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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1937)
SECTION SECOND 4 PAGES SECOND SECTION 4 PAGES Tribune DFORD Full Associated Press Full United Press Thirty-Second Year MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1937. No. 118. ME TO HELP MENTAL CASES BUFFALO. N. T. (UP) A new f , treatment (or .cblzophrenle,, or de mentia praecox. one of the most common and serious of mental dis eases, bas been announced by tbe Buffalo City hospital. The treatment, introduced In this country by the Buffalo Institution, consists of Injection Into the blood stream of large doses of a specially prepared camphor solution. Treatments under the new method were started here a year ego and hospital officials reported Improve ments In 80 percent of the cases. Based on little known research of Dr. L. V. Med una. superintendent of the Royal State hospital In Buda pest. Hungary, the therapy here haa been carried on by Dr. Emorlck Friedman, Interning psychiatrist at tha hospital, under the direction of Dr. Samuel w. Hart well, chief at tending psychiatrist. Hartwell said 40 patlenta have been treated In the Institution and that tbe success shown by the meth od was "well-nigh revolutionary," because until the last few years "no form of drug seemed to have any 4f effect In dementia praecox cases." He aald the camphor method was regarded as more successful, less dangerous and more economical than the insulin method which has been used recently In the treatment of the disease. Thirty-two of the 40 patients treated unproved so "remarkably" that they were sent home. Dr. Hart well revealed. He explained that administration of the camphor preparation brings CHEVROLET ADVANCE SATURDAY AUGUST 7th - READ THIS TELEGRAM! DOMESTIC OAVLerra NWKT MOUM NwNTUrm ROGUE RIVER CHEVROLET, BUY BEFORE MIDNIGHT SATURDAY At Present DONT DELAY! 3UY While Present Low Prices Are In OFFICE AND SALESROOM SPARTA BLD0. 1 8-Year Old Dog Thrives On Ice Cream and Candy CINCINNATI. O. (jp)-Patrick Henry, it teems, caros not for death, but la concerned only with liberty and ice cream. Patrick Henry is only a German shepherd, but at 18. saya Harry Lahke. bis druggist owner. Is "Just about the best hold-up Insurance I've got." Pat wears 10 annual license tags on bis shoulder harness. Others, Lahke explains, have been lost. Reg istration papers "that long" with Lahke extending his arms as If tell ing a fish yarn further attest to the dog's antiquity. Besides possessing a child -like fond about a profound irritation and stimulation to tbe central nervous system end gradually causes the pa tient to emerge from bis imaginary sphere. Honolulu Children Welcome Shirley HONOLULU. Aug. (AP) Thou sands of children and grownups of all racial strains lined downtown streets here Thursday to shout Aloha to Shirley Temple on arrival of the child actress from Hollywood. She mado a triumphant ride In an open car from dock to hotel, children pelted the automobile with lels and bouquets. Bouncing Baby Boy BAN DIEGO. Cal. (AP) Playing on a second story porch at his borne, Wayne Buce. 17 months, fell over tbe side and landed on a concrete pave ment 17 feet below. Doctors could find neither a scratch nor .a bruise on Wayne. tfriw thlJoUowing rm-iiagt, tubject te the Urrru MEDFORD, OREGON ATTENTION: C, M. HURD EFFECTIVE MONDAY AUGUST 9TH, THERE WILL BE A SUBSTANTIAL RAISE IN ALL MODELS - THIS MEANS TRUCKS, PICKUPS AND ALL PASSENGER CARS STOP YOU CAN SELL ALL CARS IN STOCK AT OLD PRICES UNTIL CLOSE OF BUSINESS SATURDAY, AUGUST 7TH STOP WILL CONFIRM AMOUNT OF RAISE ON ALL MODELS, CHEVROLET MOTOR DIVISION, ROGUE RIVER CHEVROLET ness for Ice cream and candy, the dog is almost humsn, Lahke boasts, in bis fastidious "demand'1 for cleanli ness. "H has to have his face washed every morning and dried with a clean towel," the owner says. As regularly as I go to tbe bath room to shave, In comes Pat, to be washed. He'll elt and watch until the last bit of lather scrapes off. Then it's his turn. If I get a used towel noth ing doing. If I start out without dry ing bis face, I feel a tug at my wrist, and I've got to go back and finish the Job.- Hll BY WHEELER WASHINGTON, Aug. 8. (API Senator Wheeler D.. Mont.) denounc ed the democratic national commit tee todAy for soliciting campaign contributions from Robert R, Young, New York railway magnate. Wheeler, chairman of the senate railroad Investigating committee, said the solicitation was t. "deplorable practice," and added: "It might give the Impression that people had to give money In order to get proper treatment, or that they might get some kind of favors." Young testified yesterday he bought $15,000 worth of democratic national convention books early this spring, but that the solicitors had "positively never discussed" his dealings with federal agencies. Midnight! IIIQHilMIEElI" TOiicr on back bmnoj. wAicA v Aery ugntd k NOW! Effect SERVICE DEPT. 32 NORTH RIVERSIDE MORALE RESTORED IN PHONE SYSTEM OF LITTLE TIRANA WASHINGTON (UP) Th com mere department has brought re assuring word of the temporarily critical telephone situation In Ti rana, capital of Albania. Tirana's phone system. 800 psid up subscribers, baa weathered the first major crisis in Its history, the department divulged, and has re turned to its status ss the most efficient telephone exchange for its size in the world. Tirana not only has the smallest telephone exchange in Europe, but a unique one. Its subscribers nave no directories because they have no telephone numbers. And so. It fol lows, wrong numbers are rare. The three operators know the subscribers all 300 of them and members of their households by their voices. And they know them all by name. For years, the commerce depart ment Indicated, this system operated without bltcH. Not even a single case of mistaken Identity was report ed until tbe Italian foreign minis ter, accompanied by a group of for eign Journalists, visited Tirana. With them came tbe big crisis In the lite of the Tirana exchange. The operators could nt recognise the voices of the- visitors. The switch board bogged down under an unpre cedented ly heavy load of interna tional calls. Under the strain and stress of this new situation, the op erators committed the gravest of In fractions. They began mistaking the voices of regular subscribers. Sub scriber All Yusself received the shock of his life when he was rec ognized as Subscriber Mukhta Ben. It wss several days after the of PRICES AUGUST 5TK, LOW PRICES! We Have The Largest Stock Now That We Have Had In Six Months! Three Carloads Just Unloaded! USED CAR LOT 234 N. RIVERSIDE, FOOT OF 4TH 8T. ficial party's departure before the Tirana exchange resumed its tradi tional efficiency. The operators were days . behind on their subscribers' personal affair and bad to get caught up. This, the commerce de partment explained, Is a vital feat ure of the service. For example, operators must be able to Inform a caller that a cer tain subscriber had left tbe city to visit a country cousin, or that an other couldn't answer tha phone be cause he was busy milking Daisy. SPED LAW REVISION SEEN NEED IN OREGON SALEM, Aug. 6. (AP) Recom mendations of speed law revisions and rigid law ...force merit to curb "the alarming Increase In fiUal motor ve hicle accidents" came today from R. H. Baldock, state highway engineer. He pleaded to the public to sup port police In enforcing laws, assert ing that the major portion of the accidents Is caused by the reckless, the careless and drunken, "The Oregon basic speed law la vary hard to define nebulous In charac ter and it is extremely difficult to secure convictions for infractions," he said. "It would seem that this law should be clarified and definite speed limits determined, the exceeding of which would be evidenoe of guilt.' Tnhpr Opposes WASHINGTON, Aug. fl. (AP) Louis J. Taber. master of the nation al grange, expressed opposition today to legislation which he said might result in transfer of land-use activi ties from the agriculture to the In terior department. He testified at senate committee hearings on be Robinson reorganization bill, which would give the president broad power to consolidate governmental agen cies. 1937, 50 WILL BE MADE BY KEW YORK, Aug. 8, (AP) 6ome time after 1050 a man now dead will create approximately 50 millionaires. He la William Rockefeller, brother of the late John D., who died In 1932 and left the principal of a $50,000,000 estate to be distributed among his great -grand child re n- The estate, growing In capital value at a mllllon-a-yar clip. Is now esti mated by Surrogate James A. Foley at $93,713,889. In addition, since 1933. the estate has paid $9,514,834 in Interest to William Rockefeller's four children only on of whom survives and 14 grandchildren. . The brother or America's oil king before his death decreed that his es tate should be kept Intact for divis ion among his great-grandchildren. His children and his grandchildren. meanwhile, were to enjoy the Interest. To carry out hla plan the estate. administered by trustees, was divided Whole Wheat or " Plain Fig Bars lb. lie JOSEPHINE Standard LIBBY'S ' . . Tomatoes 2 v2 2 for 19c Corn Beef 12 oz. can 21c Sugar 25 ib. sack $1,49 bornNaKes afor 15C STOKELY'B VICTORY I D0GF00D 2for 14c FRUITS Tr 15c KERR'S REGULAR VAN CAMP'S i JAR LIDS doz. 10c Pork&Beans 2v;r 11c LESLIE ' VAL-VITA I SALT rullpk' 15c Spinach Ho. 2 can 14c ARE READY TO SERVE YOU! MEDFORD W olden Bros. H. W. Davisson J. G. Cameron Crater Lake Highway Summit Grocery The Service Grocery Dark's Grocery Midway Cash Store Pruites Store C. W. Shores J. W. Cook ASHLAND East Side Grocery West Side Grocery Into four equal parts a fourth for the descendant of each child. The amount each great-grandchild will get thus depends upon the total num ber of grandchildren born In which ever of the four branches to which he belongs. Today there are 28 great-grandchildren of William Rockefeller, only two of them over 14 years of age. Birth record of the family Indicate there probably will be 00. Bach great grandchild will receive hla portion when his parents die. RAMPAGING AUTO ROSEBURO. Ore.. AUff. 8. (AP) Crashing through the side of the J. T. Sullivan home at Drain and Into the kitchen, a rampageous automo bile hurled the Sullivan baby boy from his high-chair against the cook stove, bruising htm badly, and smashing furniture according to a report to the sheriff's office. The automobile, bearing a Wash ington state license, was oocupled by two women and a boy, and one of the former, Daisy Trout, waa reported to have been at the wheel. None of the trio waa Injured. FOODS AT F..A. Low Prices Trade with these 7.B.A. food merchants who offer you the choice of the market. They sincerely try to please you. They offer you KNOWN BRANDS, sell you what you want at saving prices , , They have a personal interest in your satisfaction. :...' The Best Snowdrift Shortening 112. S00 cub wrrt. (or naming the Little Snowdrift Men lb. can 23c THESE F. B. A. STORES PHOENIX Phoenix Mercantile Hi way Market Grants Pass R&B Food Store Temple Market TALENT Parks Grocery GOLD HILL A. A. Walker Riviera Auto Park Roguo River Fred VKelley In the dash toward the Sullivan home, the car, after leaving the high way at a sharp turn, crossed back and smashed through a fence. W charges have been filed. - if2 f BEST FOODS I A I TASTES FRESHER PQtJ THAN ANY Vk-y MAYONNAISI I KNOW! ror course! ifv ITS BECAUSE K ' V iKl MADE WITH VCSk y tRESH-PRESf ftggl -SALAD Oil J tr"""" t. BEST FOODS REAL MAYONNAISE 3 WESTACr VANILLA AND LEMON EXTRACT 4 oz. btl 10c Wildcrvillo H. W.Baker SELMA R. L. Hammer HOLLAND H.Floyd TArUXMA H. Messinger RADIO PARK C. R. Brock Jacksonville Hamaker$ Cash Grocery 3 1