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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1933)
P2T6E FOUR MEDFOUD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1933 Bedford Mail Tribune "Ctanmw M Sevthtrn Orta Rues Uit Mill tribune'1 Dally tiwpt Sitarrttj PubllibM by MIDVtlltU PRINTING CO. 1B-3T-I& II ri Bt. Pftom " UuBUKl W. HUUU Editor All Independent Htwipipw Catered u mcooo clut oittter it Bedford. Oregon, oodtr Act of llweb 8. Ufa. ar mu to Adttnet Daily, w nu... Dallr. ill swMitnt. 18.00 l.fft Usui;, am vuuiu .- By Cirri er lo Adnnei Medford. Artund, llfttonflUt, WPini roan, rnwm, Hill IW mi Dill;', om rev le.ou Dtllj, ill nontht a Dallr, om Bootb -90 All lermi. css id wfinw. Offlclil otp or U City of Medford. OffltUl Dt of JuUao County. UEMHKH OK TUB ASSOCIATED PIIB8B tteceltlut full Uul Wtw Seniet TO AMOCltfua rrew w "'-"' tlM um for oubUcfUon of tl) new dlsptlebe. i. i . .thMiu rwiiiMi in thli oiotr tad ilw Ui tht loctl nfti published herein. AU rltbU 'or puhtlestloD of ipedil dlipttens Mfiln art tlia retened. 1EMHEU OV UNITED PHE3B MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF ClIiCULATIONS Adtertlilng Repreitntitltet Si. C. MOdKSBEN COMPANT OmeM Id Nw tork, Chieiio. Detroit. Bid FtaocUco l AwtelM fleiltU PortUnd. Ye Smudge Pot By Annul Perry, unn Bino. tht professional Mend of th farmer, who Saturday Indulged In torn country arcasm at the ex pend of the president, and hl r nn olane. announced that the farm strike "will now be thrown Into j full near." There 1 something In the : KKA iiluut "commercialized agita tion," and it le here and now predict ed that oon Mr. Reno, and U. B. marshal chasing him, will aleo "be thrown Into full gear." Mr. Reno la cu:t3 an Interesting cum. He draw 10,000 per year, and hae been too busy at his dealt to get out on the agricultural front where farmers are ramming pitchfork through each ether, throwing dynamite at cream eries, and bouncing 10-gallon milk eans off the heads of opponent. ... The Banana Squash 1 now upon the market. People who have eaten the product report' that the banana most certainly got tne worst 01 me deal. . . A group cf young married men hay taken up bowling. They will do any thing to get away from home night. . John Wlghtman 1 getting along a veil a can be expected after hu recent accident, when the milk truck which he waa driving was struck by a train with 17 empty box car. (Heppner News.) John thank hi lucky star that the 17 box oars were empty. I. Coleman, the oil squirt, 1 the bouncing father of a proud boy. ... TUB GREAT DIVIDE Re-dlatrlbutton of wealth ha been alyly mentioned by several politician OS lata, who lightly feel the urge to snake a great sacrlflo next spring and run for something. With everybody broke, or nearly so, the notion should hold a wide and wild appeal to the home-guards, and cause a Klondike rush of Indigent, auto bums, hitch hiker, ne'erlo-well, expert moooh ers, and the established poor, to get to Oregon In tUi to vote and share In the Qreat Divide. It very silliness Insure It success, and ahould pell a larger popular majority than the late unrealized electric light for nothing. Tor a number of year, the suspi cion ha been growing that the other fellow bad too much wealth, and ahould be oompelled by legislative enactment and the vote of the people to whack up with a brother who had nothing, but the year-round spring fever, and a chroma hstnd of work, thrift, and staying In on place long enough to accumulate anything out Ide of n autombbllo. Th type 1 always filled with an unconquerable desire to go some place, and when arriving there to go some plaw else. Under the spllt-up plan, the toller and the aaver could no longer turn up hi economic nose at th brother whose rattle-trap vehicle ha clattered down the main stem of every town looking for th Red Croat headquar ters, and the Salvation Army soup kitchen. Thus the Biblical Injunc tion, to th sluggard to consider th ant would be repealed, and all be as the lilies of th field, neither tolling nor spinning. After the uneven distribution of wraith, hu been cured with an even attribution, everybody know it will be quit a Job to keep It even, but the tteman who thought of th Idea In the first plac. can figure that out, by providing for another distri bution, whenever somebody goe broke playing poker, or buying bum stock. Step ahould b taktn to prevent any Inequality In th pllt-up. and th pay-oft., It I much easier to divide with a millionaire, than a gent living In a tent, equipped with, an electric clock won on a punchboard. nd whoa worldly goods consist of three dyspeptlo bloodhound and a S0-S0 r.fl with a broken trigger. There are not enough millionaires to go around, and everybody will want the governor or others of hi money getting Ilk. a partners. Here I where th contusion will tart. and trouble I to be looked for, In keeping It from becoming pandemonium. In a coming issue, the writ wtll discus another anl of thl Utopian policy, vlr: th establishment of Ore gon Jackpot No. 1, and the selection of Commissioner of th Jackpot, Eventually, Why Not Now? "PHE Nelson-Kerr-Morse flare-up is surprising only because it broke so soon after Mr. Nelson was appointed president of the state board of education. Most people expected that, with radical changes in the personnel of the state board, there would, for a time at least, be an appearance of harmony. But sooner or later, such an explosion could not be avoided. A hss been previously pointed out in this column, as long as ,Dr. Kerr remains chancellor of higher education in this state, dissatisfaction and resentment at Eugene will exist, and dissen sion and turmoil, continue. IT is all right to talk about harmony and place the blame for the lack of it on Eugtne; but does any fair minded person believe that if former President President ITALTj of the university, had been given control of the two institutions, that Corvallis would have had nothing to say about it T OF COURSE NOT1 Corvallis would have no more liked to be controlled by the head of a rival institution, than Eugene docs. And there would have been no peace and contentment at Corvallis, until the Hall control had been overthrown. This isn't partisan politics, or "noxious miasma of insensate hatred" as President Nelson terms it it's merely HUMAN NATURE. TPHE ENTIRE trouble goes back to the failure to carry out the original agreement, when state unification of higher education was decided upon, namely that the heads of both state institutions retire, and a new man, from outside the state, in no way involved with either institution, be named as chan cellor. Just why that agreement was never carried out is not clear. Undoubtedly fear of the Zorn-McPherson bill had a great deal to do with it. But 'WHATEVER the rensons, the mistake then made was FATAL. And strife and dissension will continue, until that mistake is oorrected; until those in charge of education in this state go back to first principles, and Chancellor Kerr is replaced by some qualified educator, who is not now and never has been, connect ed in any way with EITHER institution I Farmers Demand Fascism THE refusal of President Roosevelt to accede to the demand gram for agriculture, brings into sharp relief a very interesting situation. We have the EMBATTLED farmers demanding Fascism, and the president of the United States, accused of dictatorship, refusing HI For obviously if the government should put into force a pro gram of controlling prices (and production) in agriculture, it could not refuse to assume a similar control in other forms of industry. And that of course would be pure and unadulterated Fascism, a Roosevcltian dictatorship, in this country, exactly similar to the Mussolini dictatorship in Italy. FQUALLY obvious ia the fact that in denying this request, " President Roosevelt did only what he HAD to do. To accede to this request would have not only meant to repudiate his own secretary of agriculture force his immediate resigna tion, but would also have meant the scrapping of his entire recovery program. This recovery program is based upon the spirit of voluntary cooperation, free from force, compulsion, or punishment. The people of the country are asked to do certain things, not FORCED to do them, the only supporting element is the force of public opinion. 10 one denies this recovery program has bogged down sharp- ' ly of late. But nothing else should have been expected. It's a Blow prooess thig reoovery from the worst depression in world history. President Roosevelt intends to do it, by eco. nomic planning, based upon voluntary cooperation, and until he ia CONVINCED this can't be done, will not abandon his pro gram. The governors demanded he abandon this program now, as far as agriculture ia ooncerned. They maintained, and this Milo Reno and his followers maintain, the program has already failed. President Roosevelt doesn't agree with them and we be lieva the people of the country as a whole don't agree with them. Their demand is due to unwarranted impatience on one hand, and too high expectations on the other. THIS doesn't mean that President Roosevelt will never turn fA V A f! ! TT1 nrm TllllnftB., t,4 net i! nl bhJ - 1 . f - . 1 wij'uiov,j .iiiii9b.ini niiu (IKiJuuuurtll GUI1UUI, including price fixing by fedoral edict, production quotas, and all the rest of it. But he is only going to do it as a iBst resort. He is only going to do it when ho is convinced the country can be saved in no other way; ""PHIS farmers strike may cause considerable trouble, but we are convinced it will fail, because we are sure the people of the country as a whole will never support it Pegging farm prices now at a higher level, will simply mean taking money out of the pockets of the Torkera, who are least able to afford it. Organised labor will oertainly be opposed to such a plan, as will the urban dwellers generally. The more rapidly the strike develops, the more deplorable will general oonditiona become. Eventually an aroused publie opinion will orush the movement. No, it's a time to go slow, to exercise restraint, subdue pas sions, and for all classes to forget their selfish grievances and get behind the president. It's th only way the only patriotic, self respecting thing to do. Those who believe otherwise and act accordingly, will eventually regret it. I TOKSNO, Calif.. NoTe. (API Victim of an air tragedy. Mis Flo Ann Ross, SO, student avlatrti of I -o Angeles, was dead her todsy whll authorities sought to d.urmlne KERR had retired, and former what sent her plane into sn 800 foot tsllsptn, Th alcldsnt occurred after Miss Ros had taken off for a solo night from an abandoned airfield near here yesterday. She had gone to th Held with D. T. Johnson, Los Ang ele. owner of the plan. Johrison told authorities Mis Ron, whs died six hours ftr th crash, had 39 hour of flying experlenc. . Rrown In Town Bd Brown, of Cen tral Point, transacted business In Medford this morning. Personal Health Service Bj William Brady, M.D. an oeo letter pcrtauiiot to pvravoaj aemta and urrieoe not 10 du m dluttuoala or treatment, wlii of answered oj or. tSrad tl a tumped eir-addrMd envelope it enclosed. Letters tnuuld oe arlet and trrHtco id ink. Owing to tht large oumbei of letters received only a .e can De ans wered here. No reply can Of made to queries not conforming to instructions Address Dr. William Brady. i6 El oamino. rteverley UHUt, Cal, , TAENIA BAGINATA DOESN'T Th common tapeworm In this country la the beef tapeworm. Ta enia saglnata. This nam means band c r tape H7 ; mm. A thftt fatten presumably a t tha host's ex pense. Evidently tha popular mythical notion that a tapeworm consumes a lot of nourishment and that any one who eata a great deal there f on probably unnorLs such & nArAHlta vttm rnnrn1vH ttv th asm. iente. But there ut no truth In It. in tne first place, the Individual who hu m tamvnrm imiinllv hai tin symptoms, no disturbance of health, or ii mere ia any aistUDrance pro duced by tha unbidden guest It Is seldom serious. In the next place, we actually find that most persons who harbor tapeworm are very well nourished. In fact overnourlshed. and they have no more annetit for in capacity for food than have persons who are noc noBia or tapeworms. So be sensible and look the tape worm situation straight In the eye and don't take tha quack doctor hokum too seriously. The beef tanewnrm rwiira nnlv In cattle and man; the adult worm In tne intestine of man; the larva em bedded in beef and called Cystlcer cus the beef carcass so Infested is called "measly." Man becomes Infested by eating raw or underdone beef. The Cyatl cercl or measles are most frequently found in the beef heart, dlnnhmtrm and Jaw muscles, but occur In all the muscles, cattle become Infested by Ingesting the egga of he tapeworm, passed In human feces, which con taminate the feed or water of cat tle. This narrult rnihw . lntt or 30 to 80 feet, and consists of long chains of flat broad segments re sembling pumpkin seeds. The head la the smallest segment, hard to dis tinguish except under magnifying glass. The segments gradually In crease In Slza tnwnrfi th tall nrl until they become as large as the mat join, or a linger. Another tapeworm, less common bUt more ltkelv to rllatnrh th health of the host, la the pork tape worm. Taenia solium, which means the solitary tapeworm, though some times more than one la present. It grows to rrom six to twelve feet In length. The heart. tiii- head of a pin, has hooks with which is ciings to the mucous membrance, so that It Is hard to dialodge this NEW YORK DAY BY DAY 3y O. O. McIntyTe NEW YORK, Nov. fl. Dlaxy of a modern Pepye: Up nd a gold badge from Mayor Bacharaoh articling me to the Atlantic City detective force. And wearing It at breakfast my wife sniffed: "Maybe you will be able now to sleuth around and find your hat after you take It off." To an Inn to meet Ralp D. Blum m enfeld, London gaeeteer, then back to my typing, but Anne and Bill Hamil ton and Ereklne Qwyune got on the telephone and so much hanky-panky I got little done. So to farewell the Arthur Somers Roches against their Journeying to Palm Beach. j Eventide to Margaret Whlteman's dinner at the Colony and was holpen thrice to a meat-pie. Afterward to sit at the restaurant where Paul Is conducting and tilted platitudes with Mrs. iAtry Waterbury, Phyllis Ses- man and the wife of Andy of Amos1 and Andy of the radio. To bed late. They were calling fright-wig hor rors. My vote goe to a bravura In which Measmore Kendall was Inno cently Involved at a highly original i dinner Matt Brush gave on the old Waldorf roof. To carry out a cir cus effect John Rlngllng turned over animals In the cages and freak of the sideshow. Brush designated guest to make each one of "the strange peo ple" feel welcome. Kendall's waa the aimleaa and legless lady, propped In a sort of bowl. As Kendall trie! to talk to her la native German she suddenly awayed and fainted. He managed to catch her before ah fell and In looking around for assistance saw all the guest had gone in to dinner. He did th only thing poa-j alble. held her and yelled for help: until circus attendant came. I Octavua Boy Cohen tell of a apeak easy patron who ran up a quick and nervous 18 bill and explained to the bartender hi emUlen discovery h was out of funds. Th barkeep sing songed It waa O. K. and for th cus tomer merley to writ hts nam on th wall back of hlra. But,' expos tulated Mi customer, "people will It." To which th server replied: "O. no they wont. Your overcoat will be hanging ovr It." Then Oeo-g Buckley story of the Cockney 'Arrlet walking down Artill ery Lane with something wrapped In butcher's paper. "Buying liver?" a friend saluted. She replied ah wasn't. Th packag held th ashc of her AH. -I didn't think you lykxed Alf so much !" I didn't and ! don't. But all hu Ufa he fovcrd me to take in washing and orub floors o he coulu bur na pot of !. Now I'm taking bla ashta LIVE UP TO ITS NAME. parasite. The segments) are smaller than those of the beef tapeworm. The adult tapeworm Uvea in the In testine of man; the larva In the flesh of the hog, the measlea In the pork being called "bladderworms" or Cystlcercus celluloses. A third kind of tapeworm, the fish tapeworm, Dlbothrlocephalus latus, the largest of all human tape worms, was formerly almost unknown In this country, but has been en countered with Increasing frequency In recent years, particularly among Immigrants from the Baltic countries who have a fondness for certalr. raw fish. Fish in the waters of Wis consin and Minnesota and Michi gan and rther northern states or provinces have been found Infested. Dogs or cats that feed on the fish may harbor ,he fish tapeworm and Infect man. QUESTIONS A NO ANSWERS Another Old Fossil Betrays Ills incompetence I have tried to find out what doc tor In thla city uses the diathermy method of removing tonsils. I ask ed our family doctor for the Infor mation and he pooh-poohed the Idea and ... (I. D.) Answer Any physician who pooh poohs the use of electro -survery mere ly betrays his Ignorance and Incom petence. Hard on the Blip From considerable experience we have found that cakes of naptha lene dissolved in the kerosene or gasoline used against bedbugs will be more effective than the kero sene or gasoline alone. The naphth alene lingers after the solvent has all evaporated, and the odor Is not unpleasant, (a. H. H.) Answer .Thank you. Naphthalene la commonly used against moths the familiar mothballs. Sodlttm Salicylate Is there any harm In taking a five grain tablet of sodium salicylate for headache? (0. E.) Answer Not If It Is only an oc casional remedy. Nor Is the organic salicylic compound acetyl -salicylic acid either, more familiar to the laity under the name of "aspirin," harmful In similar dose for occas ional emergency use. But any such coaltar derivative used as a pain killer, a sense-deadener or a soother of anxiety or other disturbed feel ings. Is Injurious If frequently re sorted to. It Is a vicious practice using auch dope to relieve the sense of fatigue or "shoppers nerves." Ed Note: Renders wishing to communicate with Dr. Hrhdy should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D- 265 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Ca.lf horn for th hour glass. Hell work for me from now on, toe blighter." Personal nomination for the best diction on the screen that of Gene vieve Tobln. I like the restraint of P. O. Wode house'a Englishman who spoke of Niagara Falls as "moist." Bagatelles: Prank Craven has smok ed one pipe 38 year . . . George Ade write to friends on yellow ruled pa per with pencil . . . Nunnally John aon never leave the typewriter when turning out a hort story until it's finished . . . Anita Loos will tell no one her sge . . . Upton Sinclair Is "Upple" to Intimates . . . Harry Leon Wilson, against doctor's orders, re cently downed three cups of black coffee and Immediately, whoopee, turned on the radio , . . Jack Warner 1 one of Hollywood's best after-dinner Impromptu speaker . . . Nina Wilcox Putnam cannot work In a room where there's a clock . . . Until Paul Whlteman'a recent return to Broadway, Mrs. Larry Waterbury had not been In a night club since Armis tice night . . . Al Smith ha 18 ex ecutive Job . . . Billy Burke' auburn hair 1 now threaded with becoming silver. Rob Wagner's favorlt la about the actor In a salary rise suit who ex claimed: "I'm the best actor In the world!" His sctress wife was furious and said he embarrassed her horribly. "But what could I do?" he alghed. "I waa under oath." At "Dlnty Moore's they were read ing Hollywood gossip about a former Broadway show girl who complained that while sh only had small bit parts dlrectora were forever Inviting her to lunch and to late parties. "Just trying t- make a little extra!" slfihed Lou Holt. (Copyright, 1933, McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) Convitted Major Given New Trial j WASHINGTON, Nov. . (AP) Major Charles A. Shepard. army sur- geon, won In the supreme court to- day his fight to set anld his con- ' vlction of th poison murder of his wife Zenana, on the Port Rllev, Kan sas, military reservation, and Ms sentence to life Imprisonment. The decision of the high court will have the effect of giving Dr. Shepard a new trial. . hangle Has IHsplay An attractive display of photoerapha fiwi th J. erne Shangle studios is on exhibition thl week at the chamber of Com merc building. Included are atlll life photographs, portraits and several In teresting Interiors, which also dem onstrate the filing system adopted at the studio, where 20.000 negatives ave available. wTien ever patrons choose to hav additional print made. Col ored photograph ar also Included in th exhibit, hloh was attracting much attention thl morning. Returns from t'licrne Ernejit R Ollatrsp, business manager of the Medtord Mall Tribune, rc:u.-rJ ni Sunday evening from FMjrfne, where he haa been sending the past werk . with Ills family. ' Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JESKrNJ PROBABLY you noted thl para graph In recent sews: "Th end of forest exploitation In th United State wa foreseen here today a a check of national and state forester and representative of the lumber Industrie found all groups emphatic In th opinion that forest perpetuation ha been definitely de termined upon." The dispatch come from Washing ton. WHAT doea It mean? It means that the great lum ber industry has decided to log here after in such a way a to protect the forest stand, permitting young tim ber to grow up to replace the old timber that Is cut and manufMtured into lumber. In other words, th forest an to be treated as fields, to be tilled and made to produce aucceedlng crops. Instead of a mine, to be emptied and left. PUTTTNO It In 'another way, com munities that now depend upon the lumber Industry for their Indus trial payroll may expect to look for ward to that industry Indefinitely as a producer of employment, Instead of regarding It as a mere TEMPOR ARY producer. IS NRA a success! or a failure? 1 It all depends on the point of view. In the case of the lumber In dustry, It 1 a great success, for It enables th lumber Industry to ac complish what It ha wanted for vears to accomplish that ia, the adaptation to upply and demand. Adaptation of aupply to demand means STEADY employment, yesi af ter year. In the place of peak employ ment one year and no employment at all the next. FOR years and years, the lumber In dustry ha been either a feast or a famine. Either the market has been good, or It has been ROTTEN. Either employment has been ABUNDANT, or It haa been lacking almost altogether. If the lumber Industry can be sta bilized, so that ther will b reason able - employment year after year, without high peak and low valley, the lumber communities of the Pa cific Coast will benefit tremendoualy In the long run. Tht la what NRA, through It code system, proposes to bring about. A READER asks this question: "With a 'maintained dollar that will not change In purchasing and debt-paying power," what In lat er year will be the statu of a per son having a definite amount of mon ey coming In monthly as an annuity from an Insurance company?" M r AT Is an interesting question, In view of all the talk of commod ity dollar and stabilised price. Here la th probabl answer: Such a person, with a maintained dollar that will not change In purchasing and debt-paying power, wlU b Juat a well off In one year a In another will have nothing, presumably to dread, or to LOOK FORIWARD TO. Wrim Wen. If your income 1 fixed and if price are stabllleed, your dol lar will buy Just aa much In one year a another. So, you ee, under such conditions you would b Just s well off on year aa another. BUT mark thi! A maintained dollar that will not change In purchasing and debt paying power will ELIMINATE SPEC ULATION. Speculation, you know, 1 buying low in th hope, or perhap th be lief, that you will be abl later on to eU high. If your dollar doe not hng In purchasing power, you won't be able to buy low and ell high. rS nlc to talk of tablllred dollar, with unchanged purchasing and debt-paying power. But th American people ar nat ural gamblers. They SIMPLY LOVE to take a chance. They're going to mis speculation if they get a stabilised commodity dollar that doe away with It. Communications Agrees With Mr. Nealon To th editor: Mr. Nealon'a artlcl In th Tribune In regard to th slaughter of elk. hit th nail on the head, but he dtdnt hit It hard enough. Any man who will alaughter an elk for Ita teeth, or a deer for It hide, or kill gees and ducka for th fun of eelng them fall, should not only be punished severely but their hunting license taken away from them, forever. It orem Ilk It 1 getting to be a End Serious Coughs With Creomulsion Don't let them get a strnnjle hold t Fitlht perms quickly. Creomulsion combines the 7 bMt helps known to modern ecieno. Powerful but harm- ( m. PleaAsnt to take. No narcotics. Your own dru?glst is authorlred to refund your money on the spot of your coujih or cold Is not relieved by Crfomu-sion. tadv.) Wins Model Contest s,! j-- , y, 1 Constance Allen, 20, blonde and dazzling, was chosen the most beautiful artist's model by tha pro fessional artists who served at Judges at the Seven Arts Bal Mat que in Los Angeles. She is 5 feet seven, welgha 116 and has- gray, green eyes. (Associated Press Photo) common thing to violate) the law. In all manner and shapes. Take the law In regard to killing deer: A couple of fellows go out In the woods and take their wives along, women vho never fired a gun In their Uvea, and In a few days come In with four big mule deer, with taga for each one, If that Is not an evasion of the law Z don't know what you would call it. And then another little stunt that la pulled off that sounds a little fishy to me, la for four or five fellows to get In their cars and go out where the mule deer runs, and stay one or two nights and come back with s big mule-tailed buck for each one of them. Sometimes I wonder If they really killed those deer, or were they already hanging up ready for them to load into their cars? Anyone who hae ever hunted mule deer will tell you- they are up to all kinds of elusive tricks and can outwit the best hunt ers. I have hunted for years and Know something about It. There Is one more thing I want to say. why in the world did they place the open season for elk In October when It ahould have been the first of September? This Is a matter that ahould be looked Into by the special session and If I waa there It would be, JOHN B. GRIFFIN. Medford, Nov. 0, 1933. k KMED Broadcast Schedule Tuesday 8:00 Breakfast New by Mall Tri bune. 8:05 Musical Clock. 8:15A Peerless Parade. 8:30 Shopping Oulde. 8:46 The Royal Club. 0:00 Friendship Circle. 9:30 Morning Melodyv 8:45 Meeting of the Martha Meade Society. 10:00 u. S. Weather Forecast. 10:00 Ea and Zeb. 10:15 Radio School of Cookery. 10:30 The Pet Program. 10:45 Musical Notes. 11:00 The Grant Pass Hour. 11:15 Martial Music. 11:30 Protective Diet Lesgue. 11:45 Song and Comedy. 12:00 Mld-dny Review. 13:15 Popularity. 13:30 News Flashes by Mall Tri bune. 13:30 Whispering: Strings. 13:4B The Golden West Program. 1:15 Varletlea. 3 :00 Classified Edition of th Air. 3:00 Songs for Everydoy. 8:30 KMED Program Review. 3:36 Music of Old. 4 :0O Cocktail of Mu.le. 4 '30 Masterworks. 5.00 Cecil and Sally. 8:15 Popular Parade. 8:30 81 and Elmer. 8:45 Newa Digest by Msll Tribune. 8:00 Medford Theatre Guide. 8:15 Vignettes. :30 Interlude. 8:45 Holly-Time. 7:00 The Hawk. 7:15 Modernistic. T:4 to 8:00 Ministerial Union. i Hotel Wj Klamath KLAMATH BASIN'S ' 'SUfS'lI"i B R V j'.-rf a a a 55 33il . J m ,Zt J a Flight 'oTime (Medford and Jackson county History from tne rtle 01 l'n Ualj rrlbone ol to and 18 year, ago.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY November 8, 1823 (It Was Tuesday) New pipe organ for Baptist church Installed. Nippy weather. Farmer deplore th lack of rain. Plan launched for Armlatlc day celebration, with annual Medford Aahland football game, and auto race at the fairgrounds. Arrest of the Imperial Wlnard 1 or dered, for accounting on cash re ceived. Close vote In Income tax special election over state, with rural areas voting trong for It. Jackson county was for, 1,094; against, 1,628. Medtord vote three to one against. Scandal In the Veteran bureau, aired before senat. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY November 8, 1913. (It Waa Thursday) Vandal slashes an air hos on th Shasta Limited. The lectura on the "abolishment of taxes" is called off. owing to lack of atendance, and counter attraction. "Southern Oregon Get-to-Oether-Lesgue" formed at Grant Pass. William J. Bryan proposes "revlvsj of free silver to boom farm price." and I met with rebuff from Demo cratic leaders. Heavy rains are falling over th valley causing the farmera to rejoloe. Ted Helmroth of the Griffin creek district has sold his orchard to a party from Montana. "Dry territory" in Oregon enlarged by local option election. (Continued from page one) churls. That will help when th war with Russia comes. Our offlclala are convinced that Hitler Is sincerely trying; to stop Nazi attacks on Americans. They are NOT inclined to be hard about th matter. Plumbers were called In to mend the pipes In the old Russian embas sy a few days sgo. which Indlcatea recognition will not be long now. The Soviet trade representatlvea went to a hotel here to arrange a dinner recently and the hotel people sub mitted a menu containing salad Rom anoff. The Soviet pointed out they had rid themselves of the Romanoff Influence many yeara ago. It de veloped the hotel had dug up din ner menus used from the old Im perial Russian days In an effort to provide atrlctly Russian dishes. They served th Ruslan dishes but elim inated the salad. 4- STAY. HAWAIIAN ISLE Paul Shaffer, who formerly carried papers for the Mall Tribune, returned to Medford Sunday, having completed a three year enlistment In the United States army, which he served In the Hawaiian Islands, with the 27th In fantry. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Shaffer of this city, and plans to re main here with them, he said today. He returned to Los Angeles on tha United States army transport Repub lic In October, and haa been visiting friends In Los Angeles for the past few weeks. Mrs. Springer Goes Home Mrs. Don Springer, who has been seriously 111 at the Community hospital for some time, waa removed to her home at Grants Pass Saturday. Physical Ailments Relieved by Swedish Massage and corrective exercise. OSCAR 3. NISSEN, P. T. 528 E. Main. lira. 1 to 5 p. m. Fuel Oil Any Kind. Any Amount A.k for delivery by Medford Fuel Co. Tel. 831 Falls LEADING HOTEL W mak t specialty of eaterlng to commercial travellers. Modern, light ample roomi. Popular price Dining Room anil Coffee Shop. W. O. MilleT, Pre 8. W. Percy, Mgr. t.