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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1938)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOHI), OREGON. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 3. 1938. MDFORDHkTRIBUNE "Bveryun l Mmtlhrra Ortgmm Itaidf (be Mali rriboae," Daily Kieepf ft tarda y. Hubllanwl or UkiUVUHD PRINTING CO. N Fit at. PhOM 1 KOHKHI W RUHL, dltor. KNBH1 R OIL8TRAK MnSr. Ao ini1apn1ol Nwspper. Batrd cntnl -class mattei ( M6 lord. Oregon, units. Act of lUren I. ItT SltllHORIPl'lON RATBI Mm uiiili Adrinel! Dally, one rut ? Dally mnntba Dally d month 0 By Carrier, id Advance Uniform. Ash la ad. Jaokaonvilla, C o t r I Point. Pho.mi. Talent, Qolfl UI1I u on Blghwayai Dally, oot raar M Daily, an moutha t-la . pally ona month , 0 All tarma cash In advaae. Offlr.nl Pap ol tb City Ol atnlfnrd nrilrlHl I'm per nt Jackann Uooiity UKMIiKH Of IIIB AnmiriAlBIM'HBHd Welting Kull t.flnM4 Wire Hrlr. The a"ciipi1 Prat i aicmiay au tit lad to tha uaa for publloatlon of all naw 4iapatchaa credit to it ot othar wlaa oradiiert to thl pa par. and la l tba torai naar publlaha haralo. All rif h for publication nf apaelai dlapatchaa haraln ara alao rrvd. MEMBER OF UNITED I' REUS aJKMMKB Of AlJDII BURBA U :iroiii.ationh Advartlalnif rtapraaantatt' Offlcaa IB New Torn, Chicago, Datrolt, flan rranolaco, txa Angalaa. flaattla, Portland, BL Lenta, Atlanta, TaaeovveT, B. C. Member ojyjrSia- wsoaoei i r r ,ssocitio Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur feny. Harry Bridges, an Australian alien, who haa been quite peitlferoua In Pacific Coast labor trouble., In a apcech at San Franclaco recently, declared: "We don't need a new ayatem, but a readjustment of the one we have." I'naamuch a. 'Arry 1. not an American cltlnen, though njoylng more privilege, than If he waa one, hi. uae of the pronoun "We" may nettle some native-born. Strictly apealtlng. he ahould have aald "You." One of theae day., prob ably dl.tant,' from the preaent .tate of the publlo mind, the like, of Mr. Bridge, will faca readju.tment. They will have the choice of two h.rd ahlps: Behave themaelve., or go home. The Ftrat Lady la not disturbed by the sale of land, for the estab lishment of a negro colony, across the Hudson river from the Roosa vclt estate. Scribe, addloted to the promulgation of feline remark., hasten to comment: She', not home often enough to be disturbed. rCRlLII OF POLITICS (Waxhatr (NC) Enterprise) "The editor and the rest of the Waxhaw delegation had a very enjoyable trip to the Demo cratic convention In Raleigh. Tha only drawback waa the number of candidates there. A delegate put his hand out of the car to signal for a turn and fifteen men shook hand, with him be fore he could draw It back." O. Strang, the pioneer pllllst, ap peared Tuesday, wearing a Christmas necktie. It was a riot ot color, that just missed being a civil war of oolor. . B. TJlrloh. the Prospect mt.-wm.. came to town yesterday for a hair cut. Mr. Ulrlch Is now enacting the role of a downtrodden farmer, In a new Bulck. The popular detour to miss the alsln stem traffic light will not be ready for BO mph dashes after a hend of lettuce for another week, t Constable Nick Toung lost a S bill the 1st of the week. He nesrly tore his Hollywood shirt trying to find It. . . . "ROBBERS GET $70,000 AND TAKE ruaHT" IHdllne Cooa Bay Times) If a robber can't take flight, he won't take anything. Quite a number of the Older Olrls have started early fall knitting, be tween swings at mosquitoes. ... "Nothing Is more odious thsn the majority, for It consists of a few powerful leaders, a certain number of accommodating scoundrels and submissive weaklings, and a mass of men who trudd after them without thinking, or knowing their own mind." (Goethe'. Writings) The shoe flta again. The Republican party of the na tion haa adopted a new emblem and slogan. The emblem la a streamlined and angry elephant, on the dead run. The slogan la: "Let's Q. O. p.laces." The slogan la atemwindtnRly devastating no fooling. It doesn't mean anything, and is aa hard to aay as the Star Spangled Banner Is to ulna:. If the master mind who thought up the slogan, was paid any thing for hla mental effort, he should give it back. IM.Iti: COM KM TIIK HltlOK "Miss Johnson announced that she wanta a mood of carefree jocosity to dominate the wedding ceremony and that If ahe catchea anyone turn ing on the weeps, ahe will let fly amark nt the beerer of the first of fender with the bridal bouquet. In which there will be concealed a sturdy cabbage for this purpose. I have already been engaged to sing Oh. Promise Me aa Incidental music to the parson's comment, with Mam-i,n ma. That Moon Is Here Again' o an encore If the assembled entour se win atand for ona." (Blsbee Is U. S. Veering to Right? THE result in yesterday ' primaries are more conservative victories than New Deal defeats. Three technically anti-Roosevelt candidates won handily, Senator Clark in Missouri, Representative Smith, and Sir. Colgate Darden, Senator Byrd's congressional candidate in Virginia. But the administration made no fight against any of these men, so the Roosevelt issue was not really involved. '( The maximum gratification, the Rooseveltphobiacs can gain from yesterday's flurry of ballots therefore, is the demonstrated truth, that 100 support of Roosevelt, is not essential to politi cal preferment in the Democratic party. Which incidentally is all to the good. We can only regret a similar by the Democrats of Oregon, last IN both parties yesterday 1 had all the best of it. The "Ku Kluxer" revivalist not only beaten in the Republican race, but ran a poor third, while former Governor Reed, stantial, conservative, but not in that state. Bennett Clark of Missouri, son of the famous ultra conserva tive Champ Clark, with the state Democratic machine solidly behind him, had a walkaway Clark opposed the President's supreme court measure and his reorganization bill, and all down the line, refused to follow the leader of his party when turned too far to the left. It is doubtful if the President could have beaten Clark, but as long as he made no effort in posting the result, as a kick pants. THE first REAL test of Roosevelt's political strength will come Saturday in Kentucky, when "Dear Albcn" (Barkley) will meet an extremely formidable opponent in Governor "Happy" Chandler, who believes in fighting federal machine fire with state machine fire, and is doing it. Until then, the primary results don't demonstrate anything very significant regarding the President's political strength, one way or the other, They do indicate that public sentiment in the country at large is veering toward the conservative side, which if it 'con tinues that way, is from the standpoint of Republican success in 19-iO, extremely important. Campaign Cliches 'T'HIS column herewith raises follows: "Wa solemnly .wear w. will thl. campaign and the one following, to avoid two of the leading political cliche, namely. Liberal and Rubber Stamp. so help us Oodl" Perfectly good and understandable terras, but so abused and overworked they have lost nil moaning and all respect ability. Take "Liberal" for example. Today it is used as a verbal cloak to cover everyone who favors Roosevelt and the New Deal. He is for the present administration t Well then willy nilly, he is a LIBERAL. As a matter of fact, some of the most il-libcral, bigoted, narrow-minded partisans now living are for President Roosevelt and all he says and does. They have no more understanding of the term than the officers and board of directors of the late and unlanientcd Liberty League. and temperamentally there are few more GENUINE "LIBERALS", than the titular leader of the Republican party, former Governor Landon. Liberality in other words is not how a person votes, but how he thinks and feels. POLITICALLY. 'OUBBER STAMP" represents the reverse side of the same pious and platitudinous political coin. It is used as a term of opprobrium for the man who votes for a Roosevelt measure, when the speaker would the measure is an important one, and has aroused considerable feeling. The most striking example of this we can recall was the recent condemnation' of Senator Norris by the Garnett press, as just another Roosevelt "rubber stamp." Now the venerable senator from Nebraska can be called a number of things but rubber stamp is NOT one of them. His voting record for the New Deal may be 100 but anyono who knows hiin or anything about him, knows that his vote, what ever it may be, has been the result of thought and conviction, not blind adherence to any porson or any party. Next to Senator Borah, Senntor Norris is generally conceded to be the most, independent and least blindly partisan, member of the Upper House. In other words, "rubber stamp" is a term applied by the prosecution to any member of the congress who in an important division, sides with the administration; just as "liberal" is applied to the same person by the defense. Doth ternfs have been so abused and misused this column, as above stated, is going to do its best in the future to avoid them. Toledo News Bee Gives Up Ghost TOLEDO. O.. Aug S. (AP) The Toledo News Bee, a Scrlpps-Howard newspaper, announced today with Hi final edition tixiay It was suspending publloatlon. The announcement ot suspension said ::The New Bet for several years haa oeen published at a loss. . . . The decision to retlrv from the field was baaed on the conviction finally two afternoon newspapers cannot be published with fair profit for both In Toledo." The other afternoon paper here is the Toledo Blade, published by Paul Block. Huff IMeaili Innocent PORTLAND. Aug. 8. H Dr. J. H. j-iutf of Baker pleaded Innocent ves- terday after entering a demurrer to indictment chargine him with the nepal sale of narrottea. Closing tune ror Too Lata to Clas- silf AO 11 1:30 p. m, I ' . demonstration was not put on May I the conservatives unquestionably Pastor Winrod in Kansas was the winner, represents the sub the REACTIONARY elements, in that pivotal commonwealth (in his judgment) the President to do so, one is hardly justified in the seat of the White House its right hand and deposes as do everything In our power In On the other hand, politically vote agninst, particularly if Bakery Strike Ends With Pact Signing PORTLAND. Ore. Aug. 3 (AP) The Bakers' union and tha Davidson Bakery Company signed a contract last night, ending a three-day strike The plant reopened at once Settlement dctalla were not dis closed. The Wholesale Baker? Drivers' un ion had Joined the strike yesterday. short time btiore the settlement charging the company attempted t place members on a commission basis. Ranrher .sentenced McMlNNVILLX, Aug. 3. . Cir cuit Judge Arlle O. Walker wntenced James P. Hutchens. 5. Peavlne Ridge rancher, to two years in prison yes terday and placed him under five years probation. Hutchens was con ricted last Friday of awaull with a dartfrrcu weapon for shootlr.fi at a n - lthbora house. The judge lined Hutchens 7W. also I Personal Health Service By William tHened letter! pertaining Co personal health and hygiene, not to disease d lag nulla or treatment, will be ana we red by Or. Brady If a atamped 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 answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Ueverly Hills, Calif. THE PERILS Over-exertion la perhaps the most common and the moat serious haz ard of the annual vacation. Every summer many thousands of people of seden tar y occupation leave their ac customed "brain work" and with out even an at tempt at train ing, enter upon if ,.!. a strenuous fort night of swim ming, canoeing, hiking, golf, tennis, baseball, riding, and the like. When the strain la over It takes them weeks to recover If they ever do recover, That depends on how much damage the heart muscle has suffered. An excellent rule for any one In the white collar class on vacation Is this: When In doubt about the wisdom of any unaccustomed activ ity, duck It. You can always decide that you feel Inclined to laze or read or do some writing or take nap this afternoon. Young adults who get little or no exercise the year round ahould train for vacation by a dally schedule of walking, from a mile twice dally at first gradually Increased to a dally walk of six miles after a month or ao. If 'It Is Impossible to do this, then at least they should carry out a dally schedule of setting-up exer cises, such as the movements of the Last Brady Symphony for a month more before vacation. (Send a tamped envelope bearing your ad dress for complete words and music of Last Brady Symphony a course of exercise designed to keep seden tary folk from going flabby. Second vacation hazard. In fre quency and Importance, la sunburn. Probably the most painful and se rious sunburns occur from the eagerness -ol the young person to acquire a coat of tan In a week. One who Is more concerned about that than about the health-value of ex posure to sunlight would do well to purchase a bottle of artificial "sun- tan" at the drugstore and apply It freely before Indulging In the unac customed exposure. Probably the best way to avoid painful sunburn Is by timing the exposures carefully In the first two or three weeks say not to, exceed five minutes, forenoon and again In the afternoon the first day: ten mlnutea forenoon and five minutes , afternoon second day; ten minutes1 Man About Manhattan By GKOKUB rUCKEH OLD LYME, Conn. This has been a lazy man's day, and at being lazy I can give the natives a head start and win hands down. We got up thl morning about 8:30 and then went down the shaded patio and rested awhilfl. Then we strolled over to the din lng room and had a simple breakfast com posed of fruit Juice, cantaloupe. bacon, eggs, hot rolls, butter, marmalade and coffee. Then we went back to the patio and rested some more while having a smoke, and after that we got Into bathing suits, climbed Into the car. and lit out for the beach. I suppose the Boxwood beach where we swim Is about two miles from the Inn. It Isn't the prettiest beach tn the world, but It la private and It Is comfortable and there is a big hot sun and a lot of hot sand and all the water even a greedy swimmer might car for. There Is. in fact, all of Long Island sound, and on clear i days you can look across 10 miles I of salt water and see the tip of Long Island. Well, after we got to the beach we spread blanketa and then stretched out In the sun to have a nap and rest some more. And then we shift ed so that we could get burned all over, and after that we went in swimming. The sound Isn't as rough as the ocean, but it la just as salty The island serves as a bumper for the big breakers, so that usually we get only gentle swells and white caps of a mtnor order. It waa while taking these swells In the shallows near shore that the one Jarring note of the dav took place. A btg eel scared the pant off me. It swam right past me and I thought It was a big snake until Itsrrlson Wood, my host, explained. While m-e were resting we sud- tli nly dl!covered a three-masted sailing vessel bowling along far out In the sound. Some of the guests thought It might be the Corsair. J. P. Morgan's macnlflcent yacht, but Morgan Is In Europe and the Comalr has a black hull. This one waa snow white, and the last we aw of her she tipped towards the Connecticut river and disappeared Into its maw. About 12 o'clock we got lazily Into the car and went back to the Inn. where we dressed and then had a fine turkey dtnenr. And alter dinner of courv we were tired, so we sat In the shade and refreshed ourselves and then ment back to the beach again. It w.i a during the afternoon swim ) that one of those sudden. lnexpl:ra-j b la fogs came up. One minute the sun was bright aud the world was I Brady, M P. OP VACATION . forenoon, ten minutes afternoon the third day; fifteen minutes forenoon, 10 minutes afternoon the fourth day; fifteen minutes forenoon, fifteen mlnutea afternoon the fifth day. And so on. This schedule may be a little too much for very white or susceptible skins; or It may not bo aa much as a dark or less sensitive skln; will endure without burning. It Is suggested merely aa an example. Any one not accustomed to ex posure to the mid-summer midday sun is wise to get In from under the moment he or she notices or feels that the white skin la becom ing at all flushed or reddened. To continue the exposure even a few minutes longer is to invite painful burn. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Specific Gravity My weight Is exactly what it waa five years ago, yet my waist meas ures at least three Inchea more than It did then and all my clothes have become Mrs. M. R. Answer You have gone flabby. Fat takes up more room, weighs less than muscle. You need to re sume a reasonable dally physical activity. Probably you need an lodln ration. Send a three-cent-stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for The Last Brady 8ymphony (systematic exercises to keep fit) and Instructions for taking an lodln ration. Running Ear For about three years I have had a running ear. Sometimes it seems almost normal, but presently begins to run again. Doctors have prescribed and treated It without result. I would also like to have your pam phlet on Belly Breathing. C. H. L. Answer Never keep cotton or other plug in ear. Leave It open to ventilation. Drop In ear each night and morning for a period of months i two or th . of a comfortably warm of ten grains of boric acid In the ounr of pure grain alcohol, ror the booklet "How to Breathe" send twenty cents coin and a stamped envelope bearing your ad dress. Mention the leaflet on "Run ning Ear" If you want it, and also the t i, on "Rr. ...jn" which contains Instructions (illustrated) for i.-.j:- j artificial respiration In emergencies. (Copyright, 1938. John P. DUIe Co.) Ed Note: Persons nishlne to romiminlrate with Dr. Bradr Mould .end leller direct tn nr. William llroilv. M D., 3GS El Camlnn, Beverly Hills, Calif. a continuous glare. And a moment later so quickly that we were taken unawares, all of It was blotted out. You couldn't even see the diving raft a couple of hundred yards out. Everything disappeared under a blanket of fog-cloud. To a land lubber like myself It was a phe nomenon but nobody else thought anything about It. In half an hour perhaps It was gone again, leaving the sound crystal clear and the beach more glary than ever. I almost forgot the most Impor tant thing of all. During the fog a great tanker lost her bearings and almost ran aground on the sand bars. She was within a hundred yards of us before we noticed her, a white ghostly hulk looming through the mists. But there was no real damage. A group of shoremen magi cally appeared and helped push her off, and the last we saw of her she was a grey blot in the fog. Went her Northern California: Pair tonight and Thursday, but becoming foggy along the coast Thursday, cooler cen tral coast Thursday: light to mod erate northwest wind off the coast. . Oregon: Fair tonight and Thursday, warmer northeast portion tonight: moderate northerly wind off the coast becoming variable. The largest pyramid contains 2 J 00, 000 blocks of limestone ' each weighing one and a half tons. Where Russians and Japanese Battle "VT? fMANCHOUKUO ) J liny toilet let narplane. filing In a ronleted hill there, p,lttin on rJ I v I Russia o too loo S00 400SOO i yjvggl : rm Jf x.gt: n y-C situation on the Siberian Manrhoukuoan frontlrr, Comment on the Days News By FRANK JENKINS SOMETHING la happening along the border between Japanese Man- chouquo and Russian Siberia. . Developments are clouded by cen sorship and propaganda, but It looks as If considerable forces ara being employed by both aldea. Operations so far reported are apparently far beyond the scale of a mere border Incident. It will be Interesting to see what comes of It. THE fighting, please note, la over a few barren hills whose ownership la In dispute. Russia possesses already more bar ren hills than she has any real use for, and you can put It down In your day-book that she isn't risking a war that ahe DOESN'T WANT In order to confirm her possession of a few more. If Russia backs up this border dis pute with real force, it may be taken for granted that she 'means business so far as Japan Is concerned. IP Russia really means business, in this border clash with Japan quite a lot of new history is due to be made In the next few months. GOVERNOR GORDON, of Tennes see, who la running for re election against a candidate who Is backed by the Memphis political boss, announces cryptically on the day these words are written that he will not send troops Into Memphis on election day "unless he changes his mind." But politicians, you know, change their minds very easily. CALLINO out the troops on election day would be an Interesting new departure In American politics. But we've had a lot of new departure In our politics in recent years. IN Pennsylvania, the onoe pure and white Governor Earle is facing grand Jury charges that will be em barrassing In the extreme If substan tiated, so he undertakes to shift Jhe Inquiry away from the Dauphin county grand Jury, which he doesn't control, to a special session of the Pennsylvania legislature, which he DOES control. A Pennsylvania Judge has Just ruled that it can't be done. THE business of politicians Is to get elected and STAY elected, and In these days of the new freedom, as tn the old days that preceded them, any method Is all right that gets results. The ballyhoo changes from time to time, but the fundamentals of poli tics go on about the same. The Russian language Is spoken by about 110,000,000 people in the U-SJS.R. and 4,000.000 In other coun tries. Summer Class Grows CORVALLIS, Aug. 3. jipW-Oregon State college's new five-week post session summer course, instituted last year, had an enrollment of 102 stu dents yesterday, compared with 81 the year before. Seek New Courthouse GOLD BEACH. Aug. 3. (API Curry county taxpayers at a meeting here directed the county court to make Immediate application to the PWA for a grant of $45,000 for con struction of a new courthouse cost ing 6100.000, subject to approval of a bond issue to meet the county share of the expense. 4 More than one-half of the Cali fornia legislators serving in 1937-38 were born outside that atate. formation thundered over Changkofeng l and bombed Jflpan armrdlnr to a Korean army rrnnmnnlque. addlnr to the alreadt The toilet alo were The Capital Parade (Continued from Pag. One.) tlons la prefaced with careful, fairly factual argument. Ita central thesis Is that the present securities laws unwisely hamper tha flow of new capital Into industry. Many facta are adduced to prove 'this among others, that, because public offer ings have been made so difficult, "over a billion dollars ot securities have been placed by private sale In the three years, 1038 to 1937. In clusive." Its only thoroughly contro versial recommendations are those concerning bank - underwriting and the size of the SEC. All summed up In the memorandum, they read: "Additional capital in the under writing business is necessary. Banks and trust companies should be al lowed to underwrite, but not to en gage In retail distribution (of securi ties). This will require not only ap propriate amendments of the bank ing act of 1933, but also amendments of the liability sections of the securi ties act, "The size of the securities and ex change commission should be Imme diately Increased to at least seven, and probably to nine members." These make the most ardent New Dealers see really red. Bank under writing was the great object of at tack of the Pecora Investigation and the inner circle of the New Deal has never lost its conviction that banks, and especially J. P. Morgan and company, should be kept out of the underwriting business. As for the Increase In the size of the com mission, its ostensible purpose Is to permit SEC departmentalization, on the lines of the ICC. But New Deal ers see In It an effort to get greater conservative representation on the j commission. The other recommendations are distinctly technical, and. while few of them are even accepted In theory by SEC experts, they have aroused less excitement. They are, In part: "Material simplification and co ordination of all federal legislation dealing with the securities markets Is of the greatest Importance . . The present machinery of registra tion (of the securities) should be simplified. The registration state ment (should be abolished) as separate document, and (there should be filed) In place thereof only a prospectus, with exhibits . . . The present length of prospectuses should be cut down . . . "The liability provisions (affect ing offerers of new securities) should be changed . . . The present prohi bition as to solicitation (of sales of new securities before final registra tion) should be removed . . . The period for the compulsory delivery of prospectuses should be cut down . . , subunderwrltlng should be made practicable , rules should be adopted, so as to handle the prob lem (of defining, pegging, fixing and stlbillzing of prices of newly offered securities)." The prlma-facle evidence, down to the physical appearance of the mem orandum, which resemblea other documents from Morgan's, testifies that the -foregoing recomen da tlons do come from Morgan. Stanley. What the result of the recommendations will be, none can foretell. But It may be noted that the New Dealers have watched the vast proportion of total underwriting now done by Morgan, Stanley with a distinctly Jaundiced eye. Deny German Retrial PORTLAND. Aug. 3. ( AP) Fred W. German, Portland realtor convict ed of larceny by embezzlement, waa denied a new trial by Circuit Judge Earl C. Latourette of Oregon City yesterday. German was convicted of embezzling $300 from Valdemar Flen- stead by a Jury hearing the case be fore Latourette here. Workers Grow Beards MELBOURNE. Australia (UP) Workers on the lofty spire of St. Patrick's cathedral here have all grown beards as a protection against sunburn and winds. Closing time for Too Late to Clas sify Ads Is 1 :30 p. m. nee . addlnr tn the tlMrlt tnu rmrtei h.r. ..-..a .i. Flight o Time Medford and Jack ion Count; hl.torjr from tee file, of th. Mall Tribune 10 tnd.10 year, aeo. TEN YEARS AGO TODAI August 3, ll)'!8. s -(It Wa. Prldr-y) Legion delegate .tart, beating drum and parading atreeU night and day, to win a bet. II ha atop, he lote.. Polish plan, neara America. on Atlantic flight Showery weather predicted for valley. i I. Shortage of labor for Bartlett pick ing, nettlea frultmen. Pour arrested In local liquor raid. State prohibition enforcement aide. visit city. Adlienne Steward files to Los An geles to attend style .how. Brush fire In Meodows district con trolled. TWENTY YEARS AliO TODAY August 3, 1918 . (It Was Friday) German. In full retreat north of Ourcq, burning villages aa they flea. Five cars of Bartletts dispatched east last night. Still shortage of pickers. Weather In Oregon past week big help to all crops. Charlca Reames. assistant United States district atorney. arrives for a visit at Crater lake. He la stationed at Portland. Crater lake to date has 4.568 visi tor.. FOR BEAVER BOYS PORTLAND. Aug. 8. (AP) The one-house legislative system gained the approval of 200 boys yesterday at the American Legion Beaver Boys state at Hill Military Academy. The constitution provided one rep resentative for each 15 citizens to serve two years and two delegates from each of the 12 "cities" to serve six years. Of the 20 lads who passea bar examinations, 10 went on the staffs of the camp's district attorney and attorney general and 10 entered pri vate practice. Young Journalists released the first copy of the Dally Bugle. The cities have selected their mayors but elections in the general governmental system will be held lata today. E DISAPPROVE ACT SPOKANE. Aug. 3. (AP) "There Is almost universal disapproval among; wheat growers over Secretary Wal laces program amounting almost to revolution," A. R. Shumway, Milton, Ore., president of the North Pad fie Grain Growers, Inc., told directors yesterday. Supporting the cooperative's protest Monday of wheat provisions of tha farm relief act, Shumway said that to follow the program outlined by tha department of agriculture "meant nothing but ruin." He said he foresaw an uprising of wheat farmers throughout the Pa- caflc northwest and predicted farm era would act to obtain a wheat par ity price at the next congressional session. WOMAN KILLED WHEN HEAD HITS WINDSHIELD FREEWATER, Ore., Aug. 3. (AP) Mrs. Allen J. Rodacker. 23, was killed last night when her head waa plunged through the windshield of her family automobile In an acci dent on the main street. Her husband, who wai driving; when the car struck the rear of an other machine pulling away from tha curb, was uninjured. The Rosetta Stone, key to the Egyptian hieroglyphics, Is 3 feet. S inches high. 3 feet. 4H Inches wide, and 11 Inches thick. Chevrolet JINGLES CopyrlBhted At last they've found a use for "hill billy" bands, Tor the wailing and croon ing of top cow hands. - They use 'em for soothin' vote-gettin' bait, To elect a governor of Texas, the Lone Star state. They corralled the votes for the flour king, Whenever and wherever they stopped to sing. Just equip a Chevrolet as a modern sound truck And all the other candidates are "outa" luck! Chevy M Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Klrrnlitt mr opt 31 No Rltmid. Cwd Cat Lot Rirmld, at itb ill