MEDFORD MAIL TTHBTJ2SE, MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, JUNE 3, 1935
PAGE FIVE
EDUCATION CHIEF
WILL BE SPEAKER
Exercises In Ashland Lithia
Park Tuesday To Be
High Light In Education
Day Of Diamond Jubilee.
Sponsored by the Southern Oregon
Normal school and the Ashland
Chamber of Commerce, the program
for Education Day (Tuesday) of Ore
gon's Diamond Jubilee celebration
waa announced yesterday. The pro
gram will be opened at 10:30 a. m.
with, the graduation exercises of the
normal school in Lithia park. Ash-
ir. C. A. lluwurtl
land, with Dr. C. A. Howard, state
superintendent of public Instruction,
the principal speaker.
The complete program Is as fol
lows :
Processional Jubilee Band
Invocation Rev. M. Lloyd Edwards
Pastor, Presbyterian Church,
Ashland, Oregon
Music:
"Seraphic Song"..Anton Rubinstein
"Choral Paraphrase" ........
Samuel Richard Gaines
Women's Glee Club
Contralto Solo Alleen Guy
Violin Kathryn Tesack
Address ... Dr. C. A. Howard
Awarding of Diplomas
Dr. Walter Redford
President Southern" Oregon State
Normal
"Oregon My Oregon"
Song by Audience
Recessional Jubilee Band
12:30
S. O. N. S. Alumni Luncheon
v. ::. Lithia Hotel
Picnic lunch accommodations avail
able to all visitors who wish them,
Lithia park.
Open house Southern Oregon State
Normal school.
Visit Southern Oregon's Institution
of higher learning and inspect its
buildings and grounds. We welcame
you In the name and spirit of
higher education.
Tennis Exhibition 2:00 p. m.
Lithia Park
Trap Shoot 10 a. m.
Ashland Gun Club, Airport
100 16 yard Targets
50 Handicap! Targets
24 Doubles Targets
Archery Contest, 2:30 p. m -
Lithia Park
Pioneer Horseshoe Pitching Contest,
2:30 p. m Lithia Park
Children's Field Meet, 3 p. m
Lithia Park
Swimming Exhibition, 3 p. m. Hel
mans Pool, Jackson Hot Springs,
. Twin Plunges.
Free golf, Ashland Golf club, all
day.
Rustling wedding gowns which
were In vogue a hundred years ago,
will again come into their own at
a wedding gown review scheduled for
2:00 o'clock tomorrow afternoon at
the Baldwin Piano Shoppe. The re
view will be presented three times.
The gowns represent what the dress
making profession could produce
when bustles and hoop skirts were
in style.
The review Is sponsored by the
Parent-Teachers association which
will also maintain an antique fur
niture display the entire week. Next
Tuesday M1m Kate Stewart will pre
sent an old-fashioned quilt show and
win read an Interesting paper con
cerning quilts.
Committees are headed by Mrs.
Volney Dixon and are composed of
the Mesdamea Short, Swem, Thomp
son, Thomas, Thurman. Drysdale,
Dlllard, Heyland. Roseberry, McKeny
rle and Smith. Mrs. Smith Is In charge
of the publicity committee.
Formal Dedication
Pendleton Airport
PENDLETON. Ore., June 3. (AP)
Pendleton today became port of
call on the Pacific Northwest-Chl-caco-New
York route of the alrmall
pasenger service.
The city's $100,000 airport waa to
day dedicated In a spectacular cele
bration In which Indians, pony ex
press riders and cowboys participate
with city dignitaries and officials of
United Air Lines.
Twenty-two student at the Lin
coln school had perfect attendance
records during the past semester, ac
cording to a list compiled by the
school offices.
Honor rolls have also been listed
for the semester, and for the third
six weeks period, the latter Including
students who made no grade below
B durlrtg the six weeks.
Following la the attendance roft:
1-B Charlie Smith.
1- A Norman Vance.
2- B Betty Wahl.
2- A Robert Morgan, Ada Nakaglrl.
3- A Evelyn Richardson, Leo Rob
erts.
4-B Peter McGheley, Jeanette
Showers, La von a Shults.
4- A Jack Pope.
5- B Audrey Boussum, MlchflEo
Kamlkawa, Delia Shults.
5- A Margaret Ash, Peggy Daley.
6- B Lester Cass,- Jack Florey.
6-A Leigh Blew, Wayne LaTour-
ette, Lorraine Pech.
Semester Roll
1- A Jo Anne Adler, David Chlrg
win, Joyce Cox, Klkuko Nakaglrl,
Shirley Pankey, Gerald Pence.
2- B Martha Rock, Darrell Shirley,
Betty Wahl.
2- A Vonna Dale Knight, Richard
Merrlman, Shirley Weiss.
3- B Mahlon Sprague.
3- A Ralph Burgess, Zavlve Lester,
James Morrow, John Quackenbush,
Leo Roberts, Alice Takalilra, Mona
Takao.
4- A Dorothy Dickinson.
5- B Ralph Brock, Doris Rohrer.
5- A Margaret Ash, Lillian Newton.
6- A Eugene Ash.
Six Weeks' Roll
1- A Joyce Cox, David Chlrgwln,
Jo Anne Adler, Klkuko Nakaglrl,
Shirley Pankey, Gerald Pence, Thelma
Seversen.
2- B Martha Rock, Darrell Shirley,
Betty Wahl.
2- A Mary Glascock, Vonna Dale
Knight, Richard Merrlman, Joan
Mole, Frances Nichols, Shirley Weiss.
3- A Ralph Burgess, Patty Ann
Haney, Zavlve Lester, James Morrow,
John Quackenbush, Leo Roberts.
Alice Takahlra, Mona Takao.
5- B Norma Cantrall.
6- A Margaret Ash, Lillian Newton,
Peggy Daley.
An exhibit of pictures and relics
depicting banking in the pioneer
days has been placed In the front
window of the Medford National bank
through the courtesy of Wells Fargo
Bank Union Trust Company, San
Francisco.
A faded carpet bag which was
found among the belongings of James
W. Marshall, discoverer of gold In
1848, Is included In the display with
a rusty miniature covered wagon.
Gold scales and a treasure box
were a banker's equipment In the
early days, according to the photo
graphs showing an old-time bank In
San Francisco. The scales cost from
9200 to 9300 a pair and were brought
around the Horn.
A pair of gold scales used by M. H.
Coleman, who mined Jackson creek
In 1854 and 1865, were loaned to the
Medford National bank by w. R. and
J. B. Coleman. Several antique re
volvers complete the exhibit.
DETROIT, June 2. (AP) The
Chevrolet Motor company today cor
rected a Hat of reduced prices an
nounced last night, changing several
of the figures. The reductions amount
to as much as (50 on some models.
The revised list of master models
Includes: Sedan, 9640; coach 9580;
coupe 9560, and town sedan 9615
Prices on newly announced standard
models include: rosdster 9485; coupe
9485, and tho coach and phaeton,
9495. Reductions In truck models
ranged as high as 950.
At the company offices, It was
explained that the error was due to
deductions having been made from
the new list prices, Instead of the
old.
The Pontiac Motor Car company,
another General Motors unit, also
announced a price reduction today,
the cut being 940 on all models.
USED IN PLOT TO
SACRAMENTO, Cal., June 3. (AP)
A diabolical plot to, poison an en
tire family was uncovered last night
when an analysis of four sticks of
chewing gum found by Mrs. Georgia
McKenzle on the porch of her home
here revealed a deadly and Instanta
neous poison,
Each stick was wrapped In a small
brown envelope on which the word
"sample" had been typewritten. Mrs.
McKenzle found them Tuesday night
when she returned home from work.
Only the fact that she placed all
four envelopes and their deadly con
tents In her purse before other mem
bers of the household found them
prevented a tragedy, police believed.
Similar packages containing the
same brand of chewing gum were
found at three other houses In the
same block, and, although the gum
in them has not been analyzed, It Is
believed It was not poisoned,
L. C, Craven reported finding one
of the packages Wednesday and said
he chewed the contents with no 111
effects.
Another package was found by Mrs.
E. C. Sheehan and a third package
was found by Detective Michael E. J.
Stazzo In front of a nearby vacant
house.
City Chemist Burr T. Snyder will
make an analysis of the gum today.
That which he analyzed for Mrs. Mc
Kenzle yesterday contained the most
deadly of poisons.
HOI IN G. PASS
GRANTS PASS, June 2. (Spl.)
Flames threatened to destroy the
Colvlg family home, 733 South Sixth
street, at 12:45 p. m., Friday, but
succeeded only In burning the kitch
en celling, a portion of the attic and
upper story roof.
Fire Chief Claud Hollowell esti
mated the damage at about 9600.
Most of the furniture and house
hold goods were removed by the fire
men. Mrs. F. W. Chausse of Medford,
daughter of the recently widowed
Mrs. Mary C. Colvlg, waa cooking a
berry Jam on the kitchen stove when
the fire started from the chimney.
Three women were In the house at
the time Mrs. Colvlg and her daugh
ters, Mrs. Chausse and Mrs. Bertram
Stone of San Francisco.
Insurance to the amounts of 9500
on the furniture and 91.000 on the
building Is In force, Chief Hollowell
said.
The house, set back from the high.
way amid trees, has been the Colvlg
family home 45 years, Mrs. Colvlg
told friends.
ON LADY KILLER
PORTLAND, June 3 . ( AP ) Unable
to agree as to the guilt or Innocence
of Mrs, Hazel Hamilton, charged with
slaying her estranged husband,
George Hamilton, a circuit court jury
was discharged last night by Judge
Hall S. Lusk after having been dead
locked 6 to 6 for 24 hours.
Mrs. Hamilton was charged with
first degree murder. The defense test
imony emphasized the self-defense
contention. The proscutlon Vjued
that Hamilton was shot from the
back.
The jury late yesterday asked Judge
Lusk lr he would abide by Its rec
ommendation If a verdict of man
slaughter with recommendation for
parole were returned. The court re
plied It would not bind Itself by auch
a recommendation.
BIRTHS
ON RELIEF NEEDS
WASHINGTON, June 1. (AP) The
sum of 9940,000,000 waa estimated to
day by Harry L. Hopkins, administra
tor, as the amount required to meet
relief needs between now and next
March 1.
Hopkins told the house appropria
tions committee that this Includes
9640,000,000 necessary for relief of
more than 4,000,000 families from
July 1. It also Includes about 930,
000,000 remaining from the $950,000.
000 congress made available last win
ter. Testimony Hopkins recently gave
on the final big aupply bill was dis
closed today. He said that:
Fifty millions should be allocated
to schools.
Sixty-five millions were needed to
purchase farm surpluses to feed the
needy, in addition to the 9150.000,000
the AAA Is to spend to purchase cat
tle, dairy products and cotton.
The civil works administration was
closed on May l except for some un
completed projects. It Is to be sup
planted by a new three-point pro
gram, calling for Industrial re-employment,
rural rehabilitation and
aiding stranded populations.
The peak of relief activity was In
January when more than seven mil
lion families were on relief rolls.
Hopkins Indicated that employment
Is moving along as he expected and
that he does "not think there are
going to be any miracles performed
in getting people back to work."
Novarro in "Laughing Boy" at Rialto
iW vli Km
v i 'tv vat i
i MS t U V. aV 1 "V
SWrFtrtMr- '
With Ramon Novarro and Lupo
Velez heading a caxt which Includes
thousands of native Indians, "Laugh
ing Boy," the Oliver LaFarge Pulitzer
prize novel plays today and tomor
row at the Rialto theatre.
The story, probably the most wide
ly read Indian story ever printed, con
cerns the life of a young Navajo In
dian who comes from the mountain
ranges of his reservation home to
learn life and love. Novarro, in the
role of "Laughing Boy" portrays the
part of a primitive, Innocent young
Navajo, In love with Lupe Velez who
usoa her wiles learned In the White
Man's cities, to keep him from a
knowledge that would crush his depth
of primitive feeling.
Pontiac Cars Price
Slash Is Announced
Word was just received at Skin
ner's Oarage, local Pontlao dealers,
that, effective Saturday, June 2, re- 1
tall prices on all Pontiac models are 1
reduced 940 f. o. b. factory. This!
brings the Pontiac four-door sedan
under 91000 here. j
"Our cars have not been changed
mechanically or cheapened In snyi
way," wires A. W. L. Ollpln. general i
sates manager of Pontiac, "and they
are now by far the greatest values in
Pontlao history."
WINDOW GLASS We sell window
glass and will replace your broken
windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cab
inet Works.
SEATTLE, June 2. (AP) With
several mills closing down because
of the Paclflo coast longshoremen's
strike, lumber production In Oregon
and Washington showed a decrease
for the week ending May 28, the
West Coast Lumbermen's association
announced today, ; i i
GREEN
Slab wood Select Pur
ityAn 0wen-0. product.
Clean, large, low cost.
Pine, per Load
2-Load Lots
$1 88
Medford Fuel Co.
112! N. Control. Tel. 631
HSaSBbAlinulS.
Don't
Forget!
We Have
The Finest Water
The Best Climate
Best Law and Order
Community
Tell thee facts to visitors.
Write these facts to friends.
Before and after the GREAT
Farmers and
Fruitgrowers Bank
(Deposits Insured)
Announcement yesterday that
Archie Legg's fanlous dance orchestra
has been procured to provide music
for the Dir.mond Jubilee dances came
as a welcome addition to the many
features of the mammoth celebra
tion. The orchestra Is known through
out the coast as an exceptional danco
band, and Its entertainment merit
Is highly praised by those who have
been so fortunate as to have had
the opportunity of dancing to tho
haunting melodies produced by the
baton of this celebrated maestro.
The Jubilee dances will be held In
the armory Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday nights, and
elaborate decorations have transform
ed the hall Into a fairy pavilion,
suitable to the momentous occasion,
slon.
I
PEACE PROPOSALS
SALEM, Ore., June 2. AP) An
eight-point program for peace, neu
trality and safeguards In time of
peace was adopted by the Disabled
Veterans of the World War . at the
convention of Oregon delegates here
today. The program was outlined
because while, "the masses of people
In the world today were praying for
peace, yet we find all world powers
arming for war."
PRICES DROP 0N
CHEVROLET CARS
C. M. Hurd of Rogue River Chev
rolet, Inc., announces a big drop In
Chevrolete, effective at once. Mr. Hurd
says the price reduction applies to
all models and It Is made possible
by the half million sales this year.
Word has been received In Med
ford that a daughter, weighing 7
pounds, 12 ounces, waa born May 28
to Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Streater of
Tacoma, both former residents of
Medford. The little miss has been
named Carol June. Mrs. Streater
will be remembered as the former
Jessie Schlelchert.
All kinds of legal blanks for sale,
for rent, no hunting, no trespassing
and other cards for sale at Commercial
Printing Dept. of Mall Tribune.
Fountain Lunches
Gardner Drugs
DR. H. P. COLEMAN
Chiropractic and Phr'lotherapt
Orrcon License -01
California l.lrente 3029
U Years In Medford, Ore.
5 Hotel Figneroa
tlruero St. at
loth. Los Angeles.
Calif. One of Lot
Angeles' newest
Hotels.
100 Outside
Rooms of
Comfort,
Downtown, Harare In Connection,
Rates from
fl.M per day without bath
SJ.no per day kith bath
13.00 pr day, twin beds and bath
A R. SMITH. Leff.
5
il
"It Is a good morning when you
start the day right tilth stimu
lating glass of the Madrona
Dairy's raw milk. This milk It
pure because It's KEPT Pl'RE.
and It rontalnt all the vitamins
present In milk In Itt natur-.l
ttatel It It rich and tasty high
In butterfst low in bacteria
count." says Billy Break O'nay
MADRONA DAIRY
J . PHOHI 201 J
An epprovtd prodiKl Itom
ilHH UIii tatttt Mtrtttr i
AUTO GLASS
Fender, Body a Radiator Repati
General Sheet Metal
Light structural Iron
BRILL METAL WORKS
109 B 8tb St Phone tie
I J I H "M fnfa oft md
1 J ffU odiTKk(HtMtbruh
1 fMi-S I I.i R4 HH Mfpf)
tJM? alii B,1"I
yJG J I $ftti ind endunne.
7ir$tone
HIGH SPEED TYPE
; i , , 1 1 -' .
nil rsict .1111 MICI
4.7V19 8.65 6.0O.18H.D. M5.55
5.2V1S 10.30 6.50-19 H.D. 18.43
3.50 17 11.30 6.50-20H.D. 18.70
6.00-17 12.80 7.00-lgH.D. 20.75
FIRESTONE
Service Stores, Inc.
"ONE-STOP SBRVH'F."
9th and Rlverlde. 'Phone S'-'O
THE FORD DRAMA OF PROGRESS
- xv ' v,?'''Ti x 1
TEe StoMofeTsport
' I -tar
I STI 1 I 1 ' , I I I I .1111,' . M 1, -7 si'n - J V
AS '-?iLi. II, i il a i a s I I t- I tanxetS
w.. , i MM. I , 1 i i I L l f I LZ-
z r j i-j kM&. dj
n rir a a1 a a a & r. .rsH
I 1
The Ford Motor Company invitet
you to visit its exposition at A
Century of Progress, Chicago,
where the absorbing story of Ford
men, methods and ideals has been
unfolded beneath a single roof.
THE Ford Exposition is dominated by
a tower ten stories high, in the cen
ter of which is an open court. Through
. the top of the rotunda, the sun's rays
pour down upon a twenty-foot rotating
globe its surface bearing in relief the
myriad units of the Ford industries.
Grouped about the Ford globe is a
pageant of transportation, from the
earliest Egyptian chariot, crude ox-carts
and covered wagons to automobiles of
varied age, type and design. A "Roads
of the World" exhibit faithfully repro.
duces the roads upon which these ve.
hides traveled) from the earliest dawn
of history.
Around the walls of the tower, behind
the display of vehicles, appears a photo
graphic mural covering 1 2,000 square feet.
In the south wing Henry Ford per
sonally has prepared a display which cen
ters about the humble shop in Detroit
where he experimented forry.odd years
ago and where the first Ford car was
built. The car itself the first of millions
-is a part of the exhibit.
Surrounding the Ford workshop is a
series of displays which sharply etch
the advance from the cruder machinery
of other days to the almost wholly
automatic machine shop of today. It
is the story of "a hundred years of
mechanical progress."
In this story of advancement are im
prints of Henry Ford's own career. Many
devices in the display came into being
through Mr. Ford's efforts, or through
exigencies created by his insistent drive
toward improvement and increased effi
ciency in every mechanical operation.
Beside the Ford Exposition Building
stands the gray, weather-beaten barn in
which Henry Ford worked and played
as a Michigan farmer boy. Its presence
is peculiarly significant, because it has
been equipped with machinery to illus
trate how the farmer may process raw
materials for industrial uses and bring
about a closer and mutually profitable
relationship between industry and the
farmer.
Suppliers Join Ford
in Educational Exhibit
Twenty-one of the suppliers who manu
facture Ford V-8 parts have joined with
the Ford Motor Company in the indus
trial exhibits to make them complete and
informative. Each exhibit begins and
The Grand Coneourw of thi TotJ Building.
Shown hert it prlctltn collection of vehicles
of trtmporuilon of all lima, from the ancient
Egyptian chariot to the automobile of today.
ends upon the same two keys the first
that every part of the Ford car comes
from the earth. The second is that each
part, from the smallest bolt to the heavi
est steel part, must pass individual tests to
make sure it is up to Ford standards.
From Mine to Finished .
Automobile Parts
The sources of iron, steel, copper,
aluminum, zinc, lead and other metals
are graphically portrayed. Exhibits de-
picdng the processes that are used in
manufacturing parts from these metals
arc actually at work producing tho
finished parts.
A program of symphony orchestra
music has been planned for the Ford
Exposition to last throughout the sum
mer months. Opening the musical pro
gram will be the Women's Symphony
Orchestra of Chicago, directed by Mis
Ebba Sundstrom. The Women's Sym
phony will close a one-week program
June 13th. An afternoon and evening:
concert will be given daily.
On June 16th the Detroit Symphony.
Orchestra will begin a series of daily!
concerts to continue for twelve weeks.
Under the baton of Victor Kolar the
Detroit Symphony will give a two-hour
concert each afternoon and evening o
the week. "
The Ford Exposition Building is illu-
initiated at night by hidden batteries o
lights. These lights, playing upon the
central tower exterior, produce an effect
of great beauty. Straight up from the
tower is a mighty beam of light fur
nished by searchlights with a combined!
strength of 600,000,000 candle-power.
It is visible for many miles, and for hun
dreds of miles to airplanes.
PLAN TO SEE THE FORD EXPOSITION AT THE CHICAGO CENTURY OF PROGRESS
SEE YOUR LOCAL FORD DEALER FOR USEFUL INFORMATION BEFORE LEAVING
See the New Ford V-8 Cars for 1934
Now On Display
C. E. GATES AUTO CO.
Sixth and Riverside Phone 141