Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 20, 1935, Page 4, Image 4

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    PA'GE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRTBTJSrE. MEDFORD. OREGON. MONDAY, MAY 20, 1935
Medford Mail Tribune
"EnrrsM to Soutntrn Crtfloa
Rud Hit Mail Trlbunt''
Daily Eseapf Sttufday
mnroRD pbistinu co.
t-sr-t n. n 8l nam it
RUBEKT W. BCHL, Editor
Ao Independent Nmpf
loured u wecod elua mttur it Uedord.
ncoa. onto Act Mareo t. 18 TB.
ail.afRIPTIOii KATES
Mill to Aaa
Dally, on pttr 11.00
Dtilf, tli months -'
n.ll nru mintta -00
JaeksooriUi, Central Point, PboeoU. Tilnm. UoM
Bill and on winmn.
Dtjij, ob '52.
Dtllr, Hi months
Datlj, rw oooti) 60
All Unw. saab Id adTinea.
Offlelai wt or tb CiU of Medford.
Officii! PPr of Jieuoo County-
UEMBEt. Of THE ASSOCIATED PMMS
lbs Aaaodaled Preu la Mrtuiil entUUd te
tot OH for pUDlieauon m an oww?
VsdJUd U tt oUwvlse credited la lol W
ad ilao to 'Jm local n ouolUhcd txrtlo.
All rtcftta for pobllcatloo of pdl dlapatcbaa
ijtrdB v alao rwened.
MEM HE H OF LMTEDPttKM
HEilBEH OK AUDI! BLHEAO
Of ClBTULAllONB
AdTtrtUIni Keftfnesutlro
tL C, MOUENBfcN COM KAMI
Ome IB Nm Chlruo. Detroit. Bis
VtajtetoM) U tUattla Portland.
MEMBEK
ON
Hapur
Ye Smudge Pot
lly Arlhur I'frry
Reports state bunco-artlsta are
operating In the rural Mcttoni of
the atate, "with aome eucceea.
Tlmea are changing, and It la no
longer necessary to go to Portland,
to bet a atranger he can't open hla
own lock, up an alley.
.
Tha CJovernor expresses a desire
to "make bricks fly." on rebuilding
tha nre-swept atate capltol build
ing. He la annoyed by the legal
and political hell-raising attendant
upon the wall razing. Thle la a line
Idea. Either the brlcka ahould fly.
or tha paddling squad of the UotO.
detailed to duty at Salem.
.
Tha clrcua came and went with
out losing an elephant. In the
weeda on vacant lota, aa they could
have done easily.
Another citizen ..'chased by Wall
St.". but who only ran enough to
be polite, la at ease. In the back
aeat of a late model Juggernaut.
Poison Oak and a raah caused by
aklnnlng rabbit Instead of each
other, along with hay-fever, are
quite frequent.
.
The Rallroad-to-the-Coast Idea
baa waned, and enthusiasm for It
sleeps. Many who formerly held out
for nothing less than a vice-presidency,
and a special car on the line,
are now willing to work on the
aectlon.
Humdingers, Inc., are seeking a
welcoming slognn for expected new
citizens from the Mid-West dust
area. How about: Wash Your Neck,
and Run for Olflce Next Spring.
FEMALE DEADLINES!! POPS IP
(Cottage Drove Sentinel)
Aa I looked down from tha
gallery of the armory upon that
aea of gray and bald hrada. I
felt that "female of the speclea"
though I am. I could gladly
take a club and hit the trail
of the perpetrator of thla mis
arable hoax upon tha pitifully
trusting oldsters of our coun
try. t
Experts agree that the Depression
la ended. Many would rnther hear.
the Depression la still functioning.
and, the insanity thereof, enaea.
Por It, there seems to be no cure,
and will have to wear oft.
...
Dewey Hill of Prospect, la stabiliz
ing tha dollar, by building a new
bam.
Tha Spring run-off has started In
tha creeks, and down tha highway.
FRANK & CANDID LADY
(Glendale. rallf., Tlmea)
TJNENCUMBEHED widow, not
from choloe but from calamity,
want a place as housekeeper
In a first clsss motherless home
where other servants ara retain
ed. Don't want manual labor,
but can manage fine. Want
good salary with little to do.
Lemon plrs a apeclalty and
broiled chicken, little anlad with
It makes a good meal. Please
answer at once as I'm In need
of money. Cnn furnlfh references
but don't want to.
The government plans a drive, to
deport all Japanese in the country.
Illegally. This is due to the lack
of Japs on aoflp-boxea. advocating
a revolution every time there la a
atrlks.
There were more men drunk In
Pendleton Saturday Might thsn there
were for three years. They were BO
ashamed of the circus that they
took to drink. (Pendleton East
Oregonlan. SO Yr. Ago Col). The
alibi.
Tha Catholic Csrd Party will be
held at Parish Hall Wednesday eve
ning at 8 o'clock. Auction and con.
tract bridge, pinochle snd five hui.
dred will be played liefrrshments
will be served Price 35" All are In
Tiled.
Be correct', corwted tn
an Artm Model by
Ctoelwyn S. Hoflmaan.
1 OrlSlftfteJ GT.
Lawrence of Arabia
SO "Lawrence of Arabia" is dead! The most gallant, appeal
ing and romantic figure of the world war, in fact from an
historical standpoint the ONLY one, panned quietly into the
final sleep, in a little Dorsetshire village Sunday morning, at
the age of 46.
The young man, who only a few years out of college, arose
to be the uncrowned king of Arabia, who with a price of $50,000
on his head, dead or alive, eluded after scores of hair-breadth
escapes, every attempt at capture, and so out-guessed and out
generaled the wily Turk that through his single-handed efforts
he held Mesopotamia for the allies, until peace was signed, suc
succumbed at last to a petty motorcycle accident, which occur
red on an English country lane, a week ago today.
TO those searching for the fitting and the dramatic, what an
anti climax! What a needless and trivial close to a career,
that was almost Homeric in its heroic proportions, and in sheer
mystery, suspense and excitement, would make the average
Hollywood thriller, look like amateur night, under the auspices
of the Shilling Shocker League.
And yet when one looks into the details of that motorcycle
crash a bit and particularly into the true character of its victim,
the final act in the Lawrence drama, does not seem so ironical
and inappropriate after all.
FOR Lawrence died that some unknown English lad on a
bicycle might live. It was his life or the boy's life, and it
was entirely characteristic of Lawrence of Arabia, that in that
split-second allowed for decision, there was no hesitancy, the
sacrifice was to be HIS.
So he died as one feels sure he would have wished to die,
for OTIIERS, and in what one might term a rather simple,
umlramatie, homey fashion. For he was at heart the most
modest, unassuming, self effacing of men. That quality of shy
ness so characteristic of the well bred Britisher (and so often
misunderstood), was with him almost an ailment. He hated
pomp and panoply of war or the loud acclaim and publicity
of peace, he was at heart a scholar rather than a warrior, a
man or research and contemplation rather than a man of action.
It was devotion to his country, and his love for Arabia and its
people, rather than any militaristic urge for conquest or will
to power, that a combination of circumstances finally made him
the outstanding hero of the British campaign in the Far East.
THERE is another element in this abrupt and tragic close of
thp T.nvcrpna antra tn Iia AAnairlrifi
In commenting uron his death Mr. Winston Churchill ex
presses keen regret that Lawrence
he might have aided Jiis country
order out of chaos and restore
harassed and suffering peoples of
A natural sentiment to express, and yet we doubt if Law
rence would have EVER been useful in the sort of reconstruction
that Britishers of the Churchill type envision, and for which
they are so stubbornly striving.
A gentleman and a scholar, Lawrence was also an incor
rigible idealist. He fitted the romantic up-hill crusading role
against the "unspeakable" Turk perfectly; he fitted no role
played by the diplomats in the Treaty of Versailles, and he has
never fitted into the post war psychology since. Then, too,
probably only so much drama and action can be crowded into
one lifetime, and Lawrence, in ten years really lived more than
the average man does in three score and ten. The play with
him, in all likelihood, as far as the world stage is concerned,
WAS played out.
AOliEOVER, as perhaps few people realize, Lawrence of
Arabia, was a disillusioned man, and .perhaps beneath his
quiet, calm exterior, was even an embittered one.
His campaign in Arabia had been based upon freedom and
self government for the Arabs; this was implicit in everything
lie did and said. It was not only the ideal he held out to the
natives, it was the ideal he held before himself all the time.
Then suddenly came victory, reaction, the sordid gathering
of the stuffed shirts and the spoilsmen, and Lawrence and the
Arabs, were not only disregarded, but in the end betrayed.
It was this betrayal, rather than his extreme and proverbial
modesty, which led Lawrence to refuse the honors which Great
Britain and France were so willing to bestow. He wanted none
of them. He wanted no more active part in a world suddenly
gone so false and so sordid. He changed his name to Shaw,
entered the flying corps, and when this service neared a close,
resumed his translation of the classics and rode about the coun
tryside on his motorcycle, a lone, solitary, but never a pathetic
figure. No, pathos was not a Lawrence note, rather was it, a
quiet dignity an unassuming but certain grandeur.
A man true to himself he could be false to no one, so forget
ful of self, that when he suddenly met death coming around the
turn of the villase road, he didn't duck or dodge or squirm, he
met it, he welcomed it, "for greater love hath no man than
this,"
So for Lawrence of Arabia, we should say, as long aa his time
had come a very fitting aud proper way to go. A hero of peace,
as well as of war, the "White Knight" without fear and without
reproach, to the end !
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O.O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK, May 30 Diary: Out
to bid on a Chippendale chair at
an auction but mightily outbid.
Than awanaer
through Jousting
San Juan Hilt.
B ivsej .', snack at a
B 1 c k f o r d and
back to my
chambere to find
a sheaf of his
salty chansons
that Dwlght
Flska aent and
a note from Bill
Boyd's sister In
Ohio.
UL' n r h t n In I
the high heat until Tom Mtllsrd
came by. n cool snd Immsculste
I felt rc:i.-!-.ed An1 mu.-h gothir !
talk of our Missouri birthplaces, of
could not have been spared so
in its present effort to bring
peace and well being to the
Europe.
th Jami-a bev. J.y Prto. corn pone
and pot Ilk It ft. 0o promtntding
Park Ave nit and haw Sophie Tuclcrr
vvirl out of th AmbtsMdor to a
glittering; motor,
A yearly frog Iptj repat at Ben.
Riley's and an Englishman next
table. whr faror:t word wms
"whilst," talked despairingly ol
world chaos, of which I am sick
hearing. And at another ubl Ubby
Holman whoaa profile Is ths most
irregular X aver ssw. 80 reading
Lomi Bromf leld s autographed copy
of "The Man Who Had Everything,
No flcttoneer has created a more
fantastic character than the rJ
life Noel Scaffa. the sauve. silent
go-between ln great Jewel robberies.
For nearly IS yean he haa been
able to contact thiavee In the major
theft and retrieve the loot tor vie
tima. For a price, of course. Alwaye
under suspicion, he haa carried on
with bland indifference to Investi
gations. iV'affa. tn his middle 40's.
waa born ln Sicilly and ire up
:n the Eaat Aide, to which h:i un
migrant parents came. He lives
quietly and modestly in a suburb
and neither OrinJta nor amokea.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
Hlined letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease
diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped sell-ad
dressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters ahould be brief and written In Ink
Owing to tht 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, ZSi El Carolno. Beverly Hills, Cal.
SUGAR AND
la It true, asks a reader, that
whlta Bugar destroys or uses up
the calcium In our systems? If this
Is so. why does
the, refined sug
ar do this more
than raw sugar?
From my dlet
consclous friends
I hear that It Is
the chem 1 c a 1 s
used to bleach
the sugar that
make It harm
Tul. On the
other han d a
fine old friend
who was with a
sugar leimery lor many years
claims there Is positively nothing
but water used to centrifugal. ze
the raw sugar, and that the only
difference between raw and refined
white sugar la that all the Impur
ities are washed out of the latter
so why eat raw sugar? (Mrs. R. B.)
Impurities? Impurities contribut
ed by nature? In sugar manufac
ture all substances other than
sucrose and water are spoken of as
"Impurities." and the coefficient or
purity means the percentage ot
sucrose merely, not the presence
or sbsence of undesirable or harm
ful substances. Bo your friend who
was with the refinery probably uses
the term "Impurities" In that sense
Raw sugar, the old fashioned
brown sugar, not easy to find now
adays, contained some calcium, and
refined white sugar contains prac
tically or absolutely none. But the
amount of calcium In even sugar
cane or a sugar beet Is Insignificant
In everyday nutrition, for so many
ordinary foods contain plenty of
calcium, notably milk. eggs, cheese,
beans, peas, carrot, cabbage, nuts,
peanuts, lettuce, salad greens.
Perhaps your Idea that white
sugar destroys or uses up calcium
In the system comes from the com
mon observation that children whose
diet Includes an excess of sugar
and of carbohydrates as In pre-1
pared cereals, are likely to have
poor teeth, and Infants fed un
sweetened milk or milk modified
with cereal preparations are likely
to have rickets. But this does not
mean that sugar or starch uses up
the calcium In the system. It means
rather that when the appetite is
sstlslled with such carbohydrate the
child does not demand and does
not get more substantial foods
which not only contain the calcium
the body needs but carry the vita
mins which are essential for normal
assimilation and utilization of cal
cium In the development and growth
of teeth, bones, and Indeed of all
the tissues and organs.
There la another observation
equally true, namely, that pickan
innies on the old southern planta
tions sucked sugar cane constantly
and yet had fine teeth and strong
The Morgan twins Olorla Vand-
erbllt and Lady Furness whose
social haloes were threatened with
tarnish by an tinsavory trial, have
accomplished the smartest bit ol
personal promotion New York has
seen In many a moon. Instead ol
seeking seclusion figuratively to
nurw their hurts, they plunged Into
round of charities, opened a flossy
dress-making salon and otherwise
caught the public favor by a devas
tating indifference to mongerlng.
So adroit any public sympathy not
acquired seemed to swing to them
100 per cent. For the first time in
my memory of court trials a rash
of editorials not only excoriated the
Justice who deprived the mother ol
her daughter, but clamored insist
ently that the child be returned.
Personal nomination for the most
perfectly groomed coiffure that of
Mary Boland.
Barney Gallant, who gave his long
established Greenwich Village tav
ern to his head waiter and decided
to relax and knock about the world.
found he could not stand the ted
ium after two sabbatical years. He
has decided again to exploit his
British accent and professional bon
homie for the stayouts. But this
time he leaves the Tiny Tims. Sonias
and the sundry sandaled and
smocked, to Invsde the very heart
of the new Cote d'Or ln the Fash
ionable Fifties. Barney. Russian
born, is one of the bright-eyed ro
manticists of the catering world
whose career has Included press
agent Ing Mexican revolutions, free
lance Journalizing In far off lands,
painting in Mompnrnahse attics and
living with Bedouins as an adopted
tribesman. He has made, and lost
several small fortunes. His disting
uishing feature Is & blue black
beard that has to be razored twice
a day. He ha not been to bed
before 8 a. m. ln 30 years or break
fasted before 4 p. m.
Another enterer, well known to
the Broadway sport tng crowds. t
also emerging from a different sort
of eclipse. He is known to race trak
fot lowers as "Brefstcsk Charlie." snd
his place a few steps off Broad
way with pine table tops and saw
dust carpet vr?: usually packed. But.
a restaurant It sacked into
bankruptcy almost over night. Ana
"Charlie." who m a ringer tor A.
MEDFORD VETERINARY
HOSPITAL
15 year experience In larje
and mm 11 animal practice
Dr. J. IV. Uaien
225 N. Riverside Phone 36'J
To relieve
t? Eczema
iicnin.o
ana give skin comtort
t- nurses use .
Kesinol
ft"
THE TEETH
bodies, while negro babies In the
crowded cities, fed largely with
sweetened pap, suffered strikingly
from rickets and poor teeth. So It
Is not logical to assume that lots
of sugar and sweets harm the teeta
or use up the calcium In the body.
The relative amount of sunshine on
the naked skin has something to
do with It. too, and lack of a place
In the sun explains the great pre
valence of rickets and other nutri
tional deficiencies among children In
the tenements. The ultra-violet 01
sunshine Imparts vitamin D activity
to sterols' In the skin, and these
substances carry the Influence
throughout the body.
QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS
Blackheads Pimples, Large 'Pores'
Please give some suggestions for
clearing up the complexion. I have
pimples, blackheads and large pores.
(N. B.)
Answer What you think are
"pores" are In reality the relaxed
or dilated orifices of the sweat snd
oil gland ducts. Nothing can enter
the body or pssa In through the
skin by way of these openings. They
are the outlets for sweat and sebum
or skin oil. Send a stamped en
velope bearing your address and
mention your trouble. You will re
ceive Instructions by mall.
Feed the Man Vitamins
What makes a person grit his
teeth? My husband grtta his teeth,
smacks his Hps snd yawns In his
sleep. (Mrs. J. P.)
Answer Perhaps he needs more
vitamin C.
Anemia
What is the cause of excessive
yawning? I get plenty of sleep and
lots of fresh air and would like
to eliminate this distressing habit.
(E, A. O.
Answer Simple anemia Is a com
mon cause. Send dime and stamped
envelope bearing your address, for
booklet "Blood and Health."
Iron and Copper
A magazine article says call's
liver contains 26.8 milligram "'
Iron and 22 mlllgrams of copper
In a pound. Can you tell me how
much iron and copper In a pound
of beef liver or a pound of pork
liver? (S. M. I.)
Answer Beef liver contains about
half as much copper and half as
much Iron as calf's liver. Beef, lean
muscle part, contains some copper,
about 1 part In a million. Pork
liver contains a little less copper
and less Iron than beef liver, pig
liver containing more than the liver
of full grown hog. Sherman says
calf's liver contains 40 milligrams
of copper In the pound.
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Hrady, M. D.. 263 EI
(amino, Beverly Hills, Calif.
Smith, is cooking in a jerry-built
lunch stand for a come-back stake.
Bagatelles: Magazine editors say
Royal Brown, stone deaf. Is top in
writing young lovers' dialogue . . .
1 jao nm maae more money
collecting first editions than he did
1 ln
20 years of writing hit songs
. . , Jack Dempsey has three full
dress suits but Is afraid to wear
them . , . John Mccormack Is the
richest singer in the world . . .
Pinky Tomlin. Hollywood's hillbilly
celebrity, was the boy everybody
described In his town as "always
moonln' around" . . .
From a news item: "She recog
nized him after the explosion by
the grease spots on his tie."
Like the old song: "Grandpa's in
the barnyard, you can tell him by
his hat."
AtitnW Drawn.
CHANUTE. Kans.. May 20. (API
Clyde H. Miller. 38, drowned today
when his automobile overturned Into
1 a ditch filled with backwater from
the Neosho river, which is bankful
after nearly three inches of rain
since Saturday.
Use Mail Tribune want ada.
BECK
Comment
on the "
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
SIGNIFICANT political headline:
"Bonus Goes to White House."
The president baa said he will
veto the bonus. If he does. It will
then be up to congress either to
pass the bonus bill over the pres
ident's veto, or to let It die. Votes
will be gained or lost by whatever
Is done.
That la why the headline Is sig
nificant. IF THE President vetoes the bill,
as he has said he will, It will
go back to the senate. The senate
must then either pass It over the
veto (which tskes a two-thirds
vote) or fell to mxister votes enough
to pass it.
If the senate passes the bonus
bill over the veto. It must take
the responsibility for paying the
bonus, Including the fact that It
Is to be paid with printing press
money.
In other words. It will be the
Judgment of the senate that more
votes are to be gained by paying
the bonus than by refusing to pay it,
BUT If the senate falls to pass
the bill over the presidents
veto, it will mean that the senate
thinks more votes are to be LOST
than gained by paying the bonus.
That Is about the long and the
short of it.
S.
FAR as most of the senators
are concerned especially those
who will have to go on the firing
line at the next election the right
or wrong of the bonus doesn't en
ter very much Into the situation.
FORMER President Hoover, speak
ing at his home In Palo Alto,
Indicts NRA as "saddling the Amer
ican people with their worst era of
monopolies."
Those are strong words. If Theo
dore Roosevelt were still here, ana
believed them to be true, he would
get out his big stick and go after
the monopolies agali;, aa he did
once before.
ARE Mr. Hoover s words true?
It is too soon as yet to get an
accurate answer. NRA Is too near
to us to be Judged correctly. It
will require the perspective of years
to get a calm and unprejudiced
answer.
B
UT this fact stands out:
NRA says: "Raise wages, then
raise prices enough to cover the
added cost." It also says, more or
less In a whisper: "Then discourage
newcomers from getting Into busi
ness and playing hob with the old
timers who have raised prices to
cover the added cost of NRA."
That's fine for those who are al
ready In business, but It DOES
smack of monopoly.
(Continued from Page One.)
ate's time. By then the banking
bill would be ready for considera
tion as well as the holding com
pany bill and the social security
legislation. This would hsve delayed
the Wapner bill Indefinitely.
-'iWiiMirr-
atUaWijafaak
If you have tried all of the other Brands
and have found no relief from Consti
pation, try
Beck's Prune E Bread
a natural laxative which has a flavor all its own
DON'T FORGET that our whole wheat
bread is not flat or woody tasting but
has its natural wheat flavor, because it
contains onlv the PUREST INGREDIENTS.
But the senate dizzily paased tha
NRA bill In three mlnutea Instead
of three week. It had nothing to
do except to consider the Wagner
bill. And once It was considered,
It could not be stopped. While there
la much undercover opposition to It,
only twelve senators dared to stand
against auch a politically advisable
piece of leglalatlon on the final
roll call. Thue the opposition waa
caught flatfootad.
Afwr that the aenate took a three
day vacation, possibly to prevent
any mora aerloua almllar mistakes.
As a result of the senate's action,
prospecta of the Wagner bill are
reversed. The underlying situation
ln the house Is the same aa In
the senate. If the bill geta to a
vote. It will go through whooping.
Furthermore. It occupies auch a pre
ferred status aa a result of prema
ture senatorial action that the op
position probably cannot keep It
from a vote. Mr. Roosevelt will sign
It. At least two labor leaders are
privately quoting the president as
having said he would.
The bill will afford union labor
Its greatest opportunity for union
ization. Close observers have wondered why
the Republicans put up no greater
show of resistance against the lateat
new deallah movea ln the aenate
(the TV A strengthening amend
menta. NRA and the Wagner bill).
They talked a little, but made no
real fight.
Privately, the Republican leaders
will tell you they saw no reason to
waste their breath. They knew that
nothing their slim minority could
say or do would make any differ
ence. The fine art of business appears
to have been developed amazingly
by a certain southern shirt factory
la email one). In the first place. It
borrowed money from a govern
mental agency to build a plant or
addition. Then It borrowed govern
ment girls from a nearby vocational
school conducted by tha Interior de
partment. As apprentices, these girls
were not to receive the code wage
for the first six weeks, so the fac
tory staggered Its vocational ap
prentices tn six-week shifts.
Thus. It produced ahlrta for cheap
apprentice wages. Thus, ln a way,
the government furnished the chla
ela for the chiseling. That Is, It did
until the government recently found
out about It.
Close Polk Forest,
SALEM, May 30. AP) Governor
Martin today closed by proclamation
about 80.000 acres of timber land In
Polk county from entry except by
permit. The action waa taken be
cause of the fire hazard In that sec
tion. Key Casea Walt.
WASHINGTON. May 30. (API
The supreme court adjourned today
until next Monday without passing
on the constitutionality of NRA or
the Frazler-Lemke farm mortage
moratorium act.
Need extra money? You
can get it here quickly
and confidentially on your
own signature and security.
No endorsers required no
embarrassing investigation.We
will lend you any amount up
to $300. Pay it back in small
weekly or monthly payment!.
Interest charged only on un
paid balance.
Courteous, friendly servict.
Caix, Writs os Pboni Foi
Full Particulam
OREGON-WASHINGTON
MORTGAGE 80MPANY
4.1 S. Central. Llcenw. No. .4-13;
See W. B. Thomas or E. i. Riley
There must be a reason
why our sale have increased
Quality Always!
S BAKERIES
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jackson Count;
History from the tiles of the
Mall Tribune ot 10 and 10 Years
Ago).
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
May 20, 1925 ,
(It waa Wednesday)
City council holds city not finan
cially able to have a police matron.
State convention of Odd Fellwe
underway at Ashland.
Welden McBee la elected president
of the high achool student body, and
Frank Van Dyke, (now an Ash!v:d
attorney) la named editor of the
school paper, at annual election
Series of heavy showe.-e roll over
the valley.
Water department warns citizens to
turn eff aprlnklers when fire alarm
sounds.
Roald Amundsen. Norwegian ex.
plorer. ready for plane flight over the
North Pole.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
May 21), 1915
(It was Thursday)
Italy declares --ar and Joins side of
allies; the Russian army etlll ln re
treat, though Germans cease pursuit.
Medford merchants, scrompanled
by the Medford band attend the an
nual picnic of the Valley Pride
Creamery In the Applettate.
The mail contractor haa taken off
the comfortable covered hack anil
put on the buckboard again.
(Flounce Rock Frills)
Local grown flowers are shipped to
the San Francisco fair.
Congress votes against any 'debas
ing of the currency, and threats of
Inflation."
T1HT VP IN
FOR
LATTICE
TEELISSES
LAWN FURNITURE
GARDEN STAKES
AT
BIG PINES
LUMBER CO.
PHONE ONE
epreaserer.VJ
he Ford
neater is
a good
place to
buy a tjood
CAE
any make!
Many good Used
Car is being traded
in for the fast-selling New
Ford V-8. Perhaps one of
these is just what you need.
See the nearest Ford Dealer
for the best values low
price convenient terms
and a guarantee you can
trust.
REAL BARGAINS
BIGHT NOW
1