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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1936)
PAGE ETGHT MEPFORD MAH, TRTBUN"E, MEDFORD, OREGON. SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 22. 1936 MEDF0RD2t$kTRIBUNE "Everyone In Houmeni Orrcoa lleoile the Mall Trlboo." Dalle Except Satnrday PunHetied y MBDFOKD PRINTING CO. JI-87-2II N. Kir St. Phone 71 ROUKRT W, KOHU Editor ERNEST R. GII.8TRAP, Manar er. AO Independent Newepaper Entered ee acond-lae matter at Med ford, Oregon, under Act of Maroh 1. mt SUBSCRIPTION RATES By llnll In Advance ' Dally, one year . rjally, eta monthe -T Dally, one month ;;";"y ..'I By Carrier. In Advance Medrord, A.n land. Jacksonville, Central Point. I'noonlx. Talent, dold Hill, and on htKliweye. Dally, one year """ Dally. Hi month Dally, one month Bw All terme, ea.h In advance. otrlrlal Paper ot the City ol Hertford Ollli lal rawer 01 """n JIF.MRKK Or TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS KereMnx KnU Iaeed Wire Serrle. The Aeeoclated Preee le eacluelvely en tilled to the use for publlcetlon of all new. dlaiiatcb.ee credited to It or other wle credited In thle paper, end aleo to the locel new. publlehed herein. All i If hie for publication of epecfal dlepatchea herein are alio reaerved. MEMBER Oe UNITED PRESS MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertlelnv Representative WEST-I10M.I1IAY-MOOENSBN CO. Ofrice. In New York. Chlcaio. Detroit, San Trancleco, Loe Ante). a. Seattle, v-firMand. CD Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Tha Older Olrla are all busy nuking mince) meat and threaten to make the aame of anwrt-alecka, who make fun of their hata. ' e e The mayor, a aolon, and two avla tora Journeyed to Klamath eo. laat week and pinged ducka. e , The O. Hunt malo lantern show will be cloaed up for a good Buinf over. The Corning Court a Ida are getting out a paper they call the Corning Court Courier. They told Ilo worth of their laat latue. The Dock Elliott boy la aald to be the ringleader of thle lively Journalutlo enterprlee The weather continued more like May than November, and le not muob of either. e a Pop Oatea had returned from De troit, where he went to look over the new 4da. e 8. Morrla, the T-Ttock tiller towned Thura. He needa rain, and hint that Wall St. la throttling Jupiter Pluvlua and causing the drouth. e e A man had been discovered In Clat aop co. who baa killed more beers than Uncle John Orlftln. of here about. There are still bears left In both Clatsop and Jackson counties. e Peoria Bill Oatea Bill Lydlsrd Celebrated 10 yeara of bean weighing here on Frl. H. Flewher, the demon baker. Id fixing up Main and Central, In a manner that would be a credit to Aan rranclaoo. e e e Thursday la Thanksgiving day. and everybody expects to gather around a groaning board and do some groan ing too. There la a great sufficiency of turkeya. The city Is getting ready to import some fancy Inaects to devour the ear wigs. They do a better Job than bantam chickens, and do not crow about It, at 4:3ft am. The Olrla Drum Corps will bis to Kugene this week to show the educa tional center how to march and toot. if 7fi more almoleona are collected. A cloud was reported In the sky back of Oold Hill Frl. pm. but could not be confirmed. e More homes are being built In this region thsn auto trailers. The fas. football squad returned Frl. am from Salem where they tied s football gnme, In the murk and mud. The capltol city claims a ' moral victory", when It was only a sanctimonious tls. . The dying equeal of ths fstted hog la heard In the rural areas, as farmers get ready for ham and sausage mak ing. e Quite a number of promising young men have been looking preachers In the eye as the gs Yule season ap proaches. Country basketball teama have started to bloom. 8. Valley and Phoenix tangled last week, victory crowning the former. PAIR QUIZZED IN CLEVELAND. O., Not. 3!. (AP) Detectlvea question: two nwn today ns auapecta n Cleveland "headlea body" staylngn. Six decapitated bodlea or part of bodies hare been found here within year. Detectives Ralph Kennedy and Lao DufMn Mid the men shared ram shackled house near ths desolate sec tion where most of the torsos wort discovered. The officers said they found five butcher knives, ground to raw-edge sharpness, in the house. Kennedy ssld on a wall vu 4 framed painting of medieval execu tion" r headsman thown holding aloft a severed head, with 10 decapi tated boOdOB la tha XuregrouuU. How About NRA? T'HE sixteen members of the Schechter family, their name made famous by the U. S. supreme court decision which killed NRA nt Joe Schechter's behest, all voted for Roosevelt and announced they wanted a new NRA. Jacob Haged, the tailor who went briefly to jail for violating a New Jersey state compliance law, and whose mishap was loudly mourned by Republican orators as a horrible example of "New Deal" persecution of a little pants-presser, haB tele graphed the president that his business is bad and that "only NRA can restore it." These incidents prove nothing. But they fit neatly with a fact of which this writer and other ovservers discovered repeat ed evidence during the campaign that NRA was still far more popular than most politicians supposed. OW income groups which leaped into the landslide for Raose velt conspicuously including employees of hotels, stores, restaurants and other service trades still had pleasant mem ories of it. So did some substantial groups of not very big business men. It is very doubtful whether Governor Landon's various at tacks and challenges to Roosevelt as to NRA did him any good. Roosevelt in his New Tork speech promised continued effort for higher wages, shorter hours, the end of child labor and sweatshops all prime NRA objectives. ; And organized labor, claiming to have elected him- will vociferously demand the fulfillment of those promises through national legislation, although no one is now suggesting a revival of NRA in its old form. San Francisco News. Cditorial Correspondence SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 20. Had a nice comfortable ride down hero on tho Shasta with A. S. Roscnbauin, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Rosenberg, Harry Rosenberg, Mr, and Mrs. Reeso Brainy, Mr. and Mrs. AT Littrcll, Mr. and Mrs. D. II. Ferry of Foots Creek, and three car loads of Rogue River valley turkeys. Whether it was consideration for the Thanksgiving birds, or the word of advice Rosey gave to the engineer, there was no backing and filling, little or no jerking, and when we arrived at the Oakland mole in the warm morning haze, all hands joined in announcing they had spent a comfortable and uneventful night. e e e e e Rosey as usual acted as the gracious and attentive host, and when a bridge game was suggested and tho Pullman being made up early, did not provide space, A. S. R. persuaded the dining CBr conductor to allow bridge rampant in the dining car, and aa a final flourish ordered drinks all around, when the enrfew rang at ten-thirty. This was a football crowd headed for the big game, and yet, believe it or not, everyone ordered lemonade. Various explanations were offered for this strange temperance display by a mixed company of football enthusiasts, the one we personally regarded as most probable however was never mentioned i.e.: old age I It is now the cocktail hour, on Friday, and judging by vari ous and sundry activities observed in the lobby of the hotel as we came through, the prc-game celebration this year promises to break all records. Mot Martin Luther at the hotel desk, and he oonfirmed this view, he is an old timer at these festivities and said ha had never seen tho boys and girls, gain such terrific momentum, thus early in tho proceedings, Martin wasn't feel ing so hot for at great effort and so much wire pulling his fingers are raw and bleeding he secured two tickets for the Big Game for T. Slater Johnston of tho Antelope. At the last moment T. Slater decided he couldn't abandon his farm chores, so Martin had two extra tickets on his hands. As usual the local papers say tickets are scarce and speculators aro holding them for $25 a pair, but also as usual, at the last hour there seem to bo plenty of peoplo with extra tickets and darned few trying to BUY them. - This has been a year for football upsets, but as fur as San Francisco is concerned the greatest upset of thr-m all would bo a victory tomorrow for Stanford. Never have we observed before such an intense determination to win, and confidence that victory it will he, as is displayed by the California boys in the big city this year. Those newspapers reflect this sei'tynont. In fact the Kxaminer had a story this morning which must have been intended for Sunday morning's paper, for it was written on the assumption the Golden Bears had already won, and went into the details of just how the triumph was to bo celebrated. This is not the first time Brother Hearst has jumped the gun in a news way, hut if the boys from Palo Alto should happen to pull out ahead what a headache there w,ill be for William Randolph's sporting editor. Almost as bad as mourning after election day! e e e e e We determined to spend today, getting the low-down on the shipping strike, and finding out. which side is right and which is wrong in this controversy. We have worn off at least four bits worth of shoe leather, interviewed some labor officials at the Ferry building, the shipping press bureau in the Matson building, talked earnestly and long with two newspaper editors, and one press bureau chief, and oven walked up and clown the Embarcadero. We know considerably more about the situation than when we arrived, but we know that what we started out to do CAN'T be done. For there is no RIGHT side in this deadlock, which is costing the coast millions of dollars a week, and may eventually bring suffering and even death to scores of innocent people. The long and short of it is, BOTH sides are wrong. And in the same sense both sides are defending certain rights. e e e e v The best explanation we can oonjnrc up at the moment, is to compare tho strike situation with that of two men (say a ship owner and a stevedore) who meeting on the Embarcadero, engaged in an argument, became more and more heated, found it more and more impossible to como to any understanding, and finally abandoned argument, pulled off their coats, and decided to settle the Bffair, by springing at each other's throats and rolling in the gutter. Tho strike hasn't reached the fighting violent stage as yet. But that is clearly the spirit behind it, on both sides, there is no desire for peace, although spokesmen, when talking to the press at least pretend there is. The truth is the ship owners, decided some time ago, that the longshoreman's union and its affiliates had to he broken; and tho unions, realizing this, nvule up their minds they would NOT bo broken, and would force the ship owners to their knees. And there you are. On neither side as this is written is there a will to peace j on both sides there is a WILL to war. We know such a verdict would be disputed by both sides, and particularly by the shipowners, but we also are reasonably certain at least a ibuen well poMcd men in S8n Francisco, on the strike situation, could be found who would absolutely confirm it. We often heard it said in Mcdford that the shipowners were in tho right for they agreed to arbitrate while the unions flatly refused to do so. We haven't time at the moment to go into this matter in detail, but can say it in't true. The shipowners tlic offer to arbitrate both this vein- and two years aco, but tile pficr was uot buua fide, uol made in good faith, in fact was made in such a way the shipowners knew the unions could not accept it. It was done solely to put the' unions in the hole from the standpoint of public opinion and even one of the shipowners a member of the press section at least admitted as much to the present writer, saying no one in San Francisco took the arbitration matter in the dispute seriously any more. However a more detailed analysis of- the strike situation will have to wait for another time, if at all. A certain young lady from across the bay is calling! R. W. R. Personal Health Service By William blgned lettera pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease. Jlagnusia or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped, teli -addressed envelope Is enclosed- Lettera abould be brier and written In in Owing to the (urge number of lettera received only a few can be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Urudy, UGfi El Camlno, Beverly II Ills, Calif. COUGH AXD TH The other day we told how cough can deceive. When It seems to come from deep in the chest the Teal j source of the trouble may be entire ly apart from tho I breathing organs. I Pretty fool in h to take cough medi cine when the oauie ol the cough, la ade noids, simple coryza, chronic sinusitis or some Irritation of the auditory canal, yet thousands do so every day. Chronic dry cough which comes on after undue exertion and accompanies shortness of breath it, a prominent complaint In same cases of heart disease. This may be the complaint which first brings the heart trouble to the attention of the physician. In such cases most likely there Is no "murmur" or other mark ed sign of heart trouble elicited by casual examination, but the diagnosis may be made by finer analysis ol the disturbed rhythm and other evidence obtained by electrocardiograph. After all we must remember that the great vogus or pnoumognstrlc (tenth cra nial) nerve supplies both tho heart and the lungs. During a fit of coughing the blood pressure In the vital coronary artery (which supplies blood, oxygen, to the beart Itself) falls to practically zero, so that for a time no blood with Its fresh oxygen reaches the hard-working heart muscle. The coughing spell. Which raises blood pressure In the sys temic circulation and also the (in thrathoraclc) pressure within , the chest, leaves tho heart Inadequately filled with blood and the pulse rel atively empty. You try It on the dog If you know how to feel your pulse and have nothing serious the mntter with your heart or arteries. First no tice the size of the pulse, then have a hard coughing fit, cough and cough for a score of times, and note how the pulse wave thins down or disappears. Then recover and take a few free full brcAths and feel the pulse wave coming back to normal size and full ness. In a patient gravely ill of pneu monia such a strain on the heart might have fntal results. So It be comes obvious that cough rafly be symptom or sign of a disease affect qQMnfyre NEW YORK. Nov. 21. I've been wondering If the Celebrity Craze that's making New York so Intoler able Is not headed for the permanent exile of many other passing fancies. On Man hattan Isle the Master of Cere monies is King. And everybody is twitching to take a bow. The honest facts are that the craze Is so much staged fol de rol that hey nonny nonnled for awhile. Then be gan to rankle. For not two percent of the socalled "five star celebrities" have actually attained celebrity. They are mostly nonentities who made striking attitudes a career. The men and women whose accom plishments entitle them to take bows are not around ttklng them.. Cus tomary exceptions, of course. No one yet has seen Lindbergh at a night club. "No. 31" or at the ringside of a prlre fight, Celebrities do not ride aroxmd in block-long sebra-jtrlped cars. Not nine persons out of ten know Sinclair Lewis by sight. Or Edna Mlllsy, Dr. Alexis Carrell or dona notched so Inconspicuously in stellar roles. Eventually there la going to be a slinking out and when it comes, Ohl boy!, what a shower of clinkers. No one has anticllmajced Don Mar quis' acidulous add-up of one of the more audnclous of the Manhattan showoffs. Said he: "He struts silling oown." An auspicious theater open ing la the vantage point to see such phenomena In full sail. No wonder there Isn't a smiling critic In the entire Death Watch. They come, they sit. they scowl not at the stage or players, but at the astounding er mlned rxhlbltionlsta around them. I know any number, three live In my apartment spire, who have achieved and ref.iae longer to patron Ire the "smot spots" because of this annoying parade. It may be argued one does not have to look. But that W. difficult. It is their Job to make you see and bear them and they'll do It if they have to get in your koup. It was as much in Irony as comedy that Jim Flagg cantered Into "No. 31." I did not see it, but a reliable wit nesa tell about a typical touch of , the !i,r,7tiK ef tron'ery of tie fl Ard boys wlio p.c on noUblei In pul.iic. Brady, M.D. E CIRCULATION ing the circulation, or a factor of serious disturbance of the circula tion. In any case It Is rather a bootless business treating cough, unless you know the cause of it and are sure the remedy you choose will not do more harm than good. In my Judg ment the popular habit of resorting to one or another nostrum which purports to ease or stop cough Is the straw that turns the scale against recovery In many cases, it Is always a serious question whether to at tempt to ease or stop cough; a ques tion which bad better be left to the physician. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pimples and Sweets A bets you say oandy, cake and other sweets are not the oauv of pimples and that a person with pim ples need not avoid such foods. B. . , (C. I. W.) Answer A wins the candy. Not only are such foods NOT the cause of pimples, but very good results are obtained by Increasing the Intake of sugars and starches In the diet of persons with pustular acne. Nearsighted Child Our boy twelve Is quite nearsight ed. What advice would you give about his general hygiene and the care of his eyes? . . . (Mrs O. C. F.) Answer Encourage all outdoor ac tivity, play, pastimes possible. The child should use his eyes for close work only when bright daylight or sufficient artificial light Is available. He should be Instructed to hold his head erect When reading, not hanging down. Let the light come over the left shoulder (If he Is right handed) from a plane behind his field of vis Ion. That Is. the light source should never be visible tn the position of the head while reading or doing close work. At no time should a near-sighted child read, study or do any kind of close or fine work for more than half an hour without an Interval of at least as long for outdoor activity or recreation or for rest of the eyea. Let tho oculist see and examine the vision at regular Intervals and follow his Instructions about glasses faith fully. If you wish to conserve the best degree of vision. (Copyright 1936, John F. Dill Co.) Ed Noli: PeiMinf wlsblnt to communicate with Dr. Bind thouJd send letter direct tu lir -William Brady. . M D. 6S El Pn ml no. Heverl) HUM, Calif. One walked up to the dignified Her bert Marshall, clapped him familiarly with: "Hello. Herb. Nice seeing you again." Then walked over to the watting and enormously Impressed lady friend for whom he had put on his show. Marshall, of course, did not know him from Adam's off ox. I've been learning a bit about that dandy little debt-paying nation of Finland from a friend giving It the once over. My friend flew from Riga to Hclslngfors over the Baltic "A storm-tossed Baltic that suggested a churning of black Ink . t . now and then a clap of thunder and a quick vein of orange darting the sky while rain caromed off the shiny wings." Two fellow passengers were Japs with chromium teeth, the new Russian Taney. In the Soviet they are putting tn copper teeth and covering them with chromium. Finland. I'm told. Is the cleanest country In the world surpassing even the well-scrubbed Hollend. Everything glistens and ahlnes. But what a strange language she speaks I The elevators are Hiss. The Finnish baths for women are called Dambad. At the end of a Swedish film Is flash ed, from an American viewpoint, the inelegant word "Mut I" meaning The End. But telephoning la quite a lark. One takes down the receiver and says Umph. And the operator answers Umph with a lusty groan. Then one proceeds to dial the number, I breakfasted at a sedate club on the lower avenue where a group of savants were lunching. Studying them across the wheat cakes. I found my admiration for their learning swamped by a tingle of sympathy for the apparent bleakness of their lives. So long had they laboured at scholar ships, pursued truth's academlo trails and otherwise Indulged the severest rtddUd-me. riddle -me ree they seemed squeered dry of animation and spon taneity. Constantly bucking human ity's limitations to spread the light had worn them down. Somehow they unconsciously set themselves apart. Strangers. Indeed. In a strange world. One feeling that to them nothing mattered much. They knew tt all and were as weary of their knowledge as a confectioner of sweets. Flour subsidy PORTLAND. NOT. 31. U. S. department of agriculture reported the flour subsidy prico Saturday at 30c per bbl, unchanged. I'ppermost win SAN MATEO, Calif.. Nor. 31. KT) Uppermost, with Sterling Young of New Orleans In tha stirrups, record ed a record-shatterlng victory In the Oakland handicap at Bay Meadows today. 4 Celery. sweet potatoes. olives, cranberry Jelly and everything else but the turkey at Husons' Confec tionery. Ckv. .i tinu for Too Late to Claa lfy Ads is 130 p. m. Comment of the Day s News "jNE of the finest memories of this east of the mountains country tn its early days," Llnsey Slsemore told this writer the other day, "Is the people who lived here. Taking them as a whole, they were a fine, upstanding, square -shooting lot . "They had to be. No other kind was permitted to live here long, PRINEVILLE was the capital of the Eastern Oregon cattle country. It was to Frlnevtlle that people came for the bulk of their supplies; and It was to Prinevllle that they came for their relaxation. The whole great cattle country more or less centered around this now quiet, peaceful, pret ty little town In the Crooked river bottom. - Plinevllle got Its supplies In from The Dalles, where they came by river, and the merchandise gathered at Prinevllle was distributed far and wide by those who came for tt. ALL of Oregon east of the moun tains was then Wasco county, and The Dalles was the seat. The Dalles was a long way off, and the law and order represented by the county seat was bard to get at. f So, naturally enough, responsible people In the faraway community began In time to take the law Into their own hands in order to Insure protection of life and property. This law and order element organ ized vigilante committees, and it was these vigilante committees that kept the peace In the wide open spaces. "npHE vigllsntes." Llnsey Slsemore 1 says, "were loosely bound to gether all over the cattle country, and they acted more or less In co operation with each other, "They had a regular letterhead printed, and these letterheads were used In a way that was well under stood. Nobody ever threw one of these letters In the waste basket un opened." "I1THEN a stranger arrived in the fT country, his business was not asked and little curiosity was openly displayed regarding his past and where he came from and why. That wasn't regarded as good form. But strangers were watched. "If they conducted themselves well and lived up to their obligations and made their word good and generally acted aa good citizens should accord ing to the code of the times, they came to be accepted by the right kind of people. "But If they acted suspeclously. especially If they absented themselves at more or less regular Intervals with out a good reason, they were watched more closely still, and if they per sisted in their suspicious activities they got a vigilante letter, "The letter gave them two days to leave the country." UP IN the Prinevllle section, two men had failed to live up to the requirements of the law abiding peo ple of that time, and so they got a vigilante letter. They disregarded It. "Two days later, their bodies swung from a bridge over the crooked river. "When the vigilante acted, they meant business. REMEMBER, please, that this was then a big country, thinly set tled, and law and order was a long way off. Property was largely repre sented by cattle and horses, and If the owners of stolen cattle and horses waited until the distant authorities could be notified and then could ach the trouble spot, the stolen ani mals and the thieves would be beyond reach. It was conditions such aa these that brought the vigilantes Into be ing, and while they acted without formal warrant of law they really represented law and order In the cat tle country. The vigilantes of that early time were about as fsr from the mobs of today, which sometimes take the law into their own hands, aa one pole la from the other. Alaska Physician Pluses KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Nov . 31. (AP) MaJ. John Mustard. 67, a phy clan in the the army medical reserve corps and dean of the Alaska medi cal profession, was found dead in bed at his home here today. Physi cians aald he apparently died of heart dlJiease. FLOWERS for your Thanksgtvlng table. Get them at the Mever Flower Shop. 43 S. Central in with Bartlett the furrier). Dine & Dance h C.l IMCSERM.WS ORCH. Erfry Nljht at ERNIE'S CASINO CARD READINGS Madamr Mueller. Ilonfut and Reliable nith beet of returner". '1 Sherman Street, rhons KHS-J-I Retlnr si.no. OF GEM FORTUNE OUTHBORO, Mass., Nov. 21. (AP) State police combed this section today for four "chummy" holdup men who robbed Mrs. William Ken nedy, wife of a wealthy Boston mer chant, of 125,000 In gems. Wearing masks and armed, the four entered trie palatial Kennedy home last evening. Ignoring the attractive Mrs. Ken nedy's command, "Come on and get out of here and go home." the men courteously ordered her and her maid Into the library and said they wanted her Jewels. "I tried to talk them out of it," Mrs. Kennedy said. "I offered them cigarettes and did all I could think of but they meant business." Directed to a floor safe containing Jewelry, the men dialed the combi nation at Mrs. Kennedy's direction. They disregarded a valuable necklace she was wearing. After each man had shaken Mrs. Kennedy's hand and complimented her on her coolness, they bound her and Miss Emma Oreen, the maid, to chairs and left in a car. WEEK DIVIDENDS SET NEW YORK, Nov. 21. (AP) All records for the number of favorable dividends In a single week, the com pilation by Standard Statistics Co.. Inc., showed today, were broken in tbe past seven days. Increased, resumed, extra and ini tial dividends numbered 193 com pared with 04 the preceding week. The latest total was larger than for any three-month period tn 1932 and more than the entire month's figures in February, March, April, May or July this year. There were no unfavorable changes. Last week there were two. $1,000,000, its representation is like ly to be modest, if not poverty stricken. The proper solution Is known to nearly everyone In Washington above the age of reason. What the Repub licans need Is someone with a big pocketbook to take hold as John Raskob took hold of the Democrats sfter the 1928 debacle. Primarily, they need someone to guarantee the employment of a $2,500-a-year man In a public relations capacity. " There are two Washington newsmen who could handle It, The employment of one of them may be expected within the next few months. Chairman Farley seems to be better in calllne elections than In fore trill ntr what Harry Hopkins Is going to do wtth the WPA. Hts remark abroad that WPA would be turned back to me states caused a hectic few hours on the inside here, but it vtm rmiiv not his fault. Apparently what hap- was mat raney said it would be done "sometime soon." meaning within the next few years. But Mr. Roosevelt hsa hastened to make that clear by rushine forward wtth n..ti. that no change would be made next Closing time for Too Late to Clas slfy Ada la 1:30 p, m. (Continued from Page One ) Seattle TRUSS Expert Here Monday and Tuesday FREE EXAMINATION For The -RUPTURED ROBOT, th Perfect Truu All Mrt, i.lr.l er arrow idluit.kl. ALSO THC IDEAL THUS FOR THE NEW INJECTION METHOD HUMAN-FINGER PAD frit 0i".tr (. tt MM PR. lit) Oflit H.wrv t t :W HENRY ENGBERQ, Ph. Q. INVENTOR M ditto F ACTU n t n UK Feyrtu A- , Off. Otttte Hat Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the .Mull Tribune 10 and 20 yean ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY November 22, 1026 (It was Monday) Aihprt n Fall, former secretary of Interior goes on trial in Teapot Dome oil bribery case. Schools of city to close Wednesday for Thanksgiving holiday. Boy convicted of auto speeding la given time to earn and pay his fine. Revival meeting opens next week at the Lutheran church. rw.ri7A ArlLss and comoanv. arrive In special car for presentation of Turkeys sell on Portland markets at 45c per pound. Seeley Hall and N. M. Hogan are nominated for commander of the Legion post. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY November 1916 (It was Wednesday) Franz Josepb, emperor of Austria dies suddenly, aged 68 years. I.W.W. on way south occupy South ern Pacific depot waiting room during night. Fatlma most popular cigarette locally, a survey shows. "Money trust" battles eight-hour day for labor. Fuji defeats Dave Wood In city billiard tournament at Brown's. The Rogue River Fish Protective association to meet Friday to solve fishing problems. Mass meeting to be held at Nat to" discuss paving debt refunding plan. 4 Ueads Stamp Collectors PORTLAND. Nov. 31. Milton L. Gumbert of Portland won the grand prize at the Oregon Stamp So ciety's fifth annual philatelic exhi bition here today. Gumbert displayed early Oregon territorial covers. . Seeks Wheat Cargo PORTLAND, NOV. 21. OP) The Greek steamer Namea was at Astoria today, reaching the Columbia river district to load 6500 tons of wheat for Japan. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our friends for their kindness and sympathy during our recent bereavement and for the beautiful floral offerings. Lei and L. Dy singer, Clinton A. Dysinger, Mrs. Lillian Daly. Mrs. Blanche Park. a MOTH PkOOf CtEAWICI afkaaad7 1HUI WsaavasV CITY CLEANING & DYEING CO. 624 No. Riverside PHONE 474 . evnot .-. to ' " " "I alt W sftfflnilll Ruptured The Heath Dmjt Store has Just been appointed a r e n t of ROBOT TRVSSES tn Jarkson County. Mr. A. N. Johnson Truss expert from Seat tle will demonstrate the Robot Truss Monday and Tuesday at the Heath Drug Store. If you have a difficult rupture, or if your truss is not giving entire satisfaction, come in for a free examination. MT' aft "J AX dftltWff"W Uttllllltltl liK I Mill ft I 111! 1 j mm DRUG STORE