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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1937)
PAGE TWO BEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. BEDFORD, OREGON. THURSDAY JULY 22. 1937. SOCIETY and CLUBS By Janet Wray Smith Vernon Vawten Yftcfttlon Here Of much Interest to their many friend In the valley la the vacation uy here of Mr. and Mra. Vernon Vawtcr of Santa Barbara. Calif, for mer prominent Medford reeldenU. Mr. and Mr. Vawtcr arrived last we -end with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Aeward of Santa Barbara. The four are vacationing at Diamond lake lake where they plan a several days' atay. They were accompanied north by young Billy Vawter, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Vawter of this city who baa been a guest In Banta Barbara for the past two months. The visitors will be In Medford for a short time after their stay at the lrka and will be greeted by many friends here. They will be guests of Mr. Vawter's brother and slstoMn law, Mr. and Mrs. William Vawter and other relatives and friends. Plcnlci Planned Friday Evening Ideal summer weather continues to give opportunity for outdoor enter ' talnlng In place of more, formal af fairs featuring winter months. All groups, organizations and private, find picnics and other outdoor par ties the most pleasant method of entertaining during the vacation period. Among groups planning picnics Is the Electa club, members of which will gather at the Llthia park n Aahland tomorrow evening. Picnic dinner la scheduled for 6:30 o'clock Those attending are to bring a covered-dish. Transportation arrangements may be made by calling 678 -L. Visitor Bemalns . Until Week-End Planning to remain In the city untu Sunday la Mrs. Marguerite Brown of Eureka, Cat., who Is the house guest of relatives and friends In the valley. She has been entertained at the homes of her sisters, Mrs. W. P. Shef field of Medford and Mrs. Prank Stephenson of -Central Point and of her niece, Mrs. Harold Elliott of Me 4-, ford. i Mrs. Brown will return to her home Sunday. i Autumn Forecasts Attract Attention Incredible as It may seem on a hot, mid-summer day, Paris coutourlers and fash ton -designers here are al ready looking forward to autumn highlights and have announced a few premlllnary signs Indicating prob able fall style trends. The most talked -of lnfluenoa Is the mode of the nineteen hundreds with It rolled -brim, profile -revealing hata and narrow. Jacketed costumes. Ev ery style scout baa his eyes focused on It. Designers talk of a coming season of rich embroideries, apllque, spark ling beaded and rococo effects, tend ing to lend richness and glamor to the mode. Black and brown are expected to be Important. There la also a feeling for color, with greens and grays m the picture. Drapery and shirred effects are much discussed. There are docens of new fall dresses with one or the oth er used In both bodices and sleeves, creating a new 1988 look. Afternoon dresses are expected to be decidedly Important and smart versions of It In black satin or Jersey are already being seen In Fifth avenue shops. An other fashion which Is said to be scheduled for a run next season Is the Jacketed frock for both morning. afternoon and dinner wear. flruhns Vacation 'At Summer Resort Among Medford residents vacation ing out of town are Capt. and Mrs. E. w. oruhn, who, with their two children, left yesterday for Lake o' the Woods. The Gruhns plan a ten-day stay at the lake, enjoying fishing and swim ming and other outdoor recre'Um. 4 , T F VOTE BY SENATE SENDS MEASURE TO COMMITTEE (Continued from Pag On.) Ontario Visitor ... Expected. Todajr: Expected to arrive here today was Mlaa Margaret . Dunn of Toronto, Ontario, who' 1, stopping here en rout north from a vacation In Cali fornia. ' Miss Dunn will be the house guest of Mra. Clara Toung at her home here during her tay. - Month's Travel . 1 ' Started Sunday ; Mlas Lulu Metrger of Jacksonville la among valley resident planning summer vacations away from home. She left- Sunday morning on a month's visit to Idaho, Colorado and Nebraska, where she will be the guest of relative and friends In various eltle. She will return in mid-August with a stopover of several days In San Francisco. Reception Honors ) Advisor Tonight A reception for Mra. J. D, Rlckert la planned to follow this evening's meeting of the Theta Rho club at the club hall at a o'clock. The reception will welcome Mrs. Rlckert, advisor of the club, who has just returned from an extended stay In the east. All members are partic ularly urged to be present. Five young men from this vicinity were enrolled yesterday In the civil ian conservation oorpa and assigned to Camp South Umpqua Falls. They are Ned J, DeVrlea, Trail; Darrell VY. Rolls, Applegate: Lavonne D, Newstrom, Lake Creek; dale T. Graham, Medford; and Ray M. Bru ton, Eagle Point. South Umpqua Pnlla Is commanded by Capt. John R. Murray. About 90 vacanole under Jackson county's quota are still unfilled and young men between the age of 17 and 93 are eligible under the new requirements. They must be unmar ried, unemployed and In need of employment. CCO Jieadquarters emphasized that requirements for enrollment have been materially modified. It was pointed out, for example, that the families of applicant need no longer be on relief. Period for enrolling her ha been extended to July 81. Applications may be filed at CCO headquarters, Sixth and Front streets, or with the county relief committee In city hall. Cruiser still Aground. WASHINOTON, July 99. (yP) The light orulser Omaha I still aground off Castle Island light, Crooked Isl and, In the Bahamas, despite efforts of seven ahlpa to refloat her. Navy oflclal said today two additional vessels were en route to the scene to aid the Omaha, which went aground Monday while en route to the Char- lestron navy yard. fought with their back to the wall to aav remnant of the compromise bill. The proponents, however, bad con ceded for some time that the foes had enough vote to sidetrack the bill and virtually could dlcatate the kind of leglltlon they could pass. Senator Bailey (D N. C.) describ ed the altuatlon from the opposi tion's standpoint and said: "The battle for the independence of the Judiciary ha been fought and won. We are attending now to de tell." Senator Plttman (D.. Nev.), one of the bur strongest advocates, com mented: "It's up to them; they've got the vote." To Draw New BUI Senator O'Mahoney (D., Wyo.) a leading opponent of the original oourt bill, announced the committee and administration chieftains had agreed on an eight-point program of "Judi cial reform." Within ten days the program will be hammered Into legislation which will take the place of the president's bill. The new measure will be attached i a "rider" to a house bill calling for minor Judiciary reforms, which already 1 before the committee. This would lessen the possibility of revision In the house. The eight-point program, as out lined by O'Mahoney, would provide: 1. no change In the supreme oourt. 9. No proctor to assign extra Judges to relieve congestion In lower court. 8. No "roving Judges." who could be assigned wherever the proctor wished. 4. Direct appeal to the supreme court from lower federal courts, when matters of constitutionality ore In volved. 1 . Intervention by the attorney general In any lower court caw In volving a constitutional queatlon. 6. Reassignment of lower court Judges wherever they may be needed by the senior circuit Judge of each circuit. 7. Appointment of new Judges on a basis of need, not of age. 8. Requirements that questions of constitutionality arising in lower courts can bo settled only by a three Judge tribunal, Including one circuit Judge, E GRAVE CRISIS IN (Continued from Page One.) Including a number of mob murders; 7. Lowering of tariffs on Japanese goods: 6. Recognition by China of Man choukuo, the state Japan created out of former Chinese provinces In Man churia. iMUes Unsolved. A dispatch to the newspaper Asahl from Nanking says that despite the Pelplng agreement the larger Issues Between Japan and China remain unsolved. A dispatch direct from the Pelplng correspondent of Nlchi-Nichl declares that the terms of the agreement IF YOU HEED HEITJ TIRES FOB YOUR VACATION WHY waste time shopping for bargain tires when Gopdyears the world's first choice cost least per mile and givcyou these top-rank features at all prices: quick-stopping center traction grip the Goodyear Margin of Safety wider, slower -wearing treads patented Supcrtwist Cord in every ply more mileage and safety! look tar this sign THI CHMKST THING ON YOUR CAR IS THE BfST TIRES YOU CAN BUY I The mttragt maintenance costs ob tained from the records of fleet fawn ers operating hundreds of cars on Goodyear tires show that a full set of Goodyears costs only ont-fiftb as much per mile as gasoline tnt-fourtb as much as insurance, licenses and depre ciation ent-lbirj as much as garage and repairs one-balf as much as lubri cation, washing and miscellaneous. Nation-wide records prove Goodyears cost least under any conditions. whim tn iiiv vrir7-sr m a .W - - ' a llMI I IS I IP IB! M N. coooytu KA CV ft, 1 PHONE 14 MEDFORD SERVICE STATION MAIN AND PAC1TI0 HIGHWAY ASHLAND CLAYCOMB MOTOR CO. 6AGLB POINT EAOU POINT HARDWARE. JAfKSONVILI.lt JACKSONVILLE SKKV were by no mean being fully car ried out, a some of th Chinese troop still bold their positions In the so-called evacuated area. With the Japanese and Chinas troops facing each other and ready to attack on trie slightest provoca tion, on fact atand out so clearly In the present atruggle between Japan and China that It can not be ob cured. This Is that the fundamental Issue 1 that of the future relations between.tn. two countries. Are they to live together In the fsr east at peace and on terms of equality or I China to trail behind while Japan controla and direct the destiny of this part of the worm 7 when Manchuria was cut away from China proper and mad into an empire closely allied to Japan In a political, military and economic way, the Tokyo government and the war office felt the northern part of China ahould be made Into a special rone under Chinese sovereignty, but aiso under Japanese influence. War stage Set. Tokyo felt this to be necessary from the atandpolnt of economic ana military preparednea against at tack from Soviet Russia and during the latter half of 1938 this goal we accomplished. The Tokyo government Insist that the present trouble be settled be tween the Japanese north China garrisons and the Hopeh-Chahar po litical council alone. The Nanking government Insist that thl crisis and the deeper Issues involved be dealt with between the governments of China and Japan themselves. The stage la all Set for a major war to determine whether China la to be mistress In her own house, particularly in northernmost rooms, now let out to Japanese tenant. War may not come at all. However, with the stage set for war, there la the ever-present danger that hostilities may break out, whether war 1 wanted or not. ELLEN COPPOCK OF GOLD HILL PASSES Ellen Kendrlcka Coppock, a real dent of cold hill tor the past 37 years, died In her home Wednesday afternoon at the age of 70 years. She Is survived by her husband. Charles, a son, Elmer Coppock of Gold Hill, two brothers and two sis ters, Elmer Coppock, Etta Hampton and Effle Ralney of Greenville, III., and Harvey Coppock of Oold Hill. Funeral services will be held at the Odd Fellow hall In Oold Hill, Saturday at 3 p. m. The Rev. D. B Millard will have charge of services. Interment will be made In the Oold Hill cemetery. Conger funeral par lors are In charge of arrangement. LOS ANGELES, July 33. (fl) Henry Morgenthau, Jr., secretary of the treasury, arrived here today with his family, en route to the Hawaiian Islands for a vacation. They will sail Saturday. Plays Olivia & WIFE AND CHILD OF CLIFTON SIGN FULL REPUDIATION (Continued from Page One.) Dorothy Prultt, above, of Medford. 1 a busy person these days. Besides studying for her role of "Olivia" In "Twelfth Night,", she Is serving on th membership drive committee of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival as sociation, sponsoring Ashland's an nual Shakespeare productions August i to 7, SKY SHOW HERE, VIEWED AS BEST, RECORDS PROFIT Sufficient revenue was derived from the aircraft exposition and sky show held here July 3 to pay all expenses and leave a comfortable profit. It waa brought out last night at a meet ing of the board of director of Med ford chapter of the National Aero nautic association In the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce. The chapter sponsored the Medford pro gram of the aerial tour that visited ten Oregon cities. Last night's meeting was held to wind up tho accounts pertaining to the show. Thl morning. It was an nounced by Max Felrce, president, all bills were paid and all underwriter wer. reimbursed. The profit remain ing will be utilized by the chapter for aviation development here, he said. The Medford show, Mr. Pelrce told1 the meeting, was undoubtedly the best In the state. It was also prob ably the moat profitable, he axlded, with the possible exception of Port land which had a much larger popu lation to draw upon tor patronage. Mr. Felrce accompanied the tour around Oregon as president of the Oregon Aviation Development Com mittee, Inc., tour manager. The accounts have not been com pletely closed as there are still re turns to be made for the sale of tick eta, the meeting wti told. First Intimation of the falsity of th accusations waa revealed last Saturday whan Mra. Clifton appeared at th district attorney' office In a hysterical condition and declared: "I have don a terrible wrong. I want to right It." Mrs. Clifton then admitted, "there was no truth In the charge," and insisted on retractions by self and child. The original statement of the child and mother corresponded In detail, and were convincing and straight forward, the district Attorney said. Th girl' (tatament related a series of alleged unfatherly act In thl city and on a farm near Orant Pass, cov ering a three year period. The moth er' statement recounted circum stance and suspicions, and hr per sonal observations. "Owing to the enormity of the charges, I Impressed upon th child their seriousness." District Attorney Newman said, "but ah clung stead fastly to her story, and Insisted upon their truthfulness. Though tan ysara old. she ha the mentality of a 15-year-old child." Mra. Clifton In her tint claim, averred aha waa reluctant to believe her daughter, but watched and was convinced. She then declared she talked condition over with her hus band, and tried to Induce him to go to a hospital, which he refused. She further alleged Clifton threatened twice to commit suicide, once by a leap oft a bridge, and later by shoot ing himself, but she "told him that was a coward's way", and prevented blm. Clifton made denial. After several months. Mrs. Clifton declared, she decided to confer with the district attorney, "to straighten everything out", with the result a charge was filed July 13. Cllfon from the start of the affair stoutly maintained his innocence. In a conference last night he waa told of the repudiation and Informed the dlscrlct attorney, "my wife has al waya been extremely Jealous, and I have gone out of my way, to account for my every move." Clifton beara an excellent reputa tion among friend and his employers. HORSE DISEASE SEEN Dr. G. A. Oltzen, county veterinar ian, today warned all horse ownera to take careful precaution to pre vent their animal from contacting encephalomyelitis, or California horse sickness. Dr. Oltzen stated that several case had been reported recently. He ex plained the disease a affecting horse In about the same manner as Infantile paralysis affect humans. Fuller Paints Will Be Shown tn Trailer Treve Jones, special sales agent and merchandising representative for W. P. Fuller tt Co., Is visiting Lam port's hardware and sporting goods store (the local dealer) this week bringing with him a new trailer which ha displays of the many Ful ler paint and related products. The trailer Is something entirely new In the merchandising of paint products. In the trailer has been rranged some of the principal Fuller pro duct. The great advantage being that of bringing to the dealer and his prospeete a display of Items which could not be carried by the regular Fuller salesman, according to Mr. Jones. In the Fuller trailer, one of the standard displays ha been reproduc ed on a smaller scale, aa well as four miniature Carrara structural glass store fronts. Mr. Jones says th Car rara glass store front are the moat popular of all types of tore front materials today because of the as sortment of bright and permanent colors, the elimination of frequent reflnlsblng and the ease of keeping neat and clean. In addition to Uiese the trailer contains spray guns, wall paper and kalsomlne remover, mir ror, wail paper, wall papering tools, paint brushes, veneer plywood pan els, the new Stlentlto windows and miscellaneous other Items. . SACRAMENTO, July 33. (AP) Churning cream butterfat: First grade 38: second grade 35. "C.TE FIAVO. Schilling pure4nima Xm,h-m Omnium ftocbiu 'J'RAVEL by train, for safety, speed and comfort...to Canadian Pacific to points In EasternUnitedStates and Canada. ..of no extra cost! Daylight through the world-famous Canadian Rockies... stop-overs where you wish. SUMMER EXCURSION FARES " MAY 15th TO OCTOBER 15th Final return limit on 1st Class tickets October 31; Intermediate and Coach Class, six months from date of Issue. AIR-CONDITIONED Sleeping, Dining and Solarium Lounge can on trans-continental traln...dally from Vancouver, B. C Tickets and reservation at our local offices, ik.i , v 1 I 111 I1' v. I1 f WVlslfls JL ) W.H.DUCOK.C-olW Afiat jf "fi'V A WVjW I JK Sw ra'iD.,JS.W.fcosrf.ta- VPsX, 1 -if S '' 7n 'I' C4sfrtd rmtlflt Trtrillers Chtautx CotW tU World Om lip? LADIES' SILK HOSIERY FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY tS dot. regular $1.15 value. aU the newest and mot popular shade. All lite. 69c pr. At thl low prlc wc limit 3 pain tn HERE ARE A FEW OUTSTANDING nn BE iEBRTMEIMTSToRB CHARLES S. ADAIR, MANAGER SPECIALS! BUY NOW for every member of the family Shoes, Ready.to-Wear, Dry Goods and Clothing. Silk and Cotton Blouses Entire stock is divided into three groups for quick clean-up. Lot No. 1. Choice 69 Lot No. 2. Choice 9S Lot No. 3. Choice ?1.95 LADIES' SKIRTS Every skirt has been greatly reduced for the Removal Sale. See the special CI flfl values at only 5 I sjUU LADIES' SWEATERS White and pastel shades. ff Week end special 4 I aUU LADIES' DRESSES PRICE mi SALE MEN'S OXFORDS Men's Blsrk or Brown Oifords. Valur to $3.9. REMOVAL SALE $2.49 Buy Now for School BOYS' OXFORDS Brown or Blara Oxfords, leather or cord soles. Regular S3.4J values REMOVAL SALE $2.29 M s ii A 11 ,.,. V, All our better dresses dur ing the big Removal Sale LADIES' Swim Suits Choir of anr suit In the house y OFF CORSETS and CORSELETTES Broken sizes, former $3.45 values. Removal sale $2.45 AT ALL AUTHORIZED 8HELL DIALERS