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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1936)
tu.,i.-il,uir.:..v-.Jr.. PAGE STX BEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOKD, ' OREGON, SUNDAY, JANUARY 19, 1936. MEDFORDw&WTRIBUNE "Everyone Id Houthera Oregon UeatU tht Unll Trlbooe" toll; Kicapt telardar Published by MBDrORD PBINTINO CO. 11-17-19 N. Kir Bt. Phoo IS. ROHBRT W. RUHU Editor. An Indtpandant Nwppr. Entered second -class matter at Sled ford, Oregon, uoder Act of Mtrcb I. llf SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bt Mall In Advance: Dally, ona year Pally, ala months IS. 00 t.TI Palty, ona monin - By Carrlar, In Advance Med ford, Aah land. Jacksonville Caotral Point. Pboenti. Talent. Gold HU1 and on . hlBhwaya. Dally, ona yaar Dally, Hi months.... Dally, ona month All termu, cash In advanca. OfMrlal Payor of the City of Bedford. OfflrliiJ Paper of Jackson County. UKMItRH OF TUB AHSOC31ATEU PUKHH Krerlvlnx Pull leased Wire Hervlce. Tha Associated Prasa la eicloeivety an titled to tha uaa for publication of all otwi dispatches credited to It or other wise credited In thle paper, and alao to tha local newa publisher! herein. All rtfhta for publication of special dlapatchae herein are alao reserved. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS UBMDER OP AUDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATIONS Advertlstni Representatives H. 0. UOUKNHKN COMPANY Office In New York. Chicago Detroit Sen Francisco, Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perrj. The sun came out Frl. a pretty as you please, after heavy precipitation, and' the womenfolks were glad to again see what fashionably tans them. Dock Robinson, the J'vllle shlck was out the end of the week, with a yellow posle In his coat lapel, and his hat tilted at a rakish angle. Local badminton experts will do some missionary work In Salem, and learn benighted Sale mi tea how to play. H. Flewher, the demon baker and other devotees of the game Jour neyed to Spokane, to display their skill and expose their homely male knees to the public eye. The political campaign started off last week. There will be no charac ter assassinating, or quoting of the Scriptures by candidates until after Easter. New grass and the horse chestnut trees are showing signs of spring. Chickens continue to roam tho fringes of the business district. This Is contrary to ths city ordinance, made and provided, but nothing will be done about It until they start roosting on the chamber of com merce. The keel of a new service station was laid on North Central Thursday, which Is also coming to the front as a race track for speeders. Drummers, Insurance agents, and auto salesmen are back to the 1030 level, and plentiful and active. The boy mayor of Klamath Falls, and senatorial aspirant started out the first of the week to fool the Old Folks, but It Is predicted the Old Folks will deceive him. Atty. B. Hammond went to Port land In mid-week, on ltszal bis, and returned with the latest thing In golf clubs. s Docks Lagcson and Durno are run ning together. Friends are betting the former gets a back tooth, before the latter bags a tonsil. Orchards were a sea of mud all week. The orchardlsts got more molsturo thsn they prayed for, and. It Is too early to tell what It did to the coming pears, if anything. The crime wave subsided last week, and no sleeping citizen was awakened by a stronger jabbing him In the ribs with a pistol, in two Inatsnces, van dals were unable to get the spare tire off, Seversl things not nslled down In the rural areas, walked off. J. Wesley Bates, the tonsorlallat. and the republican party have be coxe reconciled. They were estranged when the plntnttff became Imbued with the notion, the way to get rich was to go broke snd everybody would drink beer until the taxes were whscked In two. A movement has been launched to make the city streets as smooth as the road to the top of the mountain nobody wants to go to. e The Bill Smith halfback has en listed at the UofO., where ha Is ex pected to cut a swath, and gain five yards when It counts ths moat next fall. The 06C. quint played Eugene Frl. night, and Verge Strsng and others of the alumni were frensled, e Dock Deane hss not been seen for several days, and It Is feared he lost sn argument. IN OREGON OPEN PORTLAND. Ore, Jsn. 18 lP) AH msln roads in Oregon were open 10 irsrel todny esoept the Ooqullle to Dindon hlhwajr, the Oregon Stste Motor ftAflocl.tlon reported. Coqullle advised, however, tht th road there winch Iwd bwn closed oy hlKU Hood, ih nmiotutfd by sevemi trucks which sloshed through the re ceding wAters. The wet side Pacific hlhjr north of EuRfne hs closed (or t time ,t Monroe, but now I. open end above flood waters, It wss atated, An Appraisal of Kipling Born Dec. 31, 1865 Died Jan. 1Z, 1936 Just as future generations have sat In Judgment upon the products of all great writers, so must the sifting process of time determine the liter sry niche In which Rudyard Kipling will be permanently fitted. Searching back over the past 30 years. It Is difficult to find a well known author who has not written a criticism of the popular Kipling Boms of these have been mere para graphs; others have swept on Into volumes; yet the outstanding feature of all seems to be the diversity of opinion. t Edmund Oosse has hidden away, deep In the center of a volume, sev eral lines that tell the story as ade quately perhaps as any of his con temporaries have done. He is vehement, and sweeps u sway with him," says Oosse. "He plays upon a strange and seductive pipe, snd we follow htm like chil dren. As I write these sentences, X feel how futile Is the attempt to analyze his gifts, and how greatly I should preier to throw this paper to the winds and listen to the mag ician himself." Upwards of a hundred volumes have flowed from ths pen of Kipling since he began writing in his early youth. Of these, by far the mo&t famous are his poems and stories of the British Tommy In India crea tions In which he has Immortalized Krishna Mulvsney, . ths Irish soldier giant, and Learoyd and Ortherls, the lovable characters of "Soldiers Three." While not the choicest of his works from a literary standpoint. j these stories, with "Barrack Room Ballads," 'The Jungle Book," "Many Inventions," "The Seven Seas," and I "Soldier Stories," all published be tween 18D0 snd 1000, have become better know than most of his later novels and poems. A majority of critics ' agree that "An Habitation Enforced." "They." PESS VISUALIZES WASHINGTON, Jan. 18. (AP) A wide open race for the Republican presidential nomination, with the ultimate selection of a "dark horse1 candidate was forecast today by Simeon D. Fees, former Ohio senator and former chairman of the Repub lican national committee. Without discussing candidates by name, Few forecast that some of those now In the field would be discarded to make way for a more out-and-out anti-new dealer. Fess discussed the political situa tion in an interview In the presi dent's room Just off the senate chamber, where for many years he wss a leading spokesman for his party. He made It plain he was keeping his hands off the race and was not lining up for any particular candi date. But he visualized a Republican convention In which no one candi date would have a controlling bloc or votes. He forecsst that the dele gates would be divided into half a doeen different camps, when the convention meets. "In all probability the man named by the convention," Fess ssld, "may be some one not In the public mind." He predicted that man would be sn "anti-new deal candidate," who had not compromised with the Roosevelt program. The Republicans, he said, are headed for victory In the fall. He asserted President Roosevelt was slip ping In popularity and would be de feated barring some sudden change In the situation. 4 REBUFF 10 EPIC LOS ANGELES, Cal., Jan, 18. (AP) Upton Sinclair's EPIC forces pro posed today to select their own dele gates to the Democratic national convention. Rebuffed yesterday In a battle with U. 8. Senntor William O. McAdoo for control of the state Democratic machine, the End Poverty league said the delegate list would be submitted to President Roosevelt for approval. Ths Democratic state central com mittee voted to let the president se lect the California delegation. Todays EPlo convention said the ranking leaders would not only select a list of delegates, but si so pass a strong resolution urging national sup port for tha plan of productlon-for-use for ths unemployed. rORT SCOTT. Km, Jsn. 18. (AP, A handful of glum relief strikers milled sbout aimlessly today, their "slefte"' of the court house broken by the arreftt of their leader .'.id a tear gaa barritRe. Sheriff s deputies reported "the sit uation has quieted down." Previously, county authorities re quested nations) guardsmen be called to preserve order but sny threats of violence appeared dlMtpatrd today John L, Bnuoitt. trader oi tne group, was arrested after of fleets were forced to use kki to evacuate ths strikers from the court house, where they asserted they would re main until their demands for hither DARK HORSE AS G. (LP. NOMINEE KANSAS INDIGENT STRIKE QUELLED (relief wages were met. "Puck of Pook's Hill," "Kim." "With out Benefit of Clergy," "The Man Who Would Be King," "Beyond the Pale," "Mohamed Din," "The Mark of the Beast" and "Ths Light That Palled" are the most notable of Kip ling's works published since 1000. Others which are frequently men tioned are "Stalkey and Co.", "Life's Handicap," "Captains Courageous,' "The Dsy's Work," "Our Lady of the Snows," "The Incarnation of Krishna Mulvsney," "The Daughter of the Regiment," "The Courting of Dinah Shadd," "The Gate of the Hundrnd Sorrows," "The Strange Ride of Mor. rowble Jukes," "The Drums of the Fore and Aft," and "Recessional." The last mentioned appeared first n the London Times, and was subse quently chosen as the poem to be read at Queen Victoria's second Jub ilee In 1807. Immediately preceding ths World war, Kipling wrote a "History of England," "Songs from Books" and play, "The Harbor Watch." During tha war In which his 18-year old ; son was lost he produced a number of descriptive stories of ths various armies, Including "The New Armies In Training," "France at War, 'Fringes of ths Fleet," and "Sea Warfare," as well as some small vol umes of war poetry. In 1020 he pub Ushed "Letters of Travel," an ac count of fts various wanderings be tween mua ana xi3. Kipling was the first Englishman to receive the Nobel Prize for lttera ture, which was awarded to him in 1907. The selection caused a wave of adverse comment to sweep Eng land at the time, particularly In view of the seversl prominent British writers who were Ignored by the committee of awards, and who were considered more representative of pure sngnsn literature than was Kipling, whom critics described the poet-laureate of the English In inaia. AMONG MPS FRETS SELASSIE DJIBOUTI, French Somallland. Jan. 18. (P) Two of Emperor Halle Se lassie's generals have been rushed to northweat QoJJam province to put aown a aerioua revolt, It waa learned today from relktble source. In Addle Ababa. Newa ol battle between loyal troopa ana rebellion forcea have reached Addle Ababa. It was aald, but a strict censorship kept It from the public, Ethiopian officials were described as seriously concerned over the situ ation. Kenlzmatch Sahle, who la known as the "revolt killer." recently went 'o uojjam at the head of several thous and troops to aid Dedjszmatch Habte Miriam, who was dispatched from Ad dis Ababa several weeks ago Jn an at tempt to restore order. The Incldenla began late In Novem ber and It was believed many weeks would psss before they take a decis ive turn. (Recent Addis Ababa dispatches quoted Ethiopian officials as charg ing Italians wi:h etlrrlng up OoJJom unrest sgalnst the government oy dropping propaganda from airplanes). L 'STALL' TO WASTE UTILITY ASSETS NEW YORK. Jan. 18. AP) Charge that attorneys representing petition ing creditors were working In collu sion with counsel for the Associated Oas St Electric Co. to "wants assets through stalling for time by con tinued adjournment" were made be fore Federal Judge Julian W. Mack today. The accusations were made by at torneys seeking to Intervene on be half of bondholders In the company Judge Mack Is presiding st reorgani sation hearings of the utility con cern. Oliver O. Carpenter, representing the Intervening bondholders, offered affidavits to support his. char pea Tney included mention of the al leged million dollar slush fund or ganised and spent by Howard C. Hop- son, former vice-president of the As. sociated Oas A Electric Co. for the purpose of defeating federal utility control legislation. Attorneys for the petitioning cred itors and the company requested to answer the chargea and termed Car penter's allegations as "wholly and entirely false and unfounded" and recklessly and carelessly made." GOVERNOR CALLS T BAIKM. Jsn. 18. ( API Governor Martin today announced a confer ence for the conservation of natural resources would be held In Portland Sunday. January 26, under the aus ploes of the United Slates Junior chamber of commerce and Us at misted state and local groups The meeting was called by Worth W. Caldwell, state chairman. Oregon's executive announced the purpose of the meeting was the or ganlratlon of an Oregon council lor the conservation of natural re sources. He urged specifically that representatives ot the game com mission, state police, hunters and analers' orjtnlrtlcn. chambers of commerce and the state motor or ganisation attend. SERIOUS REVOLT 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 rmelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief snd written In Ink. Owing to the large number or letters received only few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady. 265 El Cam I no. Beverly Hills. Cal. TONSILLECTOMY IS A He was 33. Newspaper items de scribed him as a strapping, good looking fellow of radiant personality. and had made a quick rise In the department . . . "Friday he had a slight cold." . In other words no onw knows what ailed him, The newspaper report continues He went to the hospital to have h 1 s tonsils re moved. The op eration was per formed Saturday Surviving are the widow morning . How many fine young men and women have needlessly risked their lives In the desire to get rid of bad tonsils quickly? The toll of this major operation is rather appalling In view of the fact that modern medicine offers and a. ternative treatment for Infected ton si Is which, I venture to say, has no mortality and which, If my tonsils, health end life were at stake, would be the method of my choice. I refer. of course, to diathermy extripatlon or electro-coagulation If you prefer that term, whatever method is question, let us agree that It Is in the hands of a competent physician. That Is essential If the diathermy and the surgical excision methods are to be compared. Too many physicians, keen on sell ing an operation, and uninformed or .misinformed on the efficacy of dia thermy extripatlon of the tonsils, pre. judtoe the unwary patient by assur ing him that the diathermy treat ments are "dangerous", or that the diathermy method "does nttf remove all the tonsil" or that the diathermy treatments require a long time and a day In the hospital Is enough time to give to the surgical excision. These, ore specious lies. Any physician or specialist who tells you .these things Is a good one to avoid A well Inform ed, honest physician or surgeon will tell you that your Infected tonsils csn be effectively treated by electro coagulatlon as they can by surgical excision. He can't tell you anything else now and be perfectly honest. Each and every one of the hypothet ical objections raised by the bright boys who write for the medical Jour nals has been ruled out by experi ence. Today there can be no doubt that electro -coagulation, in compe tent hands, gives at least aa good re sults in every way as does any of the various methods of surgical removel of tonsils, in competent hands. So it comes down to a question of time, and your personal courage or your love of life. It requires an aver age of eight or ten visits to the doc- E OF WHAT VETS TO WASHINGTON, Jan. 18. (P) Here are rough estimates of what World war veterans would get under the conlltlon bonus bill up for passage In tho senate Monday: A veteran who has a 11.000 bonus certificate against which no loans hsve been .isde would receive twen ty 50 bonds, for which he could ob tain el.000 If he cashed them between June 15. 1936 and June 15. 1037. The same veteran would get 1.030 for Ills bonds If he cashed them on June 16. 1837, or $1,370 It he held them for nine years before asking cosh. The veteran who has borrowed the limit of 50 per cent against a ai.000 certificate would receive Just half as much. A veteran who borrowed the limit of 23 per cent which was In effect be. fore the 50 per oent loan law of 1831. and who obtained no further loans after that lew was enacted, would be able to cash In for S780, less varying Interest charges unpeld before Oct. 1. 1831. ' The holder of a 11,515 certificate, the largest Issued would receive II. 550 In bonds and 135 cssh. If he held the bonds until maturity In 1845 he would be entitled to 1508 Interest or a total of 11.056. besides the 135 cash. FEDERAL QUIZ ON 'IOWA'S' LOSS DUE STLEM. Jan. 18 (API A tele grsm to Governor Martin from J. M. Johnson, assistant secretary of commerce, today assured a com plete Investigation of the wreck ot the freighter Iowa January 13. The governor wired Daniel O. Roper, aecretary of commerce at Washington. D. C. yesterday, re questing an "Investigation of the sinking of the Iowa near the mouth ot the Columbia January 13, with the loss of S4 lives. "Appreciate your Interest." John son stated In reply. "J. B. Weaver, director cf the bureau of navigation and steamboat Inspection, leaving Washington shortly to me tv.'.! In. vestlgatlon. t euton ( liter Talk FOREST OROVB. Ore , Jan IS (AP) George Koehn, Oregon state IKlon commander, apoke In favor oi the neutrality measure, adequate nations! defense and a universal dr,ft law at a meeting of $00 Leg ionnaire In a two-day ae&Uon here The group represented district two. IS MAJOR OPERATION tor'a office to complete the diathermy extripatlon of the tonsils. Each treat ment or seance consumes, say. twenty minutes of your time. Thst's less than four hours all told. Add In an other hour going to the doctor's of fice and another hour returning to your work or' home each time less than twenty-four hours of your time. So on that score, the diathermy method has It all over the standard surgical tonsillectomy, which keeps you In hospital from 34 hours to, oh. months and months when certain complications occur. After all, I can't for the life of me1 understand why any one should elect 1 to under go a general anesthetic and a major operation merely to have in- ' fee ted tonsils eradicated. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Keep Comfortable Tour statement that from 30 to 30 gallons of water must be evaporated in a house dally to keep the humidity up to a. fairly healthful and comfort able degree seems unreasonable. (L. A. O.) Answer My estimate was based on my own experience in a rather larger than ordinary house. But It Is gen erally found necessary and desirable to evaporate from 10 to IS gallons of water dally in the air of a five or six room house in order to maintain fair relative humidity In the season of artificial hest.ng. Makeshift "humidi fiers" will not do this. But built-in air-conditioning equipment, or spe cial radiator tanks with wlcklng racks to aid evaporation (such as I used In the house where I tested the matter) will do It. Up your fuel bill 6 for every degree above 68 you keep the temperature of your living rooms. Cheaper to evaporate water than to overheat the air lso save temper, furniture and your health. Temperature of from 66 to 68 degrees P. Is within comfort zone, especially If you can contrive to maintain good humidity, Excessive drying out of air of the heated house Is bad for akin, complexion, growing plants, furniture, bindings, temper, respiratory mucous membranes, physiological regulation of body temperature, metabolism n' everything. Carbon Monoxide I work In the office of a gsrsge, where they have a machine which gives off ozone, snd this Is supposed to purify the air of any carbon mon oxide. When it Is turned on there is a strong odor, which seems to make the eyes hurt and causes headache. (B. E. J.) Answer Ozone cannot remove car bon dioxide or its danger. (Copyright 1936, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady ' should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D 2B5 El Camlno, Itevcrly Hills, Calif. (Continued From Page One.) at the democratic national committee hints that the bllla of the radio broadcasting companies (142.860.04 to Columbia and $98,554.10 to NBC) may not be paid lor a long, long time. There are too many other bills to be handled first, but none bigger. Tho Duponts, who are financing the Liberty league, are beneficiaries of much New Deal legislation for Instance, the spending program has helped their General Motors stock. also their cellophane. Thalr friends say they take the long range view and figure that the tax cost in the long run will ruin whatever immedi ate benefits they may gain. The treasury must be expecting a lot of litigation. The budgetary allowance for Its general counsel has been In creased from $43,000 to $108,760. It is hiring 19 new employes, Including two assistants. Only 8 persons were In that office heretofore. Asslstsnt Secretary of State Phil Hps is bringing back to Mr. Roosevelt a highly important confidential re port on Europe. Little was said about It. but he made a quiet trip to Ber lin to get an Inetde line on Hitler's intentions. Alao he had a few choice chats in Paris. He wanted to get down t o Rome, but wss afraid Lon don and Parts would misunderstand. Some republican authorities are asylng that Governor Hoffman lost his chance of the republican vlce p residential nomination by his hand ling of the Hauptmsnn oase. Insiders know he lo&t tt earlier by advocating advisory opinions from the supreme court. Republican blgwlga did not like that st Ml. dopeleslaid PORTLAND, Ore.. Jsn. 18 (AP Dr. W, D. Lock wood. Portland phy sician and surgeon, wss arrested to day on charges of selling narcotics is.tga.ly. United States Marshal J. T. 81m merville made the arrest following a secret Indictment returned by the grand Jury Friday. Dr. Lockwood pouted $3,000 ball snd will appear tor arraignment Tues day. StmmervUle said Dr. Lockwood sold narcotics to a drug addict en plowed ss an Informer and later sold two parcels of drugs to an a?:ent of Wit federal narcotics control bureau. , NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, Jan. 18. I notice the restaurant called Ths Plying Trapeze has given up Its name. It may have been an excellent eatery. I wouldn't know. But the name was ' too prophetic. Most of us dining out have been ex pecting any day to have a flying trapezlst kerplop In our aoup. If one has evor missed a Kirs ten Flagated aria be cause the moron behind lnals ted on eating peanut brittle with a defective plate, there should be an appreciation of how a hungry New Yorker feels when the draft from an adagio dance turns his steaming onton soup Into consomme gele. Too many cooks, may spoil the broth In the kitchen but In many dining rooms It's something 1m. More than once I've poised a fork for an exquisite jab Into a noisette de veau when awlshl all lights flashed out. Except a baby spot for a hussey wno couia sing as well In the dark. There are restaurants The Blta. Colony and Moneta'e, for Instance- where the cuisine la such there Is no need to divert attention. Pood Itself takes the center of the stage and the bows. One does not have to bring iong a iiasmignt and chafing dish. uniy an appetite. Expert pampering of a robust ap petite la one of the. agreeable arts. Such as the studied expectancy of a waner captain slowly lifting the sll ver covering from the entree. Or anticipating the want of a condi ment. Or the magic whisking away of bones from fish or fowl Just as mey oegin to look mussy. rnnlns wivn nay ixng, Leon Gordon, and Otis Ralston In shadowy Poyofs one evening I glanced up inquiringly at a waiter, trying to think of the name of a meat sauce I had run across for the first time the day before. He bounded off to one of those 17th cen tury block-long sideboards and re turned with It. Rather conclusive proof of mental telepathy. The calloused agnostic cannot visit the Cathedral of St. John the Divine without experiencing exhalted rever ence. More than any other structure In town It mitigates by vastness the specious charge of metropolitan In difference to the aplrltual. Nowhere In the scatter-brained storm of com plex city living is the Inevitable vor tex of calm so pronounced. The vaulted corridors, cool colonades stately pillars, all tinged by the rose ate glow from serene figures leaded into lofty windows, blend an aura of mysticism that lends to grey stone a very soul. One can almost behold mo materially warped spiritually as they enter. expanding Only one other vista I have seen Is comparable to St. John's when a gathering dusk Is shifting shadows This la from the Blue Ridge moun tains In the fall after ascending from the valley of the Shenandoah. Look ing back from the Coswold-llke crest of the winding road there is a wlnd aculptured panorama of gold and rus set leaves blocked off In enormous tesselatlon. Fields bordered by rough stone walls and crlss-crossea of rail fences. It offers an exquisite home liness, an October fire acrldness and the shelter of a tradition every Amer ican should hug these dsys when cherished things totter. Files Wnter Claim SALEM. Jsn. 18. (AP) The At lantic Western company of Newport filed five separate applications with the state engineer last week for per mits to appropriate a total of 39 sec ond feet of water from five creeks for Industrial and domestic purposes ' Lincoln county. Jrf SPECIAL Medford's only fully equipped Cleaning Plant offers you for a limited time, for Cash Only, First Quality Work at the following prices: (No One-Day Service) SUITS DRESSES PLAIN HATS We are a 100 per cent Petroleum Plant and the only plant in Medford using High-Pressure Filtre and Dis tillation Methods. The only CLEAN GAS method of washing known. No synthetic solvent or harmful chemicals. f PRESIDENT WILL OPEN MEMORIAL 10 HEROIC J NEW YORK, Jan. 18. (AP) After 18 yesrs of preparation New York atate will dedicate tomorrow Its $3,600,000 memorial to Theodore Roosevelt. President Roosevelt will deliver the principal address in honor of his cousin- and forerunner in the White House. The two persons most Interested In the memorial, however, will be absent. Mrs. Edith Kermit Roosevelt, widow of the 26th president, will listen to the dedication by radio In the Long Ieland hospital where she la confined because of a broken hip. Henry Fairfield Osborn, who origi nated the Idea for the memorial in 1919, shortly after Roosevelt's death. died a few months ago. The memorial stsnds Just nortn of the American museum of natural history overlooking Central Park. A 500-foot concourse leads to the Ro man type building through a pink granite facade. A huge pavement in front of the building is flanked by pedestals in has relief and is centered In a great arch where an equestrian statue of Roosevelt towers 80 feet high, In the great hall of the memorial are 6230 square feet of murals de picting RooseVelt as Panama canal builder, statesman and African big game hunter. Doorways lead to classrooms, exhi bition rooms and a lecture hall seat ing 600 persons. Tbe memorial Is administered by the American Museum of Natural History, of which Osborn was presi dent. Its work will be Integrated with thst of the museum. Gov. Herbert H. Lehman will take part in the dedication ceremony. Representatives of the family will Include Col. Theodore Roosevelt and Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, the former Alice Roosevelt. 4 HOLLYWOOD. Jan. 18. (W Mae West has made a million dollars out of doln wrong in public. A new film contract, signed Friday, will start the blonde and full-blown comedienne on the second million to accrue out of her motion picture work. What she earned from her ef forts as a one-woman play producing organization, on Broadway, no one knows. Nor is It known, precisely, what she will earn under terms of her new con tract. Meanwhile, her popularity contin ues unabated. She is Shirley Temple's closest rival for top box-office mag netism, j 1 New Shop Open at 203 South Front. Hemstitching 5c yd.; buttons covered; hose mending So to 35c; dressmaking. Nlnann Craig and May Lewis. Phone 1336-W. ATTENTION EAGLES SPECIAL MEETING MONDAY NIGHT A special meeting: of Crater Lake Aerie No. 2093 F.O.E., will be held in the EAGLES HALL on MONDAY, JAN UARY 20th at 7:30 P. M., to consider an important report from the Grand Aerie. By order of A. H. BANWELL, Worthy President. CLEANED and PRESSED CLEANED and PRESSED CLEANED and BLOCKED r - Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of tbe Mall Tribune 10 and 20 yean ato. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY January IS, 1924 (It Was Monday) Southern Oregon Bar association takes steps to "speed up court pro cedure." E. C. Gaddta and family from visit to Sacramento. return A drizzling rain fell over the valley. Gold Hill city council following a, series of complaint will hire city marshal at once. Local people enjoy skiing at Union creek Sunday. Wife ot Rudolph Valentino of the movies flies suit for divorce. County court serves notice it will buy no more gasoline for tourists claiming to be stranded. Tim Fall!n defeats R. Maru by two points in city billiard tournament at Brown's. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY January' 19, 1916 (It Waa Wednesday) Senator Hoke Smith of Georgia twists tall of British lion In senate speech. Police start campaign against cigar stores that sell cigarettes to boys. Jackson County Taxpayers league to hold special meeting Saturday. Report Villa, Mexican bandit leader captured, denied. County court goea on record for home industries; orders "married idlers" to go to work or leave county. Germans and Austrlans renew war tare against Montenegro. By ICE AND SNOW CHICAGO. Jan. 18. (AP) Tem peratures plunged downward through out the middle west today after heavy snow and unseasonal rains. Continued cold was the prediction as the central states dug their way out of deep snow or attacked the ice which mantled many highways. Southern Iowa was blanketed un der from four to twelve Inches of snow, with temperatures edging to ward zero snd highway crews at tempting to keep the roads open as the snow drifted badly. Logansport and Huntington. Ind., experienced lightning and thunder with the temperature near 20. Rnln froze as it fell at Huntington. At Logansport there was snow. Oratorical Winners ALBANY. Ore.. ..an. 17. (AP) Top honors In the m;n s and women s divisions of the sli -college extcmpor aueoua speaking contest here went to James Yoemans and Joy Smith, both of Pacific university. Randall Kester and Constance Smart, both of Willamette, placed second In the two divisions. 50c 50c PHONE 244 Por Free Delivery North Holly St.