PAGE EIGHT-
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, MEDFORU. OREGON, SUNDAY, JULY 7, 1935,
Medford Mail Tribune
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Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
Local humanity emerged from the
celebration of the 4th Intact, with no
vital parta out of commission, and
uf ferine from nothing but general
wear and tear,
e e e
F. Wilson Walt, the bandmaster, Is
. recovering from a separation from his
appendix.
The weather contlnuea funny and
chilly for July. It la not doing the
oropa any harm nor any good.
Doug Fairbanks, the movie actor,
was here Thurs. by plane, and re
ported he Is through with the movies.
He was once famous for hla artistic
handsprings and 15-ft. Jumps that
landed him square on the back of a
horse without missing a hair.
The Soak -the-Rich notion cooked
up by the administration, as a sure
cure for what alls the nation, Is slow
getting under way here, owing to lack
of rich to soak.
8. Sherwood undertook to argue
with Peoria Bill Gates one day last
week, and had a leg bit off, oratorl
cally speaking.
e
Oregon congressmen are being cum
ed editorially, and on the street cor
ners, for voting to sustain the neces
sary payrolls and tax payments of
unnecessary power utility companies.
Dewey Hill, as the Prospect ball
team, will Tie with Butte Falls to
day. e e
O. Iverson, the carpenter. Is too
busy driving nails and missing his
thumb to write the editor a letter on
the tax issue. !
see
Republicans are not as scarce as
they wrre. They are very bold and
eass Democrats with billiard cues for
canes.
e e
J. Kort Hall went to Frisco the first
, of the week on an old-fashioned i
train. He Intended to make the trip I
In an airplane, which he once anld I
would never be good for anything
except to show off between stud-horso
races at a county fair.
e
Pine blister work has been sus
pendedboth In the woods and In
the woodshed.
e e
The Older atria are making Jam
and Jelly without the benefit of a
rise In the price of sugar and fruit
Jars.
ee
A Portland "Messiah" Invaded the
valley Inst week without eating four
fried chickens and passing his hat
twice, per custom. He was engaged
In some fancy saving of the farmer.
This week brings Friday the lath.
The only Friday the 13th this year
does not come until December.
The town clock, which ha been
out of whack for three months, re
sumed ticking last week, under the
guidance of Jno. Lawrence, the Jew
eler. e
Bill Bowerman. the coach, was here
last week and favors an embrogllo
on the gridiron with Salem next tall
for old Medford High.
Woodpeckers and squirrels have
started preparing for next winter.
e e
J. Curtis Barnes has cooked up a
scheme whereby everybody will be the
winner and only himself and the
plutocrats the loser. He holds that
the dollar Is being chased too much,
and too furiously, and favors a dollar
that will not run. when chased.
E
GAIN IN. CITIES
NEW YORK. July 6 (AP) The
1934 tuberculosis deaths, allowing a
national drop, but alao spresdlng
of the disease In 10 of the larger
cities, were Issued tonight by the
New York Tuberculosis and Healtn
association.
The report concludes that tubercu
losis Is not being ellmlnnted aa
rnplilly aa It might be. The aurvey
made by Oodlaa J. Drolet, covering
46 cities, ahowa a decline of four
per cent In deaths, to rate of flU 0
per hundred thousand population.
Traffic surveys In California Indl-
cated 58 wr cent or more of the
total vehicle miles Is traveled within t
citlee,
Ci.- ' 1,-,
MEMBER.
Editorial Correspondence
NEW YORK CITY, July 2.
O's new streamline train for Washington. As usual the tt was
packed to the doors. AVe have been here a week and gone to
town on the L every day, but going or coming have never been
able to find a seat. Yet this Ij and all the other LTs they say, are
losing money. Something suspicious about this. Sounds very
much like frenzied financing at some stage of the game.
Perhaps if we stayed here long enough we too could read the
morning paper standing up, with one hand on a strap, and the
train jerking and jolting, coming to a sudden grinding stop
and then starting with a sudden forward jump, sending the
crowded mass of liumanitv forward and backward, like water in
a churn. Hut to date reading
morning. ,
Which was the reason we failed to see some startling news
until we finally secured a seat in "The Royal Blue," and were
shooting smoothly out of the Jersey City station.
Robert Ames of Boston, Massachusetts washed overboard
from his yacht in the mid-Atlantic, and his two sons one in
Harvard, the other just graduated both drowned trying to save
him !
Talk about, self sacrifice, heroism and filial devotion! noth
ing finer in all our annals of peace or war, than that.
If there is a hereafter and honors are awarded by some just
and benevolent diety, who could properly precede these two
lads, at the head of the procession!
The Royal Blue is a streamline train, of the latest coal burn
ing model and makes the run from New York to Washington,
a distance of 2125 miles, in exactly four hours an average of
over 55 miles per hour. The service was only inaugurated a
week ago, and is another feather in the cap of one of the oldest
railroads in the United States. They charge no extra fare.
We anticipated the trip with a great deal of pleasure and
were certainly not disappointed.
Isnnprinr tn nivlimirv frnin trnvpl
V-8 is superior to travelling in an old Model T Lizzie.
At certain stages of the trip the train hit it up at ninety
miles an hour, but unless one looked at the telegraph poles whiz
zing past in a solid blur, there was no consciousness of excessive
speed. In the first place the train is built low to the ground,
there is no swaying or vibration, the wheels run on ball bearings,
and while the construction is light, aluminum, and duralinm
steel it is sheathed and stream lined so compactly, that it
doesn't roar and crash over the rails so much as it glides in
fact it comes nearer flying ON the ground than anything we
have ever experienced.
While the Royal Blue has been running for a week, it is still
the transportation sensation in this part of the country. All the
wav from New York to Philadelphia the tracks were dotted
with people, school children,
every station there were crowds who had apparently come down
just to see the Royal Blue go by. And did it go by! When a
stop was made it was only for a
carries a mail and express car too!
railroads waste more valuable time sticking around stations
than in any other way.
Tho Royal Blue also demonstrates the much maligned "iron
horse" is still in the running. A steam locomotive, of the latest
type, supplies the motive power, and can if pushed make a speed
of 110 miles an hour. We were informed by a Baltimore and
Ohio official they expert this train to make the run to Washing
ton in three hours and a half before tho year is over.' That is
railroad progress and we herewith take off our hat, to Jtr. Daniel
Willard and t ho B. and O. !
The train is air conditioned throughout, cool as a cucumber
everywhere and tho furnishings within are both comfortable and
luxurious with davenports and shaded reading lamps in the
observation car, which is largely glass and shaped like a
"Corona Corona" cigar.
Association of ideas are often
never step into another streamline train without thinking of
Mr. Robert Ames of Boston, Massachusetts and his two sons,
Richcard and Henry. It was
glided over the rails. ono felt
drawing room on wheels and
mid-Atlantic. a terrific storm
tho father washed overboard, loaded down with boots and a
raincoat. one son jumps overboard to save him, then the other
to save tnciu both and all sinking to a watery grave together!
And some people call that section of Massachusetts where
this Ames fainilv were born and bred, decadent and effete!
R. W. R.
CLEMENCY PLEAS
SHE SLUGGERS
(Continued from Page One)
on and Hnnlon, committed unjusti
fiably, on Junet 38, 1034, assault and
battery upon two law-abiding and
Inoffensive young men, and for this
crime they were thereafter, on July
3. 10.14. Indicted by the grand Jury
of Multnomnh county, and were
brousht to trial In the circuit court
for Multnomah county on September
4, 1034, and were convicted by the
Jury and sentenced on September H,
1034.
"From this record. It appenrs that
this crime was commit tfd In June.
1934. for which the defedanta were
convicted and sentenced In Septem
ber, 1034. and by the use of various
proceedings, the defendant still
stand unpunished. The appeal for
executive clemency herein Is like that
of several other cases where appli
cants have been duly convicted In
the lower court, appealed their cases
to the supreme court, which haa af
firmed the action of the lower court,
and then, without serving a day of
sentence, they appeal to the gover
nor without submitting any addition
al evidence snd ask him to supersede
and set aside the decision of the
highest court In our state a court
for whose opinion our citirens should
have the Rreutent respect.
Influence I niinlllng
"In cases of a like nature, I have
declined to intervene in spite of the
pressure brought to bear by wealth
and other powerful influences. I am
convinced that to Interfere in these
cases would be the urcwuvit abuse of
the power of my office. Rather, it
seems to me that the authority and
power of tills office should be exer
cised to uphold our courts and law-
enforcement agencies In tho malnte.
nance of the law of the land and I.
therefore, am compelled to d.-clme to
Interfere In this .n-c. etc.cr by par
dou or commutation ol aenleiK."
Arose early to catch the B. and
has been impossible, as it was this
Travelling on this train is as
nn trAvpllinir in n new Vnrrl
workmen, motorists and at
minute, and the stream-liner
We have always maintained,
surprising. We know we shall
soft and cozy in that car as it
so contented and secure in that
then one pictured that scene in
raging, the waves mountain high,
MM ACTS FOR
SOAK-RICH BILL
DELAY TILL FALL
WASHINGTON, July (.(ypyFast
expandln differences over the scope
of the president's wealth-tax pro
gram prompted opposing prediction
tonight that It would be dropped
temporarily and that It would hold
congress In session well Into Septem
ber. On one side was Senator McNsry
of Oregon, republican leader. He
forecast that corurress would either
recess and reconvene In the fall or
enact the tat bill at the session be
ginning next January 3.
On the other aide were house way
and means committee democrats, still
sticking by their pledge to bring out
a bill this aesston. They doubted, al
most to a man. that final congress
ional action on the bill not even
dratted yet would be obtained be
fore the first week of September.
Simultaneously, plans went ahead
to expedite other measures on the
"must" legislative program. The
house planned to take up Monday
the controverted amendments to the
Tennessee Valley Authority taw
The aenste arranged to take up
Monday and vote on a motion by
Senator Delterlch (D.. lll.i, to con
cur In the house amendment, knock
ing out of the utilities bill the de.th
sentence of "unnneceaaarv" holding
companies. Scheduled to follow that
were the Wheeler wster carrier. AAA
amendment and omnibus banking
bills.
In the house, hearings were set for
next week on the new "must" cold
clause bill, while leaders honed the
Ouffey coal atablllzatlon and federal
alcohol control measures would be
resdy for the floor by the week-end.
The historical society of Canyon
Tex. haa been presented a 31 -volume
FnjUsh - printed encyclopedia, that
bears the date of 1832.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M.D.
Hlgned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease
diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady if a stamped self -ad
dressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In ink
Uwlng to the large number of letters received only a fen can be answered.
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions, address Dr.
W Hi lam Brady, 265 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Cal.
CLINICAL TEST FOR CHRONIC LEAD POISONING.
Altho lead Is not Included with
the score or more of elements nor
mally present In the body, w be
lieve that the
body of every
dweller In city
or town contains
a trace of lead
City dwellers
dally take In
some lead from
one source or
another, this
metal being
widely used In
Industry and the
arts. Lead Is
taken Into the
body either thru
Ingestion (in water, food or medi
cine, or the habit of chewing, suck
ing or eating substances containing
lead or contaminated with It) or
thru Inhalation of fumes or dust.
No one now seriously Imagines lead
Is or can be absorbed Into the body
through the unbroken skin.
This usual. If not normal, dally
absorption of lead and the constant
dally excretion of a trace of lead by
the Intestine, kidneys and sxin (noio
back, wiseacre. It doesn't follow that
what comes out must go In the
asms way), complicates the diagnosis
of lead poisoning. Just where shall
we draw the line between the quan
tity of lead one may absorb or ex
crete dally without apparent Injury
to the1 health and the quantity
which is certain to produce poison
ous effects? And how can we de
termine whether the dally excretion
of a minute quantity of lead thru
the kidneys damages the kidneys?
If such damage occurs. It takes years
for the signs of chronic Interstitial
nephritis to develop. Meanwhile the
diagnosis, whether of chronic lead
poisoning or nephritis (Brlght's dis
ease) or arteriosclerosis, or neuritis
rheumatism" or headache or ane
mia or mental aberration or depres
sion or stomach trouble or unex
plained weakness of a given muscle
or musclo group or an unexplained
rise In blood pressure. Is a matter
of your physician's opinion.
Chemical testa of the excretions
for lead give unsatisfactory results,
for the reason already mentioned.
No one knows where to draw the
line. j
A microscopic examination of the I
blood gives a better index. It seems
that a constant manifestation of
the presence of a harmful quantity
of lead is a- peculiar stippling or
spotting of the red corpuscles In the
blood specimen stained for micros
copic examination. But the technic
of this test Is difficult and tedious,
and the reading of the result Is,
after all, arbitrary.
Probably the most satisfactory ,
gauge of the question in any case
ITALY-ETHIOPIA
(Continued from tage One)
gas outfits, the Utest thing In tanks
and airplanes and equipment for cov
ering vast nreas with chemicals de
signed to burn the bare feet of Km-
porer Halle Selassie's soldiers.
While fascists rejoiced at Mussol
ini's escape from harm when light
ning struck the wireless antennae of
his big three-motor airship while It
was fighting Its way down through
an electrical storm to the little west
coast town, authoritative sources
here reiterated that Italy neltner
wanted nor would aeeept mediation
of her conflict with Ethiopia.
Once again they declared the mat
ter one to be settled and settled
once for all directly between Italy
and Ethiopia. Italy wants no half
settlement such aa territorial con
cessions, they said.
If Haile Selassie la willing to ask
Italy to assume m armed protector
ate over his country, these sources
said, then war may be avoided. If
not, war Is certain.
A Premier Boasts
Nothing daunted by his near dis
aster, n Duce was into oratorical
form aa he told his massed fighting
men the die was cast.
"Remember." ha said, "that Ital
ians have always defeated the black
races. Adua (where an Italian In
vading force was badly beaten by Ill
equipped, but numerically superior,
Ethiopian defenders In 1896) was an
exception only because of the dif
ference In proportion between the
forces. There wete only 4.000 Italians
against 100,000 Ethiopians."
Declartng the earlier Ethiopian
conflict unfortunate for Italy because
she was less concerned about her :
soldiers than with "miserable quts- i
tlons of parliament an Institution '
his fascist regime has virtually I
abandoned Mussol.nl continued:
"Italy today Is rewriting an heroic
page of her history.
He asserted the entire nation was
"behind her sons who arc leaving
for Africa ." and paraphrased t he
famed fascist slogan "better to live
one day aa a lion than 100 years as
a lamb' In this wise: i
"Every Italian prefers a life of
heroism to a life of uselessnrss."
That phrase brought the greatest
ovation yet from the Italian youths
ready to join the more than 100,000
men Italy already has sent to her
colonies adjoining Ethiopia. j
Veteran Reporter Tasstes
SOUTH HANSON. Mass. July fj
(AP) Joseph Edpar Chamberlln. 83.
for 48 yeara a member ot the staff of
the Boston Evening Transcript and
for the other 15 years of his news
paper tlfe connet-ted with numerou-
other puWlcatloiis. died her, totiav. .
la the clinical test. No harm will be
done by a de-leadlng diet (low cal
cium) and medication which aids
or promotes excretion of lead, ana
If two or three weeks of this falls
to bring about improvement It is
reasonable to conclude that the lead
Is not due to lead poisoning.
The low calcium diet contains no
milk, no cheese, no eggs, very little
fruit or vegetables. It Includes meat,
potato, liver, tomatoes, rice, canned
corn, bananas, raw apples or baked
apples or applesauce, butter, breaa
made without milk, soda biscuits,
crackers, sugar, pepper, salt. No nuts,
no peanuts.
Readers need not ask me what
medication aids or promotes excre
tion of lead. That Is for the patient's
physician to decide. The low calcium
diet Is only for mild chronic lead
poisoning. More acute or severe trou
ble would be aggravated by such
treatment.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Tom, Dick and Harry.
I am subject to chronic constipa
tion. Everyone tells me it means
ruin of health, unless there la a
movement at least once, better three
times a day. But notice many ot
your followers claim they go for a
week . . . M. C.
Answer The quaint suggestion
that It meana ruin If you fall to
take physic emanates from the In
terests that sell physic. Don't argue.
Send ten cents coin and stamped
envelope bearing your address, for
booklet "The Constipation Habit."
Remarkable.
I started reading your articles
about the time I married three years
ago and now I expect a baby in
October. Have you any Instructions
which may help to give my baby the
right start? Mrs. L. A.
Answer Thank you for the testi
monial. Send stamped envelope bear
ing your address, for Instructions
for the prospective mother. Inclose
a dime If you also want a copy ol
the Brady Baby Book.
I. Q. S.
Is Iron, quinine and strychnine
good tonic? Please tell me exactly
what quantity of each to get. how
to mix and what dose and how
often, etc. . H: C. A.
Answer I should not advise It. No
particular medicine Is a "tonic" un
less It happens to be the remedy
for what happens to ail you. Strych
nin Is too dangerous a poison (caus
Ing death In convulsions) to monkey
with in any circumstance.
(Copyright, 1935, John F. DUle Co.)
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Urady
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D 80S El
Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif.
HEAT WAVE EBBS
OVER WIDE AREA;
DEATH TOLL
(By the Associated Press)
Alleviation of 193S first general
heat wave which caused upward of
thirty deaths was promised tonight.
" The aun was relenting after a show
of power which brought its year's
high of 87.7 to New York City, a
maximum of 100 degrees at Dodge
Cty, Kas., and temperatures In the
uncomfortable nineties to wide areas
of the country during the day.
The weather man said most of the
nation could expect bearable weather
tomorrow.
Three additional heat deaths In
Pennsylvania, the same number in
Ohio, another each In Now England.
Missouri and Indiana brought the
total, directly or Indirectly, due to
this cause to 17. Drownings totaled
eight.
Two persons died In New York City,
the first recorded deaths from heat
In the city this summer. The victims,
both men, collapsed In the sweltering
mid-town area.
Severe damage was done In Wor
cester, Mass.. by an electric storm,
which, however, did temper the heat.
It was 93 In Worcester at noon. A
bout of lightning atruck the Wor
cester city hospital, breaking win
dows In the maternity ward. No one
was hurt.
Anot her severe electrical storm
lashed the Blsckstone vslley near
Providence, R. I. Two women were
struck by lightning, but neither was
hurt seriously.
Score Forest Negligence
PORTLAND, Ore.. July 6 (AP)
C. J. Buck, rcslanal forester. Is
pleased at the drop in the number
of fires tn Oregon and Washington
during the first six months of 1935
but Is disappointed In the growing
total of conflagrations caused by
carelessness.
Your Investment
Insured Up to S5,000
Thl Association offer a thrift plan tinder Fed
eral (invermnent "uperllon. tt appe.il tn the
mall saver and the large investor.
T.ery Shareholder participates equal!? In dhldemM, In proportion to
nhat he has paid In. Special nomi paid on regular inonthlt .atlng.
Ve offer four tpes of shares through which you
can place jour savings In this association.
"EDERALoAVINGS
.NO LOAN ASSOCIATION
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
complain bitterly In these
days because we can produce
more than we can sell, and call
loudly upon the government to do
something about It.
If the law of supply and demand
stands In the way of the govern
ment's doing something about It, we
Insist upon Its repeal.
WELL, back Tn the beginnings of
Southern Oregon,- they produc
ed more than they could sell a lot
more but they didn't call on the
government to dispose of the .sur
plus. To begin with, the govc-nmi-nt was
a long way off and made up of hard
boiled Individualists who believed In
the doctrine of root hog or die, nnd
to end up with the pioneers of
Southern Oregon weren't the kind of
people to cry to the government for
help In every little emergency.
They, too, were rugged individual
ists.
LINSEY Slsemore, pioneer of both
the Rogue and the Klamath
countries, reminiscing the other day,
gave a fascinatingly Interesting pic
ture of the beginnings of the South
ern Oregon country.
"The early settlers of the Royue
River valley he said, "lived In one
of the richest rfeglons of the west, but
they didn't get lch quick. The prin
cipal reason was 'ack of markets.
"They could produce, but they
couldn't sell. Business was mostly
by barter and trade, what little
money they had coming from the
mines. They live! well, but they
couldn't get rich."
4
(CAN example of prices:
"My fathe was a greot trader,
buying stock all over the Roue
Rlger valley. I remember once wnen
we were out on a buying trip, a man
offered a cow and calf for sale. My
father finally bought the two for
$8.00.
'After we had left, he said to me
That cow and calf aren't worth 3.00
but the poor devil needed the
money'.
NE piece of equipment constantly
-
carried by his father Lir.sey re
members well. It was a pa'r of sad
dlebags, with a money bag on one
side and a heavy pistol and holster
on the other.
In the money bag, he carried silver
and gold money Trat. you know,
was shortly aftee the Civil war, and
people were suspicious of paper
money. They'd had their fingers
badly burned with It. especially those
who came from tho South. They
wanted good, hard money that could
be relied on.
They'd heard the same old rosy
tales about printing prew money
that we're hearing now and these
tales of paper money prosperity had
turned out to ba rank frauds. They
wanted nothing more to do with the
stuff.
So Llnsey's fathct had to carry
gold and silver with which to do his
buying. ,
ii A BOUT the first Industrial en
's terprlse I can remember In
the Rogue River valley," Llnsey says,
"was a salt spring my father bought
from some men who had fltrd on the
location. '
"He carried the salt water down
from the spring in wooden troughs
to big Iron kettles In which the
water was evaporated by boiling. The
resulting salt could be sold for cash."
THE next Industrial enterprise,
catering to an equally primitive
need, was a pottery. It wlil be de
scribed In a subsequent article, as
this column Is getting about long
enough for present-day newspaper
readers.
Lumber Gains
PORTLAND. O'f., July 6. (AP)
New business totaling 62.804.000 feet,
an Increase of 34 per cent over the
3-year weekly average for June, was
reported by the Western Pine associa
tion today for the week ending June
29.
SALEM, July . (AP) Paul
Lynch. Democrat, late yesterday ten
dered to Governor Martin his resig
nation as state representative from
Morrow, otlllam. Wheeler and Sher
man counties.
Write or call
for free booklet
118 r. Main. Phone 1!5
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
NEW YORK. July . Well, I cer
tainly told that big stltf where to
head In. Olvlng me a shove because
I accidentally stepped on his foot. I
- had as much
rieht to edge In
to that crowd
around a window
of puppies as he.
Nobody can push
me about and pet
away with It.
O. I suppose
I'd let a cop give
me a push In en
emergency, but
not a layman.
I iJ '1 Anytime a guy
itta jm&e;if& gives me a shove
" " he must be In
uniform. Or at least wear a badge.
And did you notice what I said when
he pushed me?. Like a flash I in
quired: "What do you mean by shov
ing me around?"
He said "I meant this!" and gave
me another. I replied: "Is that so?"
One comeback after another. Then I
missed my chewing gum. But I re
membered what Montaigne said, stop
ped dead In my tracks, closed my
eyes and counted 20 for my anger to
cool. That saved him. He can thank
Montaigne for everything. Dear old
Michel !
It has prettied a passive screech
I mean it has reached a pretty pass
when a hard-working taxpayer can't
stop to glance into a dog shop win
dow without having his neck unhing
ed. So long as I'm good to the folks
and wash behind my ears I'll look In
aa many oa I choose.
Tomorrow, for spito, I may get up
early and hunt up every dog window
I can find to look in. I know a dandy
one In Passaic. A second while I ad
just my tie In this mirror. My sus
picions are confirmed. That shover
la following me. Low skulking thing,
slinking through the streets. Think
I'm afraid. Look! See that dirty look
I tossed over my shoulder. Listen to
me whistling. That's the drinking
song I'm doinf?. From "The Student
Prince" isn't It? I'll go into the
mocking bird next with trills. That's
my best number. "Me and My Shad
ow" would be appropriate.
Maybe If I'd duck into this depart
ment store and prowl around I could
shake him. Funny how clerks go into
r huddle when I approach a counter.
You'd think I was e refugee from an
isolation camp. Earl Benham would
be mwientaed with chagrin to see
how this new suit of his Is going un
noticed. But about the only way any
one ever notices me Is for me to rtcp
on their foot. A-l-l-ways In the wa
ay! There's a career! sending Inno
cent pedestrians flying from under
their hats.
Speaking of hats. I might look ove.
this store's stock. The last one I
bought wtis a rakish thing called
"The Rob Roy." When my wife siw
It they had to dash cold water In her
face. To stop her laughter. Why
shouldn't I try to look collegiate?
I'm a college man. Bartlett'a Business
College double entry book-keeping
and Gregg short hand class 1911. In
the right kind of a hat. I have that
certain dash. It's only properly hat
ted I make my personality felt. Re
mind me to tell you sometime about
the Homburg I brought home from
Lake Lucerne. The one with the tiny
green tall feather In the band.
They still talk about that wherever
beautiful women gather.
(Continued from Page One)
their own Is In the interior depart
ment. Secretary Ickes has three lady
press agents. Handsome Prof. Tugwell
has recently signed a new one In
rural resettlement.
There are about a dozen directly
or Indirectly functioning in new deal
press capacities around town.
was formerly the most important
press Job in town.
But where the girls really come into
BiBknd
Medford Federal Savings and Loan Association
126 East Main Street. Medford. Oregon
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
June 30, 1935
BKSOl RCF.S
Cah
Real Estate Loans
unpaid balances..
Shares In Federal Home Loan Bank, of
Suspense
i.iMiu,nii:s
Shares
United States Treasury Shares....
Incomplete Loans
Reserves:
Contlncent Fund
Surplus
Federal Insurance Reserve
Bonus for Installment Thrift shares
Accounts Payable
Dividends Paysble
115.854 43
Safety of your Investment Insured up to t5.000.00 by the Federal Savins,
and Loan Insurance Corporation. Washington D. C.
STATE OF OREGON. COUNTY OF JACKSON, ss:
We. the undersigned. C. M. Kldd. President and J. H. Fletcher Secretary
of the Medlord Federal Savings and Loan AaeovHtlon. Being first duly sworn
on oath, depose and say. each for himself and not the one for the other'
that we are respectively the President and Secretary of said Association- that
we read the foregoing statement of Assets and Liabilities, and Itnow the
contents thereof, and that the foregoing statement of aald Association
for the period beginning January 1st. 1935. and ending June 30. 1835 Is true
and correct as we verily believe.
C. M. KIDD, President
J. H. FLETCHER, Secretary.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 5th day of July. 1835.
H. F ELDEN.
My Commission Expires: FeO.usrj-
Flight fo Time
(Medford and Jackson fount)
Hlstury from tlie files of tbe
Mall Tribune ol ID and tu Year.
AR" ,
TEN VEAKS AUO TODAY
July 7, 1U25.
Oangland's guns blaze In Chicago,
and the third Genna, brother in
three weeks Is murdered.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Carpenter
return from a motor trip to San
rranclaco, via Crescent City, Calif.
Fifteen special trains to pasa
through city In next three weeks.
Mrs. George M. Roberts wins the
ladies' handicap match at the golf
course.
Careless. campers start fires In the
Dead Indian district during the July
4th holiday.
CofC. luncheon tomorrow in honor
of Stephen T. Mather, director ot
national parks.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
July 7. 10IA.
(It was Thursday)
Twenty - one people are Injured
when a .laseball special returning
from Montague. Calif., collides with
two helper engines In the yards "t
Ashland. Among the Injured are
Kenneth Jerome. Mrs. Gus Samuels,
and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rawley.
Rain falls over the valley, and ex
tinguishes forest fires, and cheers
farmers.
Movie pictures of valley scenes
and people, taken by A. C. Allen are
shown at the Page theater.
Turks repulse British attack on
Dardenelles; Frank Holt, attempted
assassin of J. Plerpont Morgan, con
fesses he placed dynamite bombs
aboard liners now in mid -Ml antic.
TO
E
RESIDE ON FARM
BUCHAREST, Rumania, July a.
(AP) Elizabeth of Hohenzoltern.
princess of Rumania, today aban
doned hope of restoration to the
throne of Greece. She obtained
divorce from former King George.
The capital heard whispers that she
Intends to marry her secretary and
run a model farm.
Greece Is to have a plebiscite in
the fall on restoration of the mon
archy. Elizabeth and Alauander Szanavy,
tall, handsome, 40-year-old Greek
who served In the Czarlst army dur
ing the world war, have been on
excellent terms for some time. Re
cently Szanavy became court cham
berlain and personal secretary to the
former queen.
Friends say Elizabeth had farming
tn mind when she purchased an
estate from Count Toraczonyl, Hun
garian magnate, near Tim I soars not
so long ago. She reportedly paid
35.000,000 lei (about 3,5O0.OO0) for
It.
These friends say the ex-queen in
tends to convert the magnificent
estate Into an experimental farm on
the American model and manage it
with Szanavy. The estate Is the only
place In Rumania where rice
grown.
Elizabeth, now living In a pala
tial residence at Bucharest, not far
from that occupied by Mme. Magda
Lupezcu, King Carola red-haired
friend, expressed no surprise when
Informed her divorce suit had won.
It had been understood long In ad
vance that the proceedings would
be pure formality. They were held In
secret, and fhe court needed only
io minutes to return Its verdict.
George, now living In London. Bald
no attention to the trial. He was
not even represented by counsel. He
has five days from next Monday to
appeal, but It is not believed he will
do so.
It was announced Elizabeth would
resume her old title of Elizabeth of
Hohenzollern. Princess of Rumania.
. 3.741.57
.. 110.87.05
1,300.00
35.80
$115,954.43
Portland
48.57J.78
60.000.00
108.572.78
4.748.19
12588
707.31
77.11
3 08
813 38
812 38
35.00
1. 886.08
Notary Public for Oreeon.
13, 1837.
QUEEN