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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1935)
pXge four MEDFORD MAIL' TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1935. Medford$$Tribune HE.eryooe l Hontbem Or-o I Bndi tbt UU IribMW" Dallj Bleep HaturdarT Published 07 MEDFORD PRINTING CO. l-tt-i N. fir St phM ROBERT W. BUBU gltor. AD lna.paail.ilt N.wapaper. ordTortjoo. ndr Aot ol oimsnRlPTION RATES Br Mall In Art.aaCI Dally, raar Dallr. ela mootb Pho.nu. .!. " am " highways Dally, oal ytw Dallr. el nioothe .It. 00 . .! . Atb- Polnt, .f COO . .al . .00 Ail Wren", oath 10 aflvanc. Official FapM of J"' "' Official rape, tw MBMDKH OF TUB ASSOCIATE" Pitta run uhmwI wi aerric.. ?hTAoc l...d Fr I. "J Htlad to tba ma for publication of all ? m.p.icn.a cr.dlt.d to II "la. cradltad In iblo papar. and alee to tha local oawa publlabed haralo. All rlnt. for publloatlOD of apaclal alapatchea heraln ara alao r.aarvao. MEMBER OF UNITED PREB8 MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adrartlalnl RP'"""'"'lJkl Offica. 10 Nw fork. Chlcaio Datrtlt. San Fr.nolaoo. Lot Ana.laa. Seattle. Portland. ON Ye Smudge Pot I By Arthur Perry. ...thnrltlea of a NorthWCat tlty re confronted with the prob lem of what to do about a couple of grammar achool Jiivenllee who re fiiae to aalute the American flag on the grounda It conflict with the rellgloui belief! of their parent!. Similar Incident have arisen through out the nation, caualng tb auapic ion the rellgloua belief li baaed more upon word from Moscow, than the Bible. Youngtre with icruple agilrurt !lutlng the flag In the aeboolroom, should be given an op portunity to do It In the woodshed. W. B. Francis was seen about town In the flesh Wednesday, (Heppner Note. Pendleton Ksst Oregonlanl A nudUt-at-lsrge, and chilly weather for It. On of Oregon'a leading statesmen xa talked himself Into a tragic Jackpot. In oratorical efiorta on the plan of the good Dr. Townsend. he baa fooled neither the Old Folk, nor those lacking faith In Utopian ralnbowi. A grandson of Theodore Roosevelt stands charged In Connecticut wltn hooting a policeman with an air gun. The Incident caused editorial comment on the carefree attitude ol Booaeveltlan youth, and comparison with the Illegal and recklosa auto apecdlng of the two oldest boys or the White House occupant. It ap peara the Roosevelt finger la nearly aa heavy on the trigger, aa the hoof on the gaa valve. The comparison I far-fetched. Recklessnesa, In one form and another, with an auto, coat 9.000 live last year. As far as the records !how, nobody died from an alrgun wound. A Willamette young lady la aufler lrg from running a sewing machine needle through a finger, and many Orandmawa can ahow acar from almllar mishaps, when they were young. The modern maid will suffer no Ill-effects, and ahe hopea the finger will heal, so the acar. If any. will look like ahe dropped a tire rim en it. The country anussge season Is coming on apace. It will be In full wing as aoon aa the regular eatera gnaw through the Thanksgiving tur key, and th hash thereof. The oak tree, on the hill In front of the church ground was cut down aa a part of the crurch Improve ment Wednesday when a number of men and women spent the day at work on the grounds. (flpleer litems Albsny Democrat -Herald t The oak probably caused the cement aide walk to bulge. The editorial atsff of a Portland newspaper waa presented with a box of clgsra Saturday by a gentleman. The reclplenta of the Havanaa threw them away when a practical Joker caused a minor explosion and yelled: "Loaded." The uncolored and uneol erahle Associated Press, In Its dis patch, covering the event, covered all details, briefly and concisely, but forgot to say what the clpsr donor would run for In the spring. The No. 1 auto license for Oregon haa been Issued to an Eastern Ore gon autolst. Interest will soon cen ter In the annual Informal endur ance contest to see who get the Isat one, If any. John Wilkinson reporla that his boy, Don. 3.5 vrs. old), with ambi tions to be a cowboy, waa delighted to see hla name In the paper. He will never get over this thrill, but 1 now too young to deny It. SILENCE VEILS FATE E HEW Y017K. Not. 35. VP( A wot rlsnme alienee sepAmted Lincoln Ells worth end his pilot, Herbert Hoi lock -Knvon, from their bie ship In th Antarctic today. Kit worm and Hr lock -Km von, who Wt Dundee Island on a fllht to the Rom wi, 3,140 hlUsi ftwur. iMt com miiniontrd by wrerm with ih hw ivhlp At 10:4a a. m. jpam aUndurd time) Anturdny. only few hour ftT their tftete-ofr. MV.r your TlmnfcrMElriTc Dinner onmpift bv Mrvin! mwoni' nm?1 rode Puc.dic ice Cmm. MEMBEK . V-7TI ss r J Personal Health Service By William Brady, M. D. Signed letten pertaining to peraonii Dealt b and Bjjlene out to dlaeaae diagnosu or treatment will be aniwered by l)r. Brady If a tamped eelf-ad dreaaed envelope la encloted. Letter abonld be brief and written In lorn Owing to the large amber 01 letter! recalled only few can be aniwered No reply can be made to querlee not coniurmlng to Inatrnctlon. Addreaa Or. William Brady, 269 El Camlno, Beverly mm. caL THE C. P. DIET FOR Only ne&r-doctori, diet quaokJ, still strive to tell prospective customers ttut It u important to Include min eral salts or elements In the diet. Hu trition Authorl t e s, physiolo gist, physicians know .n.vt s diet well DsUnced in Other respects cannot Xsll to provide imp mineral elements for the body's needs. Senility Is the P h y s 1 c i and mental In firmity of old see. Just when docs this Decline begin? It varies widely, but In most Instances it begins at the age of thirty to fifty years. In other words many of us be. gin to show or feel our age as soon a we have attained full adult growth and development, and some of us maJiege to keep In top form for ten, f if ten or twenty years be for the In exorable signs betray us. Utter a thoughtless remark about how your friend hes aged since you last saw him or her If you want to achieve unpopularity. I am omitting recital of the signs of premature sen lllty because I don't rant to make a lot of readers feel bad. I say bad, and that is correct. If you Insist on knowing the signs, you'll find them firmly but gently exposed In the booklets "The Regeneration Regimen" and "Building Vitality" a copy of either sets you back, ten cents coin and a stamped envelope bearing your address. The Corrective Protective or C. P. Diet described In the booklets men tioned and also In a booklet for re ducing ("Design for Dwindling") con stitutes a good foundation diet for any mature adult who Is slipping. It Is called corrective because It Includes the vitamins and the minerals which .ire essential to remedy functional disturbances or Impairments due to faulty nutrition; and protective be cause It does protect stralnst devel opment of these Insidious functions! deficiencies which ultimately become definite organic disease. A main part If not the main part Of the O. P. Diet Is ONE QUART OF PURE PRFfiH UIMC DAILY. If that does not appeal to you, never mind go right on as you are. This Is a free country and you have a right to grow senile before your time. But before you rejert the daily quart of milk, old timer, let me Inquire NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. Not. 26. In the msn ner of Arnold Bennett's Journal: One of those whirly girlies sat next me at a counter snack place this noon. "I've been on ti.e loose all night," she vol unteered. "Do I look a fright?" She looked as poised, 8 m o o th and prettily done as a morning rose. O, youth I A publicity poonah has been trying to sign up a self-effacing friend for a national air CAst. He promises over night fame. But my friend turns a dear ear. He once trekked across the Sahara with Be douins and became a convert of the trjbal proverb: "The dogs bark, the caravan passes!' Albert Payson Terhune bivouacked with Bedouins. Ripley, too. Each has a complacent philosophy. Such sartorial effecta Ted Saucier achieves. Today he was duked out In a golden brown great coat with a blood red carnation. And a little further along McClelland Barclay with a sky-blue muffler dotted In pink. Vast amusement In the help-want ed columns of the Billboard. ' A band in New Orleans wants "a trombone player, sweet and goo-goo." Nothing cleaner, finer, has come to the the ater than Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice." I am stuck with the slmllnrlty of the voices of John Charles Thomas and Nelson Eddy. Two viewpoints; A sprig from Philadelphia writes "t'm Just a cub trying to make a Paisley vocabulary fall Into 'cute folds, a head fill of Ideas and a struggle to express them. Writing looks so easy, but It Is a trick to blurt thlncs on the typewriter as though thsy were casual." Another In the Orarks: "I'm so far In the hsck woods that peo ple's breath smells like tsn bark Ws use possums for tomrat and the 'whoop and holler telephone sys tem. But writing Is easy. I love It I write eight hours a day." Kmetyne TVtwlller tells About the ft-yesr-o!d poetess who sent an of fering to Nelson Doubleday, the puhllaher. Ancient minnesingers he done worse and achieved Immor tality. Here It Is: "Yesterday you were a beautiful thing running across th rosd. little white hen. But that was then." And I like the descrip tion Somerset Maugham has for envy : "Not because people do not like you but because they are not like you." M. surprises with fluency In French. Yesterday she rattled atsp-pity-nsng to a vendeuse In A per fume salon. A dsy two years sgo during an exasperating Incident in Parts, she exclslmed: "T'm going to speak this Ungnsge yet I parroted: "Me. too" fme did. T did not. Noth ing mskes a writer wince more than something written yesfw- ha"k. A doctor tn Spokane sends a vell"ed clipping of 15 yesrs sgo that atftfl a fog of despair. X have improved Lin j&t PREMATURE SBNIMTY whether you have tried Certified Milk? That's the purest, highest grade m) Lk obtainable, and in taste as well as purity It Is supreme. Don't give up your youth as lost until you have sneaked up on a quart of Certified Wllk when you are reasonably hungry. The reasoru why milk Is so prom inent In the C. P. Diet are, first, be cause a quart of milk, yields 650 cal ories in the most digestible form; sscond, because fresh raw milk Is an excellent source of vitamins A. B and O, and also contains some C and some D; third, because milk Is one of the best sources of the calcium and phos phorus the body need: and fourth, because milk furnishes the wholesome lactic bncllhis culture which promotes healthful conditions In the colon (In my opinion pure fresh sweet raw milk is quite as afflcaclous for this pur nose as any cultured or fermented milk beverage or buttermilk prepara tion can !re.) Try milk Instead of other beverage, and let us resume discussion of the C. P. Diet another day. tJfBSTIONS AND ANRWKK5 minion. . la there any way to cure a bunion permanently except removing It by operation? How lone does such an operation lay one up? . . . (Mrs. E. B.) Answer Bunion la partial disloca tion of great toe Joint, with thicken ing of the head of the bone and usually an Inflamed or Infeoted bursa. Operation la the only cure for estab lished bunion. It keeps you off your feet two weeks. Foolish footwear Is the cause of bunion. Send stamped envelope besrlng your address for monoflrraph "Care of the Feet." Interracial MRrrlaec. Am I rleht In believing you asld that the offspring of parents one of whom haa colored blood w.ll be no darker than the darker parent? (R. W. B.) Anawer Yea, all legend and folk lore to the c. n. w. Break the Hnlilt. What la your method of correcting chronic constlpstlon? (Mrs. L. A.) Anawei" send ten cent coin and stamped envelope bearing your ad dress, for booklet "The Constipation Hsblt." (Copyright. 1G35, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Mote: Person! wlihlnf to communicate with nr. Brady ihonid send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D., 26ft El Camlno. Beverly Bllla, Cl. very little. The novelist who gains stature with each fresh book is Charles O. NorrU. Vide : "Hands." His most recent. He's the only au thor I've known to handle incest without a tinge of revulsion. I recognized one of those Indus trlotis ptck-thanka with a rag who watches folk approach their cars and then begins furiously to polish the hood for a tip. He wss an oily night club gigolo of the boom. They were talking, a group last night, about things they really wanted to do. I admired the frankness of one successful fellow who yearned to plurk a banjo like Eddie Peabody. Also they discussed Irritating radio voices, but no one mentioned that bltten-off bluster to be so dramatic crying : "Time marches on ." Boo Davis In town sgaln. Back from far-flung reach and Itching to be off. To pack up the kit bag and go where you please, when you please is mightily near top In living. Prom St. Morlts a post csrd map ahot from some break rasters tn the snow. On the correspondence side: "I came here waddling like a brew ery horse and In three weeks 34 pounds have vantshed In the thin, light air. And I even drink beer for breakfast. Skating and skiing per formed the miracle." I wondered, shaving, what's become of Dashleli Hainmett. the "Thin Man" fellow, and hla hard-boiled romsnras. Most human transplants to the city nurse a sentimental tug for the neighbor.., is of their first metropolitan hotel, boarding house or flat. They make some excuse now and then to pass through them. Mine Is on W. B7th. near 8th avenue. It will always have glamour. 1 often feel I'd like to drop Into the corner drug store, milk depot or cigar stand and observe : "I used to live around here. What became of etc., etc?" (Copyright. 1935. McNaught Syndicate) RENOWGIRL E FRESNO, Calif., Nov. 3ft. Mary stammer. 15. daughter of Wal ter H. Stammer .prominent Fresno attorney, waa fatally beaten by an unidentified fiend last night as ahe sat reading before the fire In the family's palatial home In the Fig Osr den district north of the city. The crime was discovered by Mrs. Stammer upon her return from a railroad station where she had taken Stammer, who left on a business trip to San Bernardino, a telegram was delivered to him on the train at Pu is re. The man broke Into the hou.w through a rear door by cutting the screen and breaking the glass, the mother asld. He clubbed the girl into Insensibility as she sat In her chair then carried her into a bedroom. Ap parently he was frightened hv the return of Mrs. Stammer and fled through the front door as she enter ed the broken rear door. Ssn Fmnt-lro Butterfat SN FRANCISCO. Nov. 7 -Firt srarte butterfat, f ob Ssn Francisco. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS HEBE'S sn Interesting dlspatcn from Hllo, In the sun-kissed and romantic Island of Hawaii, bathed by the warm tides of a tropical ocean where winter is unknown: "The Mauna Loa volcano sent a vast flow of lava 13 miles long down its slopes early today (Friday), with the possibility It might be diverted toward this city of 30,000, 40 miles distant.' -4 THE city of Hllo lies 20 miles due east of the point where the lava apparently will strike the base or the mountain Maunakea. It then must turn to the right or left. If it turns AWAY, the people oi Hllo will heave a long end quivering sight of relief, end go happily About their business. Some of them, prob ably, will get as tight as a tick by way of celebrating. A lot of ua, you know, are so con stituted that we Act that way In the reaction from a threatened danger that haa passed by. IF THE lava turns toward Hllo, something will have to be done, and what they plan to do la inter esting. A flow of lava la preceded by an accumulation of slag, or cinders, which Is pushed ahead of the river of red hot, molten rock. They plan to BLAST this accumulation of slag on the side awsy from Hllo, hoping that the hot lava will pour througn the hole tn the slag thus artificially crested, and so turn away from the threatened city. f UMAN brains thought of that 1 A scheme which may work, or may not. But the fact remains that when people are in grave danger brains and Ingenuity, plus courage snd energy, are about all that can be of any help. Sitting down and crying never got anybody mit or trouble. HERE In Southern Oregon we have occasional spells of harsh wea ther, and we profess to be greatly upset by them, Although In reality we don't mind much. But we never look up toward Mount Pitt or Cra ter Lake with dread In our hearts because of a threatened flow of lava that may wipe out our homes and the efforts of a lifetime. We've really got a lot to be thank ful for. (Continued From Page One.) ornother. It Is a good tune for their purposes, "but thinner than It sounds. The public generally seems to have Jumped toward this conclusion be cause the latest Index of industrial prodxiction wss around 90 per cent of normal, while employment was 82 snd factory payrolls were only 74. But If you all! look into the dis parity with a spyglass, you will find that the key to the situation lies In the closeted fact that the production figures are based on a different set of Industries than the employment end payroll flgxiros. For Instnce, the production figure la heavily Influ enced by manufacturers of cigarettes. This Industry haa been virtually booming since the depression, but It employe very little labor. For another Instance, the blinding construction Industry undoubtedly furnishes more labor per dolltr of ex penditure than nearly eny other lsrge Industry. It employs In normal times a wry substantial proportion of the total number of American workers. But It Is the industry which has re covered leset, thus far. The fact Is the heavy goods Indus tries (steel, building, mining, etc.) ere now operating at only 53 per cent normal. Their output Is only 36 per cent of the total national production, whereas In 1033-3A they pixxlueed about 50 per cent of national pro duction. And It la in these indus tries that the great bulk of unem ployment lies today. Also. If you base your production, employment and payroll figures on 1930 ss 100 (Instead of (13.1-311 AW. sges. on which the official figures sre based), you will get sn entirely dif ferent answer. Figuring 193? as 100 tor ell three, you will find that pro duction during this yrnr ha aver sged around "3 per cent normal, em ployment 78 per cent and payrolls S3 per cent. Thus, on a IPIft base, you flnS that existing employment U e.-en nearer VorniAl than production and the dis parity of both with payrolls Is less civd. The. figures do not mesn that t J ere has hee n no nen aei n n t of worker bv machine. Nor d- thev Indicate fhst the recent in.-reav lr. mi tuber of rmployaV.ea hns been over-eMimswd What they seem to aiy clearlv is th.t sn improvement tn diirable goods :iu1tittie i needed ss macn as an NRA to correct the eiat!iig rtipity t n em plovme n t and pa vr M Vs. A iso they so re m the fart that the status of tv-hniMog!fal upemploynV'ni snd r.f ine-evlng enpioyaMes ?ne stressed too muci. BUSINESS BOOM TALK ABOUNDS IN NATION'S CAPITAL (Continued From Page One.) arguments as to what caused the bet ter business. One view, vigorously voiced. Is that new deal spending and other policies pulled the country through. Another, upheld Just as vehemently, Is that natural forces are bringing recovery despite new deal messtires. It Is an argument that appears destined to go on for a long time. If not forever. The A. F. of I.'s report, published today, said there probably would be a business and Industrial boom "within the next few years." At the some time, the federal reserve board said maintenance of business activity at near the year's peak haa been "the outstanding fact in the economic sit uation during the first ten months Of 1935." In the three preceding years. It emphasized, business advances "were quickly followed by sharp declines." According to some predictions, however, unemployment appears like ly to be the ghost at any recovery banquets held In the near future. SEEN AS TITLISTS CHICAGO, Nov. 25. yp, The de fending champion New York Giants and the Green Bay Packers probably will meet In the national professional football league title playoff provid ed they get by a pair of tough as signments Thursday. The Giants, who conquered Phila delphia yesterday. 10 to 0, for their seventh victory In 10 games, have only three more games to play, the Brooklyn Dodgers Thanksgiving day, and after that, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. The western division leading Packers face their most critical test of the nee. son in tackling the Chicago Csrd Inals Thursday. Green Bay gave another great ex hibition of power yesterday In wallop ing Pittsburgh. 34 to 14. The field goal by BUI Smith gave the Cardinals a 6 to 0 decision over Boston. The Chicago Bears and Detroit Lions staged a 20 to 20 thriller In the other game at Chicago. PORTLAND. Nov. 25. 7P) George R. Lewis. Pendleton city attorney, was named today by Howard Latour ette, speaker of the house, as a mem ber of the Oregon capltol (OmmlBMon. Lewis' selection completed the com mission of nine members. Lewis la a former mayor of Pendle ton, and a Democrat. He is a mem ber of the American Legion and of Veterans of Foreign Wars. Governor Martin, Senate President Harry Corbett and Latourette each made three selections. The others are: --By Latourette J. H. Lake, Portland union member, snd J. A. McLean, Eugene hotel operator. By Corbett: T. H. Banfleld. Port land manufacturer; H. H. OUnger, Salem dentlat; Robert Sawyer. Bend publisher. By Governor Martin : Mrs. Edith Waldo Johnson of Salem, daughter of Supreme Court Justice John B. Wal do: Dr. E. C. Dnlton of St. Helens, and O. A. Marshall, Baker stockman. TO ACT AS GOVERNOR SALEM. Nov. 35. tfpi Speaker Howard Latourette of Portland Will be acting governor of Orison over the Thanksgiving holiday. Governor and Mrs. Martin will leave Wednesday night for Bremerton, where they will spend se.-eml days with thler daughter, Mts. Schuyler Pyne, and family. During the governor's absence from the state the high office goes to the president of the senate. However. President Harry L. Corbett will be In San Francisco during that period, so the next In lino wtH act as governor. The speaker of the house, under the law. then will act. PORTLAND. Ore.. Nov. 35. ( API Neighbors complained of a dis turbance and Patrolmen Gnlbreath and Holland responded at 3:58 a.m. They found a man asleep In a chair, with the rndto going full blast. "We turned off the radio and left .he man still asleep," the officers re ported. Use Mall Tribune want aria p LIPS To oulrajv chapping, roughnf.. l!". ilhln. ' i..,miv .oninowtum. flaw vu trtod th HIW MENTHOLATUM UQUIO for hM. la, lla. Muh latum ntmnl It brl-t aoothin comfort GIANTS, PACKERS CAPITOL BUILDING GROUP COMPLETE BOWLING Captain Erldraon' tam chalked up a 8 to I win over captain Burrougha' a!a7 in their Elk1 club bowling matoh laat Friday. Team No. i will roll Team No. 4 tonight. Teach No. i la oompoeed of: Bade, captain; Daly, stoe.lr, Webater. R. Semon and W. Smith Team No. 4 la composed of: Sanderson, captain: R. DeVore, Ferguson. Hall, D. Watson and R. Duff. Friday acorea: Team No. 7. Erlckson ISO 148 182 llfl les 235 199 1G7 189 148 110 ies 135 199 180 171 168 110 IDS 135 139 Bulll Carey .. Find ley Saylor ... Thompson ... Handicap Total 1119 1103 1138 3300 Team No. 8. Burroughs 178 170 178 534 Gill 168 145 208 517 Rankin 190 155 227 572 York . 128 188 115 409 Duff, L . 144 104 127 375 Brayton .....161 161 161 483 Handicap 138 138 133 414 11 05 1039 1150 3294 TEAM MATCH HONORS 'STI At the lnter-state bowling tourna ment held at the Smoke House alleys here yesterday, the Eureka, CaJ., pin knockers turned in s total of 3758 to take the honors In the team matches. Eeda Transfer of Medford was only four pins behind, with 2754. The Palace Market squad from Klamath Palls placed third with a totnJ of 2610 pins. Other scores were: Electrolux (Klamath Palls), 2603; Sims Bros. (Medford). 2508: City Meat Market (Medford), 2505: and Hum boldt Beer (Eureka). 2374. In the ladles' 'tournament, the Klamath Palls squad took first with 1909. Eureka was second with 1972, and the Medford ladles last with 1884. The Eureka Bowl tm rolled the highest game, with 1011 pins, and Eada Transfer grabbed the second prize with a Nelson and Whitey of Eureka took high in the doubles with 1108, Ross and Wilson of Klamath Falls were next with two pins less, 1101, and Haight and Ward of Klamath Palls placed third with 1098, and Saylor and Murray of Medford took fourth honors with 1085. PRUIIT, PRINGLE TIE FOR TURKEY Hank Pruitt and Roy Prlngle will both undoubtedly eat turkey for Thanksgiving, but one of them will eat a bird donated by the Rogue Val ley Golf club. Right now, neither knows which one will be the winner. Yesterday they tied for low net in the club's turkey tournament, with a pair of 69's, and will have to play off the tie between now and Turkey Day. Saturday Chuck Ellia, with a low net of 71, took the turkey offered for that day, and A. P. Mansfield, with a low net of 147 for the combined two days, wort the third bird offered. Prlngle and Pruitt have not yet de cided when they will play off their tie. The handicap system waa used in all matches of the tourney. 8. P. Turkey Price. SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 1 5. (p) Net prices paid producers for dreased turkeys delivered San Francisco: (Gov't graded U. S. prime) young toms, under IB ins., 30; over 18 lbs.. 29'i: young hens, 3114- (Gov't grad ed price means box packed and sized ) Loose: Young toms, under 17 lbs.. 29-29 '4: over 17 lbs., 28-29; young hens. 30-31. XMAS PHOTOS Holiday Specials Now! PEASLEYS Opposite Holly Theatre iHlOMI OOUItl IHDWNII rOIITEl l0 ITU HINDI IttTIIU Wt 0HUJ1 Mill fast at this t HMIItD OFFERING Of REAL QUUIU ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES Wa'n only law oi aach ol thai it.m and ao much quality at e raaaonabl coat 1 aura to claar out our hlvM in hurry. Th.y ir. richly beautiful In luatroua ehrom plating, with black bakalita trim. Each ha j.narou isd heating iliminti built to laat a lifatim. But on at all lour wa know jou'll b mora than satiafi.d. Hubbard Bros. Inc. MAIN AND RIVERSIDE VICTORY IN FIGHT T (Continued Prom Page One.) send their produce to Itsly, while some pressure has been put on oil shippers Indebted to the government. Authoritative sources In Rome, while expressing some resentment against Ickee' plea, predicted' the United States would not actually Im pose an oil embargo. At the aame time official quarters ssld Itsly has enough oil for many months. II Dues was reported earlier to have warned France that a ban on oil shipments as an Impediment to the prosecution of his campaign of occu pation In Ethiopia "would mean war." Great Britain and Prance, motivat ed not only by Mussolini's adamant stand but also by doubt over the ability of the United Statea govern ment to halt oil shipments, decided to seek a delay In Imposing the pro posed embargo, authoritative reports said. Considered, too. was a critical In ternal situation In France which would make It Impossible for Premier Pierre Laval to leave Paria Friday to attend a meeting of the league's sanc tions committee at Geneva. ON THE SPOT By Wllmer Crowell (Esstern football official) (Written for the Associated Press) PHILADELPHIA Of all the decis ions I have made In football games from coast to coast. I remember 'one from the 1929 season most viv idly. The game brought together the undefeated elevens from Notre Dame and Navy at Baltimore before 70,- 000 spectators. The late K n u t e Rockne had moulded another fine eleven with S a v o 1 d 1, O'Connor. Schwartz. Brill. Mulllns and Elder heading a herd of hard-running backs. Navy scored a touchdown In the first period and It appeared Notre Dame might suffer its first defeat. The touchdown csme after Bauer completed several forward passes to Crane and Byn for short gains TO the Notre Dame four. Clifton, Navy fullback, went over on his second try. Marty Brill and Jack Edler put together seversl long runs in the second perl od to gl ve Notre Da m e first down on the Navy 15. Carldeo then passed to Elder for a touch down snd the score was tied. 7-7. This set the stage for the decision 1 remember so well. Shortly before halftime, Notre Dame reached the Navy 1-yard line, fourth down. Notre Dame smashed off guard and I dove into the pile to prab the ball. I held It under my chin until the players scrambled to their feet. I noticed the goal line out or the comer of my eye and didn't dare ground the ball for fesr 1 would move It an Inch, one way or the other, putting It down. I called time and asked Tom Thorp, of Columbia, the umpire, if the ball waa over for a touch-1 down. Thorp said he couldn't tell. The upshot was I had the head linesmen. Fisher, of Harvard, bring out his chain and messure it. I All this time. I stood holding ! the bell under my chin not daring i to move, with the player? or both ten ma clustered around. The chain, which we dropped from the end of the ball to the ground, showed it was two Inches short of a touchdown, giving Navy the ball on downs. This brought a howl of protest from the Notre Dame players. Notre Dame went on to win. 14 to 7, but I wonder what would have been said If the game had ended in a tie. Be correctly corseted in n Artist Model by Ethel wvn B Hoffmann. MOM! Tilt tn WITH HIIIH 0IIHEI M0 CHI0ME I01ITH HUH IlitUTI Till ,K!U hkeli " g-w Mltll t!l S- 1-5 Flight 'o Time ftledford and Jackson L'oontJ nlator. from the file of the Mall Trlbnne 10 and 20 lean TEN YEARS AOO TODAY November 25. 1H25. (It waa Tuesday.) Medford and Salem high football aquada reacn agreement, and gams for atate title outelde of Portland will be played here Saturday. December . Ted Hill of Central Point defeat Tom Waterman, 150 to 72. In openln? game for city billiard championship, at Brown', before a large crowd. Police report a wave of petty thl. ery In the city. One hundred forty-four Chine pheaaant released In Talley by atate game commission. United Statea senator Stanfleld to be gueat of Cratera' club at dinner tonight. 1926 auto licenses planed on aale. and Lane county man get No. 1. Klwanla club visit Trowhrldg Cab Inet Worlt. TWENTY YEA8S AGO TODAY November 25. 1915. (It was Thursday.) Russian army plans Invasion of Bulgaria, In retaliation for German Invasion of Serbia. Henry Ford will dispatch a "peace snip' 'to Europe, "to get the boya out of the trenches by Christmas." The heaviest rain In three year falla over the valley, and amount to 1.08 inches. In the ThankAztving game at Ash land. Medford won by the score of T to 0. A noisy crowd attended the contest, and after the victory thera were several threata of war. Coach Otto Klum was carried from the field by the team, aa the crowd cheered. It waa the first victory for Medford over Ashland in five years. TARIFF REDUCTION WASHINGTON. Nor. 25. ( API Senator McNary of Oregon, the repub lican leader, protested to the state de partment today against the lumber tariff reductions contained In he Canadian -American trade treaty. "I think the situation la not hope less," he said after conferring more than two hours with Secretary Hull, Undersecretary Phillips and others. He said he will discuss the matter with President Roosevelt when the chief executive returns to Washing ton from Warm Springs. Oa. It was reported reliably that Mc Nary made several sueseations to the department. He contends timber growers and lumber manufacturers In the northwest will be hit hard by a cut from $4 to $2 in the duty on Douglas fir and western hemlock. The treaty Is to go into effect Jasuary 1. K. F. Pair to Wcrl. RENO. Nev.. Nov. 25. p, Marriage licenses issued here Saturdiy includ ed: Merlon Wilbur Simpson. 23. and Illia Brown, over 18, both of Klamattt Palls. Ore. C 0 R D I R IS Cram d Mentlie, Cram da Co cao... Apricot. Cherry, Blackbarrr and Peach Cordial. IMPORTED QUALITY at DOMESTIC PBICES1 rOtt lift 0HI0HI .IFFLE MOULD WITH HUT KDIC1TCI Mf HTTtl UDU FOSTORlft M'NARY PROTESTS