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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1939)
PAGE SIT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1933. MedforiUwTbibune mEti7od ta Koothcrn Oro DMdi th UJ1 Trlbua," Dally Kxcept B-UurdAy. unnvriRn prihtinO CO. M-1T-SS No. rir St. Phons ft ROBERT W RVHU Editor. RNE8T R. QIUBTKAP UanafCF. AO lDdpn(lot Nwpapr. Batrtd ta MOond-olBii matter at Mart Cord, Oragoa, uodar Act of Uarcb I, 1171 SUBSCRIPTION RATES M Uafl In Arfraae! Dally and Sunday na paar II. M Daily and Sunday 1i moothl... 1.10 Dally and Suuday thraa months. l 'J Dally aod Sunday ont month... 71 Rt P.rrUr In Advaoc Madford. Aah land. Central Paint, Jackannvtllt. Oold Hill. Rticua Rlvar. puoanii. Taiani. Dally and Sunday on yaar Dally and Sunday on montn... All tar ma caah In adanea. Official Paper of Ilia City of Hwlfora Official Papr of Jackaoa County. MRMHKR OP Til IE afWOCIATKD PHKMS RacalTlng Tull imam ir nmrwivw. Tha Associated Praaa la aiclualvaly ntlttad to tha uaa for publication of all atwi dlapatchaa cradt'ad to M or othar. tin eradUad to thia papar. and alao to tha local nwi publlattad haralo. All rtahta for publication of apaeiai Slapatchaa haraln aro alao raaarao. MbiMHERS OF I1NITBP PRESS MEMBER Or AUDIT BURBAO OP CIRCULATIONS Advartlalng Rapreaentatlvot WEST-HOLM DA T COMPANY. 1NO Offloae In Now Tok. Chicago. Datrott. flan Franclaco. Loa Angalaa, Baattla. Portland, St Louia. Atlanta, Vancouvar. n c Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. People hae been worrying and fretting, and kept in a stew all week by the war in Europe, and the way Messrs. Stalin of Russia and Hitler of Germany have been acting. What they are fretting about is 8,000 miles awav as the crow fMfc, tf a crow was craey enough to" fly that far. There are several things nearer home that need worrying about. None know what world Issue worried them last Ootober 1. a inku h.ow t 4 Via ti-u-k4 ta nna In for a spell of Indian summer, at long last. a Many hunters have returned from the hills without any quarry. Hermr Offenbacher of the Apple- gate hayed Tues. with the toothache. Either one Is bad enough, without the other, a a It rained so hard at the a. Hunt magic lantern ahow In "The Rains Came", many autolats wished they had their oars out In It, v Ths hi school fb. squad conquered Oorvallls m. eve, In their red silk pants. The visiting athletes were not arlng overalls, The Don Runyard boy illmbed a tree and responded to the law Of gravity, and had to have nine stitches taken in his limb last week. a The Bates Boys havs .nataHWi 1st her making machine, that operates on the principle of a cement mixing machine, and mnkes almost as much noiM. it u a labor saving device. frr xp t- naorlallsts. One of theae days a speed idiot Is going to shoot out of a gas alio at 60 per, and be In need of a good lawyer, as a result. a Memoers of the fair sex who never let Dams Fn-hlon get ahead of them, now have what they called a "wasp, waist." Some say never agnln will thoy woar what feci- like an "Oregon boot", to be stylish. a a Many farmers are threatening fall plowing. a a a There la considerable travel on the made. Now and then, a veteran vehicle, weary snd wobbly, shows up In s four milt string of brand new ones, a John Mann and the Elks, will celebrate 30 years here the coming week. a Wood wagons are scootln? around th-sa days, snd are a rellnbte sign winter Is coming. C. von der Hellen, the Wellcn coun-ry-jokp. towned Thurs. His lrls sheep won the 4-H honors, and he Is proud and bouncing. a October Is now In our midst, and Is the only month in the yesr with a Friday the 13th. a B. Hur Lampman of the Oreonlan. a former Oold Hill boy wlio made good with his lead pencil In tho metropolis, won another prlre with an editorial last week. a a Elm Chllders returned from E. Ore last week, where he got his deer, and aame was consumed by fire, inntesd of Elm et a). a a a The brains and beauty of the vaU ley drirted off to lmtututlrm- uf higher learning lust week, and quite a number got Into nottses, oelleve it or not. a a a Rumors were ripe sll week and hav not been so thick since Jackson co was shaken on Its foundation, and the rascals were swept out of the etnae. a majority of the people will b-llve anything once, Just to be pnllt-. To urMlon 8 later. PHOENIX. Aria.. Sept. SO. The Arizona supreme court. In an unusual procedure today, decided to summon Robert Burgunder. former Seattle youth, from his deathhousr cell In the state prison to tell the justices personally whether he wants to die In the lethal gas chamber Friday at dawn or appeal his case and stay executloo. Editorial Correspondence EOCKFOBD, Illinois, Sept. 28. Just had an experience which ia undoubtedly rather common throughout the country at tne present time. Attended the local Rotary listened to a talk entitled "Hitler's Hells" which ended up as a stirring appeal for the President's "cash and carry' proposal. At least a dozen members as we were filing out that the propaganda in 1914, and they didn't think much of it. ..... That feeling is undoubtedly the greatest obstacle to any real American assistance to the democracies of Europe at the present time, the recollection of the propaganda drive against Germany in the World war, and a determination on the part of the rank and file that they won't have their legs pulled in that way again. The speaker presented some harrowing and blood curdling details of the Nazi regime particularly in Austria where he has lived for 16 years, but the audience as a whole, a very representative group of Rockford business men, was markedly apathetic. Had America never entered the war in 1917, and been disillusioned by the aftermath, we are quite sure this would not have been the reaction. For to our mind there is no doubt of this: the Hitler regime morally is as far below the regime of Kaiser Wilhelm, as, well as Al Capone is morally below Mayor Kelly of Chicago, to cite rather an ex treme example. Congressman Mason of this district of Illinois, who has just returned from Washington and was at our table, declared however, that the President's "cash and carry" proposal will undoubtedly pass by a large majority. He pointed out what he apparently thought no one but members of the congress knew, that the fight in the Senate was not over the President's new neutrality measure, K VERY ONE IS FOR IT, but whether or not the embargo on the shipment of amis and munitions in the old bill, should be added to the new one. The President and his supporters, don't want that done. The die-hard isolationists like Borah and Hiram Johnson do. ..... There was one rather surprising feature of the meeting, instead of singing America or the Star Spangled Banner, and the usual Rotary songs, the crowd sang several religious hymns decidedly dignified and impressive ones, with the words flashed on a white sheet via magic lantern. Congressman Mason sang so loud, that practically everyone in the large dinine room, were soon craning their came from which we have an The speaker completely flabbergasted us bv his closintr exhortation an impassioned plea for the Strait proposal, a union of world democracies with ONE ARMY, ONE NAVY, ONE currency and a COMMON supreme court I We commented upon that proposal when the and had no idea, there would for it, at this late date. Imagine up control over its own army and navy, and yielding its fate to a world court We don't think much of the practical sense nf anyone who would seriously present time, or at anv time until be ACTUALLY threatened by Before we knew who Congressman Mnsnn was if. nut Viim down as a politician of some sort, lie Imd the voice, dress, manner and brassy self confidence of a table thumper from the corn belt, inflated with sense of his own importance. And how alike all the voices are as well as the intonations of the professional office holders. Last night, returning from the movies we turned on the radio in the middle of a speech on the Neutrality measure and remarked that the speaker was almost certainly a member of the senate or congress, we could toll from the self conscious declamatory style. It proved to be Senator Pittmaii of Nevada. How refreshing it would be to find someone in high public office who could deliver an address in a natural, quiet and pleasantly conversational tone I ..... .Th. movie we attended by the way, goes on our list of choice V, although none of the older girls will agree. It was Golden Boy" and has to do with a pizefighter, which for some reason is deadly poison to the deadlier sex. The plot wc grant is phoney, but it's GOOD phoney, while the east is superb from Menjou, Stanwyck and Ilolden down to the small est two-bit part. Don't miss it unless vou are allergic to the atmosphere of fisticuffs. ft, y. R NEUTRAL VESSELS SEIZED BY NAZIS (Rjr III, AMorlalrd PrtM) A hrp docllna in British low,, nrl attacks on Scandinavian voiwels and the opening of conflict between Britain', warship, and Germany's uommng pianea marKecl the fourth week of sea warfare ending yester day Saturday). Oermany's apparent Inactivity around the British Isles contrasted with U-boat destruction of five Scandinavian vessels. Nasi warships selred three Danish merchant ships yesterday (Saturday) and took them to a Oerman port after announcing that 4 vessels had been searched for contraband and "a number or them were captured." T A Bf:lU,IN, Conn.. Sept. 30. (API As a rival to the midwest's famed "sinning house" Connecticut advanc ed the claims of this community to a "whistling cow." The animal was discovered by a Berlin resident who preferred anony mity, but who was Identified bv the local correspondent of a Hartford newspaper as a "respectable elderly man whose veracity no one doubts. The discoverer said the sound was so nearly human that It wasn't until the third whistle that he became convinced It was the cow. Kin tllirn l:lnir. NEW YOIIK. Sept. S0.-l- Rela tives Inherit the bulk of the estate of Charles M. Schwab, steel execu tive who died September 18. under the frma of a will filed for probate today. Wool Busy, sinned. BOSTON. Sept. JO. (AP-USDA) The Boston wool market wn actlv, In the early part of ths week, but trading became slow befor, the close and further advances In prices were established oefore demst'd slackened V Mall nibun, want stU, club noonday luncheon and remarked to your correspondent, talk reminded them of the war necks to discover where the noise idea was his purpose. Strait book was first published be anv serious nnblic sunnnrt the United States ever giving advance such a program at the the ennntrv's exiqtiin miaht armed invasion from alien lands. At The National Capitol with John W. KeUy t Continued from page One.) re-election. If the embargo Is repealed and America manages to "keep out" the voters against repeal will still have nothing to regret. M AYBR you can make something coming to W ashlngton to demon strate aro those opposed to repeal of embargo on arms, and these demon strators are shoved around by the police cnpltol and metropolitan de partmcnt and are refused permits to march In pnrndes. If any cranks appear during the debate the author ities assume that these mentally un stable Individuals will bo antl-npeal-ers. Authorities, apparently, do not believe anyone favoring rcpoal la so intense on the subject that he (or she) would take a shot at a concrrtw man entertaining an opposite view. Be that as It may. no on without exception, will be permitted into the galleries of the ornate to listen to the debate unless Identified by an ad mixAion card signed by a srnator gr representative- and all packages must be checked with the doorkeep ers. Plainclothes men will be sitting In every gall pry in cje of an emer gency. HORSESHOE CAST BREAKS ARM. LEG MT. AIRY. N. C. Sept. 90 API Who said horseshoes brought good luck? Elithtrcn-year old Lester Aiwel. giving the tosa all he had. Ml to the ground in the last Inp of a i horeeshoe pitching tournament. I lie could not rise. Ills thmwin, l arm was dislocated and one leg was fraoturrd. Closing lime for Toe Late to ClftS ally Ads u 1.10 p m. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped self addressed envelops Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to ths large n amber of letters received only a few can be answered No reply can bo mads to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, t6S El Cam In o, Beverly Hills. CaUf. TEW SUFFER FROM DEFICIENCY OF VITAMIN 0 Extreme deprivation of vitamin O (also called cevitamic acid, as corbic acid) Is ths cause of scurvy. Ths main char acter 1 s 1 1 e s of scurvy are peev lahneas, gloomy disposition, un reasonable quar relsomeness, soft ness or flaccldlty of muscles, weak ness of Joints or legs, laziness or pref e r a n e e to avoid play, work or even move ment, tenderness or pain on move ment, inflamma tion, sponglness, soreness of gums, loosening of teeth, thickening or swelling of wrists, swelling of Joints resembling "lnflammstory rheuma tism," tendency to bleed excessively, often bleeding under the skin, so that "black and blue" marks occur from trifling or no known Injury (patients In Institutions present Ins; such marks have frequently caused unjust accusations of abuse to be brought against attendants). Unless the diet Is extraordinarily restricted, say from Ignorance, from Institutional mismanagement, from extreme poverty or from deprivation of access to fresh fruit, fresh .vege tables, no one should suffer from Insufficient vitamin O Intake. If such fresh fruit or fresh vegetables are not available, commercially can ned tomato or tomato Juice is nearly as rich In vitamin O as fresh tomato or tomato Juice or fresh orange, lemon, grapefruit or other fruits or their Juices, It Is my belief that moderate de ficiency In vitamin O over the course of many years la one factor In the causation of pyorrhea In many In stances. Physiologists are Inclined to think that the amount of vitamin O pres ent In two or three ounces of to mato Juloe or orange Juice dally is sufficient to maintain health. There are now available tablets of pure vitamin C, cevitamic acid, each tab let containing 600 units, equivalent to the vitamin C In nearly two ounces of tomato Juice or orange Juice. Denton and doctors now gener ally recognize that a liberal supply of vitamin O in the dally diet has definite prophylactic value against carles cavity formation. Thers is some loss of vitamin C. after expression of Juice from the whole fruit, on standing for sny length of time. Oxidation destroys vitamin C. Therefore it Is better to consume the fruit or tomato Juice Immediately after it Is expressed, rather than storing It In the refrig erator . over night. Heating or boiling or other cook ing hastens destruction by oxida The Capital Parade By Joseph Alsop and Robert Kintner Released by The North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc. WASHINGTON. Sept. 30. Tha cash and carry sections of the new neu trality bill are a startling example of the crafty management of the fight to repeal the arms embargo. Senator Key Plttman, Senator James P. Byrnes and their colleague In the repeallst high command were ex tremely careful to go tha whole hog on cash and carry In their first draft. Thus they avoided an outcry against granting too much discretion to the president. But. as drafted, the bill will virtu ally sweep tha American merchant marine from the seas, on which It Is now being maintained at great ex pense by the American government. The Issue ts squnrcly presented to the opposition. They must slther take the blnn o for roollshty drastlo legisla tion, or accept a compromise which Is alreudy being quietly proposed, In the name of commou sense, behind the senate scenes. Senstor Joalsb Bailey, a trusted crony of most of th, opposition leaders, has been told off to make the necessary deal. The bugs in the cash and carry sections are largely concentrated In one clause, which makes It unlawful for sny American ship to carry elthe: passengers or freight to any nation named as a belligerent In a presicen tisl proclsmatlon of neutrality. Un der th. Interpretation of the U. e nurtttme commission, thla clau would not only keep Amartcan shl ping out of the porta of Euglan France. Canada. Australia. New Z: land. South Africa. Clermany a: Poland. It would also bar our ah!, irom the harbors of India, Prem liulo-c'hli.tt, Hoim Kong, and tli. other French and KiUsn colon piviscsAlohs which glrxllo the world. Only the llrace lines, the Mlsslsei, pi Shipping company and Unlt Fruit, among th, major America snipping Ilrms, would not be mater., ally damaged by this clsuse. Kve. mt,uld not be able to put In a ,n"r PrU " ", Bahamas and Bai hsdoe Fully 85 per cent of the Amr lc"" marine would lose ve profitable business. For exsmple. the Mateon lines which have beaten out the Japsnes. for r-.e .Vi..::!lsn trad. w..;ild bau to slop at Hawaii, losing half their W'itrh Brady, M D, tion. Therefore raw food provides more vitamin O than the same food after heating for example, raw milk contains more vitamin C than pas teurized milk or boiled or canned or dried, powdered or evaporated or condensed milk does. When infants In a large institution developed scurvy. In my interne days, they not only received orange Juice but the boiling of their milk was stopped until they recovered. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Feeling Staler Kindly reprint information on the Iodine ration as It was given In your column some time ago. (G. T.) Answer School children In the goiter belt, children in their -'teens who mope and daydream, appear pensive, gloomy at a time of life when a child should be animated and full of gayety and good humor, and adults with chronic tired feeling, lack of former ambition or pep, in clined to melancholic inactivity con trary to former normal cheerfulness, unrefreshed by vacation or rest, with hair prematurely turning gray, poor circulation as manifested by cold hands and feet, mental torpor all need a suitable Iodine ration. For instructions for taking it, send stamped envelope bearing your ad dress do not send a clipping I re fuse to read clippings to learn what a correspondent wants. tndiilnnt Fever You say goat's milk, butter, cheese are good foods. Is there not danger of getting undulant fever from such foods? I considered buying a milch goat, but gave up the idea because 1 was told the risk Is great. (Mrs C. W.) Answer Write U. S. Public Health Service. Washington, D. C, for free pamphlet on undulant fever. Ask your local municipal, provincial or state neaitn department whether un dulant fever prevails In the section where you purpose to get the goat. In any case, pasteurizing or par-boll-lng or bringing to a boll would ren der the milk perfectly safe. Bothered, Kh? For some time have been bothered with a facial neuralgia called by some doctors tic douloureux. Most distressing attacks occur when I get In a draft, which is almost impos sible to avoid on hot day. ( Mrs. F. W. M.) Answer Ma'am, you put it mildly. One authority (Vorhaus) reports com plot relief In three cases, Im provement In two cases, all recur rences following operation, when the patients received vitamin B-l (thia min). (Protected by John F. DUle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D 365 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. business without reducing their over head. An actual majority of Ameri can shipping would probably end In bankruptcy, while the United State lines and one or two others trading to England and Prance would simply have to tie their vessels to the docks the Instant the neutrality bill became law. And finally the M00.000.000 of new ships which the government la now building to strengthen our merchant marine would hsve nowhere to go when they slipped down the ways. Naturally, the ahlpplng lnterestb and maritime unions have sent their representatives down to Washington, armed with arguments and full of Indignation, Their first suggestions to Plttman and Byrnes was to permit American shipping to go where It pleases, with the advance under standing that the ships are "trading at their own risk." This was flatly rejected, as too likely to rouse the opposition. A more practical compromise has been proposed, to meet the facta of the political situation, yet to allow ahlpplng to go where It will be safe. Although German aubmarlnes are re ported In our waters, they should soon be driven out. Without bases, submarined cannot operate, and there can be little or no danger In the Pacific, Indian ocean. African or South American trade. Only the rone of sea warfare. Including the coastal watera of Prance, England and Ger many, and perhaps the Mediterranean sea. needs to be avoided. Under ordinary circumstances. If granting powers to the president were not so much feared, It would be easy to sllow the executive branch to designate the limits of the sea war fare rone. Indeed, there la a clause In the bill already, supplementing the clause forbidding trade with bel ligerents, which also authorise the JUST RECEIVED CARLOAD 1940 COUPES AND SEDANS On Display TOMORROW We Invite You To See and Drive Them SKINNER'S GARAGE 143 So. Riverside president to nam special forbidden combat areas and dose them to ship ping. Therefore, tho eompromlso would let either tho president, by proclama tion, or congress, by concurrent reso lution, name the combat areas; would require tho president's proclamations to lis on tho table before congress for a stated interval and would make trade free everywhere except In the areas named. Thus, the president's powers would bo tempered by con' gresslonal supervision. Pract 1 c a 1 1 y speaking, only one combat area. In tho North Atlantic, would have to bo proclaimed. American ships la tho North Atlantic trade might bo em ployed on routes from which British and French ships would bo with drawn. With labor, capital and tho nation al interest all on tho side of this compromise. Its chance of acceptance seems pretty good. RUTHLESS U-BOAT (continued irum page one) being obtained after his resignation. Briefly - worded innon neements from the British, Prench and Ger man authorities told of artillery and aerial action on the western, front during the day. The Prench high command com munique indicated fighting was con fined to artillery exchanges "In the region Immediately to the east of the Moselle." The communique said th pollus "replied with artillery fire" to Ger man sheila and reported "large aerial activity on both sides." The Germane usually have said little about developments on the western front, but their communique also reported "a little livelier artil lery activity." The precise sector was not disclosed at Berlin. Air Fray Reported. The chief development In the air was the British air ministry's an nouncement that British planes had engaged In an air battle over enemy territory on the western front. "We suffered some casualties," the British reported and added that enemy casualties were not known. In Berlin DNB. official Oerman news agency, aald seven British planes were shot down in two en gagements with German planes, one over the North Sea and" the other over the western front. DNB also said the Nail airmen caused one Prench plane to crash. On the sea, reports told only of the seizure by German destroyers of three Danish freighters in the Katte gat, a stretch of sea between Den mark and Sweden. Danish Ships Seized. A report from the lightship at Lacso island said the German war ships took the steamers Rota. Diana, and Lyneas to a German port. The Rota was said to be bound for Eng land with bacon and butter. While Russia set tke stage for the visit by the Rumanian delegation, some Moscow sources said the com ing talks with Rumania confirmed Russia had assumed a dominant role in the Balkana. Belief was expressed Russia may have gained concessions in the Black Sea area from Turkey, which was reliably reported ready to cancel her mutual assistance obligations with Prance and Britain if thev went to war with Russia. One report said Turkey was discussing a pact which would close the Black Sea to bel ligerent forces. While the armies fought and the diplomats conferred. Pope Plus XII expressed the hope that religious freedom would survive In dismem bered Poland "displte many reasons for fear given by the too well-known designs of enemies of God." The The pope spoke at an audience for Polish residents of Rome. It was his first public utterance since Po land wss Invaded. Ye Poets Corner Victory By Elroy Anderson "The lend of Poland is no morel" Saya Mister Adolf Hitler. "We've won our fight and mad our score 1 So now we'd ilk, to quit air. But if you want to right soma more We win a-ccom-e-date you. But really were not one bit sore, And neither do w hate you." We wish that what you say were true. There'd be some happy nations. But that old "line" that you are through Is Juat more FABRICATIONS! Phone 102 TURKEY REPORTED READY TO CANCEL ASSISTANCE PACT Soviet Favored Over Allies By Altered Position Black Sea Treaty Seen. ANKARA, Turkey. Sept. 30. (AP) Turkeya, her role ln the near east greatly altered In the past few days, was reported reliably tonight to be ready to cancel her mutual assist ance obligations to Prance and Brit ain If they go to war with Soviet Russia. A clause providing such release was aald to be contained In the new eco nomic and military agreements which a Turkish military mission headed by Gen. Kiazlm Orbay is taking to London, The mission left for the British capital tontght. Sukru S&racoglu, Turkeys foreign minister, has been in Moscow since early this week, discussing his coun try's altered situation In view of Russia's emergence as a partner of Germany in the partition of Poland. Foremost among the points dis cussed was believed to have been a Black sea pact, to Include Rumania and Bulgaria. Saracoglu was under stood to have agreed with Russian leaders that Turkey would close the strategic Dardanelles to warships nf all belligerent nations. Such an act would lessen the pos sibility of Britain and France strik ing at Germany through a back door, since It would neutralise the Black sea. (A plan frequently discussed In allied capitals would Involve sending a force through the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus to the Black sea and then presumably through Rumania. Rumania, however, has given no In dication she would acquiesce to be ing made a theater of war), 4 LOSES HIS SHOES SPOKANE. Sept 80 (API Ac cused of driving an automobile which struck a man so hard it Jarred his shoes from his feet, then con tinued for nearly two blocks before stopping, James David Bush, 19. wbs charged with negligent homicide to day and his bail set at $1500. The victim of the Friday night ac cident was Prank W. O'Brien. 89. laborer. Police Officer Wes Herwlg said one of O'Brien's legs was severed and hla shoes were found 20 feet from his body. Herwlg said the auto mobile struck a telephone pole and another auto before stopping. Church Interests and Notices St. Mark's Church. Fifth and Oakdale. ,', Holy communion. S a. m. Church school, 8:45 a. m. Holy communion, 11 a. m. Father George Turney of Coqullle. Ore., will preach at the 11 o'clock service. Everyone la cordially invited. Roberta Bebb. musical director. Eva Marsh, organist. Manretanla Sails. NEW YORK, Sept. 30. W Camou flaged and armed with three guns, the Cunard White Star liner Maure tania sailed for an unannounced destination today. TODAY and MONDAY ONLY! A girl adrift in man's world . . caus-ht un in th arms of world wize Boyer . . , the grandest love-drama ever filmed! A 1 ! l:,t r: : I;l . ' I Flight o Time Med ford and Jackson County History from the flies of the Mall Tribune 10 and CO yean sro. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 1, 1029 It was Tuesday) Between 10,000 and 13,000 letter will be placed aboard the mall plana tomorrow, when the first airmail will be sent from the local airport. Post master W. J. Warner will place tha first pouch aboard the plane. Salem negress la debarred from University of Oregon dormitory for women, she claims; charged race prejudice. Patronage at Crater Lake lodge shows Increase during past summer. J. H. Fuller and Thomas Simpson of Ashland, both unable to serve an county budget committee. Prospects bright for O.A.O. Rook U. of O. Frosh game here In Novem ber. Council orders all taxi stands moved from Main street. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAT October 1, 1019 (It was Wednesday) Cincinnati defeated Chicago 9 to 1, In first game of World series. Dutch Ruether pitched for the Reds, and Eddie Clcotte for the White Sox. who was batted from the box In the fourth, when four runs scored. Senate to vote tomorrow on peaot treaty. Chinese pheasant hunting season opens with hundreds of hunters in the field. Shortage of labor In valley slows up apple picking. Situation Is fur ther complicated by bos shortage. Very few from here went to Med ford last Tuesday to greet the presi dent, there being too much rush work, on hand. (Table Rock Tablets.) Mann's department store celebrate ninth anniversary. 4 CUT OFF CHINESE TOKYO, Sept. 30. (UP) Dome! news agency reported tontght that & Japanese detachment had cut off communications between Chines, troops in Hunan and Klangal prov inces by occupying . strategically im portant towns in the Wanyang mountains. Field dispatches, the news agency said, reported that Chtnese Oen. Yang Sen and his staff narrowly escaped capture when the Japanese stormed Into one of the towns. Another Japanese force which two days ago captured Plngktang on the upper reaches of the Ml river, key point to the defense of Changshs, capital of Hunan province, reduced another Important town about eight miles south of Plngklang today after four hours of bitter fighting. Domel said. One of the field dispatches said that 80 Chinese troops who sur rendered to the Japanese today In cluded some women. Fish Limit Sought. THE DALLES. Sept. 30. (? Oelllo Indians appealed to the bureau of Indian affairs yesterday to limit ths tribes permitted to fish at Celllo falls under federal treaties. , Coulee, Concrete Pourlnr, COULEE DAM, Wash.. Sept. 30 (API Concrete enough to oover a football field to a depth of 2S0 feet went Into Grand Coulee Dam In September, the builders an nounced today. m. irnrHr.iia. TT) TWI" DUNNE 1 lid CHARLES MARIA OUSPENSKAYA U ill BOWMAN ASTRID ALLWYN MAURICE MOSCOVICH 'H H IMP shout "