Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 05, 1934, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934.
Medford Mail Tribune
"Evtrrom in Southirn Ortgoa
Root thi Mail rrlbunt'1
Dally Eicept Saturday
I'ubllthwJ bj
MKDHIIIl) ntlNTINU CO.
V5--JT-'J0 fit 8U lbOM T5
KUUKU1 W. KL1UL, editor
Ad Independent Newipaper
Entered u ircuod elm mitur at Medford.
Oregon, uridw Act of March 8, 1879.
nuBsntimuN rates
Dally, ont rear $-W
Dally, ill month 3.13
Dalli, on nontb
JickionrilU, Central Poiot, Pbwnlx, Ttleot. Uold
Ulu ano on uigoj.
Dally, om year 0O
Dally, ill months
f11 onr month 60
AU twn. eaar. Id adftw.
Official paper of tin City of Medford.
Official paper of Jackaon County.
MEMBER Oh THIS ASSOCIATED PKE68
Reeelrlm trull Leiud Wirt Berrle
Tbt Associated Press li sielutltely entitled to
the oh lot publication or aii oei oupiiaw
credited to It or oUiervlst credited In tnlt paper
ud alio to ini local nei published herein.
All rights for publication of special dUpalcbtt
berelo tra abw tumta.
MEMBEH 09 UNITED tKE88
MEMliEH OP AUDIT BUREAU
OK CIRCULATIONS
Adtartlilng KepresentatlTM
M. C. M0UEN8EN COMPANT
Offices In Ne York. Chieaio, Detroit, 8ao
Francisco Us Angeles Seattle Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
Cltlcans who obssrved th 4th of
July yesterday, and are Interested in
thwarting any Bolshevik plot to
change the name or Bunker Hill to
Mt. Moscow, should hustle snout a
bit. nrocure a copy of the Congres'
alonal Record of June 97 last, and
.read the report made to the Presi
dent by William Green, president of
the American Federation or iDor,
dealing with Communistic activities
In the united States. It comprises
17 pages and Is better reading than
the average fiction.
'.
Peoria Bill Gates has returned from
the Middle Wost, which has been
eurferlng from a drouth. Mr. Gstes
' also suffered, and had 13 pounds
melted oft his carcass. Our townsman
was also In Chicago, but met no
gangstors. However, while coming
home, and traveling through Wyom
ing, he thinks ho played bridge with
No. 1 Bandit John Dllllnger, and two
of his pals.
FAHTISAN DEMOCRATIC RAPTURES
(Congressional Record)
I believe that the real, regular
Democrats are entitled to all the
Jobs In the Government. I believe
there are enough competent,
honest, coursgeous, regular Dem
ocrats to fill creditably every of
fice In this land. I respect the
views of Andrew Jackson, who,
when his "kitchen cabinet" was
in session at the White House
one night considering Federal
appointments, heard one of his
advisers say, "General, I do not
believe we can find a Democrat
capablo or filling that office,"
and "Old Hickory," pounding the
table with his clenched, bony fist,
exclaimed: "Then, by the eternsl,
we will abolish that office."
The Mae West story Is all the vogue
among the bon vlvanss, and many
report they aro aa tired of hearing
them, as they wore Scotch stories.
In the summer of 1020.
.
Science his been able to magnify
the human voice 13,000 times, but a
greater feat would be to reduce aome
human voices 13,000 times. (Yakima,
Wash., Herald). A very good idea
with a political campaign on the
horlron.
A taxpayer yeeterday declined to
donate $1 to an Indigent transient,
and now faces ault for $36,000 dam
ages, for physical pain and mental
anguish, caused by the said tax
payer, slamming his front door on
the said Indigent transient's left
hoof. " ,
The upper dorsal regions of male
and female tennis players, are becom
ing brown as a nut, from playing
tennis, a game that causes its de
votees to work and aweat like a hay
hand, and not notice It. The fomlnlne
backs get the brownest, but they
balk at washing the supper dishes,
because It makes their hands red.
'
He had cranked his car and got
ten In with his wife, ready to leave,
when suddenly his pipe fell from his
mouth and that was the end. (Hepp.
nr News), "The msjesty of simplic
ity" comes to country correspon
dent, .
"K YE-WITNESS TO HITLER'S EX
ECUTIONS LEAVES AFTER SEEINO
0 SHOT." (Hdllne Oregonlan). He
Just remained long enough to be
polite.
A number of gents, aspiring to
high office and the pecuniary re
muneration attached thereto, are of
fering as vote-bait vague promises
or "contentment and happiness."
Both have long been regarded aa a
state of mind In the Individual, and
beyond a bill concocted by a member
of the legislature from Multnomah
county. It Is doubtful If any legisla
tion will enable his constituents to
Ret their happiness like they do their
beans. As for contentment, there Is
plenty of evidence It Is about 95 per
cent laelness, and most anybody can
be that way. If they don't have to lay
awake nights figuring: whence the
meals are coming, for an Indefinite
period.
gP' S0W
vv
Editorial Correspondence
BUFFALO, June 20th. Yes, what a wonderful thing the
radio is! Motoring as wo arc, via one night stands through the
east, we, along with thousands of other tourists, listened to
President Roosevelt's speech last night everything was as
clear and distinct as jf the president were in the room with us,
although we happened to be dining with friends in this attrac
tive city. Had wo stayed in our hotel rooms we could have
listened to tho speech just as well. For practically all the large
hotels in the cast have radios "at no extra cost to the tax
payers." These radios have a short range but they get all the
national hook-ups. No nickel in the slot. All one has to do is
turn them on.
To us the president's speech was unusually interesting. In
the first place we had just visited the White House and walked
along that portion which has been closed for cleaning up and
repairs. So the president's remarkable illustration of his plan
of national political reform and social rehabilitation, was peculi
arly effective.
The other interesting angle was provided by the fact we
wero meeting old friends, we hadn't seen for 15 or 20 years,
and they wero all or had been, staunch Republicans. There
was a doctor, an executive in the Niagara Falls electrical com
pany, the vice-president of a biscuit factory, and a man in the
wholesale lumber business. Only the dootor was a Roosevelt
supporter, the others wero stronger than horse radish in their
opposition to the New Deal.
Yet all of them admitted one of them rather reluctantly
that the president's speech was a good one a masterpiece of
clarity and popular appeal. It was so simple, so easy to under
stand, so cleverly and effectively spiked the guns of his oppo
sition. ,
President Roosevelt defended his policies without relinquish
ing his offensive. He made his essential purposes clear, without
for a moment being placed in the position of a SPECIAL pleader.
He was sure of himself, without for a moment being bumptious.
His words rang with sincerity and yet he was never unctious.
As one of the die-hard Republicans explained it: "I don't
like the man, don't like his policies, his political theories I
regard as fantastic and fundamentally unsound. Yet I admit,
that as the set-up now stands, no one can beat hiin, no one can
even effectively opposo him. I can pick his New Deal to pieces
in a thousand ways. And yet how can you answer that simple
little White House analogy of his. Everyone knows the White
House is being repainted and repaired. Everyone knows that
to do this is a good thing, plumbing should bo modern and
hygenic, offices should be rearranged and brought up to date,
the essential simplicity and architectural beauty of the White
House isn't changed more effective and efficient machinery is
installed, that's all. Evory man and woman in the country
will understand that, and approve. I even find myself saying
"well that's OK I guess."
"Yet I am certain it is dangerous business and all wrong.
Roosevelt is like a sprinter who has jumped the gun and gotten
a ten yard start.' No one can catch him. He's just about six
jumps ahead all the time."
Mrs. Die-Hard Republican expressed it another way: "Why
shouldn't the country have a houso cleaning once in 50 years.
Jack would divorce me tomorrow if I didn't clean house every
spring. Besides, isn't the president's voice wonderful, and how
nicely he picks his words 1"
Certainly in that little group President Roosevelt didn't
loso any votes, and we will wager this without qualification,
every woman in that room expects to vote for Franklin D. next
time although perhaps few of them .would admit it to master
ful hubby at the present time.
; ,
Motoring here from Loch Haven, we passed through a little
stretch of the Pennsylvania oil country, via Bradford. Scattered
throughout the countryside were tiny oil wells, some pumps
were chugging, in more or less residential front yards. At
luncheon, next to us, was a table accommodating four oil men.
They wero much disturbed by the fact that tho pcoplo 0f this
country aro using too much light oil and not enough heavy,
too mucn western on and not enough eastern,
Although among the Buffalo business we havo seen, there
are few Roosevelt men, ovoryone
in general are vastly improved.
We gather Buffalo wasn't as liaru hit by the depression as
most of tho largo eastern cities. It is rather a conservative
community, and didn't boom forward during the Coolidge ad
ministration, like Clovcland and Detroit. No banks here failed.
Chatted with tho president of a
I1 or tho past six months ' said he. "we have been in the
black, whereas for three yoars we wero in the red. My business
is regarded in Wall Stroot as one of tho best industrial barom
eters. I send my reports evcrv month to certain Nnw YnrU
brokers. If things keep on this way, we won't complain. But
I don't credit Roosevelt with any part in it. The improvement
has been in spite, not because of the New Deal. Look at England
and Canada, without any of these new fangled notions, they
have gone ahead faster than this country, in the same length of
time.
Buffalo confirms our Now York impression. Amnno tin. m.
called Big Business men, Roosevelt supporters are as rare as
cheer leaders at a ohess tournament. R. W. It.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
BY O.O.McIntyre
NEW YORK, July . Edwin C.
Hill completely u.jseta a phllllple that
any newspaperman who haan't reach
ed an executive
Job at 80 la des
tined for the
alma house. Hill,
now slightly past
80, Is and alwaya
haa been m re
porter, and the
half century
mark finds him
In greatest af
fluence. Bom In Aurora,
Ind., he became
In the customary
migratory grada.
tlona of his kino, one ot the bright
young men on the 8un of Boss Clarke.
And with Richard Harding Davis
the best dressed reporters of the era.
He was with Charlie Summervltle the
first acrlbe to swing a cane on Park
Row,
He came back to the newspaper
game a few yeara ago after a Holly
wood flyer, The studios were not up
hla alley and he confessed to Kent
Speed he wanted to get back In
harneaa and stay the rest of his daya.
It was then his sensational rise be
gan, the perfect embodiment of a
transition period.
Radio, lectures, books, theatrical
engagements and a newspaper col
umn filled hla life aa never before.
His voice became ont of the best
known over the air and this luge
V'V
law iti
admits business conditions here
nut and bolt concern.
audience haa been augmented by
signing up aa a newa-reel announcer.
Thus making him, next to Damon
Runyon, the most highly paid re
porter ot the day.
Most wine waltere In the smarter
New York reatauranta, socked out In
brass chain loops, have been Imported
from Europe suave servitors who
have the flair of meeting every
drinking emergency. They bring a
bottle of wine aa though It had Just
been aequestered from Napoleon'a pri
vate cellar. And they twirl bottles
In the silver Ice bucketa with a de
votion that spells technique. The
most expert draw higher pay than
the head waiter. Few ever take a
drink.
Jack Denny la most effortless of
dance orchestra lesders. Yet his plsn
Isslmo direction brings out the most
perfect dance tempo of hla guild.
The late Art Hickman was another
whose restraint created a large dance
following. He sat at the drums, never
waved the baton but to this day you
remember hit "Whispering."
Young Alfred Owynne Vanderbllt
seems that rare specimen, a popular
young millionaire. A shy youth, he
likes country life and has developed
a passion for thoroughbred horset.
being youngest owner of a hill fledged
stable In America. The Jockeys like
him because he frequently Joins their
Innocent pastimes, such as seven up
and tossing cubes, behind the stablet.
Old track men say he has uncanny
Instincts for horse flesh. While gossip
Jugglers hsve now and then coupled
him with Broadway, hla Interest In
the gay life la practically nil. He la
an admirer of Rudy Vallee and went
to hear htm several times In a cab
aret. Trade continue to seep Into Park
Personal Health Service
By William
8lxrd letters perlalnlng to personal health and hygiene Dot to dis
ease dlugnunle or treatment wlU be answered by Ur. Brady II stamped
.ill-addressed envelope la eui'iused. Letters should be brief and written in
ink. Owing to the large number ot letters received only a few can be an
iwered. No reply can be nude to queries not conforming to instructions,
iddress Or. William Brady, 263 El Caralno, Beverly 111 Us, Cai.
SOFTENING FOOD WITH SODA
A mother asks whether It is harm
ful to uh i am all quantltyt of sal
erstus (baking soda) in cooking green
vegetable for
frTm,r.r. iXM&rm children or
ad una.
Chemically
baking aoda or
sal era t us la called
sodium bicarbon
ate.
Many coo lea use
a little of this
alkali when
cooking vege
table in order
to make the veg
etablea seem
more tender.
The objection
to this practice is that If the vege
table 'Is fresh and contains vitamin
O, the addition of the alkali destroys
the vitamin.
On the other hand, prolonged cook
ing destroys vitamin O too. - Par
boiling such as pasteurizing Is more
destructive to this vltman than
short steaming, cooking or steriliza
tion. Thus in selecting wllk for feed
ing of an Infant It la better to take
raw milk and sterilize It yourself by
simply bringing it to a boll for a
minute and then cooling again im
mediately. This Is certain to dispose
of any disease germs there may be
in the milk, and yet It does not en
tirely destroy the valuable vitamin
O. If you select ordinary milk that
comes pasteurized you must rely on
the human factor, which sometimes
falls, and the parboiling to whloh
such milk has been subjected, if the
pasteurizing process has not been
skimped, destroys most of the vita
min C.
Vitamin O prevents scurvy. That's
why physicians commonly advise giv
ing the young bottle-fed baby a daily
ration of orange Juice or tomato juice
or any fresh fruit or fresh vegetable
Juice. Itl s particularly necessary If
the baby Is fed with pasteurized milk.
In his book on vitamins, Barnett
Sure says that biological tests (feed
ing animals) indicate that spinach
and peppers are the most potent
antiscorbutic (prevent scurvy); then
come raw cabbage, tomatoes raw and
factory canned, and the citrus fruits.
Parsley and raw peas are rich in
vitamin C. Strawberries, canned peas
and canned spinach are good sources.
Bananas, pineapple, carrots, sauer
kraut, fresh corn, string beans are
fair success of this antiscorbutic
vitamin.
Dried beans, peas and lentils, and
other seeds, which contain no vita
min 0, may be germinated and then
become practically as good as, fresh
vegetables as sources of vitamin O.
The seeds are soaked in water for 24
hours and then kept moist and ex
posed to the air at room tempera
avenue's Gold Coast. As along Fifth
in the old days, the commercial
cacophony is muted signless apothe
caries, frock-coated travel agencies,
floral salons. But such soft pedaling
Is not for long. Many of the .finest
residential apartment house ground
leases expire within ten years and
by that time realtors believe the
evolution of Park from shanties to
spires will be complete.
Thingumabobs: Mayor La Ouardla
doea not like the taste or odor of
garlic . . . Three dachshunds In Sut
ton Place are named Vlckl Baum . . .
Gene Fowler may summer and fall
in the South Seas .- . , Eraklne
Owynne is reported writing a novel
with a Place Vendpme locale ... .
Bill Halllgan can give the Tarzan
call better than Welssmuller himself
1 1
Now! Prices Reduced
ON
Genuine Bayer Aspirin
Tim of 12 Tablets
Get Real BAYER Aspirin iVoic
So ns to put tho safety unci quick
action of Genuine Bnyer Aspirin
within the reach of everyone, the
price you pay has now been reduced.
Reduced so low that nobody need
ever again accept some other Prep
aration in place of the real BAYKR
ASI'IIUN that you've asked for.
l' now for tins of VI tablets.
2.V now for bottles of 24 tablets.
And the bis, family sire, 100
tnblet bottles nave again been re
duced in price. These new low
prices are now in effect throughout
the United States.
So Always wiy "Bayer"
When You Buy
And remember, when you ask for
Bayer Aspirin nt these new low
prices it's unnecessary now to accept
any other preparation in its place.
So never ask for il by the name
"aspirin" alone w hen vein, buy, but
always say B-A-Y-E-ft Aspirin and
see that you get it.
NOW A r 134
ALWAYS SAY "BAYIR ASPIRIN" NOW WHIN YOU BUY
Brady, M.D.
ture for 48 hours. By . that time
they will have sprouted and formsd
small roots. When germinated these
seeds are more tender and do not
require such prolonged cooking.
' Potato Is a fair source of vitamin
C. In the winter when other fresh
vegetables and fruits may be unavail
able potato serves as a good antl
scorbutic.
Most dried fruits or vegetables lose
all this vitamin O or power to
prevent scurvy, but cabbage and to
matoes hold some of It when dried
and stored, and even fresh raw milk
that has this vitamin In It (It con
tains vitamin C If the cows have
fresh green pasturage) may be dried
to powder and still retain a fair part
of its vitamin C content.
Acid foods contain their vitamin C
in spite of cooking. But the addition
of saleratus or other alkali quickly
destroys the antiscorbutic vitamin In
cooking.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Trick Vitamins.
Please give your opinion of the
application to the skin of an oily
preparation that has been radiated
and chemically treated so that it is
rich In vitamins. This la supposed
to banish skin affections . . . Alice
A. S.
Answer Even if the vitamin fac
tor can be imparted to the body In
that way, it la silly to Imagine that
such hocus-pocus will "banish" any.
thing. If you have blackheads and
pimples (acne) send a stamped en
velope bearing your adreas and ask
for the free monograph on Black
heads and Pimples. If you omit to
mention that you have the trouble I
cannot send any advice.
When the Old Fossils Die Off.
I am with you 100 per cent on the
cri business, Have convinced my hua
band and am trying to help, others,
but the older folk can't be convinced.
They're sold on their notion that it's
the rainy weather or Insufficient
clothing . . . Nevertheless, by avoid
lng the sneezes, etc., we have es
caped all crl for the past year and
we owe you our thanks . . . Mrs
S. F. I.
Answer Let the old fossile alone.
They'll die off before long and then
we ll make the world crl conscious
Sketpics, please give our tract a hear
ing. Every Intelligent Individual
should at least know the golden rule
of hygiene whether he obeya It or
not. Send a dime and a stamped
envelope bearing your address, for
the booklet "Call It Crl.'
(Copyright, 1034, John r. Dille Co)
Ed Note: Readers wishing to
should send letters direct to Ur.
communicate with Dr. Brady
William Brady, M. U.. 265 E. fa
mine, Beverly Hills, Cai.
. . . Peter Arno, man about town,
likes to breakfast In quiet Southern
tea rooms . . . Clara Bell Walsh, In
defatlgable first nighter, never misses
a change of bill at the news reel
theatres.
- Some one at dinner wondered what
had happened to the Broadway yap
wagons eight-seeing buses in the
eclipse. So I went over after dinner.
Not so msny but still a few with
never-say - die - barkers: "Chinatown
and the Bowery. Fast car going right
out." Also the gray-haired nhills
knitting patiently until time to go,
So persistent was the ballyhoo that
It almost talked me into going. In
deed I would if Earl Carroll had been
In the mood.
Bathing caps from 10c to 50c at
Medford Pharmacy.
Bottles of 24
at Loxcest Fricet in History!
Remember, too, that doctors ad
vise it, for it DOES NOT HARM
THE HEART. And that scientists
rate il among the fastest known safe
reliefs for pain. (See illustrations
below.)
Why Bayer Aspirin
Works So Fast
IN 1 fICONDS IT ITO WATCH
A Omilne Bayer Aspirin TiMrt starts
to disintegrate and go to work.
Tut Happens In These Claws
Harpfna m Your Stomavh Cmiine
BOHR Airirin TaMm Start "Taking
HoM" of Pain a Ftw Minutes after
Taking.
OPrer. a Rsvff F
Asnrin T.Nct , eVI
into a glsu of 1 "TH
By' the time I I
It hils the hot- I 1
torn of thf slits I A. if
It a dointe. -J
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
ASSOCIATES ol Dictator Hitler,
of Germany, are suspected of
treachery. Merely SUSPECTED, re
member not convicted after a fair
trial by a Jury of their peers. ,
So large numbers of them are
SHOT DOWN, In one way and an
other; on one pretext or another.
That's the way dictatorships work.
MANY people, ln these yesra ot
depression and discouragement,
have asserted that we of America need
a dictator.
We don't. We never shall. Our way,
with all Its faults, Is better by far
than the dictatorship way.
A NATIONAL-planning committee,
allied with NBA and headed by
Lincoln Fllene, big Boston merchant,
brings In a report recommending ap
pointment of a presidential commis
sion to draft:
1. A future national policy of labor
relations
2. A future national policy to take
effect when NBA expires.
3. A future national policy to gov
ern the problems of prices and mon
opolistic tendencies.
MR. Pllene, In 'p'resentlng the re
port, says:
"In the past 13 months we have
developed In NRA beginnings of a
new order of business. The danger
still exists, however, that this new
order will place undue emphasis on
governmental and political, Instead
of business leadership.
"Hence, business leadership is fac
ing a challenge of the most critical
nature." '
THAT Is to say, we are going to
have planning of our affarra in
the future.
If this planning isn't done by sound
business men, who are willing to ac
cept the responsibilities ot leadership,
It will be done by the politicians.
That, probably, is putting it about
aa plainly and as accurately as It
can be put.
A NUDIST wedding takes place at
the Chicago world's fair, and the
dispatches describing it tell us:
"The bride wore nothing; the
bridegroom was nude; the bridesmaids
wore v-only bracelets; the best man
wss naked: and the preacher had
on only a leopard skin."
CBAZY?
Not at all merely unconven
tional; and nudists LOVE to be un
eta osg qmeeitb
'""WSiWi
I ..iiLii.ii a 33; 1
Rogue River Chevrolet, Inc.
Chevrolet Cars and Trucks Complete Service Genuine Chevrolet Parts
E. A. CALKINS H. D. BYINOT0N-0. M. HURD
32 No, RIVERSIDE PHONE 188
U.
r.-,.y,v'.i.sw;.j.i
conventional. That is why they are
nudists.
If It were conventional to go naked,
people of this sort would WEAR
CLOTHES.
CONVENTION, after all, Is a strange
thing.
In this country, a nudist wedding
creates something of a sensation. In
the Jungles of, the Congo or the up
per Amazon, a wedding In which the
principals wore clothes would create
a sensation.
It all depends on what we are used
to.
MABIE Dressier, 111 of an Incurable
disease, was told by her phy
scans a while back that If she wanted
to prolong her life even a reasonable
length of time she must quit work
ing. She chose to go on working and
take the consequences.
SHE became too 111 to work, but
Instead of lying down tamely
to die she went on putting up a
fight, and as these words are written,
which Is on Saturday, she seems to
have passed, at least for the present,
the crisis of her illness.
Marie Dressier Is one of the best
loved women of the stage, and one
reason why she Is so loved Is her
Indomitable fighting spirit.
About all the real progress that
has ever been made In this world
has been made by those who are
NOT AFBAID.
(Continued trom Page One)
gages if there Is going to be a six
year moratorium on anw considerable
number of them.
It seems to be a case of holding an
axe over the heads of mortgage hold
ers. They may be reasonably certain
It will never fall, but they will al
ways be afraid It will.
Bernard Baruch's friends vow that
Mrs. Roosevelt has sold him com
pletely on the homesteadlng Idea.
Floyd Gibbons' brother la working
in the shipping board as assistant
publicity man.
Take all current Inflation rumors
with three grains of salt. There will
be nothing In them for at least a
year, If then.
Joseph Kennedy, the new chairman
of the securities commission, always
sends ties to friendly newsmen at
Christmas time.
1
S. ROYALS
TEMPERED
Flight o Time
(Medford and Jack ion County
History from the Piles ot The
Mall Tribune of 20 and 10 rears
Ago.)
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
July 15, 1034.
' (It was Saturday.)
Calvin Coolidge, Jr., son of tha
President, In serious condition from
acute septic poisoning due to blister
on hel.
Peace Is scorned in Democrstlo
nominee deadlock. Al Smith leads la
balloting. .Southern delegates gt
mad and go home without' paying
New York City hotel bills.
Ed Brown enlarges his present quar
ters on Main street.
Large crowds attend Fourth of July
celebration at Ashland, and hills are
full of camping parties.
Grass fire sweeps P- it Z. area and
menaces east side homes.
Boys shooting on highway narrow
ly miss tourists from Nova Scotia.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
July 5, 1014.
(It was Sunday.)
Medford citizens flock to h:UB and
nearby celebrations, and the city Is
deserted for two days.
An Ashland baby, speechless for a
week, as the result of swallowing a
safety pin, is able to speak, after mir
acle operation at Sacred Heart hos
pital. Police called out to capture o
prowlef In the St. Mary's Academy
neighborhood.
Fire In a barn on North Central
destroys a fine buggy and harness,
and a ton of hay.
Mme. Drey fuss, the clairvoyant,
does a rushing business and announces
she will return next month to read
'more palms and peer Into the future
for all local residents.
FIVE KILLED IN
P OF PLANE
ST. ANGAR, Iowa. July 6. (AP)
State Investigators today sought the
caust of an airplane accident which
claimed the lives of five Iowans bent
on a Fourth of July holiday sight
seeing trip. Their bodies were burn
ed beyond recognition when the
plane fell before the eyes of two
thousand holiday spectators.
Those who died In the plane with.
Pilot Fred Symington were Ed Llb
ersky, 38, and Vaney Llbersky, 30,
both of St. Angar: Marvin Miller. Jf
30, and Gladys Ueker, 20, both of
Grafton, Iowa.
Notice.
Notice la hereby given that I will
not be responsible for debts other
than those contracted by myself.
MARY I. HELMS,
Ashland, Oregon.
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4