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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 15, 1935)
PXGE FOUIt MEDFORD JfAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREf.0. MONDAY. 'APRTL 15, 1335. Medford Mail Tribune "(nmiw M SwttMrfl OraH ua Uu Mill Trlauna'' Pillr Kieapl aaturda, Ptiblhnad by MEDKIJBI) PEiNTINU C9- it-sr-is n. eu it J KOBEUT tt. BUHL, Bailor All Inafpaodent Nmpwr bund ai umd clsa ulur St Madfort. Orecos, sndar i Mara s. gUHBI SIPHON HATE Br Mill to as Dallf, on' l"f ;? Dally, ill BMntha 1-' Dally, on montfl -80 Br Carrier In Aiiianea MfifoH, Asfalana, JatUonrllJa, OMral Point. Pboanli. Tslact. OoM Bill ae HtfMan. Dtllj, ona rear Dallr. m ojonuie Dally, om noctb 10 All terms, eaeb to adianes. omaei war of mt cit, of Medioed, Official paper of Jaeiaoo County. HXMBEH Of THE ASSOCIATED PKIUH Kecelrint Full UaaeS Hill Berrtet TIM Aiaoelated Preu la ueluil'ely entitled to tba um for publication of all om dlspaulMt eradltad to It or othererfie credited lb wilt paper sad alw to tba local neva publlabad serein. Ail rlfbU for publication of apadil dlapalebes herein ara alw reeened. MEMBER Of UNITED PBEBB HEMBEB Of AUDIT BDBEAO OP CIRCULATIONS Adrerthlns Hepreeenuttree U. C. MOIiENStN 4 COMPANT Offleee In Ne Yirl, Cblraio. Detroit, Bas eraneU lie Anfelee Seattle Portland. MEMBER. Ota Ye Smudge Pot By Arlhiir Perry t inurMr house of ConKress has pssaed a. bill limiting war proms to three per cent. It l thought that the measure will function about like the Volstead Act, lim ited the use of corkscrews during the Prohibition era. A tiller of the Trail section re ports that In a 3-cornered race between a rail fence, himself, snd a mad bull last week, he and the rail fence were victorious. The government has hoisted the price of silver to .110 per ounce. This will not retard mine magicians, who reach In their pistol pockets, and pull out a rock, well lined with all the precious metals, and good algna of oil. a i Mae West, the film quoon defends her own acting, on the grounds It kids" sin, and, furthermore she Is opposed to "crudity and nuaity.' She fears that the parlor stories, of which she Is the core and center, will "force her to retire." Her fears are groundless. She will survive as hspplly as the Ford auto, and the Scotchmen, who not so many years ago were In a elmllar fix and, as jet, hsve not retired. a . Local dealers make It plain that there Is no obligation when you go to thslr showroom. They want you to came as their guests, feel free to ask all the questions you care to, and enjoy yourself 10 per cent. (Cherokee, Iowa, Herald). Blg-heart-dness de hue and rampant. e e Spring houseclesnlng Is all ths rage, and Older atria are cleaning and burning. a As, tor the good old days when we used to be annoyed by Senator Heflln. (Albany, N. Y., Evening Newel. And, the esteemed Portland Journal, nailed the hide of that eminent Republican rascal, Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, to the barn door of Democracy, every day In the week, and twice on Sunday. a a Revision of the Oregon parole laws Is sought. They should be fixed so the first 100 paroles, to a crim inal, are the hardest. ... A movement Is now underway. throughout the nation, for public ownership of banks, as well as the bank corners. The Depsrtment of Agriculture will combat "tick fever." The worst form of "tick fever" Is the so celled Eftsy-PnymriU-Plnn. The gas slla have a neat way. of combatting ths "tirk fever." If a customer runs a fever, and want tick, they cure him. by not giving him "tick." Harvard scientists have discovered wsys snd means to convey thought from the brain, to white psper. by electricity. Instead of the fingers The substance of the thoughts. could not he made out, any more than If they had been transferred through the flnprrn The age limit for Young Demo erata Is listed at 40 years A can dldate for the presidency of the atat organisation, could out of It, bv proving he had survived three nstlonsl administrations of his party, and appmxlmalely M cslen dar years. A Democrat should be listed as a Young Democrat, untl tjld enough to reach for an Old Age Pension. a PI UN OPPOKTl MTV Wsnted Want a man to work on my farm. I don't give dancing lea ons. 1 hsve no piano. I can't serve plsnk stesk three times a day. do give three square meals, a real bed. fair wages. If any man who knows a cow from a talking ma chine, can hear an alarm clock, get Up at 6 o'clock, want a Job. I will agree not to treat him like one of the family, but a darn sight better. Apply at the Steve VYIggln place. (Rome. Colo., Times). Be correctly corseted In an Artist Mode by EtheJwyo B. HoUmaan. NR. A, Editorial Correspondence SACRAMENTO, Calif., April 13.-In the coffee shop of the Hotel Senator this noon ran head-on into Rodney Keating of Portland (the very intellipent affable personable represen tative of certain large Pacific coast oil interests!. In January we met Rodney during the session of the state legislature at Salem, and were interested to learn his activities are now extended to include the great state of California. Rod ney confirmed an impression we had already formed, that in fundamentals the state legislatures of Oregon and California are as alike as two peas in a pod. There are the same lobbies, the. same cliques and factions, the same types, the same talky-talk and waste of time, and in both sessions the best work is being done by the youngsters bright, progressive, aggressive chaps, who are riding rough-shod over red tape and traditions in a determination to get something done. Having in our recent wanderings lost, contact with the M. T., or any news in Oregon, we were glad to secure from Rodney, a bundle of recent Oregonians, from a perusal of which we con cluded all was reasonably quiet, along the Rogue and Wil lamette. esse While fundamentally the two legislatures are very much alike, superficially there are some interesting differences. In the California assembly which corresponds to the Oregon house, they have a bunch of little boys, who in true professional style act as pages, messenger boys, which tends to promote stabil ity, the members themselves, not having to do as much footwork us is the case in Salem. A far more important and interesting time-saver, is the electric voting system, which the California assembly had installed this year, at a cost of $28,000. Instead of voting in a long drawn out roll call, which for merly consumed 15 or 20 minutes, the roll call is now accom plished in as many seconds. At both sides of the speaker's desk nre rosters of the membership, in clear letters white on black background, and beside each mime are glass jewels, red and blue, the former a negative, the latter an affirmative vote. At the call for a vote from the chair, all the member has to do is press the Yes or No button on his desk. Not only does this register his vote so all mav see, but at the same time, it punches a paper list, of the membership to an adding machine, so at the turn of the crank the total vote is tabulated, and the result flashes out in another illuminated sign on the wall just above and neat, expeditious and to a newcomer rather thrilling. California is a populous essentially urban state, Oregon is a thinlv settled essentially rural these differences of course. The Sacramento exhibit is much inure unified. More carnations in tailor made button holes, more white collars and derby hats, while, the Santa Harbara delega tion might have just breezed in from a house party. A ten gallon hat and a cattle ranch outfit would never at tract attention in the Salem senate, but the one exhibit in the senate here, stands out like the proverbial wart on a pickle. The wearer is one Senator Keougli, who impressed us as being one of the most picturesque figures in the legislature. He rolls his own and sticks his nondescript, necktie inside his shirt, as soon as it emerges from his collar, of having one at all. He took a leading port in the of ex-Mayor Porter of L. A. as a member of the new state porsonncl board, and his comments upon the time serving poli tician who refused to drink a toast in Tnris and also refused to welcome Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, when he visited the southern California metropolis, were pungent and to the point. Several senators had declared they did not know ex-Mayor Porter personally but believed he would, or would not be, acceptable to the people of the state as the case might ba. Senator Keough cut into this routine patter with the clear cut statement, he was apparently the only member of the body unfortunate enough to know Mayor Porter personally, and if anyone wished to know the type of gazabo he was all they had to do was to contact him, outside, where there were no rules against the use of profanity. "If you accept this SPOUT" said he, you will always regret it, and you better put a padlock on your watches or words to that But Porter was confirmed by a majority of one after a bard fight. This clearly demonstrated the effectiveness of Governor Merriam's machine ably led by Senator Swing, former congress man, and the administration's spokesman in the upper house. Senator Swing somehow reminded us of Senator St raver of Oregon, in that he isn't much to look at, hut stands head and shoulders above his colleagues in knowledge of what it's all about, and in effective leadership. Swing, looks as though lie had just jumped out of bed, in answer to a fire alarm, without time to brush his hair or put his necktie on straight. Hut just try to get something through the senate over his opposition! In this Porter confirmation he had a woefully weak case, with both local newspapers opposing such action, and no enthusiasm for the man, even in the Merriam ranks, but by sheer shrewdness in generalship and quickness in debate, he kept the administra tion forces intact, and make monkeys out of the opposition. Surprised to find no Townscnd talk here and no Townscn 1 faction at work. The administration's emphatic OK of the plan in its resolution to Washington, has apparently eliminated the issue entirely. Instead of Townscnd it's all Kpic. followers of Upton Sinclair, who himself opposes the Townscnd old age pen sion plan, and concentrates upon his elimination of poverty by "production for use." In both houses the Kpic leaders in pressed us as being very capable men, particularly .tones, in til." assembly, who is young, clean cut, and fat- removed in appear ance and technique from the long-haired radical type. The only effective opposition to Merriam conies from this Kpic group, but they suffered defeat today when the governor's income tax plan was passed in the lower house (the I'.pies want ed a stiffer tax or none at alO, and those in the know here predict the governor will get the best of them pretty much all down the line. Two veins ago no one would have predicted a conservative stuffed shirt type of reactionary like Merriam, would ever come out in the state of California for a state income tax one-third the rate of the federal income tax. Hut there it is. (If course Sinclair can take the credit for it, but probably won't. a a Oregon has it nil over California like a tent when it comes to liquor control. The last legislature here made a mess of the problem, and the present one promises to do likewise. The large liquor interests here are too strong. As a. result, alcoholically speaking, all here is confusion worse confounded, and promises to get steadily worse. Practically speaking there is no state 'iquor regulation nt all. Yet considering quality, hard liquor is cheaper in Oregon, than here, and the abuses so noticeable here are, up home, conspicuous by their absence. In fact the more we travel the more we are convinced Oregon has the hot liquor control system in the country. SAN KRAWISCO. rnlif., April (IVIh.vo, in tntnMO H-r r-r r but it's cold ! bave sprnt many days timd nielitM in San Krnncisoo the past years, but never before in an atrno spbore like tliis. Kst of tb Mississippi it iniebt be ealled irnod football weather, but if Hobby Cr.iyson tried a cut baek down at Pain Alto tonight he would be eaiiirht in the iee. "A frost i feared" sny the early inornin? paper-. (Morning papers here eome off the press about o' m0 p.m. the niht before. If it isn't a freeze that puts ieb'les on the sea lions whisker n Golden ;..te park we don't knm our oen t iiirade. No doubt coming here dircctlj from the de&cit u partly to nt the recording desk, attached behind the speaker's desk. Very state. The legislatures reflect as if he were rather ashamed fight against the continuation effect. blame. From shorts (on someone else) to racoon coats in 48 hours is something of a shock. We are wondering if they were taking sun baths in Palm Springs today. Can't quite picture such climatic extremes within the boundaries of one state. The night before leaving Palm Springs we were dinner guests of the Deep Wells Guest ranch, as were Mr. and Mrs. John Chaffee who own that new and enterprising weekly the Palm Springs "Limelight." A very fine chamber music concert was given ou the edge of the swimming pool, under the clear starlight, and no one seemed to feel the cold but the artist who manipula ed the violin cello wrapped one foot in a red flannel blanket! Incidentally the proprietors of the Deep Wells Guest ranch, which is one of the swankiest and most popular dude ranch resorts in southern California, are. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bennett, who we are proud to say and were surprised to learn are regular subscribers to the Mail Tribune. Frank Bennett is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bennett, well known former residents of Medford, and still owners of property th ere. They now live in Salem. Frank Bennett was a pal and schoolmate of Floyd Hart, the well known box factory tycoon, to whom he wished to be remembered. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. 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 answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 263 El Carol no, Beverly Hills, Cat. FAREWELL TO Certified milk Is expensive to pro- , due and therefore coots more than ordinary milk. The very highest grade of ordin ary milk avail able falls short of the require ments met by certified milk. That Is why I have always rec ommended cert ified milk in preference to so called Grade A pasteurized for all who can af ford It, and es pecially for feeding a baby, a grow ing child or an Invalid. Too many persons are still con fused about the meaning of pas teurized. They Imagine that Im proves the quality, wholesomeness or purity of the milk. What this term means la merely that the milk ha been parboiled, to kill disease germs In It. In many communities I the sanitary regulations require that ordinary milk be so par-boiled be fore It Is sold, as a precaution against the sprend of disease throng. i milk. That la the sole purpose of paateurlzatlon, and It la a nasty Yankee trick to Imply that pasteur isation has any other purpose. When milk is par-boiled (pasteur ized) Its vitamin C la In great measure destroyed. Therefore the In fant or child fed mainly or ex clusively on pasteurized milk must receive a daily ration of fresh fruit or vegetable Juice to prevent scurvy. Canned tomato Juice Is as good as orange Juice for this purpose, pro vided the tomato has been canned by the vacuum process, as used in factories, Home canned tomato or other fruit does not contain enough vitamin C. In my opinion it Is better to feed a baby or child pure raw milk II this la available, but In order to guard against the transmission or any disease in the milk, to bring each day's supply to a boil for one minuto only and then let it cool. This short duration of heating is ample for kilting any disease germs yet it does not destroy so much ot the vitamin C ns does the 20 to 30 minutes of par-boiling (heating to 14a degrees F.) of the pasteurization process. Besides, If you attend to thts one-minute boiling of the milk yourself you are certain it Is done. If you rely on the label "Pasteur ized" you put your trust In the human factor. That factor failed In Montreal a few years ago, and a great epidemic of typhoid fever oc curred there, the typhoid germs be NEW YORK DAY BY DAY Bv O. O. Mclntvre NEW YORK, April 15 Diary: Out and a gentleman In a high hat. slightly tiddly at 10 a. m.. was dir ecting traffic with absurd gravity In 50th street. Then home and as warming letters A ever T receiv ed from Stark Young, the au thor, and Rufus Steele, the gaz etteer. And a pippin from Lois 1-ong. Word this day the Ben All Hg- a"tm 1'nve a no son. James Le, and ao to my typing and tinkering with a magarlne proof. Afterward to Baron Wrangle's spread at Pou quet'a. a crush of celebrities, and walked with my wife through the reMrblfthed r&a In Central Park. After dinner Mt with Dick Ber lin awhile and he off to a party and I strayed cro.s 43d street to a Minnky burlesque, sitting in the front row and buying a soda pop and song book. To a late po' dowdy, gorglne a hatful of spag hetti, and driving Arthur Samuels and Vivian home. Wslter Connoi.y. the actor, has become one of the most sought after-luncheon and after-dinner speakers of the day Hi motif is brevity, confininc himself to one hilarious story. Walter Kelly is an other whfwe forensics are in high demand. Those who know say his oense of timing Is unexce led. He has the IrU-k of catching the mind off guard and pausing while the point suddenly explode. Winnie .fheehan. in trying to get sway from it all. fashioned a hide awav in the appropriately named Midden Valley, 0 mile from Holly wood Here in the deep '.ansied wild wood he cleaned away a sylvan mm Brady, M.D. CERTIFIED MILK ing distributed In milk prettily lab elled "Pasteurized." Some one In the pasteurizing plant allowed the milk to go through unpasteurized. Personally, I like my milk raw. And still hot from the cow If pos sible. But uncooked anyway. X like to know that the cows which give the milk are tuberculin tested, or course I demand certified milk when I have no personal knowledge of the source of the milk, for certified milk is raw and from tuberculin tested cows. Moreover certified milk is handled from cow to consumer only by persons whose health is constantly watched by- experts. Yet the world grow poorer. We are falling back toward a lower standard of living. Certified milk Is a little too nearly perfect for our lowering IdealB. And the fine tra ditions which surrounded It In earlier days, seem to be giving way to commercial exploitation. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS rninegranate Can you give me the carbohydrate content of pomegranate and tell me whether It is beneficial for one who has diabetes? (C. L. K.) Answer Bulletin 28, Agriculture Department, which you can buy for 10 cents from Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. gives the composition and caloric value of all foodB. Edible part of pomegranate, says this authoritative analysis, con tains 19 per cent of carbohydrate, being equivalent to grapea in that respect. One having diabetes should take only such quantity of carbo hydrates as his ph'ysiclan describes. Bitter Kindly tell me what solution to use on blankets and pads to break the baby of chewing them. (Mrs. M. D, R.) Answer Steep some quassia chips In a quart of water and dip edges of the blankets In the water and let dry. Tills gives a very bitter taste and Is harmless. Enema' ot an Infusion made by steeping an ounce of quassia chips in pint ol water, Is an old and effective rem edy for pin worms. Breathe Eay and Relax Please repeat the interesting in structions you gave for complete relaxation ... (J. H. J.) Answer Send 10 cent and stump ed envelope bearing your address for booklet "The Art of Easy Breath ing." (Copyright, 1935, John P. Dille Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady hod Id send letter direct to Di. William Brady, M. D., 265 VJ Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. retreat against a background ot python-limbed trees, natural foot trails and chuckling waterfalls. He banned the telephone completely and two days after the completion ot his rambling hacienda, H took fire and nearly burned down. Because of no phone the delay in summoning smoke eaters was great. But Shee han remains adamant. And as an alternative installed his own fire department with hook and ladder and everything. Tersonal nomination for the sprlghtllest of the new flctioneers Rirhsrd Macaulay. who tells his stories by personal correspondence. H. G. Weils had a rousing time on his recent Junket to write up the Hew Deal for an American per iodical. He was on the go 18 hours daily during his 19 day stag. But ths one man he wanted to see. Gen eral Hugh Johnson, could not ar rive from Oklahoma in time for a session. They swapped bang-up tele grams. Wells, in his spcnklng ss well ss while writing. Is a dramatic genius. As he writes he csn change himself Into the florid Chltterlow. the exuberant Ponderevo or the absurd Mr. Polly. He became a most prolific shoe-buver during his stay. 12 pairs to be exact This extrava gance because he could not resist the o il world hsbtt of leaving them outside his hotel rcom door upon retiring. The only place he mas not recognized was when he left his ho tel one midnight for a sandwicn and dropped In. by chance at Reu ben s. t Buddy De Slv la holding the long distance record for collabora tion. And a pretty penny it cost, too. He bought a song composed by Walter Samuels after hearing It ever the phone from New York. De Sylva needed It as a theme song for a movie on the brink of pro duction. So he arranged for three one hour phone sessions with an amplifier. And while Samuels played snd made sucested alterations in the melody. De syra contrived the j lyrics. Bspatelles: Hank Wiles is ofr a.ta.n for a trip around tiie w r.a vis Siberia . . , Ie dwell put sclera'. sma'ker on A.-ucar h' .-use it means tuftr and la one of the nine word In hi 6panub Tocab ulary . . , Samuel Blythe's maga zine copy la without capitals or punctuation and Jammed up like this! . . . Pepgy Joyce often goes to three and four parties a night, go ing home to change (rock for each . . . Al Smith Is a sucker for de tective story periodicals ... As who Isn't? . . . They are betting Oliver Hardy and Patsy Kelly will be a new pair of movie knockout . . . Clay Morgan Is a breakfast onion souper when abroad . . . Al Jolaon brought East the heaviest tan since Rudolph Prlml'a . . . Mary Lewis haa the town's moat contagious laugh. He was one of thone expansive grins with a derby down to his outstanding eara and a fat cigar. Olven a, crepe beard he would have gone on as Joe Welch. Pushing back hi chair from the next cafeteria table, he stood and beamed across: "I got to hustle back to my store. We had a customer yesterday." Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS INTERESTING item: At an election held on Sunday, the free city of Danzig declines by a substantial majority to create a nazl dictatorship. That Is to say, the free- city of Danzig proposes to REMAIN FREE. Wise Danzig I ANOTHER Interesting Item: General Erich Ludendorff de clines to accept the title of field marshal offered to him by the Ger man government, explaining that his present title of field commander suite htm quite well. He possibly recalls the saying that "the bigger they are, the harder they fail." That old saying has been proved In Europe many, many times. ANOTHER Item of GREAT Inter est: President Roosevelt, late Monday, signs the much-discussed $4,800,000,000 work-relief bill, wh.cn is now a law of the land. Most of us will Join in hoping that the President and Mr. Hopkins, who will be his chief assistant In spending the money, keep clearly In mind - that work that lnt useful is WASTED, and might as well not be done. MANT people profess to believe that it Is better for unem ployed persons to work at ANY THING, whether useful or not, than not to work at all. This writer is inclined to doubt that. Take yourself, for example. Sup pose you were Idle and were put to work doing something you knew to be useless; merely done to give you something to keep you out ot mischief, Would work of that sort add any thing to your self-respect? THERE are so many useful things that might be done with five billion dollars building here In America, for Instance, the finest system of highways ever built since the world began. Highways, unfortunately, will get less than one-sixth of the total of thts vast work-relief appropriation. (Contimv. !.om Page One) torials Moley wtote In his magazine. The use of them was not authorised. Moley is supposed to be inter ested In the deferred market Idea, out not necessarily in the freed program as a whole I psrtlcularly amendment of the securities act). There Js nothing in the story going around that Al Smith and Hoover are planning anything pol itical. Their recent activities may be attributed solely to the fact that they are employed by the same in surance company, at least partial l for the purposes of advertising. Any one who knows those two men will real(7e how difficult it is for them to shake hands, even to advertise their company in the papers. The Roosevelt slogan for next year ha? already been coined by an at tahe at Democratic headqua-cers. It lr "Save the country from rrd- icul'sm." STIRRED By CONFAB WASHINGTON. April 15 Ti'.k of a possible compromise between Pree.dent Roosevelt and advocates of Immediate ch payment of the bonus was stirred today hy the visit of Sena tor Harr:on tD, M-ss ) at the White House yesterday. Harrison is chairma. of tne sen s:e fmaroe oommit'ee. which is ex pelted to conduct br.ef hearine on tvwi lec'.'isrion as soon a it rm p'eA oons.de.-auon ot pns to ei tend NRA. Flight 'o Time (Mrdford and Jatkwn County History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 Years Ao). TEN YEARS AGO 10DAV. April 15, m (It wss Wednesday) Bridge over Rogue River at Gold Hill to be constructed this summer. Prank and King tent show, to return here soon, and expect to stay all summer. The company has been wintering In southern California. New high school bond election set for May 15. Citizens exclwd and aroused. New delivery service of local post office launched. Crater Lake highway 1 now open to Union Creek. High school typists to compete In state contests at Corvallis. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY. April IS. 191 .1 (It was Thursday) C. M. Kidd returns from a trip to Battle Creek, Mich., where he has been for seven weeks. He gained SO pounds in weight, and many ot Mr. Kidd's friends did not recognize him at first glance. The ball gsme at Tclo Sunday between the team at that place and Table Rock team, contrary to WOODS STICKS ROUTE WITH ROSS a Surprisingly game despite a wrenched. ankle received In the third round, Henry Woods, Yakima. Wash., negro light welterweight stayed the full route of 12 rounds with Barney Ross In Seattle, Wash. Rose took the decision. Ross (left) Is ahown sparring cautiously as he blocks Woods' right. (Associated Press Photol ROOSEVELT RETURNS TO DESK (I.ULI.LSMfcU ujiui UU,J)IIU.I ,111, S)J.II.,I. WSIISI President and Mrs. Roosevelt as they left Union station In Wash ington, D. C, to return to the White House. The President appeared tanned and rested after hit flthlno vacation. (Associated Press Photo) PLEAD FOR $500,000 IN DRIVE I ;-v -a, i 1 fL f -1 f sA-Xw A campsign to raise $500,000 in New York City for the Salvati"n Arm) Brought Alfred E. Sm.th (left) and Herber: Hoover too-ther, with broad smiles ana (vinaa,!,,, for each other They fo got the.r old political differences in pleading for support fo, the army. (Associ ated Press Phow expectations, was a fizzle, our team falling to put up anything that 1 could be called, baaeoalL i Table Rock Tablets). Tennis players of the city have organized for the summer campaign. City experiences the hottest day of the year, with the mercury at 65 degree at one o'clock thie aft ernoon. The city authorities are looking for a law somewhere In the Oregon statutes, providing a penalty for parents who are negligent in the care of children, when it comes to risking their lives. Chief Hlttson la desirous of applying the law to a number of Medford fathers and mothers living on residence streets who allow their offsprings to play in the streets of evenings, In the path of vehicles, while they sit on the front porch and view the pro ceedings, . 1 Oregon Weather. Unsettled; showers tonight and Tuesday : moderate temperature; fresh west wind off the coast. 4 WINDOW GLASS We sell window glass and will replace your broken windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cab inet Works. . BROPHY'S. JEWELERS, specialize in designing and modernizing you old Jewelry. 4 Home portraits of family groups and children at Special Prices, Shangle Studio. Phone 1308. " ' jr. r ' . s ft - -' ' 'I oaji J" 4 5a