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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1935)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON. SUNDAY, JUNE 23, 1935. Medford Mail Tribune "Erarvfine In Soutlwrn Oravasi Read, Ula Mall Tribune flallf Kiwtrt Saltatlaj PutilUhcd Dr MtDKIIHn PR1NTINU CO. as-at a n ru m ailttEUT . BUHL, Mllor AO Imtepeodaot Nmpvxs Kmand weonl elaia matur it Mtdfortf Onton. ral let el atardi t. 18TB. 8HI'.8( KIPI10N BATES DtUi. on' nu " Dallj, month. - Dally, ont osonUi B0 Br Carrier lo Adraooa Madronl, Aanlana. Jirkjorjrilla, Cantral Point. Pbomls. lalant. Oak) Hill ano on oilman. Dallj, on r.ar All tirma. caih Id an-ara. OmdJU pawa or tna Cltj 1 MlfwA Official paprt of Jackaoo Couotf. 11EMBEU Ut THE AB8UCIAT1CU PBE8B KreaMnj full Uaaawl Wtr. tenia Trj. AaaoelaieO Preaa to airlualiali aouuarj to tba uaa for piinileaUon ol all oawa dupalene, endued 10 It otnerle eradlted In tnla Oar tod alio to local nt puhlUbod bertln. AU rttnu to miWIeaUoo of apedal dlapaUM Baralo era aU raaenad. HEMHEU Of UNITED PUEM IIEMUKK OF AUIJI1 HUKEAO OP ClKCULATIUNa Adtertlalng Kapreawutlm U. C. MtKlENBXN t COMPANT Offleaa id Nop lira. Cnleaio. Detroit, ise FraneUeo lj Ant1 Bealtle PortUod. on Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry Summer officially arrived Trl. and In the opinion of the beat people, it U about time. Ouy Tex of Cent. Pt. wa elected school director, nd won 3rd prle for the best planned garden In bis blUlwlck last week. Mr. Tex haa a head on hla shoulders. . 'Man'a Inhumanity to Man' at the military baae Thura. eve passed off with no disorder outside the ring. One of the wreetlera waa shaken up no badly, he made a apeech, after coring a victory. John Mann, the wide-awake mer chant la busy expanding In hla store. nil mill noon have a front, that would do credit to Frisco. The cherrv nicking la In full awing, but ao far nobody haa fallen out of a tree, In accordance with long en tabltshed custom. The Dub Wataon boy now wears no shirt. Thla la very healthy, and eum inniM the trouble of keeping the tail thereof. In Its proper Jurladlc tlon. Ed Brown celebrated reading the Orofjonlan for 33 yeara on the 19th Inst. He sweara by and with, Instead of at that publication. The fish are biting, but not aa en thusiastically aa dealred by aporU men. H. Flewher, the demon baker, has completed a well at Lake O the Woods, but did so good a Job. he now has more water than he knows what to do with, besides what Is In the lnke. The Jackson County Democracy has atarted to show some spunk and la beginning to take umbrage at sass htirled at them by Republicans. The Democrats used to be able to dis pose of any Republican argument, by turning up their nose, and aaylng "Andrew Mellon. hiihP Now the mansea are demanding facts, and will not weigh disgusted Democratic snorts In rebuttal. A number of elections were held last week, the voters not pouring out as freely as when mad, and well lied to. The Prospect ball team will cross bat today with d -Hill. T. Carleton has consented to act as umpire, and be intimidated by both aides. The vslley Intellectual have all returned from the campus, for the summer. Taxpayera are pleased to note that there are less C. Chaplin . mustaches among the youtha striving for an education, than at any time In five years. Shotgun experts are still talking about the clay pigeons they missed, at the trspshoot. The National Guard la up to Camp Lewis, lenrntn to be 'cannon-fodder', as the pacifists say. Under the new drunken driving law In this state, the defendant needs a doctor, before he does a lawyer. The sister city of Ashland Is mak ing ready to meke the eagle scream July 4. They will atage 'community dramatic.' which will be more art istic, but not as exciting, aa the community dramatics on the ct. hae atepe. Hermy Offenbacher of the Apple Rate waa In town Sat. dressed up and smoking a ctgar. The Tnx-the-Rtch scheme, proposed In Congress lsst week, hit a re pen sive chord here. In spots, and some enthusiastic hat-passing la expected when the massea warm up to the topic. There are three millionaires In this county to spilt among approxi mately 30,000 people. Horticulturists have been warned to get ready to fight the spider mite, etc., etc., etc., etc. Some juvenile drivers from the Went Side strayed onto East Main stret Wed. evng. In their Paw's new cars, and scared the veteran speed Idiots of that thoroughfare with their devll-take-hindmost attitude. Red McDonald la bark. Mr. Mc Donald la a former high school ath lete, who could not dance s lick, but when he threw a basketball U thrown. Editorial Correspondence SPRINGFIELD, 111., June 20. Time being a factor, we chose the shortest motor route between Rockford and Spring field. The rain still falling, progress was slow and the flatter, less wooded and less interesting, the country became. About 20 miles south of Bloomington which we decided had not changed verv much since Ifughie Xicol slid bases for the Three ! Ieaiiiic. we detected the odor Not having indulged in a eigaret since our departure, and everything inside and out of the old Ford roadster being rain soaked, this was a puzzling phenomenon. Characteristically, we drove on. awaiting developments. They were quickly forthcoming. Lazy clouds of white smoke proceeded to emerge from the lower part of the windshield and the dash board. Driving off the highway at the first farm gate, we hopped out to survey the old boat, smoking like a water-logged cheroot and smelling like a freshly branded sheep. What could it be? With the gas tank on this type of Ford is above the engine and just in front of the windshield, from which the smoke continued to pour, we opened the engine bed the post of the R. F. D. box with the other, to facilitate a rear retreat with the minimum disorder. Nothing happened. The engine wires and grease soaked gadgets looked just as such things usually look, neither smoke nor fire discernible, (which probably should not have been surprising, as the car has shown no disposition to halt its steady progress on all four cylinders). A crawl in the long grass under the car revealed nothing of value, other than that all June tion of Illinois had been broken, and a suit ten years old is not waterproof. So back in the car proceeded the involuntary fireman, to find nothing beneath the dashboard that could be opened or closed, but the smoke and the smell still continued. A nice kettle of fish I A car or fighting it. Something internal and no way of getting at it. Well it wnsn t progressing very rapidly anyway, there was probably no leak in the gas think it over logically and consecutively, arriving by a process of elimination and deduction We had barely started on fore we were startled out of our reverie by a strange noise on the right, and glancing up, beheld at the other side of the gate, a little girl about eight years old, bareheaded in an over coat about three sizes too large of large white and irregular teeth in what impressed us un pleasantly as rather a derisive grin. Bv her side was a large white goose or gander (the noise which had startled us a burdened wagon wheel, badly in lhe car is on fire, we remarked. The girl just grinned and the goose continued to smiawk or squeek. We might have withstood much, entirely too symbolic. to suffer such ignominy longer. Wc released the brake, turned the key, pressed on the but ton, bumped back on the pavement, and away we went through the deluge leaving behind a trail of smoke like a miniature locomotive. As luck would have it, in less than a mile we hit a cross roads and there under a clump of trees was a rural service sta tion and a sign "Garage, gas and oil" was THAT a grand and glorious feeling! Up to the door we drove, with as much dignity as the cir cumstances allowed, and informed the young man who emerged in a yellow slicker that we would like to have him step in as we stepped out, there appeared to be a, slight conflagration within. Much to our disgust, he refused the invitation. Running one hand up the edge of the windshield, he drew it quickly away, yanked up the hood, peered within, snapped n flash light, and twirling a pair of pliers like a six gun desperado, made a few quick twists and yanked out some wires. "A short in the Windshield wiper," he explained, "it's 0. K. now." "Yon mean the fire is over! It, won't break out again!" "Nope didn't you notice when the wiper stopped?" Well we hadn't as a matter of fact no doubt it stopped about the time the fire broke out. "The wiper won't work now but the rain has stopped any way, you can get it Iixeri in Springfield. What a boy I Wc didn't need gas, but we told him to "fill 'er up," add a quart of oil, and much to his amazement, tipped him a quarter. As we jogged over the bridge spanning Kickapoo creek, the m broke thronph the clouds on the western horizon, in a blaze of golden glory the first time in a week. The country was beautiful again. Even the huge piles of slag that marked another coal mine, liko ashen pyramid in the plain looked attractive and picturesque. And then the Sangamon river what memories were called up by that name. The river down which Lincoln poled a flat boat, to the Mississippi and the slave market at New Orleans! It was running full to its lush-green, tree-shaded banks, the slanting rays of the sun lighting un riders of foam nn thr. chocolate-colored wavelets of the So to Springfield, the capitol of Illinois and Lincoln's home. ..... To the Lincoln hotel, an imposing, modern structure with a uniformed door-man and everything. "Not a room sorry." To the St. Nicholas. The same story. "Legislature in session, haven't had a room in a week." To the .eland not a had looking place. we are given the last room in the annex, next to the Illinois State Kpuisinr i.;.,i. can show you the name of Abraham Lincoln as a subscriber, t is bathless, dark, and across the alley, one can hear the lino. ypes clinking, but no further a day. 1'as.sing through the lobby for a late dinner, we asked the lcrk if he could give us anytliiik: about Lincoln "Certainly!" He reaches over to a nile of nnmnhlnt. n,t selects a couple. "The bass up hikis. The literature concerns Lincoln, Illinois, the lake nearbv and the resort attractions. And this is the home of Abraham Lincoln! R. w. It. Jarnen f Brenner. 43. arrested ves. terday In Portland by state police on a charge of forging a check for iuo and pawing It at an Ashland Jewelry store on May II. will be returned here for a hearing on the chsre. The spurious check wna written under the signature of Capt. Joseph H Thomp son. Quartermaster Rrvrve. In iin Francisco. According to the tic police office bete, Brexiuer teadrxed lue plioacy of burning cloth. considerable trepidation, for cover with one hand and grab records for rainfall in this sec on fire and no wav of finding tank, so whv not sit back, and at the proper modus operandi. this sensible course, however, be for her and displaying a set sex is unimportant) emitting the noise rather like an old heavilv- need of grease. the girl, but the goose was too Better death in the flames than heavv current. prowling in the nii?h. f!r there are taking the fly," he check In payment of a charge of io which he owed the Jewelry store. The police My that he waa at one time a eook In the Ashland transient cetun. He has already admitted his guilt on the charge, authorities say. Na PIT Permit Wayne J. Blrg ham. 34. Yuba City. Calif . was arrrst ed Prtdsy morning by state police charyrd with operation of a trjck without a Pt'C permit. He waa haul ing walnut leys from Yufcw city to Wahiiitfton. He appeared In Justice court yesterday morn In, and was fined 10 and com of 1 4 JO. He vraa allowed to transfer hi load, and re turned to California yesterday. For H-n that Wear buy NOI.IK fii HORr KtueUyn B -loltmaun. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS BIO news In the papers again today news affecting; the future of every person now alive In this coun try and of millions yet to be born. THE social security" bill paases the senate, with certain amendments, and must now go again to the house to secure agreement with these amendments. The house haa passed the social security bill once, and will probably get together with the senate on the amendments. The President will undoubtedly sign It. THE social security bill proposes to provide something for people to live on when they lose their Jobs and when they get too old to work. Can that be done? YES, If everybody who can work will work hard enough and produce enough to share with those who can't work. WE MUST always-remember that before wealth can be shared It must first be created. You can't share what doesn't exist. And the only way to CREATE wealth la to work. -4 THE Prealdent, In a surprise mes sage to congress, recommends a definite Increase In taxes on big In comes this, of course, on the theory that It Is easier for a big man to pay big taxes than for a little man to pay little taxes. Is It? Yes, If the big man HAS MORE DRAINS and usee them In his busi ness. IS IT a good Idea for EVERYBODY, that la to soak the big man who haa brains and uses them In his busi ness? Yes, If It can be done without dis couraging him and causing him to QUIT using his brains In business. THE Idea haa been spread by loose mouthed demagogues that big business Is crooked business. Is that true? I. Grossman, president of the Gross man Clothing Company, of New York, who visited this week end In Southern Oregon, doesn't think so. 'Ninety per cent of business men were already honest and decent," he said to this writer, "and NRA taught the chiseling ten per cent that It Is more profitable to do business de cently than to chisel." AN INTERESTING statement. Isn't It? If NRA did that and cer tainly it exerted a lot of Influence In that direction It was well worth while. TpHE Golden Rule, uttered nearly 30 centuries ago, also helped to teach people that It la better to be i decent than not to be. j If EVERYBODY. In one way and j another, can finally be brought to realize that fundamental fact, this will be a much better world to live In. EAGLE COMMITTEE FOR YEAR NAMED At the regular meeting of Crater Lake Aerie 3003, Fraternal Order of Eagles, held last Friday, the various committees for the ensuing year were announced. It was reported by officers yesterday morning. The commute appointments are aa follows: Audit, O. H. Bengtson (chair man). V. O. Olllette, H. C. Predette: finance. P. B. Blgelow, P. W. Oer hardt. Pred Powell, George Tucker. Dr. R. R. Sherwood: budget, George Miller (chairman), Frank Shafer. Jack Hues ton, Ray Schumacher. Bud Dynge; membership. William Peck (general chairman), and Morris Leon ard and Pat Shea, assistant: enter tainment. John Hyde. D. Carr. Olenn Anderson, Frank Starboard, Dr. R, R. Sherwood: housing. Charles Stetl, E. Pettet, Tom Farlow, J. T. Fowler; sick visiting, Henry Ruch; delinquent. Ray Price (chairman ), H. Chtlds: Investigating. H. F. Barrett. George Avertll. Fred I. Johnston: grievance. Fred Ryan. Harry Moore. E. B. Mc Ewen. It is expected that all committees will meet In the near future to out line a program of work for the ear which ta confidently believed by offi cer will be a bigger year than the past 13 months. Communications Orange Thanks Merchants To the Editor: The Eagte Point Grange. No. AM. wishes to ex pre Its appreciation of the drive being sponsored by tbe local (ood merchants to engage the output of leval farm produce In the markets of Medford in preference to Imported product such aa fresh vegetables In season, and such canned goods aa are manufactured hereabout. We feel that this Is a wiae move on the part of local merchants, as our farm product rank among the high est in the country and therefore should be given every preference over out of state produce. Thanking ou. CHAS. S FRASER. iSe&l) Secretary. Personal Health Service By William Hlgned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-ad-dressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink Owing to the large number of letters received only a fen can be answered, iso reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr Hill lam Brady, 265 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal. ECONOMIC IMPORTAN According to Randall over 30,000, 000 persona In the United States have rupture .breach, hernia); (J000 per uana t year die :rom strangulat ed hernia (shut .Ing off of circul ation In the pro .ruding structure, with consequent pe-rltont tls or acute In testinal obstruc tion); and 160,- 000 persons eacb year undergo op eration. Involv ing an expense of more than 150,000.000, Including convalescence and loss of time. That would be over 9900 per each, unless my arithmetic la aa bad aa usual. Formerly operation, Involving con finement In hospital and at least a month of convalescence, was the only treatment available for hernia. Vari cose surgeons claimed cures In from 80 per cent to 95 per cent of the cases operated on. A few brass surgeons of the front page era have loudly claimed less than 1 per cent of re currence, but Mark Twain reminded us that there are lies, damned lies and statistics. These brass surgeons count 'em quick. Six months or a year after the successrul operation the victim sometimes finds his hernia Is recurring the fibrous scar tissue or adheslona produced by the opera tion begins to absorb and the protru sion occurs again. But It la too late to record the failure In the statistics. Sometimes the wearing of a suitable truss or support and simple exercises will bring about a natural cure of hernia. The truss must be fitted and worn under the supervision of the physician. The exercises consist mainly of leg raising as you He on your back, supporting the hernia with your fingers or hand while you do the exerclsea regularly twice or three times a day. Of course natural cure la possible only In recent and small hernias, which are perfectly support ed by the right truss, and the truss must never be left off even for a moment while you are on your feet. Every man would have hernia If nature did not succeed In most In stances In closing the opening, down through which the testis passes short ly before birth, by adhesions and fibrosis or a deposit of fibrous tissue which obliterates the canal. Various Investigators have found that the injection of certain chemi- : cals or drug solutions Into the tis sues of the groin will produce an arti ficial fibrosis and adhesions, which Is precisely what the surgeon hopes to accomplish by the operation and what the physician today hopes to accomplish by Injecting such chemi- j cal or drug solutions in the ambu-' NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, June 23. When one has exactly 35 minutes to turn out a column It's no picnic. Either this one must be off to the printer In that time or something else will fill the space. And permitting something else to fill the space Is always danger ous. It might by aheer excellence become p e r m a nent. The Inclination Is to reprint some old column and label it "By Request," but editors are hep to that one. So a fellow must muddle through. Instead. I shall fill in a few paragraphs with a letter that pleased me. Pleasing because It la from that hard-boiled, crack news paperman. Gene Fowler. And because it came of all plaoes from far-away Damascus. Said he: "A muezzin on a minaret waa bawling some passages from The Koran today and made me think of you. It seem ed to say 'Odd Mclntyre. Odd Mcln tyre sells old clothes. So I'm drop ping a line to say something I've never told you. "But which I have long felt. You hsve alwaya been Interesting and fer tile of brain without once, to my knowledge, having had to quit be ing a newspaperman and hurting someone. So best of luck from out here where all the aromas are not waited from the cedars of Lebanon." Speaking of The Koran. I once picked up for 18 cents in a 4th ave nue book shop an English translation or the Moslem prophet's philosophy. T fell away from Its charm upon learning that to Islam those with blue eves are destined to eternal fires Many friends are blue eyed. My wife is bhie eyed, the blue of corn flowers. But In the Introductory passage to the Mohammed treatise I ran acio&s a word I never discovered before. Namely : monoglot. That la what I am a monoglot 1. e. a person who has command of one language only. I wish someone with a gusto for fine food someone such as F.rd Madox Ford. Julian Street or George Rector would annotate a few para graphs on the why of the appeal of those neatly bleak, open kitchen plscee with hickory turning fires Whenever I'm hungry I can't 't away from them, but once arriving. I eat but little. The customers are booming and hearty and suggest stoxiniE. Yet I can go to the sed'e and tiny orchestralees places Gene and Ernest's Cclny. for instance with the appetite of a elok canary and pop vest buttons In shameless gorging. A sudden psuctty of unread mod -in book dxove ma to Victor Ua'0'i PS Brady, M.D. CE OF HERNIA PROBLEM lant treatment of hernia. For many yeara injection treatment of hernia was given almost exclu sively by quacks and often without even rudimentary knowledge of the anatomy and pathology Involved. Many disastrous consequences gave the method a bad reputation. But In the past ten years or so. more and more reputable physicians have Investigated the method, stud ied and. experimented upon animals with various solutions, and finally adopted It in practice, with results at least as satisfactory, from every point of view, as are obtained with the radical operation. Industrial organizations are Inter ested, of course. In a method which promises to save the time of their employes, for as a rule the ambulant treatment does not detain the pa tient from his regular work. The radical surgeans, the old guards, may as well resign themselves to It. The injection treatment of hernia haa arrived, and It Is going to effect a saving to a large part of that S150, 000.000. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Baby Has Bull Montana Ear My baby 2 months old has one ear protruding. (M. G. G.) Answer. Keep a skeleton hood or cap on the baby to hold the protrud ing ear back against the head for a few weeks. Bran I would like to know if bran Is harmful to the digestive tract. We have heard that because of Its coarse ness It may injure the llnllng of the stomach. (S. E.) Ans. For normal persons It Is rath er beneficial. Bran contains vitamins A. B and G. Persons with digestive trouble should follow the advice of their physicians about eating bran. Although It has long been the cus tom to assume that bran Is not di gestible or nutritious for man, that idea is certainly wrong, and It Is probable that the healthy human di gestive tract can take care of bran as well as the digestive tract of a cow or' horse can. Interference Sister expects baby in a month. Her doctor who Is (not a regular physi cian) wants to induce labor two weeks before term. He says the last two weeks a baby puts on fat. . . (Mrs. E. D.) Ans. I think that Is mischievous interference, unless there Is some se rious defect which would prevent nor mal labor. (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D.. 2flA El Camlno. Beverly 111119. Cullf. "Lea Mlsera-bles" the other rainy night. For two hours I was gazing ngaln across the acres of chimney pots, wandering at twilight through Pare Monceau. prowling through the shadowy porticos of Place de Vosges, dropping in for a croissant and glass of milk at the dainty Kendall Leo like lady's boulantjerie In rue des Pe tit Champs and riding by post-chaise along the Seine toward St. Cloud. So real was the transition I expected to see a shawled and mustached con cierge when I looked out the window toward a Waldorf doorway Instead of the night hawk taxi driver. I was thinking today of an assign ment to Interview Jane Cowl when the actress was most effulgent of the bright stars. I have talked to presi dents, one king and one ex-klng since, but all collectively were not as difficult to reach as Miss Cowl. Such abracadabra looks silly from the side lines but It's a great build-up. it so Impressed me I always think of Miss Cowl along with Bernhardt, Duse and Marlowe, yet I know she Is in no wise so talented, it's like Amon Carter's story of the Texan who wired he could send 100.000 full frog skins and about two weeks later sent In one lone skin by mail with the note: "I was fooled by their hollerln'." It interests me that the sons of Ed die Collins. ba.eball star, and Martin Qulgley, moving magazine editor, have consecrated their lives to relig ion. The Collins lad Is In an Episco pal theological seminary and Qulg ley's son at the proper age Is to study for a Jesuit priesthood. The fathers are men of the woild whose lives have been many-faceted. That, in the buzz-fuzz or rampant materialism, they should want their sons to spread the spiritual solace of the Scriptures will hearten many who see faith tumbling. A group led on bv Wendell rvi.- discussed descriptive poetical lines in uie Murray Hiu barber shop this noon. Keats. Shelly. Byron and Browning were quoted. A manicure girl working over the sturdy hand of Capt. Bob Bartlett, no less, looked up snd recalled a line from Edile Guest that "the geranium was the orchid of the poor." A good as any. I thought. So the column Is finished with 5 minutes to spare. I even had one foot off the floor part of the time. (Copyright. 1935. McNaught Syndicate- T LONDON. Fnc. .Tune 22 (APi The British public was informed by a brief official announcement today that the Duchess of Kent has retired for the summer from official func tions. This lent confirmation to reports that the former Grecian princess, who wed the kine's fourth son last j November 29. expected the birth of a j child. The duchess made her last 1 public appearance yrvrdav at the conclusion of the Royal Ascot race meeting. OLD AGE PENSION To the Editor: On account of the ff.ct that there have been several old age pension stories recently published In a local paper, we feel that It la only fair to the aged people of Jackson county, who have been so grossly Imposed upon by political propaganda and otherwise during the last two or three years, that the court make a statement relative to old age pensions. One article states definitely that the sum will automatically be $30 Thls la a mistake, for the reason that the amount available will depend upon the number of applicants that are eligible In the state. There will be a total of federal, state and county money of $4,000,000 and the amount that can be allowed each person must necessarily be affected by the total amount available. Another misleading article Indicates that the age will be 65 years. The law In the state of Oregon Is 70 years, and will so remain until chang ed by the legislature. Although the federal bill mentions July 1, the counties are under the jurisdiction of the state relief com mittee and must await their Instruc tions. It will, of course, be necessary for anyone who thinks he Is eligible to submit an application in the reg ular manner, which application must be carefully Investigated before ap proved. Another limitation on the federal bill Is similar to the law now In op eration: namely, it Is available only for those In actual need and whose income Is less than $30 a month. Definite Instructions will doubtless be received from the state relief com mittee within a few days and will be published. Yours truly, EARL B. DAY. County Judge, RALPH BILLINGS, County Commissioner, L. O. CASTER, County Commissioner, (Ed Note: The local paper men tioned Is not the Mall Tribune). Mrs. J. w. Whrlsley Friends In the city . have received word of the death of Mrs. J. W. Whrlsley. aged 74 years, at Newberg, Ore., on June 18. Mrs. Rachel Isabel Hlgglnbotham was born In the east and came to Oregon In early girlhood. She and her family were residents of Medford for a number of years before leaving for Newberg In 1918. Many of the older residents will remember the family. She Is survived by two daugh ters. Mrs. M. E. Olson of Portland, and Mrs. Rnlnh Orou nf MiKnvr. a sister, Mrs. Nathan Gray, living at rort Klamath. She wns burled at Newberg June 21 at 2 p. m. Mr. Whrislev nassed a wav at n.- berg in December, 1933. Mrs. F. M. Calkins Word has Just been received in Medford of .the death of Mrs. F. M. Calkins, wife of the former Circuit Judge of this district. In San Diego on June 1. Mrs. Calkins leaves many fripnds In Medford, where she made her home for 12 years while the Judge was serving on the bench of Jackson and Josephine county. Che Calkins' have lived in San Diego for a number of years. Smart Linen Suits. Navy, black, white. Gladls Mae Shop. 16 S. Bartlett ssai LEASES! TO EVEYIHINO Obituary V.- .... JJ HOTEL Ml New in dren, beautifully hnUlied room,, with colored tiled betki and ihowcn, located on Sen Franciico'i l.moui Powell Street oppoaitt Union Square Reitiur.nt CoHee SKop Cocktail Room Circulating Ice Water. IATE$'-50 - 100 - 50-"0 SINGLE If .50 . 1.00 . 1.30 . 4 00 DOUBtf CAIACE SEIVICf AT twit.Kjr. POWEU AT OTAMEU ... rv ',nnaVJilIIJ.iJWN( "MEET ME AT Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County Hlstury from the riles of the Mall Tribune of 10 and 0 Years AR"- June 23, 1333 (It Was Tuesday) National Guardsmen, beneath a broiling sun. pass In review before Governor Pierce. The line of march down Main street Is lined with thous ands from all over Oregon. The Page theater, gutted by fire, two years ago. will be re-bullt. , Lightning storms In hills, fall to cool valley atmosphere, as mercury neara 100 mark. Road to Crater lake now open be yond Government Camp. Butte Falls announces "grand cele bration of the Fourth of July." Night air mail service to stm July first. June 23. 1915 (It Was Wednesday) Germans chase Russians out of Lemberg, after severe fighting; quiet on the Western Front. Five tons of Royal Anne cherries shipped from valley to date. Fourteen citizens are fined by Po lice Judge Charles Gay for violation of watering ordinance. "Heart of a Painted Woman." at the Page: with Olga Pettrova In lead ing role; "Fields of France" at the Star, "The Curse of Jeremiah" at the Iff Is. Portland police arrest lady for ap pearing In public, "in an exposed back bathing suit." ASK FUND TO AIO STATE WHEATMEN SALEM, Ore.. June 22. (AP) The possibility of some measure of relief for farmers in Oregon was seen fol lowing the announcement by Gover nor Martin today that he had applied to Washington for a grant of $463,500 to purchase over a half million bush els of Oregon grown wheat. The governor issued the following statment: "Pursuant to a telegram received from Jacob Baker on June 20, 1935, and in accordance with the telephone conversation with William Nunn- of the federal surplus relief corporation, I am today forwarding an application to Washington for a special grnnt of $463,500 for the purchase of 618.000 bushels of wheat grown and held In Oregon. I am In hopes that arrange ments may be made by which this wheat will be milled in Oregon, there by adding materially to the grant," MEDFORD VETERINARY" HOSPITAL 15 years experience in large and small animal practice DR. J, W. WATERS 225 N. Riverside. Phone 3G9 Lawn & Garden Furniture Awnings OURK S M 3,4 K- lln. Tel. H8 IE Mutiny on Board On every ship there may some day be mutiny, just as In every human body there I danger of future disorder. By keeping yourself ship shape you can avoid many unforseen disasters. Consult your physician frequently for A physical examination. Never prescribe for yourself! A rrescrlptlonlst Fills Rxs Carefully at HEATH DRUG STORE Medford Building Phone 884 31 1 STREET . SAN fHANCISCO THE MANX' Hit1 " SA "ANCISCO