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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1934)
r TCSIC TRIBUNE, HBDPOTO. RtGttSf, TTOftAY, JULY 10, 1931. PXGE FOTJT? Medford Mail Tribune "Cwytna in Southirn Oritoa KuU Ui Mill IrlbiJM1' Dallf Eieepl aaturdtf FublliBtd Dj MKnlrnlm I'UINTINU CO. II-lMt .1 ru St. Ptr To OBEUI W. UHU ttltoe An Independent Neeipeptr Entered u eeeond elui mitur it Uedfcrd, Onion, under let of Kirch 8, UT. aUBSC'lllPTION BATES Da Mill In Ari,!tta diiij. om ' 5-22 Dillr, U month. ' lUlll. DDI month.... n. rlf In AriranM MedTord. Ashland, JlciunrMe, Centre! Point, Fhoenll, Talent, Gold Bill and on Uiib.an. nmitr, om f" '! nuiT, iii oomiu ;6 DaUj, one month so AU lermj, euo in uiauc. Official paper 01 thi Cltl ot Medford, Official piper ol Jaeiion Countr. MKMBEB Or TUB AaiOCIATEU PUSBB ficcelrlni Full Leased Wire 8erlei Hil Associates Press li eielusltelj inlltled In Oil nu for nuMeatlon ot ill oen rllsnalebe. eredlud to It or otherwise credited In tola paper ud llM to Uil local newt published herein. AU flints for pulilleitloo of iptelil dispatches herein in also resmea. MEMBEH Ot UN11EI1 PKE88 MESIBKH OP AUDIT BUREAU or cmcuLATioN'8 Adrertlilng Kepresentatttea M. C MOUENSEN t COMPANT OfMeei In Ne York, Chicago, Detroit,' 0u Francisco Loa Antelee 8uttle Portland. -SB- Ye Smudge Pot Bjf Arthur I'errj. The Great White Father refines to five Poor Lol, the untutored remain, the right to drink beer on the ground, he cannot behave hlmeeli when lull of the brew. The noble aborigine ought to be able to do ae well as the untutored 17-year-old paleface pap acies (buck or equaw) under the same conditions, and amuck with autoa, Instead of tomahawks, e Becy. Ickes Issued an order prohibit Ing Icdcral workors in Washington, S. 0 from loafing and details guards to see that there Is none of It. The order does not apply to a number of cabinet officers, now loafing around the country, making campaign peeches on government time and money. 00 Lightning continues proficient in causing forest fires. It always allows anybody looking for a cow, In the vi cinity of where It hits, about II min utes to get back to his lightning-rod. Tbere la no organised nudism In this valley. However, there is con siderable unorganised nudism. see The proposal to give all persons over 80 years of age a eaoo per month pension Is fine, If It don't causa every body with a grey hair In their head, to be (0 years old. . t Instruments that will throw the voice of a speaker a mile have been Invented. Now we only want one that will throw the speaker the same dls tanoe. (Punch) Or, farther. There Is no truth In the report that the warden of the state penitentiary put himself In solitary confinement for failure to obey a mandate of one of his Inmates. Comment of this department on shorts and blbbettea has aroused a fair wearer of same "to the boiling point." "There la no punishment to tit such blackguardism," aha writes, and signs "Anonymous." Yea, there is a punishment to fit such "blackguard lam." Make the blackguards wear aborts and blbbettes In public. o TJS. sailors wrecked a cafe at Nice, France, because they were charged 19.74 for ham and eggs. They seem to have been about aa mad as the veterans of the Great War, who were charged 3Se for a wedge ot pie by home patriots and pirates In 1018. BUC1I IS IIOOEVI (Review of Reviews) The pages of the Congressional Record auund in the eloquence . or caicnmen advocating billions for the bonus, for bank deposit ore, for poor bricklayers to whom acquisitive contractors refuse to pay ll.7o an hour, for relief of the distressed and for those un fortunates unable to buy gaso line tor their cars, all In the name of consumer stimulation. m . In a moment of annoyed chivalry John Dllli"ger, Bandit No. 1, once hauled oft ud knocked a lady down. When she i'..eag, four front teeth were missing. Press dispatcher say the lady Is now looking for Mr. Dllllmier, She may want to shoot him, or show him her new brldgework. "The bust of the Governor la now complete," report the Portland papers. No mention Is made of the rest of them. . e Titers was some wrestling at the Armory last evening, which proved anew that Mnn la wondrously made, and not easy to take apart. The wrestling was marked by some wrestling. ... TOU KNOW TllR TVPR. , Re owns a dented tin machine, A roll of ragged bedding, Perhaps sufficient gasoline, To last where he's heading: Some pots and pans, a dirty tent. Borne rusty spades and axes He needs no home, he pays no rent, He never heard of taxes I (Exchange) tie Mall Trlbunl wat ads. Editorial Correspondence CHICAGO, July 8. To get into the World's Fair on a press pass you must be "mugged." This mugging is new as nearly everything else at the Ceritury of Progress is new. You enter a hot, brilliantly lighted booth, about the size of. a telephone booth, take a seat, and the young attendant in shirt sleeves (and somewhat peevish) gives your "phiz" a oritioal squint, then turns a gadget. "That's all," says he, "nextl" You put on your hat and get out. In another small compart ment, a churning noise emerges, a small electric light glares over an aperture, by the time the next applicant has been snap ped, your finished photograph is ground out. The peevish young man clips it off, dabs the back with paste, and places a caricature of yourself, on a passport affair which is your press pass. A finished photograph in five minutes! Obviously no one else could use that pass. For no one ELSE could look as terrible as the Andy Gump who is on it. e o o Your pass is honored. Everyone is very courteous. You ask the whereabouts of the Hall of Science, and the fair police man, who is a cross between one of the Canadian mounted and a Roxy usher, snaps his swagger stick and suggests a ten cent bus ride on the Greyhound line. You follow the suggestion and soon you alight before what everyone has told you for a year or more is the most interesting building on the grounds. It IS to the young man you are chaperoning, a nephew from Denver, 11 years old, who knows all about radios, alter nating currents, induction coils, and the Einstein theory. He wears spectacles, a somewhat weather beaten Panama on the back of bis head, flannel shorts, above slightly ruffled golf stockings, and has a chamois bag containing $8 in bills, fastened to his undershirt by a safety pin. He stands pop-eyed before the very first exhibit, various wires and gadgets in a glass case, with a printed suggestion that the observer plaee his hand at a certain place and watch the results. The hand is placed. There is a bright purple spark and a tiny electric fan begins to whirl. Young Mr. Einstein observes solemnly that the demonstra tion, elucidates the pulsating current, and Uncle, like General Grant when confronted with a new theory of evolution, says "that's RIGHT 1" e It's dark and hot in the building. There are various passages or corridors reaching out, more or less like the roots of a giant tree. Every lane is lined with exhibits, each with signs "mak ing plain to the millions exactly how science has served the needs of man." Yet to Uncle (apparently not of the "millions") it IS con fusing. You read this building alone has nine acres of floor space, and each acre under scientific cultivation. You have but 48 hours to see the fair, and you wonder what to do about it, what to see, what NOT to. The nephew, however, has no such doubts. He is not onlv scientific, he is methodical. His hibit, on the right as he enters, on ad infinitum. He may not et through before Thanksgiv ing, but then what is time in this world of space and relativity. J)ar ne it trom Uncle to place adolescent education. So he suggests that the young nephew from Denver, go his way unhindered and meet Uncle at the end of our hour at the heroio statue near the cntranoe, con structed without benefit of fig loaf. Einstein, Jr. agrees. Uncle staggers to a nearby oirous tont and consumes a vanilla milk shake. e Nephew was five minutes late at the family reunion and apologized. It seems that No. 35 on the right from the main entrance, was a hall in which there was an illustrted lecture on rubber. Once in on the lecture there was no nossible wnv for a gentleman and a scholar to over. Besides, nephew wished rubber was "plated" fused joined together. He found out and had two samples of "plated" rubber in his hands. As it was lunoh time, Aunty thought it unwise for the young man to handle the rubber so muoh it looked dirty and probably was, full of germs and all that sort of thing. ine nepnew was very polite watch pocket, as he vigorously brushed his hands, observing however quite deferentially that he was inclined to doubt the ability of any bacilli to impregnate crude rubber that had been subjected to eleotrolysis. At luncheon whitcfish or a rare lamb chop were suggested for the young man, but he said he preferred creamed spinach and that is what he got. Just betore leaving the grounds, Aunty presontcd HER press pass at a certain turnstile the euard looked at the nhoto thnro. on carefully, then at Aunty ture, Madam." They are so COURTEOUS at Persist PERSIST, July 10. (Bpl.) Mrs. Xj. W. Ash left June 30 with Mr. and Mra. Ed Ash for Centra la, Wash. They expect to be gone nearly a month, Rufus Chlldreth and Janet Gould called on the former's parents June 37, also made a ahort visit at the Mathswa cabin and Mountain dum ber Co. mill. A few ot the young people of the community motored to Medford Bat- urady night to attend the ahow. Mildred Young and Flossie Parker motored to Medford Tuesday on busi ness. Mrs. Ethel Wllllta of Medford spent July 4 with her parents-in-law, Mr. and Mra. W. W. Wllllta at Persist. Mr. and Mra. Bam Parker. Carl and Arlene Chlldreth and Mildred Young spent July 4 at Diamond lake, enjoy ing a plcnlo lunch and boat riding, then making the return trip via Cra ter lake. They roport the new high ways en route a great Improvement over the old, even If quite dusty. D. B, Hutchison and family spent July 4 with the Messrs. Peterson and George Bchermerhorn. After dinner the party went swimming In Elk creek. Jens Garber has not been working at the Mountain Lumber Co. the past tew days, because ot a slight Illness. Grandma Trusty, who has been on the alck list, waa alttlng on the front porch July 4 enjoying the fine wea ther. Louie Brlstow la again working at the mill, having been home the past week because ot Illness. No Wonder ST. LOUIS (UP) Fred Richardson caught five fish In five minutes; waa arrested, charged with fishing with out a license, tlsMng In a state hatchery and fishing In a publlo park. He exclaimed i "No wonder they were biting." On Mill Tribune snl ads, idea is to digest the first ex then the second, third and so any obstacles in the path of get out, until the lecture was to ask the lecturer iust how and placed the exhibits in his and remarked "a terrible pic the Century of Progress I R.W. R, Howard District HOWARD DISTRICT, July 10. (Spl.) Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dickson spent the fourth visiting Mrs. Dick son's grandparents, Mis and Mra. Ayres. Mrs. Dickson will be remem bered as Lorena Ayres. Miss Evelyn Robinson of Medford spent the night July 8 with Mable Parke. Harvey Northcraft has rented Dr. Sweeney's chlokon ranch and Is mov Ing his family there this week. Howard district was well repre sented at Grants Pass the Fourth of July. Those spending the day there were: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Croueher and family, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Fret well. Mable Parke, Lowell Pratt, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Croueher and fam ily, Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Croueher, Mr. and Mrs. Pete McGongle, Mr. and Mrs. Newton and daughter, Mr, and Mra. Gustln and eons. Mr.'and Mrs. Cardln and family, Mrs. Shoyer, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Doty and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Charlea Young, Mr. and Mra. Welbourne, Mr. and Mra. Sutherland. Mr. and Mrs. Ray and family. Stanley Friend left the first of the week for upper Rogue river, where he will be employed by the forest service for the summer. BIRTHS Born to Mr. and Mra. Herbert Guenther, 811 South Ivy, a son weighing ?H pounds at the Purucker Maternity Home thla morning. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Rock. 1140 Court street, July 8. a O't pound boy. Mother and son are reported doing well. Born to Mr. and Mra. W. D. Kleur. Central Point, July 8, a daughter. Oklahoma's I per cent general re tall sales tax returned about 84.000. 0O0 In lis first year ot operation end ing earl; In July, Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease dlugmuls or treatment will be answered by lir. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 865 El Camlno, Beverly 111 lis, Cnl. VITAMIN C AND Motlw today art pretty well In formed about the Importance of Vita min D for the expectant and nursing mother or for the baby In the flnt year, to Insure a g a 1 n a t rlclcete and to make the baby develop sound teeth and bones. But the value of Vitamin C In the preven tion of decay of th teeth and disease of the gums is not so well known. Vllh j almur Stelanwon, who lived more than five years In the Arctic, describes the scurvy thus: "The first symptom noted by Andersen was dizziness on sud denly standing up, laziness and irritability, proneness to becom ing tired, and loosening of the teeth, and a swelling and reces sion of the gums, with a dull ache In the gums or roots of the teeth. The appetite was normal as to quality and kind of food desired . . . Nolce iiad become unable to walk and had to be hauled on the sleds. At this time the teeth of the men were so loose that they could be plucked out with the fingers with no ef fort, and the gums were of such a cheese-like consistency that they were cut, with little bleeding, by wooden toothpicks about as easily as ordinary 'American' cheese would be. . . ." The diet upon which these men developed scurvy consisted on hard bread, lice, pea meal, honey, sugar, end dried cottage cheese. Even when they were at last able to kill some fresh meat it did not cure, until Stefansson discovered that a little raw meat, and especially raw bone marrow, quickly cured the scurvy. "In three days of this diet (one-half of the meat eaten raw, and some raw bone marrow as dessert) both men felt as. cheer ful as normal, and Instead of the previous disinclination to stir there was & desire for activity surprising In view of the weak ness from which they had not yet recovered. The pain In the joints was nearly all gone ... NEW YORK DAY BY DAY BY O.O.McIntyre NEW YORK, July 10. Tommy Gulnan carries on the tradition es tablished by his slater Texas in the New York night restaurant field. He Is reputed to have Imported the noisy greeter Joe ZelU from Paris. Anyway ZelU Is yowling his wel come at a newly decorated old haunt Oulnan manages. Also young Oulnan displays the same devo tion that charac terized his sister toward their white-haired parents. He dines with them nightly in one of his own or some other of the glddyap spots, forming a sedate and somewhat Incongruous trio In the surrounding hocusslng. For Oulnan himself Is a contradic tion to the usual .bluster of the call ing he pursues. He dresses quietly, has little to aay, Indeed Is shy. Yet he Is unusually wise to the ways and carnal domination of the worldlings who live so hard and dangerously. He la reputedly one of the famed Broadway mob. m consciously or unconsciously creating this background of mystery as to his backers, he demonstrates the Oulnan flair for showmanship. It Is abracadabra that appeals to the night-life mood for whispers. And the sinister implications they Imply. I passed New York's narrowest house at 78V Bedford street in Greenwich VlUngo today. It is par ticularly known as the one-time home of the poet Edna St. Vincent Millay and is whfre she xrote "My Candle Burns at Both Ens," etc. Although three stories high and SO feet Ion;, it Is only 0.0 feet In width. Camera. prowling, was captivated by It, Giants always like small houses. The public cricket grounds In Van Cortland park as occupied of even ings and all day Sundays and holt days. The players are West Indians who from the majority of elevator operators In upper west side apart ment houses, and whose accents are as British as London. And far more Impertinent. Dean Cornwell, the artist, has gone gypsylng in his flivver to Italy for the summer and Instead of Invading the publtclced Rome, Florence and Venice, will wander through the medl aval, fortified cities built on the mountain tops and practically inac cessible until the advent of Fords, Mussolini's clean-up of filth and the bandits. Some of the finest frescoes ot their periods are In the remote sections. Cornwell, who turned from magaalne illustrations to murals, la back to his first love to provide the bankroll to return to murals. And Cornwall's battle to give up cigarettes will Interest all over-In-dulfrers. He smoked from 40 to 00 a day and tried to quit first by smoking moderately without tnhal ln. Thla he did for a year. But waa soon Inhaling ni furlounly and Incessantly tver. After several BP, THE TEETH in another two weeks their teeth were secure and the gums hard The significant fact 1 that Vita min O prevents and cures scurvy. Many nutrition authorities now be lieve Vitamin C tends to prevent gingivitis (gum inflammation) and pyorhea, and that a diet including an adequate amount of Vitamin C tends to prevent decay of the teeth or carles. Orange juice seems to hold a pro eminent place as the most concen trated Vitamin C source. Tomato Juice Is about half the O value of orange Juice. Grapefruit Juice Is nearly but not quite as rich In C as orange Juice. Lemon Juice and orange Juice are equal In Vitamin C potency. Raw cabbage Is rich In Vita min O. Strawberries are nearly Is not quite equivalent to oranges as a source of Vitamin C. Raw tomatoes are too. 80 la watercress. So la raw turnip. These are fair sources of Vitamin C : Fresh apples, cantaloupe, ba nanas, peaches, pineapple, raw young onions, cooked green peas, radishes, white potatoes, sweet potatoes. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS More seasickness Prevention. Followed your advice on recent cruise and found It valuable. May I suggest that for a day or two before the trip and the first day or two of the trip one should take only a lim ited quantity of fluid into the sys tem. I find this a general practice among travelers who depend on one or another remedy against seasick ness. T. W. E. Answer Thank you. I should not restrict my fluid Intake In any way If I were going on a sea voyage. 1 do not think such modification is rational. Callus. How remove hard callus from ball of foot? M. B. Answer Paint once dally with corn remedy, solution of 30 grains of sa licylic acid in one-half ounce flex ible collodion. In a week or 10 days callus or corn softens and may be wiped away. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D., 265 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Col. yeara of trying various methods, he began smoking and Inhaling small black cigars. This apotled his appe tite for cigarettes, but he became ad dicted to cigars. However, he found the latter easier to abandon and won the fight at least he hasn't smoked for two months. ; The sucessful run of MDodsworthM proved an unexpectedly pleasant windfall for Sinclair Lewis, from whose novel the play was made. A hit of the season, his royalties for the run sometimes topped 91,000 a week. He recently purchased a 9100, 000 estate in Bronxvllle, which was in turn presented to his wife, Dor othy Thompson, as a wedding anni versary gift. There Is a dark-timbered hotel on South street where I am told many writers have gone In quest of water front material. It Is within aromatic distance of the fish-markets and all day rumbles with the hurly-burly of trucks. Jack London is reputed to have roomed there at various times. Also William McFee. The Interior Is fumy with hard liquor and robust pipes In the majority. A black cat curled In sleep at a street window and the ruddy man behind the bar seemed In perpetual glower the sort a request for a glass of beer would make Itchy for the bung starter. In vagrant eave-gazlng along Mur ray Hill, during a bonfire sunset. I spied the servant quarters on top floor of J. P. Morgan's mansion. There is space for two dozen tenants. The horticultural urge is pronounced, for at each window Is a plant. It is legendary on Murray Hill that few servants ever leave the Morgan em ploy. A Sunday editorial: "The Darwin Ian theory that man descended from monkey again flares into furious re volt." I know. Now the monkeys are objecting. (Copyright, 1034, McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) Communications You're Welcome. To the Editor: Words are Inadequate to express our appreciation of the splendid as sistance of the Medford Mall Tribune In promoting and publicizing our recent Fourth of July celebration. We wish to particularly acknowledge our thanks to Mr. Grey for his in terest and cooperation. We should like to have you to ex tend to the people of your community through the columns of your paper. our most alncere thanks for their participation In our big day. Should the occasion ever present itself, we shall be glad to reciprocate. Do not hesitate to call upon us. Yours very truly, FOURTH OF JULY COMMITTEE. Grants Paxa American Legion. M. A. Martin. Chairman. Orants, Pass, Ore., July 9. 1934. R0SENBL00M, RAMAGE TO BATTLE TONIGHT LOS ANGELES. July 10. (AP) Nfnxle Roscnbloom, the world's light heavyweight champion from New York and Lec Ramage, San Diego boxer, meet here at the Olympic to night to settle If possible the ques tion of superiority left undecided In their ten-round bout two weeks ago. Each expected to seale in this af ternoon at around 185 pounds. Bathing Girls Play in Fair Spray or r. i Ml With rare delight for themselves and great amusement for vlsltora to the new World's Fair, thirty feminine swimming stars who take part In the free Lagoon theater pro gram, dared the spray and pressure of the giant Lagoon fountain dur ing a recent rehearsal of their bal LONDON (UP) Despite frequent attempts to suppress It, the slave trade still Is flourishing In Arabia and Abyssinia, according to the Anti Slavery and Aborigines Protection so ciety. The activity of these slavers is causing the society much concern, and every little fragment of evidence of their activities eagerly Is welcomed by them, In the hope of obtaining sufficient evidence to lay before the government. A vivid account of slave -trappers' activities was given to the society by Joseph Kessek a Frenchman, who penetrated their haunts In Arabia and Abyssinia. He actually witnessed an attempt to kidnap a small girl while tending goats in a mountainous dis trict. She was enveloped in a calico cloth by slavers. Keasell Intervened and bargained with them to release the girl. The trappers declared they could obtain 40 pounds for the girl from an Arab dealer, who probably would re-6ell her for twice that amount. However, Keasell eventually obtained the girl's release for the sum of 30 pounds. SALEM, July 10. (p) Curry coun ty today turned in $2,181 to the state treasurer In payment of Its second quarter state taxes, leaving only Jef ferson county In arrears. City Warrants Called for Payment. Notice la hereby given that there are funds on hand in the General Fund of the City of Medford for the redemption of Warrants Nos. 2649 to 2884 inc. Interest on the above war rants will cease after July 12, 1034. Dated this 10th day of July, 1034. GUS H. SAMUELS. City Treasurer. Summons. In the circuit Court of the State of Oregon In and for Jackson County. E. H. Mann and Louise M. Mann, husband and wife. Plaintiffs, vs. Charles Burgess and Mary Burgess, husband and wife; the unknown heirs at law of Charlea Burgess ind Mary Burgess, If either be dead; also all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest In the real estate described in the Complaint and Amended Complaint herein. Defendants. To each, every and all of the above named Defendants: In the name of the State of Ore gon, you and each of you are hereby required to appear and answer the Amended Complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the last day of four weeks from the date of the first publication of thla Summons, and it you fail so to appear and answer said Amended Complaint, for want thereof, the plaintiffs will apply co tne court ior me reuer de manded In their Amended Complaint, succinctly stated as follows, to-wlt: Tnat a decree be entered adjudicat ing any and all right, title, estate, lien or claim which you or any of you have or claim to have in. to. or upon the real property situated in Jackson County, Oregon, described as follows, to-wlt: AU of Lot Number Twelve (12) in Block Number Two (2) in Roan oke Addition to the Citv of Med ford, as shown on the official plat mereor, now or record. And declaring ar y and all such claims to te null and void: and decreeing that the said plaintiffs are the own ers In fee simple or said premises, and of the whole thereof, free and clear of any and all right, title, ejtat. nen or interest of said defendants, or any of them, and that each and! an or the aeienaanta herein, and each and all persons claiming, or to claim by, through or under them, or any of mem, oe rorever enjoined, restrained and barred from asserting, attempt ing to establlf-h, or claiming any right, title, ette. Hen or interest in or to said property, or any portion thereof, and that plaintiffs title to said premise be forever quieted and set at rot. The date of the order for publics tion of this Summon' is Julv in J 1934. The time prescribed for pub lication of this summons Is once each week for four consecutive weeks. Th i 1 date of the first publication of thi: Summons Is July 10. 19.14 O. H. BENOTSON. I Attorney for Plaintiff I Ufl Ksst Mln fftreft, I Medford, Oregon. TRADE IN SLAVES HARD 10 ABOLISH let stunt. The fountain throws 68, 000 gallons of water a minute, high Into the air, and a strong wind breaks It Into a drenching apray. Inside the fountain the pressure of the falling water la bo great that even the best swimmers avoid a plunge therein. (CuDtinueo trom Page One) was that of a nationally known writer, who said, among other things: "Borah nullifies his opposition to parts of the new deal by praise of other parts." Most observers here be lieved Borah's attack was probably the strongest that haa been made, for that very same reason. One of the leading newspaper eritlca of the new deal has gone abroad for a vacation with Bernard Baruch, The best non-partisan plolltlca agency here has made a check of congressional election possibilities in November. It concluded the Demo crats would lose about 65 seats In the house If the economic situation con tinues at its present level. Use Mall Tribune want ads. Bia PINES '4 Story Scries No. 2. i: LL-EXPENET01II Tour the high pwki ; pense Low Prices ipiin avail- i i i iV'v MirV ' til A tb!e this year! These Populir Priced Tours Introduce you to all that w best in iht Canadian Rockits - millionaire scenery it mm-in-the-strect prices! Diamond peaks and opil lakes, spcctteulai mountain motor roads. You sray tt far-famed Banff, lovely Lake Louise and Swiss-like Emerald Lake. Stop over it ny of these famous resorts and have the benefit of tpteiat ndund ratts tot one week or more. nere are tne tcnn tnar you II never forget You should take one! A Cttsrfil Oiji Hoteti, mtili, toomi I dij ttch C Clarissa Days Hnwii. mnii, toomi 1 rlif Binff Sf-nnji Hotel, I etch Chung ukt Lou i it, EmcnltJ Lake Chilft 126 ffiilei ffiotonnjt. including Moraine Like id Trartifrrt ia BinffSrrinn Howl. Emerald like Ctiiltt, 3 at Chun UkeLouiu. 126milr motor, ing, including Moriin Like nd Trinifet. iCI AU Ertrw Ten htfn at Bjnft FitUAM Pick truly great Ideas In Travel Bargiias originated in the era of deflated pocketbooks, and are being continued bcu $f feftUr fro topping ii tne tnrte ramous mom too receive the beat of everything, and all ihre resorts are atnkingly different. Banff is palatial, itkt t tVf men n tkt utrid Lake Louise ii exquintely lovely, quiet with a rare continental chirm Emerald Lake is like a Swiss village, and risitort nay in the central Chalet or individual cabins, coiy and com fort able. lfe.L?f Flight o Time (Med for a and Jackson Count; History from the Files ol The Mall Tribune ot ill and 10 lean aso.) TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 10, 1024. (It was Thursday) Bryan's brother la named for presi dent on the Democratic ticket, and Oregon leaders wall: "What a mesa I" Juvenile crime wave keeps the po lice busy. Youth steals his own wheel. Pred Spuhn, local youth, Is named assistant crew coach at University of Washington. The "pumice stretch of road" on. the Crater lake road near the Georga Mansfield place has been paved, "end. Ing the dusty stretch on the face of the earth." Special aale of auto dusters at the M. M. store. Pluhrer's Bakery makes a "hit with, their French doughnuts, and the de mand exceeds the supply." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 10, 1014. (It was Friday) A thunder shower hits the Central Point district. Orchardlsts start war on codling moths. Speed cop to be stationed on West Main to stop speeding. "Fines fall to deter the malefactors," City At torney Noff reports. "War Is Hell" a beautiful hand colored film of the war of the fu ture" at the Star: "In the Grasp of Fate" at the It: "Adventures of Knth lyn No. 11" at the Isls: and "Deal Them Square" at the Page. U. S. TENNIS QUEENS EMBARK FOR HOME LONDON, July 10. (P) Still in possession of the Wlghtman trophy, women's international tennis prize, Carolin Babcock, Sarah Palfrey and Josephine Crulckshank today left London for Southampton to board the Leviathan, en route home. Helen Hull Jacobs, captain of the team which successfully defended the cup against England at Wimbledon last month, Is suffering from a sore throat and will take a later boat. Florida's retail sales tax of threo cents on each gallon of gasoline nef.s the state road department about $6, 000,000 annually. There Is a Premium on Gold WE BUY OLD GOLD Do not sell your old gold to stran gers. We hold a V S. Government licence to buy. Jewelers MEDFORD. ORB LUMBER CO. Phone 1 and LAKE LOUIE C Wsedtrfil Diri HmcIi, v meili, toomt Idmeich Banff Spring! Hotel, Chueiu Like Lou lie, F.mc;iid Like Chil. 126 milei motorine., intludint Mornne Like ind Trinifert All Lrunn i) 0U nil fsrt km put city tt tiihtr ft ) And ihete'l ibiolutel. Himtf rue .bour ihrie roan. You hm iraple rime ro enior the anrmlled fcalitin for pUr. Swim in wirm wlphar or clnr ftcih wiitr pool. PUT rrnmi on iplcndid courts. Fish in well, nocked nt Hike. Dinot to enchintine ' muiit is ipiciOMi billroomi Golf it! BinfJ for the usual sominil ereea feet. Dftuled information ind Ittmture It ou t office) W H Dcicon, Gcnrnl Ajcm Pim r I Dept.. 626 S W BroidwM, Am. Bmk Bide.. Telephone BR 0657, Ponlind. Vfl I MA M W All-Ex. H ft N u pr H