PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD. MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1943.
MEDFORDStTRIBinfS
KMdi th Hall TrlbuMT
MBoroBD pniNTiwa oa
If-M Nottfc rir (. FhoM tUI
ftOBBRT W. HUHU Editor.
mUCT It OIUVTBAP. Hilim
As IsdpBdanl Nwppr.
Enured Meend Im msttur at lUd
Cor4L Oroton. gnder Act of March I, lilt.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE!
? Mall In Advtneoi
.pony nd suoior oa roar T.
umtir mna ounpiar Oil iOOtna... .
Dafljr and Sunday thr meat bo. t-I
Polly and Sunday ono month... .fl
WT Carrier In Advance Medford, h.
lacd, Contra.! Point, Jaokaonvlllo, Oold
Bill Pboooix, Taloat aad M motor
routoat
Dally and Sundar ooo roar Il.tl
Xvl!ir ood Sunday -.ano month., .fl
All Urmo eatb la adraneo.
0rnlal Fpw .f ih. CIIt r Ifedferd
Official Paper ef Jacluoa COBBtr
Palled Press mil Leeaed WIi
UBHRER Or AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATION!
Ad.artlalns Rapraaantatlva
WBT-HOLMDA COMPANY. INC.
OHIc.a In Naw York. Chleaio, Datr.lt
Fraaclsco, Lea Anialaa, Saatlle,
rartlaal at. Loula, Atlanta. Vancouver,
PosusHlfRs'4-3tsodiiio
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Parry
Hunters continue to return
from the hills, under their own
steam and intact, to scare the
daylights out of the little woman
and the kids, while lurking be
hind a week's growth of whisk
ers. The Vice President, with un
usual official Washington opti
mism, reports the nation can
look forward to the uncondi
tional surrender of Japan, "in
the not too distant future." He
said nothing about giving the
unconquerable but conquered
foe, a quart of milk a day, for
the bowl of rice, they haven't
got.
' "We laughed. It seemed very
funny. Offering an assistant in
order to retain the services of
a man whose only . complaint
was lack of work." (The Dalles
Chronicle.) It might not be
very funny, but It sure Is giddy.
; Older Girls declare the cur-
rent horde of houseflies are the
most pestiferous in history. They
are more plentiful than If the
OPA had "frozen" all the swat
ters. UNCLE SANTA CLAUSI
(Oakland (Cal.) Tribune)
'Tederal spenders and pro
pagandists are preparing
many, future headaches for
Uncle Sam. All over the
globe they are raising the
hopes of war victims that they
may look toward the U. S. as
a permanent world WPA with
strawberry festival dainties
on the side. That is one of
the reports of the five sena
tors Just back from abroad."
A federal sales tax, to provide
war revenue, however, painful
to super-politicians and the CIO
chief tana, now appears "inevit
able." Even in Congress senti
ment for it Is mounting. Here
. tofore, that august body,
shunned it like Poor Nell did
the villain, who attempted to
murder her seven times, in as
many different ways. Much of
the confusion now rampant over
taxes is due to the failure to
adopt it long ago. Nobody can
get out of paying it and it is
as simple as the ABC's. If a
citizen is flush enough to buy
a $7 necktie the 70c tax won't
really matter.
Home magazine sections of
the metropolitan press are liber
ally dotted with recipes for
cooking venison. It Is prepared
for home consumption in the
same general way as the beef
you Haven't got either.
a .
EITHER ONE, OR BOTHI
(Exchange)
"The handsome white dog
belonging to Al Bettingen was
found dead In tho yard this
morning. The cause is un
known, unless it was from
disgust with the weather and
a democratic administration."
a a
J. Tannehlll Walker, 4, was
awakened recently by the 3 a.
m. bawling of his new brother,
christened Rober.t J. Tannehlll
has often been guilty of the
same thing, but he can't remem
ber it, his Paw states.
e e e
In the midst of all the alleged
shortages of what the nation
always had too much of, one
item stands undiminished, and
used as lavishly as ot yore.
Food plates are still inundated
with liberal hanflfuls oi parsley.
WHY THE EAGLE 8CREAMS1
"This year our Thanksgiving
tiirkev is asked to give nis an
and distribute that all to the
tables of fighting men. He
hould bs the national bird on
our stamps and coins, tor he is
lot better than tne naia-neaa
ed eagle who must scratch lice
rom hl feathers, who is pred
atory, and in extremity could
not afford a meal to the starv
ing fellow who was looking for
Albert
In the death yesterday of Albert Burch, Medford.
and Jackson County lost their most widely known
and distinguished citizen.
Although a living denial of the Biblical phrase
that a "prophet ia not without honor save in his own
country", for Albert Burch had been honored both
by hjs community and by his state, it was'true that
because of the wide range of his professional activi
ties he was better known
the state than in it
VES through the country at large, and particularly
in mining and geological circles, Albert Burch
was recognized as one of the foremost mining engi
neers not only of the country, but of the world!
And up to the time of
stant demand from one
advice and consultation.
Only a few years ago ex-President Hoover, a
personal friend of Mr. Burch's, offered him the
position of managing his extensive mining prop
erties in Australia. Mr.
could be of more varied
remunerative service in this country, and particu
larly along the Pacific Coast with the gelogy of
which he was so familiar in the development of
which he was so interested, and where he had lived
so long.
THAT was characteristic of the man. While dur
ing his lifetime, he made a great deal of money,
and had innumerable opportunities to make a great
deal more; he was always more interested in how
he could develop a district or improve a property
for others, than anything he might get out of it for
himself. He was a pioneer explorer and creative
scientist at heart, rather than an enterpreneur or
apostle of aggrandizement.
And what a many-sided
terms with the men m the pit, a rugged hard-fisted
worker with the rank and file, he was equally at
home among the most cultured and scholarly,
author of several books, extremely valuable mem
ber of th9 State Board of Higher Education, a
toastmaster and reconteur par excellence, and a
companion inaoors or out or sucn original humor,
genuine kindliness and RARE charm!
Repeal Insult to China
A bill has been introduced in congress which
would repeal the Chinese Exclusion laws and estab
lish an annual quota of 105 for our oriental allies.
THE BILL SHOULD BE PASSED! ,
With the measure drawn and presented, failure
to pass it might well lead to most disastrous results
in the Far East. .
AS it is, the Jijps have made invaluable 'capital
rt out of the plea of white1 hatred and yellow
solidarity.
Ever since Pearl Harbor they have been persist
ently spreading propaganda, not onlv in China, hut
throughout the Far East claiming the war against
Japan is a war against the yellow race, that an
allied victory would mean yellow race enslavement,
and that a Japanese victory is as much to the inter
est of the natives of China, the Malays, the Philip
pines, yes even the dusky natives of India as to
tne Japanese tnemselves.
THIS may sound a bit far-fetched over here.
But it would not, and it has not and does
not sound so over there. (
The situation is really serious and ever since
the start of the war, has been a far more important
factor in its progress than
states nave realized.
President Roosevelt HAS realized it ''
So has Winston Churchill. So has General Mo
Arthur, General Stillwell and others well informed
as to the true situation in the Orient So it is not
surprising that President Roosevelt has given this
measure his complete and urgent endorsement
TO some, the quota of 105 may seem rather a
A niggardly concession.
But that isn't the point It is not the number
to be allowed entrance that is vital it is the principle
of the thing, the principle of complete exclusion,
which has been in force all these years.
We are fighting that sort of racial prejudice in
this war and it is not only contrary to the letter
and spirit of our Constitution, but it is a shameful
insult to one of our most
allies, China.
In other words, not only is such exclusion , wrong
in democratic theory but
damaging, in practice.
This is especially true
the time honored "yellow peril" is no longer merely
a chauvinistic scare-head phrase, but a LIVING
threat, being engineered
ana ruthless roe a toe that undoubtedly realizes,
its one chance of escaping complete destruction, is
to arouse the yellow races
globe m a fighting, fanatical do-or-die combine
against all whites.
FINALLY such a quota
1(V , CIVIC) IdUUl VfA UUMVIiUI eej.w. - g-
lems. 105 among 180 millions is hardly a drop in
the national ocean now
But it CAN with the
of Chinese exclusion, remove one of the most serious
causes of friction between the United Nations of the
East and West right an ancient wrong and eliminate
one of the greatest dangers the allies face in the war
against japan.
Burch
outside of this section of
his death he was in con
coast to the other for expert
. . . ...
Burch felt however that he
and genuine, if not more
man! On. familiar
most people in the United
heroic and self-sacrificing
it is both dangerous and
at the present time, when
and exploited by a clever
on the other side or tne
, . .
as is allowed can cause
al nuirnilnHnn nrnli-
or in the future.
accompanying elimination
Personal Health Service
By WUUam
Signed latlari pertaining ta personal health and kyglone, oat to disease
dlagnoela or treatment, anil be answered by Or. Brady If a atesaped self
addressed envelope u enclosed. Letter ado u Id be brief and written- ta laa.
Owing to the largo Dumber at letter! received only lew eaa to easwered
here. No reply oa bo mod to querlea not conforming ta tnstroeUonev
Addreaa Or. WUUam Brad,, M El Camloo, Berarly HIUs, Ceilf.
CALCIUM TOR NERVE
In his pamphlet "The Calcium
Shortage" (available on request
if you inclose stamped envelope
bearing your address no clip
will suffice) the unblushing
quack who conducts this column
in person, not by proxy ex-
pj''"jiuu.ei plains why the
met oi most oi
us is deficient
in calcium and
why a great
many persons
(all to assimi
late the cal
cium their diet
does provide,
in suff ici e n t
amount to
maintain good
health.
Dr. Brady For instance
one reason why a good many
individuals do not assimilate
and utilize the calcium required
by the body is that they do
not get sufficient exposure of
the naked body to sunlight to
manufacture the vitamin D that
is essential for assimilation and
utilization of calcium or they
fail to get enough vitamin D in
food or in medicinal form.
A normally acid gastric Juice
Is necessary for assimilation of
calcium. Hypoacidity or low
acidity of the gastric juice of
course occurs in various ail
ments, and Is commonly found
associated with gastric atony
(lack of tone in stomach), poor
appetite and spastic colon (colon
derangement, "mucous collt(S ')
in persons who do not get
enough vitamin B.
One physiological function of
calcium is the control of nerve
muscle , irritability, thru which
action it tends to prevent muscle
cramp, - muscle spasm, muscle
overtenslon or rigidity.
A single dose of calcium In
jected Into a vein for immediate
effect will relieve the. painful
cramps of arachnldlsm (bite by
black widow, spider) or the colic
ot lead poisoning, or even gall
stone colic.
. From personal observation In
a few cases I am of the opinion
that persons with paralysis agi
tans, shaking palsy, Parkinson's
disease should have an optimal
daily calcium ration and enough
vitamin D dally to insure nor
mal assimilation and utilization
of calcium... By an optimal ra
tion I mean considerably more
calcium thait one gets in even
a well balanced diet. It is pos
sible to get an optimal ration
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
(Continued from Pago One)
and only complete isolation from
the rest of the world as a good
national policy," he writes. He
does not want this, but he Is a
good enough reporter to recount
faithfully the facts he found.
Crawford warns America to
steel itself again for the reac
tion experienced after the last
war when we became Uncle
Shylock to the world.
"It will be the same again,"
he says.
o m
THE British Tommy Is Inclined
to think we came In a bit
late, and he has done most of
the fighting. The French are
thankful for another chance of
national existence, but apparent
ly are politically dismembered
and confused.
The American soldier looks
upon the war, he says, as an un
pleasant lob to be got over with,
and to quarrel about for years
to come about the question
whether we were suckers or
really had to do it. But the Brit
ish Tommy thinks only of Dun
kirk and Is fighting for his home
land." .
The evidence of this discern
ing reporter substantiates again
in Its broad aspects the reports
of the five senators from the far
Pacific.
It calls again for development
of more American self-interest in
dealing with tllles and more re
alism in both war and post-war
preparations. It completes the
picture, the new undeniable, re
alistic picture which supplants
the grandiose notions drawn (or
us by propagandizing leaders in
the early siaees of the war.
Mr. Crawford Is no propa
gandist. He was sent abroad by
the .leftist-winged of all Amer
ican newspapers, opposed to
state department policy, pro-internationalist,
etc. What Mr.
Crawford found at the front was
so Irrefutably opposite that he
resigned his position with that
newspaper and now is associate
editor of Newsweek (no propa
gandist sheet, either).
o a o
UOW he got into a contused
condition on "the horn
fror.V is shown in another new
I book by that name, written by
Brady. M. O.
- MUSCLE IRRITABILITY
of calcium from foods that are.
comparatively rich In calcium
milk, cheese, peat, beans, pea
nuts, nuts greens, egg yolk, cab
bage, avocado, broccoli, cauli
flower carrots, dried figs, oat
meal, soybean flour, watercress,
turnips, onions, oysters, clams,
dried prunes, olives. The fact
remains that most Americans
get insufficient calcium to main
tain good nutrition. And so I
suggest that the individual with
Parkinson s disease should reg
ularly take some calcium gluco
nate and dt-calcium phosphate
and vitamin D to supplement
his or her ordinary cany met.
I believe this combat the ten
dency towards increasing rigid
ity or "freezing" in such cases
and that Is the main factor of
disability.
QUESTIONS ANSWERS
Training for Dla.be tee
I am B0 and neve had dtabetea dis
ease lor e.nout 36 years. Daughter,
past aixty, Uree with tne, and wants
to Know how to avoid it. My mother
died of It at age of 72. Daughter us?e
more sugar than ahe should.
(Mra. H. O. R.)
Answer1 Overeating, overweight, in
sufficient dally exercise, Insufficient
dally Intake of vitamin B complex,
are common oausea of development
of diabetes In anyone who hat In.
herlted the tendency. Bend ten cents
and regular-slta three-cent-stem Ded
envelope bearing your addreaa and
ax ior pooxiet "Training for Dia
betes." Sliver Nitrate Steins
Can you tell mo whether then la
anything that' will remove black
stalna left by Mlver nitrate solution
spilled on porcelain wash stand?
(O. M.)
Answer Try rubblnt the a tains
with a swab of cotton soaked In or
dinary tincture of Iodine.
What! No Buttert
We very seldom have milk, hardlv
any butter at all, and the bread
served hero Is considered third grade
quality en tho outetde. Pleats send
mo Information regarding ear and
diet (or pregnant mother.
(Japanese name.)
AnswerLack of butter Is unim
portant If you have Ales. l-a-.k rJ
milk is not so good, particularly tor
an expectant mother. If you mean
the bread Is not so fine or so white
as ordinary bread, that le Insignifi
cant so far as good nutrition la con
cerned, in I act, a coarser, more near
ly whoje wheat bread la far better.
For booklet "Preparing for Maternity.
send ten cento and three-eent-stamped
enteione bearina. tmi, ,t.
dress, or if you had rather not bother
ra scna ine stamped addressed en
velope sena tnirty cents.
tvupyngut, leea. jonn diho co.)
i '
. Notet Persona wishing to r
communicate with Dr. Brady
should tend letter direct to Or.
William Brady. M. Mil B
Camlno. Beverly Hills, calif.
the New York public relations
genius extraordinary. David
Hlnshaw. Books hav been rain
ing out of the skies for months.
mostly bearing panaceas for post
war or reciting exciting Individ
ual adventures.
What this war needs Is some
good straight book reporting
and straight thinking, and It
seems to me that what the lib
eral Mr. Crawford hag done with
North Africa the conservative
Mr. Hlnshaw hag done at horn.
From journals, speeches, an
nouncements and actions. Hin-
shaw hag : accumulated a dsil
lusloning record.
His main point is that the
Henderson era was founded on
distrust of the government for
the common sense and integrity
of the People and his testimony
calls for a renewal of democratic
faith.
OUTLOOK BRIGHT
Chicago, Oct. 13 (U.R) A
spokesman for the War Food
administration said today that
production of new farm ma
chinery next year will be dou
bled under government author
ization-
Lee Marshall, director of the
WFA's office of materials and
facilities, said the government
also plans to abolish rationing
on "66-23 per cent" of the 91
farm machinery items now ra
tioned. Marshall, addressing the Na
tional Retail Farm Equipment
association, said distribution
controls on the 91 items will
be cut in half.
The government next year
will authorize manufacturers to
produce 80 per cent of the
amount of farm machinery pro
duced in 1940, he said. Only
40 per cent of the 1940 total
was produced in 1943.
8EX CRIME
New York, Oct 12. (U.R)
The body of Mrs. Marie Pearson.
48, of South Jamaica, N. Y.,
mother of four children and
wife of a Portland, Ore., ship
yard worker, was found today
in a vacant lot near her home.
She had been beaten, strangled
and raped, police said. Mrs.
Pearson last was seen alive
when she left her job at a
bakery at 10 o'clock last night
for home, . i
DEVOTE EFFORTS
ON HOME FRONT
Medford Members of P.P.W.
Engaged In Many Activi
ties of Patrlotlo Nature.
This week the National Bnal.
nesa and Professional Wnmtn'i
club is observing the annual
Business women Week, with
'Xlvlng on tho Home Front" as
theme of the waek. 'Loeallw the
observance Is being canted out
by the Medford club, which
numbers among its members
some of the cities outstanding
business women and whose pres
ident this year la Mis Frieda
Gebers.
In addition to members from
the more usual occupations, such
as office workers, school teach
ers, nurses and mnm ' hn.i.
ness establishments, . the local
club has several members In
more outstanding nrmmiiiAr,.
One of these Is Mrs. Edith Davis,
registered nurse who special
izes in vision rehabilitation
the promotion of rnrrau-t h.Klt.
of vision to avoid, In many
tases, tne necessity of wearing
glasses.
Supervises Nursery
Another is Mrs. Khi t-
nant. who la tniMH.- a ak.
- - v .lie
Medford war nursery school,
wa as one ot tne best war
nurse rv aphnAla In tui. .....
- ... ... aiaw.
The school has an average at-
rciiunnce oi av cniidren each
day with a total enrollment to
date of 169.
The work nl Mrs Nina Ma...
housing manager for the local
federal housing project, is also
OUt-of-the-Orrllnnrv Mr.
work Includes the handling of
owui proDiem tor the
125-unlt project, and also the
task Of nruanllni and ... I-
- - H u.im ouunvis
Ulg a recreational program and
neaun cjmic m connection
with the nrnloo Ha ..i. .m
- r - nua Will
also be to heln tmhMni. u.
activities ot the project with the
uivic ciivuies or organizations
in the cty of Medford and sur
roundng area.
Among other well-known wom
en fit th l1nh - jT. a
- - " iviia. mum
o. Bengtson, Swedish masseuse;
Miss Maraaret Mnrrlann ri.
manager for Bear Creek Or-
cnaras; Mrs. Veda Lewis, owner
and manager of a super service
station; Mr. Gladys York, sec
retary of the Oregon State
extension service in Jackson
county: Mrs. Jacque Lenox and
Mrs. E. T. Rnrslenn Kntk .
whom own and manage women's
tcouj-io-wwr snops; Mrs. sve
Prentice, owner and manager of
a music studio; Pvt. Mabel Sher
wood, In the motor transport
division ot the WAC, In De
Moine. Ia.; Mr. Lula Watson.
pusw cier sent to tne Medford
post office from the Los An
gelea office; Miss Hazel Swayne,
registered nuns, and mi.. trin
Parish, county health nurse. .
nea cross Aided
In addition tn thai ,iU..im
occupations of the member of
the Medford BPWC, many of
the members find time to devote
to Red Cross work, such as first
aid. motor coma and nthr ok
tlvlties, the aircraft warning
service, civilian defense and
u&u. in fact, all members of
the Huh a rm TTfirt hnMM
Outstanding for civic work Is
Mrs. Eva Judd, who works at
.1 T. - . M ' .... .. .
uis nea across ouice live naif
day each week, four hnura h
week at the control center of
the AWS, two hours each week
as a USO hostess and in addition
is a member of the USO ex
ecutive council, Girl Scout coun
cil ana Ulrls' community club
board. '
Mrs. Prentlcei amrl hr anf
dlon bands have spent countless
nours entertaining service men
and women, both In Medford
and at Camp White.
This is "living on the home
front" as practiced by the Med
ford Business and Professional
Women.
Fingerprint Coords
For 75,000,000
' .Washington, Oct. 12. (U.R)
Fingerprint cards In the posses
sion of the federal bureau of ln
vestlsatlon. if carefnllv etolrrf
will make 1U columns as high as
tne wasnington monument.
There are 73,000,000 of these
cards. FBI Director T wi...
Hoover announced late yester-
at.y. xne 79,000,000 mark was
reached when the U. S. marshal
at Chicago sent in the finger
print of Elton Bertell Moray
who had been arrested frr im
personating an army officer and
who, upon a check of his print,
was found to be wanted for de
linquency by his EnglewooJ,
Cal., draft board.
Cooing time for OlassTned ads
a. m. Too late to Classify 1340
p. m.
DR. A. A. SOULC, M.D.
alto 0t Medford Center Mdg.
Office Phone 2870
Residence Hotel Holland ,
ODT RESTRICTION
Medford householder today
were urged by the Office of De
fense Transportation to plan
their household buying so a not
to be caught short a a result of
the new retail and wholesale de
livery restrictions which went
into effect Monday.
Jim H. Busch, district mana
ger of the Division ot Motor
Transport explained that under
new ODT ruling which was la
sued to conserve delivery ve
hicles, mileage and tires, retail
and wholesale deliveries are re
stricted to a specified number
each week.
Busch pointed out that retail
merchant are not permitted to
mane retail deliveries of article.
package or lot ot good or
pacxage unless they exceed 60
inche In combined length and
girth or weigh more than five
pound. Exception to thlf sire
and weight limitation, he said.
consist of certain perishable com
modities, laundry , and other
items.
Busch declared the amend
ment specifies that on Sunday all
wholesale deliveries except Ice
are barred and all retail deliver
ies except ice, fresh milk or
cream and related dairy pro-
uucts, iruit or vegetable juices
or their product and eggs when
delivered together with fresh
mux or cream.
WACS TEST NEW
Louisville, Ky.-, Oct. J2.--j(U,R)
j-Officials at the Fort Knox,
Ky., armored force command an
nounced today that a new cream
has been developed which gives
almost 100 per cent protection
against flash burns up to nearly
i.uuu aegrees centigrade.
The cream, developed and
tested by Lt. Cmdr. G. B. Fau-
ley of the Naval Medical Re
search Institute at Bethesda,
Md., gave almost perfect protec
tion against flash burns in tests
made on volunteer WACS at th
armored-command research la
boratory. It was believed the cream
would be especially effective in
the tank force where burn ac
count for one-third ot the casu
alties. Washington, Oct. 12. (U.R)
The Office of Price administra
tion has notified the poultry In
dustry ox tnese two forthcom
ing changes in the price regula
tion applying to live and pro
cessed poultry. '
(1.) The effective date ot the
provision of the price regulation
limiting the sale of drawn poul
try M within a radius of SO
miles from the point of slaughter
will be postponed from today
until November 1.
. (2.) Maximum prices of
quick-frozen eviscerated broil
ers, friers, roasters, capons,
fowl, stags and old roosters will
be Increased temporarily one
cent a pound over recently
established maximums.
Stockholm, Oct, 12 (U.R)
The Jugoslav government's
claim that 10,000 Serbs were
massacred by axis forces In the
Brncka area of northeastern
Jugoslavia In January, 1942, was
supported today by a Swedish
newspaper correspondent .vho re
turned here from Hungary.
The correspondent, who rep
resented the Social Demokraten'
in Hungary, said the Jugoslav re
ports were substantially correct
ano tnat tne massacre drjw
n any protests from Hungarians,
particularly opponent of the
gi vernment.
THE GRANGE
Pomona Grange
The White Satin ugar con
test will be held Saturday,
October S3, at Central Point
Granse hnll rlnrlnff fha.
cess of Pomona Grange.
Experienced shoe woman or woman
who wihe to learn the business ....
Good salary. Permanent petition for
right woman.
ADDRESS BOX 90, MAIL TRIBUNE
Flight 0' Time
Medford and Jackson Co. HI
tory from tba file of the MaL
T rib on 10 and SO rears age
TEN YEAR! AGO TODAY
October 12, IMS
(It was Thursday)
"Machine Gun" Kellv mrsA
wife sentenced to Ufa ten,.
'part In Urschel kidnaping.
Pessimism at LofN. confer
enca grow a no agreement can
be reached on the rearmament
of Germany. Chancellor Hitler
to get report from own delegate.
Hunter missing In Butte Fall
area return safely.
Partly cloudy.
39 degrees. .
High 85, low
Sally Rand, the tan dancer,
don flannels to (pare blushes
of New Yorker In Broadway
appearance.
Coast railroad opposed In re
port to ICC.
Closing of booze joint in
county held need to curb auto
accidents on rural roads. ;
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
October 12, 1823
Ot was Friday)
Posses scour Siskiyou for
three bandits who slew four
trainmen in tunnel No. 13 hold
up yesterday afternoon. Bandits
were seen by only one man, a
helper in the express car. Crime
is listed as "most brutal In his
tory of state." Bloodhounds seek
trail. No loot was obtained.
Casey Stengel, veteran player,
hit his second home of world
series to enable Giant to defeat
Yanks 1 to 0.
Fair, cool nights. High 64,
low 43 degrees.
Forty-eight children of county
attend pre-school clinic ot health
society.
Klamath Falls starts opening
of Natron cut-off with big cele
bration. Mr. and Mrs. Blrkholtz ot
Willow Springs celebrate their
twenty-fifth wedding anniver
sary. Eden precinct tomato grower
report good crop and price.
PCT CIMCC TCDMC
ULI IIULd, ILMYIO
'
: Cleveland, Oct. 12. (U.R)
Federal Judge Emerlch B. Freed,
after overruling -motions for a
new trial, today imposed 10
year prison sentences and fines
of $10,000 each on three former
officials of the National Bronze
and Aluminum Co., found
guilty last week of war plant
sabotage.
The officials were three broth
er John L. Schmeller, former
president of the war plant;
Frank, former general manager,
and Edward, former assistant
general manager and chief
Iirevauu, gist.
The Schmeller were found
guilty last week of producing
and delivering defective aircraft
castings to the Packard Motor
uar uo., Detroit, wmcn was
building warplane engines for
the Allies.
Gangster's Estate
Is $74,490 Cash
Chicago, Oct. 12 (U.R)-i-Frank
(The Enfo-cer) Nitti, 55,. who
committed suicide last March
when he was indicted for partici
pation in a movie extortion rack
et, left an estate of $74,490, an
inventory filed In probate court
si cwed today.
The estate, entirely In cash,
will be shared by his widow, Mrs.
Annette Nitti, and her adopted
son, Joseph, 10. Attorneys said
he left no will.
Women Who
Suffer
from SIMPLE
nW Oat Of ta last Waea
Te Help Bald Up tad Hoed!
Too girls who suffer from etmple ane
mia or who lose ao miicrTdirruia?
monthly periods that you feel Orel
weak, "dragged out" duo to low blood
irpn-etart tcdaytr7jdli PuS
ham a compound TABlrfa en th added
lren-one of the greateat Woolviroa
-uc cue.
..5?
SSJ,!f'St!ln?m,rtot t?
Su "try ihm, oTuSS2i JtSC
vuea wo 11 u, too. lrt-
don't mrkabl b-nVi?
lOW label dlrMAtlAn.
food." tN. x. Bury.