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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1935)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORU, OREGON, SUNDAY. JULY 28. 1935. Medford Mail Tribune Evprone In Southern Oroo Itotidi the Uall Tribune" Dallj Kirspt Saturday Published by ' MKDFOHO PBINTINO CO. :5-:7-ri n. Fir sl ptions . ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. Ad Independent Newspaper. Entered as eecond-cltaa matter at Med ford. Oregon, under Act of Marco , SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance: Daily, one year J-? Daily, all montha Dally, one month By Carrier, In Advance Medford, Ash- land, Jacksonville, Central Point, Phoenli, Talent, Gold Hill and on highways. Pally, one year "" Jaily. ell .nonlha Dally, one month All terma, cash tn advance. Of Metal rpr of the City of Medford. Official Paper vl Jatkiwn County. UKMIIFK OF THE ASSOCIATE! I'HKMfl Kerelilng Full Lftused V ire nrrTiccw The .')ciated Press la eKcluatvely en titled to the uss for publication of all news dlnntlchea credited to It or other wise credited In this paper, and alio to the local news publisher nerem. All rig his for publication of special dispatches herein are alio reserved. M KM HER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OK AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Raprssentatlvea M. C. MOGK.N8KN COMPANY Offices In New York. Chlcsgo Detroit San Francisco. Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland. MEMBER Ye Smudge Pot tly Arthur Perry The hoot of the sawmill whistle will soon be heard again In the valley. The B. Thlerolf, Bob Hammond and Rupert Henry boya left Frl. on horses for the wilds of Lake o the Woods, with five other members of the younger set. The trio Is about ready to plunge Into the social whirl, and are often seen wearing Ice-cream panto and no hats. t Man's Inhumanity to man. as exem plified by wrestling was presented at the Armory Thurs. eve before a large congregation, flad Sam Lethers of Texaa returned, and was Just a mel ancholy and successful as ever. None of the cash customer became hyster ical and threw war department chairs at the gladiators. e e Frederick Fry, the tonsorlsl artist, was seen going down the Main Stem Thurs. at a fast cllp Oregon Republicans held a conven tion at Sfilcm Frl. and started out by fighting like Democrats. Solidarity was urged upon all Republicans, so they will not sneak off to the' polls and vote for Democrats, at they did In 1933, when mad at Herbert Hoover. s Ev. Brayton. the pear culturlst, Is being congratulated on being knocked down by a bolt of lightning Tues. pm. and being able to stand up as usual. Mr. Brayton was standing on his front porch, minding his own busies, when felled. He saya the lightning forked like Satan's tall. I s s Several townspeople have returned j from the San Diego, Calif., exposition j Some aay they have been to better carnivals at home. I No new beer parlor hat been opened In this vicinity In 24 hours. niih Wnt(in v. a hi r thrift. tomor row and feels as young a his boy. J ' Rain fell Tues. In what some called J a "deluge", and others a "torrent", j Many were lucky and. had their autos i out In it. The fair sex are excited about the 'swagger coata" for fall. Some will be able to swagger without any coats. The fall hats will have veils and be worn off the face, and on the head. Some girls from the mld-weat and eaat. are visiting here, and compare favorably with the home - grown beauties. e e While acting as Peoria Bill dates' partner In a round of bridge Thurs.. ThomaA Waterman waa accused of doing something right, by his col league see Atty. O. Newbury has conquered the lumbago, that nearly conquered. 3 Little Plga. that escaped being slaughtered to make everybody rich, were on the boards at the G. Hunt magic lantern show last week. e The annual shortage of hay In the valley has started to ahow up. and Is emphasised by the number of hay stacks dotting the landscape. The hiy situation la always about the same: too much hay, or not enough cows to eat It. see J. Kort Hall, the horticulturist saw Man-Moutaln Dran, the 817-pound bevhlkrred wrestler, at the airport fu. am , and Ascd him as follows: "Mr. Dean, I see where that Dutch man beat you in Portland, how come !" "You run on home and pick your apples." growled Mr. Dean. "I don't want to argue with you about any thin?" Mr. Hell states that he then left, not oaring to put his foot tn aoy farther, though he felt that Mr. Dein should be walking back to Los An geles. Instead of flying. Our fellow townsman was considerably put-out by the rebuff. The voice of the K. Shimoda ty have started to change, causing them to be sopranos one minute, and baa o the next. LONDON, July 'J7. (AP) Tne London prtasenger transport board, controlling the London area, tonight told 2597 striking bus drivers and conductor In suburban London to get back to work by Monday or face dismissal. TRAVERSE CITY. Mich. (UP) Judge Harold Richardson has founa a new way to curb traffic violators. He decreed that every traffic vio lator brought into his court must tal.e a wrlUm examination on how 4 operate tn automobile. Business and Politics IN spite of the partisan drum fire directed against the Roose velt administration at the present time and the undeniable decline in what was once the president's extraordinary popular ity, business conditions continue to improve. Normally at thiff'timc of year a business slump is experi enced. 1 There is a lull in retail trade, a seasonal period of read justment, industry as a whole beats time, awaiting the customary autumn revival. NOT so this year. Electric power production has exceeded all previous summer records and both in the coal and petro leum fields, higher output volumes were maintained. Also ranging higher the past week was steel ingot production. Fur ther contributions to the pronounced improvement were made by freight car loadings and cotton forwardings to domestic mills. Equally encouraging were the increases of bnnlc debits outside of New York city, and loans and discounts of Federal Reserve member banks. "Retail trade continued to display a satisfac tory improvement and building contracts sustained previous gains." This isn't administrative propaganda. It is the report of the "Wall Street Administrative and Research Corporation, con ducted by experts, personally opposed to the president and the New Deal. OUT of 50 of the largest industrial corporations, 33 showed better earnings than a year ago, with an average gain of 29, far in excess, and contrary to all preliminary estimates. There has been practically an unbroken upward movement in security prices since June 1st, Dow-Jones averages, attained new highs for the year, on three successive days during the past week. F this improvement continues, for another 12 months, party caucuses can be held, conventions assembled, resolutions drawn up and adopted, oue side can point with pride and the other view with alarm; but tho rank and file will go ita way regardless, pay little attention to the table-thumpers and rabble rouscrs, to the fine points of political theory and doctrine on cither side, simply go to the polls and vote for a continua tion of "better times", and against any radical interference with the status quo. TITTS statement may be questioned by those who are now spraying their larnyxeses, and oiling up their typewriters, for the greatest political battle of the Twentieth Century; but it is true nevertheless. "We are essentially a business people, and a simple people. We are also a practical people. We care a great deal for facts and results, and very little for vague promises and "vaguer theories". Let genuine prosperity reign a year hence, and nothing can beat Roosevelt; let hard times return, and dissatisfaction with it, and nothing can elect him. N spite of the cynical attitude of certain political wiseacres, the Democrats can't "buy" the election, if conditions are bad; the Republicans can't win, if conditions are good. This doesn't mean there won't be plenty of noise and fury, beating of drums and beating of chests, probably one of thf most intense and bitterest campaigns in recent history, but natural forces, not personal forces, will determine the result next year, as they always have in the past. Hoover was beaten because the people wanted a change. If Roosevelt wins, it will be because they DON'T. Yes, brethren, it is just as primitive and simple Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS BIG news In the papers. Leon TrotEky, formerly a big shot In Russia, now an exile, predicts for publication that a war between Italy and Ethiopia will bt 1 olio wed within three years by another world war. Pleasant prospect, Isn't It? pORTUNATELY, however, Trotzky A doesn't know much mors about what Is going to happen In the future than you and I. What hs says just happens to make s good story, so the reporters grab it and the editors print It.) S PEA KINO of the prospects of war In Europe, President Roosevelt saya something that all of us can agree with. (Which, by the way, may b the biggest news carried In the papers In recent weeks.) He tella the correspondents assem bled at his weekly press conference that the troubles of Italy and Ethio pia are not matters of concern to the United States and that our Job Is to atsy out of whatever rumpus they stir up. He didn't use those Identical words, but that Is the thought ha conveyed. FAIR and sound. Europe's troubles sre not our troubles, and Europe's ways are not our ways. We have troubles of our own and ways of our own. If Europe Just has to fight about every so often, In order to be hsppy. well and good. That's Europe's busi ness. But let us stay out of It. A WORD, by the way, about this fellow Trotrky. who Is doing all thla prophesying. He had quite a finger In the pie In Russia's New Deal, which upset the old order and brought about s new order of things which was to make the world over for the common man. Now that the shooting Is over and the smoke la beginning to clear avay. as that! ws find that the common man In Russia, who BEFORE the revolution was s serf under the heel of the no bility, Is at present a serf under the heel of the STATE. So much for Russia's New Deal. SPEAKINO of new deals brings up naturally the subject of politics, snd along the political battlefront this Is the latest development: Colonel Prank Knox, publisher of the Chicago DaJly News, addressing the Los Angeles county Republican assembly, advocates s balanced na tional budget as the key plank of the 1936 Republican presidential plat form. Colonel Knox Is among the most prominent of tbs Republican presi dential possibilities, which la what makes hla statement a political de velopment. A BALANCED budget means that the government shall spend no mors than It takea In. If the govern ment OOE3 ON apendlng more than It takea In, as It Is doing now, the Inevitable result will be printing press money Inflation at some time In the future, and that wltl mean RUIN FOR EVERYBODY except the smart speculators. A lot of people who Insist on be lieving that two and two make four and who refuse to believe In Ssnta Claua will be able to get together on Colonel Knox' proposed key platform plank. KEEPS FIRE RENO. Nev . July 97. A sud den shift in the wind tste today en abled 300 fire fighters vo save the luxurious summer home of Chris! Ian Arthur Wellesler. fourth earl of Cowley, from a forest fire which swept foothills north of Carson City. Nb. The flame swept over the small Montgomery ranch house and out buildings and crept to within few hundred feet of the WellMley hme before the wind shifted. The summer home of Ralph Elsman, formerly of Brooklyn. N. Y . alo was threatened for a while. Us M ii rribunt vani ads. Personal Health Service By William signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Urady If s stamped self -ad dreuted envelope is enclosed Letters should be brief and written In ink uwing to the large number of letters received only few can be answered No reply can be made fi queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 205 El Camlno. Bcterly Bills, Cat INJECTIONS TREATMENT OP HERNIA STEADILY GAINS IN POPULARITY At the Congress of Railway Surg eons held In Chicago last summer Dr. Lawrence J. Qulllcn read s paper on the Injection treatment of re ducible hernia. He gave, his ob servations in 56 cases so treated. "Sufficient time has not passed to permit a def inite conclusion as to the end re sults In these cases," he said. "It la my Im pression, how ever, from smdylng the after results of these cases treated by the Injec tion method, that we have the pro mise of a definite and permanent cure of hernia by Injection and It la to be hoped that the recurrences which may follow this line of treat ment will not be more than the re currences following radical opera tion." (Physicians will find Dr. Qulllen's article published In Inter national Journal of Medicine and Surgery, October, 1034. This practical surgeon dispone of the theoretical objections opposed to the method by some would-be big wigs: "Prom the standpoint of safety, there Is little or no danger from the Injection treatment If properly done, compared to radical operation ... It Is especially advantageous In elderly Individuals who do not stand any operative procedure well, or do not stand prolonged confinement In bed." Economically the treatment Is en tirely ambulatory and the patient Is not required to stop work, an ad vantage to himself and to his em ployer.. There are no hospital ex penses, and Industrially there Is no claim for alleged personal Injury while on duty. Dr. A. F. Bratrud, Minneapolis, who teaches the method In the University of Minnesota Medical school, discus sing Dr. Qulllen's paper, reported that In 400 cases of hernia treated by the Injection or ambulant method there have been less than four per cent of recurrences. We all know the rate of recurrence Is far higher than that where the radical operation Is done no matter who operates. "With the type of cases which we are treating." said Dr. Bratrud. "we will be satisfied If we can keep the re currence rate below 10 per cent. We have quite a number of natlents who have been lncapacltatedfor years on account of bronchitis, bronchiectasis, cardiac disease, etc., associated with large hernias. These patients have been denied surgery, and today they are pursuing a gainful occupation." Which reminds me among th CATHOLIC PEACE BERLIN, July 27. f AP) Nflzllsm's big offensive against reactionaries struck new terror Into Jews and Steel Helmet war veterans today, but Catholics, heretofore under heavy fire, thought they discerned Indications of an Imminent truce. Uneasiness Increased among the reich's 500.000 Jews after Count von Helldorf. Berlin police chief, sum marily outlawed Individual Jew-balt-Ing ond announced the state nazi movement Itself would prosecute the antl-semitic fight "In another way."' Secret police cracked down on the Stahlehelm again, raiding membera' homes In Parchlm, Ludwigslust and Waren where the organization was recently banned. Many firearms and quantities of ammunition were found it was officially announced, and several leaders arrested. An olive branch was held out to Cathollca by the official organ of the Hlldeshelm bishopric. It said; '"We consider true peace between the state and the Catholic church quite possible." Perhaps significantly, the pro nouncement coincided with reports, widely circulated In Catholic circles, that Monstgnor Cesare Orsenlgo. papal nuncio, had delivered to the foreign office still another commu nication from Pope Plus protesting treatment of Catholics. BANKRUPTCY FEAR UPON COL KNOX SAN FRANCISCO. July 37 (API Colonel Frank Knox, mentioned as a possible Republican candidate for j president in 1S38, was the gueat of former President Herbert Hoover to day. The Chicago publisher, who will speak at a meeting sponsored by the j Republican assembly, a political ! group. Monday night, said flatly that he was not an aspirant for the prest- j dentin) nomination. j Colonel Knox, who instated his visit was social and not political, declared ; the Roosevelt administration's poll-; cies were "radical" and that the' country was "rapidly approaching the j danger line where the tax burden equals one-third of the national In come." He asserted "bankruptcy his torically follows overstepping that ' line and the nation must immediate- j ly awaken to lt dancer ." I "The Roosevelt tax program.' Col- ; onel Knox said. "Is utterly unsound." He aduxi.ed a sharp cut in rorrn-' mrnt cost, direct d-Mc instead of re- i Uef ork and a balanced budget. Brady, M.D. thirty-six or thirty-eight patients of Dr. Karl Kretzchmar's I was privil eged to examine recently In Los Ang eles, several were evidently poor risks for general anesthesia or for hospital confinement, and they were holding down their Jobs while being cured of hernia. It looks as tho the "well known surgeons' of the poor old American Medical Association propaganda de partment will have to pull In their horns before long so far as the am bulant treatment of hernia la con cerned. Our one big medical society Is acquiring skill at that look how the Plahbeln Promotion Guild piped down about diathermy extirpation of tonsils after that modern method put the old Spanish custom on the shelf. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Home Made Blood Tonic Is It possible to take your home made blood tonic so long as to be come "drugged" by It or habituated? It has been of great help and cer tainly has "pepped" me up, but when I omit It a week or so I lose my strength again. (Miss F. A.) Answer Not If It Is the Iron solu tion described In the booklet "Blood and Health" (Copy for 10 cents coin, Inclose s.a.e.). Perhaps you need com plete medical or health examination to find the cause of your anemia, which may be some scarcely suspect ed poisoning from a cosmetic or from your occupation, or some -occult bleeding as from Internal hemorr hoid. Ain't No Seeh Animal There ain't no resistance ain't no autointoxication ain't no cold ain't no nervous breakdown strange how the great Dr. Brady la right and all other doctors wrong about these things. Why does vaccine work If it does not set up resistance? Why does physic relieve that tired dopey feeling what causes pneumonia if temperature has nothing to do with it? . . . (M. C. B.) Answer Vaccine arouses a reaction which gives some degree of Immun ity. When we know what we're talk ing about we call It Immunity; when we are vague about It we fall back on the good old eel-word, "resistance." If we could have a candid ballot of all physicians of standing I am sure I'd be in excellent company on all of these Issues. You confuse your smug nations with what "all other doctors" think. (Copyright 1935, John F. DlUe Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Urady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D.. R5 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. PISTOL HONORS CAMP BONNEVILLE, Wash.. July 37. ( AP) Target range In expert pistol practice yesterday were won by Lieutenants George Hills of Klam ath Falls, R. C. Hendrlckson of Eu gene and H. H. Roberts of Hermls ton. Other honors announced at the 382nd Infantry headquarters for the regiment of 60 Oregon men under command of Colonel Carle Abrams of Salem Included the following: Sharpshooter a'rds: Lieutenants Charles Wllklns snd M. L. Shepard of Salem. READY FOR TEST SEATTLE. July 27. vr, Th of ten postponed test flight of Boeing 229. the huge mystery bomber snd largest land plane in America, may be started between 4 a. m. and 4.30 a. m. tomorrow. Boeing Aircraft cor poration officials indicated tonight. The early hour was set in order to avoid the heavy airport traffic priva lent Sunday morning. Faulty oil lines an brake trouble have delayed the test flight day by dsy. Bible Society Merger EUOENE. Ore., July 27. (;p) Mer ger of the open Bible Evangelistic as sociation of Iowa and the Bible San dard, Inc., with headquarters tn Eu jene. was effected by unanimous vjte in the sessions of the annual on terenoe of the Bible Standard, Inc., here this week. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O, O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, July 37. These skip about Saturday columns are most pleasant of all to do. Without form and void, they . are a mill race of tumbling thoughts, faulty, unsure and of ten Ignorant. And altogether effortless, what ever pops Into mind la set down Imprisoning the panorama In shattered bits. Other dally columns require the rigors of i formula, phor or strain perhaps for a meta llne that might Inspire a reader to murmur I rather like that!" But on Saturday there are none of these warm yearnings. Things Just go wsh-wah. The mood wllly nllly. First come, first served. Many columns. I believe, envenom their worth by sneers. Or maybe the years have made me soft. Yet I was noticing In the shaving glass this morning that my hair stubbornly re fuses to turn white. It's the slate gray of my late 20's, How proud at 28 when a streak of gray sprouted dowu the middle l The girl cashier at the restaurant said It was distingue pronouncing It correctly. I didn't know what that meant. When I saw the word in print I called ii "dls-tin-gu." More than any other person I wanted to look like Robert Milliard. I wound up re sembling, so they say, Ned Sparks of the movies. Louis Sobel jetted a fine thought in his column not long ago. I forget exactly how expressed. But It stressed by parables that so many were find ing Joy In the commonplace. That Is an acquired attitude, born largely of solitude. Lighthouse keepers attain such happy serenity. Also sheep herders and seamen. A card from a man Just out of Sing Sing today said: " never knew the fun of Just sitting In a park before." Every son almost Inherits some phrase of ejaculation from his father. Mine is "By gracious!" My dad was a poetical cusser in the flow of casual conversation. An enormous gentle man, weighing nearly 300, he was In cited to apoplectic rages at times by something trivial. Such as a deroga tory editorial about his political idol Senator Jim Reed. Then he would fume into an explosive: "By Graci ous." I walked a block or so a few steps behind John D. Rockefeller, Jr. along Fifth avenue a recent evening. Odd how, in such a celebrity-crazed city, few recognized him. One cop touched his cop. A passing lady glanced at him In a startle of recognition. Then looked puzzled, caught up with her and told his name. "Well," she snif fed. "I wouldn't want his worries with those taxes and everything." When there conies one of the knot ty days In columnlng I think of the travail of H. T. Webster In the 148th street ground floor flat days. No art ist I have ever known suffered such scute labor pains In creation. We called it "Web's dally stewl" Under a green drop light he went to his draw ing board Immediately after break fast. There he sat squirming, scowl ing, gazing, muttering and becloud ing himself in tobacco smoke. Ray Rohn. Bob Brinkerhoff ond I did our chores tip-toe. Often it was dusk and there would be a blaze of activity in Web's corner and In no time the car toon was done. Polly, the black girl, would whisper: "He's done done It!" During one of those fretful stretches Casper Milquetoast was born. Nothing plumes my curiosity like a brawl between two women, especially when they are a Mt tipsy. And deli cately obscene. I was at the ringside of a tiff tn a restaurant last night. It was getting merry beyond words when one called the other a modern name for an antique profession and they flailed Into a clinch. The poor gentle man escort was pitiable to behold. My idea of something superfine In a lady brawl would be between those hu man Roman candles, Lupe Velez and Lyda Roberta. With Mae West as referee. I used to wonder who bought those home beautiful and house and gar den magazines. To me they attolned reading zero. And then my wife be gan an experiment in what poet called it chambering a nautilus? home building and furnishing. Now I'm like a dime novel fiend about such Journals. Arthur Samuels, of "House Beautiful," chases me out of his sanctum several times a week. And I have become a front row sitter at all the auctions. Which reminds me auctioneers are the world's super salesmen. One who, properly bedls monded could double for Jim Brady, had me bidding the other afternoon on one of those piously mottoed tat tings In red they used to hang over the headboard of beds. And there's Babes in the Wood little bodies are more easily Injured than grown ones! Children, intent on their play, are so lusty and eacer and carelos! of course, they cannot reallre the dangers that lie all about them. A puncture wound may de velop into lockjaw unless treated at once by jour plnMclan. A PrescrlpMntiUt till Ra Carefully at HEATH DRUG STORE Medford Building Phone 884 Just room for a week-end reading tip. Try Mrs. Archie Roosevelt's "We Did It For the Children!" Grand travesty on a family auto tour. t (Copyright, 1935. McNaught Syndl- : cate) CONGRESS SPEEDS NEW TAX BILL TO QUIT NEXT MONTH WASHINGTON. July 37. ;p) Amid a furious campaign for ad journment of congrea by the last week In August, the president's new tax bill was expanded today to boos, the rates on Incomes as low as $50,000. House waya and means committee democrat who sre drafting the-bill which holds the present key to ad journmentended their preliminary work by broadening It to dip into the incomes of more than 7.000 indi vidual taxpayers. Previously It had been indicated that the rates would remain unchanged below 150.000 The committee has yet to consider many comparatively minor points. Nevertheless its membera apparently recognized the pressure for adjourn ment. They arranged for the bill to be Introduced formally and taken up by the full committee Monday. Their hope was to get a new meas ure through the house a week from tonight. Senate democratic leaders mean while were at work lining up their big majority against all amendments when the tax bill reaches the senate floor. They figured such an ag c ment would get the bill through the senate within a week. If this ould be done It would leave ample time for congress to wind up Its work be fore August ended. Many obstacles, such as conference agreements on the AAA amendments, omnibus banking, social security and utilities holding company bills, cev ertheles still stand In the way of prompt adjournment. But new dal chiefs Insisted present differences could be smoothed out in the next month. TO TEXAS PORTS GALVESTON. Tex.. July 27. ,7P, Joseph P. Ryan of New York, presi dent of the International Longshore men's association, who arrived here tonight In connection with the threatened strike of longshore labor at Texas ports, announced that ef fective with the expiration of exist ing labor contracts on the north At lantic and Pacific coasts, Sept 30, the I. L. A. at all ports would adopt a policy of not handling ships which were loaded or unloaded by non union labor at any other port. Ryan said he came to Texas be cause of the possibility of the present longshore .agreement expiring July 31 without any provisions for work con tinuing. LUMBER CUT FOR PORTLAND. Ore., July 37. ( AP) Figures announced at the northwest forest experiment station here today showed that production of lumber In Oregon and Washington was I ',4 per cent greater In 1934 than In the year previous. Total production for the two states last year was announced at 5.443.912, 000 board feet. Douglas fir led in output. TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, July 27. iTPi A dispatch from the town of Trinidad today reported that 2.000 inhabitants In the Santa Barbara dis trict were suffering from an unknown disease which was causing widespread panic. Yesterday 12 of those stricken were believed near death. It's Time To Go NOW Every single factor is favorable to new building and home improvement. Costs Are Low Finance Is Readily Available General business is vastly improved For full information on . PLANS COSTS and FINANCING Get in touch with us immediately TIMBER PRODUCTS COMPANY Phone 7 End No. Central Ave. Flight 'o Time (Medford nd Jtrkjoo Uoanl HUtarjr from th f ot thf Mall rrlbiin l 10 tnd to Tr A IPO- ' TEN YEARS AGO TOPAT July 28. IMS (It Wss Tuesday) A. s. Roaenbaum and Chaunoey Plorey are nabbed for speeding on the rrur T.k hio-hwav Rosenbsum Is fined 25 and- Plorey 18, in Justice court. wnum .Tnninim Brvan. atateamsji. will be burled In Arlington cemetery at Washington. D. C. Funeral train leaves Dayton, Tenn., for last rites. 'Snoopers, speed trap's, and tan trums by traffic cops" protested by Joe E. Dunne, president of the Oregoa State Motor association. Thunder storms rage In the Slekl- yous. and four forest fires are started by lightning. Mass meeting of fruit growers called to consider plans for pear ad vertising. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 28. 1915 . (It Was Wednesdayy Kaiser alms to envelope and anni hilate the Russian army, as greatest offense In history starts. John Grieve of Prospect is given contract for building entrance road Into Crater Lake park. Grizzlies ascend Mt, Ashland lft-twa sections to view the sunrise Annusl picnic of the Iowa society to be held at Ashland Friday. .i( . Deer &re reported plentiful In tb Steamboat district. AIDES TO MEET Schedule of the Red Cross swim ming classes at the Natatorium whici start Monday morning for a ten day period, was announced Saturday by Miss Marjorie Kelly, who Is In charge. Life guards and others who wiU xs sist in putting on the school have been requested to meet thla (Sunday.) morning at the . Natatorium at 1Q;39 o'clock. Regular supervised classes similar to those successfully conducted lost year will convene Monday morning as follows; 0 o'clock, beginners, both boys and girls; 9:30 "o'clock, swim mere, boys only; 10:00 o'clock, swim mers , girls only; 10:30 to 13 o'clock, Junior life saving class. Evening class es will be scheduled as follows: 7 to 8 o'clock, adults: 8 to 10 o'clock, jun ior life saving students and rechect ing classes for examiners. Miss Kelly urged that all- those planning to enter the school report promptly at their class-times and not earlier, to Insure greatest ease and effilcencv In the training. The Instructor announced that Ivan A. Fowler, 'ari expert supervisor of life-saving and swimming claws, will conduot the campaign, aided by local senior life-savers and exam in- era. Immovable Mules Meet EDGEFIELD, 8. C. July 27. (A?) rX?. mules, weighing. J200 pounds each, broke from . George Broadwater's pasture, collided head-on. and fell dead. EFFECTIVE RHEUMATIC RELIEF! RED CROSS SWIM Quickly and effectively, often with in 48 hours, Wullams R.U.I." Com pound brings relief to sufferers of ' rheumatic pains and fevers, and lum bago, neuritis, and neuralgia pains. The Salicylate treatment offered 1 in Williams R.U.X. . Compound . Is of recognized, value, and many are find ing wonderful relief from Its use. Get a bottle from the Hestb. drug store today. If the very f!"t bottle does not satisfy, your money back. Adv.