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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1935)
PAGE STX JfFDFORD MATL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON". TUESDAY. MARCH 12. 1934. Medford Mail Tribune 'Fvarvtutt in Souttitrn OrtfOtl Riadi thi Mail TrlbuM'' Dally tiwpt tuturday I'ublMwl tr MKHKOKD PHINTINU CO. J5 Ul-Sfl V frir si. Hi.liKUT tt HL'HL, Editor An lid pendent Nepiper Entered u twnnd rlta nutter at MedfordJ, Orreon. under Aft of nutb B. gi:i8l HIPTIO.N HATtS gr M,in Adtict IJly, on j car tail), ill mnibs Dalh . orw Bfintb r... . Vf.HfnrH ..5.00 .. J.I Altaian) JarVAmlllc. Central Point, Pboenli, Talent. Gold Hill and im Hichuayi. hilly, ont far ft.0t) n.ll. .1. fnn.Kh! S.2 rtiilli. am mi) nth -80 All terms, cah tn adtanes. Official par of lha City of Medford. Official p,ef of JacktoD Couoty. MEMBKH OF THE AttHUC 1 ATKU PWM HeceUini (-'nil Leated Hire Berriee Tilt AnclatHt I'rew la ticlusliely entitled to the m for publication of all ont dlpteiua rredited to It other! credited In thle paper ind ilw to he local mwt puhll'tiM nerein. All rights for putillratJoo of ipeclal dltpatehea herein ar also reamed. MKMHKI OF UNITED HKERS IfEMHKH IF AtflHT HCUEAO Or IIK(IJLATI0N8 AdtrrtMw llepr etentat t U. C. M(m;KX8KN COMPANY Offlrei In New York. Chleain, Petrolt. tao r'raiKlfo Ui Angeles Kealtle Portland. Ye Smudge Pot lly Arthur Perry Th legislature la unabla to make up It mind, whether or not the ateclheRd ia a game fish. In theae kind of times, with humanity on edge from distress. It la relreshing to know the chosen representatives tr standing firm on vital Issues, and not indulging tn any Inconse quential tomfoolery. . Quite a few of the minor nui sances of the so-called Gentle Spring are showing up, including adver tisements for poison ivy cures, and poema. ' Fashion expert predict the early return of the "Mother Hubbard" aa a bit of feminine garb. The "Mother Hubbard" la old-fashioned, hlta no place, and conceals everything. I i:,iim:ms joubnalism. (Turner (Ore.) Tribune) The pictures taken of the stu dent of both grade and hi school have been received and many are fit to be put up In the chicken house to keep the rata away. On second thought though, they are excellent considering what the photographer hRd to work on. Washington Jolna California, and adopts a Balea Tax to lessen the property tax burden, and provide revenue for relief and other depres sion financial needs. Oregonlana who have been writing to the metropoli tan dallies, alleging the Sales Tax la not working In California, can now aim their typewriters at Wash ington. It might be that eminent surgeons adjusting upside-down atomacha, could do something for the down-lde-up legislature. Myrna Loy. the film beauty I showing at the O. Hunt magic lan tern show, causing a rush of Howlers to study the picture, revealing how to curve a bowling ball, and hold the same. Aa we understand It, to be a good communist a worker must protest violently when he hasn't a Job and go on strike the moment he get one. (Dunbar Weekly) In other words, raising hell, both coming and going. -FORECASTED 1043 DEPRESSION FRETS" (Hdllne Red Bluff News Ol Poohl the one for 10S6 looks the fiercest. An enraptured sports writer up state reports that a losing basketball team was "u neon que red. undaunted, indefntlgnble and far from dismayed by the 38 to 13 score." The other team was a measley outfit, with no heroic qualifications, but the ability to get the rnont baskets. A woman's smoking car has been put on a western train. We bet some of the Joke told in the smoker will be worth repeating. (Atlanta Con stitution) with the usual blushing. If they've heard them. The Rogue River fish controversy has broken looee anew. Letters to the editor on this terrific topic should be restricted to the length of the writer's fishing pole. Tn Utah, a year-old babe playing with an automatic revolver, acci dentally shot Itself in the leg. Evidently Mama forgot to slip on the safety catch. Eastern OreRon statesmen serving a legislative term at Salem, who earlier In the atrony lonced to re turn home to hear the rovote howl, will pet hsrk In time to hear vete ran Portland pniitirians Inciting their constituents to recall the governor Inasmuch as the state proposes to license alnt-machines. plans are being hntrhed to make plsvlnn them "more of a ttmhle.' Maybe If the niche where the player Insert the nickel was built to Innk more like a rat hole, he would feel better about It. without dimming his suckcrUm. Aak the riutomer. vli.- have thiM watch repairing dona here. Jotttuon UK JeWtiol, MEMBER. MR A Medford Is Fortunate TOR YEARS Medford has had one of the best fire depart- inrntg in the state. Those who have wondered why this is true, why year after year, this high quality of service has been constantly sustained, might have discovered the answer to their question, perhaps, in the reunion of old Medford firemen held in this city yesterday. The personal reminiscences of the old timers clearly demon strated that fire fiphtini; efficiency and pride in the service is nothing new. It goes hack to the first city fire department, Medford ever had, organized some 40 years ago. The local fire department of course, was much smaller then. There was only one horse-drawn wagon. The department had no auto truck until 1912. Rut there was then, as now, a splendid morale maintained; the boys took a pride in what they were doing, and doing it well. The out in the shortest possible time the sole objective. Former Fire Chief Eugene a century ago, brought this point out clearly when he recalled the time when a livery barn at Eighth and Riverside caught fire, and the acting mayor, regulations, ordered the chief street, so as not to block traffic. Chief Amann refused, the later taken before the mayor, the latter had the good second sense to congratulate the chief on his decisive action and high sense of duty. llEDKORD has such an outstanding fire department now, largely because of this admirable morale, this high sense of duty, which started with the first fire department and has been maintained ever sine. As the years passed by this admir able spirit grew into a tradition, and it is a tradition which every member of the present department feels and lives up to. The members of the fire department aren't paid very much, they are subject to call at any time, and often at the risk or their lives. Rut traditions of this sort, when maintained, are far more conducive to efficient service, than anything that can be measured in the coin of the realm, or the precise figures on the monthly pay check. Medford is extremely fortunate in having such an efficient fire department, as it has today, and has had for so many years, and the high standard of disinterested public service, established by the older boys, a generation ago, is the cause of its good fortune. Haste Makes Vaste 1JASTE is the deadly enemy of efficiency. Few things can ' Ka rlnno rooll in an ntrnfiunliAi.. nf iimh ucl lim.... Vet for many days now the icll-mell toward adjournment. The overwhelming desire has been to call it a day and get home. A movement has even been launched in tho lower house to declare a "slaughter week" DO-IN the waiting bills, one and all, regardless of merit so that more working days without pay, may be eliminated. Under our present legislative system, such a situation i. almost unavoidable. With hundreds and hundreds of measures introduced, with the session limited to 40 days, and legislative gatherings to once in two years, PROPER consideration to the legislation proposed is physically impossible. A final stampede for the exit, literally or figuratively, is inevitable, and let the devil take the hindmost. ALL OF which, in our humble opinion, is dead wrong. If the lecislllttvA inh ia ll-nrttl rtninrr at alt I. it. ipa.IIi WELL. If it can't be done well, it might better be abandoned. But.it is also our opinion that with a comparatively slight change in the system it could be than it is done today and has been done for many years. THIS change would merely be set hv Pjilifnl-ntn nnA ...hint, - j ---- ""ii i in vi. i. c aiw dhi 'i nicy IIUMU aiflic. have not followed, namely divide the one legislative session into two. Devote the first period to the introduction of meas ures, their preliminary consideration and study, and the map ping out of a definite legislative and administrative program. Then adjourn. Let the legislators return to their homes for two main purposes. Have time for rest and calm consideration of the various proposals; and secure a definite idea of how their constituents fed and think about the main issues in volved. In two or three weeks open the second period of the session. Make it impossible to introduce any new legislation at this session, except that of such a pressing and emergency nature that it could be sanctioned by a two-thirds vote. This would practically mean, all introduction of bills would be confined to the first period, and ALL FINAL action to the second. CL'CII a change in our judgment would not only do much to reduce the flood of freak and half baked bills, which arc offered at every session; but would give the legislature what it so sorely needs, AMPLE TIME in which to study new legislation, and only allow the passage of that portion which represents the best judgment of the legislators, and is supported by public opinion. (Continued from Page One) be worth $1000 to me to get this Job." The official thought the congress man wss offering him a $1000 bribe and reported the matter to his su periors. A hullabaloo ensued. Com merce Secretary Koper. after Invest gut ion. concluded that his subordi nate had misunderstood the congre msn. Roper then reappointed the sir field employe whom the congressman had rndnraed U Ui appointment cully wa hojLQ fire was the thing, and to put it and at the minimum loss was Amann, on the job a quarter of not familiar with fire fighting to remove the horses from the flames were extinguished and state legislature has been rushing done well, at least far better to follow the example once .i-a n .... otti.;...i.1 1000 to the congressman, ha got it without even having to offer a cigar. J100,OOOTlTPAIO Collections for taxes on Saturday and Monday approitmatfd 1100 000. areordlnit to the tai collection de partment of the sheriff's office. It was the heaviest day of the current taiparlrtg .ea-on and Included 0 -000 peyment by the Southern Pacific railroad of Its first half paymenu. The California Oregon Power com pany and the Rogue River Timber company are scheduled to make their payments before March 13. final date for tax aymenta wtthout Interest. "Factory style" workmanship in watch and Jewelry repairing at the J loaen possible price. Johnson the ' Jeaaler. Personal Health Service By William slrned letter, pertaining to personal health and byalene not to IIifih diagnosis or treatment Kill be anstrered by Dr. Brady if a stamped self-ad-drrord envelope u enclosed, letter, .hould he brief and written In Ink. OHIna lo I he large number of letter, No reply ran be made to queries not nmiam liraay, 265 Kl t amino. Beverly A COI.D AND TOXEMIA COVER A LOT OP IGNORANCE In a textbook on "Nervous and Mental Diseases" by Cha. 8. Potts. M. D., published 22 yean ago, ex- Wjipiiiiiy- posure to cold W - sfS. I and wet la eiven as a cause of multiple sclero sis. Internal locomotor ataxia, primary lateral sclerosis (spastic paraly a t a). Infantile paralysis (acute anterior poliomy elitis, progressive spinal muscular atrophy, amyotrophic Idiopathic mul tiple neuritis, optic atrophy, facial paralyMs, wryneck. Intercostal neu ralgia, sciatica, scute myelitis (in flammation of spinal cord), chronic myelitis, a paralysis agltana (shaking palsy. Parkinson's disease), Ray naud's disease, erythromelagla, and we'll continue the list some other time I'm tired of It now and I'm go ing over b6wling. . . . What I meant to say la that, thank goodness, the list of ailment as scrlbed to exposure to cold and wet la steadily diminishing as our knowl edge of pathology Increases. That condition mentioned about the middle of the list (If the printr didn't give up before he got that far), idiopathic multiple neuritis, is a humdinger. An Idiopathic disease la one without extrinsic or apparent cause. Aa a matter of plain logic we might a well say that every dis ease mentioned Is "Idiopathic." but I reckon the old timers hated to come right out and admit they didn't know the cause of the trouble. That's how It happens that exposure to cold or wet Is given as one of the causes of all these diseases of the nervous system in this 22-year-old medical book. Actually so far as our scientific knowledge goes, no ailment is caused by exposure to cold or wet, save only frostbite. There Is no danger that this statement will be controverted. for there is no experimental evidence to support the quaint notion that such exposure gives rise to disease. I am quite aware that exposure to cold or wet may be injurious to one who has. say. Raynaud's disease, or prostatic hypertrophy, or chronic ne phritis, but that fnct should not be confused with the cause of the mal ady. In his book Nutrition and Disease Dr. Edward Mellanby anys: "(1) Early cases of dlsseminat e d sclerosis (otherwise called multiple sclerosis), however se vere, have greatly Improved by NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyrc NEW YORK. March 12. E. W. Howe, the grand old man of let ters, nearlng 81, la to undergo an operation ior slightly cataract ed eyes In Balti more this spring and will then re turn to his type writer with the usual vigor. His friend, H. U Mencken, has convl need him he will actunlly r,r- nave a nuwu s,,i.,c hifl'- in the hospital. Mr. Howe's win- QJl ters are spent In where in ma milk-white suit and flowing black bow tie he lb a figure at all important events. He lunches frequently with George Ade, John T. McCutcheon and H. T. Webs ter and la often a spectator at the races. He la startlingly remindful of K. C. B. In looks. Friends and admirers are trying to persuade him to revive his Ed Howe Weekly, a frisky Journal of "information and indignation," which he published Just for the fun of It from his home In Atchison, Kansas. But he la not so certain he cares to assume the responsibilities again. He says that In octogenarian years he ha become more convinced than ever that most men talk too much. Long ago he mastered brevity In writing and he now hopes even to improve along that- line. There are likely a dozen magazines ready to accept anything he writes. But he's coy. A. C. Blumenthal continues to be the official guide for all the visit ing beauties of the Hollywood screen and11 the European stage. The llrst night in town they are almost cer tain to be down front at a first night and alterward caviar! ng at front at a ringMde table of a class supper club with "Blumey." He put his block-long Rolls, with unilormed footman, at their diJ.poal, supplies them generously with orchids and otherwise proves the most generous courtier the town has ever known. Manhattan's most congested cale block is rt(ty -Second street, between Fifth and Sixth avenues. Once a row of sombre homes, it's almost solid with gaudily decorated drinking dens. They range from the ribald tunery of leon and Eddie's to the forbidding iron-fenoed exoluMvenes of "No. 21." The curbs are lined with every va riety of automobile from imported limousine to gp tsvl. It is to this block that Tal.ulah Bankhead goes for an after-theater bite. As ell as debutantes havi-. their fitng Also trie Hey wood Broun crowd, the col legians down from New Haven ana Huey Long when he's in town. The most suspicious haven for col. lege cut-up the town ever knew was Bu.Manohy'a on West 39th street. with it red phuh. mirror ami lump srilf tt madlv Ivr um-s- Arum. Sidney Rom be; g. cow a l&oiou ccm- 5? 1 Y Miami. Brady, M.D. received onlv a few ran be .niuererl conforming to Instruction,. Address Dr. Hills, cal. proper dietetic treatment a sug gested above, and so far aa can be seen at present, remain Im proved. "(2 Old-standing case may be slightly Improved by this treat ment, but In any case have not become worse the morbid con dition generally has remained stationary." The diet Mellanby refers to Is one he describes aa a high vitamin A diet "It Includes 1 to 2 pint of milk dally, 2 eggs, mammalian liver, green vegetables and carrots, and cod-liver oil two teaspoon ful twice daily." This world famous authority does not hold that disseminated sclerosis Is caused by vitamin deficiency, but modestly suggests "that the whole problem 1 worth a larger and more prolonged Investigation from thla nu tritional angle, for even If the treat ment only prevent the advance of the disease and brings about curative changes In early Inflammatory les ions, It will be a great boon." fJI KHTIONS AND ANSWERS Hueatlng Done While You Walt Pleaae advise about the benefits or dangers of hot air or vapor baths, private cabinet and alcohol burner. Will this help to prevent winter colds, pneumonia? Can It cause T. B.? (J V. E.) Answer. I know of no benefits. Why take the risk? It Is nonsense to imagine such passive sweating pre vents any illness. Equally silly to Imagine It would caust any illness. Only danger In such baths la that of being burned. Come Come I am beginning to believe aa you do that the majority of so-called colds are not due to Infection but to this carbon monxolde gas. ( Mrs. T. S. N.) An. Not so fast. Madam. I have not begun to believe any such thing. I still think that at least nine out of 10 alleged "colds" are Infectious, and that the Important mode of infection la via conversational spray. le-Cornlng Agent Your corn cure Is by far the best. . . . (A. E. W ) Ans. It Isn't mine, but was used before I was born paint corn, callus or wart once dally for a week of 10 daya with a solution of 30 grains of salicylic acid in one-half ounce of flexible collodion. It merely softens the corn or callus or wart so it may be rubbed out. (Copyright, 1035, John F. Dille Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady shitJiil send letter direct to Dr. William Itrady. M. D., 2C5 Er Cnnilno. Beverly Bills. Cal. poser, was the painfully thin pianist. Upstairs lived Earl Carroll, acquiring his now habitual pallor, writing songs. Also Grant Clarke, the lyrist. Everything expressed the blatant French at Maxim's even to the Gabrlelles. Lucettes and Flfia who checked hats and the prop cocottes in sweeping black velvet hat. The starter was Papa Jean, a ringer for Clemenceau with the glazed cockaded hat of the red-wheeled fiacre cocher. Around, the corner on 40th atreet was and still is another French cafe, the Beaux Arts. It was here that Texas Gulnan first cried her "Hello Sucker!" salute. And where Lillian Lorraine once acted as hostess. It was, I believe, the first restau rnnt In New York to serve boiled black snails in ahells swimming with garlic sauce In the manner of l'Escar got in Paree. Then there was Murray' on West 42d street with genial Pat Kyne, a cousin of Peter B. and where la he? It introduced the revolving dance floor revived in so many estamlnets this season. Two of Murray's Pink Dream cocktails, an unholy and vis clous blend of Bacardi and colntreau, and a twirl on the terplschorean merry-go-round and everybody let down their hair and cracked Into the dizzy water. Lew Cody lived tn the bachelor i mrtments, with cream corduroy furnishings, upstairs. 8o did Duncan Mansfield, John Mason, Kyrle Bellew and Jimmy Huasey. East End avenue by the river has become a residential highway for the musical. It'a celebrity range Includes not only the operatic star. Lawrence Tlbbett, but the crooner. Rudy Val lee, and the torch chanteuse. Helen Morgan. The street has been the locale of several of Vincent Aster'a de luxe apartment house experi ment. Once slummy. it ha grown uppity. Just the other twilight I w a stiff-elbowed English butler airing a fuzzy klyoodle. A dowager voice from a brick garden called out a dandy caption for a Peter Arno cartoon: "Come, Orrnnin. don't let Elolse catch the night chtll." (Copyright, 1935, McNaught Syndi cate) Optometrists Hold Study Meeting at The Medford Hotel Members of the southern district of the Orecon Optometrle association met at Hotel Medford Sunday for their regular monthly research and study session. Dr. Robert E. Lee. chsirmsn. was in charge. Those present were Drs. Lee and J. D. Rlckerl of Medford; Orvtl Sheet and H. Herman of Grants Pass and Uod Ooble and Arthur Simmons cf Klamath Falls. Papers sre received here each month from Dr. E B. Alexander, of Duncan. Oala . national director of the aociation. to be tudied with the view of developing the profession to fit present day need. Dr. Lee pointed out that the meeting enable optometrist to analyze their work so that the public may be benefitted to a greater measure a time ad vances. He said one of the moat Interest Iru p:a-e9 of The research I t V Vv;i of -'.'vl eh:li-m to abo;3 Vzta wo.k taxrou good eeu Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS RUFUS WOODS, of Wenatchee. passed through Southern Oregon yesterday on bis way home from Washington. D. C. and paused for a few hours to chat with friends. Rufus Woods Is publisher of the Wenatchee World, one of Washing ton's outstanding newspapers. He haa been on the Job for 28 years, and hi smoothly running newspaper has reached the point where he feels that be can get up and leave, when ever the spirit move him, without much worrying. He does so rather often, he says. BACK in 1918, some 17 years ago, Mr. Woods wrote and published the first story then not much more than dream of the big dam in the Columbia river that Is now the basis of the vast Columbia project. The Spokesman -Review, of Spokane, the big newspaper of the inter mountaln country, printed his pic ture on the front page and head lined It "Munchausen 1" (Baron Munchausen, you know, Is the classic liar). WELL, Mr. Woods wasn't such a Munchausen, after all, for the Columbia River project is coming to pass. He was probably a dreamer when he wrote the story, but dream ers have to start things before doers can finish them. Rufus Woods, by the way, may have been a dreamer back in 1918, but he's been pretty much of a doer In recent years. He Is one of the moving spirits of the Washington State Columbia Basin Dam Commis sion. And he's a Republican, at that! Can you feature a Republican having a public Job In these days? ASKED about Washington, Mr. Woods says: "It'a so full of wild men It gives one the shivers to go around there. As for Roosevelt why, he's getting to be one of the leading conserva tives." HOW did Mr. Woods come to go hack East? Well, he Just took a notion one morning, snd flew back. But the story of how he got home Is even more amusing. H went down on the docks in New York one morn ing, watching a big passenger ship that was to sail for Europe that af ternoon, when a woman came along offering her big Cadillac car for sale so she could leave on the ship that day. I had one at home Just like it," Rufus says, "but at least I thought it would do no harm to ask her how much she wanted for It, and she said she'd take 9225 cash, RIGHT NOW. So I bought It and drove It away." HE NOT only drove the car away from the dock, but drove It clear back to the Coast, coming by the southern route and stopping en route wherever he happened to like it. Lucky cuss! THAT reminds this writer of a story Bill Hanley tells on him self. He got up one morning feeling the urge to investigate the cattle market in San Francisco, and pulled out that day. From San Francisco he went on to Denver, and from Denver his yearning for more knowledge about cattle prices led him to Omaha, then to Chicago and from Chicago to New York. At hi hotel one evening, about dinner time, he happened to read an advertisement of a passenger ship leaving at midnight. So he finished his dinner, put his extra collar and shirt In his little black bag and caught the steamer for Europe. It was four or five months before ht got back to the home ranch In the Harney valley. Some fellows have all the luck. don't they? E IN MARTIN SUIT In federal court at Portland yes terday in the damage suit of Henri etta B. Martin against Blanche Vlr cln. a operator of radio station KMED. for S35 000 alleged damage and 94500 attorney's fee. arguments for the defense to a demurrer to the amended complain were made by At torney van Reames, and Mrs. Martin, through counsel, was granted 10 days in which to file a brftef. In a previous legal move the de fense demurrer to the complaint was granted and Mrs. Martin granted the right to file an amended complaint The suit is based upon the claim of Mrs. Martin that Mrs Virgin, as manager of the radio station, can celled a speaking date last December, causing her "huimlllatlon and "pub lic condemnation." At Sacred Heart Leroy Bucking ham of 330 South Central is a pati ent st the Sacred Heart hospital. hr irr undergone an emeriren-T append: e:r.. ope-T:on there Murdnv after ruvri. He is do:ryr very n.ceiy. ac cordc to atieadaCa. 'Invited To Probe ' . ; t vr' J Assistant Secretary Henry l Rooaevelt ia one of several navy de partment officials who will be asked by Senator Nye to appear before the senate munitions Investigating com mittee. Nye and Senator Clark have described the navy as "a party to" collusive practices in connection with shipyards. (Associated Pres. Photo) tional bankers; you who have been the president's advisers over a period of two years." He sAid General Johnson was cast In the role of "man Friday" to Ber nard Baruch. "The money changers whom the priest of pr'ests drove out of the Temnle of Jerusalem. ' said Father Coughlin, "... have marshalled their forces behind the leadership of a chocolate soldier for the purpose of driving a priest out of public af fairs." Father Ccuphlln's reply was made In a 45-minute radio speech over the pflmc network Johnson used at New York last week to call htm and Senator Huey Long "two mad pled pipers' appealing to "the lunatic fringe of the people." After hearing the speech in Wash- Ingtrn. Johnson replied that It was , all "pious flubdub." He said Father I Coughlin and Senator Long were "economic shysters" and promised an early reply to 'the priest's attack. Father Coughlin expanded his re buttal to take in Baruch. the "war bugs, the Morgans, the Kuhn-Loebs and the rest of that wrecking crew of internationalists whose God Is gold and whose emblem Is the red seal of exploitation." He declared he would "oppose these men until my dying days." Baruch. he said, was the "un crowned prince of Wall street," the "unofficial acting president of the United States." HUEY LONG LEADS AS IDEAL SWEETHEART OF NEW YORK. March 1 2 . ( AP ) Senator Huey Long is the "Ideal sweetheart" of exactly S8 of 300 New York mannequins, the Professional Models League of America announced today. Nothing very exciting has happen ed recently in professional model cir cle. Since the mannequins' battle last winter with the society girls they charged were Invading their profes sion, things have been extremely dull. Therefore, Gertrude L. Mayer, pres ident of the league, asked 300 man nequins this question: "Who In the public eye today, whether married or single, would you select a your ideal sweetheart?" 8ome of the reasons given by those choosing Senator Long: "He Is so good-natured:" "he is very charit able." and "he is a he-man and a fighter and he has such nice curly locks." Runner-up to Senator Long was Johnny Melsmuller. of "Tarzan ' screen fame. He received 24 votes. Clark Oable got six. leave for ManMllle Mr. and Mrs LesUe VanDoren of this city left yes terday for Maryavile. Cal , where they will make their home. Mr. Van Doren, who has been active in Med ford for the past four years tn archi tectural work, has accepted a position with the Dlmond Match Co.. oper ators of an extensive system of mill and lumber yards throughout Cli forni. They have many friends in Medford who rere sorry to lrn of their leaving. Mrs. VanDoren wa a member of the local chapter of P E O.. and Mr. VAnDoren a member of EUs lodce a::4 Active club For ri-Jtt alonadvilt or .-JitM-ndy on Fcv' Hcny jndTar. lion't iw'.oot acold cwjthl H msy Nm ser tout. Oet FOLEY'S today Tains no othrr. Money-hack mrvitM. At all druJt ME "A ffc''t-o -M-rv.fh pr-Tr. PRIEST DENOUNCES GENERAL JOHNSON IN RADiOLADDRESS (Contlnuea from pae one ) Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 Years Ago). ' TEN YEARS AfiO TODAY .March Vi. 19:5. (It was Thursday ) Department of commerce reports "5.000.000 people traveling from point to point in autos. the ye.v around." Tomorrow will be "Friday the 13th Woody Archer, high school boy. 1 robbed of 911 by bandits, who the police think entered the home of Dr. Jud Rlckert a few minute before. Archer had saved the money for a trip to Salem to the state basketball tournament. Medford high will meet Franklin J high of Portland, in the opening game of the state basketball tourns ment. Both are rated the two best teams in the state, but -me or the other will be eliminated the first game. "This will make It easier for Salem high," sport writers up-state agree. Freezing weather prevails, with predictions of rain the end of the week. "Picture hats" to be worn by wom en this spring, fashion decrees. TWENTY YEARS AfiO TODAY March VI. 11)1.1. It was Friday.) Police seek buggy drivers "who race their horses and yell on North River side, half the night." Spring opening at Mann's store starts, with record attendance. British troopf. start advance on Belgian front; Germans and Russians stage sanguinary fray on Polish front. The recently organised Hiking and Outing club plans to visit the Opp mine at Jacksonville Sunday, weather permitting. Freight train traffic Increases on the Southern Pacific. The Colege Women's club me;ts with Mr. E. E. Kelly. Sollnsy Leaves E. C. (Al) Solinsky, former superintendent of Crater Lake national park, who has been in Med ford Tor the last several days, left Inst night by train for Portland, where he will appear at trial March 25. He was Indicted on charges of embezzlement. New Navy Blue Hose. MaJson Jeanne, Holly Theater Bldg. TIME TO PLAN YOUR NEW HOME! MONEY AVAILABLE Bia p i N lOiNitcLs lime err 1 " s LBR. CO. NASH HOTEL 2045 University Berkeley, Calif. A STRICTLY modern estab lishment w i t b a charming home en vironment appeal ing to the tourist or residential guest. Centrally and conveniently located. Reasonable rates by the day or terra. The ideal home for yourself and family Pacific Gi-PThound lepot . . . all the benefits of a country estate in town. Tftrt, ndiAij, geJf, dWiftt, Qo 9ts to Mfurt tOuftd tlMp. E fit mtU t notjrSt dmily prl Lirg owtvd room tfc bttt. $.oo snd t: W Ideal loca tion erlookiAtj Go'den Gite, cemfU to 11 BfT rtiet Writs Ui7 fot dttcnpttvt booklet I ! 1 jf'"! t"-'t f ' Ur I tmlcois