PAGE ETGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MED FORD. OREGON. SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 1940.
MDFOBDkTBIBUNI
Daily Csl talvftfar
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torsi. OriM. 4f Act of Hare l 111
UmCRIHTlUN KATES
Mill I Adaiioi
Dally aod un1j thr mootka. .M
Dally and ue.-ie.T month.. . 1ft
land. Cnirl Polau Jaeltaonvlli. 0.tJ
Hill. R fua Rivar. ptaMBta. Tal-M-t.
and malof rouiMi
-Dairy And uf'lx)r ys
.D&Jly aud Suedar ona month... .la
All tarma caah laj ad vane.
Official Paawr mt thm CM? Mad far 4
Cirrirtal Paawr ! Javkaaw CvoMy.
MKMHEJI OP THE AWHM I ATPO fULMB
aealtlac Fwll Lawa3 tr aWvtc.
Til a Aaaaeiatad Praaa la el .
atttlad t tha u for puallestloa f all
aawa diapatchaa aradiiad t II nr thr
via araditad tm thia paper, and ftia ta
lb local aawa aubltihad harala.
All nhla for publlcattos of apotlal
4tpuhaa horois axo iao roaorvod.
MEMBER OP UNITED PRESS
MEMBER UP AUDIT BUREAU
OP CIRCULATIONS
Adrartlaltif RapraaaatatUoa
WIIT-HOLUDAT CoUPANI. IMC
Offleoa la Naw fork. Chica Patrol,
as Pranelaco. Loa Angalaa. Sattla
PortUad, L Loot a. Atlanta. Vnoouor.
n c
fit
Pit
lATlfl
Ye Smudge Pot
By ARTHUR FEIKT
Something happened In Wash
ington, D. C, Frl., that started
people asking about the Demo
cratic randidate for congress
from this district, whoever he
may be.
Gordon Bussey, 8, had his ton
ails removed the first of the wk.
and was very brave about It.
...
The mercury went to 100
Tues. It cured the hay, and
people of wanting to pitch it.
Bill Morgan, who played foot
ball for Medford, "Old Oregon"
nd New York, is here for a few
days, as big as ever.
... -
Wendell Wllkie is popping to
the front as a GOP. presidential
candidate. He is a former Demo
crat, who got over it.
The horse chestnuts are com
ing along fast, and many al
ready look like they should be
pulled out of the fire.
A number of courthouse yard
robins turned up their toes the
past wek, from causes other
than an airgun bullet.
...
The beautiful June brides and
the scared June grooms, have
caused most of the social news
of late.
The Dubb Watson boy, Edd,
has gone to the Applegate to
help Hermy Offenbacher with
his haying, and is not yet afraid
of work.
...
A man came rushing Into the
office Frl. to find out . how
Brooklyn came out in the Na
tional league. Several after war
news were astounded.
.
The Espee train for Frisco,
starting tomorrow, gets there an
iiour sooner, and cuts no corners
getting there.
...
A number of cases of poison
eak, hay-fever, and summer
colds are reported among the
natives.
...
Elm Childers returned the
middle ot the wk. from Ariiona
and way points, where he resus
citated for six weeks and saw a
lot of country.
...
Many of the Older Girls are
watching their calories, and shy
ing up to the C. Strang scales
these days.
...
Next Frl. some say Thurs.
Is the longest day of the year.
...
The Prospect ball team la no
more. Dewey Hill, its manager.
catcher, treasurer, coach, cheer
leader, and spark-plug, wearied
of the struggle and folded up,
after smacking out a farewell
homerun. When battling on the
diamond. Mr. Hill wore no
man's collar, and most of the
time not even his own shirt.
...
The CP. Sportsmen's club will
hold a salmon bake Thurs. eve.
at which time the women folks
of that burg will demonstrate
they can make a salmon taste as
well, if not better than a chick
en. Land Bill Signed.
Washington, June IS. VP)
President Roosevelt has signed
a bill (HR 5404) extending pro
visions of the forest exchange
act to 16.243 acres In Oregon
for addition to Ochoco national
forest.
Italian Ship Sunk.
Teneriffe. Canary Islands,
June IS. (IP) The crew of the
4.788-ton Italian liner Fortun
ata. which a French destroyer
shelled and sank off the Canary
Islands, reached land today In
lifeboats.
Editorial Correspondence
. Streamliner City of Portland en route to Chicago, June 14th
Just left Sun Valley where tha train made a special stop
to take on the Oregon football representatives, Percy Loeey and
Prof. C. V. Kuzelc of Corvallis, who are en route to Chicago
for more conferences. They weren't very enthusiastic about
the results of the meeting, for they opposed including Idaho
and Montana in their schedules but will now have to do so.
This will mean dropping some California games, and taking
long and expensive football trips to Moscow and Missoula,
with a decline in total revenues.
So while gate receipts are extremely important in intercolle
giate football, they don't ALWAYS control matters.
There were some concessions to Oregon however, a five
year schedule has been perfected, which Oregon wanted, and
Oregon State gets a game with Washington at Portland every
other year, instead of going to Seattle all the time, as has been
done in recent years.
Incidentally Sun Valley is well named today, not a cloud
in the sky, and the sun pouring down all over the place. It
was 102 day before yesterday but only 97 yesterday. This is
gleaned from the Idaho Statesman, the famous Cobb paper.
Among many appreciated services on this train, is the most
recent morning paper, along with your breakfast coffee.
Lots of hay down getting a good "curing", and miles of
green alfalfa, but the bills are already turning brown. Break
fasted with a manufacturer from Cincinnati, Ohio, who is
wholly enthusiastic about Oregon, particularly the Columbia
River drive and Timberline Lodge. Thinks it the greatest coun
try he has ever seen and is bringing out the family next year.
Only disappointment, he never saw a cowboy and doubts if
there are any.
Not many at Timberline and the Benson Hotel, but as we
told him, no scarcity if he would attend the Pendleton Roundup
in September!
Asked him how Senator Taft stood in Ohio, and here is his
answer verbatim: .
"Taft is a good man and a good Senator, but isn t of
presidential timber. I can't speak for the state, but all my
family four of voting age are for Wendell Willkie, and so
are most of my friends. If he were in the White House he would
be in the cab, not asleep in the caboose, and with one hand
on the throttle and the other on the whistle cord."
We have no doubt if the American Manufacturers' Associa
tion were canvassed Willkie would win in a hop, step, jump
and a handspring 1
But while on the subject might state we have heard Willkie
talk wherever we have been including the golf tournament. Yes
terday thumbed a ride from Riverside with a well known citizen
of North Bend, bis parting ahot being: "Now you get 'em to
nominate Willkie down there I"
Which reminds us of a trip we took four years ago on this
same train and couldn't find a vote for Roosevelt outside of the
colored porter. We motored back and found the garages,
service stations and motor camps for no one elsel
j
There has been very little war talk to date on the train.
If we have doped out the train psychology correctly it can be
summed up in one sentence: "It's just too bad but what can
be donet"
Last night just before dinner, the club car radio gave a
translation of Premier Rcynaud's appeal to Roosevelt, and a
war harangue by Congressman Lee to some graduating class
in Washington, D. C. .
The car was crowded but no particular interest was mani
fest. When the French premier asked for a cloud of American
planes, the fat gentleman in a sporting smock grunted in un
disguised disgust and sajd J'where is he going to get eml
It's too early to draw any definite conclusions, but this
attitude taken with the newspaper viewpoint in Portland, isn't
particularly reasstiriug. It indicates an American defeatist
viewpoint is growing to dangerous proportions.
Along this line we were interested to see the stand taken
by the Boise Statesman this moruing, regarding American par
ticipation in the present war. Quoting from an editorinl in the
Brouson liriscom chain published on Long Island, Margaret
Cobb, daughter of the late C'Blvin Cobb, approves as followa:
"In th matter of policy I believe I
"1. That we mould decide to do what Is best (or th
United States and not what Is but for Europe or Aela.
"9. That wa ahould: 'keep America out of European and
Asiatic ware and keep theae wars out of America.'
. That we ehould wholeheartedly aupport army, navy and
air force, always, however, with the idea that we are preparing
for the delenie of the Weatern HemUphere and not for Euro
pean or Asiatic aggreaelon. By Weatern Hemisphere I am visual
Ulng a line from Ureenland around South America and up to
tha Bering Straits, eeparaUng Russia from Alaska. The Hawaiian
Islands ahould be Included In thia area.
"a. That we ahould be constantly on tha alert to guard
against the undermining of our democracy and our defenses by
Nad and Communlet 'fifth column' actlvlUea. tn doing ao,
however, we ahould scrupulously avoid hysterical witch-hunting.
"Thia Is a policy of CONTINENTAL AMERICANISM. It was
, advocated by Washington. Adams. Paine and Jefferson mora
than a century ago. It waa established In the writing of the
Monroe Doctrine. It la the policy under which we upended and
became rich and great. Our World War adventure waa a dis
aatroue violation of It and wa have paid for It In blood, Im
poverishment, debt and Internal atrlfe. Wa cannot repeat that
folly without deatroylng our liberty, our aecurity for another
generation at least. Let us by every meens prepare for war,
but let ua stay at peace."
Mr. Oriscom'a Ideaa etrtke The Statesman aa sound: they are
worth tha serious conslderatlan of every thinking American
Interested In the nations- future safety ant welfare.
R.W.R.
THE
CAPITAL
PARADE
By JOSEPH ALSOP and
ROBERT K1NTNEP
Released by the North
American Newspaper
Alliance. Ine.
Washington, June 13. Al
though the fact is not generally
known, Jesse H. Jones, the
cagey administrator of the fed
its I loan agencies, is slated to
become the really Important
person In the much-needed ex
pension of the aircraft business
This will come about because
Jones is a shrewd official, adept
at writing broad powers into
RFC bills and because the pres
ident has apparently decided
not to ask for another $1,000,
000.000 for airplanes.
The speeding up of this coun
try g airplane production to 50.-
jOOO planes a year is a vital part
Iof our defense plans . n 1 the
story ot how it la hoped to be
done has significance, not only
In revealing the importance of
Jones, but as a study in rapid
shifts in policy during an emer
gency period.
The administration haa been in
disagreement on how much should
be spent for planea and how quickly
the money must be appropriated.
Several months ago Assistant Secre
tary of War Louta Johnson urged on
the president the neceaslty for stag
gering approprlatlona. but there as
no agreement at tha war department
and recommendation waa delayed.
Finally, after the war, navy and
treasury departmente were nicely en
meshed In a three-way feud, the
president delegated the problem to
Secretary of the Treasury Henry
Morcenthau. Jr. For a government
official with a reputation aa an econ
omise Morgenthau made aurprls
Irgly liberal spending sueYettone.
And aa the Oermen military super
iority over the democracies became
more abvlous. congress waa asked to
appropriate between S500.000.000 and
S7SO0OO.0O0 for planea.
But tha treasury aoon found that
sull more money waa needed. Short
ly before aircraft production waa
transferred to the new council of
national defense two weeka ago, Mor
genlhau's eiperte. Dr. Oeorge J. Mead
and Captain Sydney Kraus, agreed
that another SI 000 000.000 waa nec
essary for a realty quirk expansion.
Their etew was strongly supported In
the war department and tt was at
pected that the president would send
another message to congress. Accord-
Personal Health Service
Br William
Signed letters pertaining to personal keallh and kigteae. swt te disease
glagaosie aw treatment, alU be answered kv Dr. Brady If a stamped self.
ad'lrrssH envelop Is enclosed. Lett era should be brief and written la Ink
Owing te tbe large n'imbcrs of letters received only e few eaa be answered.
N reply ess be made to queries aot CMformlng to Instruct lone, addreaa
Or. eYIUIaia Brady. MS El Ceralne, Beverly Hills. Calif.
A LITTLE LESSON
A correspondent offers this
little lesson in diagnosis for the
benefit of whom it may concern:
Early in Au
gust I got a
crimp In my
back while
leaning over
the engine ot
my a u t o m o
bile. Consulted
family doctor
who said it
was prostate
trouble, but he
made no ex
a m 1 n ation. I
took the medi
cine he prescribed, and after a
while felt better. Then in May
I . began having trouble again,
and had to get up four or five
times every night. Family doc
tor said it was the same old
trouble of course, and that ex
amination was not necessary
he knew what it was. Then 1
wrote you and asked if you
could give me the name of a
good doctor for prostate trouble.
You recommended Dr. . . .
(Interpolation by Brady: It is
human nature not to explain all
the details when writing to me
for such information. But even
if the correspondent did do so
at the time, I would give him
the name and address of the
nearest competent physician or
.specialist I know, of course.
That's one of the important
functions of this column).
I still had faith in the family
doctor, but continued to get
worse. I had to call the doctor
you recommended at 10 o'clock
at night the first time. As soon
as he examined me he said I
had an abscess which had to be
diained at once . . . called hos
pital ambulance, operated at
11:30 p. m. I was out In five
days, and have been in fine
health ever since that was
nearly three years ago. I am 61
years old and feel 30. I don't
know how to describe the trou
ble so you will understand, but
I wish you would write Dr. . . .
and get any professional infor
mation you may care to have.
Anyway I feel I have to thank
you and Dr. . . . for saving my
life. (Signed) ...
It is immaterial precisely
what the trouble was. The les
son is plain enough for him
who reads. It recalls an early
lesson in diagnosis I learned as
an intern.
A laborer with delirium tre
mens received the digitalis
treatment enormous doses of
tincture of digitalis, in fact
enough to produce digitalis
poisoning and made a good re
covery. As senior house physic
Ing to a recent White House an
nouncement, thia will not be done.
Apparently the reason Is that the
president and William S. Knudsen.
hla new national defense aide, are
counting on Jonea to solve a prob
lem which obviously atlll exists.
In Its simplest terms tha problem
la on ot factory space. Without
hug plant expansion. 50.000 plsnea
a year cannot be achieved. Aircraft
manufacturers report that preaent
government ordera ar not adequate
to Justify such an expansion, and
they want more approprlatlona aa
quickly aa possible. The president Is
counting on Jonea to obtain thia
plant expansion In preparation for
ordera that now apparently will not
oome until th next session of con
gress. Jonea got Into th picture because
he waa ahrewd enough to writ an
R.F.C. bill with broad powers. Soma
time ago he prepared a routine
measur to return S300.000.000 from
the R F.C. to the treasury, and when
the president asked him to supervise
the purchase of auch strategic ma
tertala aa rubber he tacked tha
amendment on this bill.
Showing a farsightedness that al
ways msrks his operations, he wrote
hla new power broad enough to per
mit the RFC. either to build air
craft factorlee and lease them to pri
vate manufacturers or to lend the
companlee money for their own ex
pansion. The bill la now before con
are ss. and after conference between
the president. Knudsen and Jonea.
It haa been decided that the admin
istration will rest on this aolutlon.
Knudsen and Jonea have devised
schemes whereby the RFC. msy ad
vene aa much aa SAOO.000.000 for
aircraft plant expansion.
Knudsen estlmatea that It will take
at least fifteen months befor th
Industry Is gesred to 50.000 planea
anmialtv. Previously it hsd been fore
cajt thst with another H 000 000.
000 thrown Into the kitty now. the
business could be turning out a.iCO
plsnea a month be next Mar. Of
ficial of such lstye companlee as
Prstt snd VAhitney end Curtlsa
Wright rctvrt that they need aa
much aa siw.ow wo to ouuo up
capacity.
Their officials make little secret
prlatlona ar urgently needed now.
The Industry appears extremely skep- -tlcal
of present preparations, and '
probably rUhtly ao In view of our j
pressing defense proa-ram. But If con- i
frees rematna tn session, th presi
dent may well Chang his mind and
advocat additional spending tm-medlat-:y.
ratrier than wettltv until
the attempt la rpsje to exrsnd the
production through government fac-
Brady. M. O.
IN DIAGNOSIS
ian on the ward at the time I
was proud of the result of the
treatment. Nearly a year later,
when my classmate, the junior
intern and I had changed places
on the service, the same patient
returned, again delirious, breath
heavy with alcohol. My class
mate, now senior, decided to use
the digitalis treatment again. On
the suggestion thst we had bet
ter examine the patient care
fully first, the classmate insist
ed he knew what was the mat
ter, all right. So the patient re
ceived the first few enormous
doses of digitalis, and at autop
sy it was revealed that the man
had been suffering from pneu
monia and empyema.
Sometimes examination is as
tiresome to the doctor as it is
to the unenlightened patient,
but still it is always worth
while.
QUESTIONS ANSWERS
Ivy Poisoning
Will you kindly print tha Instruc
tions for Immunising agalnat Ivy
poisoning which you gave several
years ago. Also recommend a remedy
for relief of Ivy poisoning. (R.C.K.)
Answer Ten percent tincture rhua
toxicodendron 15 dropa
Glycerin a drama
Syrup of orange, enough to make
THREE OUNCES. Take one drop of
thia after meals In water. Increasing
by one drop each successive dose
until you take 21 dropa end of the
week, thereafter a teaepoonful once
a day for two or three weeka, and
thereafter a teaapoonful twice a week
thruout the ivy season.
Tha best local remedy for relief
of Ivy dermatltla la S percent solu
tion of iron chloride In equal parte
of water and alcohol thia la cheap,
safe, non-poleonoue. obtainable from
any drugstore.
Moat effective remedy for tha In
tense Itching of Ivy poisoning la hy
podermic Injection of homeopathic
does of Ivy toxin generally a alngle
dose btinga relief within twenty-four
houra, sometimes a second or even
a third doee may be required.
Hair Too Oily
la there anything Z can do to keep
my hair and acalp from geetlng too
greasy? within two daya after a
shampoo It becomes excessively oily
again. a (Mlsa M. T.)
Answer Part hair here and there
and carefully rub into scalp with
fingertips a wee bit of the follow
ing pomade, each night for a week
or so, now and then:
Salicylic aclde . 30 grains
Precipitated sulfur One dram
Ointment of Rose Water.... One ounce
If there la dandruff or falling hair,
aend stamped envelope bearing your
addrwe, ask for monograph "Car of
the Hair".
(Protected by John F. Dill Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brsdy
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D. 265 El
Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
toiies or government lending. Many
responsible offlclsts In the war de
partment ar urging additional di
rect approprlatlona.
Ed Geary Honored.
Salem. June 13. VP) E. A.
Geary, Klamath Falls seed grow
er, was elected chairman of the
state board of agriculture at
its annual meeting here today.
Soviet Station.
Nome, Alaska, June 13. i)
Russians were reported building
an air field and wireless station
today on bleak Big Diomede
island, four miles from Little
Diomede island on the American
side of the international boundary.
Harold Lloyd Aspires to
1 :
Harold Lloyd, lamed motion picture comedian, smiled as he rode In an aged aute In Memphis. '
Tnn.. as Memphis Shriners accompanied hlm'down th Main t;rt in a welcome to the Inter
national Shrine convention. Lloyd wss r .-;:d Imparls! Outer Guard, resierdar. first stepplna
tten. in .sc.ndancT lo High Polenlete of sll Bhrlner. vr
i In The
-News .
-v- -- ssffcs i'i InTn ,, 'I
By Frank Jenkins.
DARIS falls. Le Havre, at the
mouth of the Seine, falls.
The French, abandoning Paris
blow up the city's armament
factories, thus reducing still
further their already inadequate
supply of war munitions.
"THE Germans are now seek-
lng to surround end destroy
the French army manning the
Maginot line, whose great guns,
apparently, can't be turned to
the rear. They seek, at the
same time, to surround and de
stroy the army that has been
defending Paris.
Britain is helping gallantly,
even sending her home defense
troops to France in the present
hour of grave peril. But with
the channel ports gone, help is
given under severe handicap.
JiajADRID announces that Span-
Ish troops have occupied
the international lone of Tan
gier, across the narrow strait
ot Gibraltar. This may herald
the entrance of Spain. Franco
being the puppet of Hitler and
Mussolini.
The purpose of the Spanish
move at Tangier would be to
close the straits of Gibraltar,
thus cutting the line of supply
for the Allied army in the Near
East. Italy is poised at the
summit of the Alps and along
the Riviera.
It looks like a line of steel
closing around France.
THE problem in France now
is exactly the same as the
problem in Belgium when Leo
pold's surrender opened the
flank of the Allied (chiefly Brit
ish) army there to withdraw
the French armies without de
struction. In the next few
days we shall watch in France
a rear guard action differing
from that In Belgium only in
the fact that the French armies
do not have to be embarked
on ships.
a
pORGET Paris. Forget the
Maginot line. For the mo
ment, forget what Hitler is pre
paring to do to England. The
present job, overshadowing all
else, is to save the French
armies.
Admittedly It looks like a
superhuman Job.
B-AJEANWH1LE Hitler orders
" the flags to fly and the
bells to ring all over Germany
In a three-day celebration of
the great victory, his purpose
being to fire his probably weary
people with renewed energy
for the kill.
Reynaud. in a final appeal
for help from ANY source
says: "Today the life of France
is at stake; at least France's
essence of life."
Ta deny the darkness of the
Allied picture would be absurd.
rVSTASTEFUL as the task
may be, one simply must
glance for a moment here at
the REMOTE CAUSES of
France's present desperate
plight.
In the years when Germany
was working day and night,
under forced draught, to build
the greatest war machine In
history, France wa? living the
fuller and better life, experi
menting happily with the theory
that people may work less and
have more. I
When cold reality met rosy
theory on the grim field ot bat-'
tie, France found Germany arm-.
ed to the teeth with every wea
pon of modern warfare and her
self lacking cruelly in the wea
pons that industry and foresight
would have provided.
HTHE tragic result, now spread
before our eyes, carries a lea
son that we of America SIM
PLY CANT AFFORD to ignore.
AT THE
National Capitol
WITH
John W. Kelly
CONTINUED FROM PAOS ONE
other, and deposits in Washing
ton state. Bait offered to attract
the laboratoriea or pilot plants,
was cheap power.
The bureau, writing to Ickes
(by the way, the secretary of the
interior was once an assistant
to Oregon Voter's C. C. Chap
man when the latter was a Chi-
cago political reporter), says it
has laboratories now wmcn are
performing the work Raver sug
gests and, anyway, power is the
smallest item in the cost. In
conclusion, the bureau says that
it could use $300,000 for expand
ing its research.
e e
UNLESS congress continues In ses
sion, amendments to the Wagner
Labor Act made by the house, will
not see daylight In the senate. For
two yeara senators LaFollett and
Thomas (Utah), have atalled action
In tha aenat and now that tbe bouse
has acted, th amendments are In
the lapa of theae two senator and
they intend doing nothing. There
haa been a cloaa Intimacy between
the LaFollett civil liberties com
mittee and the NLRB and th dam
aging testimony developed by the
house committee Investigating NLRB
make no impreaslon on LaFollett
and Thomas.
Among other amendment to the
act aa paased by the house waa pro
hibition of aliens representing labor
organizations In dealing with em
ployers. Th two senators lean to
ward CIO and agalnat AFL. which
la one reason they ar amotherlng
tha legislation. It waa aupport of
President Green, AFL. that caused
the nous to pass the amendments
by an overwhelming majority.
see
FRED Brundsga and Lyla Watte, of
th forest sen-Ice offlc at Port
land, have returned to th city with
th outline for legislation which la
expected to prolong tha life of sever
al communtttce In western Oregon
depending largely on lumbering. For
the present detalla of the plan are
held In confidence, although mem
bers of the Oregon atate planning
board have been advised of what the
forest service haa In view.
e e
A SNAPPY communication haa
been addressed to Major Gen
eral Henry Gibbons, quartermaster
general, by Senator Rolman, want
ing to know wh" lumber Is ignored
for the new hang 're and warehouses
for the air corps and only ateel con
sidered. After the president's mes
sage to congress recommending a
tremendous Increase In air defenses,
the air corpa requested the lumber
Industry of the northweet to submit
deslgna. delivery schedules and coat
estimates. Within a week when lum
berman replied with Information to
the air corpa they were notified that
the matter had been taken out of
the hands of the air corpa and trans
ferred to th quartermaster depart
ment. Inquiry discloses th quartermas
ter ta preparing deelgns for ateel con
struction and la ready to place 10
educational ordera. Th Holman let
ter asks that alternate bids be called
for to give lumber a chance. Atten
tion la also directed to the fact that
steel la regarded aa essential war
material while lumber la not and
one way of conserving steel la to
make greater use of lumber.
Shrine Post
Flight 0' Time
Medford aad Jaduoa Caoaty
History fraea the rue at th
Mail Trtkna IS and te I ears
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
June 1. 1930
Ot was Monday)
Jackson county third in state
in census gain. Population of
state now 830,000.
Florida Jails Al Capone. CM-
rago gang king, as "plain liar. -
Chicago Tribune reporter
slain in gang warfare.
First Boeing plane lands at
local airport.
George W. Joseph, Republi
can gubernatorial candidate, ,
dies suddenly at Camp Clatsop t
to attend national guard review.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
June IS. 1920
(It was Thursday)
Price of fruit Jars Jumps, irk
ing housewives.
Racial war breaks out st Dit
luth, and negro is lynched.
Jack Dempsey, heavyweight
champion, issues challenge to
fight, any one, any place, any
time.
Council votes money for eight
city park band concerts.
Leon Trotsky, leader of the
Russian Bolshevikis, reported
thot for the eighth time.
Fossil, Ore., June 13. (Pi
Claud E. Cline, 46, weather
bureau prospector of the Span
ish Gulch sagebrush country,
testified at his first degree mur
der trial today that he shot
his partner, George W. Chetty,
33.
Cline, replying to direct
questions by his attorney, Ar
thur W. Tarlow of Portland,
claimed he was intoxicated.
Chetty's body was found May
8 in a shallow, sandy grave.
Authorities discovered the
half-buried body of another
partner, Eugene Rostenstiel,
shortly after Cline's arrest in
Seattle.
Prosecutor George L. Dukek,
who charged the slaying was
premeditated, demanded Cline's
death in the state lethal gas
chamber.
Although the state completed
its case today, the trial was
not expected to go to the Jury
until next week.
THIRD VICTIM OF
CRASH FIRE DIES
Grsnts Pass, June 15. VP)
Mrs. Wendell Webb, 23, died
today at the county hospital.
She was the third victim of
gasoline burns in a car accident
and collision near Cave Junc
tion on April 29. Lucille White
head. 38, and Nelle Hayden,
21, also of the Illinois valley,
died in the Hayden car but V
Mrs. Webb was dragged out
with third degree burns. Four
persons in a second car driveg
by Mrs. Harry O. Smith were
slightly injured.
Mrs. Webb Is survived by
her husband, two small chil
dren, and her parents. Services
will be held here Tuesday.
4 H Hears Allen.
Corvallis, June 15. VP) Niel
Allen, Grants Pass, state Amer
ican Legion commander, told
2.000 4-H club youngsters yes
terday "we want peace, but not
at any price, because we want
liberty more than peace and
will follow it to death if need
be."
SSajs. COMFORT FOR THE
Ruptured
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