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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1937)
NTOFOTCD MATL TRIBUNE. ArRDFORD. OREGON-. THFRSDAT. JUNE 24. 1037. PAGE THREE BONNEVILLE DAM BILL PRAISED BY GOVERNOR adding that excesaive preclpltatian has also reduced the last of the California crop. Eastern auction prices have fluc tuated In a range that neta 9 to 13 cents a pound to ttie growers, the company stated. ,1 to two-way traffic around a slide It mllei north of Gold Beach, the high, way commission said. - - Use Mall Tribune want ads. AS JUDGE SELECTION TO PUT OUT FIRE E (Continued from Page One.) chine on Ma; IS, 1883, the Jackson ville department, organized In 1867. having decided that the best was none too good. The pumper was manufactured In Senaca Palls. New York. It was ship ped on the Queen of the Pacific which made the long and perilous voyage around the Horn at the southern tip of South America. Ship Wrecked. The ship weathered the treacherous seas around the Horn, but perversely enough, was wrecked In the usually calm waters off the mouth of the Columbia river. It cost 221 to sal vage the pumper, its original cost having been 8800. records show. From the north the pumper was snipped by freight. It was delivered in Jacksonville In September of 1883 and Immediately put into ser vice. At the first fire no screens were used and the pumper was made practically useless when a large atone waa sucked Into the hose line. Quite a hectic time was experienced until the rock was removed. Chief Wilson said. To Take Movies. The old hand-pumper was utilized until 1929 when It was relegated to the department's museum to make room for more modern equipment. It Is now valued highly as a relic of the past. When it goes Into action tomor row the pumper will return to it former glory. A Universal news reel camera man will be here from Port land to record it on films that will biTs&WRat theaters throughout the United States. 'l-f Cxi? X 1 ,1." ii ft at avt 1 m n d m n iv c k - itcrv.cn. tsennops were striking and Dankers were meeting in Minneanoli the result: Bankers A. E. Romerhauser, John Laplace, Jr., and William Keck, Jr., of New Orleans carrvinr in eir own ic Be Correctly "Corseted In AN -ARTIST MODi!L by Ethel wyn B. Hoffmann. Bathing Beauty Is Also Top Scholar PORTLAND. Juno 24. (AP) Se lected as the year's best graduated senior among Oregon high schools. Cora Belle Abbott, 18, of Seaside, won the Aaron M. Prank scholarship providing four years of study at Ore gon State college. Directors of - the scholarship foun dation said the selection was made from a field of 15 outstanding stu dents "not without difficulty." Miss Abbott, who has frequently posed as a bathing beauty for pic tures publicizing Oregon beaches, ad mitted that she had never learned to swim. Declare Dividend PORTLAND, June 24 . ( AP ) A quarterly dividend of 20 cents was declared by the St. Helens Pulp and Papir company, payable July 1. Crickets Destroy Deadly Wood Tick BOISE, Idaho, June 24. (AP) The answer to the problem of the deadly wood tick may He In hungTy "Mormon" crlcketa. A. L. Moats, chief clerk of the U. S- forest service here said a for est service field man reported hts district to be free of the ticks, car riers of the dreaded Rocky Moun tain fever, since Che Invasion of fields by the crickets. "He said crickets had devoured all the ticks," Moats explained. $115,665 Estate Tax PORTLAND, June 24. (AP) Clr cut Judge George Tazwell fixed at $115,665.35 'the amount of the in heritance tax on the estate of the late Caroline Kamm. Net valuation of the estate was placed at 11,648. 206.01 Mrs. Kamm. who died An- ADRIENNE'S End of, the Month e A t r Vacation Suggestions KNIT SUITS Select a nice two or three piece Knit Suit at ONE-HALF PRICE' $12.95 Values for $6.50 COLORS $14.95 Values for $7.50 White, Rose, Aqua, $19.95 Values for '. 810.00 "" veiiow. r m (Ire.v. BelRe and fancy $25.00 Values for $13.50 mixtures. 81m IS to $29.95 Values for 815.00 44 Avar - jsfc. gust 7, 1032, was the widow o; Ci,- tain Jacob Kamm pioneer river it r am boat operator. ASTORIA, June 34 (AP) The Bonneville dam bill, as prepared by. the house committee in Washington, la just the way the matter should be handled for the best interests of Oregon. Governor Charles Martin said at a Young. Democratic club dinner here last night. The governor expressed deep re sentment at asserted accusations by labor and grange leaders that he favored the "power trust" In advo cating a low switchboard rate lor power from the project, and assailed "crackpot politicians who would ruin the Bsnneville project for a few farmer votes." Cherry Shipping Starts Tomorrow Receiving of cherries will be start ed here tomorrow by American Frr.it Growers. Inc., it was announced to day. Royal Amies will be received at the company's South Fir street warehouse and Blngs at the Med lord Ice and Cold Storage company. Heavy rains have materially re duced the cherry crop in the Wf-n-tchee. Yakima, The Dalles and Hood rt -trir. the company said. Physical Check-up Advised For Health PORTLAND. June 34. (AP) T.ie state board of health said In Its weekly bulletin that deaths from tu berculosis, typhoid and diphtheria during the laat five years were lowest in the history of the board. Increases were noted, however, in death j from heart conditions, can cer, nephritis and apoplexy. The board stressed the importance of annual physical check-ups by persons of middle age or older. TOWNSEND CLUB NO. 1 MEETS FRIDAY NIGHT By L. F. Iiler Townsend club No. 1 will meet Friday nlpht at K. P. Hall, corner Grape and Fifth streets. Thla la our regular meeting nlht and there will be matters of Interest to alt mem bers. This is the night for nomina tion of officers for the next stx months. There will also be a report of the district convention held In Rosebutg last sundry. Refreshments will be PORTLAND. June 34. (AP) A special dispatch to the Oregonlan from Washington said today the se lection of a federal Judge for Ore gon was again In the hands of the department of justice, the name of Claud McColloch, previously sent to the White House, having been with drawn at the request of Attorney General Cummlngs, The dispatch said that Dr. C. J. Smith, former Democratic national committeeman from Oregon, was In the national capital working for the appointment of Judge Hall Lusk. and that labor representatives still supported Henry Hess of La Grande, despite having been advised that Hess had been eliminated. Two Hurt In CraMi ONTARIO. June 34. (AP) Mr. and Mrs. Albert L, Barnes, Oregun City, suffered broken ribs, shock ?nd Internal Injuries when the automo bile driven by their daughtr-ln-law, Mrs. Terry Barnes, Dun away, over turned twice on the Oregon Trail four miles from Huntington. Cast Highway Repaired SALEM, June 34. ( AP) The Ore gon roast hlehway was open today 'CATt FLAVOR v Schilling WIST ADl TO tceHOMniHjemtiiT KIN OF THIM ill ounci . uuoh . uut -amir muwiutr.Gun.nor m I BOTTLE MAKES 21 GLASSES Toy mi it im m minut9 All Coats 12 Price Swagger Suits Tailored Suits $16.95 Values now $8.50 $19.95 Values now. . . . .... .$10.00 $22.50 Values now. . $11.25 $25.00 Values now. .: $12.50 $29.95 Values now. $15.00 One Group of DRESSES In prints, sheen and plain colors; also navy and black Values to $16.95. NOW $7.95 or two dresses for 2 for $10 Bring friend and get jour dresa for only $5.00 DRESSES for afternoon and street near. Values to $25.00. Now 810.05 ONE CJROl'P Evening Dresses Price Cotton Formals $395 AH Congo Tailored Suits in white and pastel colon. Regular $19.95 value, now Now U095 Hats In Spring Models now . . . $1.00 Other Hats, values to $8.95, now $2,95 SLIPS in satin lustura, tea rose and white. Size: 32 to 44. Reg $195 values. 4 JC Pridaw airl Ratiirrlaw soecial ' SPECIAL ONE GROUP OF Coats . . . $5.00 Beautiful coats in white and pastel colors specially priced , NO CHARGES NO APPROVALS NO REFUNDS 1 ADRIENNE'S AMERICAN AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION CONTEST BOARD, WASHINGTON, I. C Cbiiifcu. "STANDARD GASOLINE IS UNSURPASSED" Here, in 44 words, is the 1937 report of this nationally recognized automotive authority the yardstick of gasoline performance. You can't do better than follow the findings of the A.A.A. Contest Board: ' "Results of extensive tests conducted by the Contest Board of the American Automobile Association on the nine Non-Premium Gasolines leading in sales volume in the Pacific Coast area substantiate the state ment of the Standard Oil Company of California that Standard Gasoline Is Unsurpassed." AMERICAN AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION CONTEST BOARD, WASHINGTON, D.C The proofs in every gallon try a tankful! STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA