Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 13, 1937, Page 10, Image 10

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    PAG.: TEN
MEDFORD MATT-. TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREO OX.' THURSDAY. MAY V.i. mi.
MEDFORDtwTRIBUXE
KrroM la oothrr Urea
iMdi lb Mill rthBr"
Dally Esrpt flatordar
Subtlahsil by
yBUKflHIl PR1NTINO CO.
SI-3T-3t N. Fir St. ' Phone Tl
ROBERT W. RUHU Editor
CRNK8T R. OIL8TRAP, Msnatsr
Ad lodspeodant NpPr
En (!- econn-c.i.w nmiw ":
ford. Ortfon. uader Act of March t. w
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall In Advaocai
Dally, ona roar -
. Dally, sit monthi
. J TI
Dally, ooa month ................
r.t.r In A1 rantaV M4fOrL Alh
land. Jackaonvllla, Cantral PoInU
Phoaoli. Talaat, Oeld Hill and en
' hifbwaya.
Dally, ona yaar "
Dally, all months....
Dan, ona month
All terms, eaah In advance.
Official Paper af lha City of Med far
Official Pa par of Jarkaoa CalT
UFMHKR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Receiving rail wmj "
n.. .nta... phu ia malualvaly an
tit ltd to tha uaa for publication of all
ji...).h trAuA to it or other
wise oradltad to thla paper, and alao to
tha local nawa puDiianai own.
All rlfhta for publication of PctaJ
dispatch aa naram are aiao
MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
Or CIRCULATIONS
AdTertlalng .tepreaeotatlrea
flip
Offle.i In Nw York. Chlcsao. Detroit,
San fnnclico, Lns Anfalaa, S.attla,
Fortlsail. 8U Louis, Atlanta. Van.oovar.
B. 0.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arltmi Party.
n.n stulwer (R.. Or..) hM Intro
duced propoaal in Congraaa provid
ing for th. wlootlon ot presidential
and vlw-presldntlal candidates by
primary election Instead of a con
vention. The Oregon atateaman arguee
the primary votere would be away
lrom th. Influence of "the entnu
elasm engendered by a braa band,
or a woman In green waving a flag. '
It lit a question exactly what Influ
ence a braaa band, or a woman In
green waving a nag wouia
the primary voter. They have elected
.hri. on oromUea of "electrlclty-
..m.,i.nn.t." and defeated con-
itablei who thought a MOO per
month pension was too much. If
national primary worka anything like
the Oregon primary, It la the better
n.rt of wisdom to let the bras, band
and the woman In green continue to
do the picking. The primary n
given Oregon A-1.5 dandlea In the
way of official..
Campalgna hav. been launched In
several cities to pronioit rjoye on Bi
cycle, from riding on main traveled
highway. The idea is a ioa w
but has not become well enough
known to cause any noticeable In
crease In the number of boy bicycl
ists on main traveled highways.
With teachers up to their ear. In
politics, and high school students
staging protest strikes, taxpayers no
longer regret the minion, of dollars
they have pungled up tor education.
Many cities ns stayed up all Tues
day night to hear the coronation
broadcaata from London, and felt
just as sleepy, as when thsy did the
same thing to find out how Multno
mah county was going In a state
election.
...
DANSANT EN 8H1NDIO.
(Salmon Bar News)
"No place on the coast do they
dance and have fun like Saw
yers Bar. They had a pure welta.
Some switched like a Santa Fe
yard engine, some went up In
the air, some sat down, others
swayed forth and to. Uka It was
the last tlm. Th.n csm. the
couples In rhythmlo step, where
two heart, beat a. on.. Mr.
Knlder and Mrs (hi. Sklllen
won the first prl for th. res!
smooth old-fsshloned wslta and
Dick Hansen and Mlsa Cath.rln.
Wilson won first prlii. for th.
latest waits gild.'
Yesterday was a balmy day. frag
rant with the odor of blossom, and
gay with ths song of birds. Several
heard the call of a distant land, and
will migrate as soon as school Is
out. On a spring evening, even a
freight train whlstl. sounds good.
...
Ths Elks cat Is In ths hospital.
He ha. been running a fever, he
wsa unable to catch.
The first lsdy ot the land advo
cate, an elght-hour-dsy for house
wives. The Idea Is not origins! wltn
her. The first proponents Just sug
gested staying home, without any
time limit.
t
RETRinl.TtON.
(Manila (P. I.) Tribune)
"Lout Away la reported to
hav. peeped through the cracks
of the dressing room, of th.
Msnlls Grand Opera House on.
night last week. If It wss a
Wagnerian soprano It serves him
right."
s
The King of England wss crowned
yesterday, end the 33.000.000 Brit
ishers, who sdmltledly don't gel
enough to eat any day In the Vear.
won't mind missing their bally break
fast. .
' "LOCKHART, May 11. (Special!
Mlssra Dorothy Perkins. Nlns Wun
der and Mildred Miles, moved Tom
Klrkby's cattle to the pasture at
bockhart Monday." (Baker Democrat-Herald)
The younger set does
some of It.
.
In his mellow momenta Anthony
Comstock the "father of censorship"
In America, used to estimate the
number of box cars It would tske
to hold the men he had sent to Jsil
for selling '.'immoral" literature.
WE&fHOtt
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease
dlsgnosls or treatment, will b. answered by Ur. Brady u stamped sell
addressrd envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In ink
Owing to th. large number of letters received only a few can be answered
No reply can be made to queries not conforming tm Instructions. Address
Or. William Brady. 189 El Cam I no, Beverly, Calif.
WORK. PLAY, NERVES AND ARTERIES
Extraordinary letter received the
other day ssys: "Thanka for your
article on Prevention of Apoplexy.
May we please
have more on
that aubjectwlth
emphasis on pre
vention?" I rubbed my
eyes and read the
letter over more
, carefully. Surely
I had. re a d It
wrongly. But, no,
that'a precisely
what the reader
said. Not a word
about a cure.
Can It be possible that there Is de
veloping In the popular mind an ac
tual mtrest In preventive medicine:
This correspondent describes himself
over 40 years of Bge." Not bad.
He might be 43 or 83 yesrs old.
In the red book (Building Vital
ity) I say: "Among men 0 per cent
of the cases of arteriosclerosis occur
In the third decade, IS per cent In
the fourth, 30 per cent In the firth
and SO per cent In the sixth decade
or later."
If ever I get as many aa three let
tors from persons under 30 who ex
press Interest In the prevention of
apoplexy or other manifestation of
cardiovascular degeneration, 1 believe
I'll pioneer a new field, the practice
of preventive medlcln exclusively. It
has nsver been done. Without over
stepping the bounds of medical ethics
to attract client a doctor would
starve trying to practice pure preven
tive medicine.
Apoplexy (stroke or shock of par
alysis, cebral hemorrhage) Is gener
ally an accidental rupture of a small
artery in the brain due to long-stand
ing arterloeclesosl or hardenlne of
me arteries, nyper-trophy or overde
velopment of the heart which la i
compensatory change necessary to
pump blood through the Inelastic ar
teries, and a audden elevation of
blood pressure, whether this la
brought on by emotion, overeating,
overexertion or alcoholic Indulgence.
prevention of apoplexy Is preven
tion of arteriosclerosis, premature se
nility, excessive year and tear of the
arteries.
These daya apparently larger
proportion of young persons than
ever before are training ror arterio
sclerosis and whatever the cardio
vascular degeneration may bring
apoplexy, nephritis, snglna pectoris,
coronary thrombosis or Just a gen
eral breakdown.
Sedentary adults past 30 who begin
to take on excess weight and experi
ence shortness of breath on exertion
which formerly gave no such discom
fort, and feel tho lack of former am
bition or "pep." should but seldom
O.OMclnfvre
NEW YORK, May 13. Those bright,
bantering young men serving drinks
In the open-fronted soft drink stands
are almost Invariably from Texas.
Proprietors have
found they
the most accom
plished of all at
the counter.
Rarely do they
employ the na
tive New Yorker.
City folk some
how get a kick
out of the famil
iar conversation
In the manner
of the Texas pan
hanrne. These
Jobs offer a flrit toehold In the Dig
olty for the ambitious, but not many
remain for more than two or throo
weeka. Their aim la higher.
Incidentally. In proportion to pop
ulation, Texans In general are the
most frequent visitors to New York
from any state. There are two hotels
which dapend almost entirely for
patronage on visitors from the Lone
Star. Revue shows are especially pat-
ronlaod by them.
Too. the Texas ladles, mostly wives
of rich ranchers and oil magnates,
are heavy spenders In the exclusive
dreaamsklng and mlllnery salons.
Thti la true also of their trade at
the luxury establishments, jewelers,
perfume parlors and the like.
Don Clarke used to tell of a twlt-
tery New York newspaperman on the
old World who walked long diKtanca
each evening toward hla home up
town, thinking the fatigue might
cure hit insomnia. Some ot his fel
lows would contrive to be sauntering
casually down the ax-en ue and pass
htm with Indifferent greeting. Then
hurrying around to the El, they'd
scoot back up town and pass the
sufferer again a little further north
ward on h Is route with t he same
caaualnesa. What success they nad
In making the victim think he was
seeing things Is not recorded. A
mean trick.
In West 23rd street Uvea J. It
Shaver, who for so long sold hla fine
drswttiRs of children to New York
and English papers His vogue, once
enormous, has passed and he lives In
Dlrkrnslan dust and ahsdows with
stacks or his favorite original of the
years gone toy i Tills ecllpM comes to
almnat evory popular artist sooner or
later. The Peter Arnos of today are
often the Shavers of tomorrow.
Summer musing; We wonder what
a Dakota pioneer would have thought
on reading this winter's headline In
the Times: "18.000 In City right
Snow ot 1.8 Inches.'
Last night I read In Ray Long',
school hl.tory thla query: "Do great
epochs make great men or do eren.
men mske epoch?" With (ho pon
dsrout Idea as a nucleut, t began to
I
aa . m'Cm
Brady, M P.
do take ateps to retard the oncoming
C. V. D. that la short for cardio
vascular degeneration, the premature
old age we're talking about. When I
say take steps I mesn take ateps.
Oxygen on the hoof, two miles, three
times a day, or It equivalent In any
other form of exercise, physical work
or play. A daily walk of from one
to six miles or more Is the best rem
edy In the world against high blood
preasure, that la, If one la fortunate
enough to have a place where It Is
reasonably safe and pleasant to walk,
and can afford It. If a dally walk la
out of the question, then at least
some kind of physlcsl exercise, work
or play that one can enjoy should be
carried oh dally, by way of diversion,
hobby, avocation or change. If there
Is nothing else to do In time of
stress, worry, vexattlon, try rolling a
a dozen somersaults.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Hydronephrosis
What la hydronephorl? (J. J.)
Answer. Bnlsrgement or dtlstlon
of kidney collecting basin from ob
struction somewhere In the outflow
of urine.
Myopia
All my life I have been alghly my
opic. Now aged 02. Several oculists
have told me myopic eye Is healty,
simply malformed. Now oculists say
myopio eye la diseased eye. Please
give your explanation. (O. M. B.)
Answer. A myopic eye Is too long.
Overuse of eyes In youth without
properly fitted lenses often causes
pathological changes or disease con
ditions which might have been pre
vented by proper care. Constant wear
Ing of suitable glas&ea for all near
work Is the best wsy to save the eye
sight In myopia or near-sightedness.
Use of drops to put accommodation
or focusing of apparatus of eye at
rest for several daya from time to
time, for accurate fitting of glasses,
Is generally helpful for myopic eyes,
wmen need rest, for they are con
stantly overworked when used.
Rickety Skull
Child 3'i years old has had 13 sun
ray treatments which have cured
rickety condition In cheat. Will con
tinuance of auch treatment correct
head deformity In this child? He
also receives plenty of cod liver oil.
(Mrs. H. E. M.)
Ana. The treatment should bring
about at least . partial. If not com
plete, correction of the skull Irregu
larity. Why not give the child the
advantage of dally exposure of naked
body to aunllght Itself?
(Copyright, 1037, John P. Dllle Co.)
Kd Note: persons wishing to
communicate with Ur. Brady
should send letter direct to Ur.
William Brady. M U. ae5 E)
Camlnu. Heverly Hills, l.'sllt.
wonder whether our occupations
fashion us or whether we come Into
the world already equipped for our
occupations. In a minor key and
not particularly appropriate to the
large text - It occurs to me that
printers and telegraphers of my ac
quaintance In the news shops were
quiet fellows with a placid regard
for the turmoil of the news rooms
and perhaps inward smiles at their
knowledge of events, past and pres
ent, that might have embarrassed
some of the noisier boys on the edi
torial side. I have found without
exception that proof-readers have a
way of enjoying life, with detached
serenity. They have quietly saved
many editors and sub-editors from
ghastly mistakes.
Scene: On the avenue I saw Gen
eral John Pershing swinging aJoug.
ne was nauea by a friend with a
familiar "Why. hello John," Per
shing answered tho greeting warmly,
gave a quick glance around In ihe
manner of notables and then drew
his friend around the corner Into a
doorway for a heart to heart talk.
They were going great guns when I
sauntered on. Few oldsters have pre
served their years and carriage so suc
cessfully as Oen. Pershing.
Thingumbobs: Ashton Stevens.
Chlcsgo critic, haa turned hla face
to yesterday to write what he calls
"When Cabs Wore Horses' . , , Dean
Cornwell la the moat widely traveled
of the magazine Illustrators . . ,
Broadway now haa more radio press
agents than It ever hsd theatrical
press agent . . . Mary Roberta Rlne
hart will be among tha first Amert
can writers to Interview the new
English queen.
Old burlesque scene: Orogan, the
comedian with the red flannel un
dershirt sleeves showing, is In a bar.
His friend, the barkeep, has been call
ed out and a couple of swells come
In and ask for two pousse cafes.
Orogan puts everything In them but
the bar cat. As the orchestra plays
he slides up and down the bar
reaching for everything In sight and
working himself up to a furious
lather. As a crowning move he sops
up all the slashings on the bar with
the towel, wrings this out In the
drinks, teara two handfuls of straw
frdrn a dirty broom, sticks them In.
and serves. By this time they are
picking most of us up out of the
aisles;
(Copyright, 1B37. MNaught
Syndicate. Inc.)
Makes W.VI-Mlle Trip
BRISBANE. (UP) A Shetland
pony has Just concluded a 1750-mile
Journey by truck, train and airplane
The pony wss sold by a breeder at
Bethange. Victorls. to a farmer In
Queensland.
sleep I offices
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (UPl Two
Missouri state senators sleep In their
caplol offices. "It'a cheaper and
we have a 14.000 000 mansion to rest
In." exphtlned Senator A. N. Lindsay,
a minister.
The principality of Liechtenstein,
jn the upper Rhine between Swllrer
Isnd and Austria. Is but little largei
linn msten Island. Its srea la ti
stjuaia miles.
Comment
on the
Days News
By FRANK JENKINS
11THEN ons of Oregon's leading po
" Uto growers (a man who now
haa few financial worries) first came
to the Klamath country, he didn't
hava a cent.
But he DID hare some credit, due
to the fact that he had always paid
hla bills, so he managed to rent a
piece of land (It wasn't tod good)
and borrowed 93,000. With this j2,000
be succeeded In "making a crop,' its
they say In the south, and living
until harvest time.
OUT, by the time the crop was har
vested, the bottom had fallen
out of the market and his TOTAL
SALES amounted to just TWO DOL
LARS I potatoes were a drug on the
market that year. v
(This, remember, waa quite a while
ago.)
nUT yourself in this man's place.
He started without a cent, and
strained his credit to the cracking
point to borrow $2,000. He worked
like a' slave for nearly a year, and
wound up with a crop that couldn't
be sold. He was In debt up to his
ears, and had nothing to show for It
IfTELL, a lot of us would have folded
" up and quit.
But this man had COURAGE. In
stead of folding up and quitting
(and letting his creditors whistle for
their money) he squared his shoul
ders and spit on his hands. He rent
ed another and somewhat bettor piece
of land and began all over again
under a handicap, of course, for his
credit was pretty well gone, and he
had plenty of trouble getting enough
to eat and wear.
He went through hell that second
year.
T"HE market for his second crop
wasn't anything to brag about,
but It was a little better than his
first year at least enough better to
enable him to stick on. And he had
FAITH In potatoes, and willingness
to work hard and live on little or
nothing.
It was several years before he got
his head above water, and several
years more before he could really see
his way out of hla troubles. But he
stayed with It and WORKED, and In
time he conquered most of his pro
duction troubles and learned a lot
about growing potatoes that he didn't
know when he began.
Meanwhile, the market began to
Improve. - After a while. It Improved
LOT. In the course At time, he
began to make a little money. Later
l, he made more.
Now he Is a recognized sucesa,
HPHERE Is a moral In this story for
all of ua for we are all humttn.
and It la human nature to be a little
envious of those who are better on
than we are. and to feel that their
success has been due to luck, or to
special favors. At one time or an
other, we've ALL looked at somcbody
better off than we arc and said: "The
lucky stiff 1"
It ISN'T all luck. About nine men
out of ten who are successful have
gone through tough times, and often
they've been discouraged and weary
and low enough in their minds to
throw It all up and quit. But SOME
THING (nobody can say exactly what
It Is) has kept them at It until the
tide turned nd better days csmc
along.
More often than we're really willing
to admit, success Is DESERVED.
RAY MALING CANNERY
OFFICERS REELECTED
HILLSBORO. Ore., May 13. (API
Stockholders of the Ray-Msllng
Canning company re-elected officers
and directors at their annual meet
ing here.
Profits of g34.345.ia were shown
for the year ending March 31. with
13.363.51 paid out for federal and
state Income taxes and the state ex
else tax. Application of net profits
to a deficit reduced the obligation to
77.133.81, the report showed.
Closing time for Too Late to Clas
sify Ads Is 1 :30 p. m.
GREEN
SLAB WOOD
Big DOUBLE LOAD
FOR DIRECT MILL DELIVERIES
FIRST COME - FIRST SERVED!
Phone 7 Now
TIMBER PRODUCTS CO.
END OP NORTH CENTRAL AVENUE
ARRAIGNED IN
i&P V ...
Mrs. Agnes Gardner (left) and Mrs. Elizabeth Peters are shown
after their arraignment in federal court in Los Angeles on charges
of complicity with John W. Hunt, white follower of Father Divine,
in transDorting Delight Jewltt, 17-year-old school girl, from Den
ver, Colo., to Beverlv Hills. Calif.
(Continued rrom Page Ona)
to leave the matter in Coshocton.
Similarly, the A. P. of L. execu
tive committee does not seem to be
mourning because It cannot expel
Mr. Lewis, but must leave him in
suspension until the next A. P. of L.
convention. There Is a fairly good
tip around that the suspension will
not develop Into an expulsion even
at the next convention.
Bystanders, statesmen and others
seem to be agreed this Is the best
way. A separation Is usually better
than outright divorce. It leaves the
possibility that something will hap
pen to prevent the divorce.
Rumors are running around the
capital that tho reason the A. F.
of L. , will not suspend the Lewis
unions la that It cannot afford to
lose the revenue from them. The
facts are these: The C. I. O. diver
sion cost the A. P. of L. 983.000
members, but on April 30 It- had
3.884.577 members left. Most of ihess
members pay one cent a month. The
loss of the Lewis unions, therefore,
would seem to represent a financial
loss to the A. F. of L. of about
0830 per month. But the revenue
received from remaining members la
certainly sufficient to keep It going.
Furthermore, the loss already has
been sustained. The suspended CXO
unions are not paying dues now.
C. I. O. finances are not so readily
ascertainable. The C. I. O. does not
have a general levy upon members of
Its various unions. The unions ap
propriate sums from their treasuries
for Its operation from time to time.
In these new steel and auto unions
which have been organised by C.I.O..
a levy system Is supposed to have
been put 'into effect, but It has
not been operating long enough to
become productive.
The coronation caused hardly a
ripple of official interest here. It
has been accepted somewhat as the
British counterpart of the world ex
position In Parts or the world's fair
In New York In 1939.
Few officials know the new king,
but those who do like him. They cal;
him ' dependable, like his father" in
contradistinction to Windsor, whom
these same people regarded as some
thing of a harum-scarum. They never
knew what he was going to do next.
The feeling prevails that King
Oeorge will slowly become more and
more popular among his own people,
although they doubt that his popu
larity in the world at larg? wHl soon
approximate that of his father or
the former Prince of Wales.
Chairman Wheeler of the senate
railroad finance investigation re
ceived a telegram from a mystprloua
organization which signed itself :
"The National. American and Inter
national Leagues (and American As
sociation) for Peace." It reads like
this:
"When you first started your in
vestigation, the Spanish war broke.
When you started up the second
time, the Ifindenburg crashed. The
third time brought the coronation
In the Interest of peace (and your
own public ity) won "t you please
itop"
PINE
CULT. SCANDAL
Communications
Editorials Enjoyed,
To the Editor:
I enjoy your editorials. Don't agree
with you In everything, but then I
am a white-headed old woman and
only know so much. I have been
sending the paper clippings to a sta
ter In Memphis, Tenn. The one you
wrote on "Gone With the Wind" she
read to a group of women book
lovers. They were surprised when my sis
ter told them you were a Republi
can. 1 You know they are dyed-ln-the-wool
Democrats.
I wanted you to know that your
writings, or brain children, do not
only go to your subscribers, but out
like a wireless. Hope you success
In all your thoughts and writings,
for they help to smooth the way for
someone.
Sincerely,
MARY GLENN.
Talent, Ore.
Menus of the Day
Flail Lonf
Dinner Serving Three or Four
Codfish Loaf Relish Sauce
Baked Sweet Potatoes
Biscuits Honey
Green Salad French Dressing
Fresh Spice Cake Penochc Frosting
Plum Sauce
Coffee
Codfish Loaf
1 cup cooked codfish
1 cup soft bread crumbs
1 cup mashed potatoes
',4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon chopped parsley
3 tablespoons chopped celery
3 eggs or 4 yolks
't cup milk
3 tablespoons butter, melted
Mix ingredients and pour Into but-1
tered loaf pan. Bake 35 minutes In
moderate oven. Unmold. I
Relish Siuire
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons flour
1'i cups milk
teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon paprika
U teaspoon celery salt i
3 tablespoons minced plmlentos !
1 tablespoon chopped sweet pickles ;
1 hard-boiled egg. diced I
Melt butter and add flour When
blended add milk and cook until
creamy sauce forms, stirring con
stantly. Add rest of Ingredients. Cook
ono minute and serve.
Fresh spice Cnkc
1-3 cup fat
1 cup dark brown sugar '
" 1 e?S
1 cup sour milk
3 teaspoons cinnamon
i teaspoon cloves
i teaspoon nutmeg
teaspoon salt
3 cups flour
1 teaspoon soda
3-3 cup ralains
1 teasrpoon vanilla
Cream fat and sugar. Add rest
of Ingredients. Beat 2 minutes Pour
Into shallow pan fitted with waxed
paper. Bake 35 minutes In moderate
oven. Cool. Frost.
Penoche Frosting
3-3 cup brown sugar
'a cup granulated augar
3 tablespoons butter
i cup water
Vj tenspoon vanilla
Boll gently, stirring frequently,
the sugars, butter and water. When
a soft ball forms If a portion is tet-
QUALITY GIFTS
FOR GRADUATES
Monday's paper carried a news Item
to the effect that 177 young people
will graduate from the Medford
senior high school this month. At
Heath's a large assortment of gilts
for both bovs and girls-may be found.
Every gift In stock Is quality merch
andise. While some of the Items are
in the luxury class there la nothing
that will prove useless or a waste ol
money.
Many people are bothered with In
?omnia due to noi.ies from the out
side rather than from any physical
ailment. We have recently received
an ear stopple that keeps any noise
from entering the brain and disturb
ing your rest. These stopplea lave
proven very succesaful and they are
perfectly harmless. However, they
should not be used by anyone who is
alon In the home. This product Is
called "Flenta--.
And Insulin Is $1.13 at Heath s.
HEATH'S DRU0 STORE
Phone 834
Flight 'o Time
Med ford and Jackson County
history from the files ot the
Mall Tribune 10 and to rears
ego.
TEN YEARS AUO TODAY
May 13. 1927
(It waa Friday)
Captain Nunngeaaer, French avia
tor, believed lost in attempted flight
across Atlantic. American planes
scheduled to bop oft on flight to
Paris are halted by bad weather.
P. C. Blgham catches eight fish In
Rogue river.
Sheep shearing starts In the Table
Rock district.
Team used on Suncrest orchards
runs awsy and demolishes wagon.
Flood relief fund in Jackson coun
ty now totals 13134.31.
Manager Oeorge A. Hunt announces
that Rlalto theater will be remodeled
at cost of S17.000.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
May 13. 1917
: (It waa Sunday)
Los Angelea group plans to erect
box factory near Medford.
Deal closed for establishment of
new movie theater on Main etreet In
Weeka & Orr and Palm building,
under lease to H. L. Percy and A. J.
Moran.
Overnment to muster boys for farm
work.
Capt. J. C. T. Nash, owner of the
Nash hotel, dies at hla home In
Berkeley, Calif., aged 89 years.
City makes elaborate preparations
for patriotic parade Wednesday even
ing. China's Import, of clgareta. which
averaged 7,310.000.000 annually dur
ing the 1928-1930 period, receded to
75,000.000 last year as a result of
Increasing domestic production and
tariffs.
ed in cold water, remove frosting and
iei acana w minutes. Add vanilla
and beat ur'll creamy. Spread over
cake.
Lj B. Hoffmann
WEEK-END .sale
COATS and SUITS
Formerly
$22.95.
Reduced to
Formerly
$29.95
Reduced to
STRAW
Values to
$12.95.
Reduced to
REGULAR HOSE
ONE GROUP
Formerly priced from $1.15 to rf
$1.35. Discontinued colors all rS-)C
sizes at J J
WE GIVE S. & H.- GREEN STAMPS
New Homes Are Going Up
... and so are HOME STANDARDS I
Thanks to the low cost of building mute
rials, better home designs and the FHA
Plan of convenient monthly payments
the average family can now AFFORD to
build and enjoy home comforts our grand
fathers nevir dreamed of! Now's the time
for you to build the home you want. We'll
be glad to explain how you can pay most
of its cost, by the month, out of your income.
Listen to "Famous
Program,
Tuesdays 6:45 P. M.
Timber PkodMts Company
Ye Poets Corner
EPITAPH
Ths crossing sign said "STOP AND
LOOK" I
But he Just didn't care;
So now he's pushln' daisiea up
In WOODEN UNDERWEAR.
Elroy Anderson.
TO-NITE
ONLY
HEAR
RICHARD
HALLIBURTON
and his
"Seven League
Boots"
at the
Medford Senior High
School Auditorium
8:30 o'clock
General Admission... .8 1.00
Reserved $1.50
Sponsored by
Medford Active Club
$ 5OO
$2295
HATS
$295
UD
American Homes"
K M E D
Fridays 7:15 P. M.
t:nd of N. Ontral