILL ADVERTISE
THESE IN THE WANT
ADS.
a THESE IN THE WANT iSLTfe I fc 'Jl
WILL GLADLY
USE THE
MAIL TRIBUNE
Classified
Ads!
ATTENTION
TURKEY
GROWERS
Bear Fruit fc
Produce Co.
115-117 Washington Street
San Francisco, Gal.
IN SAM FIANCISCO
STREET SAN FRANCISCO
GOOD
WHEN
BEING
CASH.
BE PAID FOR
'!
I'll T.. Main