Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 24, 1938, Page 8, Image 8

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    PA'ftTC "EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRTBTJjNTE, fEDFOUD, PRECOX, SUNDAY, 'APRIL 24. 1038
MEDFOWVtWTRIBUNE
"Eve-front Id Hnutharn Orvgos)
RMdi tht Hall Trlbona."
Dally Bi rapt Saturday.
Published by
u&fiironn PRINTING CO.
tlSTlft N Fir St. Phons T
HUBERT W RUHL, Editor.
RNE8T R. OILSTRAP. Mt)t.
Ad lodtpaadtoi Nawtpkpar.
Kntarad aa aacond-elaai matter at lied
lord, Oregon, under Act nt March I.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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Dally, one month 60
By Carrier, in Advance Med ford. Ab
lnd. Jaclcaonvllla. Central Point,
Phoenli. Talent, Gold HIM and on
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All terme eaeh Is advance.
Official Paper of Ibe City of Hrdford
Official Paper of JavkwD County.
MEMI1KR OF THE ABSOC1 ATEI I'REHg
Reoelvlnii Full ..cumui iro nrrvir.
The Aeeoelaied PreM exclusively en
titled to the un for publication of all
sews dlipatchee credited to it or other
wise credited to this piper, and also to
the local newa published herein.
Alt rights for publication of special
dispatches hereto are also reserved.
MEMBER OP UNITED PREBS
MBMRKB OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advert lain i Representative
OfflCM 10 N.w Vork, Chlcalo. D.trott,
i.n PnnolMO, Lo. Ana.l.s. Siattl.,
rorlUnd, 11. Logls. Atlanta, Vtnoou.r,
- - Member,
Oregon Newspapei
vJ Associatioi
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
Th csmDaien hereabout lacks
vehemence, and Is tranquil compared
to the civil wars of other years. No
laaue has arisen to make the voters
mad.
e
Lett Carpenter unexpectedly flared
with s wisecrack Frl. When ae.
parting friend remarked. "See you
asatnr Len retorted: "Not unless
I'm unlucky." Ha was greatly pleased
with bis own flippancy.
Tracy Boothby of the Red Blanket
Area hauled a beef, and Ed Hon en
beak to town the end of the week.
The Ralston (English) Spsrrowa
has taken an apartment In the Dock
Butler Neon sign, where they enjoy
electric lights and heat.
This week Thespians of the sr. hi
will present "Applesauce." It Is a
romantlo comedy, Instead of what the
nation haa been getting from Wash
ington, D. 0., the past six yesra.
An Espee section crew has been
fixing the Main Stem crossing all
week. Rome wasn't built In a day.
The H. Flew her dog Klpp la atlll
lame In a front leg, and, consequent
ly not able to knock a person down,
as fast as when himself.
e
The pesr trees are all abloom, and
J. Kort Hall, the fretting horticul
turist Is having a fine time fearing
' tha worse. f
e e
The wUy trout la still too foxy for
the p lacs tor lal enthusiasts, who flock
to the river and tills. A man from
Nebraska was here last week to catch
a fish, but didn't.
e e e
Two or three promising young men
will look a preachrr In the eye, early
In June. They nave bought circlets.
Next Sun. May 1 has been pro
claimed by the Governor as Child
Health Dsy, and keep well yourself,
e e e
Lilacs and butterflies came out the
past week.
e e e
The Young Democrats of the state
convened In Pendleton last week.
From the photographs published, they
took their Pswa along.
roe pan cane hat Is being worn
by the fair sex. with a veil and thrte
hand fulls of peach blosxoms, on top.
It can be worn either off the fsc, or
on the head.
Oene Thorndyke, of the flduelar;
depositary, has taken over the reins
of the CofC. where they were dropped
by T. BUI Isaacs, elected the week
before.
The poison oak season has started
again. There are more cures for It
thsn a cold. All am good when -
with discretion.
Not much Interest Is manifested
around here In who will be elected
state maentro of the Grange.
Hermy. FYed and John Offenbacher
of the Applegate towned Sat.. All are
wide-awake farmers.
The first thunder of the senson
came Sat. and wai ss unexpected as
a 17 cigarette lighter bursting into
flames.
Mulher, l.over llr
WESTERLY. R. I., April 33.-
Mrs. Madeline Partelow, mother of
eight children, and John William Le
doux. were found shot to death here
today In a smnll coupe and Chief of
Police Robert Keel mild the deaths
were the result of a suicide pact.
Hnilth Uw Hffecdve
THE DALLES. April 33. AV- nrat
proposed amendment to the six-month-old
city health ordinance re
quiring aeml-annual examinations of
all food handlers, barbers and beau
ticians came today when employes
affected by the law's provisions went i
on record favoring free health exam-'
Instinn"
- ....
toe MiU Xrlbunt VSinl Ada.
....
Will They "Get" the Governor?
f"N the surface it looki
v Martin.
But the moment one gocx
picture is presented.
For there is a quiet,, subterranean, but well-organized and
determined effort to "get" the
good, i.e.: in the Democratic
His enemies and he has
people of the state, as a whole,
Governor will be re-elected by
So their only nhance to defeat him, is in the primary where
only registered Democrats can vote, and various partisan and
personal wires can be effectively
TPHK strongest opposition to
from the radical wing of organized labor.
Governor Martin has had the
deal, as far as organized labor
to knuckle down to the labor politician, or be intimidated by
the labor racketeer. As a result what threatened to be a civil
war, between radical labor on
other has been averted r industrial peace is at least in the pro
cess of being restored; and various and sundry labor gangsters,
guilty of criminal sabotage, are cooling their heels in the
penitentiary.
NATURALLY these gangsters don't like it.- Neither do
their friends and followers. And the radical labor wing
is sore because these convictions
to end their graft, unless the
ride, politically.
They can't very well make
issue j so tbey are, and for many months have been, working
quietly to convincr all organized and unorganized labor, the
working people of this state that Governor Martin is their
enemy, is not, and never has been, their friend.
.......
TpiIIS is not only untrue,
Martin will scree, is the
The WORKING man and woman in this state never has
had, and never will have, a
friend, than Governor Martin. The keynote of his administra
tion in fact, might be termed his effort to so improve and
strengthen this state economically that the people who work
nil of them, might be assured
paying jobs. That desire distinguished his attitude toward
Bonneville dam; it has been his policy toward every issue that
has arisen during his administration.
"Will this tend to develop the state, increase payrolls, make
the state a better place in which to live, for the people all
the people!"
If the answer has been "yes" the Governor has been for it.
If it has been "no" ho has been against it.
MORE than that. In this crusade he has led against labor
radicalism and lawlessness, Governor Martin, far from
being a foe of labor, lias been the greatest friend organized
labor in this-stato or anywhere else ever had.
For NOTHING will do more to discredit labor, deprive it
of its legitimate rights, and threaten a long period of injustice
and persecution, than a continuation of the tactics, that brought
inch confusion to Oregon's industrial situation, caused such
destruction and loss, aroused such widespread publio indigna
tion, and finally, thanks to our
leadership, was put down.
And we are sure the right thinking and conservative loaders
in the labor movement realize this. But in all organizations
where intenso organization CONSCIOUSNESS enters, pride and
partisanship are factors, and as a result this underground cam
paign to get Governor Martin,
progress. .
The individual member gets
been attacked this is an attack upon hiin, when only the
undesirable elements in his organization have been attacked.
r.nd it is to his interest, the
well as to the interests of the
whatever source it comes, should
jfJOWEVER, as this campaign progresses, snd the true facts
become more generally known, we are quite sure that this
latter fact will become more apparent to the rank and file of
organized-'abor in this state, and this attempt like others to
GKT "the best Governor this state has ever had," will fail.
OUT the Merlin campaign should certainly not be conducted
on this assumption. In fact one of the greatest dangers
as we see it, is the fact the primary opposition to Governor is
not only quiet, but indirect, and because of this fact its strength
is apt to be underestimated, and a feeling of over-confidence
created.
Nothing could be more unfortunate. Eternal vigilance is
not only the price of liberty, it is the price of good government.
And fundamentally the issue in this gubernatorial campaign,
is liOOll GOVERNMENT.
UNDER Governor Martin the state of Oregon has had GOOD
government, in fact the best state government in the
memory of the present riter, and that goes back over quarter
of a century.
And it has been good because, it has been efficient, fearless,
absolutely honest, and last but not least, NON 1'OldTlCAL
No Governor in the history of the state, in the history of
the country as fnr as we are aware, has ever disregarded
politics, refused to play politics, as has been true of Gover
nor Martin.
It has been amazing, refreshing, delightful!
Hut it hasn't created an efficient political machine, it hasnt
Hi-used lOO'o political partisMis.
sore and created some pretty potent political enemies.
So the big question in this primary is this:
CAN AHSOIXTEliY HONEST, COl'RAGEOl'S, NON
I'Ol.ITICAl, GOVERNMENT be sustained in the state of Ore
gon, or whenever it is sincerely attempted, must it be doomed
l, DEKEATT
A viet-iry for Governor Martin will be an answer in the
J.itfiniiiitiv... His defeat, cither in
sicction, will be the reverse.
like 4 walk-away (or Governor
beneath the surface a different
Governor while the getting is
primaries.
many of them, realize if the
ever get a chance to vote, the
an overwheming majority.
pulled.
the Governor comes, of course,
temerity to stand for a square
is concerned. He has refused
one side and business on the
hurt their cause, and promise
man responsible is taken for a
labor racketeering CRIME the
but as all who know Governor
verw REVERSE of the truth.
more loyal and sympathetic
more permanent and better
chief executive's courage and
on his labor record, IS making
'
the idea his organization has
interest of his organization, as
state, that such an attack, from
succeefl.
it has made some heads pretty
the primary or the following
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease
diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Or. tlrady if a itamd self
addressed entelope is enclosed tetters should bs brief and written to ink.
Owing to the large number ut letters received only a few can be answered
No re pi; can bt made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Addresa
Dr. William Brady, 265 El Caml no. Beverly Mills. Calif.
AFTFR ALL, IT IS A
A doctor in practice has certain ad-
vantages over a doctor in print. For
oxample a doctor In practice Is com
paratively safe In saying what he
thinks about the
matter of exam
ining the eyes
for falling vision
and prescribing
for whatever alls
the pstlent; or
about the effects
of pasteurization
of milk on hu
man nutrition.
From experi
ence I know It Is
safe and some
times apparently
sound for a doctor In practice to ad
vise a distracted mother to try a dose
of the gad on a wayward and defiant
daughter In her early 'teens. In print,
however, he csn't do it south of the
33rd parallel, I have been given to un
derstand.
Is there any difference between
physical courage and mental or so
called "moral" courage? For exam
ple, could a person have sufficient
courage to fight with the menacing
Intruder or to face great danger In or
der to defend or help another who
could not defend of help himself, yet
lack, the "moral" courage to uphold
a view or a belief he believed to be
right, against any and all opposition?
Or on the other hand, could a person
be conspicuously courageous In tak
ing his stand on some great moral
question of ethics or religion or social
economy, yet prove cowardly In re
spect to a personal danger?
My own answer is "No." Courago la
courage, and fear Is fear.
It all depends on the amount of
adrenln secreted by the adrenal
gland and poured Into the blood un
der the emotional stress. If the adren-
1 function Is deficient, the person
will not have much courage of any
kind. If the adrenal function Is not
too greatly Inhibited or restrained or
weakened by long educational and
cultural training and by the constant
Inhibitions Imposed by civilization
with its necessity for dissembling,
concealing or repressing primitive
emotions, the Individual will have
sufficient courage for most emergen
cies, physical or moral.
A certain schoolmaster had the
right idea. He staged regular boxing
Man About
Manhattan
. Bj OEORUB TUCKKK
NEW YORK. Somebody u r a 1 y
muat be wrong. Somebody must
have their dates, or their writers,
or their something, mixed. I wns
thinking of Ernest Hemingway, and
Jed Harris, and
the new maga
zine Ken.
In the first Is
sue of Ken Mr.
Hemingway
writes an article
about his favor
ite subject, the
loyalist causo In
Spain. After pub
lishing the piece,
the editors, In A
little aside to
the reader, say:
We would like to
6EORGE 1UCK have Mr. Hem
ingway become one of our editors.
It our editorial opinions do not come
Into too much conflict. We do not
know whether he will become one
of our editors or not, for he hfl.
been In Spain ever since this maga
zine was first conceived. But whether
or no. he will continue as one of our
contributors until he quits or Is
fired!
Now let's go back to an afternoon
last Pebniary. In an office on Broad
way. Mr. Jed Harris, the producer,
la facing this correspondent across a
wide desk. He has just come In ofr
a Junket from the deep south, and
his bags are still unpacked.
He says: "I've been hunting and
fishing with Ernest Hemingway down
In Florida. We had a great time and
I darrJed him with my markaman
ahlp. We also discussed his new
play. The nfth Column,' which !
may produce, I think he really has
something there. Then I came back
to New York."
Like Cleek, the man of 40 faces,
nobody can get together on hts exact
whereabouts. Whither. Mr. Heming
way, Spain or the Everglodes?
There Is something hilariously
cheering In weeing old Pearl White
thrillers of 20 years a?o, and te
vlllilns with curled mustaches emit
ting silent but cruel "Ha's" whenever
the fragile heroine hove Into sight
The Hotel New Yorker haa begun a
series of revivals for dinner guests
and show several of these ancient
movtea each week. I am a sucker
for the early film adventures of
Helen Holmes, leaping off trains, and
Ruth Roland, who fared a thousand
deaths every Sunday nteht In the
old serials. e;h episode ending with
the Iron claw clutching at her throat,
or t!e hero hurtltns aa tou thought
to a horrible death in the bys
below.
Jimmy Dorsey I like too. snd hi
music I like better. ... I am not
wsvlng s f'ag for the New Yorker
but with an Ineenuous Ice show
early ViiUe Retd mavtes. and CMr
sey's music ill thrown In for a Mncle
dinner ticket somebody deserves a
nice hand.
Meanwhile. Mr. C. W. Dayhoff, ot
TWA. welchs in with wrat seems to
me a legitimate complslr.c. "It will
be okny with us If the Tennessee
Valley Authority and the Public
Worts Administration wnnt t,- quit
ilns ttirir ln!t:V. TV A mH PW.v
h antes.
Xtery time ."metbmg i
v.
Brady, M. D.
QUESTION' OF ADRENIN
bouts between evenly matched boys.
aa the manly way to settle their quar
rels. The system worked beautifully
until one refused to accept the decis
ion against him, went home boo-hoo-lng
to his misguided parents snd cre
ated a furor In the community, which
put an end to an excellent system of
training.
QUESTIONS ANSWERS
Monographs
Please give a list of your free mon
ographs pr treatises. (Mrs. E. H.)
Answer A partlon list:
Acne (Blackheads, Pimples, Oily
Skin)
Pruritus (Itching without appar
ent cause)
Falling Hair and Dandruff.
Hay Fever.
Oalnlng Weight.
Prostatic Obstruction.
Bed Wetting.
Piles
Asthma.
Stage Fright and Examination
Jitters.
Diabetes.
Tobacco Habit.
Somersaults.
Nephritis (Chronic Brlght's Dis
ease) Foot Itch (Ringworm, Athlete's
foot)
Headache (Neuralgia, Migraine)
Menopause (Change of Life)
Sweating (excessive sweating: foul
sweating)
Varicose Veins and Carlcoss Ul-,
cer.
Insomnia
Wheat to East.
High Calcium Diet.
Vitamins Everybody Needs.
Bread and Milk Club.
Belly Breathing.
Chronic Arthritis (Rheumatism)
Tuberculosis.
Pocket First Aid Kit and How to
Use It.
For any one of these enclose a
three -cent-stamped envelope bearing
your address and name the mono
graph you want. No clipping will suf
fice. If you want more than one. send
ten cent coin for any three.
Copyright 1938. John F. Dille Co.
Ed Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brad;
should send letter direct to Dr.
William Rrady. M. D. 265 El
Camlno. Beterl; Hills. Calif.
happens the phones start ringing and
people want to know If we are having
trouble In Tennessee. It seems aa If
we are alwaya being confused with
TV A." Mr. Dayhoff, for your infor
mation Is representing TWA, and
that, tar from being a government
project, Is the Transcontinental and
Western Airways.
Comment
on the
Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
EARTHQUAKES in Turkey take
upwards of a thousand lives,
render thousands homeless and do
untold property damage.
Eighteen villages are totally de
stroyed and 33 others are badly
damaged. Debris buries whole fam
ilies and pits of boiling water arc
opened up.
It Is a major disaster.
IP IT HAD occurred in California,
or anywhere on the Pacific coast,
we would be shocked and horrified
As It Is, we glance casually at the
headlines and pass on to something
else.
Wc measure disaster by its NEAR
NESS TO US.
USED to speak, by the way.
hushed and awed tones of
the "terrible Turk," This writer can
not recall that In recent years the
Turks have started any wars, grab
bed any nearby countries that did
not belong to them or shot any
opponents of the government against
blank walls.
Are the Turks getting better, or
are the correspondents down that
way Just getting careless?
ENRY Ford says the "back-to-
the-farm" movement Is the sol
ution of present-day problems.
"If people do not raise their own
food." he adds, "they will have to
have a dictator to tell them tc
do It."
AND if they do raise their own
food, they wilt destroy the mar
ket for those who have been raising
It and selling it to them.
It seems to be a tough problem,
any way you look at It.
(Thla in many ways old-fashioned
writer has a personal notion that
If we'd quit trylns to spend our
selves rich, get fat out of scarcity
have more by producing less, lift
ourselves by our bootstraps, etc..
and would start In working and
saving Instead of spending so much
of our time trying to get lomethlng
for nothing, a lot of these problems
that are vexing us would vanish
quickly Into thin air).
Kale Alarm ratal
NEW YORK. April 23. False
fire aarm In Brooklyn vrtenlsv sent
10 persona to a hospital. Including
two I.rcmcn (ho maj die. I
To Guide C
f P - s 'I
Eugene Thorndlke (left) and Glenn L. Jncknon Bill administer the af
fairs or the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce for the ensuing year.
Mr. Thorndlke Is the new president and Mr. Jarkson vice president.
10 WHITE HOUSE
PHILADELPHIA, April 23. (AP)
A new exchange of charges in Penn
sylvan la's explosive Democratic prl
mary campaign fight drew White
House attention today as federal and
state agencies pressed investigation
on separate fronts.
A telegraphed appeal to President
Roosevelt from John B. Kelly, co-
leaner of the party In Philadelphia,
brought an Immediate Inquiry Into
Kelly s assertion that Senator Jos
eph P. Guffey, (D.. Pa.) was at
tempting to coerce WPA workers for
political purposes.
Aubrwy Williams, national deputy
WPA administrator, promised "sum
mary action" If Kelly'a charges were
substantiated. Williams told Kelly he
was sending a special representative
to confer with the Phlladelphlan
and to obtain "any specific informa
tion which you may have in your
possession."
Meanwhile, from the camp of
Kelly's opposition came another call
to the White House. Repressntative
Walter (D., Pa.), who is aligned with
Guffey, said he Joined in Kelly's
request "because if there is any
coercion of the WPA it's coming
from Kelly's mob."
ME THIS WEEK
CORVALLTS, April 23. (AP)
More than 500 high school agricul
tural students from 48 chapters in
Oregon will attend the eleventh an
nual state cenventlon of the Future
Farmers of America here April 28
to 30, Earl R. Cooley, state director
of agricultural education, said today.
Lex Murray, national vice-president
of the F.F.A. of Santa Rosa.
Cal., wtll attend the Oregon conven
tion. Six regional winning teams In par
liamentary practice will vlo for state
honors. These represent Halfway. The
Dalles, Corvallls, Grants Pass, Canby
and Forest Grove.
Governor Charles Martin is sched
uled to attend the banquet where
he Is to present awards to the boys
winning state farmer degrees and to
three honorary adult members to be
announced there.
mill gates, the elder Berle said:
"Adolf, as long as you live,
must never forget this sight."
you
Mr. Berle was Just turned 18 when
he had his degree from Harvard, and
barely 31 when he could cnll him
self doctor of laws. He has taugh:
at Columbia, advised South Amer
ican statesmen, and helped reorgan
le the stock exchange. He hurried
down to Washington in the dawn
of the new era. to help with the
first new deal, and was tempted back
to New York by Mayor LaOuardla's
need for a man who wasn't a banker
but could understand them.
Now he has returned to Washing
ton again, and. in spite of his ambi
tion to run for the New York gov
ernorship on the American Labor
rarty ticket, he is already suspected
by the new deal's left wing of hav
ing reverted to conservatism. Whst
the left-wingers rail conservatism is
scarcely the Liberty league variety
And If he really is In the corner of
Messrs. Jones and Morernthau, the
conservatives are fortunate. Thev
may experience the tlnpleaslng sen
sations of intellectual Inferiority, but
they have a good mind on their side
Wasco Leader IM.ses
THE DALLES. April 33 . .) Lu
cern iLoul B. Kelly. 71, former Was-
" .. .-.-..u.r,. oini ii-rv
vesterdsv following a brief illness. H
a. a re-Idem of Mnupln, where he
had lived since 18Sf
The
Capital
Parade
(Continued from Psw One)
- C For Year
N!!
10 TIE APPEAL
EUGENE. April 23. (AP) Attor
neys for Hay W. Blaine, former pres
ident of the barbers' union local
here, who was sentenced to 16
months in the state penitentiary
Thursday, filed notice of appeal to
the state supreme court today.
Blaine was convicted for his part
in hiring three vandals to throw
skunk musk into a non-union bar
ber shop here last January 22.
Attorneys announced that the ap
peal will be based on the supposi
tion Blaine did not commit a felony
for which he was sentenc?d to the
pehltentiary in hiring "goons" to
throw the skunk musk. He was con
victed on three counts, two of which
brought him penitentiary s?ntences
and one misdemeanor count which
brought a county Jail sentence, all
to run concurrently.
Communications
(iking Away Plane Seeretsf
To the Editor:
In the Interest of American avia
tion military security, the Women
Defenders of America would like to
call your uttentlsn to a vital article
appearing In the current Issue of
Liberty Majazlne (April 30th). The
material Is entitled "America Has No
Aerial Secrecy" and Is written by
a Junior grade lieutenant in naval
aviation.
It Is the belief of our organization
that the efficiency of America's mili
tary aviation has been needlessly
Jeopardized by the Indiscriminate
sale of all our combat type of planes
to foreiirn governments. Since these
airplanes and engines are developed
with our taxpayer s money, and in
view of the fact that our young men
would have to use them In combat
should America go to war we do not
think our aerial success should be
Impaired by letting potential enemy
governments know all about our
fighting planes in advance.
Our organization Is making and
will continue to make a concerted
drl- to stop the exportation of
American military alrplanes and it
needs your help.
, DOROTHY M. ARNOLD
State Executive Director
Women Defenders of America
Los Angeles. April 20. 1
THREE
starring
KATHARINE
7 v
HEPBU8U -ROGSRSK
f- IAMBUS? EU.I9 M
with Call Patrick
Andrea Leeds Con
stance Collier Ann
Miller
Flight o1 Time
Medfnrd and Jackson Coonty
history from the files ot the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years
ago.
TEN YEAR9 AGO TORAY
April 24. 192S.
(It was Tuesday.)
Med ford team to be known as
"Merchants."
Stan Sherwood returns from vaca
tion trip to Hollywood.
New storm due to hit valley, after
two balmy days.
District attorney is Indicted on ten
counts alleging larceny of dry fund
money.
Col. Lindbergh carries pneumonia
serum to Canadian wilds on mercy
mission.
Herbert Hoover leads In Massachu
setts presidential primary.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
April 21, 1018.
(It was Wednesday.)
Germans resume offensive at
Amiens on western front.
H. D. Reed of Gold Hill spends day
in this city.
Upstate sheriff caught smuggling
booze into dry town is fined by fed
eral court. Vice-president of ' th
Chamber of Commerce also nabbed.
County Prosecutor George Robert
leaves on trip to Salem.
Masles and mumps cause decline In
high school attendance.
Road to Prospect reported In good
condition, and no mud.
Dr. Nellson Named
ATLANTA, April 23. (A1) Dr. N. P.
Nellson of Stanford university became
president of the American Association
for health physlcnl edxication and
recreation today.
MEDFORD JUNTOR SYMPHONY
CONCERT
Esther Palmer Day, Harpist.
Jackson Co. Teachers Chorus. '
May 3rd. High School Auditorium.
Tickets: Adults 75c. Students 35c.
Chevrolet
JINGLES
You know every young lady
loves a new Chevrolet,
And if you ask her why, this
is what she'll say:
It's easy to park, easy to
drive and look at, too!
And STILL easy on the
pocket when no longer
new!
She loves its streamline
beauty; its shiny Duco
coat,
It's just a gliding symphony
without a harsh note!
So if YOU are buying a car,
better listen to her voice
If you want peace ever after
let her have her choice!
Chevy M. Hurd
Rogue River Chevrolet
Main and Riverside
Service Dept 32 So Riverside
"sed Tar Lot Riverside at (th
MEALS A WEEK!
The lives, loves and
tragedies of the girls
who gamble everything
to win fame behind the
footlights !
GINGER
mm
ADOLPHE
ip
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