PAGE TEN
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBHSTE, ilEDFORD. OREGON. FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1935.
Medford Mail Tribune
"KvfOOD In ftoothrn Oreaoa
ReiirU tha Mull Tribune"
Dally Etrept Snturday.
rubllnnrd by
MBDFORD PRINTING CO.
2fc-:7-: N. Kir St. Phona 71.
ROHEKT W. ftl'HL, Editor.
An In dependant Nawtpaper.
Fnlrd aa efpond-elam mutier a( AfM
ford. Oregon, undar Act of March I. la.
- 8CHSCR1PTION RATES
By Mall In Advance:
Daily, ona year li.vn
Dally, all nionihi 2-
Dally, ona month 10
By t'arrlar. In Advance Medford, Aan
land, Jacksonville, Central Point.
Phoenix. Talent. Gold Hill and on
lila-hwaya.
Daily, una year .o
Dally. ix months
Daily, ona month
All terma. cash In advance.
OrriWal faner of tha f'itr of Medford.
Official l'aier of Jai Unn (ounlj.
H KM MF.H OF THE AMIM IATKO PKEMff
RsxH.injj, Full l.e-nard Wire hcr.lre.
Tha Aanoclated Pren la exrluaivtly en
titled to the uaa fr publication of all
nana rtlapstchea credited to It or other
wlaa credited tn thla paper, and alao to
tha local nwa publlxhed herein.
All righta for publication of apaolal
dlapntchet heraln are olao reaerved.
MKMMKIl OK l.'NITBU I'HKfiS
M K MUKR OP AtMiIT TIl'REAU
OK CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Rpreaenia 1 1 vaa
M. C MOURN BUN COM PA NT
Officea In New Vorlt. rhiaa;o Detralt.
San Francleco, Loa Angeiea, Seattle,
port land.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur mrj
Msthematlclans with pencil arfU
paper have figured out that under
the Rooeevelt pln to distribute
wealth by awattlng-the-rlch, each 01
the 136,000,000 people In the land,
will receive a.70. The average en
thualast lor the notion will srnd
that much Jor stamps on lettera to
the editor. .
The glorious and oft-timea gory
4th paaeed with a minimum OX ce
lebrants, being bleated looae from
lege. Jlngera and eyea In these part.
Swivel chalra have ruined many
young lawyera In government eer
vlce. They alt and learn to retard.
hamper, delay and object. They are
a boll on the neck o! progress. (L
Orande Obaerver) A motion to
strike la In order.
The carefully nurtured and high
pampered rural corn, la now aimoat
aa tall (a a city weed, Ignored by
both Man and Nature.
...
The reeearch department of Yale
unlveralty ha discovered that "the
world waa once all gaa." How tlmee
have not changed!
.
The delusion of wandering Port
land orator, addicted to oratorical
Invaalona of trje tried chicken belt
of the Willamette Valley, that Gov
ernor Martin la "a failure," ahouia
atart alate-wlde agitation for more
all-around fallurea In high placoa.
Press dmpatchea atate that St.
Loula bomblata heaved a bomb at a
beer parlor, and mlesed It. Thla
aeema like a technical error. With
beer-partora o plentiful. It doea not
eem plaualble or possible to nils"
one. The bomblet Juat failed to nil
the one he aimed at.
The meadowa are now dotted with j
ealvea, that In another all weeka,
can be readily mistaken for deers,
by careful hunters.
A young man of Detroit, who never
amounted to much, and three ladlea.
who aad to tell, were not what they
ahould have been, confessed the mur
der of a New York lawyer of eatab
Ushed social and professional atand
ing. The feminine portion of the
crime received B apiece, and tlie
male kept the balance. 1100. foilpo
in the pocket of their victim. All
race life In prison. It waa an un
profitable adventure for all con
cerned, not to mention the mentality
exhibited. One of the ladlea bewails
the poor financial returna.
...
Summer la here. Many of the
Older Qlrla have their fall hate.
"If the banka would lend money."
you hear people aay, "we'd begin to
get somewhere." IChlco (Calif. I
Enterprise) It would give the masses
a chance to throw H at the birds,
and the new autoa with more vigor.
HOME TOS TAI'IB.
What a aaga could and ahould be
written about the home town paper.
The home town paper with all Its
bungles and blunders, grows out of
tha grass roots and la part and par
cel of all that makes the home town
a home town. The scent of the dan
delion and the wild rose are mingled
with It print. The home town paper
Is full of typed pictures of the home
town scenes and facea. Here la a
wedding of the folks you know,
here la a funeral of the folks wltJ)
whom you were Intimate, and In be
tween the lines you see througn
smiles or glistening teara the place
and facea so laminar to you. Thr
home town paper has a heart ana
soul for folka who are at home all
the time. As soon as the boy, sends
the home town paper bouncing on
the porch with a clever curve, the
home town folks stop. "urlax." loll
out In a rocker, unroll the paper,
and soon get burled up ,o the ears
In the home town news about Dick.
Tom and Harry. .tttsa. Mr and Mrs
this and that and what's 'agoln on
In the ole home town." The home
town paper has a heart t.nd soul
and a voice. (Shawnee (Okla.l
NrM.
Ml Warrants railed for raiment.
Notice is hereby g'.veu that llwre
.ire funds on hand in the General
Mind of the City of Medford f.r the,
ircit-miMiun ui warraiiis nw. o"f 10
4788 Inc. Interest on the above War-
MEMBER
to i jj
rants will cease alter July 8th. 1933
Doted this 9th dav of July. 1933.
OUS H. SAMUEIA.
City Tresrurer
Um Ifibuue Haul ads.
Editorial Correspondence
NEW YORK CITY, July 2. We can find no one in New
York who is interested in the colored problem. Nevertheless if
one cares to investigate the colored birth rate, compare it to the
white birth rate, look fifty years ahead and do Rome simple
arithmetic, he will be appalled, by the result.. If one includes
under "colored" all the non-whites, the so-called Nordic stock
on Manhattan Island will in less than fifty years be hopelessly
outnumbered. And to be outnumbered in a democracy means
to be dominated and controlled.
New York city with its Italian mayor, less than a week aeo
went wild over a new heavyweight champion of the world, the
son of a black Alabama cotton picker. A certain colored boy
from Ohio state recently cleaned up everything on the track,
in Herkeley, California 100, 220, hurdles and broad jump. And
now New York also has a colored Messiah, black as the ace of
spades, known as "Father IJivine," who following the leadership
of Bob Sliuler of 1j. A., announced his entrance into politics, at
a huge mass meeting here Sunday.
But after'all, what can bfc done about it! The blacks, browns
and yellows are HERE, and they
been dominant for many years,
to hand over the reins to those
or unwilling, that ib what in the
to do unless the colored problem
in the south which is an eventuality, not very pleasant to
contemplate.
This Father Divine asscmblv
have been an extraordinary spectacle. It started at six in the
online d.s.t. and ditln t end
hours later. The main purpose
new colored voters, but it amounted to a highly emotional tosh
monial to the divinity of Father
in a blue suit, with a white
gold studs," not at all impressive iiv appearance they say but
a master at working up the brethren to a black heat. To give
an idea of the attitude of the
Messiah, here is a brief quotation from one of them, published
in the morning paper:
Ialk ot ertiancipators, (talk of emancipators when you
have A MIGHTY GOD sitting
This was a rejoinder to some white politician who horned in
for the Republicans and expatiated on the devotion of his party
to that great Emancipator, Abraham I,incoln.
The greatest outbursts of perspiring enthusiasm came when
Father Divine's "godhead was
again quote the newspapers
waved their arms, charlestoned
it seemed as If the hall would not
Shades of Tweed and Dick Crocker everyone admits, Father
Divine will be the boss of Harlem at the next election, and
several hundred thousand colored people will vote as he dictates
throughout Manhattan. But who is interested iu "The rising
tide of color!"
A trip across the country by train certainly demonstrates
clearly how the sales tas has been spreading since it was first
adopted only a few years ago. On the present trip we have
never escaped a sales tax in the diner, which means if there are
any states which haven't adopted the sales tax from the Taeific
to the Atlantic, we happened to pass through them in the night.
In New York states, they expect to raise between 40 and 50
millions in 12 months. ..
Happened to be down on AYall Street today when the news
came over the ticker that the House had beaten President Roose
velt on his holding company issue "death to holding companies
is beaten" read one newspaper banner. The newsboys with
extras made as much noise as if war had been declared, and in of
fice buildings and on the street did land office business. After
reading the dispatches it was difficult, to see what all the noise
was about.' Merelv one provision of the measure was voted
down, and there will probably be
tomorrow. That proper regulation of holding companies the
elimination of the holding company -ABUSE is desirable, no
fair minded person should question, and in spite of the rejoicing
in AVall Street todav. we are confident the people of the country
as a whole will sustain President
direction.
' We doubt if anyone from the proverbial "wide open spaces"
can spend anytime in. New York city and not wonder how in
Sam Hill, those men and women who have to work and live here
all the time, stand it. How is it possible for the human body
and mind to endure such noise; such crowds,' such a mad rush
in such a mad world, and a world so unnatural, so entirely
iniin-made and artificial, day after day, not the sight of a
blade of grass, or a tree, or a brook. a cow or a horse, (uot that
one sees many horses anywhere now except in a circus) noth
ing but steel and stone, brick and tile,' asphalt and glass and
above all noise noise noise everywhere all the time.
, ,
Well yesterday (which was Sunday), we found the answer
at. least as far as some people are concerned. AVe took a train
to White Plains early in the morning and then a motor trip
cross country to or near Bridgeport, Connecticut and back
to Ossining on the Hudson where the ex-convicts come from
(when they are let out of Sing Sing). We saw traiu after train
loaded wilh children steaming out into the wide open spaces of
New York state children sent out for a few weeks in the wilds,
in summer camps financed largely by private subscription.
And up near Ossining we visited an old school friend who has
lived and worked for many years, in the very center of Man
hattan's business district, and likes it. Yes he likes New York
and he likes his work, and we have an idea no one could per
suade him to abandon either.
And this is the way he does it : Many yirs ago he purchased
:!0 acres of dense woodland, on the hills above the Hudson, built
what he calls a sliifk (it is a sixroom'houfce, with every comfort
and convenience-! and there he lives seven or eight months of
the year with his w ife mid two children. He isn't a rich man
not by Hiiy mentis. According to Park Avenue standards he is
a poor one just a white collared, salaried man. Put there is
his home and believe it or. not it is just as quiet, just as simple,
as a similar home would be down on Rogue river. Fox roam
about those hiljs. and deer also; he can walk over a hill and
catch speckled "brook trout, returning in time for dinner (true
the trout stream is stocked and a part of a rich man's estate.
Init it is real trout fishing just the samel. From his living room
porch he can look over the tree tops to the quiet waters of the
Hudson it is four miles across at this particular point, and
looks like a lake and from another hill to the south of the
house he has a perfect view of the Empire State building ami
the New York skyline. miles away! He has no near neighbors,
no noise except perhaps the occasional whistle of a New York
Central train no smoke, no motor traffic, nothing but Nature -and
Nature au naturalc no lavrus to mow. no gardens to weed
or tend. just rocks and wild flowers, birds and tree, gcrcs and
acres of his own in which to roam. A smaTt man. It TAKES a
smart man to lio.it the .Sew York'
JULY 4 TO BE BIRTHDAY
FOR EIGHT IN PORTLAND
pon n and. juiy a r - t:.
DO multiply. The whites have
perhaps they should be willin
who aren't. At any rate, willing
course of time they are going
in the north is handled as it is
up in Harlem yesterday must
until nearly midnight, some li
of tbe meeting was to register
Divine, "a small colored man
evening waistcoat buttoned with
colored people toward their new
tight there on the platform!"
mentioned", the audience to
stamped. and shimmied, wept and
and jumped up and down, until
last through it."
another vote on that question
Roosevelt in his efforts iu tliis
g'nhie.
R. W.' R.
will be & wU oocMion each pear,
ll t?uM Doctor Stork elctd July
4 to usher them Into th world. The
new arrival lncludd tir boj and
Personal Health Service
By William Brady. M.D.
Signed letters pertaining to personal Health and hygiene nut to disease
diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-ad-dressed
envelope la enclosed. Lettera should be brief and written In ink
Owing to the large number of letters received only a fen can be answered
Fo reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructlona Address Or
William Brady. 263 El Camlno. Beterti Hills, (al.
Pl'ZZI.F.S IN
After a long and determined strug
gle I have nearly, but not quite, con
quered the crossword puzzle habit. I
' can now turn the
pa?e right over
without even tak
ing a peek Just
to see whether I
can get the first!
horizontal word.
That la. I can do i
that weelc daya.
Sundays I relapte.
If the Humding
er ln the Sunday
paper Is within
reach at break
faat time. I'm
sunk I go into
a kind ol daze Which laAts all diy
or nearly up to time to turn on a
program and enjoy a good archejitra.
Next to crossword pureles, I get thft
greatest pleaaure from the puzzles in
the dally mailbag. Just for fun. here
are today's puzzles:
1. I know you will consider me crazy
but here Is mv trouble. I eem to
have a very weak stomach and
have' a good deal of trouble with
It. but the gTeat trouble Is that
every time I get a haircut It makes
me sick at my stomach and I turn
pale and I am that way for abo'it
three days, and then I am all right
aaln. but for the three days I
seem to lose all my strength. I Am
30 years old. (John Dee.)
Solution: Indeed I haven't any. I j
tiled It ln the Have Another Go de
partment, and had andther go at It
time and again, and finally told the 1
young man that perhaps his trouble
la allenry. that ts, he la sensitized or :
hypersensitive to some substance in
the barber shop, and a series of cktn
tests by his doctor might reveal what
substance It la, and ao enable him to
avoid or cs-npc future trouble. I
did think of the hysteria anigle. but
dlamisaed It Immediately, for it la my
experience that a blind guess of
"hysteria" la generally wrong.
2. I saw your article about the mouth
condition of the young man who
had gold and amalgam fillings. .My
aon has thoee white patches on his
cheeks and complains of a metalli
. taat. But he ha no gold in his
mouth. Would the galvanic sore
mouth come from amalgam alone?
(Mrs. J. r.)
Solution: Not only mercury and
gold, but any two metals, say silver,
and copper, may give rise to metallic
taste and galvanic sore mouth. The
usual cause of white patches ln the
mouth, however, la smoking.
3. When I flrat heard of garlic for
high blod pressure I had been
practically atarvlng myself for four
ajionths following a stroke. Tnat
waa three months ago. Then my
blood pressure was 180. EVch
week It came down little. !70.
165. 158, 152, and last week It
w-aa 145. Every day I chop fine
a small piece of garlic, put it on a
card and wash It down with a
glaaa of buttermilk. Only one
friend haa ever detected that I use
It. (W. R. O. B )
Solution: No accounting for tastes, i
So far as we know, there Is no sound !
basis for the notion that garlic cures '
anything. So far as we know. I say.
On the other hand, certainly a nip of
garlic doea one no harm, if one Ukcs
the flavor.
4. Mflke my living handling plants.
. EU;ht months a$o plant poisoniris
both hands and arms. Treatment
by M. D. and two dermatologists
' gave ho relief. Rnb'her gloves -ji-itn
leather gloves over them, still the
. akin trouble continued. Took ten
days off. and trouble cleared up.
But have to work to live. R-ad
'that 'It' is ah alkaloid condition.
Figured acid would counteract It.
. Bathed. skin in strong carbolic acid
solution. Hands became numb
and whitish. Inside ten daya skin
, trouble cleared up. No more
trouble for over a month now.
(U D. J.)
Solution: Alkaloid does not -mean
alkaline. Morphine la an alkaloid of
opium, but it is not alkaline. Phenol
(carbolic "acld"l Is not an acid. Pure
.strain alcohol la the antidote for phe
nol- (carbolic burn. The application
of carbolic in solution ln water or
In a aalve ts too dangerous ma;
cause gangrene or death of the Issue,
and Invariably delays normal healing
However, you may hare discovered
something. I don't know. Those tw.i
dermstologlata I hope they were Doc
tors of Medicine too?
QVKSTTON5 ,Mt ANMrVR-
?inart Aleck Sometime? Compile
Book.
Our physician aays children of the
type of our children need cod liver
oil. But a book by M. C. .
whoever he or she may be, Implies
that "goats which were fed 'rtth c.-d
liver oil died suddenly with heart
lesions, implying that the cod liver
oil waa responsible. , . . (Mrs. r..
D. O,
Answer Well, your kid are not
goats, are they?
Writer's Cramp.
The only way I can write ts to gr ..p
the pen or pencil In the manner a
wrestler might hold a teaspoon. I
suppose it is writer's cramp, in other
words, when writing It Is imposible
for me to relax my muscles to th.u
I can write properly. . . . (C. B. S.
Answer Practice anting left-hand
ed. Practice writing with the rmis-
GOOD NEWS FOR
RHEUMATICS
If you suffer from rheumatic pains
nd fevers, neurit 1. neuraUia. and
muscular pain, here's news. William
R. V. X Compound, an effective an-
a'elc and anMpvTetlo compounded
from a doctor's presripMt-m. ha? hen
Adtwistlr p-epsred fO brine qulk re
lief, ofren within 48 hour, snd it
contains amor? the few chemi-n!s
m-hJch authorities recognlre as bene
ficial for such condition.
See Heath's Drug Store today fcr
your bottle of William R. U. X Com
pound. The first bottle must satinfy.
,or your money
tll be refund'Al.
THE MAIL BAG
cle-movement or freehand. Make
yourself a present of a noiselese type-
wrlter, atreamllned, air-cooled end
with knee action.
I Now Have tour rien tor Friend.
I wa n t to tell you how m u ch I
enjoyed your article about 'galvanic
"re MWim, i win erery person in
tbe state could read It. . . . (C.
DeM, D. D. 8.)
Answer Thank you. Doctor. Heav
en xnows I haven t many mends in
your profession. "Galvanic sore
mouth." lay reader will not remem
ber, means white patches In the
mouth, with metallic taste, from th?
electric reaction of amalgam and
gold, or any two metals In the elec
trolyte saliva. Cheap makeshift den
tistry is a poor investment.
(Copyright, 1935, John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. ISrady
should send letter direct to Or.
William Brady. M. 1).. Iu:, F.I
(.amino. Heverly mils. Calif.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
Bv O. O. Mclntvre
NEW YORK. July 5. Thoughts
while etrolllng: When better tunea
come along, they are usually by Je-
rome Kern. - Hla
"Sally" score Is
still something to
Looks alikes:
Hendrlk Van Loon
and Buddha.
When I first saw
magazine I thought
his name In
Nunnlly Johnson
was a girl.' The
tired business man doesn't care for
revues with Marxist message hence
the flop of "Parade." No one has
been able to Imitate Floyd Gibbons'
breathless excitement on the radio.
Lavender's the color for ladies.
Wonder if Joseph Wood Krutch ever
met Thomas Steele Cain? Name for
a Boston : Pop-eye. Add rarely see
one without the other married cou
ples Pat and Rupert Hughes. Lois
Long mim-up of the Norma ndie;
"Some hunk of ship."
What waa so bad about the horse
and buggy days? Still another name
surging up like a hiccup: Jouett
Shouse. And Cecil Stsson in Houston
would be swell for a seltzer bottle
manufacturer. Jimmy Savo Is always
bearing down on one of those long,
twisted Italian stogies.
ENDS
rei? 1 . .jaws
LAST CHANCE! I
jlte sew
Good
IP!
O
Msaslfl
PRICES SLASHED
AND A
WITH
ALSO
NO DOWN PAYMENT
YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD
Lewis Super Service Station
Complete Automotive Service Wrecker Service We Never Close
8th and Front Streets. W. L. LEWIS, Mgr. Phone 1300
Overheard: "He'd give you the shirt-
off his back If vou'd wash It for
him." Louis Calhera certainly mar
rlea gorgeous women. The first daya
of that Tacoma kidnaping all I could
think of waa "Karpls Delicti." Fred
Allen and Tony Wona could awap
voices and nobody would know.
A fine professional howdydo ha nounced.
sprung up between the Octavos Roy The ship la oompoeed of a dlrtgiDle
Cohens. Some months ago Cohen j wnter part with vanes running
was called to a Hollywood studio to 1 in corkscrew fashion around It. That
do an original. He did It and moved l6J mounted between wings with a
to another studio. In the meanwhile j cabln SUSpended below and & large
his wife, who used to write under motor ln fTOnt. The drlglble section
i her maiden name. Inez Lopez. Joined
me writing aiaii oi me
to which her husband was called and
was asslgn?d with Prank R. Adams to 1
raa aslgn?d with Frank R. Adams to
rork on the shooting script of her
husband's Rtory. The comic strip
complications are endless If the pic
ture Isn't so hot Mio. Cohen can
blame It on the story and her hua
bHnd can lay It to the scripting. Etc..
etc.
A rather bewildered drunk, who
had Just received a punch In the Jaw.
weaved up to Harry Rlehman In a
cafe and Inquired: "Pardon, mister.
But do I still appear to be smiling?
My mood Is frolicsome!';' Then there's
one about the night club owner can- dominal tumor. His sinking conci
Ing to the doorman lupgtng a drunk tlon defied 21 blood transfusions. He
to a taxi: "Put a card tn hla pocket. decli
He might want to come back aome prom hla back, surgeons removed a
time." Also that famous bathing I wf of ftM,, an lnch lonR wnich he
oeau.y no was a.waja .oirnu, ..w.
In
dive.
' The gpntleman looking le a part I
of the sophisticated first night scene J
he graces ao conspicuously Is Perry
Hamm.nd. He has a pontifical man
ner and with a pie pan hat and a I
Bflasco ccllnr he could pass for a cu- !
rate of the Enellsh country. One to
whom the ribald mot micht be af-
front. Indeed none of the critics.,
save perhaps George Jean Nathan, ex-
n,-, .k. elosin... a mnr mhsht
expect. The erudite Brooks Atklns.-n.
mone other hlch cifts and ornlthol-
oglst of note, would not look out of
; place as an attendant at a Dlscuri of
culture known as the shooting gal-
i icry and pin ball hall. Yet In aisle
; Mnts all sugeest a group of savants
shoot at. rll j attending a pest graduate lecture at
never be able to the Sorbonne. Although they see
disassociate Hen- j each other ln close communion many
ry Hull from that i consecutive nights, year after year,
ornery Jeeter Les-j there are no petty Jealousies among
ter. Nobody looks them. Between acts they clot under
dandier in a col- j the sidewalk marquee to discuss al
ored shirt' than most every subject under the aun
Tulllo Carminatl. ! save the play they have come to see.
'There's an unwritten law about that.
Two of the mo&t consistent first
nighters ln my years of intermittent
premlerelng I, thrill to the theater
In stretches and suddenly find It
deadly have been Robert Rubin and
Clara BpII Walsh. Mr. Rubin casts a
practiced eye over the movie possibili
ties for his organization. Mrs. Walsh
is generally friend of every player
In the cast. The more auspicious
openings, such as a Lunt-Fontanne.
Noel Coward or Katharine Cornell
opus, have among the front rowers
Jules Glaenzer. Bernard Bartich. the
Irving Berlins. Tony Blddle and the
Prank Storrs. No effering since hns
brought out the notable fine-feathered
audiences of the Follies.
From a home town weekly "The
girls of that era. remember how Odd
Mclntvre. when dancing, stepped all
over their feet."
I was rather good at hopping upon
ankles and sliding down too.
(Copyright. 1935. McNaught
Syndicate)
MIDNIGHT SATURDAY
rich &f
TUBE
EVERY SILVERTOWN TIRE PURCHASED
THE GREATEST JULY CLEARANCE SALE OF
Apro-reo Odd Craft
"w "
To Get Test Soon
RAPID CITY. S. D. (UP) An
aerozep, strange aircraft.! will be
ready for lte test night here soon,
lte builders, the Rev. C. H. Loocke
and lorr1n Hansen of Rapid City, an-
inflated revolves to give the
,mft Its forward thrust,
r,ai"
j ie- T m
j ShfOpTiel KlllS V Ct
17 Years After War ,
KANE. Pa. (UP) Joel r. Williams
waa stunned when a burst of shrap
nel knocked him to the ground, but
la hasty examination dlsclosea no
wound. He picked up his rifle and
resumed the march ln the Meuse
Argonne with his buddies of the
112th Infantry. That waa In 191B.
A short time ago he waa admlttea
, to a hospital suffering from an ab.
CBrrlfd 7 years.
Youngsters Retain
Cinema t eatureS scarcity of files this summer. Several
. i ! different reasons are given, some gW
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP1 Only ... tne fW Bwa.tln
two-fifths of the '
"essential features
of a motion picture retameo
average adult la lost
to a child ot
' j nn ! n.tninvt hV
'" u , y '
I p k
The estimates were made by Dr.
! Edgar Dale. Ohio State university.
i who. In conducting a conference on
motion picture appreciation here, said
I high school students show keen abll-
I Ity to criticize movies and spend more
time discussing the direction, photo-
graphy and casting than they do talk
ing over the plot.
Ifus Oneration George Schnebele of
n-r DA.,u xrA...rn.n.n ctrmr la a tvitts 'it.
at the Sacred Heart hospital, having
undergone a major emergency oper-
atlon there yesterday.
SATURDAY, JULY 6TH
At
Dreamland
GEO. DAYTON
And Music
"FOX TROT CONTEST"
Men: 40c Ladies: 20c
$m Silvertown
M "WITH IXFE-SAVER GOLDEft PUT
ATT CI7PC
ALU Jli,LJ
AS LOW AS
Flight 'o Time
(Medford and Jarksun fount)
History from the fllea of the
Mall Tribune ot IU and i0 Tear,
Asu.
TEN VE.tKS AiO TODAY
July 5. lH'M
" (It Was Sunday)
City Is deserted as majority of pop.
ulatlon celebrate the birthday of th
nation by long motor trlpa.
June was a normal month, except,
for 108 degrees on the 34th.
Users of city water, living outs'.dtt
of clXy limits, to have water cut off
Record breaking prosperity la shown
by June bank statements.
First home-grown
sale ln local atores.
cucurfibera on
Tourtst travel on pacific highway
now at its height. President Coolidja
In speech at Boston, declares "the na
tion la on wheels, and disregarding
the teachings of the forefathers, for
thrift and calm pleasures.'
TWENTY YKAItsTGO TODAY
July 5. WIS
(It Was Monday)
Assassin who tried to kill J. Pler
pont Morgan, financier, tries suicide.
w hear manv remarks about the
; 4. in,t v.r hv tim
I COIlUllltwrc 0(jpv.""- -.-
lmnr,m,. association. (Kanes
. ., .
,. ; Creek Items.)
I city aeserwo ...-..
, atwnamg celebrations in nearby
: towni.
w. H. Oore Sunday lost ISO ton ol
I hay by fire, and his automobile, when
j it rolled off an embankment ln tha
sisklyous.
Oregon Weather.
Cloudy tonight and Saturday; oc
casional light rains northwest por.
I tiOn Slid On
the const; migiuiy
I warmer east portion tonight: cooler
east and soutn poniyno 0.ij.
'moderate west winds off the coast.
nsaiBBBBaaniaaarJaaimi til u lljasiilaijui
10
f2
A4T.