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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 30, 1933)
PAGE SET MEDFORD' M3JL' TR1BT7NE, MEDrORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1933. Medford Mail Tribune "Ewyont in souuicrn urtos Reads thi Hall Tribam" Daily Excapt Satifday PoblMMd br MEDFORD PKLNTINQ 00. ss-sr-sa n. nr st. nam tt BOBEBT W. RDBL, Edits As lodepwdtnt Wwraptpar Botcnd m Mcood daw outtsr at kUdfort. Oregon, udv Act of Mareb 1. U7B. ormornrPTifiN BATES 07 Mill lo Adnoea Pally, en fear Daily, ail Bjoutlw. . .$5.00 . a.T6 iuuy, ooa bodu. .SO By -amer, ID AOtim nrano, "uwiu, JaekMbrtlla, Central Tolnt. Pboeala, Taltot, Gold Daily, oat year I? ?? Dal It. all dooUm - Dally, om month All Lermi, tub to adtaoea. OffleiaJ paper of U City of Madford. Official paper of Jackson Comity. .00 UEMBEB 0V THB ASSOCIATED PBE88 hccutius uu w u aw.. Tba Aaaodated Press If txeltaUtlj .otltUd to tr use for publleaUoo of all mm dJipatctua credited to tt or oumtvin ctkumo ra j a. ik. lul iuis- euthllahswi herr1n All rlrJiU for publication of !) difpttcbaa oareu are alio reterraa. MEMBEB OV UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS AdTtrtlitnt BeprateatatlrM M. C. MQUENBEN COMPANY Offlttf In Mew Tori, CHeato, Detroit, San FrancUco, Loo Anaalat, OeatUa, Portland. UlMIII Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Parry. LIT TLB OBEEN TENTS ,nu i MTTIf flTUmK TBNTS WHERE THE SOLDIERS SLEEP, AND THE SUNBEAMS PLAY AND -ins. WOMEN WEEP, ARE COVERED with wnnjina TonAY; AND BETWEEN THB TENTS WALK THB WEARY FEW, WHO WERE YOUJIU anu STALWART IN SIXTY-TWO WHEN THBY WENT TO THE WAR AWAY. THB LITTLB GREEN TENTS ARB BUILT OF SOD, AND THEY ARE NOT LONO. AND THEY ARE NOT BROAD, BUT THB SOLDIERS HAVE JjOTS OF ROOM: AND THE SOD IS PART OF THE LAND THEY SAVED, WHEN THE FLAG OF THE ENEMY DARKLY WAVED, THB SYMBOL OF SOLB AND DOOM. THB LITTLE OREBN TENT IS A THING DIVINE; THE LITTLB OREBN TENT IS A COUNTRY'S SKRINB, WHERE PATRIOTS KNEEL AND PRAY; AND THE BRAVE MEN LEFT. BO OLD, SO FEW, WERE YOUNO AND STALWART Df SIXTY-TWO WHEN THEY WENT TO THH WAR AWAY. .WK HUOI.) I ... The atyls these daye la to proclaim to the world: "I would not car, to tie In J. Plerpont Morgan's ahoea," what with tha aeuate Inquiring, and a lawyer loaded to the hilt with ,..Mnn. Rhnut hi doings In the financial world. The place to be la i , UA-onn'. nnnta. coat and vest the pockets) of which bulge wlQi round yellow ana jong ritou, other ill-gotten gains. Summer la here, and everybody la rejoicing, but the major woodshed oroprletore, who favor a IS montha , ... . nuMnlwr. year, WIW1 ever, muuu " The late winter waa Ideal for them In fact, It often looked like It waa of their own manufacture, ' Dewey H1U, the Prospect hired man and all-around athietlo leader of the tall timber, towned yesterday to let s, dentist fix hl teeth, lnatead of doing It hlmeelf. Six of hie ohompera have been busy aohng. all at the aame time, for the pest six (0) weeks, and begin to discommode him slightly, last winter Mr. HU1 busted three Tibs trying to throw tile school professor, to discover he waa not a wrestler. The ordinary run . of ailments that affile mankind are generally Ignored by him, aa he la too busy playing first base, oenter on the basketball team, pitching horseshoes, coming to grips wlUi larger cltluna, tripping the light fantastic, milking T cows, feeding pigs, plowing, plumbing, do ing housework, keeping books, acting as postmaster, ex-offlolo, showing easterners bow to oaten a flab, mow ing lawns, cutting wood, doctoring dogs, nurse maid to 10,000 worth of foxes, capturing wlldoaU with his bare hands, dehorning bulls, rescuing high eobool girls from the bear, looking handsome, and other duties all in the day's work too numerous to mention. Conditions that used to howl, have now stsrted to hum. ... HORRORS Or OONOMY (Cong. Record) Here we are, at a time when we are outtlng down the com pensation of ex-aervlos men. The man who lost a leg or waa wounded In actual battle la hav ing hla compensation reduoed 30 . percent. The compensation paid in other oases of disability In action. In Una of battle, Is like wise dtmlntehed or elmlnated altogether. Yet, In the face of that, we are going to take one of the most efficient army offi cers In the whole army, so X am told, elevate him at a very young age to the highest position to which he can aspire, and allow him to hold It for years and then retire Into private Ufa at 500 a month. If there la any consistency In that policy, X am Unable to follow It. TENDER - HEARTED EX BANKER VISITS (Humboldt Standard.) Why he Is an ex-banker. Many diatribes formerly directed at the cold to make tt hotter, will soon be aimed at the heat to make It cooler. ... Printed at request of O. A. R. members: '"There are bonds of all sorts in this world of ours; Fetters of friendship and ties of flow ers; And true lovers' knots, I weep; The boy and glVl are bound by a kiss; yjut thejy never was a bond, my friends, like this: We have drunk from, the same can-.'teen-.- Memorial Day ' I'HJJ great need in the country rather be right than be successful. That is more men true to their convictions, men who ideals, and regardless of their ing until the cause in which they It is men of this stamp who are being honored today Memorial Day. The veterans of the Civil war were militant and uncompromising idealists. ciples, the principle of human and the principle of permanent ernment preserving the union. THEY left their homes, their marched to war and for on marching, until the cause in Neither suffering nor death and on, defeats and reverses nation, until the final victory had been won, and they returned to their various states, in a permanent union, dedicated for all time to human freedom. They saved the union, and same stamp now, ready whenever the need arises, to save the government in which they believe, again. As Quincy Scott, excellent "The sacrifices of the dead have no present power to pre serve a nation except as they Inspire the continuing devo tion of the living." Let the People Know WE TRUST that before the July election, some of the vocif erous onnonAnta nf thA baIas tat. will taII th nAnniA what , , they propose to do if the tax is We have yet to hear of any fact of any plan whatever. It is easy to tear things down. It is particularly easy to oppose a tax any tax. DUT Oregon faces a condition, not a theory. That condition is a depleted treasury due to the collapse of the property tax. The only hope of balancing things now stand, is the passage to apply, that can be collected if trie sales tax is detested, special session of the legislature expense to the people, and some found. WHAT IS that other wayf incomea At tha vaninhlnc with gas already bearing more polls taxes t What BO the opponents of the sales tax propose t For if they have their way, or general bankruptcy can't be Before the people of Oregon tax leadership, they should certainly have a clear and explicit answer to the question i "In lieu of the gales tax what DO you who oppose it, pro posef" Senator Couzens OBNATOR C0UZENS1 appointment to the U. S. delegation at the Ivondon eoonomio conference, is a break for J. P. Morgan. . The Michigan senator was the master mind op the senate committee, and the chief support probing of the ways of high finance. President Roosevelt however has no love for the House of Morgan, and is determined to bankers, over national and international affairs. So it is pretty certain no stuffed shirt will take time partner. It is doubtful, will be as effective as Cour.ens. POR Couzens is a rare bird. One of the wealthiest members of the senate, many times a millionaire, he knows the in tricaoies of high finanoe, and at the same time, has no sympathy with either the plutooratie or the Tory type. In fact he fits into Roosevelt's new deal like a hand in a glove. He knows the old days are over, never to return, and he is sinoere in his efforts to have the new deal, distribute to the common man, a better hand. THE best index to Couzens' character Is that for years he has higher brackets, though suoh inoreases would take money out of his own pooket. There are plenty of demagogues and prole tarians in the senate, eager to "soak the rich," but as far as we know the Michigan senator is crease the burden on the olass to Not that Couzens is either qualifies as an idealist or if so he is a thorough-going Liberal, cratic background. Very rare in the past. But future. SALBU, May SO (AP) Payment of gasoline refunds to farmers out of fuels tax reoelpte before such money Is credited to the general fund was proposed by Secretary of State Hal Z. Hoas in a letter sent to State Treas urer Rufus C. Holman. "In view of the hardship that Is sxrked on the farmer because of hla inability to deposit or cash his state warrant for gasoUns tax refunds, X am deeuious of doing everything In my power to. be helpful to htm. Hess' letter resd. Coach Jimmy Phelan'a backfleld at .Washington next season will be oomprlsed only of football men who can paaa and kick aa well aa carry foe ball, he announced to candidates seeking tbeee varstts pcarttobs. today ii more men who would are willing to fight for their personal fortunes, keep on fight believe, wins. They fought for two prm liberty, stamping out slavery; and orderly constitutional gov fields and their work shops, and over four long years, they kept which they believed had won deterred them. They kept on only strengthened their determi the country needs men of that Oregonian cartoonist points out: j f 1 defeated. practical substitute plan in state and county budgets, as of the sales tax a tax easy painlessly 100 per cent. that last nope is gone. Tnen a must be called at considerable other way out of the dilemma 1 Increased income taxes, with nnint.t TnnrARnerl can tarea than its share t Nuisance taxes, some new taxes must be adopted, avoided. decide to follow the anti-sales for Investigator Pecora, in his break the control of big private the place of Henry Ford's one however, if ANYONE available the only member willing to in which he belongs. radical or a saint. He hardly he ii a very praotical one. - But with a conservative and pluto we prediot, not so rare in the MATH ALFALFA SALEM, May SO (AP) Negotia tions to purchase large tonnage of alfalfa from the Klamath basin were effected at a meeting of the Salem Dairy Cooperative association here last night. Most of the dairymen expressed a preference for alfalfa to feed crops grown In the Willamette valley this spring to replace the crops froaen last winter. "Hobby shops" have caught the fancy of Londoners who like to build things, materlsls for making toys, radios and small furniture being sold, e Belgium is the leading export mar ket for Amerlcsn passenger autonto siles. wall japaa 1 U chief truck Personal Health Service By William Brady, MD. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diagnosis or treatment, wlU be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, sell addressed envelope Is enclosed. xtters should be brief and written In ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady In care of The Mau Tribune. , ' PASTEUR'S COLD CHICKEN NO LONGER SERVES JOB HASH. Some of th trick medical or health authorities' are caught on the wrong aide of the "cold" controversy, and In their despera tion they dont mind handing the public a mesa of hash In- lieu of an honest ar gument. Whan they begin mak ing hash of Pas teur's cold chick en. It la time to show them up. : I have before me three recent examples of this. One Is a popular article written by a gentleman who purports to be a medical authority; another la a pub lic health bulletin composed by a for mer health commissioner; the third Is a bit of news service copy by a bright young woman who handles the health publicity for a "charity" or ganization. All cite Pasteur's famous experi ment with the hens and anthrax, and all Imply that this experiment proved that exposure to cold may produce disease. 'The ex-health commissioner draws a conclusion that would aston ish Pasteur, for he says the great scientist found that chicken had marked Immunity to anthrax, but that this Immunity could be over come by standing the chicken in cold water. Of course Pasteur scarcely knew what Immunity meant; they had not conceived that Idea In bis time. Pas teur never found that chickens had Immunity of any kind. This Is Just one of those convenient "scientific" observations which modern self-styled authorities" draw from their own Inner consciousness. Any Intelligent person who cares to read the life of Pasteur may see for himself that these trick authori ties are either ignorant or dishonest. I suspect hat the medical gentleman first made the dishonest deduction from Pasteur's experiments, and the ex -health commissioner and the bright young woman publicist bor rowed the Idea from him. What Pasteur really proved waa that he could produce anthrax In hens by Inoculating them with the anthrax germ. Physicians and others did not believe this could be done. Pasteur Inoculated hens with the an- i thrax germs, but the hens did not develop the disease. Fowls have a i higher natural body temperature than I sheep, cattle or man, Pasteur con ceived the Idea that if he could bring the body temperature of the hen down to that of the sheep or man. the hen might prove as susceptible to anthrax as are sheep and men. 1 Old Timer Shows How Oregonian Has Changed Its Attitude on Mob Law To the Editor: You appear to be a bit annoyed by the attitude of the upstate papers, particularly the Oregonian, toward the "late unpleasantness" in this county. .Perhaps your contempora ries up north take for granted that since Medford has become more fa mous, Its Inhabitants have left be- hind the rough-and-tumble life of pioneer days, wltfi beefsteak for food and redeye for drink; that they are milder, softer, more peaceful and have drifted Into a sort of milk toast, diking, never-xsweat stage of de velopment. On the other hand, their advice to have peace at any price may be nothing but pure Jealousy. Those college towns In Willamette valley, Portland Included, seem to be well supplied with professors but they are short on congressmen, and these lat ter are more Important than the for mer. There Is Cor vail la with not a single specimen and t&ls fact must be annoying to Editor In galls. Salem, the capital, bas barely got one, and Portland, the metropolis, has but one, and that only a few years. Eu gene, the home of U. of O., had none up to a few weeks ago. When they had to borrow one from Medford and then locked him up in the calaboose the neighbors would not steal him and but few have trhe privilege of seeing. H?(-e is Medford with a population of some 11.000; boasts of more con gressmen than New York, Pennsylva nia, or even Washington, D. 0. Now there Is something to feel oheety about, but perhaps Medford feels It has too many congressmen and would be happier with less. Maybe the "lora" or the O. of C. could ar range some kind of a trade or swap. especially with Portland, and ship them at lot of congressmen for some thing they are long on, even If you bad to pay freight on the stuff. Many of these O. O. C. s are experi enced campaigners and perhaps Chief Counsel for Defense Lonergan could make use of them In his campaign for governor. They could show the webfooters and all the rest how to break down law and order," as tt Is done in Jackson county. The case of the Oregonian Is rath er puszUng, especially to some of us old timers who have seen that paper grow from a small four-page sheet to Its present slse and importance, and the paper that took the Mall Tribune to tak back In February for coming down from the former digni fied post t ton to the level of Banks style of journalism, and If they now recommend to forget and forgive per jurers, burglars and rioters, then the present writers or at least some of them, have completely abandoned the high standard and character WAtvey Scott gave the paper, and also Xergotten what aha OKkgoalAA Fowl naturally never have anthrax. So he Immersed a hen In cold water for hours, until the ben's tempera ture was brought down to that of mammals. Then he was able to Inoculate the hen with anthrax. - Some of the old-timers, however, insisted the mere chilling of the hens had caused the disease which Pas teur produced by Inoculation with anthrax germs. So Pasteur Immersed a number of hens In cold water till their temperature was brought down to that of mammals (98), then, in stead of Inoculating them, he took them out of the water, dried them and let them warm up again to their natural body temperature. None of these hens became alck or died. The Important difference between Pasteur's experiment and every day exposure to cold and wet such as you and I and every live person experi ence. Is that ordinary exposure does not appreciably alter our natural body temperature. So don't let the trick medical or health "authorities" mislead you about that. There la no scientific evidence that every-day exposure to cold or wet lowers any Immunity any one may have against any known disease. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Science Makes Rapid Strides. In a recent article you recom mended a solution of one ounce of Iron-and-ammonlum-citrate In four ounces of water, with the addition of one grain of copper sulphate, to be taken In doses of one or two tea spoonfuls after food, thrice dally, in cases of primary anemia where the hemoglobin or red coloring matter Is low. ' But In previous articles you have assured us that Iron in the green leafy vegetables la best for the body. Is this another of the changes of mind you are always making? A. M. B. Answer I suggested the remedy for anemia because I believe it may do good and can do no harm. For well persons the green leafy vegetables, egg yolk, dried beans, dried peas, oat meal, lean beef, and unmllled (entire) wheat, are good sources of food Iron. Physical Examination at Fair Cost Please tell me where I can get a good physical examination (a thor ough one) at moderate cost. Miss E. J. 0. Answer1 Tour own physician. Temporary Teeth. My B-year-old daughter's lower front tooth Is decayed. If I have It pulled will another tooth come in later? Mrs. 8. C. Answer Your dentist can tell. Gen erally the front teeth of a child of that age are temporary, and perma nent teeth will be cut later. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dllle Co.) did to the Oregon Journal back In the nineties. If they look over trhelr old files they will find that the Journal, as soon aa established, began carping and abusing its older competitor In the "tall tower.' (The Oregonian moved Into its new hove at Sixth and Alder In 1894, the Journal was housed in a low frame building on Yamhill street). This racket kept up steadily for some two and one-half years, but waa entirely Ignored by Scott. Then 'all at once he got off his stoll of dignity and attacked not only the Journal but Its financial backers, with the result that the carping ceased. It Is absolutely un thinkable that Harvey Scott would have occupied a dignified editorial chair In Medford the last few years or been one of the leading citizens (aa he would have been) and taken a dally barrage of mud slinging; no, not for a minute. He was not built that way; but a strong advocate of lrfw -obedience and order, opposed to fake and demagoguery of all kinds. One Illustration will show what metal ,he was made of: When the radical elements in the coast towns were yell ing the "Chinese must go,' Scott op posed It, but mobs drove the Ori entals out af Tacoma and some other towns, and there was uneasiness In Portland. When some came running upstairs at the southeast corner of Front and Stark streets (where the paper was published) and told Scott a mob was starting to drive the Chinamen out of town, he Is re ported to ftave said: "Is that so?" but calmly took his old Indian war rifle, went down the street and sin gle handed defied the mob, which gradually dispersed thus saving Port ina tiOia the odium of being a mob town. How could such a man or the paper he edits approve of the do ings In Jackson county, or aay let us drop and forget it? Their modern writers must be 111 Informed unless there Is a political side to It. It has been reported, and not denied, that Chief of Defense Counsel Frank Lonergan wants to be governor and his co-worker, En rlgiht, help In the campaign; also that said attorney also Is In the good graces of th eOregonian. If that Is so, would not the entire defense staff Join In with the Banks or Fehl followers and attempt to poison and Influence enough voters in the state, and especially the labor vote of Port land, to make a go of It, and If suc cessful, how long would the main agitator stay In the pen? If the Oregonian is a party to a plan of putting barristers In office who wax fat and rich by defending criminals and murdered, defeating and defying the law and making court proceedings a farce, t,ian that said old conservative paper is begin ning to decay and ceases In Its ln- Xluence and UMftUnjsaa. We can eaa NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, May SI I dropped In to watch Will Rogers broadcast sev eral weeka ago. A group of his sd- mlrers the night ssSsave-esxaxsael B aw onn discussing the if arasBHAeiei secret of his l' : greatness. I I I sometimes have 55r vJ oun off course It Is hla disarming grin. For Bogere can aay what he rjieases and rare- i Pty .XJ'7 offend. That I "Igrln doea the I y X " 'trtck- aVjr , His mind seems tt-" :. ' totally unprepar O. O. Mclntyre ed for the blurts that he delivers Jocose, satiric or engaging child-like. More than any person I know he hss rocketed through life doing aa he pleases. Be fore the mike, aa on the stage or screen, he la twltchy with nervous ness and always faltering. If there are times when he passes margin of restraint, he can Immed iately by a grin reduce It to mere clowning. . No one could possibly re main angry with Rogers. Mark Twain had that same unpredictable gusto. So did Bill Nye. And other humor ists who bluff to hide a sentlmen tallsm. In writing as well as speaking he has no time for glueing together split Infinities or chopping preposi tions off sentences. Before one has chance to point a finger he strips them down to laughter. Along with Ring Lardner he makes literature of Illiteracy. Another strong favorite of mine in primitive phrasing has been Jimmy Durante. Yet he never acquired that indefinable finesse of Rogers. One csn listen to Rogers'for two hours as many have and not become cloyed. But ten minutes are plenty for Durante. His chief difficulty, I believe, is, he still thinks he Is In a saloon. And It was rowdlnees that kilted the saloon! A young man of 33 does occasional copying. He Is a collegiate and suck ler for precise English. Now and then after completing his chore he leaves a sheet of paper in the typewriter ex pressing some dainty satire. This morning I found this: "I have typed the articles you left and am looking forward to an evening of Bacon s essays." This same youth has ambftlons to be a poet. He has a twin brother who has realized suoh an Ideal wirn sonnets, landing In the Atlantic Monthly and Harper's Bazaar. So far aa he knows there have never been twin poets. He also argues poeti are best In the autumn and points to Keat's ode to Autumn as a tri umph of his theory. Park Avenue, suddenly siphoning to splendor from a mean, shabby rail road street, was known 60 years ago as "Livery Stable Row." Nearly all stables of the town huddled on either side of the tracks In middle of the roadway. In 1879 an editorial In a comparison declared: "It Is as un thinkable as Park Avenue without the filth of Its roaming chickens, goats and pigs." Older New Yorkers say the least changed section Is .around Gramercy Park, now more than 100 years old. The double house of grotesque 'archi tecture that was Samuel J. Tllden"s home remains and Is the National Arts Club. A tenant Is Isaac Mar crosson. The Edwin Booth home, now The Players is another building whose facade la unchanged. Too, Gramercy Is one of the few spots where spread ing trees at the curb are edged in sleepy whisper. Tenement children are brought over by teachers for their first glimpse of trees. As a frequent Idler In the dusk around Gramercy I have noticed how the usually hurrying New Yorker, coming suddenly upon the Idyllic area, dimlnuendoee to a pensive saunter. Gramercy Is a haven for strollers with dogs, pipes and chil dren. The moat engaging people are those with nothing to do. Among them emotions vibrate naturally. A grizzled settler with a aplculous chin leaning against the tail iron fence of the private park the other evening called friendly like: "Bub. that off dog could use a aet of roller skates." A prod for the stubborn seaiyham. I might have been passing Cooney Schreck's, back home. That night, too, a drenching shower sent me scampering Into the po relied area way of a private home In Oram- ercy. I stood an hour as solitary ss Thoreau at Walden. Not a soul pass ed nor a taxi. Finally I pulled tne bell. And who should answer but Mark Dwyer, with whom I played as a boy In Missouri and had not seen in 30 years. And did we go into a dance 1 (Copyright. 1933, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) Communications V. r. W. Thankful To the Editor: On behalf of the members of Crater Ike Post 1A33, Veterana of Foreign Wara of the United States and Aux iliary, we wish to thank the people of Medford and vicinity for thslr generous support of our 13th snnul Buddy Poppy sale. Times sre hard and many gars till It hurt but it is for a good cause and the people of Medford have lived up to their reputatton of being a good and generous people. I. D. Canfleld. Commander. Julia H. Canfleld, Pres. Auxiliary. Phone Charles A. Wing Agency about rates on Hall Insurance. Hall Insurance being written by Charles A. Wing Agency. Uy recall other great papers which cared In after the master minds that created them had passed on. OLT TIMER (Name on File). Uedford, May 80. Gilda Weds Again JIeEf 7 i Fry4 " ' j1 -Hi. 4 it 'J Gilda Gray, who popularized the shimmy dance on Broadway a few years ago, became a bride for a third time. She was married In New York to Hector B. Do Saa, 24, former attache of the Venezuelan legation in Havana. (Associated Press Photo) Tl T IN ASHLAND IT ASHLAND, May 30. (Spl.) Med ford tennis players walked away with 10 out of 13 matches played in the Ashland Junior chamber of commerce tennis tournament played here Sun day. H. G. Wilson Is Medford manager of tennis teams and Howard Woodson la Ashland manager. Men's singles were played as fol lows: Carter Boggs, Medford, vs. Dick Joy, Ashland, score 6-1, 6-1 Medford; Kramer Deuel, Medford vs. Alan Prea cott, Ashland, 7-5, 6-3, Medford; Harry Brlstlen, Medford, vs. Howard Woodson, Ashland, 6-1, 6-1; Wllsle Prultt, Medford, vs. Stuart Henson, Medford, 6-4, 0-6, 6-4; Leo Glascock. Medford, vs. Claude Hlnes, Ashland, 6-1, 6-4, Medford; John Reddy, Med ford, vs, Headrick Bnughman, Ash land, 6-1. 6-4, 6-3, Medford; Floyd Parson, Medford, vs. Wade Hanson, Ashland, 6-1, 6-0, Medford; Lee Van Ausdale, Medford, vs. Bob Cadzow, 6-1, 6-4, Medford. Women's doubles were won by Ash land with Jeane Ferguson and Jane Schmidt, Medford, playing June A 1 kins and Mary Beatty, --Ashland, score 6-4, 6-3. Women's singles were also won by Ashland with Jeane Ferguson, Med ford, playing Mary Beatty with a score of 6-1, 6-4. Prescott and Woodson of Ashland won from Prultt and Parsons of Med ford with a score of 9-7, 6-4, 3-8, in the men's doubles match. Medford won the other double matches with Wilson and Glascock winning from Hlnes and Hanson with score of 6-1, 6-4 and Boggs and Deuel winning from Joy and Baughman, 6-1, 6-1. NEW YORK, May 30. (AP) Miss Helen Rltchey of McKee sport, Pa., an entrant In the postponed all-women air race around the Metropoli tan area,, who had been reported missing In the Alleghanles, made a safe landing at Bethlehem, Pa., after crossing the mountains, race officials were notified today. PYROIL It keeps new CHRIS WOLFF. iPYROllf y. f vOC m and BUNGALOWS Pasadena, California A truly charming atmosphere In which to rest for a day, a week o to live and dream a way ths winter months. Pasadena and the beautiful HOTEL MARY LAND are a bit farther away from the ocean, where the dry, crisp air and health restoring sunshine srs so Invigorating- -yet only a few minmea drive along paved boulevards tc the heart of busy Los Angeles. For Booklet and flew on JlateA Writ, to H. M. NICKERSON, MANAGER Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the File, ot The Mau Tribune ot 20 and 10 Years Ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY Slay SO, 1923. (It was Wednesday) The nation Joins in paying tribute to Its soldier dead, with appropriate local exercises. Ward Beeney, a graduate, of thla year's class of the high school, and one of the best and most popular athletes who ever wore the local colors, will leave for his old home In Nebraska about the middle of June. Charles M. Russell, the "Cowboy Artist of Montana." pays Dr. C. T. Sweeney a visit. Gerald Hartsock of the Jackson school, wins first prize dental essay of 925. Water problems to be threshed out by commission soon. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY May 30, 1913. (It was Friday) With the Seventh Company. O. N. G. In full dress uniform as escort, the veterans of the Civil War marched to the cemetery thla afternoon. There were fhtrty old soldiers In line and as many members of the Women's Relief Corps. Portland business man mysteriously disappears. Portland business man mysteriously disappears. Military ball at Nat Is well attended, and sets new social precedent here. At the Isis: "The Tool of Fear"; two-reel Lubln special. SALEM, May 80 (AP) An Initial grant of (313.981 will be made to Oregon under the federal emergency relief act, Harry L. Hopkins, federal emergency relief administrator, ad vised Governor Julius L. Meier. The grant was based upon an In complete report of public relief ex penditures from all sources In Ore gon during the first three montha of this year. The funds will be handled by the state relief commission of which Ray mond Wilcox of Portland Is chairman. Exports of cotton remnants from the United States In 1933 amounted to 8.604,056 pounds, an Increase of 360,000 pounds over 1933. Your Favorite Style Seed & Feed Co. Phone 260 Adds Years to OREGON TO GET $313,981 GRANT mm CUPS I Per 1000 t ?! MONARCH I KS the Life of Your Car motors young and it makes old motors run smoothly. MEDFORD OIL DEPO 207 So. Riverside Front Sanderson Motor Co. Phone 1385. FRANK Hl-'LL