Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 16, 1936, Page 6, Image 6

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    FA'GE SIX
tfEDFOTtD MATL TRTBTJN"E, ftfEDFOKP, OREGON", THURSDAY. ftPRTL 16, 1936.
Medford4I&Tribune
"Eteryonr in Hoatfar Orga
Re da tb ULaU THbm"
Dally Rirept Ha tarda.
Publlahad by
MEDFORD PRINTING CfX
tl-lT-lft N. Fir 8t Pbomt U.
ROBERT W. RURU Editor.
BRNEBT R. OJLSTRAP. Maatfer.
A.S Indapendant Ktwapaptr.
Botarad aa aaoond-clau matter at Mad
ford, OrasoD. uodar Act of Uarcb I, 1ST.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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Dally, all montha.. I.?
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By Carrier, Id Advance Mad ford, ' Ab
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Paonli, Talant. Gold H1U and. oo
highways.
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All terms, cash lo advance.
OffirlaJ Paper of the (Jlty of Med ford.
OrriilaJ Paper of Jarltimn County.
M KM II EH OF. TUB ASSOCIATE! PfcUUJS
RecrlvlDi Full laofd Wire Herrlce.
Tha Aaanclaltd Praia ta aioluatvaly D
lit I ad to tba uaa for publication of aJI
nawa dlaoatohaa eradltad to It or other
wise credited lo thla papar, and aleo to
tba local oawa published aerem.
All rlghte for publication of epeelaJ
dlapatohaa hereto ara alao reserved.
MEMBER Or UNITED PRC 68
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU .
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Repreeentatlvee
H. C. MOOK.NHKN A COMPANf
Offlcaa In New rork, Chicago Datrolt
San Pranolaco. boa Angeles, seai'-ie,
Portland.
Ye Smudge Pot
Bf Arthur Perry.
Tho Governor has proclaimed Of
month of May u "untYersal good.
wUl month." with no ttm out for
, the primary election.
The employment situation snows
Improvement, end, next eummer the
transient worker may be confident
enough to tell the farmer looking
for a hay hand to Bring nia nay to
town, and he will consider cutting it.
mm.
, The Mayor of Klamath fall,, who
rushed out prematurely lor tne uo.
Bsnate. and forthwith announced
tile Intention! "to take off hla coat
and work for the Townaend Plan,
la now working for "power dlatrlcta,"
but etlll In hla ehlrt-eieevee.
. .
B. Harder, O. Amaplger and J.
Boyle, who had their picture. In
the paper armed with plcka aafi
shovel, aa yet have received no re
quests to dig a haaement.
A number of the Older Qlrla dls
guetedly report Jlmpson weeds have
come up where they planted golden
Jonqulla.
. a .
Income tax atatlatlca reveal there
are 6007 residents of Oregon nos
aeraed of.aoO.000 or more. They are
the boye lined up with "Wall Btreef
to squash the "Share-The-Wealth"
movement.
"Albert Zabal of Soled ad waa
' here Thursday and accompanied
Martin lermlnl to Ban Feline to
purchase a male cow." (Burhank
(Calif.) Review) HushT .
The first forest fire of the season
has occurred, and waa not blamed
en the cigarette. The cigarette will
resent this slight next August, by
starting 33 fires, In an afternoon,
on some creek.
e ' -
Preas dlapatches state a Nebraska
hot-clerk had his fifth crossing
argument with a locomotive last
Sunday. After being nosed to the
edge of eternity that many times by
a cow-catcher, it looks like faint
signs of caution would begin to
ahow up.
"Many older people seem to take
unmerited pride In the mere fact
that they are adulte." (Extract
from the President's speech In Balti
more) The people still have the
"horse-and-buggy" notion of letting
the years pile upon them, aa it did
their forefathers.
One of the letter-wrltera to the
Oregonian favors the ducking stool
for Altre Roosevelt, aa punishment
for her dally, except Sunday, peeling
the hide off Democratic notions.
Another contributor favors her as
the Republican choice for vice-president.
It seems to be unanimous that
Alice be punished.
There la considerable editorial dis
cussion on the Ideal of the Missouri
farm-boy. IB, who won a asooo
peace essay contest, only to be re
vested sa a flagrant plagiarist. As
long aa neighbor, were collecting
for pigs and wheat they did not
raise, he may have figured It waa
In accord with the spirit of the
times to collect for what he did not
write. He pleads Inability to distin
guish between right and wrong, and
alao write and right. He has been
given eseuranrea of a four-year col
Irge course. What he needa 1, four
yeara of Sunday et-hool.
.
The leading legal question of the
week, center, about a writ of outtus
gettus.
That EJdie Cantor Prize
1 1 -jIERE has been a great deal of sentimental nonsense, writ-
ten about that Missouri farm boy, who won Eddie Cantor's
5000 peace prize, by handing in a professor's essay on the sub
ject as his own.
The Oregonian, for example, cries into its beer over his
"pitiable plight" and the "unintentional cruelty" that would
place callow adolescence in such a position.
Not a word of warning or censure for the young man. The
Oregonian places all the blame upon those who instituted such
a competition, and suggests a law "to regulate and superivse
the rash benevolence of such impulsive friends of humanity as
Eddie Cantor" while "someone owes that mistaken and wan
dering Missouri boy an apology."
IT would be difficult to conceive of & more glaring example
of twisted thinking and sentimental hooey. No one owes
that Missouri farm boy ANYTHING, but a thorough dressing
down and a stiff lecture on the difference between right and
wrong! He is no babe in arms. He is a high school boy, 18
years of age, presumably mentally, morally and physically
equipped for college.
It is shocking, we admit, and in a certain sense pathetic,
that any American boy of that age and education, should have
done what Lloyd Lewis did. It is even more shocking, that
neither before nor after the event, did he himself, have any
sense of wrong doing, or consciousness of guilt.
But what he or any boy like him needs is not tearful
coddling and back slapping, the taking of his part against a
cruel and misguided world; but a moral awakening, and the
best moral training that can bo secured, for unless this is done,
then this young mini's future looks very dark indeed.
THERE are far too many young men of high school age in
this country, who like young Lewis, are morally sub
normal; who have never learned the difference between right
and wrong, who like him could not only steal the idea, but
steal the work of someone else, receive the reward for what
they had never done, and not suffer the slightest pangs of con
science. Criminologists will tell you the underworld is full
of them, a large proportion of our big city gangsters are lads
in their teens. They are classified not as immoral but UN-moral.
And many of them started, as this Missouri farm boy started,
by cheating in school. Such a little thing! Yes such a little
thing. But big things grow from lutlo ones. And if it is not
wrong to steal another person's 'work, and use it as your own,
why is stealing his watch,' his pocketbook, or any other private
property wrong. And from there WHERE do you go!
a0 the social problem is too acute, the proper moral develop-
' mcnt of the young WHEN they are young is too impor
tant, to treat this denouement of the Cantor peace prize contest,
as just a good joke on him and other misguided humanitarians,
and an occasion for making an appealing martyr of tho young
man, who turned their efforts into such a humiliating fiasco.
Eddie Cantor is of course an enthusiastic idealist. Like
many of his race he is extremely sentimental. It may be true
his heart is bigger than his head.
But those who listened to hiin over the radio on his peace
prizo proposal know how sincere ho was, how anxious not only
to servo the cause of pence but give some boy who could not
have it otherwise, tho benefit of a college education.
And to think that his efforts were rewarded in THIS fashion !
WE believe wo have at least a normal understanding and
affection for youth, we certainly appreciate boys will
be boys, but boys being boys is one thing, hoys being crooked,
is something else again. And in this instance our sympathies
are certainly NOT for the boy who won this prizo by passing
off the work of another as his own, but entirely for Eddie
Cantor. Instead of Eddie doing the apologizing, that farm boy
from Missouri should crawl on his knees and beg the forgiveness
of a fine citizen and a gallant old trouper, who was anxious to
befriend him, and whom he double-crossed and betrayed.
The mistako Eddie made, we believe, was not in treating the
lad with kindness, publicly condemning or humiliating him
would do no good, but refusing to talk to hiin as he would to
his own son who had done such a thing (Eddie has only a flock
of daughters) and yielding to a mistaken impulse and offering
him a collego education.
A high school boy of 18, who could enter such a contest as
this one, copy word for word a professor's essay and. not only
iibmit it for his own but. receive the $.000 prize for it, witliout
ho slightest. fua!m, or consciousness of having done anything
wrong does not need a college education.
He needs to go back to the Hoy Scouts and get a little of
the priinnrv education, in honor and squaro-shooting, that that
xeellent organization gives. And as a supplement to that his
parents might bo wise to give him an extra curricuiar course
in tho woodshed, down on that old Missouri farm I
Personal Health Service
' By William Brady, M.D.
signed letters pertaining to personal health and hvglene not to disease
dlagnoils or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped self-addressed
envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered.
No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address
Dr. William Brady, 269 EI Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cab
BUMPER CROP OF RAGWEED POLLEN
xrs
According to botanist Oren O. Dur
ham, who recently published an In
teresting and Instructive book en
titled "Your Hay Fever" (Bobbs-Mer-rlll
Co. New York)
there are no less
than nine varie
ties of ragweed
In these United
States, producing
at least & million
tons of pollen
annually. August
and September
are the peak
months for rag
weed pollen pro
duction; tests of
the air In that
season show that
more than 98 percenv of the pollen
In the air In such cities aa Pitts
burgh, Buffalo, Cleveland, Indian
apolis, Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee la
from ragweed. In the height of the
hay fever season pollen counts Indi
cate, there Is 826 pounds of ragweed
pollen to the square mile In Indian
apolis, S68 pounds In Buffalo, 401
pounds In Chicago, 16 pounds In
Tower, Minnesota but the place Is
small and can't accommodate a great
Influx of visitors, remember 29
pounds In Mobile, 0 pounds In Phoe
nix, 6 pounds In Los Angeles, 2
pounds In Sacramento, and none at
all In Portland, Seattle, Spokane,
Prince Albert Miami, Reno. Duluth,
where many sufferers find relief every
autumn, doesn t stand out In Mr.
Durham's table 153 pounds of pol
len to the mile. Other hay fever re
sorts were evidently on good behavior
when the pollen tests of the air were
made: Denver, 98 pounds; Boise, 17
pounds; Bar Harbor, 27 pounds; Up
per Dam (Rangeley Lakes), 8 pounds;
Isle Royal, 8 pounds; Sault Ste. Marie,
44 pounds; Blloxl. 28 pounds; Bethle
hem (N. H.), 16 pounds; North Platte,
44 pounds; Atlantic City, 108 pounds;
Roswell, 22 pounds; Lake Placid, 26
pounds; Saranac Lake, 22 pounds; El
Paso, 7 pounds; Amarlllo, 0 pounds;
Cochrane, Ont., 7 pounds; Father
Point, Que., 6 pounds; Port Arthur.
20 pounds; Winnipeg, 24 pounds;
Tamplco, 18 pounds; Mexico City, 2
pounds.
My notion of dull reading la almost
anything about hay fever and Its
causes. But then, I haven't hay fever.
This book of Mr. Durham's makes
mighty good reading, and If It were
not for the bla-bla "Introduction" and
the equally superfluous chapter on
treatment contributions by medical
gentlemen who lovo the sound of their
own voices the book would make a
welcome addition to one's library.
People who entertain quaint fancies
that they have "rose cold" or rose
fever, or that they are sensitive to
goldenrod, or lilac, or even jonquil or
Iris, will learn Borne thing to their
own advantage or their friends' by
reading Mr. Durham's book. Phy
sicians who treat or advise hay fever
patients about resorts will get the
right bearings here.
It Is generally agreed that destroy
ing or cutting pollen-bearing weeds.
such as ragweed, within a few hun
dred feet of one's residence Is a use
ful prophylactic measure. But rag
weed pollen la carried chiefly In the
air, and probably for great distances,
and as Mr. Durham points out, It has
not been demonstrated that It is pos
sible to lower the amount of pollen
In the air as measured at U. S. wea
ther stations, even by the most thor
ough weed-cutting campaign as yet
Instituted.
With pollen slides we may test the
air and with pollen extracts we may
test the patient. By these two tests
we may determine definitely the cause
of the trouble.
a tea to rush to Newark for his Ini
tial air Journey to Hollywood. To
Miriam Hopkins he twittered: "I'm
flying to flight my first covt In the
air and land to hopels all I can."
(Copyright, 1936. McNaught
Syndicate)
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Prenatal Influence.
Haa the extraction of a tooth any
111 effect on the unborn child? What
are the symptoms and causes of pre
mature birth? (seven months).
(Mrs. R. J. E.)
Answer No, the extraction of teeth
can have no 111 effect. Send stamped
envelope bearing your address, for
monograph for the prospective moth
er. This being a health. column, we
cannot suggest symptoms.
Raw Eggs.
Please tell me If raw eggs are bene
ficial to a person In a rundown con
dition.. If they are, how many should
be taken a day? . . . (B. C. H.)
Answer Not unless you prefer them
raw. Cooked egg, cooked as you pre
fer, la more palatable, appetizing, di
gestible and healthful than raw egg.
The popular notion of the value of
raw egg Is probably bated on the ob
servation that physicians prescribed
raw egg sometimes when patients
were too feeble to eat cooked food.
A kind of ferment in raw egg albu
men prevents complete digestion of I
the white. Cooking destroys this fer
ment and makes the egg more com
pletely digestible.
In Practice or In Print.
Every time I have written you I
have received some printed circular.
Are you a doctor or a circulating
agency? If you cannot answer a per
son's question, at least return them
their three-cent stamp. What Is a
spur on the septum? A deviated sep
tum? A. submucous resection opera
tion? . . . (B. F.)
Answer It would be a physical im
possibility for me to write a personal
letter In reply to everyone. Most
correspondents not only accept print
ed answers to their questions but ask
for them. A spur on the septum ts
a projection of cartilage or bone from
the partition between nasal passages.
Deviated septum means the partition
bulges to one side or. the other, nar
rowing or obstructing the nasal pass
age. Submucous resection means re
moving part of the bone or cartilage
underneath the mucous membrane.
for the purpose of straightening the
septum.
(Copyright, 1936, John F. Dllle Co.)
Comment
on the
Day s News
Creek. Uttle Butte Creek will vote
April 30.
The Lost Creek rote waa ten for
and fifteen against consolidation,
while Lake Creek went 19 to 0 for
consolidation.
)
By FRANK JENKINS
FROM Weed to Redding, at this
time of the year, la a awlft pro
cssslon of the seasons.
At Weed, BtUI high In the 81erra
foothills, late winter holds away. At
Redding, In the upper lowlands of
the Sacramento, It Is early summer.
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brndy
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Brady. M. D 309 El
Cuinllio, Beverly Hills, Calif.
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
program and likely his choosing of a
cinema role.
Th Bill Offutt grsndboy hud a
birthday ymferday, and the C. Flrht
ntr girl If busy intUng a tooth.
Th Salt Cwk school In Marlon
county has held It annual spelling
tryouta before tne primary candi
dates come up,
a
"He bevame a St a te's wl t nes .
gained nil freedom, died eventually
of a hulltn In hit native Southwest."
(NY. World-Telegram) Cruel and
Inhuman,
!er Near Dttfur
DUFUR, Or.. April 16. (API
Mot or lata traveling tnrough the Mt,
Hood national forest range a few
miles from here told of seeing a herd
of some 200 deer feeding In the low
lands. Forest rangrrs said they
probably were driven there by the
recent heavy anowa.
rlher
NFW YORK. April 16 -iAPi Bur
silver itetc) and pnehanjed at U V
(Continued trim. Pane One )
The reason the supreme court la
Inking so long to decide the Ouffey
coal caae la that It hta so many
angles which must be run down. It
Is more complicated than the Schech
trr case on which the NRA opinion
waa rendered. Thla Is the conclusion
of the ablest court lawyers. They
spoof at the current rumora that the
delay Implies the court Is closely
divided. They expect a decision hold
ing the major features of the act unconstitutional.
applauded at the wrong time and did
not always Inuuh at the right time
Thla ts coimUUrcd to b bad lor
radio dlsif mtion. Timely applnuw
and laughter help to stress proper
points.
It is not unusual for campMsncrs
to pass out In advance halt a cfcvr.cn
copies of their uppcrhM, markett at
the spot where npplauw and Uitf: ti
ter are eipeoted. Tills niny be done
with the next one.
Despite what houw leader are say
ing, a chain-store bill will be passed
by the noune. It will be brought up
when a congressman, in charge, re
turns from seeking a Democratic
nomination out west. That will prob
ably be in about ten day. Whether
the senate will pass thev bill Is not
yet certain.
Democratic leaders wy privately
that there- Is something In their last
platform which mnkei it dl ruble tc
act on the Uyj i:i.n, aithomch they
sir not tror, (or 11.
On the ho vise side also. Lobbyist
Ickes Is Mid to have supplied the
new PWA bloc leaders with charts
and other Information to get 700.
000.000 of the new 1.800,000,000 re
lief fund earmarked for PWA. Most
congressmen have been expecting the
situation to result in an open break
between Ickes and the White House.
If anyone want data on the wealth
sharing which haa been accomplished
bo (ar, he can get It In the new fig
ures of Internal revenue collections
tor 1994 and relief expenditures for
1935. These show the extent to which
industrial centers paid tha taxea and
the farm states received the benefits.
For instance, North Carolina paid in
23,000.000, received 16,000.0000;
Mississippi paid 1,100.000. received
nearly 13.000.000,
Did you know that congress ap
propriated 300,000,000 to run the
entire government in 1877, and. In
1936 (fiscal year), approximated 33
times thst much These represent
the high and low V t; nr appre
ciations b) congtcsa since 1783.
i: ,-.L-"--. - "-Vrt'w
Y-Yi
NEW YORK, April l. New York'e
chief point of Interest for the sight
seer Is by long odds Radio City. With
the Empire State building next. Eu
ropeans, where
skyscrapers are
so little known,
make the Empire
their first stop,
but the Amerl
can tourists pre
fer the broad
cast studios.
Radio City for
a few months
after Its opening
offered a depress
ing spectacle of
tmpty store and
office space. No one could admire
Its architectural extravagant with
out experiencing a wince at its dev
astating, costly desolation. Many be
lieved It would be the city's No. 1
eyesore.
The few magnificent establish
ments that lodged there appeared
entirely lost in what many thought
a building blunder. A mistake that
might impair one of Amcrlcaa larg
est fortunes. The change to opu
lence waa not gradual. The area
blomed over night. Mke Mnglc.
Tlie new steamship center con
gealed en nias!e. A doren ultra shop
ping strips gobbled tip largo and
small varanclea. The horticultural
decorations mado It a bower of
beauty. In tact, Its rise out of al
most hopelesa Inertia has been one
of the major triumphs of the let
down.
In a booth at Linays a recent eve
ning, someone Informs me, the oc
cupants were George Burns and Gra
de Allen. Fred and Portland Allen,
the Jack Bennys and the Goodman
Aces. Each couple happily married,
all the husbands comedians working
with comedienne wives. Also, al
though In a highly competitive field
and, both men and women, exploit'
Ing almost the Identical' brand of
humor, the four couples are the
staunchest of friends and otten
spend relaxing hours together. My
Informant also saya the dinner party
seemed razorrd of humor. The con
versation to apearances was scattcry,
monosyllabic, dry.
One of the newest of the bright
young advertising whizzes Is Fred
Smith, who at the ago of 37 la the
youngest major executive In the
larger agencies. Ho came from Troy.
O., three years ago to write fiction,
landed In a few pulps but became
so discouraged he waa about to re
turn to his home town. One morn
ing he walked Into the advertising
agency and In the eloquency of de
spair talked himself into a copy
writing Job. From that he went like
a shot to more Important nosta.
Such happenings are especially pert
in race 01 tne constant yowling youth
no longer haa opportunity. That the
Big Chance Is dead I
Budden memory: The yellow water
bucket snd tin dipper on the little
bench besido the kitchen stoop.
Fay iempleton, a good trouper
playing many- parts In a distin
guished career, refu&ed to permit
sniveling over a sudden role In real
life a gentle rookcr on tlie porch ot
an actors' home. When her plight
was discovered, she sent out word:
I'm fine and happy." Miss Temple-
ton. like many others, thought she
had arrived at retirement years with
material sufficiency for comfort, only
to find her safety vault box held
worthless scraps ot paper. But whrn
her plight became known she became
a hostess In a Pittsburgh hotel. Then
the flood!
Thlngumsbobs: Roy Howard's
heckered shirts csuscd crowds to
rollow him In Moscow when he went
to Interview Stalin . . . Noel Coward's
latest Is white shirts with vivid col
ored collars. . . . Gov.' Alf Landon
llkea a good Oppenhelm mystery . . .
Koeourn van Buren, successful mag
azine illustrator, still attends art
classes . , , Anthony Eden likes green
olives with salt for breakfast . . .
Heywood Broun dines with nls
mother once a week and Is always
lectured for his union labor sympa
thies . . . The smart shops of Paris
are leaving the rue de la Palx for
the Faubourg St. llonore.
THIS transition from late winter
to early summer, however, len't
made auddenly, a a one passes
through a door from one room to
another.
It la gradual, going through all the
changes that occur In normal
spring season. At Weed, the buda on
the earlier trees are Just nicely be
ginning to swell. At Dunsmulr, the
earlier trees are In tender lear and the
buds on the later and more con
servative oaks are beginning to bur
geon. A few miles farther and the green
of the oak leaves begins to show,
and In a couple of dozen more miles
oak leaves are plainly In sight. At
Redding, the trees are In fairly full
leaf, and the fruit blossoma are far
gone and beginning, to fall. Roses
are In full bloom and the grass Is
lush and tall.
Farther on. in the pleasant Vaca
valley, they're putting up the first
crop of alfalfa.
IT'S A great country, this lovely Pa-
I Clfic Coast Of ours, and at anv
time, somewhere along It, one can
find about anything a human being
might want. All kinds of people,
with all kinds of tastes, can find
their hearts' desire here.
THE Los Angeles border legion, aa
of course you've noted In the pa
pers, has been called home.
There's a reason.
The reason Is that the bums, who
all winter have been moving Into
California, are now beginning to
move OUT of California. There's
nothing muchln the way of stopping
for the border legion to do, and Its
members have probably tired of
standing beside the road and waving
the bums on their way and wishing
them Godspeed.
CALIFORNIA, which pioneered the
no-limit traffic law, has given
It up and gone back to the 46-mlle
speed limit, and there are disturbing
rumora that it Is being enforced.
A tale Is going up and down the
highway to the effect that a couple
coming up from the south the other
night In something of a hurry waa
stopped at the clammy and gruesome
hour of 3 a. m. and the not very
wild speed of 47 miles per hour and
Informed heartlessly that they'd have
to tell It to the Judge.
It may be only one of those talea,
but at least it la being repeated. And
California cops are beginning to alt
beside the road and look at people
going past In a chilling way that
sends shivers chasing each other up
and down the spine.
WELL, they've hadaccldents enough
down here, the Lord knows, and
we've had accidents enough up In
Oregon, where we have the no-llmlt
law. And excessive apeed undoubt
edly contributes to the accident to
tals. But, with all their 45-mlle llmlta
and all their chilling glances from
the traffic cops, three California
drivers, In tho short space of five
miles, pulled out from behind other
cars and PASSED them thla morn
ing In the face of thla correspond
ent's aproachlng car which la about
aa dumb and dangerous a driving
trick as can be practiced.
Apparently you can't legislate com
mon sense Into people's heads and It
la lack of common sense and reason
able caution that Is responsible for
the bulk of our staggering total of
automobile accidents.
SLANTS
mbzPao-
LITTLE BUTTE VOTES
ON SCHOOLS APRIL 20
LAKE CHEEK, April 1 (Spl.)
The election for consolidation, of the
Lost Creek school district with Lake
Creek and Little Butte Creek dis
tricts was he? April 13 In lake
If vou happen to be athletically
minded and entertain ambitions of
sports conquests for your tiny little
daughter when ahe grows up, you
mleht give her a good atart by nany
ing her Helen. A quick glance over
the list of girl champions shows that
a flock of fair champlona answer to
the name of Helen. No other single
name comes even close to It.
Women's tenrjla la dominated by a
pair of Helena, Helen wuns raooay
and Helen Jacoba. Helen Stephena,
the outstanding girl aprlnter In the
country, holds the national A. A. V.
championship and la Americas dosi
bet to win Olympic titles at Benin,
A Helene, Too
Helen Hicks, now a business woman
golfer, held the national amateur
title and was ona of the leading girl
eolfera In the land for several years,
And there waa Helen Meany, winner
of the Olympic diving championship
at Amsterdam In 1928. Helen Madi
son turned professional after ahe had
won Just about every swimming hon
or possible. She held Olympic and
national championships, and most 01
the free-style swimming records as
well. The New York Women's Swim
ming association haa a tiny little
Helen who Is going to be a threat In
future backstroke races. She la Helen
Rains, 11 yeara old and weighing only
74 pounds but ahe can swim.
You'll hear plenty about Helen
Mayer in connection with Olympic
fencing next aummer. one la tne
Juno-esque German girl who la fa
vored to auccessfully defend the
fencing championship she won In
1932 at Los Angeles. Another Olym
pian bearing the name of Helen Is
Mra. Helen Boughton-Lelgh, captain
of the American women'a skiing team
which competed at Garmiach-Parten-klrchen.
round-Building Program
Evangeline McLennan, .pretty At
lanta, Ga., tennla atar, hopes virtu
ally to eat her way Into tho nation's
first ten ranking thla year. While
many other young ladles are minc
ing lettuce sandwiches and toying
with a lamb chop and tea to shave
down their weight, Evangeline alts
down to enjoy meals of:
Steak with potatoes, spaghetti,
grits with plenty bf butter and that
sort of thing.
Last year she sallied forth to the
east for half a dozen "big time"
tournaments and critics raved over
her possibilities but lamented: "If
she were only h' vler and had the
stamina that necessary weight gives
the tennis player."
But at that her splendid show
ing won her the name, "The Slight
Southerner." Thla year things will
be different, the girl .tennla luminary
says, and she points to her pound
bulldlng training program as the
reason.
"I've gained 16 pounds already
since last summer," she declared with
a note of satisfaction.
Last year Evangeline went to the
quarter-finals In the Southern, lost
a match critics said she should have
won, then made her assault on the
eastern matches, and climaxed the
season by competing in the national
at Forest Hills.
Twice In eastern tournaments ahe
lost to brsliant Mrs. Ethel Buark
haiiit AniolJ, the young lady who
turned pro after staging an amazing
comeback In which she won tne de
elding match to take the Wlghtman
cup for America.
SENIOlPLAfSET
FOR APRIL 28TH
April 38 haa been set as the date
for the production of "The Nut
Farm", a three-act comedy to be pre
sented by the members of the senior
class In the high school auditorium
at 8:15 p. m.
"The ten members of the cast have
been chosen by competitive try-outs
and represent the best dramatic tal
ent in the school," stated Kenneth
Scott Wood, director of the produc
tion. According t o Mr. Wood, a total of
35 studtnta will engaije in the work
of staging this play which is one of
the cleverest comedies ever written.
This drama waa produced several
times In New York theaters enjoying
runs of many weeks. It has been very
popular among many high schools.
Mr. Leland Mentzer, industrial arts
instructor, and Miss Elizabeth Crls
sell, art supervisor, are designing the
stage scenery and are now engaged
In setting it up. Rehearsals have
been under way for five weeks.
Reserve seats tickets t 45 cents
and general ad ml ion tickets at 35
cent will be on sale at the high
school office within a few davs. -
Flight fo Time
Med ford and Jackson County
history from the files of the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
April 16, 1026.
. (It waa Friday.)
Tha mercury -drops to 85 degree
here. High temperatures upstate.
Southern Oregon Law Enforcement
Officers' association la formed.
Marjorie Goff will be the valedic
torian of the Med ford high school
graduating class.
Hen belonging to Mra. Charles
Owens of Eden valley laya an egg 8&
by 6 14 Inches.
Jacksonville highway la popular aa
site for new homes.
Federal steps taken to curb revels
of Klamath Indians.
Two hundred forty-five state can
didates file for May primaries.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY,
April 16, 1016.
(It was Sunday.)
President Wilson, In speech to D.
Clares "America will fight only for hu
Clares America will fight only for hu
manity not Itself."
Germans renew attack on Verdun
after two days' lull.
Large audience at Nat hears Sen
Burton of Ohio arraign administra
tion policies.
Mining activity in the Blue Ledge
district Increases with prospects of a
railroad.
Orchardists advised to fight blight
and codling moth.
Germany warned that America will
sever diplomatic relations if subma
rine warfare continued.
IN RIFLE RATING
Ray Watklns, firing with the Rifle
club on the Indoor range of the
Southern Oregon Sales company last
night, upset all dope by outranking
Pete Pomeroy, one of the club's ace
shots, for second place. Ivan K. Wad
dell took first rank by outflrlng the
field nearly 30 points.
The regular outdoor shoot will be
held Sunday at 50 and 100 yards. .
Scores last night:
Ivan K. Waddell 370
Ray Watklns 351
Pete Pomeroy w 331
Ed Lull w 34B
Harry Rinabarger 343
S. M. Tuttle ... 339
E. H. Pomeroy 336
M. C. G lea son ..... 331
I. C. Daley 339
C. R. Richmond 324
Lou Lull ..', 318
317
311
Mrs. S- M. Tuttle .
Lew Conger
C. Ouches
Mrs. Ivan K. Waddell ' 300
V. A. Turpln , 380
Dee HenUrickson . 278
John Wolff 258
BICYCLISTS TRY OUT .
SALEM-PORTLAND RUN
PORTLAND. Ore.. Aplrl 16. (AP)
Walter Welser and Bud Anderson,
both of Portland, pedaled their bi
cycles from Salem to Portland In
3 houra and 60 minutes In training
for the Salem to Portland wheel race
Saturday under auspices of the
League of American Wheelmen.
They and 10 other Portland cy
clists have entered the event, which
will start at the Salem court house
at 9 a. m. and end at the old post
office In Portland about noon.
Knox Hats
S5.D5 to ,12 76
.ETHELWYN B. HOFFMANN
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
Finds Relief
Safe, All-
VegetableWay
She had given up bore
Ol ITWthlnir hill narl.l
relief until she learned
ol iamous ali-veeetable
Remedy) But no alter veari Ihi.'Si'
lunnhnen and imeMm, 1, This If.
hot. All Wkai,. 'Mi Mi
Most of us pttter-jctters can svm-pafhit-e
with the votmsr man qnttttns
I
Frank Fay returns to Hollywood
with something of a personal aa well
as professional triumph. For several
years he hud winnowed the atudloa
coldest stare Mid 1I domestic life
a muwd as the result of his
divorce by the lovely Bttrbara Stan-
j wyrfc. Ills aiuvesa on the Vallee hour.
I however, was one of the sper tabular
I of t !r c , t . i t tic prod ; I tjiie
i back s th juu ol a .u.?orrd radio
Quality
Green Pine Slabs
s
Med ford Fuel Co.
Vrt l.odit
Two load
lot
MANY NEVER
SUSPECT CAUSE
OF BACKACHES
This Old Treatment Often
Brings Happy Relief Of Paio
Many suffprfra rtlfrve nactfnr bscktfrH
fluicr. oncm thrv dioeover that th. rttl
eavue of their trouble may b tired kidnya
The kldrteyt ar one of Nature's chief
r.v of taking the acids and wait out of
the Wood. If they don't ri S pints a day
tnd io get rid cf more than S DmtnrU rtf
matter, your IS milts oi kidney tubea
may new! fiuhm.
If you hav trouHe with friei VU,t,u.
pasnAKes with scanty amount Sich of(-n
(mart and hum. the. IS mc of kidney tuSet
Z r.i. "i"""1."'- ni" ruier int
may be the hetnntng of nagginn hafkaehe.
le Mtna, fM pf prp and energy, getting
ud ttiehta, swelling, vuftinesa under th tyea,
headache and d:fitn-.
Ak your dmrgt Ur Pan' Fill
MPce fully hy miltin ftr over in
They give harpy relW ad hftu Auth
ut Uu ii m.le ei a.dj.r tubes.
GREEN PINE
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END OF NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE