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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1937)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD AIL TRIBUTE. MEDFORD, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 18. 1937. ltoFORD&.TRIBUNE MKvryoo U Hatbni Oregoa sj UM Mali iTtbBM" Pabllati-M oy MaflUfcffJHD PRINTING CO. Mfl1-! M rir St. Pboo II ROBICRT W RUHU editor BRMBfil a UIL8TRAK Uuiagw. 4a !niUtMOlnt Nwvpapr. Cor, Ortcon, onr Vet of Utrob t. Ult tfUBSKiPTION RATS! aw UaliIn ArivinRl! Doiir. OHO Otll. s moothi DftHr. n- mootli ft aarrlar in AflVftfiOO IfMlfOrd. (sort. iackinn'fJI. Cootroi Point, pho-oix. Talanu Oold Hill tad on Dally. on rr Dally, all montba Dally, on moDin 411 torma, aih Id advanoa. OffloaJ Pupn ol tb Ullf ol Uadrortf UJtHKHM l IV IHK AHWX-'IA 1'Uli t'lifcob ftrralvtag Villi LMMd wir bottic Ti AMnciaiari Pr-M i flioluaivaly o tltto to tho for publiaatloD of all iliHlch! eradliad to it M other- rlM 3f1irf1 to th1 paper, and tloo to no local nw pub!ihi naroin. All rtcftt for publication of apoolai dltpatoha rtaralo ara alao rri1, UBUUKR OF UNITED PRESS If BMBtSH OF AUDI! BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Avarttalni Rapraaantatl! st-H0Ll-tD Offtcat id Ntt York Chicafo. DatrotL 0a o PraaelKo, Lor Angela. 8 a 1 1 l , Portland;. St. Loula. Atlanta. Vancouwar B C. . Ye Smudge Pot Br Artliui Perry. Th tatc is apparently due for tome terrific legal hair splitting, whether or not a pin-ball machine 1 a game of chance, or a lottery, They might be both, or they might b neither. Whatever they are, they ban four legs, and resemble the nickel department of the US. mint mors than a J. I. Case threshing machine. An. McNary, the senior senator, to back from Washington, D. 0., Mid la not as indefinite a usual eo soma topics, and more so on then. He declares the nation re son U" the third term plots and plana of the charming White House Incumbent. The country does not eve to be a 3-tlme loser. t Ths weather hereabouts continues detrimental to feeling sorry for the atx soviet aviators reported strand ad on an ice floe, a snowball's throw from the North Pole. a TrrR LIQUOR IB LEGAL! (Oakland (Calif.) Tribune) Tfvery Friday night from about 10 to 1 and 3 In the morning, the resident of this commu nity are treated with a continu ous blare of horns, some of them Illegal, the screeching of brakes, fire alarms, open cut-outs, which is Illegal, the deliberate and In tent tonal back-fire of motors, also Illegal, the breaking of bottles m on the street, which la a misde meanor, and the yelling an cars race each other up and down the bill, panning Illegally on a grade." The police report alghttng an 80 tnph. speeder, with a lady passenger en her own side of the front seat. The suspicion she was his wife proved correct. a tt now appears a Seattle, Wash., expert will be thrust upon Oregon as administrator of Bonneville dam electricity. There are no candldatea for assistant administrator, unless you count those asskllouMy eiiKaged In writing letters to the Portland papers, praising the probable ap points as a combination Edison and Marconi. a Since the CofC. conflagration, any person caught smoking a cigarette on the shady side of the edifice, does so at his own risk. Hereafter, he will be reKsrded the same as a Chinaman with a bomb In his blouse hanging around the Japanese em bassy. a a a Juvenile have started railing tho school superintendent 'Mister." This ta the surest sign school will open In about three week. a a a Prm dljpntche yeMerday men tioned the Ku Klux Klan. recalling to many the nights when "Plery Crosses" burned atop Roy Ann. and men were miHlc pure by strain ing their Mns through tho tall of a Ifl 50 nightgown. Whatever became of the "Orand Titan of Oregon, and RsprerwntRtlve of the Imprint WlB ard. West of the Rockies?" PR AYF.H MK MAT! ItlHV NHlllT. Be with us. lord, whce pretty daughters nre Out motoring with handsome lads tonights- They are no Innocent; the moon Is bright; No telling where they'll go, nor yet now fsr. Oh, recklesn, young hsnris on a steer. Ing wheel! Oh. glamorous, the warm proximity on us the real responsibility. The heart stop heating and the blood congeals At thoughts of dangers they must meet before They're home how long the houra when they are Istel It's so hard to lie unsleeping. Lord. and wait . . , To listen for the opening of a dor; Be with us; worry Is a hesvy toad. And be with all desr children on the road. (Ethel Romtg Puller in Sunday Oregonlsn.) 4 Of U.000 farm famines In North Dakota., nesrlr 4A.000 families de pended on the Hesettment Admin istration for aid in m. Editorial Correspondence NEW YORK CITY, Aug. 14. hours make, flopped the Congressional Limited at four o clock and landed at the Pennsylvania station here, three hours and 20 minutes later. That'll moving alontf took us a couple of days to motor the same distance a nireamiiner taices 0 nours. io reach Newark, passing through Baltimore and Philadelphia as if they were flag stops. Yes what a difference. In whether you are a U. S. senator lr you were, in rsew York tney don t know either and they don't give a damn, you are just auother two-legged animal, with some money in your pocket, presumably, and they are going to get as much of it as possible. Two porters brought up our bags and we tipped one was sutticicnt tor them both tipped raised a tprrible howl, ent, as we shoved on. io reciprocity in this man s town. ..... Expected it would be cooler here but it wasn't. Terribly hot. and stuffy and once more even a sheet, was an encumbrance. But arose at. 6 a. m., Daylight Saving time, and it, was deliciously cool, which comparatively speaking it has remained all day. The streets were deserted at that hour and after a hurried drug store breakfast, we taxied to the 2:ird street ferry with green lights all the way. Made the trip in about a third of the time that woijd have been required a few hours later. Onlv a few working men, who looked as if they had been up all night were on the ferry to Holland American line, of nearly a large anil impressive liner, fiually docked. There was a big crowd aboard, and the usual handkerchief waving, and neck stretching to pick out the ings from the pier to the ship, and the ship to the pier. "Hello Bill! Hello Mary! Hi Jack, Aye, Kate! How are you, 0 Kehl did you have a nice trip? I'd etc., etc., etc. Then the scramble down the gangplank, buck slapping, hugging, laughter and tears, the customs, luggage hauling und back to New York. An old story to Father Gotham, but quite a thrill, for popper coast I Before leaving Washington tried for the fifth time to see Airs. Iloneyman, recently elected to the house from the Portland district. Again failed, Mrs. H. was out for lunch, searched the restaurants but again no luck. Had to give it up. After the senate the house seemed confused, noisy and un interesting. Some young man was walking up and down before the speaker's scat, talking, about a civil service measure. No one paid any attention to him, but that didn't seem to bother him. He appeared to .be thoroughly enjoying himself, even ... 1 J u " I if no one else was. We can readily understand why a man elected to the senate, should do everything in his power to Btay there. It has such a nice clubby atmosphere, there is no confusion or strain, and a senator just by being a senator is SOMEBODY in Washington. He can ring three times and an elevator will come to him pronto no one but a senator can do that, no one but a senator can ride in the car. He has a special stairway which no one but a senutor can use, and a restaurant which only the members of his own club can patronize. And then there is that monorail subway which connects the senate and the house and is cool. The molorman knows all the senators and if you don't happen to be one you have to step lively, or you will be left, behind, and if a senutor is in a hurry you have to step lively or there won't be time for you to get off and you will get a round trip when you only wanted to go one way. Say what you will about this great and glorious democracy, the average homo sapiens likes that sort of thing. In fact he eats it up. And once let him get a taste of it, and it's like a tiger tasting blood he wants more, and more and more. And he is never going to be content again without it. . . Yes the upper house is very clubby. Young Bob La Kollette appears to be the clubbiest member. He is a short, chubby, boyish-looking little chap, and it appears to be a physical im possibility for him to greet a fellow senator without putting his arm around him, and petting him a bit. He is always doing it. They say he is one of the most popular members of the club. We can't understand that. We should think he would be one of the most UNpopular. We have never heard of any other gentleman's club where pawiug was popular. . . . . But it is in the senate. Young Bob is the most demonstra tive, but there is a great deal of hack patting (not slapping), arm in arm promenading, hand-on-shoulder, eye gazing, etc., etc. Even Joe Singer, the chief doorkeeper, and for so many years scrgeunl-at-arms of the house at Salem has the habit. Johnny Kelly, of the Oregonian, sees Joe two or three times every day, but only now and then can he get by him without being tapped affectionately, by Joe. Of course it may be only Joe's way of expressing his high regard for Johnny and the paper he repre sents. The Oregonian is still his bible, and he never fails to remind any visitor from Oregon that he was scrgcant-at-arms in Salem without a break for 25 years until the New Deal came in. But more likely it's just the senate habit he has acquired. Then there is J. Hum Lewis of Illinois, once a stevedore on the Seattle waterfront, then the pink whiskered legal Boulevitr tlier of Michigan and Fifth Avenues, and now the most, courte ous, erudite and flowerly-tongiied member of the senate. J. Ham's whiskers are no longer pink, he wears an extraordinary toupee, which mutches nothing short of a bale of marsh hay, a civil war hand embroidered vest, cut very low, spats, and trousers of a creamy -lemon shade J. Main doesn't pel his colleagues with his hands, hut with words. "The honored, eloquent and able senator from Carolina. the distinguished, scholarly, and eminent senator from North Dakota, etc., ele Will say this for J. Hum however. The more fluttering his introduction may be, the more caustic and biting his remarks may become, ns he progresses. Some newcomers in the gallery think J. Hum a sorl of joke an old buffoon, a fopish old fool. He isn't the man lie once whs, but even today such critics would chunue their minds, if they ever opposed him in a rapid fire deh.'itc. ,1. Hum is eccentric but he is nobody's fool. In the debute on the nnti-lynching bill, he was the sole defender Hgiiinst all the verbal butteries from the Solid South, but he certainly held his own, on the ground of plain logic, he made mnnkevM of them, in oor opinion R. W. R 567 Coyotes Slain By Federal Hunters PORTLAND. Aug. IB. kA rive hundred and sixty-seven coyotes. 46 bobcats and a mountain Hon fell be fore the gun of WPA hunters in Oregon last month, the biological survey utd today. The federal bureau has undertaken ground squirrel control work In Baker, Lake, Malheur. I'matllla and Wallowa countoes. Ttorker live- trapped a nnmtw of beavers In Union and Umatilla count tea, transporting thero to the Wallowa forest. The Argentine government Is plan ning to expend as rtoo.oco for the purchase of 75.CHX- flame throwers and other materials In ccmbettuf locust plague i What a difference just a few few years apo. And the B. & 0. stop trom Washington until vou Washington they don't know or not, hut they treat you as of them, suggesting the amount which it was. But the one not and was arguing with the recipi Iloboken. We had a wait at the an hour before the Statendam members of the family. Greet say, gave Europe the works, and mommer from the Pacific McCulloch To Head The Dalles Schools THE DAU FS. Aug. 1 -vTr The city school board appointed Paxil R McCulloch. high school principal, superintendent todsy to succeed J. P Cramer. The board released Cramer from his contract to permit him to accept similar post at Fugene. McCulloch. who 1 a graduate of the University of Oregon, formerly was auperlntendent at Wasco. He will receive $9O0 anually. The bureau of fisheries report a trend toward the use of larger trout for stream stocking purposes. Several st st as are planting thousands of 6 to 13-lnrh trout i compared 1th lUh lea Uian i Inches a decade ao. Personal Health Service By William HlClird Irtteri perlalnlnr to prrkonul hrallh and Inglrnr, not to dlsraw dla(nol or treatment. Kill he annnrrrd by Ur. Ilrady If a stamped slf ddrrurd envelope li tnelOM-d. Lttem should be brief and Britten In Ink. 0lii lo the larue number of letter, tnihnl only a few can be answered. No reply ran be made to querlett not conforn.lnr to instruction. AddreM Dr. William Brady, 26.1 Fl Camlno, li-verly, calif. DIETIT1C One subject to hyperacidity, bout stomach, hyperchlorhydria, heartburn, waterbra&h, acid dyspepsia, peptic ulcer, should should avoid vin egar, plcklos, sour food, raw fruits. especially apples, grapes and citrus fruits; soups and meat extractives such as consom me or bouillon spices and condl ments such ai e x c e ft s lve salt, pepper, mustard. hot sauces; con centrated sweets such as sugar, candy, honey, syrup, molasses; very coarse foods such as corn. bran, nuts, salad vegetables; alcohol, especially sour wine, cider grape Juice and any alcoholic bever age before eating; tobacco, especially before eating. As an antl-acld. preferable to soda and other alkalis commonly used to relieve stomach acidity, calcium car bonate la recommended. Ten grains of calcium carbonate (otherwise known as precipitated chalk or pre pared chalk l is the average dose and this dose, taken as powder or in tablet form, will neutralize excessive acidity In the stomach for several hours, and may be repeated two or three times a day If desired. Unlike sodium bicarbonate ;'soda, saleratus) chalk does not disturb the acid-base balance in the blood and tissues. Neither does lt produce much gas (carbon dioxide) on reacting with acid In the stomach, as does sodium bicarbonate. Many sufferers find that occasional dose of calcium car bonate gives grateful relief to dis tress from gas at least they ascribe It to gas. Where such an antl-acld is to be uped for an Indefinite period the chalk Is far less objectionable than soda, magnesia and other alkalis often used for that purpose. r'.T ,r' d8Mtl" "n1"' '" 1 mouth. UnlrM you chew food w you oan.t pect dlgMt lt m Remember, digestion begins In the well expect to digest it well. If your masticating equipment is at all crippled, you had better loosen up and have the necessary restora tions made. Dentors are doctors only by courtesy (I signally lack cour tesy!, but even so. I can assure you that a bridge or other denture you can use for chewing, to fill that -O.O.Mclntvre NEW YORK. Aug. 18. No other city and no other stretch of street are more celebrity conscious than New York and Broadway. As accus tomed as Broad way is to seeing Rudy Vallee, his dining In a res taurant will often result In a call for an extra cop or so to shoo the crowds away. In a Park ave n u e apartment recently, a ten ant phoned that when Miss Kate Smith arrived to send her up at once without an nouncement. It was not the radio Kate Smith, as lt happened, but with in a half hour traffic along the block was in a Jangle. Restaurants find they can charge any prices If they fill tables nightly with Llbby Holmans and Martha R&yes. The success of "No. 31" and the Stork club Is predicated largely on the people of Importance who go there for relaxation. And to be seen. It Is said that Lindbergh told Inti mates he really did not object to at tention In any other city save New York, But there he found It Impos sibly rude, so much so that he could not help losing his temper and this he did not want to do. Thus, exile In Englsnd. A spectacular spending stunt these days Is to take over a toney restau rant for the evening bar everybody but selected guests and make merry until dawn. The cost of such a splurge ranges from $1,500 to 2.500 and was started by Herb Swope at the Colony several years ago. Among pleasant reliefs from t h; New York uproar are the whimpering young lovers enjoying a dreamy Jog around Central park In a horse-drawn four-wheeler or hansom as the sun goes down or the moon cornea up. The venerable drivers know their Jobs and keep eyes straight. Now and then, too. when they come to some dark bend they hnlt. tnke a few pulls at their pipe and mosey on. One of the Jehus, .take ?,oler. declares that in his IB years of park backing ever,il couples hsve come to him in after yes re and told him they decided to plight their troth while making the round with him. The accordion haA topped the miu phone as the favorite instrument of young folk. Five years ago ISO saxo phones were sold to one accordion. While that ratio la not In reverse, there are at lrat a down accordions sold to one sx these dsv Radio broadcasts featuring o many young jsters who are accomplished ac vrdion Iste contributed largely to the in crease. Heretofore, the accordion was associated almost tcely with Italians, but the malorttv nrt purchased now by Americana in smaller commun ities Arkansas Is abandoning the fiddle for them Thrre are a doren accord i on sc hoot on u pper Broad way. Doris Pukc plays one. And so on. IVubtle. tor. Phil Bskr has done uuCab to populariM the accordion. 'I Brady, M D BREVITIES. space where a tooth or two hi been missing for years, will bring more relief to your digestive trouble than ten times the cost of the den tlstry spent for medicines or fancy diets. With all your teeth In goo working order, give 'em a fair amount of work or exercise chewing fruits, vegetables, cereals. It doesn't mat ter much whether you gulp down meat, fish, fowl, egg In large pieces. Normal folk should make It point to have a salad bowl or at least go In for a large and appetlz- Ing dish of salad every day as many raw vegetables and fruits as season, appetite and market afford. Some Vinegar may be used in salad dress. Ings. but lemon Juice Is always pre ferable, being a food Itself, and will be found even more pleasing if used In place of vinegar. Cheese Is concentrated food. It Is as easy to digest, calory for calory, as any other food. It Is not binding, Just not as laxative as some other foods. No food fit to eat at all binding. Used as a proper food, cheese of any kind Is healthful. Prejudices against cheese are based on the un warranted practice of serving cheese with pie when even the pie Is prob ably so much excess nutriment; and on the distress offenders feel after having indulged In a late supper or a feed they dldn t need. qlESTlONS AND ANSWERS. Implantation of Tooth. A says it Is possible for a dentist to extract a tooth and set another tooth In the space and It will live, B denies this. w. B. Answer T can find no authentic record of such an experiment suc ceeding. There are numerous reports of successful reimplantation of teeth that have been accidentally knocked out of the Jaw. Snoring. Is there any cure for snoring? Should a physician be constuted? C. B. Answer One who Is healthy and fit does not snore. General over hauling may be needed. Local treat ment or swollen or congested nasal tissues may be needed. (Copyright. 1937. John V. Dllle Co.l Ed. Note: Person wishing to ronimtinlcate nllh nr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Rradv, M. D.. 265 El ('amino. Reverly Mills, fallf. He was the pioneer so far as Intro ducing It In the stage revue. HK earlier appearances date to the Mid night Frolic Roof where he was billed as a "bad boy from a good fam ily." Few know the accordion Is not his favorite Instrument. He Is fonder of the piano upon which he plays skillfully. Baker was first, too. to have a stooge sass him from a stage box. The wacky perfume salon la com paratively new In retail business life. Until recent years perfumes were sold In depsrtment stores, drug stores and dress establishments. One only found shops selling perfumes In Paris. To day the -big Paris parfumlera have their mlrrory. silver-edged branches In the smartest stretches of Fifth and Madison. Jewel boxes of splen dor, with enchanting French girls In charge. There la a perfume shop for men. Also Innumerable shops exploiting only American products. Many American manufacturers are sending young men to the De Orawe districts to learn the technical side and there la a hunch America may soon be running with the ball. Confession of a glutton: I tried out dreaming on a piece of wedding cake last night but, after waking from dreamless sleep three times, I reached under the pillow and ate It. (Copyright. 1937, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) CHURCH WOMEN URGE WPA JOBS FOR NEEDY SALEM. Aug. 18. pi The Worn ens Home Missionary society of the Methodist Episcopal church sent a letter to Governor Martin today ask ing his aid In restoring WPA Jobs to needy women. The society asked him to support the flchwellenbaeh -Allen resolution to make jobs available. Use Mall lYioune want ads. AMERICA DISCOVERS Fvrlvn TonnVy, 18, ot folumVus, ' ital tullure contest to xouuu. Wp-t j i-t i, ' v.' f?.ri fv IM''KV ' ' 'it lq t-1 "J Aiv Behind Washington Headlines By H. R. Baukhage Copyright 1937, hy The Xorlh American N'ewa pappr Alliance, Inc. (Continued from Page One) Uli declared this was essential contra band. Then. later, came the war loans. America Joined the allies, the crops were snort and the glorious days of torty-cent cotton were with us. Speaking of cotton, if the specula tors think they are going to have a wild party on the basis of a war boom. tney are riding for a fall. Preparations have gone along very quietly. The details of the program canvt oe revealed at this writing. But It can be announced with cer tainty that the new commodity ex change administration (successor to the old grain futures administration) Is ready for a crack-down. They've got the law. It has the teeth. And the commission has the money, too. In addition, lt has the backing of the president and Secre tary of Agriculture Wallace. The "ecurttlea and exchange com mlaslon has been putting the bridle on the stock market gambl'.s while the cotton and grain futures Jugglers have been riding along without too much trouble. Now the Joy-ride Is to be over. The commodity exchange commis sion has moved Into larger quarters In the south building of the depart ment of agriculture, under whose auspices lt operates. A branch office has been opened In New Orleans. Branches In Chicago and New York already exist. The Democratic party has Just dis covered a new strange creature grow ing In 1U nest. It Is the "eplus" movement, not epic, but quite aa ro mantic, and takes In (theoretically) a lot more territory than Upton Sin clair's movement. ( The latter con fined himself mainly to California.) The Initials stAnd for: End poverty In the United States. It started in South Dakota, and Its father Is Arthur W. Watwood, who has run for congress three times. He Just ran. He was. however, a government at torney In Washington and only re cently resigned to go home and fos ter his eplus. The Idea seems to be to shorten working hours, obtain lib eral old age pensions and do several other things which add up to the brotherhood of man. It sounds harmless, but these days every little movement has a poten tial meaning of Its own even If it means nothing Itself. TO E SALEM, Aug. 18. (A Oregon was urged today to continue partic ipating In civilian conservation corps operations In a letter from .tbe In terior department to Governor Mar tin. W. Frank Persons, acting for Sec retary of the Interior Harold Ickes, said Oregon, which has 30.980 en rol lees, would be expected to cooper ate In the program, which has been extended by congress until July 1, 1938. Governor Martin replied that he considered the CCC work one of the outstanding accomplishments of the administration. Sino Japanese War Hits Cedar Logging PORTLAND, Aug. 18. fi The conflict raging between China and Japan has damaged an Oregon Indus trythe Port Orford cedar logging business. Japan has consigned 150 merchant vessels to carry men and war equipment to China, removing the craft from the trade lanes. Approximately one million board feet of logs are on the Portland docks awaltlne available space. COLUMBUS. Ohio, waa the vainer of 1 New und America most beautiful Comment on the Day 5 News By FRANK JENKINS. confirmation bv the senate ol V the nomination of Senator Black, of Louisiana, aa a member of the supreme court of the United States was a foregone conclusion. The senate haa an unwrlten ruJe that anyone who is good enough to be a senator la good enough to be named to ANY OFFICE. THE surprising part of it Is that SIXTEEN senators disregarded this rule (which la of the utmost Importance to members of the sen ate, any one of whom la likely to be struck by the lightning of ap pointment to high office) and voted against Black's confirmation. ORNATOR BLACK voted 34 times J out of 34 for New Deal laws that came to the senate marked "must pass." In other words, he haa a CLOSED MIND regarding the New Deal. Tne outstanding qualification for Judges (according to American ideals) has always been that they shall be men with OPEN minds. IT was charged on the floor of the senate that Black was backed in 1926 by the Ku Klux Klan. Senator Burke, of Nebraska, asserted that there were In Washington two men ready to testify that Black was a MEMBER of the Ku Klux Klan. The point Is this: The Klan, although it Included in Its membership many good people, was BASED ON INTOLERANCE. We do not like to think of members ot the supreme court of the United States as men who are swayed by Intolerance or who stand ready to profit by the Intolerance of others. The supreme court and the con stitution are the final protection of minorities against oppression by in tolerant majorities. BUT the die Is cast. It was cast from the moment when Franklin D. Roosevelt sent Black's nomination to the senate. Hugo L. Black, what ever manner of man he la, la a member of the supreme court, and will be as long as he lives. One more precedent has been broken the precedent that members of the supreme court shall be the broadest, fairest, ablest, most tol erant men to be found In the whole country after long and diligent search. WINDOW GLASS We aell window glass and will replace your Broken wlndowa reasonably rrow bridge Cab inet Work. SEEKS RELIEF. While congress rushes through legislation seeking adjournment. Speaker Bankhead swelters and seeks relief from heat. RESINQL TAKF5 TUP Jd.J m OUT OF BURNS Ot application Ivm ptwnpl rtM. In fly lxi4 uwthw tti pankaM, ikbi. T -..e- r I --'fed tfN ..... A mm' mill mil- it i i i vim. ii mill! l mill i 1ft I 1 ; . . . I i , III I I I I I II III li t II I II 1 1 1 1 1 II III It nil.. , minim, I Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 yean ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY August 18. I27. (It was Wednesday) Neither Democrat nor Republican party to have a dry plank In 182S platforms. Art Goebel wins air derby to Rons, lulu. Bids asked for graveling of Crater lake road. Five Queens have entered Jubilee of Dreams Resllzed contest. Sixth street crossing cost city $1985.93. Rim road at Crater lake la opened. "Ashland Has It." official slogan adopted by sister city. Grants Psss scheme for $3 auto tax is lambasted by Governor. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY August 18, l!17. (It waa Saturday) Germans claim recapture of lost positions on western front. Federal army may be sent to halt IWWIsm in northwest. Bootlegger fined $500 and sen tenced to six months in Jail. Knights of Pythias hold conclave on Wizard Island In Crater lake. Forest fires raging on Elk creek. Colony club will give a tea for soldiers on duty here. Germany Offers Refunding Bonds BERLIN, Aug. 18. (AP) The gov ernment announced a new offering of 700.000.000 marks (about $280,500.- 000) today In 16-year four and a half per cent treasury bonds for funding operations. The Issue conformed wltb Ger many's established policy of such periodic reductions of lt Internal debt, which now stands at 2.465.000, 000 marks (about $990,000,000.) Officials said 100.000,000 marks (about $40,200,000) already have been subscribed. The balance will be of fered for public subscription at 98.75. For Complete Coverage of Bust- I a Read nesi and Financial News Paeite Coatt Edition THE WALL STREET JOURNrVL Relied upon by Business Men and Investors for Current Newi and Dependable Information. Send for our special introductory offer, FIVE MONTHS FOR $5.00 tis BaUl St., BAN FRANCISCO ins w. etfc St.. Un ANGELES Ex thane. Bids;., SEATTLE Phone 1300 tor Towing or Wrecker Service Anywhere Anytime Lewis Super Service Chan & Chan ! Chinese Medicine Co Be relleveu at once u ' ,K.4---luur herbal remedy uo i'i'fejyoo nave: Asthma uJhij frever. gtomath Bi Trouble cunstlpatiun tnrnnlr Cough, tiheumutlsra- si nus rrouhle piles Arthritis Co litis gczema. Appendicitis, High Blooo Pressure I'runute, Hart Liver, madder Kidney looi Blood. Urinary troubles Herbi will give von renet. IU a.m to 6 p.m.; Tuesday- l b undav 10-11 a m Closed Sunday UNIQUE FOR REAL CONVENIENCE Whether you visit San Francisco for fun or for finance, for business or for pleasuie. you'll be amazed and pleased lo find a area! hotel coverina two acres where five principal sheet meet the famous Palace) HoleL Here the financial, shopping, theatre, and wholesale districts meet literaUyl nn mono, eseh ttlth Pith, from S3.M per (1st (lng!a) up. a PALACE HOTEL "!n !he Heart of Sem Frandeeo" Em 1 Archibald H Phes Mmtn 41