Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 21, 1937, Page 2, Image 2

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    .PACE TWO
MET)FORT NTXTL TTITBTTKTE. M"ET)FORD. CWEGO:ST. fSUSTfXY. yOTEfBE-R 2f. 193T
LOCAL AND PFRSQNAI I As Rescue Neared for Shipwrecked
, Hera on Visit A. K. Andrews of
acramento. Cal U ipendlnf several
days hero visiting his parent.
To Portland Frank Olrard of 430
Pearl atreet lelt by motorcar yester
day morning to spend ths week-end
In Portland.
'
Barnes Return W. D. Barnea of
Phoenix returned Friday evening from
Davenport, Iowa, and Edgar, Neb.,
where he ha spent the past five
-weeks on buslneM and visiting rela
tive. Bark from Oakland Max O. Henne,
United Air Llnea manager here, re
turned to Med ford by plane Friday
afternoon from Oakland, Cal., where
he spent a few daya Tlsltlng hla
family.
e
At Hoffmann's Mrs. Docia noma
has accepted a position at the Etnel-
wrn B. Hoffmann shop at Sixth ana
Holly street. Mr. NorrU has had
..... or eioerlenoe In aervlng the
Medford ahopplng public
In Sacramento Dr. A. It. Johnson
la eoendlna: the week-end In Sacra
mento where he la attending a meet
ing of the Northern California chap
tr of the alumni of the College of
Medical Evangelist.
To Elect Officers Annual election
of officer of the Jacksonville Home
Economics club wilt be held at z p
m. Tuesday In the home of Mrs. Ruth
Hoffman. All membere are requeued
to take part In the election.
1 Exhibit Planned Etchings brought
t,.r from New York by the ooutn
rn Art association will be on display
at the atudto, room 18. Jackson coun-
hank bulldlnc. Tuesday from i
to 5 p. m. Visitors are welcome.
e
' Mrs. Tedrow Visits Mrs. Maurice
Ted row made a business visit to Med
ford recently from her home in Wah
Jngton where her husband la a United
State forest ranger. He is atstloned
about 20 mllea from the Canadian
border. Mra. Tedrow was formerly
Mrs. Nellie Batten and an employe
of the Mali Tribune.
nealth Classes Ida M. Wilson of 7
Chestnut street yesterday announced
she would conduct a claas on health,
a work she ha done for SO yoars.
She aald she had been requested to
do this by many friend a a con
sequence of the lecture given here
recently by Viola Sweet. Person In
terested In enrolling my telephone
Mr. Wilson. -
see
New gump A new three-cent
tamp commemorating Alaska will be
placed on sale In the Medford post
office and aub-atatlon tomorrow. It
1 one of a aerie of new stamps com
memorating the territories The Alas
ka stamp shows Mount McKlnley In
the background wnue in me iore
, ground are views symbollalng preaent
day developmenta.
i
Auxiliary Meeting Auxiliary of
Jackson county chaper of the Dis
abled American Veteran of the World
War will hold a regular meeting In
th armory at p. m. Tuesday. It
was announced that Important busi
ness would- be considered and all
members were requested to attend.
Each member waa aked to bring
sandwiches for refreshment.
Visiting Mother Ensign Richard
Barr Lynch of the battelahlp Mary
land haa arrived here to apend the
Thanksgiving holldaya .with hla moth
er. Mra. Jamea 8. I.ynoh. and Mr.
and Mr. Newton Edward of SIS
north Peach atreet. He arrived by
motorcar from the navy yard at
Bremerton. Wash. He. waa graduated
from the Annapolla naval academy In
1933.
Plans Advanced Plan for the an
nual American Legion district con
ference here December IS were carried
forward at rrlday night's meeting of
the executive committee of Medford
post. The district conference I view
d aa one of the moat Important
American Legion meetings of the year
nd a large attendance la anticipated,
post offlcera stated. Post and euxlll
ry representatives from all part of
southern Oregon will participate. All
local Leglonnalrea were asked to re
serve December 13 tor the conference.
' Brings Prisoners Paul Hanlln,
TJnlted State deputy marshal, return
ed Friday evening from Klamath Palls
with four prisoners who were placed
In the Jackson county Jell to await
grand Jury action. The prisoners
were John W. Howard, as. described
sa a CCC enrolee at Camp Silver Lake
from Owensboro. Ky., who we charg
ed with larceny of government prop
erty: Edward Johnson, SS. Prank
Strawn. 37. and Thomsa Foley. 67.
11 of Klamath rails and all charged
with selling liquor to Indian.
Attendance Gain Medford poet of
the American Lesion la establishing
n excellent membership record. It
waa stated yesterday by Horace Brom
ley, adjutant, who revealed that more
than ISO members had already paid
their 13S dues. Mr. Bromley pre
dieted that the post would attain tts
membership goal belore January 1.
He attributed the membership show
ing to the work of Lee Oarlock, mem
bership chairman, whose elforta In
pt year have won him state and
national recognition. Thla year Mr.
Oarlock was appointed state vice
chairman of membership.
Examiner tue yeilneedav ftam
Inations will be conducted here tor
drivers and chauffeur from a a. m.
to S p. m. Wednesday. Persons seek
ing permlta or licenses to drive cars
ahould report at the examiner's room
on the top floor of city hsll. No ex
amination will be conducted Thura
day because of Thanksgiving. After
this week examlnatlona will be held
on the second and fourth Wednesday
and Thursday of each month, except
ing holldaya. This la extra service
for Medford and vicinity. In addi
tion to the mid-week service, ex
amination will be conducted aa usual
every BMurflay tinder Ward McReyn
olds, auto axuuusr.
Medford Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Llnlnger of Ashland were visitors In
Medford Thursday evening.
Healing Lecture The Rev. M. T.
Larkln will give a lecture on divine
healing In his home at 48 North
Orange street tonight at 7:30.
e e
Confer Here Jesse DeWltt, district
ranger of the Rogue RrVer national
forest at Union Creek, conferred with
forest service executive at head
quarter here yesterday.
see
Hkllng Poor Skiing conditions in
Crater Lake national park were de
scribed a poor. It rained In the park
all Friday night and yeaterday snow
mixed with rein.
Zonts Luncheon Zonta club will
hold a regular semi-monthly lunch
eon-meeting In the Hotel Medford at
13:10 Monday noon. All members
were requested by offlcera to make s
special effort to attend.
e
Oeta Contract F. O. Dlllard of
Medford ha reoelved s contract for
construction of a municipal water
plant at Toledo, Ore., according to
a report received hers yesterday. He
bid 804.338. Water will be taken
from SUeta creek, the report atated.
Rlwanls to Elect Annual election
of offlcera will be held by the Klwanls
club at Its weekly luncheon-meeting
In the Hotel Medford at 13:15 to
morrow. Prior to the election a pro
gram aymbollo of Thanksgiving will
be presented. Adjutant 0. R. Dur
ham 1 program ohalrman.
Ranger Returns Owen L. Aydelott,
assistant ranger of the Dead Indian
district of the Rogue River national
forest, returned yesterdsy from a ran
gers' school at Carson, Wash. He
waa aaslgned for the time being to
the forest servloe office In Klamath
Falls,
e
Car Recovered A 1838 Plymouth
touring car stolen from the Lange
Motor Car company' used oar lot
sometime before 10 p. m. Friday, was
recovered by city polios yesterday
afternoon on North Orange street.
abandoned and undamaged. Entrance
to the ear lot waa gained by tearing
open the front gate, police aald. .
On Hunting Trip V. V. Harpham,
supervisor of the Umpqua national
forest with hesdquarters In Rose
burg, and K. P. McReynolds, assistant
forester, visited In Bedford Friday
night. They were en route to the
Klamath basin area where they plan
ned to hunt ducks and gceae. Mr.
McReynolds waa formerly assistant
forester of the Rogue River national
foreet.
Forest fhange Rex Wilson, who
has been acting ranger of the Union
Creek district of the Rogue River
national forest, haa been transferred
to the Hemlock ranger station of the
Columbia national forest at Carson,
Wash., It waa announced yestenlay.
He came here from the Columbia for
est a few montha ago to replace Jesse
DeWltt, district ranger who had been
granted a leave of absence. Mr. De
Wltt resumed his post last week.
Winter Park service Jamea O.
Bromley, district maintenance super
intendent for the state highway com
mission with headquarters In Orants
Pass, yesterday Informed the Jackson
County Chamber of Commerce by
telephone that he had received con
firmation of the order to keep Crater
Lake highway open to the Crater Lake
national park boundary throughout
the winter. E. P. Leavltt. park sup
erintendent, was quoted by A. H.
Banwell, chamber manager, as saying
there had been no change In the
plan to keep the roads within the
park open ell winter. Keeping the
highway open, together with the park
roads, haa been sponsored by the
chamber.
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. This remarkable picture of a rescue at sea shows one of the sailors of the flreek freighter. Tzenny Chon
drls, with arms extended and supported by a life belt. Just before ho was snatched from the storm waters oft
rape llntleras, Vn., by a rprue rrrw of the const ounrd Putter Mendota.
Lass Would Go to War
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Kuth CHI mi. 18. Aint'iiruu-imrn (hi nose flipper club hoU'M In Si'uttk,
Hiih.. nuultl like to hionu (tic flr-t unman ,-ilit lit the Chlnrxe arun
Iiiii ner frx. ne unt toiti, nuiKew mat impovfiiie. 'iiut Mnieday I'm Ru
in j to fly In China, ma) hp as a lenrher,' Hie liuMed. he U a capable
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HIRER INFORMS
BRITAIN ON PACT
OR AND COULEE, WftMv, NOV. 30.
The contract lor construction of
th high dam at Grand Coulee, bid
for which will be opened December
10 In Spokane, will not be awarded
much before Chrlatmaa, reclamation
bureau offlclala aald here today.
After the bids are opened at leiut
two wwka of checking and Investi
gation will precede the award, it wa
reported.
A large number of the 1B5 Item
will be bid aeparatelj and all will
need to be checked. Both the Den
ver and Washington. D. C, officca will
make complete analyst of all bleu.
A certified check for M ,000 000
muat accompany each bid and all
bidden will be Investigated as to re
liability and ability to finance the
contract, which will aproxtmate tW.-000.000.
BERLIN. Nor. 30. . A uaually
well-informed aource dlcclcsed today
Adolf Hitler had told Great Brit
ain' good will envoy, Viscount Hal
ifax, the OcrmanJapan'Siv.ialtan
triangle must be accepted ai a factor
In world affairs.
TIUr first concrete Indication of
what Hitler and the Brltlfh lord pres
ident of the council talked about yes
terday came from the obscure pre-w
service "from Oermnny." Government
spokesmen gave assurances this serv
ice was "usually rt;ht."
According to this agency Hitler and
Hullfax "(rnnicly and trustfully" ex
charccd views on the reason for the
present International difficulties and
misunderstandings.
DENVER . Nov. 20. ...? Sit-down
trikws are 'Illusions." Frances Per-
t kins, secretary of labor, said today
! as she visited Denver briefly on her
way from Salt Lake City to Washing
ton. "If any exist." she said, ' they will
be over tomorrow morning."
"We ought nf ver to think of them
w pnrt oi the pattern of American
life and Industry. They are sporadic,
Slven an Importance by the press
out of all proportion to their ig
nlficanee." she aald when asked her
vknvs on sit-d-vvn strikes at Akron.
Ohio. Fontlac, Mich., and elsewhere.
A-ikod about report ahe would re
.Ipn from President Roosevelt's cabi
net, Mrs. perktna 5ald she had "no
such Intention. Indeed. I expect and
want, when the time cornea ;or me to
die. to be In harness."
SUSPECT HELD IN
SEmE. Nov. 80. Cla ide
Trans. 31. e-conrlct wanted In con
nectton with a mall robbery chary,
walked into a federal bureau of in
vestigation trap here tonuhf after
i hit escape from a U. 3. marshal dep
uty Wrdnrday.
j Since hi escape authorities had tn
j vr !!; ted every known haunt or
Travis, finally ttm a tmp at an
apartment nous. Other details of the
trap were not made puXk
FOHT WORTH. Texas. Sot. 30.,
A 33-year-old man waa a rented here
late today aa a suspect in the aiaylnR
of V. L. Presley. Dallas baker who
was found shot to death In a ditch
near Dallas this afternoon.
Homicide Officer A. C. Howerton
said the suspect, who gave his name
aa Edward Winn of Columbus, Ind..
admitted he had taken an automo
bile ahtch offlcera aald belonged to
Proaley. but declared he did not kill
the baker.
Homerton quoted the suspect as
saying he had found the car with the
ignition keys in It on a Dallas street
Five out of s:x pedestrians Injured
in motor car accidents are struck be
fore thf y reach the middle of the
street they are crossing.
Joan Davis, the ' fs:i Ctrl ' of com
edy, our sold goldfish in flve-and-dlme
sttre in her native St. Paul.
Autos rank cot.d only to food
In family budgets In 34 town of the
vvstcrn states, tlie dejrtn.ent
airU'ulture reprts
of
The Pan American I'mon formerly
is known as the Internsiional Bu
fvsa oi AwerKau ii uui.es.
For Sale by Owner
It-ACRK PKOPrHTV
S mfie Medford. I'enred. raw
fenced, ctly water, t.arte hue.
1 b.ilhrtom. tiood out build
lns. P Hv -MT. Meilf.ifit
10
WINNER OP PRIZE
First prices awarded In Sharpie's
annual baby salon la.it niht at the
Hotel mm ford were to Marcla Youryr
su month old. in claas on: Louis
Works. 17 months old in claas two;
and Michael Wyatt. five yvars old. in
claas three. A complete list or winners
will be announced Monday.
Transparent photographic, flirn first
miw ush1 In IKH3.
PREVENT COLDS
BEST METHOD
Now that the winter month are
her coldt are becoming quite preva
lent. Do not nenlevt t:ie first warn
tr wnti or th first si.:e throat.
Prevention of colds with the mod
orn cold taoi-ine is t;.e dcauable
mcthv1. However, if you think t;ist
a cold Is start:r.jt, brain at onre t.-
trat it. The aarest treatment is to
w your dovtor Immedia'.eiY.
Insulin 10 fC V 40 U II 08 We
.'.v S H 0en aViiis. HeAth'f
o;c:i, pcuc
SPRING SURPRISE
LONOMONT. Colo.. Nov. 20. JF,
Turkey growers of the Longmont area
are gathering turkey egs gloomily
and wishing the turkey hens wouldn't
bother.
The hens, for unesfplalned reasons,
have started laying at a season when
they should be conserving their
strength and weL?ht for the even
tualities of ne:it Thursday.
E
BOY ACTOR FAME
LOS ANGELES. Nov. 20. yp)
Jackie Coogan, the ragged urchin who
starred with Charlie Chaplin In the
silent screen hit. 'The Kid," 18 years
ago. and Betty Orable, blonde screen
actresa who haa been his sweetheart
for three years, were married today
In St. Brendan's Catholic church.
The Rev. William L. Mullane offici
ated. There were scores or top -flight
movie actors and actresses in the
little church to see the ceremony
and speed the couple away cn the
briefest of honeymoons at Palm
Springs, nearby desert resort. Jackie
and Betty must be back on a movie
lot next Monday to resume work In
the picture "College Swing."
When the brief ceremony was com
pleted the newlyweds kissed at the
altar and were greeted by numbers
of phot ogra pliers' flashbulbs aa they
walked down the aisle.
The Jackie Coogan of IB pars io
wore patched and baggy pints. He
was Just starting a remarkable career
as a child actor. Today, the Jackie
Coogan who took the beautiful Betty
arable as his wife, waa a millionaire.
Coogan appears infrequently In the
movies. His fortune was built as a
child actor and the salary he earned
wasv wisely conserved and Invested
by his father, Jack Sr., who was kill,
ed a few years ago In an automobile
accident near San Diego, CaJ.
Jackie's money was placed In a
trust fund and the principal was
turned over to him only two years
aeo, when he reached voting age.
Water leaking from a faucet the
size of a common pin wastes 160
cnllcns o day.
In Respect to
WILLIAM LYDIARD
,yho Passed Away Friday Evening
Both GROCETERIA SUPER
FOOD MARKETS
Will Remain Closed
All Day Monday
ujfi ua, ngm'ff! ftwt,
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ELECTRIC RANGE
before Thanksgiving...
a big Thanksgiving dinner
is easy to get with an
ELECTRIC RANGE
Ever if it's your first Thanksgiving dinner cooked on
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an eiecrric Kange you can go odout it without a
qualm. The beautiful, modern Westinghouse
Electric Range now on sale is the last word in
domestic cooking equipment. It costs no more
to cook the electric way and means unbelievable
release of work, time and worry. $30 allow
ance for your old range, $5 down and $3.34
monthly constitutes a bargain offer for this
exceptionally fine range. Be sure to order
your new range in time for Thanksgiving.
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