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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1937)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORP, OREGON. TUESDAY. AUGUST 10, 1937. MedfordJIITribune "Evarrooe IB Snathant (rft Hmd th Mali rrlbonav" Dally Birtpl tetuday. Hubiiahad oy uKDntlHI) PRINTING CO. I.-I7 19 N fir St thOD fl RUblCRI W RUHL, Udllor BRNBB1 ft UIU1TRAK Uanafar. Ad tiHUpu1Dt Nawipapar. Qotirwl u Moond'Oiu cnattcr at Mad for, Orcion. utnUi Act of March . SUBUl'HIPTION RATES By Hill-In A1vnct Dally, on caar... Dally, 1i moothi .SI 00 . .? Dally, ona momr, .V.V'V. Z B. farrier In All vanflO UtdfOrO. Alt Un1. Jokionviii, Ctotril Polot, Phoenii. Talanl, uoio mil Dally, ona yaar ftllV. all months jHHy. ona month. All tarma. eaah Id advance. nrriMMi Paon at tbm City of Uadfortf Official Taper of 4akoD County UfcllHtCH Of 1Mb AHlitH'IAlKU fHkJtb Uh airing run lwo w . Th Aaaociata1 Praa ia ielually 0 tltlaS to th ua Tor publication ot all ..... Ai.nxrhu ararlltart to It OF Othaf- wla orartltail to thta papar. ana also to th insat aaw puDiianao naratn. Ah rlsht for publication of apaelaJ dlapatchaa haralo ar Mao raarvad. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advartlilog Rpraota.tlva Offleai lo Nw Torlt. Chicago, Detroit. San Francisco, !oi AnsaUa. S a t t I a, Portland, St. Loul. Atlanta. Vaneouw. B C. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Officially there la no war In China, because none has been de clared by China. Such being the caise, aa Japan maintains, appear ances are more deceiving than usual, for all the shooting and killing bears a striking resemblance to war. It also aeema to be "civilized war fare." a term employed to gloss over human cussedness In the late Great War. If the conditions In China are not war. In capital letters, hungry people have no appetites. ... Speed - galoot have "one - track minds." and tbat Is what alia them, medical experts declare. Tney also possess an "Inferiority complex" more Inferiority than complex. Out' aide of these scientific defects, there la nothing wrong except the speed- galoot has a high-powered auto, "Mr. and Mrs. Browning will open their new home next October. The plaoe Is reported to be one of the ohow places of the district." (Stay. ton (Ore.) Mall) Why editors turn grey. ... Oregon democracy la now In the throes of selecting a state chairman, to fill the vacancy caused by the Incumbent ascending to a fatter piece of pie. In the grand rush for the post, this section offers no can didate, and, what Is worse, not even a democrat, who acta like he wanted It. ARE HER CHEEKS REDf (Chlro (Calif.) Enterprise) "He answered: "Okey, I will give up drinking and take up spanking: It wouldn't be a bad Indoor aport.' He got up, poured out hla bottle of whiskey, picked up the hair brush, put me across hla knees and gave me a good one. He hna kept his word about drink: we seldom quarrel, the family fortune Is righting Itself, but I take at least three spank ings a week with hairbrush, razor strop, slippers, etc. He always hss a plausible excuse; says X nsg, am argumentative, extravagant or gossipy. Maybe this sounds like a bugs Joke to you, but there's no fun In It. Sometime I am too sore to alt In the car." (love Agony Column.) ... Th horse-chestnut trees have a bountiful crop. Quite a number of th chestnuts look like they hsd already been pulled out of th fire. . Messrs. Hoover and Landon will meet at the home of a former Illi nois Governor In September to dis cuss plans to revivify the Republican party. The revlviriers have not de cioed whether to Install a set ot gout glsnds. or Just feed the patient more spinacn. Upstate prognoatlcatora predict the 1638 csmpsign Issue In this stst will be the "power Issue." affording the people a chanr for more (re electricity, and save the water In Rogue river for th children's chll dren. s . rsrmere report their gardens are Deing pillaged In the night, the fa vorite loot being vegetables thst re quire no digging. A woodshed In Nevada Is reported atolen It win probably show up In the Willamette valley next week, on lour wheels, and Impersonating a trailer. t t IT II.WN'T KIOHTi "There Is something about a new barn thst a sleuthing asses-jor geta wind of every time. One of my neighbors built a new barn. He needed It badly, if he ss to malts a living on the farm. He had to let other obligations go In order to accomplish thia. They caught this man In possession of a new bsrn When his tsx statement came In he found that hla n'fartous act had cost him MO. Judging the cost of the barn, plus thi fine the county Im posed on h'.m for building It, b would have been In better standing financially if ha hsd let hla rows stana out In the rain, or sold them snd gone on relief." (Eugene News.) Clcelng time for Too UK to Clas sify Ada It 10 J. M, f Editorial Correspondence FISH CREEK, Mich., Aug. left Medford on Rosey'a Cannonball. Seeing like a month. The reason? have been on the move ever wnce. Therefore many varied impressions, changes of scene, etc. etc. which have the cumulative effect of the lapse Finally got a trip in the motor boat over to Adventure Island. Didn't look rough from shore but in the middle of the bay, the motor boat (a coast guard life-boat with a gas engine installed amidships) tossed around like one of these roher coast ers, bump the bumps, rig-ma-jigs, providing more exercise of the abdominal muscles than a broncho at a rodeo. All the boys over 50 of them were packed in the Viking ship, a home-made ornate affair with a totem pole prow, (which Miss B, thought looked like a rooster), which whs towed astern, with the aid of a frayed and dripping rope. Only the fact that the trip is made every little while, without disaster prevented some of the landlubbers aboard from being nervous. The headmaster of the camp however, known to all as the "skipper" a funny little man with a stiff leg, and an old hat two or three sizes too large for his head, assured all and sundry, that there was no danger. He handled the tiller with one hand, and the engine throttle, with the aid of a long pole hooked to the proper gadget with the other, and assured one of the nervous passengers there were only two lookouts on life, the positive and negative. His idea appeared to be the passenger assumed the negative view point while he the positive. We have a hunch he has been flirt ing with New Thought. Well, at any rate, he and his positive pole won out. There were three girls and provised stone dock. All were delighted to greet the lads from their overnight hike, particularly the dogs. They jumped and barked and hopped about at a great pace. They are old family pets brought from the city by their boy owners, and enjoy life on an island all their own. The girls were respectively the die tician, the trained nurse and the skipper's secretary. Couldn't quite fathom their joy and excitement, for the boys had only been away 24 hours. Later it was explained. The dietician is en gaged to the chief councilor a husky youth in a life guard shirt and shorts while all of them were to take the motor boat on its return trip for a bust in the night life of Fish Creek. "You have no idea," explained one of them later, "how lonely you get away on an island, where you see no motor cars, no movies, no stores, nothing but work. Getting back on the mainland gives you the biggest kick." Hadn't thought of that but we have an idea there is little of the Robinson Crusoe in the female of the species. II)d dinner with the boys, birthday of the young man, with the sunburned nose. There was a birthday cake of course, and the "happy birthday" song from the assembled Boy Scouts, followed by something to the effect bland up, stand up, we won t stop till you stand up! We felt for the young man, he is at the awkward age and blushes easily and furiously. Fortunately with such a sunburn, no one was aware of this, which helped a lot no doubt, at least we can recall that stage quite clearly and always maintained, we didn't blush because we were embarrassed so much, as we were embarrassed because we of it is quite the modern viewpoint 1) However he did his stuff o.k., blew out the candles after 4 attempts, and got a hearty hand from all including the guests. After such a hike over ten miles for some of the lads the supper struck us as rather a pallid affair. Instead of soup there was puffed rice and skimmed milk, followed by melted cheese on crackers, some sort of green aspic siilnd about as large as an old-fashioned butter plate, and cake. However there was an unlimited Bupply of fresh milk, and the diotiuian assured us all the necessary calories were there. We had had no hike, but that bay trip or something had given us an appetite and we longed to get our lower bridge work into a juicy steak ! Again the dietician assured us she is a graduate of the University of Chicago and knows all the answers, that meat at night for growing boys, is NOT on the approved list. ..... There were birthday presents, then as a special treat a re turn trip on the boat to Fish Creek, a short motor trip, an other visit to the ice cream cone pavilion, and the final good byes, nephew oh the prow siuging "Working on the Railroad" at the top of his lungs, as the launch plunged off, removed nil fears of tears and the pangs of homesickness. . This is a restful place, and as before noted amazingly cheap. Most of the permanent guests are from Chicago and St. Louis, and are constantly congratulating themselves on being awny from the heat. To one accustomed to summer resorts along tne Pacific Coast, on the shore or in the mountains. Fish Creek however, lacks zip. Except for high as the Sacred Heart knoll, cake, and while well wooded in ill nourished. The lake water is surf, no salty taug in the air, no foot hills or mountains to frame the picture, and with so many people about, a certain stuffy atmosphere which isn't pleasant. Everything is relative however, and lifter an hour in can readily understand, the enthusiasm of those who escape it. ROCKFORD, 111., Aug 8: Came down here from Fish Creek, after n ulensaut and uneventful trip. Carefully avoided big city traffic, Fon du Lac, at the baso of Lnke Winnebago being the only place of any size encountered. Our first view of the lake was impressive, it stretched far to the horizon, like an inland sea or the ocean itself. Never heard of anyone spending the summer at Lake Winnebago, but clusters of summer cottages along the shore, demonstrated that they do. Beautiful rolling country dotted with lakes, literally a land of milk and honey. Dairv farm after dairy farm, with contented Uolsteins, chew ing their noon-day cuds under the trees; clover and ailaiia fields, full of h'.isv bees, several of them, inspecting the driver's compartment of 'the Buick, along the route, and causing con siderable consternation. Stopped at an attractive little hotel on the Main stein of Water-town, hotel Washington, a lime stone structure with gaily colored awnings, and cool within, a bowl of golden honev on the table made a hit with the family. Hot in Iiockford-ia usual and very dry. Most of the Main Street lawns burned to a crii and many homes closed for the summer. As stated at the outset of this trip August is the worst month of the year I R. W. H. Lions Object to Facing Camera BMIXIEPORT, Conn.. Aug. 10, (AP) Two lions aeverelj clawed rrlti Menn. 7. of this city. chef In a restaurant too. aa he attempted to photograph them yesterday. He was rescued from between their cage by two motorists who heerd screams aa they drove past the place. They poked at the lions with a long poie snd drov them away from Menn. The chef, who received so lacera tions, told police Investigators he oe lleved the lions to oe Irlendiy and that h hsd Uken a camera over a four foot fence separating th csge from th restaurant proper because a young woman wanted some pic ture. CM UMl TrtDUD trasl Ida, 7. Only a week ago today we of time. four dogs to meet us at the im little boys and just work, work, the big occasion being the ninth blushed. (Which come to think one sand stone cliff, about as the country is Hat as a pan spots, the trees look lean and clear and clean, but there is no Chicago s turkish bnth loop, we Seville Archbishop Is Called By Death MVtLLI. Spain. Aug. 10. (AP) Eustace, Cardinal lllundaln y Este ban, archbishop of aeville. died to day. He was ,4 yeunt old. Cardinal lllundaln was elevated in March of lt;, and received the red hat In ceremonies later that year. He had been bishop of Oren and archbishop of Seville for more than 20 years previous to his elevation. 4 Fraternity Head IMea COLUMBUS, Ohio, Aug. 10. (AP) Dr. Francis W. Sheperdaon, 70, na tional president of Beta T.ieui PI fra ternity, mho at one time taught at th University of Chicago and as j an editorial writer for the Chicago ItlbUjM. 4194 to! M0(1 Personal Health Service By William signed letter pertajnlni to person., nniitn ana ayiiene nut w mra jUxi"Ml ui treatment will o siuvrrreu by Ul ursd) u a .Uuipeu kU cdreed envelope is enclosed Letter .riuuld at oriel ana wrillro in ink Owing In the large oumliei of tetter received unl) a few can ne nwered No reply can ne made to queries not ounlurinint to Uuiruetions Address Or William Hradj 269 BJ camiou oVverly. Cam GLIDE TO RIOHT TIIINglNO Once you get It clear lo your mind the tact that acid stomach la not acldocla, although these atatea are often c o n- X u a e d In the popular fancy, you will not worry ao much about the so called acid-form lng foods In your llet. I am not a food speclallat. Just a doctor, and what I do not know about eating or not eating this and that fills many circulars, brochures and books, for Yankee wiseacres. Once when a cal low medical student tried to uphold a diagnosis of append lcltla made by the village doctor In a case of belly ache Auntie Blnnel, the village aeer. disposed of the upstart by observing ; that he'd probably know more when he got a little older. For thirty jaera 1 stud'ed hard and I still believe that certain foods make the stomach and the system acid la wrong. Acidosis Is diminution of the al kaline reserve of the blood and tis sues of the body, a lowering of the normal alkalinity of blood and tls- sues. Acidosis la practically always a consequence of disease and not a cause of disease. Only under extra ordinary circumstances which restrict the choice of food la a significant degree of acidosis from faulty diet conceivable. In every Instance where apparent benefit to health la as cribed to excluding acid-ash foods the real explanation, in my opinion, la either (1) the needed rest from overeating, or (2) the increased in take of vitamins, or (3) the better ration of minerals the Individual en joys while following the regimen. However, if you must know, here are lists of foods which leave acid ash end foods which leave alkali ash : Acid -Ash Egg, fowl, beef, pork, oysters, fish, oats, white bread, whole wheat bread, corn meal, peanuts, rice. A I kill I ne-Ash Beans, beets, carrots, peas, pota toes, cabbage, cabbage, celery, cauli flower, turnips, lettuce, asparagus, apples, bananas, oranges, lemons, grapeffurlt, muskmelon, peaches, rai sins, almonds, pecans, walnuts. Neutral-Ash Butter, nream, skim milk, sour milk, buttermilk, acidophilus milk, NEW YORK, Aug. 10. I have a literary friend whose relaxing mo ments are spent In prowling around haunted houses late at night and from which he makes models. There la more material than one might Imag ine. Every town and city neigh borhood has Its haunted houses. Most of th?m run to fictional type lop sided, decayed, with mournful cedars waving gaunt branches across the broken windows. Floors that creak and mumble. And always a grown up garden and an abandoned cistern where someone re putedly fell In one stormy night. Too, the woodshed where feathers flontcd, drifts and swirled In the still air as the apook passed by. There are. In the contral section of New York 15 houses, difficult to rent. Real estate agents say frankly they are Jlnxcd by ghost rumors. People in a spirit of bravado often rent houses supposed to be haunted. But the records show they Invariably leave within a very short time. They will admit they have never seen a ghost but they do hear strange nolss. The fact la every house has atrange noises. The newest type of Dangerous Lady In the snark bars is the pseudo ath letic girl. The half world haa thumbs downed on old artifices, realizing they only serve as hands off warn ing. That Is the roige pot. the ex otic perfume, bright red nails, heav ily kohled eyes and the bizarre frock. So the something new in gay de ceivers appear as though they had Just returned from the golf course, with golf ba$s, etc.. or the tennis court, with racket In ease. AH thia to stress their Innocence but they employ the same old device. After a few drinks they mention In off hand their little apartment around the corner! It was a swell reception Ted Lewis received upon hie return to Broad (way after a lapse of many years much longer than the usual plff awmer stays away from the street. For Ted with his battered hat nd clarinet besnn on Broadway in the remembered days of Rector'a and doubtless overstsyed his welcome be cause he was beginning to be brack eted among has-beens. Sensibly, he pulled up stakes and found a hearty reception trouplng across the out land. He became an especial favorite in Chicago where he has been tor several years And so this summer the new generation of New Yorker as well as the old have beer, making him feel at htme. 1-ewls was the cr iminal delineator of Jaza and his methods are In us by many Imita tors. Onr wonders Jum what was Ted twis' traction to the claptrap (Broadway in contrast to Ih on he OO-Mclnfyre Brady, M. D. cheese, lard, cornstarch, sugar, ayrups, honey. tapioca, It Is en excellent health habit for sedentary or for hard working or playing Individuals, youthful or ma ture, to eat cheeae, cottage, Dutch or any kind of cheese one likes. In stead of meat, fish or fowl at one meal every day. Cheese la the best source of calcium, the mineral ele ment In which the modern rellned diet Is most likely to be deficient. The following, quoted from San sum's monograph on Diabetes Mel lltua (Harper & Bros.) fairly reflects a view accepted by many good physi cians: '. . . .'Individuals who had an ex cessively acid urine often complained of certain symptoms. The acidity of the urine was often associated with frequent and burning urination. Dys pepsia and an 'acid' mouth also oc curred. Such Individuals seemed prone to sick headaches. These man ifestations, -together with .... the symptoms mentioned above, can be relieved by a change In diet sufficient to produce alkaline urine. Such a change seems to have a favorable In fluence upon high blood pressure." QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS flat Feet Infoimed In a clinic that my 15-monlhs-old baby has flat feet. Is this serious? What do you recom mend to correct It? (Mrs. D. Q.) Answer. Sounds a silly notion. Exposure of the naked skin to sun light dally, and a good dally ration of vitamin D In one form or another, would help correct flatfoot In e. child. If you mean the baby has club feet, that requires orthopedic or making quilt blocks for a quilt to be surgical correction a series of plas- I given to the person giving the larg ter casts, or possibly operation, or 1 est contribution. It will be a pretty both. applique flowers in basket design. . . YeT' WeU I Mrs. Oscar Higlnbotham and son (Third page). Now please do not ' visited at the Patton home Wednes tell me to consult a physician. In day. w.r mot, jjiuuo x nave no latth In me incompetents around here. (D. W. K.) Answer. Just aa you wish. But you neen't have gone to so much trouble. Aluminum , Ia the use of aluminum as a relin- lng for dental piatea Injurious to the health? O. B.) Answer. No. (Copyright, 1937. John F. DlUe Co.) Ha iNute; Perum wtsniQj; to communicate with Or uraaj huuld tend lettet a i reel u Ut. William urad M i. 40a & tJamino Hfferlj Hills cum hlnew so well. There are restaurants m wew York today that far excel Rector's, where Ted started. In cuu. lne but none has recaptured its ela- mour. Too, George Rector had a way i Bm Hughes bought the Chester El of making people of importance feel j 1,8 noUM- the ptaco was opened solely for them. I Mr' Hllkev 18 improving in health. And of looking through people who 1 Mr' and Mrs" 0011 Smltn and cnU dldn't matter and Jockeying them dren sPent Sundfty evening in Med behlnd the palms right next to the fod drummer. Rector's was snooty and n and dau8nter there was and still is a vast nubile Vlslted relatlves m Fort Klamath Sot that feels flattered when welcomed In Urday and Sundfly- the snooty spots. j Coos Bay Mtllmen Most families of wealth who hire! r li C . m French chefs-paid in Instances as' high as H2.000 a year have to em- ' ploy especial pastry cooks. The French know scarcely anything about ; aesserts. Their list is confined to a souffle, a raw peach on a pad of cot- ton or sliced fruit. Employment agen- cies say there has arisen a vogue for Oerman cooking the past year and those of that nationality especially skilled find no trouble getting -crack Jobs. Our grocery delivery bov Is a blend of Burgess Meredith and Buddy Eb sen plus a tousle of red hair and plentious freckles. He cornea in whistling or boo-boo-boolng in the manner of Bing Crosby. "Every guy I know," he said today, "is soured on the world. That's a lot of peach iuzz. i goi my youth, health and dsnrin L V V " "P ln S ' fmateur Ih, i"" P",5''n8 I amateur nlRhts to break in. But s3 I 90 rKKOK HlramVslker Soni. Peorl., Illlnol,; Walkfrvllle, Ontario; Glasgow, ScotumT THIS WHISK It IS NOW 2 TEARS OLO someday you'll see us at Loew's 8tate. So with youth, health, a swell girl and a career can you blame a fellow for being bubbly?" And aomthow you can't. Ye Poets Comer God. God la the dearest thing to me That ever, ever there could be. He makes the grass and meadows green. And makes the brooklet clear and clean. He helps us aa we skip along He makes us healthy, happy and strong. He make the trees grow green and tall, God does this for us all. t God 1 the world and all within. He doesn't want It filled with sin. So let us try to do our part, With all our fajth, and all our heart. He loves the rich, the poor, the strong and week. And his help we must always seek. His love for ua Is so great and good. That we must praise him as we should. i MELBA AYRES, (Age 10) j Jacksonville, Ore. Butte Falls BUTTE PALLS, Aug. 10. (Spl.) Mr. and Mrs. Lee Weaver end daugh ter of John Day, Ore., were recent visitors at the Jack Stowell home. Mr. Weaver la Mrs. Stowell's brother. From here they went to visit a sis ter at Slletz .Ore. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Glddlngs and daughter, Joan, of San Francisco are viltlng Mrs. Glddlngs' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Page. Members of the Hustlers lub are Sammy Moorehouse Is spending the I summer with his uncle, Roy Moore I house, and family, j Mrs. Josephine Geppert had the I following guests on Sunday: Mrs. Conrad Latham of Rose burg, Mrs. Graden Chlldreth. Lee Casey, Mrs. I Yew Geppert and children. Miss Applegate, one of the new grade school teachers for this year, was In Butte Falls lest week. Ernest Smith plans to build a new house soon. Many people are looking for houses to rent here. Mr. and Mrs. Amos Weaver re turned to their home here after spending a short time at Areata, Cal. Mr. an Mrs. Barney Leabo may move to Butte Falls. Mr. Leabo Is to take Chester Ellis' Job In camp. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ellis will 1 move away this week. r m OUap tO MARSHFIELD, Aug. 10. (AP) ' Opponents of C.I.O. affiliation in the Coos Bar Iocat the Lumber and Sawmitl Workers' union said today tney woll swk legal counsel and attempt to have a vote favoring sep- aratln from the A.F.L., taken Sun- dav- outlawed. Tne meeting Sunday at which the election was held, they said, was not propeny anvenisea ana was attended by C.I.O. officials. The vote was 159 to 132. Death on lllghnav ALBANY. Ore.. Aug. 10. (AP) ; Mrs. Amy Watson, 60. died in a lo- I cal hospital shortly after being I struck by a car on the Pacific high way here last night. State police i said witnesses related that Mrs. Wat- 11 Pffred ride, stepped Into th" Plth ' a " (lrlve M. I rinllno-.v m t . Tk afkTTTiT Tl Mmi vfe-?M: VA (Oontinuea nam t&ge one ) Paradoxes and politics appear to wolk in hand, but one last week seems to offer a prize, with perfect logic guiding both sides of the con troversy. It now develops, although, of course, it isn't nominated in the bond, that harassed Secretary 01 State Hull was hurried into urging the passage of the bill forbidding the picketing of foreign embassies and legations by fresh protests from the fascist governments, Italy and Germany. "By the comity of nations." said Mr. Hull, "representatives of foreign governments In countries where law and order are supposed to prevail are entitled to freedom from any at tempted Intimidation or coercion." This statement might be taken out of any work in International law. But peaceful picketing, as such, 1b permitted under the statutes of the United States, and the liberals in congress immediately aprang at the throat of the antl-plcketing pro posal, crying "unconstitutional." Nothing strange about that, either. But here, In the forefront of tnose who leapt upon the bill, was none other than Hamilton Fish, red- baiter de luxe, when It Is well known that most of the picketing is done by crowds unmistakably and admittedly the leftists of the leftists. Yet It was Mr. Fish who wrote the minority report attacking the bill, with Maury Maverick, obstreperous Texas liberal, seconding, and Repre sentative Jerry O'Connell of Montana, who lately sponsored the showing of a heart-rending pro-loyalist film, "The Blood of Spain," loudly ap plauding. Representative Maverick explained the strange bedfellowshlp this V7ny: "You can count on 'Ham' Fish being right sometimes, especially when a Democrat goes wrong." Meanwhile, Secretary Hull Is kept ousy, what with avoiding delegations of plcketers who aren't satisfied with parading In front of embasstesr. but insist on presenting him with peti tions, and likewise with the sugges tions from European countries that there ought to be some correlation between the "comity of nations" and the laws of our land. While talk of a special session 01 congress disturbed the atmosphere on Capitol Hill, there remained one point on which there was no un certainty. Whatever happens, it will be a case of adjournment and not recess. When congress adjourns, the mem bers get their fares paid back to Washington by the government if a special session Is called. When there Is simply a recess, there Is no travel allowance. GREEN SLAB WTOD Big DOUBLE LOAD Phone 7 Now Timber PRbjDiifjTs -IOCOK0 fefVW ORtOON Phone ?. cuz 5 Flight fo Time Med for 0 and JackMiD Count) oiUjr (rum the rue 01 th Mall frlbunr Ml ano to rear ago TEN YEARS AOO TODAY August' 10, 1927 (It was Tuesday) DeAutremont brothers, serving Ufa terms In state prison for Siskiyou tunnel murders, iniormed murder charges they thought dismissed still stand against them. Forest fire on Elk creek brought under control. Jack Porter leaves on vacation trip to San Francisco. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Mann and children return from a six weeks' auto trip over the northwest. Huckleberries to be ready for pick ing in two weeks, mountain resident say. C. A. Meeker leaves for San Fran cisco on business. Prowlers enter home of Frank Isaacs for second time. TWENTY YEARS A CIO TODAY August 10, 1917 (It was Thursday) Big guns again roaring along Bel gian front as allies prepare for new offensive. Local pool hall proprietor arrested for allowing a 16-year-old boy to watch a game of pool. Two thousand, seven hundred and sixty-three people visited Crater Lake during the month of July. Paul Janney organizes a Medford branch of the Boy Scouts of America, Publicity for draft evaders ordered by war department. Canned fruit is much desired by members of Company I at Fort Stev ens. Government acts to "prevent huge war profits." American Bishops Given Appointments VATICAN CITY, Aug. 10. (AP) Rt. Rev. Monslgnor George J. Retiring of Cincinnati, Ohio, was appointed today as auxiliary bishop to Arch bishop John T. McNicholas in Cin cinnati. Rt. Rev. Monslgnor Duane G. Hunt, vicar general of Salt Lake City. Utah, was appointed bishop of the Salt Lake diocese. The most Rev. James E. Kearney, former bishop of Salt Lake, was ap pointed to the Rochester, N. Y., dio cese last week. .iuLJttfN MOM EH Nead Not Sufftr monthly pain and delay due to colds, nervous strain, expoaure or sinriilar cauaea. Chi-chca-tersDiamondllrnnd Pills Me efi ecu ve, aii aruggista lor over 4& years. Aiktor THI DIAMOND 1 PINE Company End of N. Central TV. r5?7S IB $Sr BBAMO-ij' J AGING WINTER AND SUMMER FOR 2 WHOLE YEARS BRINGS YOU THIS WHISKEY WITH "NO ROUGH EDGES" Get the low-down on TEN HIGH, the whiskey with "no rough edges". Formerly, whiskey matured more slowly in winter than in sum mer, but in Hiram Walker's modern weather controlled rackhouses, summer temperature if maintain? d every minute of every month. That's why TEN HIGH is the whiskey with "no rough edges." Try TEN HIGH tonight k .