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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1935)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OEEGOy, SUNDAY. .TULY 14, 1935 Medford Mail Tribune Krrytme in Southern Oregoa Reads the Mull Trlbuoe" Dally Except 8atnrday. Published by MRHPORD PRINTING CO. 25-S7-: N. Kir St. Phone 11. ROHKRT W. RUHU Editor. An Independent Newepiper. Entered eecond-claee matter at Med ford. Oregon, unaer aci oi mwcd . SUBSCRIPTION BATES no In Advance: Duly, one year 15.00 Dally, elx month Dally, one monm By Carrier, in Advance Medford, Aih tanH .inknonvili. Central Point, phoenix. Talent, Oold Hill and on hlghwaya. Pally, one year I'-'" Dally, elx monthe i-2S Dally, one month All term, cash In advance. Ofrirhil Niper of the City of Medford. OfflrltU Paper of Jarknon County. MKMUKH OF TUB AHSOC1ATKII t'HKHS Hrrelvlnc Full Leased Mire nerrira. The Associated preea le excluelvely en titled to the une for publlcallnn of all disnatrhee credited to U or other wise credited In this paper, and also to the local news published herein. All rights for publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MKMUKH OF UNITED I'REHS 11 KM UK ft OP AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representatives M. C. MOOENKK.N A COMPANY Offices In New Vork, Chicago Detroit. Ban Francisco, I.os Angeles, Seattle. Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot Uy Arthur Terry &()! the weather, say many, as summer showed up Frl. Orchardlst Kort Hall ha returned from Frisco by train and with Doc Hayes' oldest boy, was the only passengers on the same. e e Congressmen and other Washing ton, D. C officials started calling each other liars. In regulsr court house steps style last week, but as yet nobody has suggested hsnging the attorney-general. e J. Wesley Bates, the barber, has been on a vacation to the coast, during which he scraped up a num ber of acquaintances. e e e Picking of apricots ha started, and are being Jammed and Jelled by the Older Olrla. e e The demand for a Republican administration, they voted against in 1032 Is becoming more pro nounced, among the natives. e e Valley .watermelons have reached Linoa whpt-A thev can be vlvl- accte4 with a buck-saw. They will bring enough this year to pay for .i.. -.tr-. u. in tvifl ahotnun shell. itwd to repel the 8 hare -The -Crop vadvocHtes. see J. Curtis Barnes was heard argu ing that a $ possessed no more In trinsic value thsn a cabbsge leaf. He refused to lend his audience a head of lettuce. A shtvarec was perpertrated in the Tolo district last week. e e ' Luncheon clubmen rode burros playing donkey baseball last week, and many wish they hadn't. e e The Elks cat has recovered from 1U recent bunging up. and is again In concert form. e e A calliope rended the air of the bla dist. all last week, ana was change from a phonograph record hurled from an autd amplifier. e e A recall of Gov. Martin It now threatened by upstate politicians, who plan to raise hell, under pre tense of testing the Constitution. It will also be a chance to test the political sanity of Oregon. The dis turbers figure voters are still mad and blind. e e e T. Wilson Waite. the cornetiat, ha returned home from the hospital where he was disconnected from his appendix. e e e C. Holmes, the ins. man. ha been elected com. of the veterans of the Great Fracas. Mr. H. was president of the Orlnly Hiking club In his youth, and has walked up all the leading eminences and landmarks oi this vicinity, as far aa he could in a bus. Joy was expressed here. Sat. that Old Sol hit 108 In Portland, and bets were laid, it would not be trumpeted on the front page, as is the valley's torrid tty. e e The I. Coleman boy John, ag gressively got in the mud three times Frl. and was washed down the same number of times, until he shone like a new paint Job. e Hermy Offenbacher of the Apple gate towned Sat. Thts would be news If he did It Friday. e e Several citizens are getting very friendly like they were going to run for something next year. e e e F. (Red MacDonald. the ex-basketball thrill was seen doing a neat Job of guarding on the end of a shovel last week. e e e I Bill Bolger. the merchant, is get ting ready for his annual blanket ' sate in August, j ... The mechanical bandits, or slot maohlnrs. still gobble up the nickels of the masses, who will not be fooled. One C.rmliifite (lets All Honors, HARR1SBURO. 111. (UP) A for mnl commencement program wsa held at a district school at Muddy, near here, for one person. Ophelis Chavous, negro girl graduating from Gsrdner school, was the only mem ber of the claw of 103V but formal exercise, including a commence ment address and selections by the school orchestra, were presented. Editorial Correspondence TERRY, Montana, July 10. This place wasn't on our itinerary. Neither was a cloudburst and flood shortly after midnight. It is now nine-thirty a. m. and the crack- train of the Northern Pacific, the "West Coast Limited" has been stand ing here with steam up for nine hours. e e e e How much longer we shall remain here no one seems to know. There is a washout ahead and another one behind, which makes it difficult to ro far in either direction. Which is rather too bad, for the Milwaukee tracks are only a few hundred yards away and tnere is a spur tracn 10 mem west 01 me washout. Terrv lias a railroad station, leaks like a sieve, a general Btore and about half a dozen houses. This is a cattle and sheep country, but a native at the station who was flooded out of his home last night and was drying himself in the sun, says most of them were shipped out last year, when everytning was as ary, as it is wci now. une can see the bare rocky cliffs of the Yellowstone river about half a mile to the north, and the bare table land behind. The Yellow stone however has not overflowed its banks, in fact it hasn't reached the danger point. Not the river but the sudden cloud bursts caused the trouble, too much water falling in too short a time, and the culverts too small to take care of the runaway. So the water went over the tracks, swept away the road bed, and nearly drowned the brakeman who had to walk back in the deluge, to flag any approaching train. He too was sunning himself at the station, with his water drenched shoes and socks out to dry on the wooden platform. After that dash from Chicago West Coast Limited as it moved slowly out of the station yester day morning, seemed cumbersome, snail like and antiquated as a stage coach. When we waited at a little station in Minne sota for the train from Duluth one day coach, in which was one passenger for Seattle, the contrast between modern and old fashioned transportation appeared even more depressing. However during the night we made up that time, passed the Yellowstone Comet which had gone ahead on schedule, and would have been the other side of Billings, Montana now if the elements hadn't decreed otherwise. However it is better to be roasting here in the sun, than in the ditch or perhaps the nearest hospital which was the fate of the passengers on the Great Northern Empire Builder, north of here less than a. week ago, when the engine hit - - This train is air-conditioned it is standing still. A young survpvinor crew for the U. S. Geodetic survey, also flooded out early this morning from a sod hut to the ncuth, says it was 302 in the shade here yesterday and very humid. It seems in his work, allowances have to be made for expansion and con traction so they carry centrigrade thermometers on their tran sits. The temperature he reports therefore comes near being official. Not so good. We arc now over nine hours late and will be lucky to reach Seattle before dark tomorrow night. We were due there about 8:30 tomorrow morning. However we have a good diner, and very geuinl dining car steward, and after tomorrow morning, we eat on the Northern pacific. So there will be compensations, particularly for the young man from Memphis who has been eating out of a paper bag all the way. We spent several hours in Minneapolis and went to the top of the Foshay tower to see the city. The country is dotted with lakes like a cake with raisins. There are lakes in the city limits with beautiful narks around them, and lakes outside. A very beautiful citv and beautiful country. The Foshay tower serves as rather an ironical reminder of the 192!) boom days. Foshay wo believe is taking a long rest in some federal prison for his peculations and financial manipulations, a man of the Tnsull type without the Insull shrewdness or good fortune. In tho lobby is a very handsome bust of George Washington with the information that the Foshay tower is a testimonial to the Father of his country. A testimonial to the man who could never tell a liel Railroads are all alike. Ever since daylight the report has been we will be on our way in an hour or two. It is now ten fifteen, about H0t). in the shade, outside of the car and in, and we are still here. The children of Terry however are having a good time. They are propelling hastily constructed rafts around their back yards, building dams and enjoying a sort ot Venetian holiday in general. Two kids in a wash tub with a big yellow farm dog, jumping beside and now and then forced to swim a few strokes, comprises a diverting spectacle. It isn't so diverting for the father of the family who is wading through water up to his knees, carrying chickens from the barn to the house. A kind father certainly, letting the boys have their fun while he does the dirty work. A long freight train on the Milwaukee has just pulled in from the west, and word comes they are held up by washouts also. A good time for the mayor of Terry to take the census! R. W. R. RELIEF LIST CUT DURING JUNE IN 140 BIG CITIES WASHINGTON, July IS. (A) A more thsn seasonal decline in the June relief population of 10 of the larjtest cities today oheered the men In charge of President Roosevelt's long-delayed M.000.000,000 work pro gram. Instep of 3,070.640 families tnd single persons the number sup ported wholly or in part by the fed eral government during May there were 3.003.073 in June. Thl was a decline of 349.897 persons. S 3 per cent, and the coat of relief dropped M .4M.439. Harry L. Hopkins, who hopes sojn to liquidate his relief administration and limit federal activities to wors pronrewt. attributed the declines to pickups in private business. Warmer weather also helped cut expenses. Aa "noteworthy" Instances of In creased employment, he cited the au tomobile Industry at Flint. Mich . and the re-opening of a large textile mill at Winston-Salem. N. C, I til (lenerntton Graduate. KNOXVILLE. Tenn. (UP) When T h e r o n Alexander was graduated from Marysvllte college thts June, he represented the fourth genera tion of his family to finish there. His grandfather ended college there in 1841; his prandmother. oldest living graduate, left in the '60s, his father early in thl century. Use alai) rtlbiu want ad. two water tanks, one of which to St. Paul on the Zephyr, the a soft spot. - - when it is moving, but not when chap employed near here on a (Continued from Page One) But his third principle then laid down was that project should be undertaken on which a targe per centage of direct labor can be used. (This Is the Hopkins philosophy. He wanted to spend for wages first, Ickee for materials first). To give you an Idea of the confu sion still existing, the mayor of a Urge eastern city wired Washington recently aa follow: "Do you know when contemplated allotment of worka progress funds will be made? There Is considerable question aa to whether city will hare to pay for material. My original un derstanding was that federal govern ment would bear entire cost of WpA When will final forms of WPA appli cations be ready? Only form we have had are stated to be tentative." Representative Rankin failed to create much excitement among his colleagues when he charged that his telephone wire had been tapped. A certain democratic leader In the house commented: "I don't see why anyone would want to tamper with Rankin's phone, except to cut it off." The "ionosphere" surrounding the earth, which reflect rsdlo signals, has been pushed out to a distance of 1ND miles by latest discoveries. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Binned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed-. Letters should be brief and written In ink Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr William Brady, 265 El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Cat FLABBY FAT A number of readers who do not wish to put on more weight are wor rying about the calories In beer, wine. whiskey and soda highball, cock tail and the like. One likes dry sauterne, Rhine wine, chlanti. etc., and would like to know how much, when and with what one should take these so as to add no more weight. Another c o n -sumes a glass of beer, or a highball, or a glass of sweet wine, or a cocktail now and then at parties, but being "on a diet" she wants assurance that these little ex tras will not Increase her caloric In take. On the other hand, a young man writes that he has gained many pounds In weight since he started drinking beer, although he had tried for years to gain weight but in vain until he discovered beer. A glass of beer yields 130 calorics. provided all the alcohol In It Is oxi dized In the body, that is, utilized fuel. There is approximately one- third of an ounce of alcohol in a glass (half pint) of beer of 4 per cent al coholic strength. Few persons, aside from Inebriates who drink exsesslvely and desire and can toke or retain but little food so long as they can get plenty of liquor. are capable of metabolizing, utilizing. oxidizing, burning more than one- eighth of an ounce of alcohol in an hour. So It is obvious that when more alcohol Is taken than the body can oxidize the excess is execrated as alcohol, and the unburned alcohol Intoxicates. Whenever you can de tect the odor of alcohol on the breath, that Is the best evidence of Intoxication, Whiskey contains from 45 to 60 per cent of alcohol.- Brandy about the same. Gin contains 60 to 70 per cent alcohol. In fact, much gin today is actually alcohol diluted with less than one-third water and flavored with Juniper oil. Wines contain from 8 to 30 per cent of alcohol. A gram of alcohol oxidized or burn ed yields 7 calories, or say an ounce yields 200 calories. Within limitations a small amount of alcohol burned In the body protects corresponding E (By the Assoclnted Prens) Moves for peace gained a portion of the Italo-Ethloplan "war" spot light yesterday as Secretary Hull of the United States issued a statement in support of the Kellogg-Briand pact. His action evoked comment In Lon don circles that "united front" with Great Britain against war In Ethiopia was possible If the United States Jointed Great Britain In opposition to stich a war. In Home, Italian authorities de clared they had "in no way" violated the Kellogg-Briand pact. Military preparations on the part of Italy moved forward with una bated Intensity. Massaua. the leading seaport of the Italian colony of Eri treat, was described as a city of sol diers and stevedores, laboring stren uously to move men and supplies Into the rone where hosttll tics are expected In September. Emperor Halle Selassie of Ethiopia was reported moving ccrown Jewels and religious relics out of the holy city of Axum to a safer place thigh In the lntorlor of Ethiopia. FEUD WOUNDS 1 BARBOtTRVTLLS. Ky., July 13. ,pt Bullets wounded a girl and a man when two f am 11 tea renewed an old grudge In this hill town tonight. Twenty shots whistled through Sat urday night crowd on courthouse square. A passerby, Miss Mary Gregory, of Manchester, Clay county, was shot In the wrist. Orange GAmbrlel was wounded twice In the shoulder. The shooting was blamed on an old enmity between tne Kinder and Oambrlel families of the Artemus section of Knox county. FARM BILL FIGHT WASHINGTON. July 13. A move to shove the farm adjustment bill through the senate early next week and get it Into conference w. initiated today by Senator Smit.i. (D.. 8. CI, in charge of the b:ll It coincided with warnings from foe of the AAA amendments that a host of amendment would be press ed. Ore and Bullloi: Purchased t.kmfttr Stat ( ilitorh F iji.,.., WILDBHRf, BROS. SMELTING X Rl FINING CO. Off: 741 Mukft St., San r'ttiviKO - Flint: f jtN Sin I'tiff.-d FROM BEER amounts of fat, protein or carbohy drate from oxidation. So there you have the fattening effect of moderate or occasional drinking. A glass of beer Is equivalent to, say, ' of a glaas of milk. One propa gandist for alcohol asserted that a highball Is equivalent to a plate of ham and eggs in nutritive value, but I think we must discount that by one good slice of ham. Say It Is equivalent to a hired man size slab of apple pie. Compared with sugar or starch, which yields 4 calories to the gram, and protein which yields 4 calories to the gram, and fat which yields 9.4 calories to the gram, alcohol yields 7 calories to the gram. On estimating the "fattening" effect of beer, wine or liquor, we must always bear in mind the strictly limited capacity of the body to oxidize and utilize alco hol In place of real food or body fat. It makes those who are already fat fatter and flabbier, but those who need to gain had better Interest them selves In foods the body can utilize. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Epithelioma Please tell me what will cure skin cancer on the face. (P. D. T.) Answer. Taken early, X-ray. radi um, diathermy, sollfled carbon diox ide, solar cautery, elctro-deslccatlon, even chemical coagulation will cure Personally I should prefer a clean surgical removal, which may be done under local anesthesia if the treat ment Is not too long put off. Gargle Kindly publish your gargle to pre vent hoarseness in apeaklng or sing ing. (Mrs. C. A. H.) Ans. Send stamped envelope bear ing your address and ask for the in struction. Pneumonathorax I am taking the gas treatment (ar tificial air) to collapse my left lung, as I am a hemorrhage case. Does this weaken the heart? (J. A. G.) Ans. No. It Is a mistake to seek elsewhere for such information when you have a physician good enough to give you such treatment. (Copyright. 1935, John F. Dille Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should. send letter direct to Ijr. William Brady. M D.. 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. WASHINGTON. July 13. AP) Es tablishment of 11 regions for rural re habilitation, and the distribution of $91,000,000 between the areas were announced today by Rexford G. Tug well, resettlement administrator. The $91,000,000 was allocated re cently to the administration by the president from the $4,000,000,000 works appropriation, and Is for the six-month period, July 1-December 31. 1025. Officials explained that no break down of the fund by states will be made. Under plans now being draft ed, specific projects will be planned where the administration determines a need. Then individual allotments will be made within the regions for specific projects. Funds allocated to the regions, of ficials snld, will be used to maintain projects alread y launched by other agencies absorbed by the resettle ment administration and for new projects now being planned. Region eight Idaho. Oregon and Washington is allocated $4,526,570. TEXAS BLACKMEN FORT WORTH. Tex.. July 13. Jfr District Attorney Clyde Eastus sild It was against the law, but that did n't discourage a group of Fort Worth negroes who considered tonight vol unteering "to spill their blood In be half of our native land. Ethiopia." Walter J. Davis, a World war vet eran, announced a group or negroes would meet at the Nyro Y. M. C. A. Monday night to protest against the expected war between Italy and the realm of Emperor Halle Selassie. Wolverine Reported Seen. LANSING, Mich. UP) Some where In Michigan's north country, a wolverine Is believed to be roam ing. Louis F. Smith reported tracks similar to those of a wolverine, and Elmer Dalton saw a low. shaggy besr-llke animal running near New berry. Wolverines. It was believed. have long been extinct In Michigan. As some soils blow more readily than others, the federal government recommends using easily-blown soils for pasture and sod crops to hold them down. SURE WAY TO PEP SAY MANY THOUSANDS Stomachic, Laxative, and Tonic Effects Produce Results Mr. C. E. Jeffries, traveling sales man, states that he suffered for some time and tried many well-known pre parations without satisfactory re- u Its. Qu.Mir.s from hi letter: "Tlie re lief tin medicine has (liven mr L AOP.de-ful 1 no lonsrr !'.s vr csy nur s'.oni'.'.: and we-ejs I f.T:ve'iv hed on a liquid diet I now enjoy FINAL RITES FOR BE HELD MONDAY Funeral services for W. H. Canon, who passed away at the Good Sa maritan hospital In Portland, Ore July 13 after an Illness of two weeks, will be held at the Perl Funeral Home Monday at 2:30 p m., Rev. E. Iverson officiating. The pallbearers will be A. E. Reames, Col. Frank L. TouVelle, Postmaster Frank DeSouza, J. A. Perry, S, S, Humphries and Ber- thold Barnum. Interment In Siskiyou Memorial park. Mr. Canon, at the time of his death. was registrar of the United States land office at Roseburg, Ore. He came to Medford with his family In 1907 and was mayor of Medford from 1009 to 1913, and was an attorney by profession, and was admitted to the bar In Wisconsin. He was one of the leading Democrats of thts county and state. He was a man of high char acter and leaves a host of friends be sides his family. At his next birth day he would have been 78 years of age. He Is survived by one son, Vern T. Canon, and three granddaughters and one grandson. He was a charter member of Medford Lodge, B. P. O. Elks No. 1168, which will conduct the ritualistic services at the grave. Sarah Ann Harvey passed away in Cottage Grove July 13. 1935. She waa born near Troy. Davis county, Iowa, October 10, 1852, and emi grated In 1865 with her parents, Lewi and Rebecca Hendrlx, In & horse-drawn covered wagon, settling near Santa Rosa, Calif., where she married Isaac M. Harvey, November 20, 1870. In 1880, she, with her husband and children, moved to Med lord. Ore., residing here until 1907 when they moved to Cottage Grove where she had resided since. Mrs. Harvey is the last survivor of a family of eleven children, and was loved for her noble character, devotion to family and friends and loyalty and reverence for her church, of which she became a member in early life, and which was one of her comforts to the last. Preceding her In death are her husband and daughter. Sylvia E. Halley. Surviving are her two sons. Homer H. Harvey, of Medford and Worth Harvey of Cottage Grove, six grandchildren and nine great grandsons. Funeral services will be held in Cottage Grove Sunday afternoon at 3:00 o'clock. Rev. Cook of Eugene, officiating. , SUNDAY SALE OF TACOMA, July 13 (p) Although Prosecuting Attorney Harry H. John ston today renewed his announce ment that the old 1909 law prohibit ing the sale of beer on Sunday would be strictly enforced. Sheriff John C. Bjorklund countered with the state ment that he had neither men nor money to enforce the low in Pierce county. The sheriff pointed out. however, that all warrants issued by the prose cutor for Sunday violations would be served by his office. FUND BILL SPED WASHINGTON, July 13. (JP) House democrats backing the Ftazler Lemke farm mortgage reflanclng bill today considered rorclng a democratic caucus with a view to putting the majority on record behind the ad ministration opposed measure. The bill calls for government re financing of the mortgages over a long period through a $3,000,000,000 new money Issue. LONG BEACH. Calif . July IS.i&i While more than 100 persons looked on. Robert Green. 50. shot himself to death today at a shooting gallery on the Long Beach pike. The man left a note to his wtf In care of the Y. W. C. A. at Astoria. Oregon, in which he said he was without work and finances. The man recently operated a beer parlor here. GET BACK a wide selection of foods." This is typical of the statements re ceived from manv orders who hive used William 3. L. K. Formula. By combining the three important actions of a stomachic, tonic, and a laxative. Williams P L K. Formula has proved very effective in the relief of , such conditions as atonic dyspepsia. I constipation, loss of weight or appe tite, indigestion, and tired-run down feel ins T-v a oottle txlay It may he ob 1 tamed on a money b.icit svmran , from the Hcata Drug Sto.s. Adv. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, July 13. Purely per sonal piffle: Few believe, but I have a dog that cocks his head and Whim pers when a radio orchestra plays "Trees." The Great obsession of book-reviewer Is their readers might not think them high-brow, you know, a best seller but Is It art? Sustained top In hilarious sketching peter Amo. Stark terror in fiction: "Skin for Skin." by Wini fred Duke. For no reason I've become clock cuck,oo. annexing the craziest specimen. Clev erest book autcgraph in my collection that of E. Phillips Oppenhelm. Best selected of the nome de plum: Guy Fawkes In the New Yorker. It 1 Benchley. I like to see Pat O'Brien get tough in the films and rarely miss the calm news announcements of Harlan Eu gene Reed on the radio. Funniest theatre program announcement: The Casino de Paris' "Less 16 Smart Boys!" At 17, I wrote three girls e,t the same time for their promise of marriage. Cities forever calling me back: Am sterdam, Cologne. New Orleans, Mex ico City and, of course. Fared Parecl The bl&gest surprise I ever got in a close-up of a celebrity was the hefty size of Vincent Astor. I can't take my eyes off those scars beneath the ears of lifted faces. An unbeatable young literary tri umvirate: Joel Sayre, Vincent Shee han and John O'Hoxa. Every picture I ever had taken on ship-board hs a vague hint of nausea. Total movie eclipses: Harry Langdon. After ten years I cannot unscramble Zoe Akins and Zona Gale. The only wine I've ever been able to distinguish by taste is Chablls. The side splittingest book critique was by Dorothy Parker as "Constant Reader" reviewing Milne's ttddeldy-pom whlmsey, "The House at Pooh Corner" and ending: "At which Tonstant Wreader Frowed Up." Jaunty scribbling' moniker: Tea Sleslnger. She's the reputed Dorothy Parker of The Village Of Louis Brom fleld she observed: "He writes novels at the drop of a top hat." Harry Leon Wilson signs all his mall H. L. Wilson. Outside the smell of a baby's head, no aroma equals grass falling under a lawn mower. Best part of a baked potato the Jacket. No one wears a wide brimmed hat so captivatlngly as Mrs. Will H. Hays. The only eatable that does not agree with me is water-melon. But I give It a whirl once a year and sit up all J night puffed and groaning. I ve ne er seen the widely pressagented Jock and Liz Whitney or heard Lily Pons sing. Most remembered breakfast cof fee: At the Kalserlne Augusta Vic toria at Weimar. I own the percolator now. I look more the fool than usual in a straw hat. Another low uprising: The daisy is now the fashionable flower. Old tim lest looking New York suburb: Flush ing. And it's charming. Heap o" llvin' suburb: Jackson Heights. Mrs. Mar garet Emerson Is Ve best dressed rlrtgslder at Important prize fights. Favorite taste: chocolate. Whenever I see a "Must Vacate" sale sign I be lieve it. People with undershot Jaws fascinate me. Most expert dinner or derers amone the writing clan: The late Karl K. Kitchen. For 13 years I lived at the Rltz and never felt Justi fied in making a single complaint. And that, my friends, is hotellng! Parliamentary Law t'pset. INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (UP John Thomas, negro, paid a police fine for seeking recognition by the chairman at a Sunday school meet ing. When refused the floor, Thomas pulled a revolver from his pocket. Army Worm Plague Farms. GOLDEN VALLEY. Ont. (UP) This farming section has been at tacked by a plague of army worms. Living mounds of the worms, six to eight inches deep are a common sight. SCREEN DOORS WINDOW SCREENS MEDFORD MADE TROWBRIDGE CABINET WORKS Flight fo Time (Medford and Jack win Count? History from the files of the Mall Tribune of U and tit Year Agu). TEN YEARS AGO TODAY - July 14. 1925 (It waa Tuesday) Pancho Villa, flyweight champion of the world, dies following oper ation for abscessed tooth in San Francisco hospital. Snow falls In Virginia; heat claim 14 lives in middle west. Cloudy weather comes to the valley. The Medford Elks "hick orchestra" at the national convention in Port land, "makes a decided hit." Don R. Newbury, a member of the troupe, executes a ballad. Two more fires, none serious, are reported in Crater national forest. The Tennessee "monkey trial" continues to claim world attention. Court over-rules motion to quasn, Indictment, and hold "anti-evolu-tlon law" is constitutions!. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 14. 1915 (It was Wednesday) California-Oregon Power company offers to sell to the city Its power distribution system, and sell them electricity at wholesale, the rates to be fixed by the state railroad commission. Hob Deuel returned from a trip In a Ford to the San Francisco fair. Mass meeting to be held Friday evening to discuss rebonding the city. All county road work discontin ued owing to lack of funds. One hundred fifty-six autos and 1.603 people have visited Crater Lake so far this year. Liberty Bell due here tonight at 1:45 a. m.. for a ten minute stop. The picture shows will remain open all night, and there will be a dance at the Nat. The fire whistle will blow three times, ten minutes before the arrival of the historic relic. f 3 Do you Need Glasses? ? Dr. R.M.HOOD OPTOMETRIST Tel. 283-K Siarta Bide. 40.1 B. Main St. .Medford Skillful Service Reasonable Prices 1t ote! fen Pablo 5fln Meiqflv. at -ner iV Calif. ) town Central A Home Away Frcm Homc Completely Renovated - - - and Redecorated RATES With detached bath from! Z5 daily witn Bam . trotn i.idaj(y FREE HEWMOM8H GARAGE ' .COI-ftE JMOF DIRECTIONS TO HOTEL. Jiay on WamTiicfhway (San Pablo-Ztvenue) directly to 20tkStreet fllaixyemenf-" Harry B.Stnrnf eTTOP over night ai theSAHPflBLQenrrwt, toiheSM DIEGO FAIR Infinite Wisdom Your physician Is prepared, through years of concentrat ed study and vast experience In the field of medicine, to meet any emergency. Very often a serious condition, such as nephritis. Is mani fested by early mild symp toms which can only be in terpreted correctly by your physician. A rre;icrip(tmlit Fills Ri Carefully at HEATH DRUG STORE Medford Building Phone 834 o