Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1934)
PAGE TWELVE MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNT:, MEDFORD. OREGON, FRID3.Y, .TUXE 22, ,1934. Medford mail Tribune "Evaryona In Southarn Ortgon Rum till Mill Trlbuna" Dally except salurdar Publlihcd br IIEUKOUD PMNTI.NU CO. iS-lMt N. fit BL ROBEItT W. KUHL, Editor AO Indcpaodent Nawpapar Eatarad u ttcood clan matter It Madrord. Oratoa, iiodw Act ot Mareb 8, 18TS. SUBSCRIPTION BATED Dallr, ooa fear J.;" Dallr, III monUa tlallv. on DODth 60 t. CrrLr In AriTanfft Mtdford. AJOlaDd, JltUomiUe. Central Point, Fboeoll, Talent, Gold Bill ind oo BiiMara. Dallr, ooa rear I'.OU Dallr, all DODthl Dallr. ooa moots .80 All tarma. tub lo ad,aoea. Oflldal paper ot tba Clti of Hedlord. - Offldll paper of Jackaoo Couolf. UEMBEU Of THE ASSOCIATED MESS n u C7..II i Baibl LUI.a flurtrlM lbs AiMdatcd Preu li oelmireli totiUid u m 1. 1 a..i - m rflinatirhaa IM UM IW inwuuuuu vi su, txt&KiA to It or otDervtw credited to tbl paptr ud alio to tbt loci) oevs publiibed btreto. All rlcbU for publication of ipedal dlPlb DtrciD Ml 'c rewriwi. ItEMBEB Of U Nil ED MESS IfEMBEH OF AUDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATIONS Adrertlflng Repretenutliu H. C. MOUENSEN A COM? ANT Offlew In New York, Chicago, Dttrolt, Bu fYioelioo Ui Ainilei aeittto Portlind. ui. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthnt Ferry. Boseburg Joins tba Hat of Ameri can communities that from time to time, have occasion to point with pride, and mention with Chamber of Commerce guato. a audden epurtof Justice In their courts. A transient, 95, (inn-gotten Man to aome), robbed a Douglas county banlc of 1800, and m .n.hii, than five houra was caught, convictec, ana tha bib House at Salem, ine won- greaaed processee of law and order waa due to a large extent. u sus pected, to the painful fact that tha erring gent was due. to a large ex tent, It la suspected, to the painful fact that the erring tranalent waa completely out of Influential friends, money he could call his own, and a snappy lawyer. The same news of the day lmparta the Information that Justice la In no hurry In the case of the governor of North Dakota, con victed In federal court of attempting to defraud the government, and so liciting from relief workers. Though found guilty of a felony, aome diffi culty la experienced In tearing him loose from the governorship. It la a good guess that writs to keep him out of the penitentiary win oauuge the courts, and it will be all of two yeara before be will officially meet t,he warden. ' Hen French of tha E. Pt. area towned yesterday. He waa on the business end ot a nickel cigar, and thinking freely without the aid and consent ot a Portland politician In love with the farmer'a vote. The latest NRA regulation prohibit a tobacco dealer from giving more than one packet of matches with a purchase. This la quite an improve ment over tbe 1 -match offering prevalent when economy waa raging fiercest, but In the long run Is not apt to produce prosperity any faatsr than wholesale plg-stlcklng. YOU OET WHAT YOU MARRY. (Chlco (Cal.) Enterprise) Dear Mies Chatfleld: Since I waa a girl I have worked hard, saved my money and In vested It. Four months ago I married a man a few yeara younger than I and we began to keep house In my home. I thought I had a husband who would at leaat be kind and considerate, though I knew he waa laay. How here la my atorjf. With the ex ception of doing odd Joba around the place he la utterly Indifferent to hla responsibility. A New Jersey girl danced 18 hours, and "felt no ill-effect save a alight dlaslnesa when forced to halt." This might also have been the trouble when aha started. e Relief commltteee have started to comment on the ability of Indlgenta to get beer, when fancy wills, cash on the mshogany. Cspt. John Smith, an Old Dealer of pioneer daya In Hew England la now needed to remark! "Oet your beana next winter where you got your beer last summer." s A. 8. Bllton Jumped Just In time, yes, to escape being run over by a head of lettuce, going S miles per hr. In a new snub-nosed auto. e e THB NEAT COMEBACK. (Utter lo Time) Imagine then my delight tha other evening In the fallowing Incident in a tavern. A fellow, homeward bound apparently, with a copy of Time under his arm. etopped at the bar. Aa he eat there quietly, drinking hla cock tall, a fllahty. fluttery flousey, who hsd been making a nuisance of her- aelf, aidled up to him, bent on strik- j the copy of Time, aha chirped: "so you read Time! wny. tneve my ia vorlte msgaalne." I could not help resenting the re msrk myself, because It waa obvloua that this little bar-fly did not, could not belong to thst charmed circle. The young fellow grasped tha situa tion perfectly, diving her an amused, withal withering look he said: "You read Time, do you? Why, HI bet you can't even TELL timet" i . - DAN D. CHAPMAN, Chicago, Ill- Editorial Correspondence NEW YORK CITY, N. Y., June 20. The longer one stays here tbe more incredible it seems. There is nothing real about it, nothing HUMAN. Wb can't get over the idea that these amazing canyons of brick and stone, their sides towering liter ally ABOVE THE CLOUDS (as this is a rainy, blustery day) were not built for people to work or live in, but for show like a gigantic world's fair. We keep visualizing them at some future date, as completely deserted, gaping monuments of the great money age, and men and women and children living as they were designed to live, somewhere out in the country, amid trees and flowers, working not in masses but in scattered groups, comfortable and sufficient unto age of rapid transportation should do, if it develops logically But perhaps in this mad modern world nothing develops logically. New York is certainly impressive even appalling but it is not appealing. Oscar "Wilde's definition of a cynic perfectly describes it it "knows the price of everything and the value of nothing." Everything and everyone has its price, if you have the money you can get no spiritual blessing goes with the purchase. In short, New York has no manners, and no real feeling. It is not only hard boiled but case hardened. To a visitor therefore, in spite of its teeming millions it is the loneliest place in the world. The individual simply doesn't count. To those who wish to get lost, to get away from the personal touch, to be absolutely alone and be perfectly independent, Greater Manhattan is made to order. 0 0 On the other hand with this perfect independence, if one has money, any indulgence one may wish can be gratified. You can buy the best in music, in art, in the theatre, raiment and fine feathers, food, drink, or what have you. You can have society, society of any kind, if you can PAY for it. This was not true in the good old days of the "400." But there is a "400" no more. No social bars now that will not melt before the acetylene torch of GASH. , Our first ride on a big steamer was from New York to Boston on the Fall River line. That was about 46 years ago and we can still recall the glamour and the thrill. There was much gilt and plush, a full orchestra, negro waiters in the big dining saloon, and cute little staterooms. The Fall River steamers are still running and we journeyed to Boston on one of them the other night. They are even bigger and better than they were in the late 80 's, but no longer im pressive, after one has seen the modern ocean liners, with their many dining rooms, elevators, swimming tanks, dress shops, ball rooms, etc., ete. They have jazz orchestras, radio enter tainments, dance floors, bars, and plenty of dancing partners in(.nnH. Rut. to - -- ocean liner, the Fall River steamers today, don't register much higher than glorified ferry boats. ... Small wonder however, they are popular. For they leave New York early so you can have a beautiful water tour of Manhattan Island, and glide under the vast new bridges across the East River. In fact it is a seeing New York trip par excel lence. With daylight saving, darkness does not fall until the boat is off the Connecticut shore. The trip is as smooth and quiet as a ferry passage from New York to Jersey City, the staterooms are large and roomy, and the beds extremely com fortable. With the stateroom window open one can drift off to sleep, when one is tired of looking across the moon-lit waters of the sound, and watching the twinkling lights of Long Island shore, glide by. The cost of the on the New York, New Haven and Hartford, and one wonders why anyone ever takes the train. We quickly answered that iuquiry however. For after a few hours in Boston, certain things made it necessary to get back to New York that same night. So we left Boston on the Mer chants' Limited at 5 p. m., and reached Now York five minutes before ten. In spite of only parlor cars and an extra fare, the train was well filled. Time is money in this part of the world. . o Conductors on these eastern roads look as prosperous as stock brokers and probably are. The conductor on this train, was short, plump, with a white closely-cropped mustache, a heavy gold watch chain, and rimless eye glasses. He spoke with a broad "A" and was extremely polite without suggesting any thing approaching servility, He had found the cap of a foun tain pen somewhere, and the way he asked each passenger if by any chance they had dropped such an article, could have served as a model for any standard book of etiquette. He was followed by the Pullman conductor, like the president of U. S. steel, by his first assistant secretary. They toured the train twice, and as you filed out, the conductor was there to bid you good-night. Something must be amiss with the Postal Telegraph com pany in these part. At every important station a breezy repre sentative of the Western Union, dashes through, offering to ro oeive messages of any sort to any part of the world. Ho makes change as fast as an Automat cashier. But never a sign of the rival company. How comet ' esse For concentrated rudeness, in the opinion of the present writer, New York leads the world. Taxi drivers, street car con ductors, subway ticket choppers, theatre ticket sellers, hotel clerks, clerks in stores, doctors yes, we have sampled doctors, we don't care what type you may pick out, there isn't a smile, a kindly look, the evidence of slightest personal interest, in a carload. They simply don't give a damn, and if you live here long enough, you won't. New York eventually DOES THINGS to you. We havo seen that among some of our friends of SO years ago. Some of them have been successful, some haven't. But all of them have changed essentially we mean in tha matter of temperament and character. They have radically changed and not for the better. They are New Yorkers, too. You can spot them a mile. Not only the way they dress they are the best dressed males in the world, but the way they act and react, in short, their manners. 0ne w()(llf, proi,HDy be needlesly melodramatic ami prob 'ably inaccurate, to say they have as we can come to describing them. They don't SEKM to have any. No doubt there is what passes for one somewhere inside. But the gradual accretion' of 30 years in New York has given them an integument, so metallic and thick, that one needs n steam drill to pierce it. New York is a material Heaven to visit, if you have tho cash and its delights continue only as long as the cash holds out but to live in, without tho slightest hesitation we mark it down as HADES I themselves. That is what this anything you may desire, but one who has been on a modern - - boat trip is less than half that no souls. But that is as near -R. W. R. Personal Health Service By William tujcurd letteri pertaining to personal bealtb and hygiene uut to dis ease diagnosis or treatment wlU be answered by Dr. Brady u a stamped u-lf-addretsed envelope I enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an iwered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions, address Dr. IVUIIaro Brady, 265 El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Cat. FROM ECZEMA TO ASTHMA IS SIXTEEN YEARS - When a very young child, writes Mrs. E. B. P., I had severe eruptions of eczema which by the time I was 'iwJfrVN 10 years old had completely disap peared Now that la a common history, The eczema which is so troublesome In Infancy and early childhood a p o n t a n eously disappears by the age of ten twelve years a c o 1 n c 1 d ence which has made more thun one docwr or nostrum famous. But, alas, not long after the eczema has gone the, patient be gins to suffer from a new trouble, Mrs. E. S. P. continues her narrative: . . . Prom that time on I've had the fall variety of hay fever every year without exception. I can't recall whether this began before the eczema had disap peared. ' I waa brought up in Maine, where the hay fever re- , curred each year, the only ex ception being when I could re main at the seaside. Seven years ago I lived in Pittsburgh for a year, with no change In the hay fever. Then moved to Utica In the fall and had a bad attack lasting a month. The following winter I began taking calcium lactate aa suggested by good old Dr. Brady and have resumed tak ing It at. Intervals ever since. I haven't had a touch of hay fever since, not even on my vacations In Maine. Always previously a part of my vacations was devoted to being miserable with the snif fles. This may be Just ' your , friend, John J. Coincidence, but I would sooner credit the calcium lactate. The m true t Ions for taking the calcium lactate for hay fever or for asthma are given In a monograph on hay fever or one on asthma, either of which will be sent to any reader who asks for It and thoughtfully In closes a stamped envelope bearing his correct address. When the Infantile eczema disap pears about the age of 10 years that very fact Is ground for suspecting food allergy as the cause. And among the food substances which have proved (by skin tests) responsible are egg white, chicken, cereal, fish, even milk. . About half of the children whose eczema or other manifestation of food allergy or peculiar sensitivity disappears at the age of 10 years presently develop a new form of al lergy or sensitization to air-borne sub. stances dust, dander, feathers, pol len, etc., and suffer the character istic reactions to such substances, that Is, hay fever or asthma. At present the most dependable remedy for relief of the acute at tack, whether It be hay fever, asthma, eczema, hives, angioneurotic edema, Is eplnephrin, or as It Is more com monly known, adrenalin. In every case the problem Is to learn NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, June 22. Thoughts while strolilng: A lady's hair could not be that color. Bud Kelland'a shirts and ties are same mate- rial. And Joseph P. Day Is seldom without a carna tion. They say Mrs. Pat Camp bell, King Ed ward's idol, meet ing London's moat f a mous waif, Chaplin, kiss him, One word de scription of Eddie .Peaooay country pakelsh. Messmore Kendall Juts a mean eyebrow,' Dandy dog shop name: Puppy vllle, All S. 8, Van Dlne's books are a six-letter-word murder case. Most of us hanker for school when too late, Marlon. Da vits and Dorothy Mackalll, close friends, look alike. Indlgesf.on Jitter: Sumner Blos som's usual lunch Is a slab of apple pie covered with melted cheese. You'd think Dickens has Just been discovered. Fred Stone in one of Amon Carter's six gallon hats. Just what did they ever do to gold hoard ers? Julia Sanderson's flutey up take laugh would answer that. George Armsby always looks as though he had Just received the works In a barber chair. Dale Car-j negle and Pierre Cartter have ldn- tlcal profiles. Time for a Society for Improvement of the Rich. A stir ring book-title: "To the Vanquish ed!" And a salute to most of us these days. One of my favorite people Oliver Herford. Dawn Powell Is from out Ohio way. Never see those young Roll os in horn-rlmmed fttssset any more. Lucius Beebe suRgeets hat, gloves and stick. And Mrs. Bryan Foy a 33-year-old Pannie Brlce. If the Palrbanks-Plckford muss flares on Page One again, I'll scream. Morton Downey Is America's champ badge collector. In almost every pocket, he has one or more symbols of benefits and Rifts of lodges. His collection totals several hundred gathered hither and yon. Aa a sha ver, his burning ambition was to be a policeman and sport a badge. Aa a tenor singer, ha never lost the longing. Hamlsh McLaurln. the writer, whose hobhy Is mag Is. has been knocking about India for several months hoping to see the famous , I -stwPlL 'J Brady. M.D. precisely which substance or sub stances precipitates the attack, and this can be done only by the routine skin tests with purified extracts of the various foods, animal emanations, pollens, etc. When the specific ex citing substance has been determined In thla way. It may be possible to exclude the substance from the pa tient's environment, or if that Is not feasible then to remove the patient from contact with the substance. I have mentioned here before and It Is worthy of mention again, the case of the physician's child where they learned eventually that It wasn't grandma'a cat at all, but silk that caused the asthma. By excluding silk from the child's environment I they were able to prevent most of the trouble. Then there's the case of the bene dict whose spurious "hay fever' proved due to the orris root he In haled when he kissed his bride. And eke the poor girl who paid for her chocolate craving with 'an attack of migraine. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. It Is the Cri the 01' Doc Yelled. And now I would like to know what causes frequent head colds and the cure. Marie. Answer Not 18 cents' worth, tho? Well, if you would, Just sit down and write or Doc Brady another billet doux and this time Inclose 10 centB in coin and a stamped envelope bear ing your address, for the booklet "Call It Cri" and the monograph on "Ca tarrh." If you still have money left, treat yourself to a hallver oil cock tall or some capsules while you wait. One ot the Flrxt Fifty Thousand. Surprising to me that no doctor before you has recommended ephe drine for hay fever. Thanks to your advice I have obtained wonderful re lief from this medicine . . . J. W. Answer It would be even more astonishing to me. At that I dare say not more than 50,000 doctors recom mended or used it before I thought of It. In fact, you might say that of nearly everything good I recommend here, I spend an hour or two every day learning whst good doctors are doing, and passing along to the laity such suggestions as seem likely to be of use. The hay fever monograph la available to any reader who asks for It and Incloses a stamped enve lope bearing his address. Hurry Up Stuff. Since away back befo' de wa when ever anybody In our house needed some hurry up stuff we have found 01 Doc Brady's Bran Gems the right medicine . . Mrs. C. H. A. Answer Seven Ingredients, ladles, count 'em. One egg well beaten, pinch of salt, butter size of walnut melted, one cupful each of sweet milk, wheat flour, wheat bran, tea spoonful baking powder. Bake in gem tins. (Copyright, 1934. John P. DlUc Co.) Ed Note: Readers wishing to should tend letters direct to Dr. communicate with Dr. Bradv William Brady, M. D., ZG!i E. ca mlno. Beverly Hills'. Cal. rope trick. But like everybody finds only people who know someone who Knowa someone who saw It. The rope incit ia legend and nothing more. McLaurln also finds most In- dtan conjurers vastly over-touted. American lllustlonlsta such as Thur etone and Cardlnl have them lacheri to the mast. Indians often surpass In feata of muscular control, ewal- Bt th, ar,""Sno"t"if,u"snr" The charm of their work la .Derformin evanlshments at close range, thus periecung the art of mls-dlrectlon. I saw the Immaculate Cardlnl, with dllk hat and Xverness cape, go through his routine wearing gloves for perhaps the 20th time a recent evening. His performance Is a glos sy study In superb finish. Every gesture a poem and triumph of fa c" expression. There are no ef forts at humor In a Cardlnl ner- and seeing his 'ormance. He takes his prestldlglta mimicry, asked to tlo"a seriously. And I have never seen him when he did not bring down the house. Yet I always have prickly qualms, he is going to kin himself inhaling the smoke of the hundreds of lighted cigarettes he yanks from the air. Elsie Jsnls has reopened her beau tiful est Ma near Tarrytown, bought with the 'profits of her most famous play, "The Vanderbilt Cup." Since directing a successful revue on Broad way last season, she has been derat ing her time to writing fiction. In maUirer years she prefers this mode of expression. Another stage deserter Is the lively Eddie Dowling. But Instead of lit erature, he has turned to politics. And Broadway rumors Insist that he is not kidding: that he is seriously I BUY NOW SUMMER PRICES COAL-WOOD HERE NOW I Order ROYAL today the best UTAH COAL at no extra cost to you. FUEL OIL Any Kind You Want Special Pump Ben-ice F. E. SAMSON CO. Phone 833 220 N. Riverside considering possibility of a U. B. sen ate seat. Dowltng's real name Is Oroucher and his grandfather founded- the girls' college bearing that name. He Is happily married to Ray Dooley, the original baby-voiced talk er of Infantile roles In the Follies. She was one of the few comics who could make Zlegfeld's glum expres sion break Into a smile. I received a manicure today In one of those silvered and mirrored bo tlquea by a striking Julia Hoyt look ing brunette with a feather of snow white, like a cockatoo. In her hair. As she polished I spun a fanciful web perhaps an Impoverished nrln cess In exlls. At length I comment ed on the white streak and my admi ration therefor. "You can git It done for 2," she said. How consistently life cracks up the Illusions. (Copyright. 1934, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS A DISPATCH from Ottawa, In Can ada, says: "Gasoline pepped up with alcohol made from Canadian wheat has been tested In the national research labor atories and found more powerful than plain gasoline." . SURPRISING Not at all. It has long been known that a mixture of gasoline and alcohol makes a powerful and effective motor fuel. . The trouble Is that It COSTS MORE than plain gas oline. What is needed is a fuel that costs less, DO YOU remember that only a few years ago we were all scared to death that the supply of gasoline waa going to be exhausted RIGHT AWAY? Well, It hasn't been exhausted, and there are no signs that It will be. Petroleum, as a matter of fact, Is so plentiful that at the present mo ment we don't know what to do with it all, and are trying by means of laws and codes and other devices to restrict Its production Exhaustion of the supply of gaso line was merely another foolish fear. A PEW generations ago, the world was frightened out of Its wits by a man who proclaimed that pop ulation would Increase faster than the capacity of the soil to produce food, and so everybody would starve to death. Now, In the case of food as In the case of gasoline, the problem la to find a market for the so-called OVER-PRODUCTION , of food .(. . : HERE Is the moral: Most of these terrible predic tions, such as exhaustion of the sup ply of gasoline and Increase of pop ulation faster than increase of the food supply, have failed to material ize. The world has been getting steadily better, Instead of worse, through all the centuries of the past, and It will undoubtedly continue to do so for a long time In the future. JOSEPH FENTON, of Talent, aged 72, takea as his sixth wife the woman whom he married mora than SO yeara ago as hla flrat, but U f" ? a Tn "T" of thl" blt of Ph"osoPhS'' "Wives are like horses. The more you trade, the worse they get. So I'm starting all over again." And It took him 72 years to find that out! ANOTHER blt"ofnews from The Dalles: "A cigarette flipped from a passing automobile started a fire that de stroyed 40 acres of wheat belonging to John Ryan, on The Da lies -California highway." Not a long Item, but a mighty good one to remember about this time of the year. A lot of damage can be caused In the dry season by the little spark In the end of an unconsidered cigarette butt, AND now this one from New York: "A mechanical man to be ex- hlblted at the world's fair this year talks, moves his head, smiles, shows his teeth, raises hla eyebrows, rolls his eye and chuckles," But he can't think. T TOOK a corps of sculptors nnd electrical engineers nearly three Body Fir or Oak in al- most any length you -want at right prices. All dry and ready for quick delivery. months to make him. Why spend all that time making a mechanical man when there are so many human be ings of the same sort all around? Ye Poet's Cornet . BEAUTIFUL SOUTHERN OREGON To the Tourist: When on vacation you embark, Southern Oregon la one great park Of mountains, valleys, lakes and scenes. Of sparkling falla, of creeks and atreams. There's many a sheltered, shady nook Along some stream or gurgling brook Where you can camp and pitch your tent, Live next to Nature and be content. A thousand marvela will delight The eye with Joy from morn till night; This higher, bracing altitude Will keep you In a cheerful mood. All your doubt trill disappear In thla glorious atmosohere. Our mountains with flowers and forest clad, Our fertile valleya make the heart feel glad. Wa hope you'll decide to stay In this land of promise don't delay. Such charming scenes you look upon Are only found In Southern Oregon. D. T. Gerdes. (Pythian Home, Vancouver, I Wash. Former resident of Medford). Communications To Keep the Record Straight To the Editor: To be able to read a long editorial concerning my own alma mater and our great rival, Princeton, In today's Tribune was a pleasure. However, being a close follower of the track world and a former competitor In the I. C. A. A. A. A., It hurt to find an error made in relation to that great mller, Bill Bonton. - Having raced against him twice In cross country and twice at two milee in varsity dual meets and being 3 ahef myself, It would be impossible for him to be In the class ot 1935. aa la mentioned in your paper today. Bill waa captain of hla team thla year and has now graduated from Princeton. '34. Incidentally, he won the four races I mentioned and Is ertalnly a born runner. I know it makes little dif ference that thla mistake ebould ap pear but a track fan flnda errors quickly, even a tenth of a second In regard to a certain time. Respectfuly youra, HOWARD L. HILL, Yale '33, Sheffield. Medford, Ore.. June 20, 1934. " P. S.: The three-year rule ia In effect at Yale and Princeton. (Continued irons Page One) You cannot floor a congressman, or fool himfor more than a year. No effort la being made to hold the cabinet officers here during: the absence of the president on his vaca tion cruise. Mr. Roper la going to Alaska, Mr. Morgenthau to Montana and others aro making plans. The new republican chairman, Henry Fletcher, has been doing a lit tle job of making friends with the senate Republicans who were dis mayed at his election. He has held sever si private dinner parties, at which everything was peaceful although not exactly happy. Mr. Morgenthau successfully put down the Inner agitation against him in the senate, and none of the threat ened steps against him were taken. The silver bill helped to soothe many senatorial --tampers. DINE AND DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT Featuring Al Stewart and His 11 Nite Owls Al Stewart will personally con duct band during the entire evening. DANCE- RESTAURANT OASIS 11 Miles No. Medford on Crater Lake Highway Cover Charge: Men 40c All Ladies 10c DANCE . SHERWOOD BURR'S FAMOUS CARIOCO BAND ASHLAND, OREGON TWIN PLUNGE RESORT 75c COUPLE Saturday, June 23 Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the Files ol I be Mall Tribune ol iu and 10 fears Ago.) TEN YEARS AUO TODAY. June it, 1924 (It Was Sunday) ' The Slngler Brothers Rudy. Blch ard, and Raymond star In trade -meet of National Guard encampment." The third annual Copco picnic 1 held. Al Smith leads fight that keepa William McAdoo. from Democratlo, nomination for president. "No greac er service was ever performed for tha -nation or the Democratic party," de clares Hearst. The convention Is "Just a wild clamor." An unknown Oregon. Ian and delegate, attracts attention by ahoutlng. "I'm a wild Democrat." Aviator Maughan arrives at Salt ijake city, in nis rsco wua &no across the continent. Portland banker visit southern Oregon, and reports, "Klamath and Medford ere rolling In prosperity." . TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY, . .' June 22. 1914 (It Was Sunday) The P. k,. E. runs mi excursion to Butte Falls, and a number of hikers hiked to Table Rock. Grass fire on West Main calls out the fire department, and a "horde of small boys Impede the fire laddies." Police prohibit loafing on the Nasli corner. "Women do not care to mov through a mass of tobacco chewing and ogling males," says Sergeant Pat Mego. Copco starts a campaign for use of electric fans in the hot season. Good progress la made on Paclfta highway over Siskiyous. Notice of Final Account In the County Court of the Stat oC . Oregon for Jackson County. In the Matter of the Estate of LOUIS A. SALADE, SR., also known aa LOUIS A. SALADE, and L. A. SAL-.: ADE, Deceased. The undersigned, Executrix of thai Estate of Louis A. Saladc, Sr.. .also, known as Louts A. Salade, and L. A, Salade, deceased, has filed her Final Account on the administration of sa'-d . estate with the County Clerk of. Jackson County, Oregon, and th.; above named Court has fixed 10:00 o'clock A. July 33, 1934, at tho Courthouse, Medford, Oregon, as the,, time and place for hearing objectlona t hereto, and allowing and settling tha same. BLANCHE T. SALADE. ' " Executrix. Notice to Creditors In the County Court of the State ot Oregon, for Jackson County. In the Matter of the Estate of W. H., Fisher, Deceased. Notice Is Hereby Given that that undersigned has been duly appointed " and ha qualified as the Executrix of the estate of the above nomed de" cedent, W. H. FISHER; all persons having any claim against the sa:d deceased or his estate are hereby no tified and directed to present samo, duly verified as by law provided, to the undersigned Executrix at the of-, flee of F. j. Newman, Attorney for said estate, Palm Building, Medfor.1, Oregon, within six months from the' date of the first publication of this' notice, and all persons owing said estate may make payment at said office. Dated and first published this 32nd day of June, 1934. CLARA T. FISHER, -V Executrix of the Estate of W. H. Fisher, Deceased.1 Hotel Figueroa Flgueroa St, at loth, Los Angeles, Calif, one of Los Angeles' newest Hotels. 0 0 Outside Rooms of Comfort. Downtown. Garar? In Connection. Rates from S1.50 per day without bath $2.00 per day with bath $3.00 per day. twin beds and batb A B. SMITH, Lessee. Yum! Yum! Another Big Southern Fried Chicken Dinner "Eat with your fingers" On the Marvelous New SPRING DANCE FLOOR Jil TS r