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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1935)
PAGE FOUR BEDFORD WAIL TRIBUXE, MEDFORD, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. JULY 31. 1935. Medford mail Tribune STrron la Soatbvrn Orejoa BMdl th Mail Trlbnn" DkJIr Exopk Saturday. Published br IflEDFORD PRINTING CO. tf. 3T-I9 N. Fir St. Phone T. ROBERT W. AUHU Editor. An Independent Newepeper. Uotered eaeond-elaaa matter M Med-r-. d. Oregon, under Act of Marcb S. SUBSCRIPTION RATES u Mall In Advanett liaily. one 7r Halljr. eli months Ually, one month .... " Carrier, In Advance Medford. Ash (and. Jacksonville, Central Point, F'hoenlx. Talent. Gold Hill and oo hifhwaye. Dally, one year Pally, atx aiontbe nally, one month All term a, eaeb In advance. off I Hal Papr of the City of Medford. Official Paper of Jackson Conoty. M KM HER OF THE ASSOCIATED PHKbfi RecelrlDB Full Leased W ire Senlce. The Associated Preaa la exclusively en i uled to the uee for publication of ail i.Awm dispatches credited to It or other iae eredlted In this paper, and aleo to ihe local newa published herein. All right for publication of special tiepatchea herein are aleo reserved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS AdvertlFlnr Representative M. C. MOGENHK.N COMPANY Offices io New Tork. Chlcejo Detroit 8aa Francisco. Los Angeles. Beat tie. Portland. Ye Smudge Pot Bj Arthur Perry State Democrats plan ptenlo Au gust tl. It will be eeparate and apart from tha picnic tha Republi cans think the Democrata hava ban baring for tha two year part. Tha House of Common! waa ehamed and allocked yesterday, by the Information that an Engllsn achool teacner had been reproved, by achool Inspector, for approving an essav written by an English lassie, In which England waa lauded. It waa charged that tha aaaay showed "pride In nationalism." It seems to hava been lust a mud case or in fantlle Humdtngerlam. The eame entlmenta enpressed by a ,CofO. di rector. In a booster speech, would bring chargea of losing Interest I" Ms home town, and allegations 01 oratorical tamenesa. . WHAT'S OOINO ONT (Klamath Falls Herald) WTIX TRADE allghtly worn cor set for exceptional wlra-halred terrier. Must ba a show winner and able to aire champions. Must ba registered and hava genuine platinum wire coat. Must be able to pass gold bricks without shying. George Mueller, Shasta Way. ... I am Informed that tha state of Nebraska sends to North Carolina mora alfalfa than they raise to bacco In the latter state. (Cong. Record) Suspicions fill the air, aa wall aa tha aroma of rope and cab bage leaves. e t . - The government now proposes to take man from the hills, and estab lish them on "scatter farms" In the wlleye. Those thus transplanted will probsbly scatter right back to the hills. A mountaineer accustomed ever a decade or so to the mid night howls of a coyote back of the barn, may be a trifle slew getting used to being awakened at dawn by the clattering of a M In hla lane. The Auto Safety league desires aneane to causa speeders to go slow In school Bones, as the present signs are Ineffective. Why not repaint them: POLICE STATION AHEAD1 t The new fall hte havs arrived, and make the fair wearer look either five times worse, or ten tlmea bet ter. . . mnio ANNot'srr.RK. AMATEUR VOICES BEST. Etpert esya oecaalonsl talkers havs superior tones. Newa note. "Good evening, radio antiouncerst t have been listening to you boys for soma time and are not quite aura what you are trying to Imi tate. Some of you suggest song birds from a strsnge land, others of you put as much unction In your voices ss unwesned rslves. at sight of their mothers: still others give the Impression of having merle a bet that they csn announce and gnrgle at the same time. "Be ns'mral. boys, speak ss you would 'a your wives, your seaoelatea around tha studio, or your doctor or dentist. Adopt thftse good old nor ms', chest tones which rise to en thusiasm only when there Is some thing to get excited shout. Be kind to your command of English. Don't dip Your tongues like paddles Into placid Jakes. Don't use the spltbsll style of enunclstlon. And remember there's msny a allp "twlxt the false unction snd the Up. "If you come home very late at night, you wouldn't talk Ilka that your wlvea would think you were a couple of other fellows who had lost their way after a drinking party. Adopt the simple style ot speech approved by generations of sensible people. Don't rltr. the radio audience or go whimsy on them with a peek-a-boo style of address. To be agreesble does not mean that you must smile with everything you ssy. psrtlcularly whn you are trying to put over a mouth-wash, a head ache tablet, a shaving cream or other product which you never use yourselves. Be natural and avoid being tuned out. Nothing falls like affectation eo good night and good Inflection I" Buffalo Courier-Express). Oregon Weather Partly cloudy tonight, unsettled In north portion: Thursdsy fslr: slight ly cooler northesst portion tonight: moderate northwest wind off the eoist. One Mail Xtlpuna want adj. A Bad BARKING 500 Georgia school teachers from Crater Lake was a silly business. The same teachers had visited Glacier and Yellowstone National parks, why couldn't they have been allowed to see Oregon's national parkt Precedent ia important in govern mental matters. "Why couldn't the precedent established in Wyoming and Washington have been followed heret The park bus regulations are identical in all national parks. "We realize "orders is orders," and the park service ordered only sight seeing busses to which it had given concessions, "may be operated in Crater National park." But three exceptions were made to this ruling: () educational organizations, (2) pleasure cars, (3) oars or busses chartered for a tour of the park by any group or organization. If this school teachers' caravan couldn't have been admitted under exception (1) we see no reason why it couldn't have been under exception (3) in fact, as we see it, if common sense had prevailed, instead of stiff-necked adherence to red tape, the visitors from the south could have been allowed to view what they had travelled many thousands of miles to see, under either provision. KJOT that it's fair the park - ' the blame. The managers also. BEFORE they reached Crater Lake park they should have known they could be admitted or make changes necessary to Probably, because they had had Glacier, they assumed they would have none at Crater Lake. At any rate the entire affair points everyone, and benefits cessionaires. The school teachers from Oregon, the lake fails to secure the advantage of valuable patronage; the park and the orable advertising, but instead as far as the school teachers of Oregon has enough difficulty to gain its proper place in the tourist sun, without throwing away any opportunities that come knocking at its door and needlessly at that. Admitting these visitors from the south, as they were ad mitted at Yellowstone and Glacier and will no doubt, be ad mitted at Yosemite, would have injured no one, and the state would have greatly benefitted, instead of hemp INJURED, as a result. Open Threat From Moscow SO Sam Darcy, U. S. A. communist tells his comrades of the Communist Internationale at Moscow, chances are "FINE" for another longshoreman's strike on the Pacific Coast in Sep tember. "A bitter struggle," quoth Sam, "is likely to ehsue, when the present workers and ship-owners agreement expires, and it could well start an unprecedented strike movement. The outcome of the Btruggle will depend not only on our work on the Pacific- Coast but the efforts of all sections of the Com mintern to obtain the cooperation of seamen and port workers in all countries in a general and decisive FIGHT against the burgeoise!" If any added proof were needed to show these sea-front labor troubles on the Pacific Coast, are engineered from Mos cow; fomented and directed by alien agitators and communists; with only one end in view the overthrow of the American government, and the establishment of a dictatorship of the proletariat, Sam certainly supplies it I STRIKES in this section of the country, have practically ppARprI In rppresent. an? effort, on the rtnrr. of the workers to better their condition or remove genuine ABUSES which so called "inhuman and hard-hearted capitalists have imposed." In no recent instance have they represented LEGITIMATE grievances of the working man, in any sense. They are rackets, pure and simple. And they are rackets, almost exclusively engineered by alien communists, who have no more real interest in or sympathy with organized labor, than they have with Wall Street. They are merely USING organised labor as the most convenient vehicle, with which to further their destructive purposes, and gain their selfish ends. WE WONDER how long the American people will remain hlinH In tli ftSt fflpta nn'l thai iflmrrira i rt Vt At nivf in Irinni We wonder how long it is going to take f'"r the government to tell these revolutionary acitators, that, while they are at liberty to go TO Russia and toll the communists Internationale what they intend to do to this country, they are NOT at liberty to return to this country and DO it ! We have strict quotas for peaceful and unoffending immi grants. We are continually keeping hard working and law abiding aliens OUT, not because anything can be said against their character or purposes, hut simply because their quota has been exhausted, or they haven't enough money in the bank! Yet there will probably he no effort to keep this Bolshevik BambooMer Sam Darcy out when he returns to New York, even though he is an avowed Communist, a trouble maker and agi tator, and makes no secret of the faot he is returning to San Francisco for the purpose of aiding another longshoreman's walkout with just as much violence, suffering and bloodshed, no doubt, as he believes will advance the cause of an anti- capitalistic revolution. BEMEVE the time has " Darcy politely but firmly, believe the time has come to tell line and strike when conditions under which thev work JUSTIFY NO SUCH ACTION that neither they nnr their families can expect to have any government relief. Tolerating Reds like Pa rev is bad enough. Subsidising his ra-'ket with the taxpayers money impresses us as considerably riatsnp Rrll.r Aide Prait P3TORIA. Or.. July 31 AP Rsl E H.nlfy. 61, hud ot clat- ssa rsat- rrWt artlvltlrs snrt chair maa af ths Catt;op rounry d.moTHtk fntr,l committee, dlfd here yratar-1 staad of to rVA, Secretary Ickes an day of brat ii.tnt. aouuce4 Kxisjr. Blunder authorities should shoulder ALL of the excursion were at. fault under the conditions prevailing, conform with park regulations. no trouble at Yellowstone and is MOST unfortunate. It disap no one, not even the buss con Georeia fail to see the lake or state not only fail to secure fav get a couple of bad black eyes Georgia are concerned. come to tell these birds like where they get off. We also those who fall for the Darcy t.aWrlrw loan rut WASHINGTON. July 31 (API The aa.7.000 pVA loan and grant to IKrvl.w. Or., tor school construc tion was rclucpft to s,T.2,ooo bocmnc th. recipient, sold bonds prlv.tcly in Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self-addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In ink. Owing to the large oombet of letters received only few can be answered. No reply can be made to q aeries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady. 285 El Camlno, Beverly Bills, Cal. AGGRAVATED CASE OF Out where the-tall com grows and men are pretty much the aame type of animals that men are everywhere. there Is a sad situation In one fami ly, to wit and as follows. "My mother-in-law Is sup posed to have cancer of the gums. It start ed from a small growth on one side of the gum a round a Jagged decayed , tooth which she refused to have filled or extracted . . ." There Is the first sermon for you Ignorantones. Even If It be only a question of comfort it always pays to have it bad tooth, a cavity, properly treated either filled If your dentist thinks filling advisable or the tooth extracted if he deems it damaged be yond re- sonable hope of repair. And here a word Is due the dentist, the good, reputable, reliable dentist. You never find him working in a "parlor" or any such quark set-up. A dentist, you know, practices on virtually the same basis and principles of ethics as the physician does. So if the dentist is good he practices under his own name, and his satisfied patients see to it that he Is kept busy taking care of their friends. On the other hand, If the dentist ia not so good, he can, like any ordinary medical charlatan or trickster, go into a huddle with himself or a gang of his own stripe, and set up as a "clinic", "parlor," "specialists' offices" or some such Impersonal name which ao readily Impresses the Ignorant customer. If I'm wrong about this In any Instance. I'll be happy to make due apology and amends but I'm pretty darn sure that will not be required. To return to the recalcitrant mother-in-law who promises to fill her role: "She will not see a doctor. She's been going to a woman who claims to be able to cure cancer with salve. She puts the salve on with cotton and It draws blood and puss from ' all around the gums and even from the roof of the mouth. "My main worry la, whether it is contagious. My three small children go to her place to play, and her I whole family drinks from the same PARALYZING HEAT DEATH TOLL IS 12 (By the Associated Press) The heat-weary Middle Westook- vainly for relief today. At least la deaths and many pros trations were caused by high temper atures yesterday, and weather bureau forecasts, with monotonous unamtty. "not much change in temperature." There were three deaths In Chicago and three each In Iowa and Missouri. Two of the latter occurred in Kansas City. Wisconsin and Missouri each reported one heat death and Ohio had three drownings. At Sedalia, Mo., Topeka, Kas., and Fremont, Neb., the mercury reached 105 degrees. Grand Island, Neb., had 104 degrees and Lincoln 103. It waa 102 at Kansas City and at Falrview, Okla. St. Louis felt 100degree weather for the first time this year and hos pitals reported eight cases of prostra tion. It waa 100 also at Springfield. 111., North Platte and Omaha. Neb.. and Waynoka, Okla., and 101 at Pitts burg. Kas. Other temperatures; Tulsa, Okla., Pf; Wichita. Kas.. 06; Jefferson City. Mo., 97: Albuqueque. N. M., Miles City, Mont.. Muskogee, Okla.. and Abilene, and El Paso. Tex., 98; Salt Lake City, 95; Chicago. Pocatello, Idaho, and Oklshoma City, 94; Mil waukee. 93. Topeka reported this the driest .July i experience in the 50 years accurate' records have been kept for Kansas, and In Nebraska a(trnnomlsts advised crops could stand only another week of unbroken heat without suffering much damage. PLANE CRASH If) TREES KILLS 3 VANCOUVER. B, C. July 31. (API Three persons are dead snd one critically Injured as the result of a seaplane crath at Alta Lake, 50 miles north of here. Dean R. W. Brock of the Univer sity of British Columbia, and Wil liam McCluskey, an alrplre pilot. were killed and Mra. Brock waa fa tally Injured when their plane nose dived into trees at the south end of the lake yesterday. Mrs. Brock died early today of her Injuries while hetnft taken from Horseshoe bay. 15 miles north 01 here to a Vancouver hospital. She 1-nd a punctured lung and fracture of one arm and one leg Davtd Sloan. mansalnx director of lh Pioneer Oold Mines of British Columbia, a passenger in the p'.ane. suffered badly fractured legs. Tana i.'""" v Robert lee Returns Rotvrt K Lee. son of Mr. and Mr. Roy Lee of West Ninth street, returned by train today from Sacramento, where he haa oeen visiting with Cheater R. Parr for the p ..- t two wee X s . Mr. R,, rr will be re-vie tube red ss the rn.vi.iaTr here for severs I yrsr. of the tnn:-KinUll and Pope fruit lute re us. MOTHER-IN-LAW glaaa at the well. She prepares food for all the household. She never scalds her dishes . . . Cancer Itself la not communicable Ordinary soap and water cleanliness la ample precaution against ordinary septic Infection from contact with cancer. No other antiseptic or disin fectant Is necessary. How long are ignorant victims c cancer 'o be subjected to such mal treatment as this woman Is getting? What quirk Is it In our national char acter that makes us tolerate such cruel exploitation of credulity? Note that the apparent exciting cause of the development of cancer was a neglected Jagged tooth. Any such slight long continued Irritation may eventually lead to development of cancer. This la the beat knowledge we have of cancer. No one knows tM essential cause of cancer. Taken In time cancer of gum, lip, tongue or throat may be cured, by surgery, by X-ray or radium, or by a combination of these. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Rubber Gloves Will wearing electrician's rubber gloves cause trouble later? (M. D. A.) Answer No. If the hands s.veat too much, remove the. gloves when ever possible to let them dry, C'est Mol As a doctor Interested In human welfare what do you think of the American Medical Association and the findings of that group? (C. P.) Answer I'm a member of It. Some of the findings of the association are all wrong, I think, but I'm only one of the 90.000 or so docs composing the group, so what's a fellow to do? On the whole the work of the A. M. A. Is admirable and I'm proud of my Infinitesimal part In it. Sweaty Hands In my work handling fine fabrles. sweating of the hands la a serious handicap. My hands sweat too much . . . (A. H. S.) Answer Have the pharmacist put ip an ounce of simple ointment con taining 3 per cent of formalin, in collapsible tube. Apply a pea-size por tion to palms every day or two. (Copyright 1935, John F. Dtlle 01.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brady should tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D. 263 El Camlno, Beverly HIUs. Calif. You may expect to see this caution expressed publicly by the executive branch of the government If there I a senate Investigation. You may expect some quiet effort from the executive side to block a senate In quiry, on the ground thai It would endanger an already strained situa tion. At least th!a Is the present view, subject to chsnge. rt will be denied now but there Is valid cAuae to believe thst the state department and the German embassy h&ve been cooperating in an appar ently intelligent way to prevent the situation from getting out of hand, Ashes. The Guffey coal bill is not burled as deep In the congressional bin aa you may have been led to believe. It has only been covered over with ashes until the tax bill 1 out of the wy in the house. Then a real ad ministration effort will be made to enect It. You may depend on that. The chances of success are not nod. but stranger things have happened lately. What Is worrying those inside that situation is whether there will be a coal strike If the hill falls. Opinion la divided about 50-50. It seems to get down to a question of whether John L. Lewis has enough money in his mine union coffers to finance a strike. Perhaps that, question la beside the point. Harry Hopkins hss plenty. Notes. The res-son Britain was so quick to consent to German rebuilding of sub marines is the report In choicest dtp lOmattc quarters that the soviet. hve hullt or are bulHing plenty. One good report says 80. Some of Senator Vandenbers's friends have complained to him thit he wajs not bitter enough acatnst the new deal. This may. In part, ex plain his thunderous opposition lead ership against the tax program. Senator Borah calls the newspaper office personally and dictates those well-known Sunday nlcht statements which catch the Monday morning headlines. The best advocate in the house 1 Representative Huddleaton. but he emerges only once every few veara. Prior to this holding company fight, his last major appearance was In the sale tax fight several years ago. (Continued from Page One) THE MARYLAND FUND is quoted in this newspaper daily. Prospectus may be secured from your Investment dea'er. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW TORK. July 81. The gradual flowering of New fork's many little Italian fruit stand offers also a study la human hortlcult ure. They a t a r t ao often with a box of oranges and a stock of ba nanas In aban doned doorways. Seldom can the little merchants apeak mora than a dozen words of English. I watched one upshoot in a Co lumbus a v e n ue crevice 30 years ago. The frail little Tony was not more than 17. Hie stock of fruit on a sidewalk box could have been purchased for a dollar. Next he waa in a sort of a blind hall niched between two itores. In a year he had taken over one of the stores. He opened at dawn, after going to the markets, and re mained open until after midnight, sleeping on a cot in the rear. Any day I expected to see hla physical endurance crack and an ambulance carry him away. He had paroxysms of coughing. He took over the other store, then the corner. Today he has a dozen clerks, three shiny delivery autos snd a blase of front with his name, shimmering in shell pink. He has married, has an estate In Italy and a home In Astoria. But still works as hard as ever. There are many such Tonys. Tallulsh Bankhead is reputedly the figure most besieged by autograph hunters and the most obliging. She never turns one down. They not only wait at the stage door, but there la usually a group at the Elysee, where she Uvea. As well as the haunta where she partake or midnight supper. Among the male celebrities the chase centers upon Lawrence Tthbet. He. too. accepts the gesture with suavity and grace. Jack Dempsey is also a target, now that he's front man in a cafe. Tad. the cartoonist, went his cus tomary way. for years with what he called "a bum ticker." Thomas Burke, who glorified the wretched squalor of &lmehouse. Is able to walk only a block or so without his neart. as he says, patting his tonsils. Sakt (H. H. Munro) swooned If he worked more than an hour a day. O. Henry had a cardiac strain, developed dur ing exiled years, that made stairs almost impossible. R. L. Stevenson wrote his best between fainting spells. And today I heard of a por trait painter who gallops an hour In the park every morning before breakfast. Fifteen veara ago he waa told that even mild exercise might be fatal. Of the come-backs from what seemed permanent Invalidism, that of Jimmy Swlnnerton la moat inspir ing. He cracked up at his drawing board in a newspaper office and was shipped west on a stretcher. For yeara his only contact with civiliza tion waa watching Santa Fe trains roar by from hi hut In the desert. In toiling up the grade he progressed also from a pen "nd Ink delineator of comics to a painter whose can vases Imprisoned sweeping vistas or the old west. Also he became an ex pert on Indian ceramics. And 1 to day a picture hi rr.se If of perfect health. The Waldorf's men's bar Is roll ing up some of the atmosphere that made it the booming, thoroughly masculine sanctuary It was on 34th street at sundown. The fiercely mu tached colonel types who down their Bourbon and rye neat and stamp out with a garrumph drop in. There's the rousing laugh that only a salty story unlatches. Also a few of the opulents whose glitter suggests the old "we boy" strain. There'a hearty back slapping, too, and dive for the telephone to announce: in sud denly steadied dignity: "Something has come up at the office; I'll be home late." it needa only a "Bet a Million" Gates, a John McGraw and a Diamond Jim here and there to make the Nineties live again. I passed 319 West 57th street last evening, the site of an earlier New York boarding house. Wreckers had laid It low. Once solid brownstones. the entire block had gone commer ctsl. Irvin Cobb wrote that every newcomer to town had a brief stay as a paying guest on West 57th. Its true at least of many writers. Bow man Bulger tarried there. Also Har ris Merton Lyon, Frank Harris, LeRoy Scott, Roy McCardell, Jsmes Oliver Curwood. and Alfred Henry Lewis. That was the pleasant era of ahlrt sleeved stoop sitting. One of those brisk young men with a camera who kodaks approach In? pedestrians, passes out numbered cards that reclaims the finished film at the studio, snspped a prim Victorian lady near the Murray Hui I hotel. She was startled at first and then minced up and Inquired: "Which tabloid will It be In onnjT" (Copyright. 1035. McNaught Syndi cate! Toltvo Shaken. TOKYO. July 31 (APi An earth quake shook Tokyo and eight ur- : rounding prefecture today. Clocks i were stopped and many persons J rushed Into the open as wall crack- ed during the temblor. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS CARL COOK, Jaivenlle officer over at Klamath Fall 1 telling a good one partly on himself and partly on the other fellow. Carl bad his tonsil removed a few days ago, and a often happens In itch case he vas able to walk before he waa able to talk. So he came back to work, carryflng a pad and pencil. When sometoody asked him a ques tion, Carl wnote the answer. - HERE 1 tihe nub of the story: About nine tlmea out of ten, the person so answered would reach for the pad. and pencil and WRITE BACK I rt tickled Carl, ao about the tenth time It happened he wrote a note, enclosed tt in an envelope, and then wrote on hla pad: "Take thla to my wife, and ahe'll tell you what you .want to know." In th note addressed to hla wife, he wrote: "Tell the bearer of this note that Ilss lost my voice but NOT MY EARS. THIS writer, incidentally, can ap preciate Carl's story, for a num ber of yeara ago he submitted to a tonsils operation and came back to work while still In the whispering stage. A good half of the people who were whispered to would whisper back. It really get to be funny. , AFTER all, we are creatures of Im pulse, and the Impulse to do what the other fellow Is doing Is strong. Stop on the street, for ex ample, and begin to sure upward and soon you will be Joined by a dozen others who will also be staring upward. Or, putting it the other way around, go along the street and see a down people, looking upward and the chances are you will join the crowd and begin to tare up to see what Is going on. A RUMOR starts possibly the wildest sort of tale and sup posedly sound snd sensible people will hear It and pasa It along. Some two or three years ago, for example, a rumor got loose on the street that congress had voted to suspend the constitution and name a dictator, and for an hour this newa- paper'a telephones were kept busy de nying the tale. (It sounded wild then, but came darned near happening later on.) BORN leaders are familiar with this Imitative trait in human be ings. They know, for Instance, that if an emergency arises and the leader appears frightened and uncertain hla followera will become frightened also, but of the leader retains a firm and confident appearance hla follow ers wilt keep their courage. We like to think of ourselves as lords of creation, but tn many ways we are still creatures of habit and auggestlon. 1200 HANDLE WORK PORTLAND. Ore., July 31. (API Bet ween 1200 and lftoo rersn win be employed In handling federal re- uer and worirs funds In Oregon. Washington. Montana and Idaho, it was revealed today by Major A. B. RlCheSOn. WhO Will set itn hnnh unit of the treasury department In xn racuic wortnwest. Major Rlcheson said the branch 1 unit are to assist in checking on the Northwest's portion of the $4,880.-! 000,000 emergency relief approprla-1 tion. The Portland office alreBdy has i been opened and others will be es- j tabllshed In Seattle, Helens and I Boise. I ADRIENNE'S ANNUAL Corset Sale ADRIENNE'S Flight 'o Time (Medford and Jackson County History from the files of the Mall Tribune of 10 and 20 rear Ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 31. 1!25. (It was Friday.) Flnsl rites are held at Arlington cemetery for William Jenninga Bryan, a the nation mourns passing of the 'Oreat Commoner." Jesse Wlnburn, "angel of Ashland." to be welcomed with bras band on return from trip east. Lively exchange of real estate re ported from Rogue River. Threshing starts in Sams Valley, with light crop In sight. J. A. Perry Is elected "Senior Saga more" at state meet of Red men at Portland. Jack Dempsey, champion of the world, and his manager, Jack Reams, split up. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July .11. 1915. (It was Saturday.) Cement plant at Gold Hill has been financed, and work of construction will start at once. Wild blackberries are rtpe. and the patches are the meoca of many Med ford people. Mr. Alon Brackinreed leaves on trip to Duluth and Minneapolis. Registration of births and deaths now compulsory In this state. Elks will run special excursion train to Colestln tomorrow. Fight occurs on Front street when laborer tells former, seeking help, "to bring in your hay. and 111 see about pitching It." EUGENE. July 31. (AP) Dr. Don ald E. Barter, 53. prominent Los An geles physician, died late yesterday at hia summer home on the McKenzle river east of here. saw 9UNNT m SPRINGS 1 Straight Whiskey rt a LOW PRICE $1.15 AflJC jl j& Quart Jf m pint ' ' THANKS TO SCIENCE Insect pasta ora no longer a problem. Quick, pleasant, inei pensive, FLY-TOX kills flies, moths, mosqui toes and other Insects INSTANTLYI CUSTOM GRINDING Grind your grain for better feed Jackson County Feed Company 4th it Bnrtlett streets. Phone ani An assortment of broken sizes including the Famous MUs Simplicity and Tu-Way Stretch models. V2 Price Hosiery Special All silk hose in new shades: 1 pair $1.00 3 pair $2.00 Extra Sheer Hose $1.50 and $1.65 values $1.00 Visit Adrienne's July Clear ance Sale for attractive values in Dresses. There are still many to choose from