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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1936)
VEDFOKD AfATC TRTIBWE. flfEPFORTX QREflONT, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 6", 1936. PA'GE THREE SOCIETY and CLUBS By Janet Wray Smith State Officer Is Entertained Here Mrs. Cora Young, at Rose burp?, grand guardian of Oregon for Job's Daughters, was a guest of the Med ford' bethel which met last night at the Masonic hall. Mrs. Young In spected the group, giving Instruc tions and suggestions for conduction of sessions. An Ashland bethel is being organ Ized In the Llthla city and the Medlord girls are to cond uct the institution of the new group Friday, October 16. This Is considered an unusual honor for the local organ isation as It Is seldom that a bethel is given such an opportunity. The card party which was sched uled for Saturday, October 10, has been postponed until Saturday aft ernoon, October 17, it was announced at last night's meeting. The business session was followed by refreshments. Young riaulst Composes March At the Saturday morning meeting of the Degree of Honor Juvenile club, Eugene Bennett, club pianist, pre sented a club march of his own com position which was very well received. Mrs. Ethel Linhclm of Portland, state vice-president, who was a guest of the group, suggested that the march be presented &t a district meeting to be held In Cottage Grove this week-end. It la believed by Mrs. Llnholm and others lit charge of the group that the composition may be adopted as official music for the organization throughout the state. Several Med ford members are planning to attend the Cottage Grove session, including Mrs. Hattie Bradshaw, Mrs. E. T. Al len and Mrs. H. G. Wilson. Eugene Bennett will also attend. Mission Society " Plans Discussion. Mrs, Everett Eads heads the com mittee which Is preparing a program on the negro and education for the meeting of the Adult Missionary so ciety of the First Christian church which has been scheduled for Wed nesday afternoon at 2 'clock In the churoh. Social arrangement are In charge of Mrs. Ralph Cook and her commit tee. ' All members having canned goods for the old people's home are requested to bring them to this meet Ing by those In charge. All members and friends are extended a cordial Invitation to attend. Rotary Women To Be Entertained Mrs. C. D. Bean will be & lunch eon hostess tomorrow afternoon at her home, 522 South Oa&dale. Guests will be Women of Rotary. The affair is to be salad luncheon at 1 o'clock, according to the announcement. Both new and old members ar urged to s(be present. Program Completed For Union Session Plans are being completed for the meeting Thursday of the Women's Christian Temperance Union which la to be held at the First, Christian church. New features of the program include a vocal duet by Mrs. John Frees and Mrs. Clarence Pierce and leading of devotional by Mrs Ger trude Kirkpatrlck. Mrs. Minnie Bryant, new president, will conduct the session and ladles of the hostess church will have charge of refresh ments. Delegates to the state conclave held recently in The Dallea will report on developments and plans presented at that session. Those to appear will Include Mrs. Ellen Thrasher, of Grants Pass, president of the Jose phine and Jackson bl -county union. Mrs. Rozella Douglass, also of Grants Pass, and Mrs. Minnie Bryant, Mrs. M. Russell and Mrs. Guy Cox. of Medford. A cordial Invitation U Issued to anyone lntersted. . Mrs. Harding Is Guest In Klamath Mrs. B. G. Harding of this city, newly elected state regent for the Daughters of American Revolution, was entertained last night by Eula lona chapter in Klamath Falls when she' made her official visit to that group. The Klamath group arranged a no host dinner In Mrs. Harding's honor, which was followed by a business meeting at the home of Mrs. E. D. Lamb, during which Mrs. Harding addressed the group. A great deal of Mrs. Harding's time during the ensuing months will be taken up in traveling to various chapters in the state in her official capacity. Among the chapters plan ning entertainment for her In the near future Is the Ashland branch which will be hostess October 16. Appointments Made , ' At Saturday Session Appointment of committee heads and members and discussion of plans for the year were principal features of the business session of the Dixie club Saturday afternoon when Mrs, Rawles Moore was hostess to the group at her home, Falrview, on the Old Stage Road. Mrs. John Peter, new president, conducted the meeting, which in cluded a discussion of subjects of current interest with politics pre dominating. The next meeting is to be held at the home of Mrs. John Crews, Rogue River. Guests of Brommers Returning to Home Leaving by train this morning were Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Korthauer, ot Chicago, who are returning home af ter a visit on the coast. They arrived tore about two weeks ago from San Francisco to be the gueste of Mr. osf s Momey 6 Tiers 12-Inch IPine Slabs Direct from the "Big Mill" VALLEY FUEL CO. 28 W. Main. Tel. 76 and Mrs. Carl 3rommer. Mrs Broxn mer and Mrs, Kdrtauer are sisters. The visitors plan to stop a short time in Eugene where they will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Small. Mrs. Small was formerly Miss Louise Brommer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Brommer, Two Guests at " Reynolds Home. Among Medford visitors are Mrs. Edna Pearson and Mrs. Ernest Wyatt, of Eugene, who arrived here from the north yesterday. They are nouse gueste of Mr a-nd Mrs. J. F. Reynolds. The visitors motored to crater iskb today. Numerous trips are being planned for them, as well as enter tainment In the city. Lady Lions To Lunch Tomorrow Member of the auxiliary of the Llona club will be entertained at luncheon tomorrow at the Hotel Merffowt at 1 o'clock. All members are urged to be present. Reservations may be maae a tne nowi or "jr calling 946-R. FIRST TO TIL FEDERAL COURT First session ot the tederal court term for the Southern Oregon dis trict opened today with the sched uled arraignment of five defendants on counte charging liquor violations Involving Indians, and routine mat ters. The first case scheduled for trial le the civil suit of Walter L. Small, a resident of California, against the Oregon Caves Resort company for alleged personal Injury damages and medical fees. Small alleges that In the summer of 1934, while on a tour of the cave he stepped In a hole and was Injured. - Two trials of assault. Involving Klamath reservation . Indians are also scheduled to be called. David Copperfleld Is alleged to have at tacked Walter Riddle with a knife as the result of a feud. Ted Cap tain, another Indian, faces trial for allegedly shooting at but not hit ting another. Naturalization proceedings sched uled for the present federal court term have been postponed until Fri day, November 13, owing to conflict with a federal election law prohibit ing the holding ot naturalization hearings 30 days before an election. The officials and aides attending the federal sessions are: United States Attorney Carl CI. Donaugh and deputies, Attorneys Mason' Dlllard and Olenn Foster. United States Marshal John T. SummervlUe, former Medford resi dent, and Miss Dorothy Alder, sec retary, and Deputy Marshal dene Narregan ot this city. Chief Clerk Arthur S. Kenyon, Fred Norman, bailiff, and . Miss Adeline Mclntyre, secretary to the court. " The term of federal court Is eX' peoted to last the better part of two weeks. MESSAL TO FACE A charge of operating an auto without a driver's license, will be filed today, District Attorney Oeorge A. Codding said, against Lester Messal, 38, ot Lake Creek, employed recently In a Klamath county mill Messal, the authorities assert, was driver of the auto that hit and killed Everett . Thompson, Talent resident, on the night of Sunday, September 13, as Thompson was walking down the Pacific highway. Messal will be held to await action of the next grand Jury, now sched' uled to convene for the October term of circuit court October 26. At the time of the accident Messal was under suspension of his drivers' license for a six month's period tor conviction' of reckless driving In this city. in o 1 Cinderella Shops Early Oct. E Dr. Harris Tells Republican Gathering of Personal Experiences in European Countries; Points Dangers Asserting that although no one will accuse President Roosevelt of being a communist he Is neverthe less surrounded by new deal reac tionaries and leftists, Dr. Ernest Lloyd Harris described the horrors of communism and dictatorship as he has seen them in European coun tries during the past 45 years, to Jackson county Republicans at the high school auditorium last night. Dr. Harris, who stated that he has known Lenin, Trotsky, Dolfuss and many other radical leaders intimate ly, described revolutions and com munistic and leftist activities In Rus sia, Turkey, Austria and other coun tries which have seen uprisings of the radical sort, "I was in Petrograd for the six days In October. 1017, which saw the assassination of the csar and his family and the mas sacre of hundreds of others. I saw the Red Square in front of the Krem lin literally red with blood. I saw the blood of the royal family spat tered where they were shot down. In fact, the bones and ashes of the czar and hla wife and children were given to me to carry out of Russia. I took them with me In a small trunk on a train and handed them over to Miles Lampson, then British minister to China. Where they are now, I do not know." Results Alike In his opinion, Dr. Harris stated, there is no essential difference in the net results of communism and dictatorship, one being the dictator ship of the proletariat and the other of one man or group of men. Both, Harris said, lead to loss of liberty for the Individual and rule by vio lence. "Some say," Harris continued, "that democracy Is dead. Democracy la very much alive today, in England and In America. And It Is alive be cause of the constitutions, written and unwritten, of these two great countries. At the present time our liberties and rights are beset by almost Iden tically the same trials existing for the American people at the time our constitution was formed' 'I do not accuse President Roose velt of being a communist. But the men of the new deal surrounding the president, such as Felix Frank furter and Rexford Tugwell, leave no doubt as to their beliefs. Tugwell has said mauy times that he wishes the American people would study Russia, Well, if that's what he wants I .wish' they'd take some of this AAA money and send Tugwell u Russia where he can study the coun try for the rest of his life." Describing a visit to his home town In Illinois last December, Harris voiced his belief that the old com munity spirit of self-reliance and reverence of American Ideals is dead. Hopes America Spared Attacking Earl Browder, commu nist candidate for president, Harris pointed out that Browder has never denied that he Is under the direc tion of the Third Internationale, communist organisation in Russia which takes as its creed the more violent doctrines of the early writings of Karl Marx. "I have seen tho bloody and vlolont deedB of destruc tion perpetrated in tho nnmo of communism and I pray to heaven we may never see them here. Every experiment In social democracy has led to communism or dictatorship." Harris address contained numerous allusions to his life In Europe and his acquaintanceship with many prominent figures in recent history. Join ETHEL WYN B. HOFFMANN'S Hosiery Club. Every 13th pair free. Tune In KSL every evening. Mon day thru Friday, 8 p.m. GUN REPAIRS. Expert gunsmiths Sims Bros.. 23 N. Fir. Gun sights. Use Mall Tribune want ads. Aimee Girds for Battle to Finish With Own Child LOS ANGELES, Oct. 6. (AP) , Aimee Semple McPherson buckled on armor over her evangelical robes to day for what her attorney said was "a fight to the finish with her own child." , The blonde pastor Is at war over control of Anpelua Temple, which she founded more than a deendo bro. A courtroom, It waa Indicated todny, may soon be the arena of war. At least two suits attacking Mrs. Mc pherson's so-far supreme voice in temple affairs were under considera tion. Confined to the Hermosa Beach home of her grandmother, Mrs. Min nie (Ma) Kennedy, In a distraught condition, Roberta Semple, daughter of the evangelist, announced through her attorney, Stanley Arndt. she might ask judicial protection of her rights, in the religious institution. Another ally, Jacob Moldel, dis missed temple attorney, also admit ted he might file a breach of contract suit. Moldel was "fired", at a midnight directors' meeting Saturday when the evanttellst and her son, Rolfe McPher son, voted themselves a quorum in Roberta's absence and hired Willedd Andrews to hnndle temple legal affairs. "Mrs. McPherson has been intimi dated, threatened and blackmailed for the Inst time," her new attorney de clared. "Tills time she is prepared to fight to the finish. While she re grets that the war will be sanguinary with her own child the only course ahead of her is protection of "the or ganization which has consumed the best years of her life." Teamsters Union . Blights Portland PORTLAND. Oct. 6. (AP) The teamsters union was blamed bv Hor ace Mencklen, president of the In dustrial Relations association, for what he termed a "stranela hold" on the transportation business of Portland. Mecklen. addresatne the aasoclAiifm yesterday at Its annual meeting said; "Most of the unions are dis posed to be law abiding, but the cancer In the labor temple is the teams teas union. 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