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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1934)
PXGE FOTJT? STEDrOUC TRTBTJNE, KEDFORD. OREGON, TUESDAY. AUGUST 7, 193?. Medford Mail Tribune 'wm III seathars Oraeea Ru tl Kill rrlMM'' Dall Ctcept aaurdu Pnhllirwd bf UEurouD fmniuki co. IJ.JM N. ru 8L Paras tt KOBSUT W. UUUU tVlltot All lodapendeDt Hawrpaper tatared u smqoo elsaa matter it Mslrord. Orrioa, omlel Act Hares , 1SH. auusiKirnoN bath U Mill in AO.IK. Dallr, OM laar Dallj, in eonu Dally, eoe moot Bi Carrier Id soianee MeUoril, asglaa, JirUoortlli, Caotral Potot, Pboeoli, Talent. Gold BUI ano ob unman. Dallj. ana laar ' J Dallr, ill Bootlil Dallr. ooa Boot. . eo AU tensa, cart in ailwaa. finidtl paper M tba Cm er aladfont. Orridal paper of Jaciaoo Comity. UEMRER Of TUB ASSOCIATED PRE8 Beeelflnt foil Uaaed Wire genlea Tba AiaoclalM Pitaa If escliuHeli anUUaa to the usa for pubUeatlos of all nam dlipatebsa oradltad to It or olnenrlM credited to thla paper and alao to tba local orn published oerelo. All rltbta for publleatloo of ipeelal dtapateboa larelo are alao reiened. ME.NIBBU Of UNITED HKKHS MEMBEB Of AUDIT BIIBBAD or C1UCUUTI0NB Adterttilnt KepreaeoUtlTOa U. C. MOIIENBEN COMPANT Offleal Id Nee Tori. Chleajo. Detroit, Ban Francisco boa Arwelee Seattle Portland. MEMBER -3a Ye Smudge By Arthur Ferry. Pot An unsung achievement of Pteal dent Roosevelt, la hl anility to take a vacation without pitching hay and wearing a 10-gal. hat (ala Coolldge) or trying to ride a horaa (ala Hoover). Another algn of returning prosperity la the return of the automotive de formity, known aa a "bug." They once more clutter up the highway and byways, with a tendency to run Into avervUilng but each other. Len Carpenter, who waa never even mentioned for postmaster, ate lunch with the Chief Executive In Portland Friday. A couple of Klamath reservation Indiana visited the city Sunday. They did not yell and whoop like a couple of white men visiting on tne reserve tlon. Lightning started another forest fire last week. The top of a waohboller and a copper ooll waa found approxi mately 40 rda from where the ngnr ring hit. a a "WHAT DOES MODERN HUMOR LACK?" (Caption, Atlantlo Monthly) Most of all. It seems to lack humor. 8. Morris, the trl-distrlct tiller, re ports a good crop of potatoes. This refutea the pioneer claim potatoes can not be raised In this valley unless they are planted, Harry rrenta sat down on a nail at tn skating rink a few nights aince. Now he has a pair of pants contain ing a bay window. (Pendleton East Oregonlan) Very neatly put, a -a a One of the Older Oirls report she has canned 1S qta. of peachea, and killed the same amount of flics. a a rtEAm.Y F.mciFNCv. (Press lilapatrhrs) Portland, Ore., Aug. S (UP) Mra. Franklin D. Rooaevelt was tousled by a mob of misdirected peraona who closed In about her In the court yard of the Hotel Portland as she waited to be driven to the hnr. bor to greet the president today. Borne women seised at her coat and hat and she waa Jousted about quite roughly be fore she was res cued by secret service men and pollcs and dis patched to the harbor In an other car. Portland. Ore Aug. 3. ( AP) A tall young man learned today that Mra. Franklin D. Roosevelt was well miarded while In Portland. "What do you wan t," Patrolman Burmester of the Portland police, as signed to the Job of protecting Mrs. Roosevelt, Inquired ihortly. "I want to see my mother," the young man said But Patrolman Burmester made him wait until he was Identified by ecret servlee ngents. The young man was James Hoosevrlt. Cata of the Oranue street sector have started fighting like Rcpubll cans and Democrats. a Saturday. October o. ha been eet aside aa 'National Recognition Day for 8undny B.'hool Teachers" There are a.OOO.000 Sunday school teachers, according to a circular letter, and their obscurity Is not Justified by their potential voting strength, tl Is hoped this Information will cause a ruah of candidates to Sunday school for plowing of a field they have over. looked thus fsr. a e The son of the founder of Sears, Roebuck Co., has gone to work In Seattle, to learn the business "from the ground up," and "climb the lad der of aucceas by his own efforts.' There la no doubt, after the manner of rich men's sons, he will go tip the ladder like a skyrocket cornea down The first day he waa supposed to go to work, he waa unable to report, be cause of hay-frver. The foreman of the department conalderately held the place open at the foot of the ladder until he recovers. In real life this la not done. WINDOW GLAUS re sell w'ndow f'.aai and will replace your broken windows reasonably. Trovrbrldso Cao met Work. You Have a Date, Thurs. p. m. NO section of the etate Lb more vitally interested in the CCC camps than Southern Oregon. The establishment of these camps has not only stimulated local business, brought needed improvements in our forests and parks; but it has given us the opportunity of aiding in the worth-while task ''of producing, healthier and therefore better citizens. Also no section of the state is more vitally interested in the national park service. As the principal gateway of Crater Lake, Medford 'a stake in this national attraction, is a large one; as is its interest in the development and administration of national parka throughout this section of the coast. e TpHIS coming Thursday night, August 9th, Director Robert Fechner of the Civilian Conservation Corps, will be the guest of the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce, at a local dinner, to which the publio is cordially invited. Director A. B. Cammerer of the National Park Service will also be an honored guest. Colonel C. Q. Thomson, former superintendent of Crater Lake, and well known here, will come up from Yosemite, where he is now stationed, to attend. Mr. C. J. Buck of Portland, regional U. S. forester, will also be here. a a IT seems rather superfluous to add, that the people of Medford and Jackson county should turn out in large numbers to give such distinguished guests, a cordial and enthusiastic welcome. Provisions for the crowd, however, must be made in advance. Those who intend to go but make no reservations, may find an S. R. 0. sign when they arrive, which would be disappointing to them, and the J. C. C. G, also. So if you haven't made your reservation, do so. Ladies are invited. All will be welcome. Let's show the national heads of the CCC and the park service that we are interested in preciate their interest in us. F. D. R. Gives the West Its Due PRESIDENT- ROOSEVELT'S recent boost for the Pacific northwest, as a land of opportunity, where settlers on marginal land, facing disaster, in the stricken middlewest, might well move, and thus enjoy a happier and more abundant life, has not been pleasantly received in the east. At least one of these large eastern newspapers, has interpret ed this invitation as another effort at regimentation, and main tains that federal agents are to call on the hard working far mers, order them to abandon their homes, pack up their belong ings, and settle down somewhere west of the Rocky mountains, or stew in their own juice, as the saying goes. OF course such an interpretation is entirely absurd. As the president has stated, those farmers on arid marginal lands, who for many years have been in the red, and wish to stay in the red, will not be interfered perfect freedom of choice. But called their attention to better tunities elsewhere. If they wish to and CAN tunities, well and good; if they don't and CAN'T well and good also. It is entirely a matter for them as individuals to docide. a. TO one who has just completed an eastern trip, this resent ment, noftinat PraaManf P.nnaivlf siicrfraarinn im oaev tn understand. All along the north larly in New York, there is not only a strong prejudice against the Pacific coast, there is, with the possible exception of southern California, an abysmal ignorance concerning it. Not only the states of Oregon Idaho, Utah, Arizona and Wyoming, are merely strange names in the typical eastern mind. They know such places exist, but they have no idea of their exact location, and care less. More over there is a firm conviction, that while these peculiar por tions of the unshaven wilderness, get large federal appropria tions, they pay little or nothing into the treasury at Washington. The wild west gets the plums, and the eastern states, New York, New Jersey, Msssachusetts and Pennsylvania pay for them, and pay through the nose. That is a fixed, eastern complex. 0 SO while the president's gesture on behalf of the Pacific north west was appreciated by the people of this part of the coun try, and is perhaps the greatest advertisement the western coast has ever received, an advertisement that is bound to pay divi dends in the years to come, it will certainly make no votes for him, east of the Alleghanies. As the president remarked, the West has a stake in the East, and the East has a stake in the West. This is a great and a united country. But not one person in one hundred, along the Atlantic seaboard, BELIEVES it. To them East is East and West is West; and never the twain slmll meet. The pride themselves upon being cosmopolite, but actunlly, their provincialism is almost incredible. When in moments of relaxation and repose, their feet arc inclined to wander, they turn to the East, as inevitably as the faithful Mussulman turns his eyes to Mecca. The large foreign populations there all have their family roots abroad. The typ ical Easterner considers only one pilgrimage a real vacation, i.e. an extended jaunt in Europe. ease TPIIIS is one reason thougn by no means the only one why President Roosevelt's popularity in the East is waning. The president's viewpoint is NATIONAL. He is interested in no one class, or no one district; he is interested in the welfare of all the people, and ALL the country. It is not as some claim, that he favors this western country. He mcrrlv gives this part of the country, its just due, a For this fact the people of not only now but in the years continued growth and increased advantages and natural resources justify. Duck hunters at a Long 'aland, N. T., club are experimenting in breeding wild ducka for sport. More than 20.000 whltea left Mem phis. Trim., from IS7S to 1878 be cause, of yellow fever. them and their work; and ap by the large city newspapers with. They are to be given the government will, and has, agricultural and economic oppor - take advantage of such oppor a Atlantic seaboard, and particu and Washington, but those of thing few presidents have done. Oregon should be grateful, for to come, it should mean that well being, which the natural of this section of the country, One of the first negro millionaires In the world ws R. R. Church, boss of Beale street, Memphis. a During extremely hot weather In New York city, city officials uoted an lucres In mortality. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease diagnosis or treatment wUI be answered by Dr. Brady It a stamped aelf-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should b brief and written In Ink. Owing to tlie large number of letters received only a rew can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instruction. Address Dr. 'William Brady, 203-KI Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. SOME WOMEN ARE EASY TO LOOK AT AND SOME FOODS ARE EASY TO EAT flomvhow, beauty contest winner sugg'.st corn syrup to me. Tne carbohydrate such a bread, sugar, syrup, 7a cakes, plea, pud dings, candy, tee cream, sweets In general, crack era, cookies, break fast cereals, fountain bever ages, beer, wine are all pretty nourishing stulf and, oh, so easy to eat or drink, whether you are hungry or not. AU of these are notoriously lacking in food minerals and In vitamins. Beauty contest winners appear to lack qualities that make a woman a good wife. All the Items mentioned are made from foods that In their original nat ural state contained vitamins or min erals or both, but In the process of manufacture, refinement, purifica tion, pasteurization, sterilization, fu migation, bleaching, preservation, concentration or cooking these es sential factors are partly or entirely removed or destroyed. Por efficiency and well being the body demands not only a minimum of calories from protein, fat and car bohydrate dally but alao a minimum of minerals and vitamins. The ordi nary diet of civilized man, consisting largely of refined, manufactured or purified foods, falls to supply the minimum of minerals and vitamins required. In the instinctive effort to get theM essentials most of us eat too much of the food we have. The ce piles up as fat. And still we are hungry, for the demand has not been met. The easiest kind of food to eat Is carbohydrate. Candy, loe cream, crackers, bread, cakes, pie puddings, hot fudge sauce these things are so easy to eat even when you are not particularly hungry or when you have Just had a full meal of regular vic tuals or when someone Invites you to have some refreshment. Thus the nutritional deficiency Is a kind of vicious circle. You' crave food because you are not properly nourished. The easiest and most available and perhaps the most tempting and palatable things to eat are these very items, and they hap pen to be the poorest in mineral and vitamin content. Our national per capita consump tion of sugar is enormous, and it Is Increasing year by year. So Is obesity NEW YORK DAY KY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Aug. 7. Lower Broad way, below 14th street, looks espec ially down-at-heel when night comes But a few places are open, notably the garishly lit clothing stores and a forlorn all night lunch here and there. Men dicants stand In the fugitive shadows. Cats prowl. In some blocks, vacant rooms are tn the majority. J growing shoddier In their empti- Ti.e one bright beacon In the gloom is the old Broad way-Central, with spacious gay 90 lobby. Its cli entele suggests Omaha or those ven erable Inns fringing stock-yards of Chicago. Wide Stetsons. String ties. Broadway at night ends In the sky- rockety glare of 14th street and does not pick up Its glitter until City Hall Despite Us utter desolation, it's sin gularly free from hold-ups and fleet ing condor-like ladles who coyly turn a corner and look back expectantly. Orace church, brooding In the moonlight, filters a touch of solemn Ity. It only needs sadly fluting frogs in the neighborhood to complete a picture of rural loneliness. Now and then a wandering policeman raps a lamp post with his nlRht stick. Not for alarm, but merely for the com pany of echo. Lucius Beehe reports a new brass rail down the center of a big New York hotel's stairway for "sllde mtnded drunks." Remindful that there is a guy -minded lady who can not resist bannisters wherever she goes. Once she purged a stately wed ding of Ua decorum by stepping out of the bridal march to ehoot-the- chutes. The statuesque Lillian Rub- cell declared she could only resist bannister sliding by super-erfort. Even Uoyd George Is a bannister slider. Bruno LeMlng has become America' most widely traveled columnist. Just now he Is on a swing through the Orient on way back to Italy which has become a temporary base. Bruno Iesstng la the literary pseudonym of Rudolph Block, whose epic magarlne stories of the Ghetto are established classics for the quarter. Por years he was also Idea man for comic strip artists and much of the hoopla they execute today were his sugtrtvit Ions He collects canes as a hobby, loves the sidewalk cafes and is one of the better raconteurs. I heard the other day that Mark I Twain, for a few days In latter years. gave serious consideration to an ex cursion Into dally columning. He wa3 to turn out 4M wonts a dav on any subject. His wife spiked his guns Slie p'eaded th.it for one of his years it was too much of a (.rind. Another lime Twain turned d.n MV000 s year for a aeekly newspaper article fVy -"' Lib IS Brady, M.D. and diabetes on the Increase. Prob ably many other aliments which are not so definitely associated with ex cessive consumption of carbohydrate food are Increasing. For the immediate treatment of obesity or overslee it Is Important to see that th diet shall provide the correct quota of minerals and vita mins. In such a diet It Is possible to use concentrates which will bring the proportions of these essentials well up to or a bit above the natural or normal level. Indeed It Is fair to say that a diet which is not thus scientifically planned Is a menace to health .and thousands of persons who have dieted unwisely or under in competent direction have found that whether they lost weight or not, their health has suffered in consequence of the bad nutrition. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pineapple. Kindly tell If raw pineapple eaten often has any 111 effect? Has It any effect on reducing? Miss 8. J. Answer Pineapple, fresh or canned. Is a wholesome, healthful food and has no HI effect of sny kind. Of course it has food value. It is silly to Imagine that certain foods, such as lemons, pickles, etc., reduce. Best Ant-Acid. Some time ago you recommended something as an ant-acld for stom ach acidity. I believe It was chalk, but I have lost the clipping ... Mrs. D. J. W. Answer Yes, prepared chalk, also called calcium carbonate, Is preferable to soda or other alkalis. Ten grains will neutralize excessive acidity for an hour or more, Molasses. Can you tell me what molasses does not contain sulphur dioxide? Mrs. M. b; Answer Only molasses made tn the old fashioned way, by boiling the sugar down In open kettles. Here and there such molasses is still mar keted. All so-called molasses made In the modern vacuum process con tains sulphur dioxide, which has been added In the. bleaching of the sugar. Crude pure sugar not being Illy white enough for the Wiseacre Yankee pub lic. I cannot mention here brands of molasses that contain no sulphur ous acid. (Copyright, 1934, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letters direct to Dr. VY 1 111am Brady, M. D., 263 El Ca mlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. I know but one columnist of worth who quit at his peak quit because of the exactments of the dally twirl. This was the late Charles R. Barnes, who flourished In the middle-west 30 years ago. At the same time, he quit fiction Just aa the better maga zines were clamoring for his stuff. Writing became suddenly anathema. So much so he gave his typewriter away and tn his last years refused even to write letters. They were talking at the Cafe La fayette the other evening about locales for fiction. New York, Lon don and Paris are stand-bys. New Orleans and San Francisco lead the second division and during the past few years Hollywood becomes a se rious contender. Indeed, there have been three distinct fiction successes with Hollywood as a background. Oddly enough, the city with likely more Intrigue, color and cosmopoli tan personalities than any other has never been successfully exploited among better fiction sellers. That Is, Washington. D. C. Hawaii is Just beginning to be flctlonlzed. The mellow Lafayette cafe, inci dentally, has been the occasional haunt of almost every litterateur of parts. Edith Wharton liked it best of New York restaurants. Edwin Arlington Robinson still goes there on Increasingly frequent nights he dines out. David Graham Phillips gave quiet dinners there. Even such moderns as P. Scott Fitzgerald and Sinclair Lewis are now and then patrons. The marble topped tables In the coffee room still feature domi noes and cublto. And brandy glasses are the widest flanged In town. While gaalng Into innocuous deseu- tude with the vauclty of a dog scratching a flea. I am wondering how many paragrsphers suggested the Crosby twins be called Blng Blng. (Copyright, 1934. McNaught Syndl cats. Inc.) Ye Poet's Cornei IN AFTFR YEARS I. In years to come, when you are old. As time Is prone to stray. Your thoughts and memory yearns Por the youth of yesterday. II. The o'd mill stream and swimming hole, In your mind's ere appear, And all the pranks that youth will play Are vlsloned to you clear. HI. The winding path, midst shady trees. Where countless times you strolled. Seem but the turning of p. vie In after years, when you are old. 1 W. L. HUFFMAN. WASHINGTON. Aug. 7. (API Army orders Issued by the war de partment today Included Ue follow ing: Colonel William H. Patterson, now on duty at Oregon State col lege. Corvallls. assigned to the "over sea recruiting drpot. Port S'.ocum. New York. KNIT TACKING Gl GVKS St H jb Mrd Bro. C. K. Rcse for E.Dtr.44. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS. HAVE you noticed the new type of road th atat highway commis sion ha been building at yerloua point In Oregon during the pst year and a halt base of hesvy stona, practically boulders, from one to three feet In thickness, with th surfacing material laid on topf HTma so-called 'nW type of high 1 way," R. H. Baldock. stst high way engineer, aald to thla writer th other day. "goea right back to the practice of the old Roman road bulldera. "Those old Roman road were the moat permanent ever built sine th world began. Some of them are still In use. With proper caxe, this new type of road we're building tn Oregon to day will be In use centuries hsnce." THAT I to say. with all our modern engineering knowledge, we've gone back 18 or 20 centuries for a type of road to fit our modern neds. There's a provsrb, you know, that there's no new thing under th sun. It Isn't far from th truth. FOR that matter, the Europe of to day la going right back to Roman political history. Rome started a a republic, then drifted by slow stages Into a dictator- ship In which one man'a will waa absolute. Dictatorships, of on sort and another, are spreading rapidly over Europe. Remember, please, that the down fall of Rome began not long, aa the historians reckon time, after th rlae of the dictatorship principle. A-A THEY aay that history repeats ltelf. la the rlae of dtctatorahln tha ha. glnnlng of the downfall of Europe? BUT let' get away from European politics, whose recent trenda are certainly disgusting to good Ameri cana, and back to the subject of roads. Thla heavy-base highway of which Mr. Baldock apeaks haa been made feasible by the new types of surfacing, such aa oil macadam, which hold the surface In place and prevent the big rock In the base from working up. We built some of these boulder base roads back In the early days of Ore gon and they were TERRIBIJB. The surface wore off, or blew away, and the bouldera worked up to the top. If you ever drove over one of these sections, you won't want to hear any more, for your memories of th Jolt ings you got will be painful In the extreme. IT WAS In Oregon, Incidentally, A under the direction of Mr. Baldock, then engineer In charge of mainte nance of atate highways, that the oil macadam highway was first developed aa a practical and economical road. It waa Oregon, also, that developed the system of financing blghwaya by means of automobile license fees and gasoline taxes, thua providing that those who use the roads shall build and maintain them an eminently fair system. Now Oregon Is pioneering In the construction of these heavy-base, per manent highways, using It own In ventlon of the oil macadam surface to make them feasible. Oregon, you aee, ha been a real highway pioneer. a HERE'S something else that will in tereat you: The Oregon state highway commis sion, looking into th future and shaping Its policies according to what tt conceives the needs of the future to be, la planning Its main hlghwaya to carry traffic at a speed of from SO to 100 mllee an hour. Width of right-of-way and surface curves, grades and all other factors are being adjusted slowly, of course because such changes cost money; but nevertheless steadily to this plsn. BEFORE criticising, remember that atreamllnlng la expected to in crease tremendously the apeed of cars, aa well as their fuel economy. En gineers are already talking of speeds of 100 to 135 miles an hour, with fuel mileage aa high aa 40 mllea to the gallon. It la overcoming wind resistance at high speed that burns up fuel and holds down speed, and with wind resistance reduced by proper stream lining, much greater speed and econ omy will be possible. Before such speeds, together with th increased travel resulting from greater economy, will be safely pos sible, we must have roads to handle them. Our state highway commission ts planning to give us that kind of roads by the time we really need them. a Communications tvhy Porcone the Came Commla.lon? To the Editor: In "Comment on Day'a Newa," Aug. 3. tlie state came commlMlcn la cred llcd or charged with opening the alldfoal season October loth, thereby causing financial losM e outturn Oregon, ate. "Th state gam commission ougnv to reconsider It action . . ." aay Mr. Jenkln. In bewlllng th lost dollara. Fortunately th migratory bird act i. uimlnlBterwl bv th U. 0. Biolog ical Survey, and they give more con sideration to conservation of wildfowl than to dollar-marked raving. Th Biological Survey fixed th open sea son datea aft thoroughly Investigat ing all angles 01 tne wuaiowi Pu lems. Without uch action duck and gees were doomed. Brownaboro, Or. To th Editor: I rtad with much Interest your editorial In last night' paper en titled "Cutting th Property Tax." Now I ehould like tha privilege to present a small part of th other side of th question. Th big proposition with us prop erty owner 1 that our returns on our property la so low that we are positively unable to pay the taxes aa they are today: we are faced by the economic necessity of being forced to cut our overhead expenses and the taxes are the major part of them. Somebody will have to suffer for thst; we might Just as well face the propo- altlon baldly that we do not want a large part of what constitutes our taxea; you leav th proposition of what the property owner wants in the way of what we are paying taxea for up to the property owners themselves. and we would aoon aolv that prob lem. Or Just give the property owner the opportunity of governing the finan cial returns on the property and they would pay all the taxes that the pub lic would ask for. The property owner la faced with a proposition of having hla property confiscated for taxea and this meas ure I only one item of his fight to retain hla Interest. Another Item of Interest 1 that, for the person who Is trying to get himself out of the clasa of the poverty stricken by the accumulation of prop erty, the tax burden on such efforts Is so heavy that It becoiuoa prac tically an Impossible proposition, when you consider that taxes tske from a third to over all that a prop erty will produce In the way of reve nue, then why own any of It at ail. Wfl would be far better off to apend an w make a we make It and let tha public feed us when we make nothing. Thla la only part of th argument for tax reduction, but enough for the present. Thank you, GEO. IVERSON. Antelope ANTELOPE, Aug. 7. (Spl.) Cecil Culbertson and daughter are spending a few days at Crescent City. Mr. and Mrs. Rual Pinch and daughter of Pomona, Cal., and Mt. and Mrs. Leo Cannon of Medford Tls- lted Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Rlggs re cently. a. W. Baize, rather of Mra. B. K Rlggs, returned from Portland August 4, where he had gone for a medical examination. Antelope Literary held a picnic at Rancher! a August 5. Present were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hatlett, Mr. and Mrs: Luther Day and daughters, Mrs. Helen Culbertson, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Owens and children, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Da vies. Mr. and Mra. Wil fred DaWes, Mr. and Mrs. Cal Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Holman and chil dren, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace McDowell and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Rlggs and children. Mrs. Dorothy Llndsey and daughter, Clinton Char ley, Mr. and Mra. John Oreb, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Predenbery of Butt Palls. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stanley and son and George McClaln. Antelope Literary club will meet the evening of August 10. There will be an election of officers. Mr. and Mrs. Cal flpenoer hare a new Chevrolet. B&rtlett picking Is almost over In the Antelope district and a few start ed picking Boscs August 6. Persist PERSIST. Aug. 7. (Spl.) News has been received hen that E. E. Ash of Trail, who has been very 111 and Is receiving treatment at tha Commun ity hospital, is gradually improving. Harvey P. Morman of the Mountain Lumber company, made a business trip to Medford Monday. Mrs. Roy Proctor Is spending a few daya this week with Mrs. Ervln Hutch ison while Mr. Hutchison Is In the hills ssltlng cattle. Vlck Peterson and boys, Dave and Orval, also Mildred Young, Ervln Hutchison and Carl Childreth, are camping at Huckleberry lake for a few days. George Schermerhom and Charlie Ovelman were dinner guests at the Matthews cabin Sunday. Irma Ah and Arlee Ragnda'e made a brief call at the Matthews cabin August a. Mra. Jess Oarber called on Dorothy Ash last Saturday morning. Sadie Barrow of the Butler Butte lookout station on the Dmpqua side, spent a few days with the L. W. Ash's last week. She returned to the sta tion August 1. Mr. and Mrs. Ernn Hutchison were in Medford Prlday. attending to busi ness matters. Mrs. Miller and son Jim accompanied them to town. Oregon Weather. Pair tonight and Wednesday: warmer interior; gentle changeable winds offshore. done I The High Cost Of Stomach Trouble Don't pay 13 50 to 15 00 for relief from stomsch pains. Indigestion. Try Dr. Emlt's Adla Tablet 3 weoka treatment only II. Relief or your money back. Heath'a Drug Store. MEDFORD IRON WORKS 11J5 North Central Foundry and Machine Shop Gears. Sprockets, rullers, Holata Car Wheels. aw Mill and Mining Machinery Flight o Time (Medrord and Jackson County History front th Files ol ihe Hall Irtbune of nil and 10 lean Ago.) TEN YEARS AOO TODAY August T, 1924. (It waa Friday.) i "LeFolletlam" reported taking root In Willamette valley, with "Portland demagogues urging stat control of publte utilities." Nash hotel lobby undergoes ertea. slv repairs. Council refuses plea to Install hot water tank at free auto camp. Pro. ponenta sk "what will the tourist think." A peppery ciunciiman re. torta: "I don t care what the tour, lata think." Oeorffa Leonard, eon of Mr. ms Miss Marl Stewart of Tacoma, Wast$ are wed toaay in raris, Tnce. Ann Luther, movie actresa (who re members her) break down on wlu ness stand when "reputation Is bat. tared." Newly arrived fruit broker from California discovers "close relation, ship between Medfoid gang and Washington, D. 0., corruptlonlsts." TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August T, 1914. (It waa Saturday.) French troops Invade Alsace-Lor raine; British forces land In -ranee: battle of Lelg still rages, with Bel. glana put -g up atubborn resistance; Portugal Joins th allies. Council orders all dogs to ha mua- zled. Judge Oay to hear an assault and battery case arising out of a neigh borhood argument over the kaiser and the war. ft & Dunbar and Leonard Carpenter mo tor to Crescent City. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Mann returned Friday from a six weeks visit and business trip In St. Paul, Chicago and other eastern cltlea. Despite the fact that th eaat and middle west wa extremely hot they had a delightful trip but are glad to get back to Medford. (Continued from Page one) tlcularly Justloe) have not follower suit. Several administration orators cut short their summer speaking plans because they felt that they were not getting anywhere, not accomplishing anyhlng. Very much on the q. t., a few efficiency experts have been prying through certain government depart ments here. Bureau chiefs have been told In several known instances to out personnel now so the Jobs that are left can last longer. It looks like the beginning of an economy move, which certainly does not fit in with the government spending program. (Copyright, 1934, by Paul Mallon.) O. O. Irey of Lodl, Cal., has tamed a quail. It will ride around on his shoulder and chirp when hungry. The quail has usually been considered un tamable. Notice to Creditors. Notice la hereby given that the undersigned has by order of the County Court or the State of Oregon for Jackson County been duly ap pointed administrator of the Estate of Edward W. Prey, deceased, and he qualified. " All persona holding claims against said estate are hereby notified and required to present the same, duly verified, as required by law. to me st Lake Creek, Oregon, within six months from the date hereof. Dated August 7, 1934. OTTO E. PREY, Administrator. W. E. PHIPPS, Attorney for said Estate. NEW EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Clear Vu Style Special "Read With Pleasure" Tru-Site Bifocals For near and far vision V Dr. G. Gaston Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Main and Riverside OppnMte Hubbard Bros, part, niilr.. Tel. 28II-R I N&ys I 13m WsaV is. . " --