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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1937)
PAOfri EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1S37 MedfordJTribune "Everyone Is Hoolhflrn Orrgom IKmdi the Uall Trlbunt." Dallj Except latoriUr. Published by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. tl-3?-: N. Fir Si. PhoMTl ROBERT W. RUHL, Editor. ERNEST R. OILSTRAP. Mamrer. An IndpndDt Newaptpcr. Knterad Mcond-elaaa matter at Mi lord. Orsgon, uodr Act of March . SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally, one yaar ' Dally, ill month! Dally, ona month " By Carrlar, in Advanca Madforfl, Aan tnA .lankannvllla. ClDtril Point, phoanlx, Talant, Oold Hill and on hifhwayat ma Dally, ona yaar I"-00 Dallv. all montha -3B Daily, ona month All lirmi caan id lavmci. Off U Inl Paper of the City of Me1ford. Official Paper of Jaclcoo County. MEMIIKR OF TUB A8tOCIATEI PKEaS Receiving ruil I.eHMO Tirfj nrrm. "ina Aaaociaiau row tltlad to the uaa ror publication of all nawa dlapatchaa oradllad to It or othar wlaa oradllad to thla pa par. and alio to tilt local nawa puDiintju h.i-m,. All rifhta for publication of apaota dlapatchaa herein are alao reaervad. MEMBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Officii In New Tork. Chlearo. Detroit, San Franclaro. Loa Anfelea. Seattle. Port Ian. St. Loula. Atlanta. Vancoiiar. B.C. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Festive gnawing on the. toothsome uid Important sections of a turkey was the order of the day Thura. and widespread. All food and viands dis appeared as If swallowed. Postmasters have started salting people "to do their Chrlatmas mail ing esrly. The November rainfall has been a record and a caution. It Is the first time Ince 1928 farmers have fallen to report they plowed up dust. The Dubb Watson boy, Ed, hss a tog hla Paw will have to buy a 11 oense for. yule garb adorns the lamp posts of both the Mall 8tem and Oth st. '.tie men of Old Medford wound up their football seaaon with a vic tory, and the neit thing on the tapis will be long-legged basietoau play ers. The way things are shaping up In the nation has caused Republicans to breathe easier, but no oftener. The Brown boys of Bagle Pt. have started grinding out their notorious sausage, to the great Joy of people In position to eat. ... The Elks tomcat Is now as fit aa a rlolln and the scar of combat on his lower Jaw has knit. ... A bunch of the boys went over on the Applegate laat Sun., and ate fried chicken a la Hermy Offenbscher. ... Old Sol shone brightly Prl. with a warm glow, and it was more like spring than spring. ... The, Intelligentsia of the colleges have come home to dins and dance and visit. ... Amateur magicians are now In training In this city, and some can hide the ace of spades up their sleeves already. It will be a long time before they can make everybody Tien, by everybody going broke, and save money by spending It. a . . The grapplers will tangle sgaln to morrow night at the armory. Some sew faces will be on hand to twist the foe Into a pretnel, and let him unravel himself. ... A million crows gathered In the Alice Hnnley mesdow Thura. pm. and held a caucus. ... Del Oetchell, the banker-poet, and Tom Bradley discussed civilisation, uch as It Is, Wed. eve, but reached DO verdict on where It will wind up ... Shrtners Journeyed to Eugene Sat. The more Intrepid wore no hats and took no umbrellas. ... Smart Girls" are reported They grin st the traffic cop and all the other sulotlsta wait till they get by. ... The English suto rscer who trav eled 8J4 777793 mph. had business on Weat Main after the dsnce Thura. night. ... Your corr. has to send aome pears to Salem scribes, as the result ol running lis neck out farther than necessary In predicting Bend would beat Oregon City by an touchdowns for the mythical state title. It was a giddy and semi-ldlotlo trick. We would bet the pears, the aame way. If there waa next time. Being Irom Balrm. the beneficiaries proDaoiy need Dcs Chutes spuds more tbsn they do pears, and the latter win be as milk and honey and cham pagne. They were and, are lucayi ... Th Wig Antipole boy, . Is still hot for besr stones, aa told By Uncle John Orlffln. B7. He has hsuetcd his Paw'e reporiolre. Air Mall Approved WARRINGTON. Nov. 37. (API The poetofiire department announced to day that It had approved an appli cation hy the Northwest Air Unci to establish s route from Yeklmi, Wash to Portland, Ore, Adrertlalnlc Repreeentetlvee Editorial Correspondence PASADENA, Calif., Nov. 24. Quite apparent there are two climates in California the north and south. Annual rain fall around San Francisco, as in Southern Oregon, above the average this year. Below the average in Log Angeles county, in fact it is surprisingly hot nnd dry hereabouts' It was 80 in the shade when wo arrived and while a high fog cooled things off yesterday, it is hot again today. Up and down Orange Grove avenue the sprinklers are busy and the lawn mowers ditto. They arc playing golf in shorts and minus sweaters across the rond at Annandale. In brief its mid-summer here now nnd the local pupers as usual, are boasting about it with dirty digs at the freezing temperatures and blizzards in the east. Returning to the bungalow after breakfast were accosted by a chauffeur from Dos Moinps, Iowa. It was his first visit to California, and after plowing through the snow and ice with chains for 24 hours, he just couldn't get over the miracle that had transpired, and had to tell someone all about it. The time to date has been devoted largely to meeting trains, the .Simla Fe "Chief" here in Pasadena, on which half the family arrived, and the Sunset at Glendale on which the remaining fourth came in with about 300 girls and boys more or loss from school to spend the Thanksgiving recess, with their families.. The Chief is the popular "movie" train, and we had to wade through a veritable milky way of stars before we finally found our kin folk surrounded by tile usual array of unmatched lug-' gage. There was King Vidor, the director, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Menjou, H. B. Warner, the one-time matinee idol, meeting his wife and daughter, and Joan Blondell, who was greeted by her hefty young son, .accompanied by his equally hefty grand mother. She also had a husband somewhere about, but he got off on the other side of the train, and didn't join the family group, until later. The young man incidentally, all togged out in canary yellow and blue, had enough difficulty in recognizing his mother, without having a step-father known as Dick Powell. to complicate the situation. ..... Joan Blondell. by the way, is one of those movie stars who is far more attractive off the screen than on, or at least this was your correspondent's impression, obviously a fleeting one. We liked the casual, yet devoted way she greeted her infant son, and turned her back on the candid camera men- A vital wholesome person we should say, with a sense of humor. With two generations there as exhibit No. 1, mommer and son, we can see some hard work ahead, for Joan to keep her figger." The Glendale meeting took the "big game". Cars were parked all over the place, and there was a perfect mob of poppers and mommers, and brothers and sisters, awaiting the train, with a dog show mixed in between. The Sunset, drawn by tho new circus-wagon stream line locomotives arrived in two sections, and as always happens, tho fourth member of the family was on the second, and at one end, when we were milling about at the other. However we finally got together, and not in any too good humor for it was earlv and no one had had breakfast, we sallied forth for the nearest coffee stand. OTO.Mclniyre NEW YORK, Nor. 37, Tills Is n good day any to wonder Juet how far thy ore going to stretch th week-end. When I laboured In the news-rooms the week used to end SAturday. If lucky we got off a lit tle early Saturday Afternoon and had Sunday for our very own. Thla regulation waa general. Then not many year ngo we adopted " we e k - a n d " which meant we knocked off Sat urday at noon or maybe Friday night. Finally we quit early Friday afternoon and showed up fairly late Monday morn ing. In England I discovered the weekend is from Friday lunch to Monday lunch. Yet, even so. we have topped merry old England. Adcla Rogers St. Johns recently delivered a manuscript to a weekly magaElne editor on Wednes day morning at 11. His mvretary came out and with a scornful glance said: "I'm sorry but Mr. Soanso left for the week-end this morning." Illusion: Dorothy Parker is widely three-sheeted as most daring of the pu inters. Yet those close to her say she la fearfully shy and rarely In dulges the verbal riposte for which she has become noted. Also she Is so afraid of newspapermen she has become practically a recluse. Few non-dog-owners would believe dog are conscious of time. Yet evi dence piles up. rVr Instance, a mem ber of our household goes regularly twice a week shopping and return at 1 o'clock, Invariably prompt. On svich days, within two or three min ute of the time for her return, our deaf Boston, Billy, now gone, would arouse himself, asleep or awake, and go. to the front hall to sit a few feet from the door waiting! He new miased. Eventually moat New Yorker tire of the pfaccvk fripperies of the gaudy cafes. There is something Irritating to the true trencherman, about peo ple who come to a restaurant to be seen more than to express a test for food. Uxe that professional eoctrty party thrower who bounces from table to table, haloolng across the room and otherwise trying to be the whole show I The practLed gourmet stu dlously avoids such places. When he dines out you will find him at ren dezvous rarely mentioned In society chit-chat. Park-timbered sherry and beef havens with old print, and per haps a collection of steins around the wall. Instead of shrieking jaw. the cutter of knives and forks and the tinkle of glasses. No roster of the "small hour' blades, but diners who know the cut of a steak and to whom a goblet of rare port or a tankard of nut brown ale are a help and not a refine Those ancient, sturdy places keep helr hold In the midst of eter nal change. Whenever In this vt crowded cen ter columnlng seem a michtv tank 1 often think of Will Riot, wbo lives at us back to the traffic jam at B. W. R. a crossroads place In the deep Ozarki, where nothing happens, and yet turns out readable columns for a group of country newspapers. Few strangers coma to his crotch of the creek and there are no entertainments such as theatre, movie, etc. Tralna run through twice a week and night life consists of an owl's hoot or so, or perhaps the mournful strains of mouth organ from across a faraway rdlge.Yet Rice manages to winnow fuU blooded observations about Ufa and Its meaning amid such desolation. Ex cellent stuff that papers are glad to print. Hidden treasures from lost cave. Often magazine editors find some of their better pieces come from the abandoned and pindllng places of the earth out where the blackberry bushes hold up the rail fences. Ople Read's fine novels tor another gen eration were turned out In the swamps of Arkansas, far from rail roads. Harold Bell Wright got his plots out of the Ozarks. There Is something Inspiring an Itch to write amid bleakness. Whlttler's Snow bound, for Instance. And Edith Whar ton's "Ethan Frome." The manazlnn ntxA nt m nan like better than most was written in a surround of cowling hills of old Mexico In one of those dusks that hang so despairingly until the first iwinmo or stars pricks through. My typewriter was nn an ni and my chair an enormous sack of frlloles. Out Of thn vlnHnv . .ha young deer was tethered to a sapling. nun, apace away wss the clearest pool of water I had ever iutn a nri in which the rock bottom IS feet ne low was plainly visible aa were a dozen varieties of darting highly col ored fish. (Copyright 1937. McNaught Syndi cate. Inc.) E OF SHERIFF SALKNf. Nov. 37. it, Governor Charles H. Martin today a.ialcnrd .he attorney-general'a office to take charge of the prosecutions of Sheriff T. Mass. his son Howard, ieputv sheriff, and Jessie Taddoc. tax col lector, all of Clackamas countv, who sre under Indictments chsrglng Isr- ceny of public fund. The alignment waa msde st the request of District Attorney Fred H Miller of Clscksmaa county. Francis T. Wsde. assistant attor ney general, probably will be align ed to take over the prosecutions. Pless of the three defendants will be received In the Clackamas county circuit court next Monday. RETAIL TRADE IN STATE HOLDS UP PORTLAND. Nov. 37. jn Retail j trade In Oregon remains about the j same as October, averaging three to four percent tnder last year, a Dun I ft Bradstreet report say today. Un- j employment Is about 10 percent and price adjustments are causing hesl- j tsney hy merchants in placin? or ders. Collections remain fairly good 1 Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, wlU be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answeied. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. WE CALLED Up and coming business woman announces she la looking for a build ing lot on which she can build a house without a front yard but with plenty of space In the rear yard. 'And we're not going to have any dining- room," she ad- Vls "hilt oaf tall fr,L 1" I I over the house, in the patio and In the carden. I chen with rug- II iPt eW' Retl ""Ptece. and iLnsii fil laifcl down the middle , of the room a heavy long table with benches with backs along either side of It. Our guestA alwaya settle In the kitchen, anyway, so we may aa well go early American. So I didn't invent the Idea. For that matter, who ever originates an Idea anyway? Possibly one gets an Idea from the subconscious or the unconscious now and then at least It seems that way when one happens to remember or recall It on waking but nearly all Ideas are born of suggestion. Don't blame me, then, if any of these Ideas of good housing strike you aa freakish. We called It Odd House when we Introduced the subject here, and Invited readers to contribute their Ideas. Mrs. W. J. W. reports she is 68 and may yet build an Odd House herself, with her own hands. She needs more Ideas. She has some hand-made block letter mottoes on the walls of her present house, her favorite sayings (not her own say ings), and her friends tell her they are atrocious. The latest Is one she put on the wall over the work table In her tiny kitchen. It reads "Culin ary Studio" wtlh credit to th3 Brady column. Sorry. Madam, but the Brady column cannot accept responsibility. Perhaps the suggestion to hang signs about the place came from a college freshman of the class of '98. L. K. of New York offers a sug gestion concerning floors for the Nut House, as he facetiously calls It. "The floors should be made of tiles, which are easily kept clean and most sanitary of all floor materials. Wood-1 The Capital Parade (Continued irum Page one) Robinson by a majority of one. The brand of leadership which he has shown since the special session con venod la in marked contrast to what the senate knew under Robinson, and It may be blamed for the fact that the depression -Inspired revolt of the senators has already gone to such lengths that nearly 40 of the 76 Dem ocrats In the chamber have almost forgotten that there's such a place as the White House. The Kentucky senator Is an ami able. Imposing -looking person, with a pleasant manner, a talent for barber shop song, and' a passion for tele phoning the White House. Not so long ago, during the antl- lynchlng bill gas attack which he was powerless to prevent. Senator Tom Conatly of Texas called him a Charlie McCarthy." senator Con- nally hit a rather sore spot. A Char lie McCarthy was pretty much what the prealdent wanted for leader last spring, but now the president Is find ing that commands carried by ven triloquism to a congress In a dis obedient mood are not altogether effective. Among other trouble afflicting Senator Bsrkley Is the additional fact that he longs to Inherit the presi dential succession In 1940. In conse quence, his leadership of the senate Is not only ventrltoqutstie. It is also exceedingly friendly to other sena tors who may have something to say In con 'ntlon delegations that It lacks necessary force. The senator la genuinely liberal: he Is able: he Is extremely eloquent. But these qualities do not make up for his defects. Moreover, the con servative southerners who ujimI to be Robinson's chief lieutenants are busily plotting against him. The once-helpful Republican lesder. the wise cyn ical Charles L. McNary of Oregon, Is giving the southerners all the assist ance he can. And the extremety in fluential and foxy vice-preMdent. John N. Garner, haa practically dedi cated his life to procuring the revi sion of the tax laws and the defeat of the wages and hours bill. Add to all this the effects of the depression, and the unhappy senator's situation la all but hopeless. A for the hou.e situation. It Is hardly better than that in the sen- i ate, as the deadlock on the wages and hours bill has already demonstrated j The definite coolness toward the WHY Chinese herb, will five too relict no matter what yon ire art Itc-trd itn you owe n to rooriell to ose thl opportunity to regain rout health. Cbant nerba oav. restored neallh to thuusands ol people Why oot yoot no run hsve uaa. constipation, stomach Trouble. Kbeo mailsm. May Ferei pro. late Troobte. Ulcers. Children-. Hed tVettlnt sinus Trouble. Asthma. Infloensa femak trouble, riles Chronic Couth. Nib Blood pressor, arthritis. Colitis vervousneaa. Apprndiritla ronillitla Enema. Heart, urn Biaddei Mdiirya. Lunta. tllood inner? Disorder, herb will lira yon relict when others fall Free confliillatloa Open 10 to P. M. Me .Thura IB. H . CHAN riiwd Brady, M. D. IT ODD HOUSE en floors, while warmer underfoot, require frequent scraping, repainting, varnishing, waxing, etc. They develop squeaks and often provide a hiding place for Insects. Large red or other colored tiles are fireproof, decorative and everlasting; they require no fur ther painting or varnishing after first cost of installation." Ever since I began mulling this thing over I've been trying to get up courage to plump for some such floors throughout, floors from which the rugs could be lilted while the hose la played over them for a quick, easy cleaning. But whenever I have ventured to hint of this I have met with such Intolerance that I hadn't the courage to carry on with the Idea. I do hope L. K. Is In earnest about It and that he la not engaged in the tile business. From away up north O. A. B. pro poses a roof garden section 8 by 13 or more feet, with roof that rolls back, for sunbathing or for star gazing. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Myopia. Can you tell me whether there la any scientific evidence to support the statement that an optimal intake of vitamin D dally will tend to correct or improve myopia? (C. S.) Answer Blackberg and Knapp re ported In Archives of Ophthalmology, 11:665. '34, that "encouraging results" have been obtained from administra tion of a vitamin D concentrate to supplement the diet. Injection Treatment. Following your suggestion I went to Dr. who gave me several In jection treatments and now I am happy to report I no longer have any piles. The treatments were quite painless and detained me never more than a few minutes at his office. He knows his business. (J. W. M.) Answer Today all the well-equipped physicians give Injection treat ment for hemorrhoids (piles) In the great majority of cases. Only ex ternal plies cannot be obliterated by this modern method. (Copyright, 1937, John F. Dllle Co) Kd Note! Persons wishing to communicate "with Dr. Brady should aend letter direct to Or. William Brady. M U 6S El Camino, Beverly Hill. Calif. wage-hour bill on the part of Speaker William B. Bankhead. the open op position of the A. F. of L., and. once more, the effects of the depression, have all combined to tangle up the president's program, about as com pletely as possible. In spite of the setbacks which the wage-hour bill has suffered recently, Majority Lesder Sam Rayburn and the New Dealers still hope to get the measure through. Their Idea Is to effect a compromise this week-end between the 150 farm representatives who oppose the wage-hour bill and the 150 Industrial representatives who have little enthusiasm for the farm bill, and get the signatures to the petition bringing the wage-:iour bill out of the rules committee by these combined forces. To do so. however, they fear they may have to make concessions in the wage-hour bill e,ven more sweeping than those already made. As one New Dealer put It: v "I guess we'll have to pull out all the bill's real teeth, stick In some nice false uppers and lowers In front, and pass It like that." OOLD PEACH. Nov. ST. (AP) Speaking of rain and who hasn't In the past as days? give an ear to forest service officials who got tech nical about It today. The service rain gauge here shows a November fall of 38J7 tncnee to date, which sounds like a lot, but wait a moment. Let the experts reallv flaure It. That rainfall, figured over the ap- proximate area of the county, amounts to 89.S0O.0OO.0O0 (billions Is' right) gallons of water. The water. If It could be put In one tank, would I fill a receptacle 1"0 feet square and slightly less than a mile high. So far as anyone here knows. Curry i county has never seen November rains ; like those this month. On the 9th. the gauge measured a 4.53-lnch fall In S4 houra. while 4.30 lncha fell on j the JJnd. The only daya without rain have been the 4th and 3lst. Beech wood Is being used In Ger many to replace the customsry cork for bottle stoppers. Use Mall TTlbuna want ada. RADIO SERVICE On All Makes 00 days guarantee on all repair work W riria RADIO AND mjmUMU 9 electric stior Nit to Rnxy rhone 1757 SUFFER? CHAN at til I f. H nn Chinese Mee) Co tit Main Comment on the Days News By FR.t.Ml JENKINS By FRANK JENKINS N 1028 and '39, we discovered a new era. No longer was It necessary to work and scrimp and save. One merely bought low and sold high. No mat ter what one did, It showed a profit for prices went always higher and higher. We pitied our benighted an cestors for living back In the dark ages before modern progress had shown the way to EASY MONEY. It was grand while It la&tcd, but It ended In a craah. A GAIN, In 1B38 and '37, we dis- covered a new era. This time It waa Santa Claus who pointed the way. Work les jnd have more. Spend ourselves rich. Achieve abundance through scarcity. Don't save; don't scrimp: Just leave It all to Santa Claus; he will provlle. These were the shibboleths of 1936 and early 1937. Again It was grand while It lasted, but again It ended In a crash. llfHAT la the lesson of these two world-famous sprees? Here It la In a nutshell: There Is NO SUCH THINO as some thing for nothing. We have to work for what we get. A hit the pretty words ever spoken since the world began can't change this fundamental fact: Wealth Is the product of labor ap plied to raw materials. When we labor much, there Is much wealth. When we labor little, there Is little wealth. When nobody labors at all. there la NO WEALTH. YF we can anly learn that lesson so thoroughly that never again will we forget It, the terrible burning of our fingers that we suffered In 1929 and the somewhat milder, but still painful, burning we are Buffering from now will not have been In vain; for the knowledge, gained by hard experience, that before we DIVIDE we must PRODUCE will enable us to go on and achieve a higher standard of living than we have yet dreamed of. No Property Levy PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 27. (AP) With Income tax receipt offsetting any need of revenue ordinarily pro duced by property taxes, the state will eliminate the property levy next year. Wallace Wharton, mudget direc tor, told a meeting of realty execu tives here. The 1937 property levy was 1.16 mills. FELDMAN ELECTRIC CO. 237 EAST MAIN AT BARTLETT MedforcTs pace with REMEMBER YOU XL GET 1938 RCA Victor 86K7 Regularly $79.50 For a limited time only AND YOUR OLD RADIO FEATURES 6 Metal Tubes Sunburst Dial 12-in. Dyn. Speaker Tone Control All Wave Set Walnut Veneer Terms Within Reason EFFORTS TO END SALEM CULINARY 8ALEM, Nov. 27. &t Efforts of C. H. Oram, state labor commissioner, to effect a settlement of the differ ences between the Salem Association of Restaurants and the local Culinary Workers' Union by arbitration ap peared to have been stalemated to day by Inability of the contending factions to agree on a basis for arbi tration. Both were willing to arbitrate mat ters of hours, wages and working conditions for restaurant employes. But when the union, at a meeting held yesterday afternoon, authorized Its executive committee to name the union's representative on the three man arbitration board and specify the terms of negotiation it declared the restaurant owners must agree to a closed shop for all employes. The restaurant owners, according to Frank Chatas, president of their association, will not agree to arbi trate the closed shop lssua and will arbitrate only on the agreement of the union to remove pickets from the two places now being picketed, take all of the restaurants off the unfair list and recede from their ac mand that the employers discharge all employes who refuse to Join the union. FIERY PALESTINE HAIFA. Palestine. Nov. 21. if?) Sheik Far nan Saadl, bearded trouble maker of the Holy Land, was banged today in the ancient fortress of the medieval crusaders at Acre the first to face punishment undar the new military courts martial to curb ter rorism. The sheik, a stalwart, six-foot man between 55 and 60 years of age, walk ed to the gallows with Moslem stoic Ism and faced the hangman without flinching. The fiery Arab was dragged from a cornbln last Monday and given sum mary trial for possessing firearms and ammunition. Saadl had been hunted for more than a year. The British commander- in-chief in mandated Palestine con firmed the sentence of death render ed Wednesday despite last minute ppeals by Arab organizations which argued the sheik was too old to be hanged. Wheat to England PORTIiANH Ore Vrtv 97 Ats More than 30,000 tons of wheat will be moved from terminals here for England's bread baskets In the next week In eieht shins, it. win h of the year's heaviest grain move ments out or tne northwest. Radio Center sets the a TRADE-IN SALE of 1938 .RCA Victor Model 87K Regularly $89.50 For a limited time only AND YOUR OLD RADIO FEATURES Msgic Eye All Wave Set 7 Metal Tube. Walnut Veneer 12 in. Dyn. Speaker Sunburst Dial Automatic Volume Control IF YOUR OLD SET IS WORTH MORE MORE DURING THIS SPECIAL SALE! 50 Flight 'o Time .Medford and Jackson County history from the flies of tba Mall Tribune 10 and 20 yean aso. TEN YEARS AGO TODOV November 28. 1927 (It was Monday) O. A. C. battles to a 14-14 tie with Csrnegle Tech. City rsnks fourth In state In bank deposits, state bank reports show. Chicago gang war ebbs. Floods upstate recede and families routed by high water return lo their homes. Snow reported on highway at Un ion Creek. ' Sheriff Ralph Jennings hurt when he falls while chasing erring boy. New Ford car to be shown here Friday. Title tilt between Grant high called off. Medford and TWENTV YEARS AGO TODAY Novemher 28, lf17 (It was Wednesday) If the breathing out anathemas of the people of Eagle Point and those living along the different star routes wer as effective as they are said to have been In olden times, the per son or persons responsible for the delivery of our mall from Medford would surely be In a horrible condi tion, for It has got to that point where forbearance ceases to be a vlr- tue. (Eagle Point Eaglets), Germany talks peace with Russia, Chaos reigns in land of the Czar. No Issue of the Mail Tribune to morrow, thanksgiving Day, Group pictures of Co. 7 displayed in local store windows. High school students to hold rally tonight for Ashland football game tomorrow.. The world's largest fruit Juice plant Is to be built In Honolulu at a cost of 91.250.000. It will specialize In the canning of pineapple Juice. Use Mall It t Dune want ads. STORE FULL OF QUALITY GIFTS Since adopting this reader type of advertisement we have consistently advertised our prescription depart ment. For the first time, In these ads. we are going to deviate from this policy. This time we sre going to talk about the quality Christmas mer chandise we are now unpacking. Christmas orders are arriving every day Our windows and shelves are londed with the best of this season's offerings. We have gifts for every member of the family, In wide range of prices, and we assure you the quality, as well as the price. Is right. Insulin 10 c.c. U 40 Is $1.08. We give S. & H. Oreen Stamps. Heath'a Drug Store, phone 884. PHONE 937 : 1 ' Jjv ..-i "