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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1935)
PA"GE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON. MONDAY. AUGUST 19, 1933. MEDFORDsfTRIBUNE "Everyone Is 8orjhn Oregon Btidi th Hall Tribune" Daily Except Saturday. PublfRhed by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. Sl-lT-aa N. Fir at. phone U. ROUEKT W. aUHU Editor. Ad Independent Newspaper. - Entered es eeeortd-claes matter at Med : ford, Oresoo, under Act of Msroh s, III. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall Id Advanca: D!ly. on veer " Dally. Its months -7 Dally, on month By Carrier. Id AdTance Medford. Aen. land. JackaoDllla, C n4 r a I Point. Pnoenls. Talent. Gold HtU and on hlfhwara. Dally, one year Dally, all months ! Dally, ona month ! All terms, oaab la advance. OffMul t'niMW of the City of Medford. Official Paper of Jnckaun County. UK. UK Hi OF THE ASSOC. ATfcU I'lttS Kot-vlvltig Full lHrd Wire Service. Thi Aunniatad Preaa la exclusively en- titled to the use for publication of all navta d snitches credited to u or ou.er wie credited In ihle paper, and alao te the local nana publiehM herein. All rights for publication of special dUpatchge Herein are aiao reserved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Rapreaantatlvsa M. 0. MOCiENSBN S COMPANY Offices In New York. Oh Ice so Detroit, 6an Franctaco. Uos Angeles. Seattle, Portland, Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry Amateur human fllea kept rescue parties fairly buay lMt week remov ing tham from the and story ledges of precipitins cliffs, whanrs they hut a seen fled without thinking, and quits A number of klndergarden plorers were lost In the tall timber without waiting for ths first anow, or the equinoctial storm to compli cate their return to firesides. Doth these haiwrda, gained on picking up a sad appearing hitch-hiker, ss ' means of rolllng-your-own-temptlng of -f Ate. Upstate Democrats have started fighting among themselves, due to the aurpUie of poatmaaters and ths shortage of postofflces. The prlco of hogs has reached the point, where the genius who inventsd "Mock Chicken Legs" should try hla skill at concocting a Mock pont Chop. see "If We Ha4 a Million" continues at a favorlta editorial topic. In ex changes landing on ths exchange table. It Is high tlms some fearless, militant, and clear-thinking scribe took typewriter In hand and replied with one entitled: Only OBB.OOOBO Shy. Wfllt Johnson Is tsklng a vacation from "pulling" beers at ths Corral and J. I. MrCoul Is substituting for him. Walt'e pedal extremities hove been giving him trouble, hence the vacation. (Lakevlew Examiner) Intimate touch Journalism. The "Independent voter" ta now rated as "the deciding factor In the 1936 election." The trouble with the Independent vuivf. In the past, hae been that he was ao Independent tie wouldn't vote. a MORAL WAVE SHOW". TKKTII. (Marlon Advertiser) The remarke made on ths street by s couple of young men would have been bad enough should- thry have emanated from a drunken man, but from young mrn of education, why those very words (we cannot mention them here) should have been drove back down the vulgar throats from whence they came. a a The foundation was laid last week for several shlvarees. by promising young mrn. The Prospect ball team waa o f en ted yesterday by an outlandish score. They got leaa runs than Hoover got. votes In the same precinct In in:io. e e a 111011 COST OF TO0T1NO. One of the moat Important results of the experimentation is the dis covery thst the railroads of this country literally pv too much for ! their whistle ' It required four tons I of water and 1200 pounds of coal hourly to blow the whistle used by Dr. Poley in hla work. A train whistle la blowing from one twenty-sixth to one thlrty-flfh of It actual running time, as he found by tlmln trains on three roods. Conservatively esti mating 31.000 locomotives In con tlnuoua use. and using one forty fifth sa the fraction of running time that s train blows Its whistle, he estimates that the nation' rstl waya spent approximately aa.ooo.ow snnuslly for blowing their warning signals i Railway Journal! Jackie Camp of Red Blanket, s suburb of Prospect, wants hla name In thS paper, and her it la. Jackie ta nine years old, and a good boy. e Joseph! Funeral Portland Today PORTLAND. Ore.. An. 19(AP1 Funeral service will he held here to day for Dr. fllmon Edward Joseph! BA, the first dean of the rnhrrsity of Oregon school of medicine, and former state senator. He died here ftaturday nlht. Dr. Joephl era first president of trie Portland Medical society and one president of the Academy of Medicine of Portland. He ws dean of the University of Oregon School of Medicine from IA87 to 1912. Ore on U at her Generally fair tonUht and Tuadav, but becoming unsettled north wet portion: fog and mist on coast: nor mal temperature; modern t" nor:ri west wind off t;;e coflM. MEMBER EDI QN The Journal Broadens Out WE congratulate the Portland Journal. In its issue today, the front page lead ii "National Af fair" by David Lawrence. Also on the same front page ii an installment of "Today and Tomorrow", by Walter Lippmann. Lawrence and Lippmann are two of the most intelligent and expert political commentators in the United Slater. Both were strong supporters of President Roosevelt at the outset of his administration. Lawrence was the first to turn to the "right" and for a year or more has been one of the administration's severest critics. Lippmann has never turned to the "right" nor the "left". He has pretty well maintained his but with the recent sharp turn he has become increasingly critical of the president. All in all wc regard Lippmann, as the most in the country today. IN his column, Lawrence deals posed of about 40 business leaders, under the direction of tho secretary of commerce, and its recent appeal to the president to defer his tax bill until the January session of congress. It agrees with the administration that at this time a balanced budget is impossible, because extraordinary expenditures are still needed to care for Hie unemployed; but it recommends the budget be brought "GRADUALLY into balance" by a curtail ment of expenses and a WELL CONSIDERED tax plan, which should follow the budget estimates for 1936 which have not as yet been revealed. "The crying need of the hour," declares the council, "is a restoration of business confidence, and this can't be achieved by clumsy tax rates any half baked measure "conceived in politics and jammed through" by a weary and harassed con gress. Lawrence concludes : "Members of the oounell are rprMDt4j as dlapleasa! that tha Whtta Houas did not maks public the text of the report when the document might have been ef tome avail. It haa on ' the other hand, been pigeon-holed by the president and probably will stay there Indefinitely. That haa been the fate of all the Roper council report." Pretty severe criticism of page 1 of the Pro-Roosevelt Journal! MR. LIITMANN in the same issue is equally severe, and KtrAtio-ek enoiith ilnnls with the same general subiect: the president's tax program, and through congress, without mature and proper consideration. To quote : T do not mean to Imply that I tfhlntc Mr. Roosevelt has Una ambitions of a dictator, or that he la not a loyal defender of free, lnetltutlona. But I do think that he haa let zeal, political calculation, and Intoxication of power, heat and fatigue, confuse hla graap of a very simple but very fundamental political prin ciple. Thl country will have to undertake many far-reaching reforms. But In undertaking them there la euch a thing aa du proceas, not merely In law, but In morale and In demor.ratla methoda. The manner In which thla tax legislation has been handled vlolatea the very spirit of due process. Discussing this feature of the administration's present pro endure at considerable length, Lippmann concludes: Thla p.-ocedure will ruin him If he contlnuea to follow It. The country will become Increaalngly uneasy aa It la taught to believe that something wholly unexpected may be proposed at any moment from the White House. It will be Impossible for any BUT BLIND PARTISANS to support the president If he re fuses them the right to know In advance and aa a trhols what they are asked to support. The government becomes personal, arbitrary, and capricious when at any momeet and without notice major reforma are announced, and without due demo cratic process are railroaded on to the atatuta books. The president Is to make some apeechea when congress ad journs. Let him tell the country what to expect. Lat htm sea what reinalna to be done In the near future. Thla la no un reasonable demand. It Is a demand that the president of the United Statea take the people of the United states Into hla confidence. It la their right. This is criticism, but it is PRECISELY the sort of criticism President Roosevelt not so long ago, endorsed and requested ; namely CONSTRUCTIVE criticism, expressed, not in a narrow and hostile, but a broad-minded and friendly, spirit. TO find such anti-Roosevelt rma of tliA innnt IovhI nml Roosevelt on the 1'aeifio coast, is and in all sincerity we extend nal, which has for many years spokesman and journalistic lender in this stale. It shows the modern and enlightened jouruslistic spirit, the generous and the PROPER spirit There is no REAL place in this country for the narrow, hide bound partisan newspaper of the old school the paper that tries to keep up the silly pretense that all that is great and good is contained in ONE political party: and all that is evil and un worthv is contained in some OTHER. We don't expect the Journal editorially to be any less LOYAL in its support of the president and his policies, than it luis been; nor is less LOYALTY in any sense desirable, hut this inclusion of both Lawrence and Lippmann in is news col umns. DOES justify the expectation, that the Journal will not yield to that hieotcd partisanship, and childish obscurantism, which hns PREVENTED so many laree newspapers up and down the Pacific coast because of their narrow political policies from beinpr also regarded, as "BIO" ones. shove the narrow, petty pnrtisaiiahip of an era that has passed. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY Ry O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. Aug. IP. Diary Abroad id came upon Herb Rotn looming in the crowds like Gibson's drawing of "The Champion ' Than driving with C. B D T I S C Ol 1 tO Yonkers, y a r n in about Addi son, knife-throwing and pen guin. And at a soda basilar I met Mary Mar g a r e t McLlrMe. the Marths Dean ot the tiidlo, H o in ? snd a . 1 w .- :aSfc V 4M AJ n s ! r h hor's ca- course In the middle of the road, of the administration to the left able and fair minded observer with the Itoper eouncil, com the administration to appear on his methods of forcing the same articles, however, played up by arrlpiir. annnnrl ira nf President as refreshing as it is surprising! our congratulations to the Jour been regarded as the official of the great Democratic party dlsrractlng. IV to a framer'a witn s Peter Arno original and loitered over a lemonade at a sidewalk cars solving a charade Carolyn Wells sent. Home again and another bird an astonishing owl an Arkansas ladv sculptured out of a pine cone With Harry Stlvey to a duckling dinner on a Searvllff verandah and dropped him at the Lambs. Then with my wife to the Boblentrie and Helen Wills Moodr there And Can Von Wiegnnd. Georte Hearst and Dick Berlin, late to bed reading s mua'ng letter from Winnie pYhee han on life and ths s'rantw times. Ths bell-hop too, ftnds the d presh still depressing. Hopping bel'S In a de luxe New York hotel a few years before the crack -up was quite an opulent caltlng for the unskilled Many could knock out from 940 to rtO a week and any number were home owners In Astoria, the su burban haven of hell boys. A few owned their cars. Today in even smart inns the Job Ik a scant living Tsn!v rt,il!r. In ((! nnnal.ltrsvt Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal bealth and bjglene not to disease diagnosis or treatment frill be answered by Or. Brady If s 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 ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 2 US F.I Camlno, Beverly Hills. Cat. TOR WHAT AILS VOL YOU Sll OIXD WHEAT A pomphlet distributed by s com mercial organisation contains some remarkable remarks under the seal of "aocep ttnci by the Commit tee on roods, American Medi cal Association,'' I quote: "White bread Is more com pletely digestible than vhole wheat bread . . . White bread is s whole some, nutritious food. As such it has Its rightful plaos in the normai di of the nor mal individual, it avoidance for fear of any harmful eonaqunccs or the fear that It Is the cauas of any dis ease condition when properly used In the normal diet. Is entirely without scientific foundation." I doubt whether there Is any sci entific foundation for the notion that white bread Is "more completely di gestible" than whole wheat bread. All ths rest of the statement which bears the "seceptsnoe" of the A. M. A. appllea as well to whole wheat bread as It does to white bread. In deed, our newer knowledge of nutri tion warrants the opinion that whole wheat bread Is more essential In the normal diet of the normal individual than Is white bread. Hlndhede. distinguished physiolo gist snd nutrition authority, found that men doing light work, pert of the tfme in the laboratory, part of the time In the garden, thrived well and felt well and vigorous on a diet of whole wheat bread and margarine for a period of 261 days. When a sim ilar teat was made with white bread instead of whole wheat, the men lost strength snd energy rapidly, had headaches, dlzzlncs, constipation and other complaints. Hlndhede attribu ted the difference to the bran In whole wheat bread. Bran contains protein of high biological vslus) to supplement the Inferior protein con tained In the kernel and present in whits bread, Htndheda further proved by actual tests on men that bran Is digested as thoroughly by man as It Is by domestic animal, Let the un known authorities of the A. M. A. "Committee on Foods" set their Pick wick at work on that. Wheat bran contains something els that may have a bearing on the superior vslus of whole wheat bread in the diet. It contains fourteen times aa much mineral matter as refined 0 1 meon Ford si ways h ad a red - head bell-hop on his staff "for luck.' In a lifetime of hotel living It seems to me trje most alert bell-hops were red hatred. And there was, of course, Red" McGulre. of the Regis In Mexico City, who ran his tips Into gold mine fortune. Gypsy Lee Rose continues by over whelming odda the star of stars In continuous burlesque. At the mo ment she Is the only actress along 42nd street's Burlycue Row to have her name etched in lights, under shortened name, Gypsy Lee, she had a walk-on part In The Follies. but stepped out a few weeks to re turn to the rougher revue. Her vogue Is largely among ths out-of- town sports who strive to whoop things up. ;5!.e has a way of tossing knowing wink that means much to them, absolutely nothing to her. snd makes the boys from out yonder her worshipful slaves. Her day's run of mash notes often overflows a bushel basket. Personal nomination for the great- est boon In years to struggling un- j knowns Major Edward Bowes' "ama teur hour.' Dogs-cannot-reaaon notes: On hot days Peggy Hoyt's Peke drops s palm leaf fan at her feet and whimpers , Albert Payson Terhune hns a collie that will not go near him. even when called. If he's st his type writer . . . Sir Arthur Wing Plnero has a docile Sealyham that would always run howling from a qulct mannered neiRhbor ... He turned out an experimenter in a vivisection laboratory . . . John McE. Bowman s Chesapeake hunter trotted to the veterinary alone when a tooth needed extracting. Jeesle Reed on Chicago relief rolls offered a drab dip Indeed from the raarle-dHjxle that once aurrounded her when she was the red -haired queen of the Broadway show girls. Zlegfeld paid her as high as 9300 a week, although she never spoke a line or danced a step. She had no tags ability. Een her smile whs a prop smirk. But In gorgeous cos tumes against Urban back-drop and in a flood of artistically thrown lhta she Inspired audience saspa. She liked to go pls-es and do tilings but moat of the time she was inar- toulste. A p-Hfil was her bet in gestures Also, ironically enougn, sne was always befriending her chorus sisters In dtstree. She wa one of the few Zlegfeld beauties who Uked to "troup" preferring the road to the metropolis. Bagatelles: Jack Noruorth, once so shm. Is now s heavyweight . . . Queenle Smith csn nibble lettuce snd twitch her nose like s rabbi; . . . Gene Jm ter is t'.ie community mayor of the writing colrm at nre Island . . . Joe Wiiiicombe private secretary to William Randolph Hearst, always refers to his em plover Sf Chief . . . Trnent Boyd Is a blsck thorn caneist. from Hollywood: A dire-tor In hotel offK-s sceue ordered an extra to w.Mk up to the desk. His stride , had a dash of lavender. "Try It again and forgot that swish." said the dl- rector. Adding: "Be a man I" Shriekea . the extra: "I should do a character bit for 7 SO a dayl" t i Copyright. liu.V Mv-N.-uipV Syndi rvei EAT UNSOPHISTICATED white flour does. Most of the calcium (lima) and phosphorus, as well as moat of the Iron, of the wheat is 'in the bran which Is usually discarded or fed to animals. Most Important of all Is ths fact that practically all ths vitamins (A, B, B and O) of wheat axe present In the bran and the germ, both of which are removed and dlacsrded in the manufacture of white flour. The Committee on Foods of the meddle some Association scarcely knew this when they "accepted" ths peculiar teachings about whit bread which X quoted above. Even Hlndhede prob ably did not know this when he ascribed the superior nutritional value of whole wheat bread to the quality of the protein or nitrogenous material In the bran or outer cost of the kernel. Indeed, this newer knowledge of nutrition renders obso lete and rather ridiculous many of the "accepted" theories or notions of five or ten years ago. What the average doctor of 1630 didn't know about the role of vitamins In human nutrition and vitamin therapy in the prevention and cure of many com mon ailments, fills many book and scientific Journals today. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Hatr Mattress I am 46 years old, and considerably run down in health. I use s hair mattress snd have heard that people sometimes suffer slcknes from the arsenic used in preparing the hatr for the mattre.se. (H. L ) Answer There is no foundation for the conjecture. Temptation Resisted I received the two booklets I sent for, but what about the personal let ter on acidity? I expected same as I Inclosed stamped self -add reased en velope. You might at least have wise cracked. If you had nothing to ssy on the aubjea-t, (Miss C. L ) Answer True, but you e, that's precisely what some corresponded t renent. And when they do, their vol ubility reverberates egreglously. Running Ear Please give the formula for drops Tor running ear. W P.) Answer Ten grains of borlo scld dissolved In one ounce pure grain alcohol. Drop two or three drops In ear (agreeably warm) twice daily for months. Ed. Note: Persons wishing to runt in imitate with Dr. Itrady should send letter direct to Dr. Ulllium Brady, M. D., 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal, In the belief that he would be the easiest Republican candidate to beat In the election. This situation seems to be the source of much current talk about the growing atrength of the Hoover candidacy; that Mr. Hoover will get all the votes he got last time and many more: that the other foremost candidates will kill each other off; that Mr. Hoover attll controls a ma jority of the Republican national committee. The ben authorities do not believe tneMa devolpments have altered the situation. They com-ede Mr. Hoover's chances art still about one In four billion. There was real mourning around here among politicians and states men at the news of the death of Will Rogers. He knew them all and they admired his exceptional character. They would get peeved at him once In a while for hla comments, ss for Instance the time last winter when he gave an unreported speech at a big dinner here. It did not get out. but the president was upset becsiue Will lampooned the world court. Some others were offended because he spoke of the supreme court as "some old gentlemen In kimono." When Will heard about the reac tion to his speech he was apparently more distressed than st any other time in his life. He worried about It for weeks, writing letters to dorens of atatesmen. explaining thst he had In tended no offense. Whenever a public man dies, his friends always 5ny what a loss It is to the nMion. This time their words mean something, because they res lire Rogers was the only national force for good humor In politics, at a time when it l needed. At last name haa been found for the wtif.i:ke t.-jt bill. ft wj'.i be known forever after ss "the wnale oil tax bill." A senator dubbed It that In the cloakroom after an amend- ment wa adopted repealing the three cents a pound duty or. sperm oil. The amendment will be lost later, but-not the name, because the bill at least alms a h;irpoon at the whalea of business and Industry. Also, whale oil is quite a greasy substance. WASHING MACHINE REPAIR SERVICE (iiitantred Mnrk i reaMiuaMe prlre.. Mata and all other make. Thone t!: C. D. BEAN r Mam at (Continued from Page One) MEDFORD VETERINARY HOSPITAL . IH years experience tn I arte snd mall animal pisrtice -25 N Riverside. Phone 369 Comment on the Day's News Br FRANK JENKINS. tTWIA dlspateh comes from Portland, where the Oregon Federation of Labor la holding Its annual meeting: "Two hundred epolceemen for or ganized labor today placed the brand of union disapproval upon Governor Charles K. Martin. "In tha aweeplng declaration of policy submitted to tha federation of Labor, union worltlngmen ware ex horted to reatat tha 'threat of civil rights' they profeeeed to see In tha governor's handling ot strikes and picket morementa." rTKZ governor'a publicly announced po"'7. In hla recent handling of atrlkea and picket movements In Ore jon, waa auoatanciaiiy tmt: 1. Those who want to strike peace fully have tha right to strike, and must be and will be protected In tha employment of that right. 3. Those who want to work have the right to work, and must be and will be protected In tha enjoyment of that right. T'HIS writer, who la a working newapaper man, aa well aa an em ployer, and who haa the ultmoat re spect for those who work, la unable to In that policy any threat to the civil rights of working men or others. It seems a fair and reasonable policy, designed for (he protection of ALL. TnHIS dispatch which la Interesting to say tha least -comes from Chi cago: "Wholesale prleee for fresh pork In the Chicago area today had reached a high of 130.60 a hundred pounds, or mora than 390 per cent Increase In two years." Plowing under the pigs, aa a device to raise the price of pork, eeerna to have worked. COB the present, 'a wholesale price of 39.60 a hundred for fresh pork. f.o.b. Chicago, la nice If you have pigs to sell. It Isn't so nice, of course, If you are on the buying end. But a price like that raises thla question In our minds: What will be the effect In the future? The effects will be twofold: 1. Consume re. Influenced by the high price, will reduce sharply their consumption of pork, aubatltutlng something else: thus reducing de mand. . Producers, also Influenced by the high price, will Increase their produc tion of pork, AAA or no AAA, thus In creasing the supply. Pork producera In other countries, enabled by the high price to pay the tariff duty and still find a market for their product here, will Increase their exports to America, still further Increasing the aupply of pork In thla country. WITH demand decreasing and sup- r 'J . . VLB rtW V. J-"-" mint ultimately decline perhaps sharply, it will go on declining until It reaches the point where consumere feel that they can again afford to eat pork In normal quantities. ' txperlmentera may profeaa to think so, but we HA VENT yet reached the point where we can get around the law of supply and demand. to the caN DIE60 tfPOSVTWri) 3320 round trip A TTorld'i Fair so near at band doesn't come every year. See this one. Combine it with many things to see and do la southern Csiifornis. Tbn'$ cmiimt Plan to so by rail Yc can fro there and back oo fast, comfort able trains for Terr little money. Above tare is good in coaches and chair cars on all oat trains; also to improved Tourist Pnll mans, plus small berth costs. Io coooecdoo vita your tmB ticket we will gladly foxnish too with American Express Tour CaOurxasrii at assure too ofhotel accixnmodaoon io Sao Diem. These coupons include transfers between station and hotel, hotel room, admission to the Fair, sightseeing tour sll for ss little as 2.86 a dsy per person. i. r.Varle. Arnt- Tl. M Communications From Sam KroscheL To the Editor: ! We have enjoyed reading your paper for a good many years, but are now enlovlnaj It more than ever, thereby enabling us to keep In touch with many of our friends that were so loyal and faithful to us while In Medford. Once away from your good old town, even your old frlenda will forget to write; for that reason, It la the purpose of this letter, which we hope you will grant a little space and trust It may be tnduclve and arouse the spirit that makes good will. No doubt, some will wonder h" haa become of us, since our depar ture from the valley where we lived for about 28 yeara. We left Medford on June Slat: the first day we drove to Clam Beach, near Eureka, Calif., where we were euccessfu.1 In get ting about 150, our limit. Wo com pleted our trip down the coast In eight days, so you see we did not hurry to get to the Promised Land. Bine our arrival In 6an Diego we have enjoyed many things of In terest, as well as undergoing the ordeal of starting up house-keeping again and going to the fair, ate. There are many educational op portunltlea offered by the exposition, particularly from the atandpotnt ot children, ahould not be neglected. A trip around the grounds Impresses one with possibilities of gathering Information from the displays much more quickly than would be poaalble through classroom Instructions. The federal building offers a com prehenalve and easily understood picture of many ramlflcatlona of our government and the extent to which It affects each of ua In our dally lives. The climate here has been sublime, neither too warm nor too cold, and we are enjoying our aun-batha dally. Noticed In your valuable paper the other day that It waa 107 In Med ford: well, well, well, with due re spect to the good old Rogue, we went deep aea fishing on that day, Just off Point Lome, and about 1U miles out; In the forenoon It was rather cool and had to wear a coat to be comfortable. In the afternoon It warmed up a bit and the Hah bealeged us in schools, There were about 60 of us fishing on this boat and by 5:00 p.m. they reported that 317 fish were landed that day. Your bumble correspondent la not a very good fisherman, but was successful In catching six baracudas. It re minded me of the moving pictures, when we were pulling them In faster than you could take the hook out. (Notice) Have learned to keep my hands and foot out of the fish's mouth. This Is a true fish story. (Oh, yea. forgot to mention, there was one man-eating shark landed.) To those that wish to visit the exposition, might say that from August 23 to September 3 would oe an Ideal time to come. There will be 90 warshlpa and 400 planes of the Unlied Ststes navy In review. The warships will form off l. Jolla and proceed eouthward and upon reach ing Point Lome where the formation will break up. Commercial planes will be restrict ed in an area of about 10 mllea square; from the Mexican border Wake up to what you're missing, you and all your family, by doing without hot water in un limited abundance: Dishes done in a trice, baths without itint, laundering made easy, shaving turned Into rite to be enjoyed, and washing-behind-the ears made painless even for 5th-graders! Don't dream of having hot water... have it. Order a WESIX automatic electric water heater. One with a Whitehead tank of rust -proof MONEL METAL, guaranteed 20 years. Cost of opera uon? Price? Depends on the size you need. That's our job. Call us. The California Oregon Power Company north to La Jolla and west from La Mesas to 10 miles out over the sea. In this srea the 400 navy planea will maneuver dally during the days stated. In the past San Diego haa not had the pleasure of entertaining very many manufacturing enterprises, but this prejudice haa been overcome, end In later years a number of fac torlea have been erected: one under construction at the preaent time la an airplane factory that will, or rather proposes, to employ 1400 peo ple. The depression hsa left Its foot .rint. tipre ..a well aa other places, but history hss slwaya repeated It self and win continue w oo ao. Prom chaoa and depressions wa have alwaya emerged triumphant. That la the background of America. Let us go forward serene and unafraid with faith In our Ood and our coun try. SAM A. KKOBUHEU 3419 Vermont street, San Diego, August 1". 1036, Calif. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and M Tears Ago). TEN VEARS AGO TODAY August 1, l!2g Escaped Oregon convicts, now seen In .Seattle. Grants Pass. Hood River, and Roseburg. Sheriff Jennings gets resdy to hunt .Ellsworth Kelly In Jackson county. Three hundred forty-seven cars of pears have been shipped to date, by local shippers. Clarence Meeker of ths M. M. store returns from & buying trip to San Francisco. There will be a horseshoe plte.lilng tournament the last two days of ths county fair. Burglar enter Ed tAmport's and steal three pistols. Active prepsratlons start for an nual Jackson county fair. Cooler weather, suggestive of In dian summer, prevails over the entlrs state. TWENTY VEARS AGO TOD AT August 19. 191.1 Greater Medford club to beautify park et city reservoir. Harry Nealon is getting to be an expert driver of his tin-lizard, though about all ths time he has to practice 1 before breakfast snd after sup per. (Table Rock Tablets). A woman, the police say, has been Intoxicated for two weeks snd was ordered to leave town. "She gads the streets at sll hours of the night, the police claim and acting "ss hos tess of alley rush -the -can .parties." Glen La id ley has returned from a week's vacation at Coles tin springs. Plre destroys a ten sere barley field belonging to Prank Preston on the App.ega.te. Pour carloads of Dodge cars, sold In advance, are delivered to Jackson county buyers. Css UaU Tribune want ads. nir so bursting "lib song It " ' s fslr m-sek- Use siU rnouoj want sd. Jl