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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1933)
PXGE FOUR SIEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, M02TDXT, JUNE 26, 5933. Medford Mail Tribune "fitrrenl la SoulStD Oreao Haass th Hill Wilms" Dell) besot Utxitl Puoiiinrs by HTOroKD PUNTUiO CO. ts-ir-ii n. nt sk MBgKT II. UUU UIU Aa Indspaodwl Nnspapar Inured h mma elasa utter it tUMoro. Orooo, enow lei ot slant) , U7. SDBSCBIRION UTU B7 Din la AdnoM DUll, SOS W .....11.00 Dallr, all bodiM I.t Dallr, ess snot " to Ctmsf, U Misses Madford. sjUsdi, JictuoTlUe, Onlrtl Point. PboaaU. Ulant, Colo Bill aod oa Ulibvut. Dill,, on Mir f00 . Daily, fU Booths r DUlr, CM Boots. .... .SO . AU tcrmt, caiil Is torsoe. OffliUI papar of tin Cltf of Medford. Official pr of JickMo Couotr. MEMBER Of Till ASSOCIATED OMiSt iucainai full Leasad Win Barnes Tfao Awoclilod Prasa Is eteluil'eli (atllJfd 10 too dm for pubUealloo of oil oewi dlipatcbta mdlud lo it or otnerwlH ornliol to tMi papei Ad tUo to UM IockI otin publlibed oaralo. AU rUbU for publleaUoo of rptelal dlapaUbea bireln in oIm raaned. MEMBER Of UNITED PKRfls lilMSEU OP AUDIT BUREAU Or CIBCOUTIONB Adrrrtlilng KeprtaioUtlTn IL C. MOtiENSEN A (.OMPANT Offleaa In Htm York, Chicago, Detroit, Sao franelaeo, Loo Aoielaa, Buttlo, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perrj- There are more new overall! than there ere new autos. 0 The widely acclaimed "Breakdown ol Law and Order," la these part, seems to have been Just a Breakdown ot Dishwashing and Housework, Skeptics have begun to fear there will be no rammer. There will be plenty of summer, when eummer ar rives, so summer should not be Judged until It gets hers. , , ' The complslnt It well taken: be cause most of the people who settled the west were as dull and pious as their descendants art, Heredity tells ths story protty well. (Salem States man.) Why the editor looks scared. Bicycling Is aii the rsge among the fair sex, and pedestrians who did not truth has been committed, and that feminine enthusiasts 'sally forth at eventide, and stay out almost as late aa when nothing mattered but driv ing a Ford. The law allowa them the right to ride their bicycles any place but on the sidewalks, so that Is the only place they- want to pedal. Jus tice Is blind, and so are the police men. The gals do not care to associ ate with the gas and oat propelled means of transportation.. They travel In droves. Several have bells, that In a pinch could do time on a freight engine, Most of the lady bicyclists are mad because the roads are not down hill, going and coming. The latest alibi used to nail the rural listener to the barn door be fore he can utter a word la: "More than the truth." This leaves the Impreaslon that over-indulgence In truth has been committed, and that too muoh truth la worse than no truth at all. It can also be argued ' that a V4 -truth Is better than no truth. As near as csn be figured out, "more than the truth." la something leu than a lie. "More than the truth" should be a mighty slogan in crusading for more hell-raising. It don't mean anything, but sounds flabbergasting. '00 Mr. Mitchell. New York Olty hank er, was acquitted of cheating the government out of approximately 89,000, for his Income tax. Your corr. knows a gent who was a trifle hesitant about paying his Uncle Sam S11.39, and was forthwith threatened with five years In the "big house", and a fine not to exceed asooo, or both. Com Is coming up fins, and reach ed the knee last week, In Its upward growth, Less corn will reach the bottle and the kega this year, than In 1992-81-30-98-37, and eight years farther back. There was a time when the corn was aged, by counting ten, and rushing It to town. Now the proprietor Is aged before he oan sell It, up the alley or In the willows along the creek. The decline In the demand for Illicit brew, assures one and all of roasting ears. Corn Is a peculiar product. It always needs hoeing when the fish start biting. Jim Dlnkens of Beagle towned Frl. He told about the time the mule kicked him, the cougar scratched him, the bear scared him, the movie queen amlled at him. and then went back to the timber and the purple nights. e a Salem Is now afflicted with Im ported agitators, assldlously raising hell on the courthouse lawn. Tran sient Indigents, confronted with work, are rushing' there. As yet no paranoiac, suffering from the delu sion he I Frederick the Great on Tuesdays, and the Messiah the rest of the week, has arisen to lead them. The county Judge has been sassy to the leaders, and refuses to move out on the lawn and allow the auto bums to uk the courthouse as a hotel. There also seems to be no disposition on the part of constituted authority to act dignified and blame the display of organised ornerynesa on the Depression. Neither do they entertain the fond hope thst the movement will kill Itself. Such move ments have no suicidal tendencies. As yet there have been no felonies committed. It a leader gets hit on the head with a 10-pound Bible, and the cruasdera start singing "Amer ica." It Is the signal that the felonies have started. A number of veterans of the local uprising are on the ground, and are handy to the state prison warden. The same thing could happen In any Oregon city, the Port land press observes. They said that once before. But, In the final anal ysis, Salem Is suffering from what Kugene needs. a. . Copper, brass and other non-oorros-vs sheet Bill) IfeUl Works, U M I I Good Work by State Police TTTE State Bank at Aumsville, Oregon was robbed Saturday A morning. This morning early, the bank robber wag arrest ed, shortly after he stepped from a south-bound stage, by State Detective Sergeant Jimmy O'Brien, and is now on his way to Salem. Another feather in the cap of the state police I Although in service for a short time, the state police h,ave done more to check the Oregon crime wave, than any organization in the history of state law enforcement. The state police are on the job all the time. They combine efficiency with courtesy; zeal and fearlessness, with good judg ment and restraint. With state wide jurisdiction, they have a natural advantage over other law enforcement agencies, in freedom of movement; and at the same time are entirely free from any local political complications which may exist. Like the Canadian mounted they have only one chief aim: "to get their man." To date they have established an enviable batting average in this direction. e s HTIIB people of Southern Oregon are particularly in debt to the state police. But for them, the serious situation which existed here, four or five months ago, might well have resulted in open violence and bloodshed. Criminals and crooks don't like the state police. Organized crime and the underworld, are, and have been, pulling every available wire to discredit them, and undermine Governor Meier politically, because he is chiefly responsible for their organi zation. Good citizens everywhere, who believe in the maintenance of law and order, and a persistent and unremitting war on organ ized crime, therefore should give the state police their support, and show state authorities that they appreciate what this or ganization is doing to make this state a safer and a better place in which to live. Unless this is done, this self interested agitation against the state police, augmented from time to time, by those who suffer from its law enforcement services will eventually force the organization into the maelstrom of politics, which will spell either its abandonment or the end of its usefulness. It's Bound AS everyone knows, self preservation is the strongest instinct ' in the human animal. It is the exercise of this instinct, which accounts for the tremendous and overwhelming popular ity which President Boosevelt now enjoys. This popularity has included all classes, all political factions. He has a hold on the affections and loyalties of the American people, which except for President Wilson at the entrance of this country into the World war, has not been approached in the nation's history. BUT just as when war enthusiasm waned, President Wilson's popularity waned with it; so when the enthusiasm for President Roosevelt's war against economio collapse wanes, his popularity will wane with THAT.- This is certain. It isn't a matter of politics, it is a matter of human nature. And that enthusiasm will wane, when the dangers of eco nomio collapse decline, or disappear. In other words, when business conditions in this country become materially better, political conditions for President Roosevelt will become materially worse. s THIS is inevitable. For with conditions returning to normal, national psychology will return to normal. Then the Big Business boys, and their satellites, who are oheering so loudly for the new deal, and accepting its restrictions so nobly, no longer afraid of ruin, will be looking around to see where they get off, on the question of private profits, And then for the Roosevelt administration the trouble will begin. For the cohesive force of a common and genuine danger, will be gone. Feeling safe once more the Big Boys will want to abandon the new deal for the old one ; and the politicians in the opposing party, who have been afraid to open their mouths, will be opening them very wide, and very noisily again. 0 WE have an idea no one realizes this more clearly than President Roosevelt, as he sails under clear skies, for the Bay of Fuudy, with the oares of state left far behind him. He is not only a very intelligent man, but he is a smart politician, and as a member of the Wilson administration he knows from actual experience how such things go. In this President Roosevelt has a great advantage over his former "Chief." For Woodrow Wilson was essentially a theorist, with no experience in praotical politics. Roosevelt is essentially a realist, and has been in practical politics, almost without interruption, for over a quarter of a century. When it comes to politics no one better knows his onions. DUT knowing his onions, will not avert the inevitable turn - in the tide, the unavoidable back swing of the pendulum. It will, however, place the president in a far better strategic position to successfully meet it And in that fact, and that fact alone lies the best hope) of those who believe in President, Roosovelt and his new deal, and beliove that his administration will mark permanently a new epoch, in the economic, social and political history of this country. AUMSVILLE CRIME IS CONFESSED BY STAGEJERAVELER (Continued from Page One) plaid golf aocka, grey golf trousers, a white sleveleas sweeter and a straw hat. Contrary to published descrip tions of the robber, as given by Mrs. K. T. Pierce, cashier of the Aumevllle aute bank, he was dark ompleslon ed, 6 feet Inches tali, and weigh ed 105 pounds. Mrs. Pierce had given Sheriff A. C Burk of Marlon county a description Of U hold-un sua est Uh com- to Come plexloned, and having a small red dish moustache. Wegener told the ar resting officers that the published description of him was wry poor. Arrest rtelsy Surprises Wegener ssld In his confession that he had purchased round trip rsll- rose, ncxes at erugene, which he did not use, and later took a stage en routs to Los Angeles. On the regular bus echedule. the stage arriving here snortiy before midnight. Is a sleeper, but due to necessary changes north, a regular dsy coach was used on the run. Wegener told officers he was sur. prised he had not been arrested in Roseburg. The stage arrived here t il:0. Wegener said he was born In Bow- den, North Dakota, and cams to Ore gon from MlnneapoUa, Minn, In March. Arresting officers aald Wegener seemed anxious to tell his story, and stsrted reletting the details of the robbery while in the polios car en tW to VM station, Personal Health Service By William Brady, MD. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment, U be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-sddressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few csn be answered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to In structions. Address Dr. Wllllsm Brady, f.ti El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. ANALYSIS OF A NERVOUS WBECK. AJ1 who purport to have bad nervea or nervou hution are afraid of something. Tha Clau B neurotica, the crook, the maHgnerefi, who, thank hiTn, constitute only a minority of all nervoui w re oka, know what they are afraid of; they're afraid of being found out. The Class A ner toui impostor are too dumb to comprehend that the origin and foundation of their "nervotianeaa" 1 fear, worry, anxiety. But these Class A 'neurotica are not bad at heart, aa a rule, and there la always hope for them, provided they have aa much In telligence as the normal 10-year-old child. You know, a normal ten-year-old child' will presently lay aside his belief In Sunt a. Glaus and the Stork if you assure blm again and again that there are no auch birds. Like wise he will cease to believe In ner vous exhaustion If you assure him over and over that In truth there la no auch thing, since there Is no such thing as nerve energy apart from ordi nary physical, muscular or bodily energy. In order to restore a Class A ner vous wreck to sobriety, usefulness and happiness, the first requirement la a general physical examination, or call it a health examination, by a physician who dosen't care a damn whether the client pretends to be "nervous" or not. In any case It Is a mistake to suggest to a physician that you are nervous It Is a tempta tion to him to lay any organto or functional Impairments or deficiencies the examination discloses to your bad nerves, and that, of course Is sheer hocus-pocus. All examination by an honest doc tor may determine what alia you really. This being a health column we shall not suggest a thousand and one things that masquerade as "ner vous exhaustion" or "nervous break down." Just one of the less common things will suffice unsuspected dia betes. Hastily turning now to the further pursuit of the occult source of fear, If the medical examination falls to show any definite physical aliment, next in order, that Is, if you sincerely desire to be restored, Is a quiet talk with your physician, or with your spiritual adviser or with any good friend whose character and education command your respect, a talk about life In general and your views or prin ciples or alms In particular. Such conversation, or a series of such- chats, may bring to light the bidden com plex or conflict that keeps you wor ried. . . MARVELS AT FAST PACE ITJLLOIO Roosevelt Put Congressmen Through Furious Gait As Dynamo to Furnish Power for Emergency Program By Herbert Plummer WASHINGTON It wssnt until the end was In sight and members of the bouse hsd opportunity to pause for breath, while the senate was tied in a knot over psyment to veterans, that they were able to real ise Just what a pace President Roose velt put them through tn the special session. It was apparent to most Washing ton observers shortly after the spe cial session was convened that the president Intended using the house of representatives as the dynamo to furnish the power for pushing thru his emergency legislative program. The set-up In the house wss Ideal for his plans. The democratic ma jority was overwhelming. The rules ot the body were., strict, and, once Invoked, capable of being applied ruthlessly. Not so with the senate. There de liberation on legislation Is a cher ished prerogative. Every president finds thst out sooner or later. Roose velt knew It In advance. ' Rspld-FIre So the presidential guns were trained on the house. Literally a barrage of legislative proposals was laid down. At times they came so fast that it left the congressmen be wildered. Take the month of March, far ex ample. The session was convened on March 8. Here's the rapidity with which the presidential guns rained messages "on th. hill": On the opening dsy came the emergency biasing mi'.. (This meas ure was pcased by both houses and signed by the president before the day was over.) On the next dsy, March 10. the economy measure, oalllng for drastic reductions In governmental expendi tures, landed In the lap of the house. Then a week-end Intervened, but three days later, on the morning of March 14. cam that most surprising of all measures, the beer bill. All In Twenty (lavs J The echo of the president's de mand for beer hardly had subsided before the far-reaching farm bill reached the house on March Id. He waited five days until March 91 befoie sending up message rec ommending the cua'.lon of ths civil ian WMaijtuoa jorj logtsU In many eases when mcb Inter views ar not feasible, pyehoanalyats by a psychiatrist (a physician who limits his practice to mental diseases) and not a men psychologist who la not a physician, la advisable. From two to sis mile of oxygen on the hoof, or on the pushblke, la prob ably the best dally outlet for that "nervous tension" which, naturally and primitively. Is the Increased out put of physical or bodily or muscu lar energy caused by the emotion ot fear and expended In fighting or flee ing. Riding a motorcycle or riding in a car or even driving a car la a very poor substitute for dally walking or bicycle riding. Horseback riding la much better, but, In my Judgment, still Inferior to walking or bicycle riding. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. . Little" Disease. I have a niece, aged 6 year old, who has what doctors call Little's disease. Is the cause of this known and la there any cure for It? J. O. N. Answer The cause Is not known. All doctors know as little about It as Little knew. The name Is applied to various congenital conditions rang ing from Idiocy and epilepsy to spas tic paralysis without mental defect. The outlook Is not encouraging tn cases with scissors gait, ataxic move ments and involuntary twitching or trembling of the hands, tho with growth and good training the patient may acquire sufficient control to get about and take care of himself. Batt for Half-Blind. I have heard of a book by a man who claims he can cure bad eyesight . , , s. a. r. Answer The hokum Impresses the unwary because they can't understand It. But Isn't that the secret of a thousand successes In the quackery trade? Monophobia, Due to a "nervous breakdown" last ing 3 years Z have a great fear of going anywhere unescorted . . many nerve specialists have fed me on sedatives . . . Mrs. J. L. Answer A "nerve specialist" Is Just a highly refined quack. There la no honest excuse for such a "specialty." Mind, I am not referring to psychi atry. Your phobia Is a common one. Most healthy individuals have one or another such phobia or peculiar fear which they know la unreasonable. Why take it so seriously? It Is amus ing If you Just acknowledge It and compare with the phobias of your friends. (Copyright, 1933, John P. DUle Co.) Ed- Note: Readers wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. !., 265 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. tlon that put the unemployed Into the national foreate. And then, to round out the month, on March 39 the bill regulating the sale of securities was dispatched. Twenty days six high significant legislative proposals. That's an example of the speed shown during the special session. And the house, although bit grog gy, acted on each one with haste and hurried It along to the senate. SHELL OIL CO. TO ANNOUNCE SALES Announcement of a new product and details of a comprehensive adver tising and sale promotion campaign will be made by officials of Shell Oil company at the company's second an nual radio sales convention, to be broadcast from 6:S0 to 7 a. m. Pacific coast standard time, Friday, June 30, over a network of 14 radio stations. Shell executives, employees and deal ers, meeting in scores of cities In five western ststes, will hear the broad cast. Th convention will usher In the company's new sales campaign, to be gin the same day, In Which newspaper advertising will be the backbone ot an extensive schedule, Including sev eral other mediums. The drive will extend throughout the company's ter ritory, including Hawaii snd British Columbia. O. Leigh-Jones, president, will sddreas ths convention, spesklng by, remote control from his Ssn Fran cisco offices. He will review the com pany's progress sine th launching of an aggressive advertising campaign a year ago and outline future policies. Other epeskers will be 1 L. Miller, vice president In charge of marketing, L. T. Klttlnger, general sale mana ger, t. H. Sanders, advertising mana ger, and J. W. Miller, vie president of ShU Service, Inc. As an arrangement for acquainting personnel with the details of a new sales promotion development, the compsny points out thst the radio convention has the advantage of executive-employe contact without the necessity ot dessrtlng Important post while traveling to meet at some distant point. Th Idea, originated a year ago. haa since been ad op ted by ser.ral other companies. As In the case of the first convention, many employees will assemble at special meetings, while others will tun In at horn. Th network will nclude the following stations: ICJPRO, Ssn Francisco: KHJ, Lo Angeles; KFBK. Sacramento; KWO, Stockton: KMJ. Fresno: KDB. Santa Barbara; KERN. Bakersfleld: KOB, Ssn Diego: KOIN. Portland; KOU Seattle: KVL Tacoma; KrPT, Spokan: KOH, !Uno and K&L, oi us at . NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, June 39. Diary of a modern Fepys: Up and a knlfey let ter from Oordon Sinclair, the pamph leteer, who Is foot-loos, in India again and so driving with the Will H. Hays and jiy wife to Weat ohester and breakfasting a t the Stag Coach nn, being served by waiter in periwigs and knee breeches. Typing and to th tram to wel come my later-in-law, Dr. Ed Marttndlll's Nelle, whom I love very much. And aster off with Harry SUvey to see an amateur ball game In Prospect Park. But the sport has lost rest for me snd walked over Brooklyn Bridge wondering from what spot Steve Brodle leaped. To dinner at Matt and Celle Carnj ey's, and Bob and Madge Davis there. Also the Irvln Cobbs. And Cobb and Davis in rare story telling form. So much so that when I told my most accomplished yarn everyone felt sor ry. Home and read "Queer Street," splendidly writ, until a. m. Near slumbering Tarrytown was an old-time horse sale we stopped to watch. It wsa a throw-back to the Saturday sales In our town. I thought the motor age vanquished the horse deslers of snother ers, but they were there, prodding flanks, feeling hocks and running sensitive fingers over withers. One expert referred dispara gingly to a "wind sucker" and a "roarer" and another amlmal receiv ed a professional sniff for "eatln her beddln'." No gourmet perhaps gourmand Is more descriptive has ever touched the appetite of Diamond Jim Brady In the history of the town' gastronom ies of the past two decades. They were telling of his yearly visit to Ben Riley's, where Jumbo frog legs are the piece de resistance. Brady, upon such occasions, would order a triple por tion with an empty plate on each side. Then with both hands, piston like, he would gorge the huge pile, tossing the bones Into empty plates. - Personal nomination for the most engaging of all the dancing sister acts The Fairbanks Twins. News drifts from far away Borneo of the hair-breadth escape of the novelist Somerset Maugham In an attack of a hamadryad, the king co bra, near Sandakan. This Is the only snake attacking man on sight. Msugham left a dinner party for a turn with a steamship captain before retiring, when the reptile made for him. The snske was killed by the cap tain with the only walking stick In Borneo Maugham's cane, & gift from Arnold Bennett. The super thrill of a movie. film In Borneo, Incidentally, Is a python attacking a native, climaxing In a hair-raising crushing scene. Maybe It isn't cricket to tell I'm not Jerry to Jungle etiquette but there are non visible wires on the snake's hesd and tall. When the pressure gets too strong, coolies pull and ease off oon strlctlons. Thingumabobs: Ishbel Ross has been tn Singapore finishing a love story of the Scottish Highlands . . . Theodore Roosevelt was refused per mission to take his wife through the dangerous Khyber Pass ... A town In Slam Is called Peek A Boo . . . Sherwood Anderson, after a tour ot the United States, thinks a revolution Impossible , . , Samuel Merwln never misses lunch at the Players on black bean soup day , , . Layman Beecher Stowe, grandson of the "Uncle Tom's Cabin" author, has a cook In his Bsekman Place home named Eva . . . Oliver Herford, world famed for his drawings of cats. Is often followed by a stray one . . . Marysvllle, Mo., Is to have a Homer Coy avenue, a spy re ports .. . , Issac Marcossen has been dangerously 11 In London. Gene Crawley has a worldling friend who, having sky-lsrked a for tune away, la touched by th horrors now and then. The other afternoon little green-whiskered men on veloci pedes began Jumping out of the gut ter at him snd he fled horn In th nearest taxi to calm himself. When he got Into his fist he thought he ssw smoke ourllig from a laundry shut and opened the door to see. A bonfire of flame burst out. He quick ly slammed and locked the door and sst down to read a novel snd com- Announcement The Directors of the SOUTHERN Building and Loan Association Wish to advise the people of Southern Oregon of membership in The Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland, Oregon We will publish a series of advertise merits telling you of the importance of this membership to you and all South ern Oregon ! s Economic Delegate f t.- ' $ f -jVjS - "H n It .-TCr; r-AV M J Senator Jsmos Couisns of Mlchl. gsn Is th republican member of th United State delegation to th London economio eonferenca, (As tociated Press Photo! G. .F.C. (continued trom Pag One) a complete recheck of the railroad aurveys and situation. After viewing the whole of the territory between Grants Pass and the Ocean they were taken to Medford, where tonnage and other data collected by the Northern California-Southern Oregon Develop ment association were made available to them by A. H. Banwell and Med ford railroad supporters. Their reports. It wss said here, were completed by the three engineers on the ground and forwarded to their headquarters, and they gave their en dorsement of the project's completion as assuring the development of a ter ritory ln( the two states as large as the whole state of Fennsylvsnla. James Twohy. representing the Twohy brothers Interests, was over the local field four weeks ago and made preparations for today's formal application before the Interstate com merce commission. The original Inter ests In the railroad have kept all gov ernment rights to traverse the 73 miles of government and private landa alive through the years since several times defending them In open hearlnga so that when an opportu nity like the present arose, there would be nothing In the way of In mediate construction should a vorable action on the I. C. C. and the R. F. C. applications be given. The application papers, which were filed today In Washington. D. i, were signed In the offices of Twohy's attorney, James O. Wilson. In Portland last week upon the return to this coast of Mr. Demaray from an ex tended trip In the east. 4 H. W. Conger Is the new president of the Medford Lions' club. It was an nounced today following luncheon and election at the Hotel Holland. The office of vloe-presldoncy was not filled as the candidates were not present. Other officers nsmed are: Lion Hoover, second vice-president; H. T. Hubbard, secretary-treasurer; C. H. Hopkins, Lion Tamer; O. I. Hays, tall twister, and B. G. Harding and O. W. Newberry, directors. There will be no meeting of the club next Mondsy, due to the Fourth ot July holiday. The officers will be Instslled at a future evening meet ing, lo which Lady Lions will be in vited. pose himself. "Mustn't see that sort of thing. Silly. Have to get frayed nerves under control." he murmured. Ten minutes lster firemen were car rying him down a Jolly old extension ladder, feet up I (Copyright, 1033. McNsught Syndi cate, Inc.) Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the FUe ol The Mall rrtbuoe of 10 and 10 Vtan Ago-1 TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 26, 1023. (It was Tuesday.) Dr. J. J. Emmena was put aboard th northbodnd train last evening and left for Portland when he will spend soma time visiting and recup erating further from hi recent un usually severe attack of pneumonia. Ho was brought to th station plat form by Charles Brown In his car. Sam Bateman Is named vice-president of the Montana society at plcnla held on the Rogue. The mercury soars to 100 degree and the city swelters. Plan to Improve the free olty auto camp for tourists Is rejected. "Many have started to abuse our hospital, lty" Is the reason. Atrto dealers complain they art unable to procure enough cars to fill the demand. Wind and rain storm hit valley, but damage Is slight. HVENIY YEARS AGO TODAY I June 28, 1013. (It was Thursday.) 1.04 Inches of rain falls In June to date, and Is abnormal. Much hay wet. Will G. Steel, recently named sup erintendent of Crater Lake National Park, leaves to assume his duties. The northbound train was delsyed by Willis Brown. Southern Pacific passenger conductor running be tween Ashland and Dunsmulr, when he was called to take out his train. There was a long string ot hoodoo numbers connected therewith. First It was Friday, June 13, 1013; he had been In the service 13 years and was to take train 13 out on tlmecard 13, Brown refused to do duty and an other conductor had to be called, causing a delay of 4& minutes. Coming to the Star "Tigress, four 1 reel special, no raise In admission." "The Ire of Osaka" at the It, and "Gaumont Weekly No. 14" at th Ugo. Telling the history of Insurance from Its conception up to now. Max Fierce of the Southern Building and Loan association addressed the Kl wanis club today noon at luncheon at the Hotel Medford. Ho Included in his review many interesting events beginning with the famous London fire and continuing to the San Francisco fire to empha size the value ot Insurance. There will be no meeting of the Klwanls club next week because of the Fourth of July holiday. Wanted Used Cars We Will Make an Attractive Allowance On Your Old Car Ag Part Payment on a New Carl . Armstrong Motors 3g No. Riverside Chrysler and Plymouth Headquarters for Southern Oregon Stop in Roseburg at the UMPQUA HOTEL The leading hotel of the Dmpqua Valley J. A. Harding, managing owner RATES: Single, without bath: $1.00, f 1.25. $1.50. Single, with bath: 11.71, 12.00. S2.25. .When You Are fa) KLAMATH FALLS Stop At Th WILLARD HOTEL Cheerful Service Modern Surroundings Central Location Al Dining Boom We tnrfte Toot Patronasj Rate S1JSO Vp WILLARD HOTEL J ja stain. lOaaaaOi rmJ I AXBKRT ACSTU. Bars. L