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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1937)
M"RPFORT MATL TRFBTTXE. MEDF0RI1 OREO OX. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 20. 1037. PAGE THREF SOCIETY and CLUBS By Janet Wray Smith EX-PRESIDENT OF WALTON LEAGUE IS Olson-Andrews Wedding Told Announcement ha been made ol the marriage or Miss Joyce Andrew, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Andrews ol this city and Harold Olson, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Olson of Klamath Falls. The ceremony was solemnized at the First Christian church parson age In San Francisco September 11. Both bride and groom are well known here and the announcement will be of much Interest to many friends. They will make their home In Oak land, Calif. Circles Gather At Grants Pass Members of Grants Pass Neigh bors of Woodcraft were hostesses to other -circles of southern Oregon Thursday evenlnc Renresentatlves were present from Crescent Cltv. Medford. Klamath . season. Falls and Ashland. Following the business session, the hostess group presented a program with dancing arranged during the remainder of the evening. China Is Tople At circle Session. China was the discussion topic at the last session of the circle of the First Christian church, conducted by the president. Kay Barbour. The gathering was especially planned for the entertainment of guesta. The program was In charge of Vir ginia Fredenberg and an assisting committee. Short talks and stories of China featured the program. Games and refreshments followed the formal session. All young people over high school age are urged to attend the circle meetings, scheduled every second Tuesday at 8 o'clock. Mrs. Relnhart Guild Hostess. -Members of 8t. Marks altar guild will be entertained this evening at the home of the president, Mrs. J Frank Relnhart. 301 Crater. Lake ave nue for the first session of the fall Harveys Return From San Ilego. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Harvey ar rived home Saturday evening after a vacation visit In the BOUth. They have spent the past two weeks as the guests of their son and daughter-in-law In San Diego and visited other California cities during their stay. Class Meeting Set Thursday. Election of new officers will fea ture this week's meeting of the Golden Link Bible claijs of the First Baptist church. Mrs. R. G. Beach will be hostess to the group at her home, 113 Geneva street, Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Chapter Plans Tuesday Session. Mrs. Louis Brown will be hostess to members of chapter BE, P.E.O., at her home. 727 West Jackson street, tomorrow evening. Time is announced at 7:30 o'clock The affair Is to be a covered-dish buffet supper at 6:30 o'clock. All members are particularly urged to be present. Mrs. B. L. Lageson will assist the hostess. I.emerys Attend Pendleton Fete. Dr. and Mrs. Charles Lemcry are among local residents who attended the Pendleton round-up last wees They left Thursday. The Lemerys expect to be away about a week, vacationing in the Pendleton area. Thimble Club to Gather Thursday. Mrs. Charles Gall will be hostess to members of the Chrysanthemum Thimble club at her home Thursday evening at 8 o'clock Instead of Tues. day as previously announced. All members are urged to be pres. ent. Will Wed Gable? Because of the Inroads of Industry and the rapid Increase of population. streams and rivers In America are fast becoming depleted of fish. Dr. Henry B. Ward, former president of the Irak Walton league of the United States, told an Interested audience at the weekly luncheon-meeting of the Klwanls club In the Hotel Medford tl'ls noon. Dr. Ward, who Is In Oregon at the request of the state board of mining and geology, recalled that when he was a boy the Hudson river was one of the finest fishing streams In the country. Now, he declared, it was nothing more than an "open sewer." He stated that Oregon today has resources superior to any .other place In the entire world. He pointed out that conditions have changed since the old days, when pioneers could do as they pleased such as cutting down trees, diverting water from streams and wasting natural resources with abandon. He explained that now, those resources must be guarded and conserved. Dr. Ward complimented Medford on Its fine new sewage disposal plant, stating that it would go a long way toward keeping fishing streams un polluted. Dr. Ward Is a former faculty mem ber of the University of Illinois and is Investigating conditions In Oregon regarding the effect of mining condi tions along the Rogue river. Guests at the meeting today were A. M. Swartley of Portland, the Rev. E. S. Bartlam, T. E. Daniels, Dr. W. W. Howard and W. F. Isaacs, all of Medford; J, s. Love and Otto Bohnert of Central Point: C. B. Monoghan of California and E. H. Gould of Brookings, Cal. Miss Currier leaves Sunday. Among those planning to attend j Mhwi tHie vonr ir Mi. Georgia Currier who left yesterday morning for Eugene. Miss Currier will enter the Univer sity of Oregon at Eugene. BIRTHS LYRICIST MILLAY Tl Famous Author Says Trans ; ition Is Natural Avers She Has Always Been Aware Of Life About Her. By Charles Norman (AP Feature Writer) AUSTERLITZ, N. Y. Once upon a time there was a young woman in Greenwich Village who wrote poems that shocked the bourgeoisie, poems that went like this: My candle burns at both ends; It will not last the night; But ah, my foes, and oh, my gives a lovely light! . A whole generation of under graduates and Bohemians knew her verses by heart, quoted them, Imi tated them. Today. Edna St. Vincent Mlllay la older, more fserlous. Her fame Is uni versal. But as fhe looks around her. she sees her light-hearted world of the years after the war transformed by the political hatreds of man kind. So she has laid aside the lvrlc of love and beauty In which she excels, to put down in verse the troubled thought of our time. Crltirs Are Divided Her Intost book. "Conversation At Midnieht." has divided her critic and renders. Some praise it as her ereatest work; others wish she naa continued to write lyrics with the tieht-Dacked. sinning line of wnicn Bhe is master. This she does not mind. What she does mind, Is the Inference that she has Just become social-conscious. To this she replica "Vnhodv has ever read me." "It, ridiculous to say that I have suddenly become aware of the life, RolnB on around me," she exclaim with passion. "I've always been aware, always been writing about It. "What was 'Renascence about? It was about people who were starving, people who -were suffering. And that was mv first poem. More than 10 vears etro t wrote a play called Aradlo da Capo' that ww about the war." Retain GlrlMi Vivacity She speaks with compelling ear retns. brushing away with n impatient gesture a lock of blonde hair falline from lw orderly bob over her brow. Psle green sparkle like emeralds, and her voice rlnes clear, with a warm, agreeable cadence. She received her visitor In a cool. plpaant room of her farm house hrre. Thert were two grand plane In the rorm. A few minutes before, sh hsd tven playing tennis, and now !h was wearing lounging pa jsma with a flower pattern. Her 5lieV fieure pvm1 lithe and strong, an her girUsh. frerkled face glowed wrh vivAi-ity and health. To thop who know her work, th intellectual sutcpsv wleh her char acters in "Conversation At Mid- nieht" hold over the worlds 111 is no new departure for the author ol "Thf BMif1 of The Harp-Weaver." the Sacco-Vanzettl sequence In "The Buck In The Snow," her "Epitaph For The Race of Man" in "Wine From These Grapes." She has look ed with clear eyes on beauty, on poverty, on injustice, and given them all her voice. Follows "Natural Dlrertlon" A sentence of Thomas Mann's was quoted: "The destiny of man pre sents Itself to our time in a political guise." "I agree," she said. "Yes, of course. That's excellent." Did she think there was a ten dency toward political expression in contemporary literature? She look ed thotightfxil. It was a subject re viewers of "Conversation At Mid night" had touched upon. "Yes," she agreed, "but great poetry has seldom come out of tak ing sldea, and la not likely to. How. ever, that's a different matter from having a natural direction from lyrical toward dramatic poetry, and following it. It would be hard to look at the 'destiny of man' today with the eyes of a dramatist, and not find one s self at momenta looking into the eyes of a politic ian. Hasn't Abandoned Lyrics "I for instance, am moving nat urally In the direction of dramatic poetry by which I don't mean." she threw in impatiently, "that I've given up writing y!c poetry. Really, the public 1a very stern with the artist it looks upon him as an In spired scatter-brain, yet expects htm to proceed in more rigidly method ical fashion than any banker! I've given up nothing. But the poet who ia both lyrical and dramatic usually turns to drama; Shakespeare did; Shelley would certainly have done so." Shelley died young. "If you don't chanee and develop between your first book and your 10th," she said after a pause, "then you Just keep on re-writing your self. And it seems to me that life should do more for you than Just keep you alive. After al!, a child is not merely fed by the food he eats: he Is strengthened, and he grows. It's the same with the poet that Is to say. If he has a hearty ap petit for life. It's no good nib bling at It.' Then she added with a smile: "He must also, of course, have an excellent digestion." Born to Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Bittor. ling of Klamath Falls at Sacred Heart hospital yesterday a babv bov weighing 6 pounds 14 ounces. Mother and child are doing nicely. Born to Mr. and Mrs. E. w. Od.n nt Jacksonville at Sacred Heart hospital hub morning a Daby boy weighing 6 pounds 2i, ouncea. Both mother and son are reported doing nicely. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Georue Camn- bell of Jacksonville at their home thlc morning a baby girl weighing 9 pounds. She has been named Sharon Lee. Both mother and child are do ing nicely. Belated Success. PHILADELPHIA. (UP) Charles Rockey of North Hills Country club broke 80 for the first time after play ing golf 20 years. But he had to sink a hole-in-one to score his 79. lnlt on Urllrluui (irade A LOST RIVER BUTTER & MILK Mantitarturrd ir Spoons a One-er, LORAIN. O. (UP) The Rev. Jo seph Matun, pastor of St. Vitus church, playing on the Spring Valley Country club golf course, sank his te shot on the 160-yard No. 2 hole. He used a spoon. Closing time for Too Late to Clas sify Ada la 1:30 p. m. Use Mall Tribune want ads. THE OTHER WOMAN LIVES JUST AROUND THE CORNER IT may swm unrwonaM hut mosi men cannot understand whv woman who Is usually happy and loWn linuid have rwirnnit period when liw whole character iwiu chariRed. He cantiot appreciate- the distress, tho diwoinfnrl that all women mu.it endure lit does not know what It it to rlo uouwwork with an Benin hack and ratlin enencv All he rioeit know in that other womn tern more cheerful by comparison. Are you tucn a three-oiiarter mf? Don't let ihe nrdeali that all women face csn you avoniahle discomfort or eiifiatiiiT your home Do a so many wimi women hava try Lrriia E. Pinknara'a Vefpv tWe Cnmfiound. for three (feneration! one wom an haa told another how to tn "smiling through" Uh Lydia K Pink ham Vet taMe Cnnn-ound. It helpi Nature tone up th tem. ihua lewnin the diet'm fort from the functional dlrlT which womn niu.t endure in the thrve ordeal of life: 1. Turning from girllmod to womanhood '. Preparing for mo'b Thoi. 3. Ap proaclung "middle ar." Don t h- a thrive-- :.-:rtr wf. . take I.VDIA Y. !'IMMM A VK'iETAHLK f IMPOUND aad bO "p-r"'1'f'l 1 lifni. ik ' ' Add Izaak Walton. SHERIDAN. Wyo. (UP) Here's a fish story, and it's a "bird." E. E Roberts, while fly casting in a stream near here hooked a pheasant. A 'f'"Wv Delia Carroll (ahovat. 33. recently slinMl a nleht cluh conlraet and an nounced she would be Tiarrled to Clark Cable next nrln. "I'm Ju nuts about Clark." she said, "we suit each other down to the Rrouud." (iable hasn't commented on Uella s disclosure. ELUDES POLICE HUNT (Continued from Page One.) legs, a broken wrist, and a torn ab domen. He is in the Community hos pital. The attending physician states that Nichols will recover unless tn foreseen complications develop. Nich ols, who was hurled a distance of 25 feet by the Impact. Is well known throughout southern Oregon, and is a member of a pioneer southern Ore gon family. The sheriff's office spent all Satur day night, and yesterday seeking trace of the car and driver. State po lice said they had received a half dozen calls from alt parta of the county, telling them of cara with bent fenders. In each Instance, how ever, the drivers were able to furnish substantial proof they were not in TALKS ON , CHICAGO SET FOR F.D1 TRIP group U more Intimately associated with the Oregon home than are the rtaltora." Bath .Too Hot. NORWOOD. Mass. (UP) Clad only In towels, three unidentified I men fled the Finnish atam bacn when It became too hot for them. The building was on fire. PIONEER HOTEL FOUNDER OF EUGENE IS CALLED EUGENE. Sept. 20. (AP) Mrs. W. P. Osburn. 78, pioneer Oregon news paperwoman and hotel operator, died here Sunday at the hotel which she helped her husband found more than 90 years ago. Forty years ago, Mrs. Oeburn. who was born In Nuremberg. Oermany. worked on the Portland Oregonlan. Surviving are two sisters and a niece, all of Portland. TOLEDO (UP) During the plat three years the WFA adult education program here has taught reading and writing to 300 adults. HYDE PARK. N. T., Sept. 20. (AP) Two definite speaking en gagements were placed on President Roosevelt's west coast Itinerary to day at Bonneville dam near Port land. Ore., and Chicago as officials continued to chart the 6.000-mlle Journey. The cross-country swing, planned to give the chief executive a first hand picture of administration pro ject and an opportunity to gauge Interior and Pacific coast sentiment on his broad economic objectives since congress adjourned, will start from here late Wednesday. It will end two weeks later, most likely at Washington, after a speech October 5 dedicating the federally financed outer drive bridge In Chi cago. Secretary Marvin Mclntyre said the Bonneville address, a date for which haa yet to be selected, prob ably would be the only formal one of the trip. Others, to be made en route to Seattle where the president will visit his only daughter, Mrs. John Boettlger, and returning east, will be of the rear platform extem poraneous variety, It waa said. REAL ESTATERS SALEM, Sept. 30. ( AP) The con vention at Eugene Friday and Satur day of the State Association of Real Estate Boards will feature real estate and home owners' week, which began Sunday under proclamation of Gov ernor Martin. "The people of Oregon are home loving people and the majority of them own and reside In their homes" the governor said. "The Oregon home la indeed a tcwer of" strength in the maintenance of law and order and In building a sound and prosperous commonwealth. The 2.030 real estate men and women throughout Oregon play a prominent part in finding for our people suit able homes. Probably no business Tha Grange Centra) Point OniiiRfi Central Point Orange will hold a booster meeting Sept. 30. A good program has been arranged by the program committee. Refreshment will be served and all are asked to bring a cake. , "Invite your friends and come and have a good time," says the announcement. Charter members are especially urged to be present. -GET JI4.95 PREMIER "102" Electric VACUUM CLEANER Ma ACT NOW to mod em I io any existing home with American find I tor System Bet bandy vacuum cleaner gift. Forde tails see your Heat Ins Contractor or write AMERICAN P. API AT OR COMPANY. m-Al!SEaU SAHJAII COttQlUSM A3 Wait 40th Strut. Niw York. N. V. Groceteria Super Food Markets ONE SHOPPING STOP FOR EVERYTHING BOTH STORES OPEN EVERY WEEKDAY NIGHT UNTIL NINE 0 COMPLETE FOUNTAIN SERVICE Including Turkey Dinners FINER FRUITS and VEGETABLES Finer Quality Meats Home Purity Cakes and Pastries Home Purity Bread With the Real Home Flavor TONIGHT (After 6 P. M.) FREE ICE CREAM CONES Bring the children (LIMIT TWO) and with a purchase of $1.00 or more ex clusive of Bakery Goods free double dip cones will be given to the children. GATES & LYDIARD You Always Save at the Groceteria pi HERB LEWIS, De- I I J trou Ice hockey I EVELYN CHANDLER, figure skater:"What an asset good digestion is! I smoke Camels during meals and after. They do help to keep my di gestion In order." GENE SARAZEN, golf champiom'Tvewalked, I guess, thousands of miles around golf courses with Camels. They never throw my nerves out of tune." T j. JOANNA DE TUSCAN, fencing champion! "I enjoy smoking so much and I find that with Camels I tan smoke oftttl. Camels don't give me ragged nerves." CAN PEOPLE REALLY TELL THE DIFFERENCE IN CAMEL'S COSTLIER TOBACCOS ? f sww. V FRED MoDANIEL, Texas rancher: "Me and Cam els have been getting along mighty fine now for over 13 yean. I never law the beat of Camels for tastiness." AmZij The Best Answer is This . . . ' 41VJfJJ$ I Camels in a big U J0h ' Jm ji!?!! J M WKJr f J hausting game- - 4 JT ffm J0fafad Mj&gM m3l M S 0 f i extra periods and , i JW r slwM WmIMM WW p" M Si - mjQWM IRENE SHER WOOD, shopper: "Noon-time is one of my buiiest timei. That's why 'for digestion's sake smoke Camels' means so much to me. 1 OTIS BARTON, underwater ex plorer: "After a dive in the 'ba thy sphere' or any time I'm tired I smoke a Camel. I get a 'lift' with Camel Year In and year out, Camel pay millions mere lor liner tobaccoe. And amokera do appre ciate the added pleasure this meant to them I CAMEL'S use of choicer, costlier to baccos has been the subject of much discussion. The question has often been raised as to whether or not people could tell the difference. The way smokera feel gives the an swer! Camels are the largest-selling cig arette in America. ..or the world. If you are not a Camel smoker, per haps you, too, would enjoy a cigarette with a richer, cooler taste. Turn, then, to Camels. Put them to the mwtil teat smoke them iiiadily. As you enjoy Camels, you'll realiie how true It is that there ia oo substitute for mtlin tobatnt. ENJOY BENNY GOODMAN'S SWfMO BAND FOR A FULL HALF-HOUR! Tunt In Btonr's popular swioaattrs hear his famoua trio and quartetta. Tueadara S;JO poa B.S.T, (9:to pm E D. S T.). 7:SOpra C.S.T 6:30 pm M.S.T., S:30pn P.S.T. WABC CBS. we jm. EiawBsesajMsajisa Costlier Tobaccos in a Matchless Blend Camels are a matchless blend of finer, MORS EXPEN SIVE TOBACCOS Turkish and Domestic.Skillful blend ing brings out the full flavor of these choice tobaccos. n!Z!Z!!ZZ!ZZZaJ pmw' . w n.u. Ssi ; Jet I ii 4J MRS. v.N- tev ' , C?T13 I Y 1 t maker: 'Believe me, lap. I TtSi . , V ,tiS ' 1 -.'-r-r?. predate howmild Camels I L 7t5 J, - fV?. CTVfil MRS. 10HN W. ROCKEFELLER, JR., society avia trixi "I prefer Camels for steady smoking. I smoke asmsnyaslplease they don't get oa my oerves." SID WETZEL, tunnel engineer: "I work in the face of danger. My sentiments are 'I'd walk a mile for a Camel!' Camels don't C'J el- frazzle my nerves.1 MY WINTERS, radio announcer: "Camels suit met And that goes for my throat espe cially. Can't remem ber when Camels ever scratched my throat."