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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1928)
PXOE SEVEN E RUSSELL'S CRY OF UNITED ONLY MEDFORD 'NOT I'KUID' AS FLOOD CONTROL NO iS HELD UP BY frrEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, TUESDAY. JUNE .", 1023. f 1 a "On to Medford" is the cry uf the I'tiltt'il Artisans thin summer, for the annual eum-Iave of the l'a- clflc Northwest will be heM in Mcdfurd Aumist 10, 11 ami 12, ac curding to V. M. (Jack Hamil ton, district representative for the fluted Artisans in Jackm! and Josephine counties. Tlio country of the Crater Lake was selected last year as the ideal fijiot for the l'J28 conclave,, and the roads from the. coast and the mountains, from the north and the sou tli will find the caravans of Artisans thronging their way to Med ford. : The United Artisans was estab lished November 4. 1S94, and has been celebrating Its third of a cen try anniversary this year. Dur ing this period it has prown stead ily until it is one of the strongest and one of the wealthiest frater nal insurance organizations In the world. Approximately JO.OOO.OuO worth of insurance is in force with full legal reserves, and an addi tional surplus. The home of the organlutlon is In the Artisans building, Tortland,. Ore. In addition to its Insurance benefits, it is well known fur Its social services, including the Arti sans' home where the fcharp edec of old age and adversity arc dull ed with a loving care and kindness that is no kin to charity. Tiff GIRL' AT RIALTO The play might bo the thing, but it doesn't Interest Ue.be Dan iels very much unless it Is cram med with laughs. This was proved lust night in the. star's latest com edy release, "The Kifly-Klfly (IhT whli-h opened at the Hiatto thea ter for a run of three days. And laughs thero are, plenty of them. In the first place, Hebe tncltles the problem of the modern young woman who is imbued with the Idea that she can take the place of the man and mako the latter like it. With that is the major ltreinl.se. Sliss Daniels travels along a rather rocky road of situations until fluaily she puts out tho call for help. Tho story of "Tho Fifty-Fifty llirl," written by John McDer niott, concerns the attempt of Miss Daniels to run a gold mine like a man while her partner, James Dull, assumes tho obligations .of the woniiin. ''' this ends "YELLOW : MASK!" I lln v vmtr TVt1i n Vllrtu.'iali , - j S Sliaclr? Dental Science now Ior ftcla a .Sale Way to Itanthh It for Lustrous Whiteness Guaranteed! ""yELLOW MASK" i omanl by a1iiiiil X cement' in your saliva toliich glues to your tecili ntnl harden.1. It completely envelops tlm nnlarnlly white rnnmcl. Food, codec and tobacco slain litis mack a baleful yellow. Ordinary dentifrices rntt't lielp you one iota. Tlicy floss rijilit over this mack. Your own experience tells you tlut. There's just otic thing that run do tins job without harm lo the iuu:t oVliejHo enamel. It is a white powdery sub-tancc (non-gritty) known as 'Tri-Cdlcium l'liof pliatc. ' You'll kuow it ituiaediatcly when we tell you it is the material that (lie foremost tlcntiMs use lo clean leelh and add that exquisite hih jHjlih. "Yellow iMa.k" has no chance against it. Alluring whiteness always follows. Hut what science has sought to do has !ern to compoie a plcj.-aul, htty tooth paMc of this marvelous material. .Si that the magic of "Tit-Calcium I'tiosftlntte" coitid Kork fur ywyiuil) ! Success at last has conic. The name of this man clous tooth parte is OR PI I OS. Leading film and etage atars hac adopted it joyously. Dcnlfets arc rec ommending it to jMlicnls. Its public recep tion has been ocrw helming a million Users in leas than ix months. - ' Prove it in 20 DeysL W r. know how eflcrlhc OKTIIOS Is So we efler you an extraordinary Guarantee. Get a lube of OIU'IIOS today. I se it 20 day-. Look folely for new teeth whiteness. U you grt one throb of disappointment return the unused part of the tube and pet your money Lack. But start and start today! Orphos TOOTH PASTE Removes "Yellou- Mosk" U. 0. GRADUATE! rXIVKKHITV OF OltEOOX. , KL'tiBXK, June 5. (Special.) , Graduation week end at the I'ni verwity of Oregon this year, con tinuing from June 8 to 11, will be replete with entcif-alulng events. ' including a play presented by the Kenlor class, the baccalaureate ser 1 mon, the annual flower and fern I procession and the commencement address. The e o in m e n e e m e n t play. Shakespeare's "Midsummer Night's Dream." is one of the most elub I orate productions ever attempted ' by an amateur Kroup ir any unl- versity in the northwest, and will include over 1UI people In Its per . simiiel. "Why the Prino-ss of t?od Walk ; With a Klinp." Is the subject of , the sermon that Dr. Herbert S. Johnson, pastor of the Warren Av-nue liaptist church of Huston, j will, deliver at the hassalaureate ! servlre. llev. Johnson, '87, Is the son of John V. Johnson, first president of the University of Ore gon. The lovely pageant of tho an nual flower and fern procession, expressing In stately symbolism tho essence of the Oregon spirit, nnd the loyalty of university women to their alma mater. Is expected to surpass all previous flower proces sions. The commencement address, "The Making of a Man." will be delivered In McArthur sourt Mon day morning by Dr. Jess Kellems. an alumnus of the university. Dr. Kcllums is noted as an evangel ist, hns received a doctor of phil osophy dejirec from the Vnlversity of Edinburgh, and has spent some I time in Africa on missionary work. Of the r!0 students who will re degrees at commencement this yenr, only one Is from Med ford. Robert Charles TIart Mill receive a bachelor of arts degree in busi ness administration. A glance at the records of those who have been given degrees re veals n steady growth In size In the university. Starting with 1912. the first yea r that accu ra 1 e sta 1 1st ics were' kept, the books show a total of 137 degrees granted. Last year the total was 4 S 1 , showing that th enumber this year comfortably surpasses that of last. "CIIICAOO. Juno.. 5.--M') Ann now they are IncuniorutliiK against crime. Certain citizens of tho 42ml ward have received a charier for tho Forty-second Ward Voters' Assocla llon, Inc., non-partisan, tho purpose of which is "to clean up tho ward." Tho association sets forth that It "purposes to foster honesty and safety in the administration of poli tics; to redeem our ward from po litical chaos, corruption and graft; to secure honest elections and a fall- count of tho ballots; to enlist decent and upright citizens of this ward to accomplish those pur poses." 1 Dance Headliner in Vaudeville Tomorrow All the well known dances In tho terspslchorcan category will bo of fered hi Doll Dreams, the head liner. Miss I.uelllo Human, with a wonderful routine of acrobatic dances, Is tho feature uf tho act. She possesses beauty, graco and skill and executes her difficult numbers faultlessly. Tho com pany of four who accoinpnny her give various exhibitions of charac ter dances. Thero Is also some singing, and a whistling number included In the offering. Admirer ot clean, wholesome comedy will find something to en thuse over u the act staged by Wolfnr.l and Stevens. They have a veritable riot of loughs with their offering. "Hits of this c:n! That." They sing, dance, and each plays a musical Instrument. Probably a more spectacular or more difficult routine of aerial work has never been accomplished than that of the I'nul ISroth.-rs. There arc two of these super-atll-l.tes. Harold Kenedy nnd Kmma Francis nre n team of untisually talcuted artists who can be count ed upon to furnMt most nmuslng entertainment. Mr. Kennedy was principal comedian with tho late rieorge Primrose nttractl.ins. and while It was not generally known, acted as understudy for Mr. Prim rose, substituting fur this well known star In his famous dancing specialty. In MNs Francis he has n partner whose ability, versatil ity nnd personality matches his own capabilities perfectly. "Itlg Itoy" Williams Is a mu sical Instrument Imitator. Armed only with his trusty larynx and a guitar he Is able to produce the effects of a wliolo hand. lt Xurwcw Homo Contract. SAl;KM. Ore., Juno 5. vT) Tho 8wope-Itico Construction com pany of Portland was tho uc cessfnl bidder yesterday for the contract lo build the new nurse home at the Mate Insane hospital. The bid was $T3.2f9. Hcven other firms bid for the contract. 4 Tone Una Komi Night WAFHT.VUTUV.. June i W Henator Wesley Jones of Washing ton who yesterday underwent s major surgical operation here rn resting comfortably today after a EASILY AS FOLKS SAX AXTONIO, Tex.. June 5. iA) Modern youth was stoutly de fended here today by MIks 1-aura Kuykemlnll of New York, who told the biennial con vent iun of the tleneral Federation of Women's Clubs that the slam; phrase "apple sauce." wus the young generation's triumphant repection of the ko kum which once fooled 'parents. "Our youth of today is less cred ulous, less crudely suggestible, keener to detect Insincerity and hokum than formerly." aiu said. "Their minds go straight to the bottom of thinus. ' Youth is too keen to be misled by the things that misled the older generations. The old hokum of spurious . re ligion does not appeal to' them. The old hokum of convention does not appeal to them, but they are susceptible to mm h new hokum Jazz music, petting and silly non sense, and rough and direct laugh ter. " Miss Kuykendall found many things to criticise In youth of to day, but she was optimistic as to the future. "KIghty per cent of our girls are underweight," she said. "They are slightly anemic, the majority of obstetrical cases today are path ological nnd we would do well to study this problem wJth all seri ousness. H is rc a I ly a n occasion for alarm to be told by physicians that a normal birth is rare. "Kxeessive use of cosmetics Is bad, and our modern girls are most intemperate on that point. How ever, athletics has done much for our boys nnd the great hygiene of bobbed hnlr and short skirts for our girls has helped. We should keep these things." !00L SECRET TO THE GRAVE PORTLAND, . Ore., Juno 5. (fpi TukinB her secret with her, Knld Aiiiuiis. 1G, senior student at (ii-iuit liiKh school, who wus found by her mother wounded by a pistol siiot at Iter home yesterday, died Sunday at a hospital. She refused to toll her reason for shooting her self. 130 120 110 80 :2d mmm: It LEWIS ORGY OF SPENDING I CHK'AOO. June G. (P) Presi dent Coolidge last night sent greet ings to the Mississippi valley flood control conference, holding a vic tory celebration here; but he add ed a warning against any move ment that would lead to further immediatre expenditures in flood control. "I should bo pleased to have my best wishes convoyed to the ' Mississippi valley conference," aald the message to Mayor Thompson. , its chairman. "It might be well to remind them that the federal government has undertaken this 'great flood control work at a cost of several hundred million dol ( lars. that it has authorized river land harbor work of close to $3uo, : 000.000. and that u real service i-i i ). inrf.ii-nii.,t t I... ..iti.. ' on... will consider the sucrlfk-ca ' necessary to find ways and means by whieh these commitments can , be met. rather than in promoting ; plans for further Immediate ex penditures. Th,. mwin xvi in .i.u1v- 1,,'was exuaustoti ami men uescenu one hy Mayor Thompson asking the president to "convey any sage you may have for tho people, of llie valley." , j N. Y. AHORNEY WALK? ON 10 CRAM LAKE n cotiri Willi his imniun and en mem n picture -of Cratet' in ko leading him on, It. I-. Mntj wil ci-i-y mi aclvertlsliiK cam-1 lliows. New York nuorncy trami-l vuKn tor the II. V. I. t.-.impany, i ed throiiKh the snow down to tool j,,,, o0 makers of "it. V. IV mi-! blue water, drank sonio. then ! u e r w e a r. distributed by Levi! climbed the three miles rut to j strauss company. This uduruar tho road, where lie had b ft bis 'mini has many exclusively feu-1 ear. nflcr trylni; the other en-1 turcs that supply u combination of j trance to the resort. jjtu uml freedom. " The "11. V. L." i Mr. Matthews siient Severn! days here, last week as the Mist of an old classmate at Oenrgo Vesh - hlKton University, Hawley Moore, i local attorney. Ho lu,-l been dl'iv ; InK around the country since i October. After leavini; be,v M"ii jdav he expected to s:end i-onio time at Hoseburi? with friends. mm mm Bnolt E(D)1 mouiitdnr a broiling day a red-hot road a long, hard pull tough going! And it's a whole lot harder on your car than it is on you harder and hotter! But there is a way to avoid motor over-heating and that way is to use the right lubricant. Engineers will tell you that the best lubricant is asitoir n5H Until now, only airplanes and racing cars could use Castor Oil because of its exces sive cdst. We set out to overcome this ob jection so that every motorist could enjoy the superiorities of Castor Oil. We were successful our engineers perfected a mew process which is a scientific blending of the fin est mineral oil and chemically pure East Indian Castor Oil. Thus Castorlube retams all the super lubricating qualities of Cas tor Oil. Castorlube costs no more than any other high quality oil and gives more mileage, more power, more compression and less friction, less crankcase dilution and less vibration. Try it yourself the tougher the going the better Castorlube performs. Castorlube Refining Co., San Francisco, California. mm SUPER SERVICE STATION Distributors ADVERSE WINDS TllKl'ASSKY. X. V., Juno 5. tHl The F o k k e r monoplane Friendship, in which Miss Amelia Kurharl of lioston and luv two male companions hope to cross the Atlantic, was buffetce by Btrong northwest winds hare to day. whieh made plans for com pletion of fueling imposibie. Seven more tanks of gasoline remained to be poured into the plane's reservoirs. The fliers announcod tho take off, which last night hid seeme.1 likely upon completion of tho fueling operation, had been post poned. Aside from th? wind, tho weatlter was cleur nnd fine. An Intimation that the Fiieud sh'p might fly beyond England was given by Miss K:rharr, Pilot Wihner Ktultz ami Mechaive Limis !"'" ' .-unvcr.ui.loii here liils morning. They said th.it their plans for a landing plaen cm tho other stile of the At lent ic wens ' ndefinite. Their pun:c-e. nrVj, added, was to fly until their fuef 'aml tn,'' ho,ei1 to m,lko a ,",,ltft mns-!fliK,u ,,m " wf Uu'!r V.redeces- Eors over mis rouie. At S a. m., ea.ite, n daylight l1.1';. wind was still too strong for n resumption of r-jftullng ope rations. The visibility was per fect. B.. V. D. Campaign Starts in Tribune licL-liinliiL- t.i.h.v. the Mull Trill union suit is made In many sizes to fit men of every build. The lHj)eoially woven and treated naln sook and reinforced nnd finished tailoring resist rcl.catcd, thorough launderini;. This nationally known uarmcnt is sold iu all the up to date men's clothing stores and de partment stores. ..:?y, (toy' motor 'ft m : j m Summer Time Clothes of Cool res Celense Voile Plain colors nnd figures in guar anteed to wash eelenesc voile. For finer dresses there is no other summer fabric that will equal these in looks or service. There are many advantages in using "Genuine Olencsc." Let us ex plain them to you. $1.50 New Ready Made Wash Frocks If you don't have the time to make up your own dresses, we've a beau tiful selection of new models in organdies, dimities and other fast color prints. New basque models and high waist lines for the missy type figure are exceptionally desirable, while there are also many new models for the matronly figures. $1.95, $2.95 to $5.95 "MEDFORD'S OWN STORE" Fabrics GUARANTEED TO WASH It pays to buy "Guaranteed to Wash" fabrics for your summer dresses and re lieve your mind on wash day of the possi bility of having your new dress ruined by the first washing. "Borden" and "Butter field" fast-color wash fabrics sold here, and are nationally known and advertised as the best. 40-Inch Ribbon Edge Voiles Very fine mercerized ..voiles, in beautiful designs, both large and small. Also a plain mercerized voile at this price. These are absolutely fast colors and an 49 C exceptionally good voile at.. 40-Inch Mercerized Foulards A soft, lustrous "Butterfield" fabric in unusual designs and colorings. This is a highly mercerized fast-color summer fab ric that will make up beautifully for women or children '. Marcella Check Dimity Thin fast-color check dimity lends it sell: admirably to the best ".summer fashions. Unusual , designs, both . small and large, make it suitable for either 49 C Avomcn's or children's dresses....... . ..... 40-Jnch Printed Batists Sheer and cool, in prettyand fast-color designs, both light and medium shades. Many of the new "Butterick Fashions" call for batiste in making np 49 C the clever styles 36-Inch Borden's Cambrics "Just perfect", that's the way they wash, and the designs and colorings arc new. A very fine fabric for summer clot lies for cither women or children. 30c Light or dark shades ..-.........i..'. 40-Inch "Mistsheer" Voiles Just as fine and sheer as any 'voile you ever used and colors are absolutely fast. Gorgeous colorings, too, makes this one of the season's finest dress fabrics.' 03 C An exceptional voile at ............ Plain Rayon Voiles Pastel shades and white in this very fine plain dress voile of Rayon. This is abso lutely a fust-color fabric and though very sheer, will wash perfectly. All Cl v 1 Q L the best pastel shades 40-In. Washable Silks The finest quality for the juice we have ever sold. It's a pure dye crepe dc chine in guaranteed fast, plain shades. -.About 15. of the best pastel and street shades to select from. For finer wash frocks for summer and for finer lingerie, it's unexcelled. $1.98 ood night.