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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1937)
'PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. .TUNE 23. 1937. medfobUtribune "Eftrroa ! Bout ham Ortfoa lUad to Biui atidoji. Daily scpt Saturday. Publish by UEDPORD PRINTING CO. SI-ITI N. fir St. Fhooa II ROBERT W.RUHU Editor. ERNEST R. OILBTBAP, .oir. As Independent Newspaper. Entered as Mcondelass matter at for, Orsgon, under Act et March I. 11 .1. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall Id Advaaeel . Daily, one yaar Dally, ai months... i.ti Dally, one month By Carrlar. In Advane Madforfl. Ash land, Jackson t lit. Central Points , phoanlx. Talaot, Oold BUI and hlfhwaya. Dally, oaa yaar, .. ' Dally, all month a Daily, ona month All terms, eaah to advance. Off I rial Papr of Ilia City of .Hertford OtftelaJ Paper of JackaoD County MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRKMH BcallBS FnU Loued Wlr MarTiea. The Associated Praaa la selualvel tit lad ta tba oaa for publleaUoo of all tvi d lap tents eradttad to it or other wlaa eradltad to thla papar. and alao to tba local nwi published herein. A!) rlfbta for publication of apaoiAl 'dlapauhaa haraln are alao raaarfad. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Of ft eta Id Naw Torh. Chicago, Detroit, an rriDciKQi """" p rtlaod. St. Louis. Atlanta, Vaneouvar, Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. A notorious speed! stopped at th, 611th street crossing 1st, yeater dsy, du to mistaking ths approach ing passenger train for a blonds. . Upstate gluttons 'or punishment an advocating a special session of th legislature, to consider means to ralss sg pensions revenue, and Trythlng else that comes to mind. ... "Jefferson 1 certainly getting rltay fee a little place. Here we ar, with a beauty parlor sporting chronlum and blue leather furniture ("(Jef ferson (Ore.) Review) Klckleas Joy I ... lira. Ellaabsth Quali report that while returning to her neatalow on the Pub. Lib. lawn lata Tuea., she was followed by a rough looking cat. ... Nothing has been heard for some time anent the reported and reputed Southern Oregon Nudist Colony, Inc. Now that th weather Is showing signs of normalcy It la expected a date for th Oreat Undressing will b announced soon. ... A noted sociologist argues much nrlm Is due to "boys being boys." On the other hand, much of It could be stopped, no doubt, by policemen being policemen. ... ' The esteemed and distinguished secretary of state failed to show at a convention banquet. A good politi cal writer could prove In 4 columns this Is a sign he will not be a can didate for anything next spring. ... Autos, more disheveled than their oecupanta, have started rolling north-m-ard. ... Owing to the rMna, agriculturists ar behind with their hay-baltng. and ahead on tnelr coming to town. ... A Prospers father screeched Sun day at his ball playing son, as he struck out In a crisis: "Hal Hal You will stsy out till 3 o'clock I" ... Couplee have started appearing at th courthouse, with romance and th fear of a ahlvaree In their hearts. . The chief Jtistlc of th US. su preme court want to know: "Are your democratic Impulses growing weaker . . . T" Judge, hereabouts they are. Rven the paaalng of the Lit, Dig., whose Inlquttlous straw vote scared them so last summer. fslld to mak a slngl current New Deal notion sane, or cause a full throated cheer. ... Th flight of Valerl Chekalofl, Oeorgl Baldlkoff, and Alexander Be llakoff, from Moscow to Vancouver. Wash., brought ot. some Journalistic astuteness. In the state press. In be stowing fulsome editorial praise upon th epochal and heroic hop, they were referred to aa "the three Rus sian avlatora." Instead of Messrs. Chekaloff, Baldlkoff, and Bellakotf. ... Th county agent reports there will be 35.000 leas ttirkeya In this county, than last year. Thla Indl eates more grasshoppers will be avail- ahl, for fish halt. ... James J. Braddork emerged from a world's heavyweight championship brawl with a sadly and badly muaerd physlogomony. and nana title, due tn th flatle activity of on Jo Louis, a colored gentleman. Th things that happened to Mr. Brad dock are alao listed a "a humiliation to th Caucasians" It Is thought th whit race will survlv. In th light of th humiliation th white raos has been applying to Itself In a gay and seml-ldlotlc manner. In recent years. Th cone, lered gladiator received approximately 1300.000 aa his share of th gat receipts, so lie should b able to work his way out from under the humiliation per sons! and Csucaslan In no time at all. The sum should Insure all the little Brsddocks their vitamins, and bulwark Papa against a record-breaking return to relief roll, from which h ros to the pugilistic peaks. Pony expreaa riders carried Lin coln's Inaugural "ditreaa from At. Joseph, Mo., to San Pranrieco In 7 day and 17 hours a record. The modern air line schedule la U hour. Advertising Its preventatives Amend The rtE Wagner Labor Aet ghould be amended. There wag a demand for thia when the measure wai upheld by the Supreme Court. But action then appeared premature. Why change an Aet, before it had been tested, and its precise weak nesses revealed in actual practice! rffl development! since the action of the Supreme Court have' been ao rapid, however, and the defects of the measure so clearly demonstrated, there is no further excuse for delay. Congress could render no greater service to this country, than proceeding at once, to make this socalled labor "magn charts", the sort of fair and equitable "bill of rights" it should have been in the first place. FOR nothing is really settled until it is settled, RIGHT. The Wagner Act, in its present from, ISN'T right. And as long as it's the law of the land, labor troubles will continue, for peace is impossible, under any settlement, where one side in the controversy is accorded its rights, and the other side ISN'T. And it's plain today, that this is what the Wagner Act does. It gives organized labor its rights. rights it has fought for against heavy odds for over half a century, rights it deserves. but it denies similar rights to the employer. For example: IT gives labor the right of collective bargaining, through agents of its own choosing, and free from interference or coercion, on the part of the employer. In other words if a worker wishes to join a onion, any union the employer can t take any coercive action to prevent it. The worker is a free agent, he can do as he likes, without interference from anyone. That is IF HE WISHES TO JOIN A UNION I But, if he DOESN'T wish to join a union, the situation changea completely. There is nothing then in the Wagner Act preventing the leaders of organized labor, from employing any interference, coercion or strong arm methods they wish, to deny the worker freedom of action, and force him into any union they want. And this is what they are doing. The employer CAN'T prevent that man from doing as he wishes, the labor leader CAN. It aeems hardly necessary to dwell upon the injustice of such a set-up. The only hope flict, is a square deal to both same basio rights to one side as Freedom of individual action BASIC right. It is granted by the labor-capital controversy, it rlERE is another thing, rnnilnl ia !nrnrnnrntid and Labor isn't. When organised labor was weak, struggling and poor, there was some practical justification for this situation Capital so to speak had everything and needed no PROTEC TION, labor had nothing, and DID. That aituation however no longer holds. Organized labor today is not only strong and rich, it is grow ing stronger and richer day by day. With the passage of the Wagner Act in addition, it has been given a power, both political and economic, which ia tremendous. At the preset rate merely from the standpoint of cash resources alone, organ ized lubor in this country, will soon have greater financial strength than thousands of large industrial corporations. AND yet, it refuses to incorporate. And the Wagner Act, rtnne nnf nnmnal ii tn An t It has been given tremendoua and more power, but it refuses the proper exercise OF that power. It demands complete freedom organized capital over half a century ago; and complete irre sponsibility which is denied in every other department of our industrial and economic life, and social stand, it is sustained, by labor-capital bill of rights, the law of the land. Now, of course, this is all wrong, completely unfair, entirely unjust. And because of this, there is no hope of attaining the goal in this country which all right thinkiim people desire a working agreement between capital and labor which will be permanent until such obvious injustices are cor rected. AS has been frequently pointed out in this column, in this eternal labor-capital conflict, there have been, and are today, wrongs on both sides. In this present Independent SteH strike, walk-out for ex ample, the action of the Steel executives in refusing to sign contracts with the union. while agreeing to bargain with it, struck us at the outset as illogical, dumb, and from the stand point of enlightened strategy, indefensible. In taking such a stand, aa we see it, they accepted a heating before they smarted For if the right of collective bargaining is (JRANTED. to den the right of contract which sustains it, just doesn't make sense DUT the Steel executives have a point in taking such a stand, " and that point goes directly to this one'aided Wagner Act. Why sign a contract with an organization that isn't respons ible, and can without penalty break that contract at any time it may desire t Not. only can, but does and HAS I Let the contract be between two equal parties with equal rights, and the Steel executives will sign. I'ntil they arc given the same rights granted labor, they won't. Our prediction ia they will be beaten on this issue, for the right of contract will come first. But nevertheless they ate morally if not technically right. For no contract is worth the paper it is written on, if oil" party is responsible and the other isn't. Yet the Wagner Act in its present form, legalizes just such a contract. The Wagner Act should be amended, and amended at onee There is no issue in this country today, more important, than the labor issue; no controversy which has packed within it more dynamite, none which erics more strongly for settlement on the solid basis, of the public welfare, of fair play to both sides and special privileges to none. And yet eonirres docs nothing. Unless something is done ami done quickly, if thin,'!, ard Wagner Act! of permanent peace in any con participants, according the to the other. in a. democracy is certainly a the Wagner Act to one side m is denied the other. responsible for its actions. power, and it asks for more to accept any responsibility for of action, which was denied yet in this illogical and anti what, it is ploiisnd to call a Wagner Act! The present allowed to continue going as they are now from bad to worse, then' we can see no outcome eventually, but a blow-up and we mean just that. No not civil war, revolution, communism. There is going to be no red flag for us. But something almost as bad some people believe worse, FASCISM, Business with a capital B, DICTATORSHIP! And then where will labor bet And more's the pity, it will be GHIEFLY organized labor's fault! Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal Health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will b answered by Ur. Brady If a stamped self- addressed envelope Is enclosed Letters Owing to th larg number of letters received only s few can be anlwered. No reply can b made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr, William Brady, gas El Camlao. Beverly, CaUf. LITTLE TIN DOC Allusion In thla column recently: "Pretty society girls In romantic cos tumes selling stickers to the presi dent or the may or." At the same time X Mid Im munity ha a specific meaning but ''resistance" doesn't mean thing. "Resist ance" Is a trick word when used by doctors, a malaprop Urn when used by others. When anybody utters the word "resistance" In referring to susceptibility to disease the discus sion Is certain to prove unprofit able, leads nowhere. Every written or spoken exposition of the cause or prevention of respiratory disease In which the word "resistance" Is used Is so much medical hooey. In my Judgment. That hackneyed preach ment that "plenty f pure, fresh air, plain wholesome food and regular sleep" protect against tuberculosis mean nothing more than the fa miliar caution "take care of your self." Ask the person who gives such advice what he means by pure fresh air and plain wholesome food and after he has floundered about you will know no more about It than he or she does. A nurs who has a nice Job as "executive secretary wow. I could cheerfully throttle the bird who In troduced "executive" and "In con ference" to our Jargon of a tuber culosis society, with two mere nurses under her, writes to give me a pat on the back, for my remarks about the pretty girls in romantic cos tumes getting thetr p'ctures printed In the local, paper. The little tin doc tor rails on for two pages telling me how necessary that sort of drama tization of anti-tuberculosis work Is to gain the Interest and cooperation of the public. She takes advantage of the opportunity to explain how Incompetent the medical profession Is: "A large majority of physicians are not Up to date about tubercu losis. They never saw r case during their college days and Just read about It In books ... It requires a lot of family education and medical ethics do not allow the private phy sician to Insist Ufn examination for alt contacts In an attempt to find the source of Infection and early cases . . . . The little tin doctor's conception of medical ethics la as naive aa Is her notion of the training of physte- QaMclnTyre NEW YORK, June 33. The metro polis seems finally In revolt at the cocktail party. Beginning as an Amer ican version of the pleasant English tea time relaxa tion, the cock tall party be came a fixed ln novatlon for workers who wanted to relsx In the late after noon for an hour of friendly com mune. The h o a t or hostess was care ful In selections and only those who mixed agreeably were invited. VYWle the cocktail term was used, the vverate was mostly tea and coffee. Tr-ey were ivmnll and Intimate gath erlnga, without the vicious go-Mtp now st pronounced. And lately the cocktail party has become something or a racket for per snal exploitation and publicity stunts. A ladder up for hangers on ni d social moochers. More often than not a collection of phoneys one would not care to meet anywhere and cer ta.nly not in the privacy of ft home. Such promiscuous get-togetherlng became duck soup for ft spurious no bleman e,nd sundry pick-thai. Xft to nuke contacts In an aura of respecta bility. Many gyp names resulted from Mh meetings. Today there are many New Yorkers who wisely thumb down on all cocktail party Invitations. Memories: The rock spring hour with crocks of cool sweet milk Bak li bacon rinds in the oren A bird's nest in the pocket of an old cost Hanging on a picket fence. The little brown hen that came In to lay an (si. on th Pftrlr sofa,. The palm leaf run with the black calico edging Si.c vlng the creaky willow chair to the brwry corner of the porch for grandpa. Sudden thomht: Martha Rsye'e top ping hifth note fineKtats opening a tvirn door on a frosty niht The growth of science fiction for tie Tountj is one of the upward tnnds of successful authoring Boys from 13 to 1ft hsve become gluttons for such stories, in the same manner that drown upa of today went for the il-.ttfS Bradr, rrank MrrrtweH. Fran Rrd. Jr and Ni.-lt Carter psper btuka in their youth. rh demands Brady, M. D. should be brief and written In Ink.' TOR SOUNDS OFF. . Ian. But that's the attitude bright young ladles In positions like hers I must take. It Is much the same as j with the nurse who takes ft Job as school nurse, factory nurse, store nurse, or nurse In a large office. She has to function as a doctor in order to hold her job. In the circumstances It Is only natural that she comes to think she knows as much as, or a little more than ordinary doctors do and can treat ordinary Injuries and Illnesses as well or better than the plodding practitioner who. In her estimation, probably never aaw a case when he was In college. It Is unfortunate for present and prospective victims of tuberculosis that "executives" with such strange notions of medical ethics are given soft berths In the antl -tuberculosis campaign. As I said before, .tubercu losis would be better controlled If prevention and treatment were left entirely In ths hands of physicians In practice. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Prostatism. Please tell me If there Is a remedy for what Is generally called early ris ing or irritable bladder. a., S. W. Answer Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on prostatic obstruction. Any man past middle age who finds It necessary to rise at night should consult his physician for careful in vestigation of the condition. Saccharin Is any harm likely to result from the use of saccharin three times a day In coffee, tea or In desserts? Mrs. P. J. M. Answer Critical Investigation sev eral years ago showed that the use of not more than five grains dally la harmless. Vitamin B. Kindly list foods that contain vita min B. Mrs. E. K. Answer Graham bread, rye bread, whole wheat bread, plain wheat, cornmeal. rolled oats, wheat germ, wheat bran, brown (unpolished) rice turnip greens, beet jreen, raw cab bage, green peas, tomato, tomatc Juice, canned tomato, spinach, ruta baga, sweet potato, fresh pineapple canned pineapple, pineapple Juice, peanuts, peanut butter, canned peas dried peas; fresh milk, skim milk, evaporated milk, dried milk, malted milk, condensed milk, lettuce, liver, dried brewers yeast. (Copyright, 1937, John F. Dille Co.) Ed Note: Persona wishing to. communicate with Dr. Brady honld send letter direct to Or. William Brady, M. D.. 285. El Contlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. for the new type of fiction are strict. The science must be accurate as to basic facts but for the story, of coure. the imagination may run riot. The literary standards and accuracy of science, chemistry, histology and phyelcs laid down by the editors are rl7ld. Among the crack science fic tion writers la John Tftlne, who Is really Prof. Eric Bell, of California Institute of Technology. And there are many other famous scientists writing under p&eudonyms. The amaz ing younger generation Is steeped with scientific terms. I was conscious of this the other day when Ray Long! began to expand Interestingly on the j topic of electrons vibrating In co-' heslve harmony and the sm a lines of Uitle Nrga, the negative electron. He; is not a mental prodigy but Just the! average alert boy of today in the fourteen year-old bracket, t Twilight: After summer has knlt t ,t her stitches of color, no touch of Nature Is more enchanting than that fthagtcy haze of violet that sifts over Central Park at sundown. In all di rections the tall spires take on ft .ireathless gleam. Pierre's windows In the windless summer stillness flower Into yellow buttercups Hampshire House's stepping ,towers might be nit rbler stairs to paradise. Across the meadows lie shimmering pools of shadows like gentle pansles. open to tc sky. The Essex tower might be ar enormous tulip, trembling slight ly In a vagrant breeze Then of a atx'den the necklace of park lights burst Into sunburst glows. Southward the pink streak from the Broadway electric fires rainbows the Illusive tx-t of old. Joe cook brought to the radio a sc rumptious bit of remembering when presenting Connie Mack and Mrs John McOraw recently. MeGraw is ! t 1' Mack's idol and has been since NkOraw's star days on the Baltimore : orioles. McOraw won ten pennants i and Mack nine, his ambition betn to l equal the McOraw record. Almost jevtrybody knew McOraw was ft Jawy. bull dcy of a scrapper in action out : a warm and sentimental friend In mufti. I had never met anyone whoi ' had seen or talked to Mrs McOraw ! Her voice over the radio aiggetd a ' jirt spoken, cultured lady who knows j every anle of the game. She is a de voted friend of Mack's as was her ' husband, although long bitter rival i oi the diamond. i 1 Ted Woodyard, In driving through a West Virginia berg, pulled up at i ; the curb and asked a local about a 1 hotel up the street. "Is It American.' or European?" he inquired Amer-, -can," snapped back the questioner t "In fact the owner was born right 'icre in tin town" Copyright 197. McNaught Sundl cate, Inc ) j ' JSe. t v 11 '-j A TICK FOR TEXAS. Prof. Albert Einstein b shown at Prince ton, N. J., as he ticked off the telegraphic impulse to open officially the greater Texas and Pan-American Exposition at Dallas. Enough Autos For All In U.S. To Ride at Once WASHINGTON (UP) There are enough motor vehicles for everyone In the United states to take a rid at the same time, according to registra tion figures complied by. th U. 8. buteau ot public roads. Registration during 1938 reached an all-time high of 28,321.291, of which 24,197.685 were passenger ve hlolea and 4.023.608 trucks and trac to? trucks. These figures have been Increasing at approximately 150,000 a month thla year. The bureau said reglstrat'.on In 1938 Increased nearly 2 000.000 over 1935 and surpassed the former all time high of 1930 by 1,700.000 v hi'les. Total registrations are ex pected to reach the 30,000.000 mark some time next year. Some Idea of the number of auto mobiles and trucks can be gained by asrumlng that a highway wide enough to accommodate all could be built from New York to Los Angeles. It would take a 37-lane highway with an automobile for each 20 feet. Every state showed an Increase In registration over the prevloua year. the offices which house the interior department's housing activities that suggests that the roof Is coming down on somebody's ears. There are number of rather alee able housing projects built with PWA money In cities throughout the coun try. Perhaps 30 or 40. Many were organized under the sponsorship of ft local housing authority composed of leading citizens. The government. Instead of pay ing taxes on these huge communities, agreed to pay the clUes for "service." The little Jobs a city does for Its citizens. Including the work of a school teacher and garbage collector, have to be paid by somebody. Recently an official from Washing ton made a sweep of the country, cailed meetings of the authorities In the various cities, startled bankers, business men and other dignitaries who have lent their names to the projects, with the announcement that Uncle Sam would no longer con tribute his "service fee." The city emiM take It out In general social uplift. Violent repercussions are now being heard all along Mr. Ickes' air-cooled corridors. What will the cities do? One city has already "done." U has shut off the water. At the request of a researching student In the American university's school of public affairs here, the post office counted the government mall and averaged it for two typical days. The total received by all govern ment departments was 164,700 con gress was not In session. Washington's largest seating ca pacity 960 and one of Its mwt ef ficient restaurant, has achieved quietly a minor social revolution. It has abolished noise and also the eolor line. It Is the cafeteria of the nw de partment of the interior building. Kansas usually has more of both hogs and cattle than of human In habitants. . Closing time for Too Lste to Claa sifr Ads is 1 :30 p. m. fs Chan & Chan f U C hinese Medicine Co. j-'iSfr y Be relieved nt once by '. our nernai remmy. v o ii have: Vtlima. "CPy T Fever. Montarh -f Ito Trouble, Constipation. ( hronle rough, KheumstUm. $1 nu Trouble, Piles, ArthrltK Co litis. frtn-,a. ip?ndl HI, tilth Blood Prr,ire. Protate. Hart, Mver, H In (liter. Kldnv. Lungs, Blood. I rlnnry trouble. Mirh will tl.e von relief. 10 a.m. to 6 n m : Tiri-'dav - Thndav Il'i a or Closed 5un4sy, (Continueo uom page One.) A: - f ; '!; Registrations In 16 states Increased more than 10 per cent over 1935 fig ures. The average Increase for the entire United States was 7.6 per cent. Registration receipts smounted to 359.783.000. ' Trucks and tractor trucka composed less than 15 per cent of the registrations but account ed for nearly 24 per cent of the re ceipts. New York state led both In the number of vehicles, 2.459.542, and In receipts $46,291,000. California had almost as many vehicles. 2.327 984, bt.t recelpta were only 831.O87.000, .'ess than half those of New York. Pennsylvania, with 1.018.116 ve hlclea, was second tn receipts with 35.331,000. Ohio was fourth with retipts of 823.256.000 from 1,777.048 registrations and Michigan had an in come of 819,737,000 from 1.373.676 vehicles. Illinois followed closely with ra ce pts of $19,410,000 from 1.559.750 registrations. Texaa was the only oth er state with more than 1.000,000 mo tor vehicles deriving revenue of 817. 725.000 from 1.478,124 reglRtrat.ons. 5E TACOMA. June 23. (AP) Five men who have captured six Pacific northwest amateur golf champion ships In the last 19 years were pitted against 37 other ace par-snipers In the first 18-hole round of match play in the race for the 1937 title at the Tacoma Country and Golf club. They were Harry Glvan. the de fending champion. Scotty Campbell, who twice has been victorious, and Forest Watson and Dixie Fleager, all Seattle, and Rudie Wilhelm of Port land. Among the others who qualified for a crack at the crown were such fancy shot makers aa Jack Westland. Seattle and Don Moe. Portland, for mer Walker cup members; Stan Leon ard. Vancouver, B. C, recent winner of the Pacific northwest open, and Kenny Blark. Vancouver. B. C., for mer British Columbia amateur and open rhsmplon. TIME TO REWIRE Install those needed outlets now! OLSON ELECTRIC Phone 115. s s. Bortlett '5b mil BSBBBBBBBBBBBaaa(BWaSaaBBSl RIGHT Now IS THE TIME TO BUILD We're Ready to Serve You! THERg are score, of real bargains In Medford real estate now. A desirable lot for your home will he easr to find . . . economical to buy. Then you ran hullrt a new home out of your monthly rent rherks. We will prepare the finance schedule, help you ecure the loan loan especially adapted to your Individual Income requirements, provide vml estimates. QVA1.ITY lumber, dependable workmen fn do the Job right. If yon are rnnMderlnr a home of your onn. we'll iiartl; lake the detnll, off your shoulders. Woods i .! oacKson at L n i. er r? pups : 3&et1 r Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from th file of the Mall Tribune 10 and to tear so. TEN YEAR AOO TODAY June 23, 1837. Three DeAutremont brother a Hugh. Ray and Boy confess Siskiyou tunnel ettempted train robbery and quadruple murders. In dramatlo end ing to moat sensstlonal crime In his tory of northwest. Hugh found guilty and sentenced to life. The twin sgree to plead guilty If given sain sentence, to which the district attor ney agrees. Each takes th blam for murder of one man. Summer run of fish start In ftogu river. SalTatlon Army budget drlv to start July 5. Tourist travel through elty gains. Letter to editor declares Hugh De Autremont la Innocent. Missive print ed In same Issue as confessions of the trio. TWENTY- Y'EARS AOO TODAY June 23, 1917. (It wss Baturdsy.) Mrs. Pred Pick of Jacksonville hat returned from Portland where ahe at tended a grand lodge session of th O.EB. Mr. and Mrs. Orris Crswford leav to spend week In Portland. Plre on Suncrest orchard destroys farm Implements. Red 6ross fund drive to exceed $10,000 quota for this city. - British tighten grip on Lens by night rsld: French repulse Germsns In Teton Hill battle. Closing time for Too Lata to Qla. slfy Ads Is 1:80 p. m. Use Mall Tribune want ads. if Tne straight whiskies In this product are one year or more old; 20 straight whiskey 1 year old; A". straight whiskey 6 years old; 75 neutral spirits distilled from grain. 00 proof. Lumber Co. Genesee. Phone 108 v l sr ae3sr vi " ' ---h- V sa. l