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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1937)
PAGE FOUR' MEDPORD MATT, TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREOON, MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1937. MDF0RDITRI6UNE "Evarroo IB tttiathcra Oreco pall j Bifpl ttotorday. MMSDKUKD FKINT1NU CU. 1I-1T Sft N fir It Phone RUBUK1 W HUHU ttdllor. RNBB'f R UIUB1RAK Manager. Ao Independent Niptpw. Entered as moooI-oiu matter at M4 for. Oregon. uni Aot of March . !!? BUBai'HlPTION RATES Dally, one Mir I Dally. ii monthi Dally. on month Br Carrier. In Advance Hertford. Ann l.nri J-nkannvllla. GlUlril POlOt. phoeniz. Talent, Qold Htll ana on ' highway- . Dally, on year Dally, all moutha Dally. nn month i0 All tarma. eaah to aflaooa. Official tapn l the Clly ol Uodrord orili'iai rapar 01 iwitu" UK Mllfc.lt Of lllb AMHM IAIKW rrtfch Hnatflni run i"a Kk. ianriii Praai la axolualvaly to titled to the uu (or publioattoo ol all Hi.n.frhu frariltad to II or Other- wise credited to thl paper, and alao to the local newi puniteneo noroin, AH right (or publication of ipeeiai diapatchaa herein are alao retorvod. UBMUBR OF tWITBP PRBHI UBMHBH OF AUDI! BURaUU OF CIRCULATION! Advertlalnt Representatives Offieea in New Tork. Chicago. Detrott 8aa Franctaco, Loe Angela 8 a 1 1 1 , Portland. St. Loula. Atlanta. Vanoonw. BM&EX Ye Smudge Pot . By Arthur perry. A jittery bandit robbed the Ste venson, Wwh bank, starting hi nefarious operations at 7:80 a. m.. before the village statesmen were so thick around the bank, getting in side would be a herculean task. Early mornlnf; banditry also has tta disadvantages. In the getaway, the criminal can't lose himself in the dally economic conference, that ar gues on banking hours. "FLIES IN AIRPLANE, WHERE HE RODE IN COVERED WAGON" Head line Eugene News) Neatest trick ol the week. e e Hogs are now 118.75 per hundred the highest price In years, due to the drouth, and not the New Deal folly of killing all the little pigs, to gain the "more abundant life." XI the price soara higher, the "Forgotten Man" will have a silk purse made from a sow 'a ear, long considered Impossible, but apparently Just what he needed, to cure all Ills and, end All WW ' EVER MKET HIM! (Detroit News) "His ta usually a new, light . rifj that accelerates rapidly, but not always, and If the driver to his left Is unaware of the quar terback sneak being perpetrated by his side, and Is something of n getaway artist himself, there is a second or so when anything can happen In the way of hooked , bumpers and worse. If there are cars parked along the curb in the block ahead, someone must lag to the rear to straighten the line, and if neither of the drivers concerned la Inclined to be accommodating, then Bt. Peter waits with poised pen for a new registrant at the pearly gate." e a The Chinese general, Chiang Kai Shek boldly announces "China win fight to the death." China will also fight to the "last man" and the General will earnestly endeavor to be the "last man." a e Civic peace Is Imperilled In several upstate spots. Vitriol has appeared In the Ink, and the mystery ol "Whose Skullduggery Is this?" Is the problem of the day, and editorially argued. e e e The Josephine county fair haa engaged a "Cycle of Death" for the entertainment of customers who are tired of looking at the same thing on the hlghwsys. e e e The dreamers of the New Deal now propose an "ever normal cash bos" as well as an "ever normal granary" for the care of those who run out of cash and gurb. Something should be done to establish the "always full" gasoline tank. a a a WHAT AILS THE NATION, "America is having kind of a time that a small town hr.a after 'protracted meetlnV The revivalist comes snd stirs up the folks. Par ticularly all the old alnners who. by the way, are sinners because they are emotionally unbalanced, get roused up and start to shout ing. Repentence washes over the community like a wave and sub merges sin for a time I The revival 1st gsthers to his mourners' bench not only the sinners but a fairly de cent lot of people who always fol low tha winner. Then the exhorter leavea town, and gently the devil begins to sneak bsck into the community. In six months sin has emerged and Is doing business at the old stand. AH the emotional kick-up which the re vivalist produced is gone snd for gotten. Franklin Roosevelt waa the great exhorter. Last fall he gathered to his mourners' bench all the old po litical reprobates. He had the hard shell sin-soaked South shout In', He had the starry-eyed liberals sewing seams along their ascension robes. The negroes were going straight u glory. The various Tammanies saw the Promised Land of eternal patron age before them, and tha poor sw manna raining down from Heaven It was a great revival." (Emporia (Kan.) Gazette ) Us aiail Trio una want ads. Editorial Correspondence FISH CREEK, Wisconsin, Aug. 6th. No sooner off the Streamliner than we landed a job. Which accounts for the long lapse in this column. The job was to drive the family Buick up to Fish Creek, Wisconsin (where this is being written amid the pines and cedars and birches of the Green Bay shore) and visit a nephew who is spending the summer at a Boys' Summer Camp on Adventure Island. This used to be the wilds of northern Wisconsin-rbut is no more. Paved roads, some of them four-lane speedways, lead up here from Chicago, and the streets of this little village are packed with cars almost as thickly as the Main Stem at home on a Saturday night. Cars from all over the country, too, except Oregon (Florida, Oklahoma, California, Kansas, Ohio, New York). The nephew says he saw one from Oregon, which found us slightly skeptical, but we wouldn't wager a dime on the other side. He is a very accurate young man. Took us nearly seven hours to make the trip of 8bout 280 miles, and we stopped for nothing except a hasty lunch just outside of Milwaukee. Ran into a rain which slowed us up a trifle, but the real cause of the slow going was getting out of Chicago and through the city that beer made famous. Spent half an hour trying to find a "left-hand turn," near the North western station, and then it was slow going until we reached Wacker Drive snd connected with the new four-lane highway up the lake shore. We made a valiant effort to avoid Milwau kee but after wandering around Robin Hood's barn, with one service station saying one thing and the next something entirely different, gave it up as a bad job and spent a solid hour wedged in stop and go traffic, and large blue bottle flies. . Was surprised to find Milwaukee has a population of over half a million, had an idea it was about the size of Portland. This would make about a dozen flies per capita, judging by our experience. However perhaps we were in the brewery district and didn't know it, for flics have a weakness for beer. However before the Milwaukee Chamber of Commerce files a protest let us say that judging by the egress via the lake shore, Milwaukee is one of the most beautiful residential cities in the middlewest. The highway ran through rich rolling country, dotted with fine looking farms, wheat in the shock, which always pro vides a restful and attractive scene. Before we ran into rain many threshing crews were at work, the engines belching smoke and the blowers filling the air with dust and straw., much of the latter reaching the highway, due to a heavy cross wind. The highway would be improved scenically if the beer signs were taken down. There is a beer in Milwaukee for every letter in the alphabet. This is literally true, from Arnold through Blatz, and Kingsbury to Zellanders, and they all advertise. At a small service station lunch counter we ordered cheese sandwiches and milk, of a red cheeked German maedschen and in the interim had the gas tank filled, the tires and oil checked. When we returned there were the sandwiches Wisconsin cheese on rye, and two foaming mugs of beer. The red cheeked miss was nowhere to be found, and the elderly woman sitting behind the counter, didn't appear to understand English. So we took the beer and it was excellent, Miller's High Life on draught we decided beer as the beverage within a radius of 20 miles of Milwaukee is taken as a matter of course. . There are two hotels here, Thorp's and Welcher's botli consist of a main wooden frame hotel where meals are served, and innumerable cottages, scattered about. This being a brief stop we didn't try a cottage, but secured rooms in one of the mam buildings. Amazingly good accommodations and sur prisingly cheap. Room, bath and threo meals per day for H50 per day. Everything plain and simple, but comfortable, and fishing, sailing, tennis, golf thrown in if one likes. Judge the fishing is good but not exciting. At least one boat load came in with a large mess of perch and two bass, there vere eight men in the party and a keg of beer. They had been anchored most of the dav. near Adventure Island, were nicely burned and were approaching the Sweet Adeline mood as they marched up from the pier. In fact two in the rear, readied it. This morning motored over to a nearby resort called Ephriam where we ran into some old friends from Rockford, now livinc in Cliicaeo who had cruised up from Chicago in their schooner. The skipper had the C'hicago-Mackinac yacht race near making the front page m the Chicago Tribune. About two hours out from Chicago ran into a storm, one of the worst in lake history for August, his crew, a group of ama teurs out for a lark, were all so and flop. He had to stay at soaked to the skin, and "lashed to the mast" to keep from being washed overboard. Finally got one of the crew to relieve him for 30 minutes, while he went below, changed to some dry thinus. and srot a cun of hot coffee. It was touch and go tlie rest of the night, but he finally three boats finished the rcce. He looked the part, grey aim wan and jumpy his wife said she tried to keep him from setting out for this cruise but had no luck. He had planned such a vacation and was going to have it. If he enters the race again, he won't pick his crew from the Saddle and Cycle club but go down to the waterfront ! Hired a boat to go over to Adventure Island two miles across the bay to see the nephew and then just in time, learned the boys were on a hiking trip and had spent the night in pup tents near Bailey's Harbor, eight miles from Fish creek. So motored over there, and found the young man, rolling up his outfit, and getting ready for a swim. A marvelous beach, nnr .hitn ami water so shallow one could walk out half a mile, without getting wet above from six years to fourteen, spiasnea in wiui cuuiuv vi n.i councilors in the lead, and stayed in for a couple of hours. Times have changed. An hour was the limit in the gay nineties. The young man is nine and big for his age come to think of it, did you ever hear of a boy who ISN'T! He has a mop of flaxen hair, a round face and a recline red nose. He didn't like the camp last year, but does this year; says it's "swell". That popular term and the expletive "gosh", constitute practi cally his entire vocabulary at the present time, llus worries Miss B and Orandpap. They seem to forget there are styles in expression as in everything else, and boys are slaves to style. They abandon the vernacular of their younger days, as regularly as they do their first teeth and a tew years later ineir razor blades. He has built, a kyak with his own hands, cBn swim dog paddle across the pond, and is now engaged in fashioning a leather belt for his grandfather (takes a good rice of leather to encircle Orandpap!) Back from the hike the boys were allowed one ice cream cone apiece and a candy bar. P. chose "Buy Jimminy", a peanut concoction, and a cherry-marsh- mallow cone. Ho is an expert in candy bars per example: Gosh the "Buy Jimminy" is swell, but gosh. "HershryV almond cake" is swell too; and so is "Oh Boy" and "Bnhy Ruth", full of dextrose that means sugar that's good for you, and gosh I like "Butterfingers", about as well and "Merry-Go- Round" bar ain't bad, and gosh and so on and so forth far into the night, or rather the day. . Cherries form the chief commercial crop hereabouts, fxcept of course, tourists. All the way up from Sturgeon Bay, there were gaugs of pickers in the srehaid, a jjoljgiut Sew of men a tale to tell. He had entered the week before, ana came sea sick they had to go below the wheel nine hours straight, made Milwaukee harbor. Only the shoulder straps. All the boys and women and children, all ages, all sizes, all nationalities. There are few sweet cherries grown up here, which is perhaps one reason why there are so many signs, "Come in and pick your own." The season is about over now. Cherries are not as profitable as tourists, it seems. ' R. W. R. Personal Health Service By William Blgoco letter, pertaining u penwuj, oouto tod afieoe uul to dura.. (Uujcnu.t. or (raiment -ill ot ininrw by lit rind) u ttamuca ten mar euro eureiupe u neiueea kjtvjm anuuld u nnel and wnllro id ins Owing in tnr large numrtel i urntn recalTM onl) few can De enrwrred .No repi can ne made to iiuerto ool cuntormini to instruction, Addm Or William Brady tti a uammo anal caul WHY DE .1QUEAMI8 The unit by which the heat, en ergy, fuel, nutritive or sustaining value of itiiy food Is measured la the calorie, that Is, the amount of heat necessary to raise the temper ature of a gram of water from IS to 10 degrees Centigrade. B y this same unit metabolism Is measured, that Is, the work done, the energy used by the body In a given period, re corded In the equivalent of heat produced and heat dissipated by the living body In the performance of functions. The number of calories In the ounce or pound of any food wholly determines whether the food Is nourishing, strengthening, fattening. If there are approximately 100 calo ries In the ounce or 1600 calories In the pound, as In bread, cake, ce reals, sugars, candles, such foods are two to four times as nutritious, strengthening or fattening as foods containing from 400 to 800 calories In the pound, sucb as potato (440), baked beans ( 600 ) , cottage cheese (600), canned salmon (680), fresh trout (440), chicken (500), and beefsteak (800). Of course, other factors are concerned In the choice of foods, their mineral content, vita mins, cellulose or fibre, kater con tent, as these concern bodily func tion and growth, calories alone de termine immediate nourishing value. There la no scientific foundation for the popular notion that meat la more strengthening than fish or potato or bread nor for the tradi tional sickroom fancy that meat "ex tract" or Juice or broth contains con siderable nourishment. Only way to get the nourishment or "strength"' from meat Is by eating the meat The extract. Juice or broth may carry the appetizing or stimulating flavor of soluble extractives other than the protein and fat, but can carry prac tically none of the actual nutritive valuo of the meat. Clear soups are mildly stimulating and appetizing, but nourlfihlng only If bits of lean meat or fat are contained or flour Is added to thicken into gravy. Bulletin as (revised edition). 'The Chemical Composition of American Food Mnterlnls," for sale by the Su OHMclnfyre NEW YORK, August 9. Diary: Up and dulled a Best for bresktast munching salt water taffy Shlela Barrett sent from Atlan tlo City. Then at my mall and found notes from two of my favorite editorialists. Dr. John H. Plnley. of the Times and Abel Green, of Variety. Depressed most of the afternoon over so many ex cellent Journal iKtN hclna out ol employment and mentally st loose ends. So away to watch the ball players at the Polo Grounds and went down to the press box. albeit too timid to enter. BUI waved to Grantland nice. ntnoyl At hnme An a Cold Chine of beef. Afterward motoring with my wife to tne Kiviers, caie, dui nrnlt. .nrt 1.K7.V-lCOklne WB COn tlnued to drive along the Jersey highways, passing tne estate 01 in Lindbergh kidnaping And I sang Scottish madrigals, with dulcet poig nancy. Among the little known restau rants highly bespoke by choosey gourmets is The Bat near the Pro vlncetown Playhouse, in McDouga. street. It la Italian and conducted by a proprietor who wait on tables and whose wife does ine cooaing The place la not intereste-' In tran sient trade and. unless one is known. the service Is aloof, casual. For tnis reason there are rarely more than 20 diners. Pirandello, the playwright does all hi entertaining there when in New York. And among patrons are Toscanim ana me uiin unrrt. A. P. aisnninl. Rex Beach Is among the few suc cessful authors who has been squally successful riding a hobby aa a side line. Some years ago. Beach took over a large farm at Avon Park. Florid,, for raising citrus fruit, vege tables snd flowers. He hss had such succcm growing gladioli bulbs thai he hss Just leased a tract of land at Ft. Myers where he will set out a, 000.000 making him one of the btBot. growers of the kind in America. remonsl nomination for the most unattractive of msitattne covers those on Enquire. Fr w men of e nor mous ach levc ment fro touched off my hero wor ship ss did Marconi. One evening arter theater in London I stepped In the Savoy lift as the only pas senger. The operator started, then stopped snd swung open for a hur rying arrival. As we shot upward, I glanced into the well-known face of the inventot and blurted an ln witunt..'. "Marconi." I mad a eon- fuW aj'-ology, ejtpiaiuiUft- my admi Hi Brady, M. D. H ABOUT CALORIES? perintendent ot Documents, Wash ington, D. C, at ten cents a copy, Is the source of most Information about the caloric value of common foods. If you are squeamish about the calories In this and that, consult the tables of analysis given In this government pamphlet. All figures are for pound quantities, not for an egg, or a glass of milk, or a chocolate fudge sundae. From lists to follow you may get an idea of the approximate number of calories In various ordinary helpings or quan tities of common Items. An adult alttlng or lying about re quires 1600 calories a day; doing fight work, 3600 calories; doing general housework or walking three or four miles dally or doing other active work, 3000 calories, to maintain nor mal weight and strength. The calo ries are the best provided by mini mum quantities of the three food materials in these proportions 3 ocunes protein (lean meat, egg white, nitrogenous part of cheese, milk, peas, beans, fish, fowl, wheat, etc.; yielding 360 calories; 3 ounces fat, yielding 840 calories; 14 ounces, car bohydrate (starch or sugar), yielding 1680 calories. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Would appreciate your sending me your treatment for hypopltultaxy dysfunction, both dietary and medic inal. (O. C. T.) Answer. True to type, both of you gentlemen forgot to inclose a three cent stamped envelope bearing your address. You will receive a reply in due course If I don't forget It. Liver Trouble Asked our druggist what makes my nails break and grow so unevenly. He said no doubt I have liver trou ble. (Mrs. E. L.) Answer. Lore he got from Dr. Horsetrader's Almanac of the year 1886? Rigid, brittle, atrophia, poorly growing nails commonly feature sim ple hypochromic anemia. Also pro longed deficiency In vitamins B, D and O. Former deelt with In book yet, "Blood and Health." Latter In booklet "Victuals and Vlte." For copy of either send ten cents and three-cent stamped envelope bearing your address. (Copyright, 1837, John P. Dllle Co.) Ed Note; Person, wuhln, to communicate with Ot urad) ihould wnd letter direct m or ivilham urad) M u. iso el Cominti Hpvtriy Hill, cam ration and my pleasure at recogniz ing him at close range. Like I gentlemen of true greatness, he ap peared genuinely flattered and when we met afterward ln the halls or foyer bowed graclrusly. No visitor to Chinatown so ex cltea that quarter as Anna May Wong. She Is, when In town, a fre quent diner at the Port Arthur ana the minute she arrives at Chatham Square the news seems to have reached each wr- grapevine Every denizen is out front or lean ing out windows to watch and mur mur welcome. Miss Wong hss an amazing per sonality, indeed, that attracts In any part of town. New York ta a bit too cosmopolitan to do any head turn ing over a Chinese, Japanese or even a turbaned maharajah. Yet Mis Wong at the play, in the cafe, or along the street, becomes the cyno sure of all eyes. Even at blase "No. 21" I have seen her entrance bring eating, talking and showoffry to a full stop. Bagatelles: Sidney Franklin, the Brooklyn bull fighter, la a No. 1 caricaturist ... In Alcatraz prison, the best lighted corridor la called "Broadway" . . . Frank Cnimlt has memorized more than 4000 songs . . . Eddy Duchln. who still wants to be a small town druggist, has garnered more than a half million, leading an orchestra for society to dance , . . The Duke of Windsor's favorite midnight lunch la a piece of hot gingerbread and a glass of chilled milk . . . George Palmer Putnam lost 19 pounds during the search for Amelia Earhart's plane. Charlie Hughes r.rn a friend who: wife Is a constant patron of every new fortune teller laker. The nus bsnd calls her "the original eer sucker." (Copyright. 1037, McNaughl Syndicate, Inc.) ,C. 64 OF Milton C. Anderson. 04, a resident of Phoenix for 30 years and of Jack son county for 54 years, passed away at the home of his sister, Mrs. Ar thur Klelnhammer of Jacksonville, at 7:15 this morning. He came to Jack sonville to be with his sister three weeks ago on account of til nealth. Mr. Anderson was born at Wil lows, Calif., May 3. 1873, and came to Jackson county at the age of 10 and had resided here since that time. He was a man of strong character and Christian faith and leaves a wide circle of friends by whom he will be greatly missed. Three brothers and two sisters sur vive: H. P., Arthur and Paul F. An derson, all of Medford; Mrs. Leila Lynch of Talent and Mrs, Arthur KleinhAmmer of Jcksonvtlle. runeral services will be held at the Concer chapel at 10 30 a. m. Wednesday with Rev. Mallory offi ciating. Interment wiu be made in tae Phoenix cemetery. " (LV " " V: l. -xWlf J" X vt i . .Vi V$&fW --J .4"- - few f" ' r Js Tv 1 - " v Srw , a. v . gk biWrMrMr(MIarhkB- - ...ifjMijl - aro,aMtaa.faM CLIMATE CONTROL. It wasn't a Saturday night; it was just a warm Wednesday In Buf falo, N. Y. Kiss Sandra Lynn rigged up her own air-cooling gadgets. It was hot work rounding up the Ice cream, fan and chunk of ice, but after Sandra got set Ln the home-made resort she smiled didn't she? Comment on the Day s News By FRANK JENKINS UP on the Sn'.-qualmle forest in Washington, a little while back, an old wagon wheel was found, and careful checking leads to the belief that It belonged to one of two emi grant wagons lost In that vicinity In 1853. fiEOROE H. HIMES, 93-year old Portlunder, waa a member of the expedition that lost these wagons, and he tells an interesting story of how they cam to be lose. - The waon train, he says, came out on a rim rock on tl.e Naches pass In the late fall of 1353. Tney tried to find a way down, tut couldn't. Win ter was coming on and every hour was valuable, so they resorted to he roic measurt s. Oxen were killed and skinned and their hides cut Into strips. With these strips cables were made and by meani of these cables the wagons were let down the rim rock. TWO were lost in the process, and it is assumed that the old wheel Just discovered uo.cnged to one of them, out the ot'wrs got down tha cliff safely, and at the bottom the remaining oxen '.vnlch had been led down a brrak In HIV rim were hitched on and the expedition was resumed, finally arriving at :ts destination near the present site of Tacoma. THERE was no Santa Claus govern ment to be annealed to ln those days no CCC boys to he called in to help; no WPA to m-n Into the breach with a rehabilltat'oi project. The pioneers who settled this We. era country were rugged lnvidtdual lsts, and proud of It. It 1a doubtful If they would have welcomed CCC aid. It Is debatable If cr.ty wouldn't have chased WPA worker back where they came from. It la certain they wouldn't have thought of asking the federal govern ment for help. Whtn the West -as beinc settled, people helped them selves and ln emerncles helped each other. NO onu wants to go back to those rug'tfd. crude and In so many ways harsh times. The world haa mov ed along in these 60-odd years, and life Is easier for u than It was for our pioneering ' r.ncistors. It la no crime to live In and take advantai. of easier times. But what men end women those rugged pioneer were who killed their oxen and made ropes of their hides and with the ropna let their wagon down over the rim so they could get onl And what a country hy built tt us I TO FACE TRIAL SOON Cloyd O Kelley. Roy Milton. Wilbur Milton and Arch Ballard. Rouge River youths, charged In a complaint signed by Harry R- Randleman with disor derly conduct, entered pleas of not guilty last week. No time haa been set ln Justice court for the trial, but It la expected to be held this week. It Is anticipated the quartet will ask for Jury trials. The four men are alleged to have created a disturbance at a Town send club sponsored dan In the Rogue River city park July 31. Randle man, a special city policeman, as serts he received a black eye in the hubbub. The dance was held to raise funds aa help reduce the deficit In curred in the rowntead club Fourth of July celebration. (Contlnueo wojn Page One ) But by not saying anything, they tacitly assent to the thesis that the president gets the last word. If any, on the question of neutrality, which, ln effect, nullifies the "mandatory" element entirely. . The law, of course. Is on the statute books all right, but congress la realizing that It doesn't mat ter what brand of neutrality is speci fied If the president can't see a war on the far eastern horizon, there Is Just nothing that can be done about It. It has been the administration's contention from the first that only the broad principles of neutrality can be legislated. The present Slno Japanese case Is being offered as fresh proof that each situation must be Judged on its own merits. An embargo clamped down on both belligerents would work distinct ad vantage to Japan, whlln America's traditional sympathy has always been with China. No wonder the diplomatic equiva lent iof "I told you so" Is being heard ln the solemn corridors of the state department. It will be no surprise If Senator Vandenberg or some of his colleagues across the aisle who battled to the death for mandatory laws may have something mollifying to say on tho subject. Or. perhaps quite as sig nificant still, they will say nothing. A very formnl reception the other night at the Egyptian legation cele brated the investiture of Kink Pa rouk I. On the Invitations which were sent out to a rather Inclusive guest list appeared the word "decorations," which means that the military and diplomatic representatives must wear their foreign orders. Some of the guests took the word In a more generic sense. Several congressmen appeared with their ornate "master farmer" badges In their satin lapels. Aubrey Williams, deputy relief ad ministrator, sitting in for his chief. Harry Hopkins, while the tatter is vacationing, had a strange experi ence out in the dust bowl the other day. Mr. Williams was scheduled to ap Par at a meeting to discuss relief for the drought-stricken Inhabitants, but nearly missed It. His car got stuck ln a mud-hole. P Mall Tribune want ad's. BETTER RE Take advantage of the Summer weather to put on that new roof and be sure to use RED CEDAR SHINGLES Come in, look them over and get full information as to cost and grades, etc. BIG PINES Dependable Phone 1 Flight 'o Time Medfora and Jackson County hiPiurj imin the riles oi the MaU Tribune 10 and go rears ago TEN YEARS AOO TODAY August 8. 1027. (It was Monday.) Freeman and Wiley warehouse at Central f-olnt swept by fire, ana en tire city threatened for time. Government warn aliens "to be have or go home," as agitation stirs land. Aerial flights across Atlantic and Pacific, and around the world to start this week. Raymond Fish Is champion. oity tennis Plans for Jubilee take shape to celebrate prosperity and progress of city. H. Van Hoevenbei-g of Gold Hill thlps the first car of Bartletts of season. Fire Chief Bof Elliott is re-elected head of state association. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 0, 1917. (It was Wednesday.) Food control bill passed by sen ate. Artillery duel underway on Flan ders front. Seek to delay opening of deer hunting season owing to forest ftre danger. America starts work of "rehabili tating Russia." and consider grant ing hug loan. Red Cross Issues call for all knit ted goods that are finished. Pacifists seek Impeachment of President Wilson and repeal of draft law urged in Washington, D. C, meeting. Draft evaders in Arizona given year In prison. To Wind lp Bank 8ILVERTON. Ore.. Aug. 9. (AP) The remaining assets of the First National bank of SUverton, Includ ing real estate, will be sold at auc tion August 23 to perfect liquidation of the Institution. Depositors have received 53 per cent of thlr total claims, or $85,655.47. since the bank closed August 1, 1932. May With A. F, of L. BANDON, Ore.. Aug. 0. (AP) Forty members of the local lumber and sawmill workers' union voted to remain in the American Federation of Labor. The vote offset an earlier decision of 16 members to affiliate with the C. I. O. - ROOF NOW! LUMBER CO. or Building Advice 6th and Fir Sts.