Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 25, 1938)
PA'OE RTX HfEDFOTlD MATL TftTBWE, MEDFQRD, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, MAY 25. 1938. Medforr rTRIBUNE "Kvrrjrun lo Houilirrn Or fa, no Head Ihv Hall tribune." Daily ISirrpi Saturday. Puhlttnsil by HBDKURD PRINTING 1I-I7-.. N Fir SU CO. Phone Jl RUH CRT W RUHL, editor. 1RNE8T R OIL.8TRAK Uanasar. Ad Inrtapanrtani Nwapapr. Enured aa taconrt 'din maltai at Mad ford, OrtfOD. undai Act of Uaroh I. 17 aiJUSCRIPlION, RATES B Mall In Arlvanrat Dally, ona vaar 11.00 Dally, tlx montha 176 Dally, ona month 60 Bv Cirrlar. in Advanea - Madford. Aih land. Jaektonvilla. Cantrai Point. Phoenix. Talant, Oold Hill and hlahwavat Dally, ona Mar 1100 Dally, ill month t.tb Dally, ona month 0 AH tarma eaah tn ad vane. Official Poprr ol (he City of Mlfnrd. Official Paper of J ark mid County. URM II KK O rilK AHMH IATKU I'KKHH Rr.-alv.na mil I,mimh wire nervum. Th Aaaociatar? Praar i aiclmlvaly an tit I art to tha uta foi publication of all nw dliparchea. craditad to It ot otriar wlaa craditad to ihl paper, and alao to tha local newa oubllahed haraln. All right for publication ot .pact I dispatch haraln are alao raaarvad. UEMUKR OF UNITED CRKBS MKMUBR OF AUDI! BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS AdwtlalnK rtprBantatla Offleea In New York. Chlcaso. Ottrolt, San Franclaco, Lo, Angela,. Biattle, Portland. St. Loola, Atlanta. Vaneouvar. b n. Member, Oreg&iTNVspapenr'ubnMi Ye Smudge Pot ' By Arthur ferry. Wrong Kinds of Teachers KJEW YORK CITT finds more men than usual applying for examinations for teachers' licenses. This is a result of the depression, says Dr. Louis Marks of the board of examiners, He thinks it would be a good thing for the schools to have a fifty-fifty division between men and women teachers. Another development, probably caused in part at least by the depression, is the shift of interest in subjects. English used to be the most popular. Now it is in fourth place, with history, biology and commercial subjects ahead. No doubt current events throughout the world in the last few years have influenced this trend. From the standpoint of employment, most of the men and women seeking teaching positions appear to have picked the wrong subjects. A thousand persons applied for history exam inations, although there were only 16 history teaching positions listed for women and none for men. a ON THE other hand, while there are 40 candidates to one position in the academic high schools, there are not enough candidates to fill teaching jobs waiting in the technical and vocational schools. In 100 trade subjects for which examinations were offered last fall, only 225 persons qualified for 450 vacancies. Boys and girls seem to recognize where their fi.ture em ployment opportunity lies, but the men and women who seek to. teach them do not. The would-be teachers probably are not prepared for such work. Here is a shortage pf workers which needs filling if the youngsters coming along through school are to have the training they need for future employment. B. S. The Economical Sex County Vote on Judiciary VOTING) PRECINCTS SUPREME COURT POSITION N. 3 1 I 3 POS. no. a SUP. CT. POS. NO. B 1 Boulevard .... a Esst Central. .. 8 Weat Central.... 4 Oak I North Ashland., fl Eaat Ashland 7 Southesst .......... 8 North weat 0 South 10 Weat 11 Antloch 13 Applegat 18 Barrow........ 14 Bellvlew 18 Brownsboro 18 Butte Flails 17 Central Point North.. 18 Central Point South. 19 Climax srj Derby .-....... 3 1 nftitn 33 Eagle Point 23 Flounce Rocic 34 Foots Creek 25 Oold Hill 36 Griffin Creek 37 Hlllcreat 38 Howard .. 28 North Jacksonville.... 30 South Jacksonville.... 31 Lake Creek 32 North Main 33 South 34 North 35 South Since the primary election, the democratic party of Oregon la not on speaking terms with Itself. After the seml-ldlotic display at tne pom many of Its members, plan to turn to the Republican ranks, from whence many of them fled, to gain a New Canaan In the 1933 and 1936 mandates. They are gruntled and disgruntled, as well as they may be. They were the dupes of an envious politician full of wormwood ana gall, ' The radicals and the rabble won the day, and the sacrifice waa too high , price to pay for one man a Venae. High administration chiefs aided In the Intrigue, but now plan love feasts to restore harmony, and escape the wrath of November votes. It may work. But, If they can laugh c'f the treachery, the state motto, "She files with her own wings. should be changed to read: She Flips With Her Own Flopa. ... M.Mr OF THE LAW (Coos liny Times) "The peat weekend was a bad one for the atrong arm of the law on Coos Bay. Constable Fred Poulton who has troubles a- plenty with the Bunker Hill public, came off second best In a gunman chase, and Mat Coy, Marshfleld chief of police, was subjected to unwarranted abuse by a local citizen Saturday night in front of a local dnnce hall." The prevailing temperatures has esused males to shed their lints, and husk their coats. The Salem Capital-Journal eat! mates 138,000 Democrata did every thing but vote, more than mustered their strength and courage, and val iantly made tehlr fearsome wsy to the pons. An Oklahoma atntesman proposes cltlsens who take 18 min utes to vote be rewarded with a 88 rebate on their taxes. The way things went, it would be wisdom to cancel all their taxes. If ajiy. for not vol Ing. i Miss Janice Orlove of Prospect Is years old today. She Is three davs older than the Dlonne girls, can re cite poetry, and la Just as happy. O. Hunt, the magic lantern king, ta over a cold, and able to sit up iiu rat cnicaen like a late candl date. a good many humorous things have been said about the song. nnisiie wnue You Work.' but no. body seems to have taken the serious view that it might be a good Idea. We mean, to work." (Battle Creek (Mich.) Enqulrerl Suggestion. That's all I SAP, I'KRTINENT Oll-I R VTION (rhtlrMiiln llevtrn) "The second monthly anniver sary of the Chtloquln post office robbery Is coming next Tuesday and no robber apprehended yet and most Important, the cash Is still missing" The highly Irritable aeeretary of the Interior, who makes the mean talks for the Administration, was married In Ireland yesterday. He seems to have been In a pleasant mood, for he failed to snatch the Bible out of the preachers hands, and whnck the best man over the head with It. , An upstate newspaper observes the testimony of speeders in rourt. Indicates they were going backwards m-hen the policeman thought they were forcing ahead at BO mph. It la understood the old story they only had one beer two hours before the accident Is atlll employed. Republicans smell a victory In November. It's too Iste to hunt deer, and too early to shoot duck,, and by that time the votera will be 'fished out.' T IS unusual to hear women criticized as not being good 3BBouth anonrWa Most husbands and fathers seem to think that 37 North women spend only too freely, But a fellow-woman, active in the National League of Women Voters, thinks differently. "Women are entirely too conservative when it comes to spending money," she says, "regardless of the good it may accomplish, whether local or national." She is speaking espec ially of public expenditure, and says their parsimony there is "probably due to the fact that they are accustomed to keeping such a careful and strict household budget," Most men, although accustomed to regarding their women folk as extravagant in household spending, would probably spend more freely themselves if they were handling the money The men wouldn't take the trouble to save the nickels and pennies. The average housewife is thrifty and it is good for the world she is. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Main Central...,..... Central ....... Rtveralde... Rlverslds... 38 North . 39 Oakdale 40 Newtown 41 King 43 Northeast 43 Cottage ....... 44 Southeast ... 45 Queen Ann 48 Eaat 47 Southwest 48 South 49 West ., hi (tried letters pertaining to personiil limit h and hyxtene. not to disease, diagnokls or trealmrnl will be answered by Ur. Brady it a stamped sell u ild rented envelupe is ntcluked Letters should he Uriel and written In ink Owing to the lorge number it letters received only a tew can ne answerea No reply can be mnde to queries not conforming to instructions. Add rem Dr. nilllara Urady. 2811 El Comlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. RKPRKSSION AND HIGH TENSION The function of nerves la to con duct message or Impulses. The nerves do not wear out from per forming their function, nor become exhaust ed nor expend appreciable e n ergy, any mora than do the wires that cou rt u c t mesflnffo!i when one tele phones or tele graphs. When peoplo ttpeak of "high strung" nerves tension" of bust and social Hi. a matter of nerve WINDOW OLASS-we tell indo glass snd will wiace roul oroken window, reaannardv rroworldite Can met w.irsa . Cljui lline lui roo Late 16 CIS (; Ads U 1 :90 p. to. or of the "high ness. professional they Imagine It Is energy, but of course there Is no such energy. The only energy con cerned Is physical, caloric, musculo.) energy: Indeed that is tno only en- eritv recognized by physiology, rnc high tension Is not In the nerves but In the arteries. The harm done by the strain of such business, pro fessional and social life Is to the hesrt and arteries, not to the nerves The conventlona and amenltlea ot business, professional snd social life render It neceBsary for one to re strain or repress natural Impulses Naturally one would react to the Impulse or emotion by fighting playing or running away, but such action, or Indeed any exercise or norms! expression of emotion Is tm polite, frowned upon or unconven tional, a confession of low breeding So one must repress all emotional Impulses ss much as possible. Vet mount of breeding, culture ir prsctlce can ohange the physiological reactlona of the circulation. 80. while one sits there pretending to be un perturbed, one's heart and arteries must stand the brunt of the shock for the blood pressure goes up snd the heart beats faster and more forcibly even If one succeeds In re naming quiet and betraying no ex- Itement. Isn't the relative degree of breeding measured by the ability of he Individual to conceal his emo lons? Isn't It "lowbrow" or vulgar to show any excitement under pro vocation? The layman harbors some quaint notions shout the nerve-restorative velue of complete relaxation. 8uch things are a million years ahead ol the times. In the present stage of evolution man, Irrespective of his culture and brredlng. Is still an ani mal. U Is as rrnsonnble to try to control our heartbeat or your breathing rate as It Is to try to contml your automatic nervous or emotional reactions. Tile very best any human being can do In thot way Is to sublimate the Impulse to bounce one oft an adversary's chin Into a run. or maybe Just a brisk walk around the block. In other words, try to absorb the sudden surge of enerity by some unobjectionable or If possible some actuslly beneficial sctlcn. Ceaseless rocking, tapping the arm of the chair or even pacing the fKior under some emotional stress Is hardly ade- quale lo absorb the enerv moblt- I Ired by the emotion: onr r.:u--' rr. gage In some real iiiti .nlii .o.k. play or exercise ronu'arable in de gree with the effort one would put forth In physlcsl combat or flight were It not for civilised repression. QUESTIONS AMI ANSWERS Klve rents or Five Hollar Three or four times recently I have had what 1 thought was a sty on my eye. Now 1 have two. and a doctor here calla It hordlum or some such name and says my constitution must be In bad condition. M. I. Answor Hordeolum la a five dol lnr word for atv. Also It tends to keep the patient from asking why and as the doctor doesn't know why, you see It Is a valuable word. 8end a thrce-cent-stnmped envelope bear ing your nddross. and ask for mono graph on styes. "Ilates and Prunes. Which Is more laxative, dates 01 prunes? H. P. Answer Prunes, for most persons, rrm-klng Knee. Age 41. always have taken consid erable exercise, for six months right knee cracks loudly. Embarrassing. Husband says I'm getting old. Doc tor saya I'm no spring chicken. Does one have to expect creaks snd groans when one gets along in years? Mrs. L. C. Answer No. Perhaps atrapplng the knee or wearing a suitable elastic support such as that described hers recently for Internal derangement of the knee a woven elastic (not rub ber) bsndage Including dumbbell ahBped crepe rubber pad on either side of knee. When your doctor has shown you how to apply such a support you csn do it yourself every day for a few months. (Copyright, 1038, John P. Dllle Co.) 50 Kenwood . 61 Northwest fia Haven 53 Mound 54 Orcahrd Home.... 65 Perrydale 5f) Phoenix East 57 Phoenix West 58 Plnehurst . 59 Rogue River....-.... 60 Roxy Ann 61 Sam Vslley ea bterllng 83 East Talent . 64 West Tslent 65 Trsll 61 47 TB 58 56 SO 53 78 83 34 37 56 I 48 30 84 S3 80 6 7 8 69 48 16 48 33 35 63 71 38 30 85 68 43 43 13 40 38 86 83 81 76 68 71 63 68 6 73 83 71 31 44 43 ..82 68 65 88 8 49 66 Union . ...... 67 Watklna . 68 Willow Springs.-. 69 Wlmer 33 70 Reese Creek 34 14 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 7 7 8 1 5 8 13 9 7 18 8 17 17 6 3 13 18 14 9 4 5 9 18 m I mh etai io 10 16 78 33 34 48 34 1 9 38 64 34 30 86 35 5 18 36 106 38 30 86 43 13 6 38 96 30 39 41 38 10 9 39 78 36 33 34 63 16 13 38 83 39 30 43 48 13 10 34 76 38 35 43 33 31 18 39 111 38 30 66 61 8 9 13 49 11 30 18 34 3 3 8 39 11 10 33 8 1 3 9 36 19 10 .. 18 19 9 ' 3 11 67 16 44 18 18 .8 3 4 19 3 4 13 5 16 16 34 63 40 39 38 43 8 4 14 36 14 10 18 17 4 8 15 43 34 14 30 43 17 , 7 49 133 44 40 90 SO 36 36 1 41 134 34 31 94 48 ... 1 6 8 3 3 8 3 3 10 t 13 10 S 11 1 3 4 IS 8 4 10 6 31 IS 43 108 46 81 84 65 11 10 36 66 19 9 87 49 8 1 17 35 11 17 17 7 17 11 83 105 40 45 48 60 8 11 30 43 34 33 31 33 8 8 16 43 13 7 33 18 14 18 87 106 31 35 63 66 8 18 43 96 37 39 59 63 7 13 34 61 19 18 34 - 35 5 13 11 48 30 14 33 39 31 38 37 137 30 38 89 44 10 36 17 91 33 18 63 48 7 11 15 61 18 30 36 38 15 33 30 69 35 31 63 81 33 6 4 ' 38 16 36 13 19 16 18 33 74 30 36 33 45 18 33 34 73 31 39' 47 33 14 30 14 111 18 IS 86 33 9 34 33 105 34 36 SO 46 8 33 30 133 33 19 76 50 13 35 17 101 31 31 77 34 8 33 18 93 39 31 59 47 8 36 17 95 33 36 67 36 10 9 13 85 14 11 68 23 8 14 10 84 18 13 70 32 13 17 19 90 36 33 54 .41 19 38 33 108 41 31 63 65 13 32 30 108 37 29 77 43 17 IS 22 106 22 19 77 39 11 16 22 45 26 19 22 36 10 14 38 73 15 17 43 36 33 11 34 63 27 17 45 34 34 18 39 100 35 30 80 37 39 34 36 134 36 28 81 60 10 25 16 94 37 18 73 39 14 13 33 122 37 18 95 54 6 10 8 35 11 14 16 9 37 31 39 88 53 71 44 43 33 31 30 108 44 30 73 59 8 13 14 46 24 16 28 34 3 3 8 6 10 3 10 6 17 19 38 78 33 31 49 45 9 19 15 68 39 36 47 38 17 14 8 56 33 37 33 42 8 11 11 35 24 26 33 18 6 .... 8 14 13 11 7 10 10 13 43 31 18 37 10 11 9 17 37 33 36 24 13 11 6 13 36 ' 23 33 16 30 finally plain that Hitler Is determ ined to push eastward. The reduction of Czechoslovakia to an economic, and political province, a mere shell of a state, Is to be followed by economic and political aggression In Hungary and Rumsnla. And, because of 8paln, Mussolini must sit helplessly bywhile Hitler gobbles the rich meal which was once destined for the Italian table. Experts here thinx that. If dic tatorships were not so reliant on the blether of prestige and conquest, Italy would withdraw from Spain. It Is a strange world In which a great nation prefers the thin reward of a fulfilled boast to the wheat and wine of Hungary, the wheat and oil of Rumania. 3384 421 805 979 1435 4978 1715 1613 3148 2388 t wonder where she gets those gor geous gowns. And how they dance I" Before they quite realized It. that little four-letter word was trotting at their heels, saying "uncle." Cd Note: Person, wishing to communlrate with Dr. Brady should rnd tetter dlrert to Or. William llrady M t). t6S El famine listen. Hills. Calif. Man About Manhattan By (IMHtUt ril'kfcH Perhaps you read about the re cital they gave In Carnegie Hall not lung ago. People said It couldn't be done successfully. Through 15 num bers, which represent, roughly, an hour and 15 minutes of continuous dancing, they waltzed and floated and swirled and glided to Irresistible music, much of It written by Veloz himself. When the finale came peo ple were amazed . Why. they had hardly gotten In their seats. It didn't seem possible that an evening had passed away. "But wasn't It tough?" I asked Velos, "I mean, all that rehearsing and work that must have been neces sary?" That made Veloz laugh. "No; he said. "As a matter of fact, we didn't have a chance to rehearse. The hall was busy practically every night, But we were fortunate In having Pan cho's orchestra to play for us. He knew all our numbers. He has played them for us frequently. Here la an Item about these two that may provo Interesting: When I Invaded their suite at the Plaza expected to enter an atmosphere of the dance world such as you would expect In the habitat of two such prominent figures. Instead, I encoun tered confusion of a much llved-ln apartment. ... A ping-pong table was wt up. , . . There were pictures of race-horses all over the walls. In cluding all tha big favorltea and a couple of young horses, "Red" and Veolanda," a filly, which they own The Capital Parade (Continued from Page One ) In such a world, the most minor victory of peace and reason deserves to be lovingly recorded. Rephrasinga of the sentence, "I am holier than thou art," have been the most fre quent American contributions to the science of International relations, yet it must be admitted that the story of the road from Washington state to Alaska territory offers a pleasant contraat to any story lately heard In Europe. For years, a road has been badly needed to run from the American border, across British Columbia, to Alaska. For some time, negotiations on the road problem have been In Drogresa with the British Columbians and the Canadian government. Re cently, T. P. Pattullo, premier of British Columbia, quietly visited Washington, talked things over with Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Zckea and other officials and reached an Informal agreement. The United States Is to put up the cash for the road. In some fashion 3i to 'oe de termined, while British Columbia is to build and maintain it. You may see nothing surprising in that, but try to Imagine Polnnd agreeing to build and maintain for Hitler a road from the German border to east Prussia. An appropriation of $20,000,000 for the Washington-Alaska road waa late ly knocked out of the pump-priming bill In the senate committee. But that la not Important. The important thing Is the agreement, which dem onstrates so splendidly how two neighbors can live together In peace and mutual profit. No one seems to care much, these days, about peace and mutual profit, but they have . their pleasant side all the same. 1 1 . I Is now Czechoslovakia without start ing a general European war. History will probably repeat itself If tha Germans actually croca tha Czech border. WHAT la going on there la a gi gantic game of bluff, and every poker player knows how easy It Is for something to slip when a lot of bluffing Is going on. Comment on Days News Flight o' Time Med ford and Jackson County history from the files ol the Mall Tribune 10 and to years TEN YEARS AGO TODAY May 25, 1928. (It waa Friday.) . Harry D. Norton of Grants Pass wins Democratic nomination for cir cuit Judge. Senate upholds Coolldge'a veto of McNary farm aid bill. Hottest May day in history of Ore gon recorded. Ona hundred thirty-four members of congress favor Hoover for president. Senate passes Boulder Dam bill. Graduation exercises held at Phoe nix school. Slash burnings now prohibited In county. work there more than 15 years ago. when there was nothing but willows, and have bult It up until It Is known far and near as a wonderful resort. They leased It sometime ago to Or. Haines of Ashland, who will carry on the work, and sometime In tha near future will build a sanitarium to accommodate the public mora fully. Mr. and Mrs. Ottlnger are sure en titled to a good long rest. They will visit a great many places while they are gone. .They will go by Salt Lake to Pueblo, Colo., and Wichita. Kans.. keeping between the dust storms on the south and the snow storms on the north, and what a story they will have to tell the folks back home, of the beau tiful Rogue river valley, where wa don't have dust storms and snow filling up the highways. The only pests we have here are politicians. Friday's frost killed off most of them. A WELL WISHER. Golf Lender Dies PORTLAND, May 25. (AP) Death won a match yesterday with Edwin I. Neustadter. 49, a founder and for mer president of the Oregon State Golf association. A native of Port land, Neustadter waa a retired ex ecutive of the Neustadter Brothers company. SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE Coats Dresses Hats ETHELWTN B HOFFMANN NKW YORK. The story of Veloz and Yolnnda is ow of the classic you-can-get-there-tf-you-try-hard- enough talc of ballroom dancing. Ten years ago thry were w 1 n nlng bronrc medals at ams t e u r contest Then they got married. turiI professional, and started after a little four-lett thing called FAME. They danced In New York, and In Chicago, and tn San Francisco They danced In Kansas City, and 1 In Detroit, and in Los AngM(- They tygan to ihir nniM mnrf fn-q'trntly tn the nr.siivr.. IVop.f ivxan m1iir Hat you seen Yfloa and Yolanda? Veloz and Yolanda are "hoss" con scious. If a sack of feed or a aaddle had been In evidence the place would have looked like a paddock. Yo landa, who Is dark, wears mostly clothea that are severely dark, relieved by a rhlnestone clasp at the throat With her deep olive romptexlon and flashing eyes the effect Is striking. Veloe lounged comfortably In a trim, dark business suit. He was in fine fettle. On a table lay a copy of their new book, "Tango and Rhumba, the Dances of Today and Tomorrow, de scribed by VeJoa and Yolanda." It Is a technical guide to terpslchorean ac complishment. It has been selling exceptionally well. TODAY'S TRAFFIC TIP- HOE TOIRTKSY PAYt Hugh Knson, state director of traffic nfety, mvs the great ma Jorltv of accidents In Oregon are hie to tack of rnurtev that would Ite extended In ordinary nocLi) rontnrt. M K WORD I KAF Kit 5KtlV rm m ii accepted aa a first step toward sta bility in Europe. An immense effort waa made to extract tha presidential indorsement of it, simply because It was believed that Neville Chamber- lain had shored up a prop against the ruins of peace. And now the prop has been kicked out. The European situation, for which all far-seeing men and women will read "the world situation" Is back on the old hour-to-hour basis. Now the most Informed and respon sible officials shrug their shoulders and tell you, "war may be today, or tomorrow, or next week, or next year. One cannot predict." Human protoplasm la an odd sub stance. The victims of general mis fortune will laugh at the mishap of one of their number. Famine suf ferers will split their hides at a fal low who trips and falls over a banana peel. And, human nature being what It ta, it's natural that the only con solation in the new situation is the lesson to Italy, All informed experts here point out, with a grim pleasure, that, if Austria failed to convince Mussolini that his friend Hitler Is playing him for a aucker, Czechoslo vakia must now have rubbed the les son In. In the leason. of course, la bound up the Anglo-Italian accord's failure to Improve matters. Spain was the one point left vague In the accord. T.. failure to settle the Spanish problem upset the negotiations for a second accord between Italy and France. And the same unsettled prob lem now prevents Mussolini from helping France and Great Britain. either publicly or in secret, to block German aggression in eastern Eu rope. Thus, the expected return to the balance of power In Europe has 1 proved a vain and empty hope. J By FRANK JENKINS HONEST Harold Ickes, aged 64, slips over to Ireland and secret ly marries 24-year-old Jane Dahl man, of Milwaukee. 117ELL. so far as this writer Is con- TT cerned, that is Ickes' own pri vate, personal business, and as such Is not a proper topic for public com ment. But we harbor a sneaking suspic ion that If somebody else (especially some wicked economic royalist) had done it Ickes, who Is tho prize scan dal-sniffer of the New Deal, would have scented something off-color about It. IF you're familiar with the "off agaln-on again-Flnnegan" story that has been told by so many thou sands of after-dinner speakers to suffering -audiences, you must have been struck by Its similarity to the war scare In Czechoslovakia. One day Europe is on the verge of war. The next the situation has calm ed down. By the third day some new irritation has developed. Then the sequence is repeated. YOU'VE noted that Hitler snatch ed Austria and nothing was done about It. Austria was more or less GERMAN ANYWAY. And of course you couldn't fall to have observed that when Mussolini snatched Ethiopia there was a lot of talk, some of It threatening, but i nothing come of It. In reality, no one In .Europe cared a hoot what became of Ethiopia. BUT keep your eye on Czechoslo vakia. In the past several hun dred years, no one has Invaded what PhutM M.) Wt It haul away your refuse. City Samury Sarrlca. The Joke on Italy has the grlslv Irony of one of the old dances of death. Italy embarked on the Span ish adventure, with Germany for her partner, tangely for reasona of pres tige. The most optimistic Italians, who saw another happy valley In the barren plains of Ethiopia, have never predicts miKh dollara and w-nts I fc-atn for Italy from a Spanish tri umph. But. having embarked on the ad venture. Italy Is now dependent on her German Ally. She Is paytry dear ly for the alliance. A few combs for the women and children of Barcelona, a few mercenaries for Franco, cost Hitler nothing. They are costing Italy the whole Danubian valley, the utrat area of rich minea and fertile fields over which Muwotini once hopfd to rrljn as an economic oerlord The Csechoslovak Incident makes it 1 4-fNOINED BOEING S I ON A TEST f i 1 if ITS LUBRICATED ! . J,JJ ivith piNNioiL ;M "YEAB afer YT.8R TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY May 23, 1918. (It was Saturday.) President asks tax upon war prof its, and passage by congress of new war revenue bill. Two Inches of snow falls at Fish lake. Dr. R. W. Stearns will close his office June 1 to enter army service. Food economy urged upon all the people, "to win the war." Oregon to be crop harvested. "wheatles" until new Communications To the Editor: Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ottlnger of Talent left Sunday for an extended pleasure trip to Tulsa. Okla., where they will visit sn old friend. They will go from Tulsa to Lamar. Mo., and attend memorial services at the Lutheran church, near where Mr. Ottlnger was born and spent his early life before coming to Medford over 30 years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Ottlnger are owners of Jackson Hot Springs on the high way near Ashland. They started to Chevrolet mini i-n JlflULCd Buying a motor car or a stick of gum, You want real value for either sum, Not the amount spent but what you get that brings satisfaction or lasting re gret, That's the reason why peo ple everyday are turning more and more to Chevro let, They know the biggest build ers of cars on earth Always give the buyers their money's worth! Chevy M. Hurd Rope River Chevrolet Main and Klverslde Service Dept. .12 No. Riverside Used Cat Lot Riverside at 4th Shi, . . .. .,! t eave here any evening. SAVE TIME! Travel . -J rrMcisco Fast overnight rv.bnn. you. nt -7JZ r'est. You'll save money, wo. For examp.e alter a SAN FRANCISCO Tourist Ear. $ 9-45 S18.W lower Berth 1-75 3.50 lot PORTLAND One wtj Bonoitrtp lstClasFare$9.88 $14.85 Lower Berth 2.50 S-00 In Coaches 6.59 10.65 Southern Pacifie O. MORRIS, ajen.. Phone 34 SUMMER Excursion TRAIN FARES EAST Dally May 15 -October 15 Standard Chicago $90.30 DesMolnes 80.25 Kansas City 75.1 St. Paul . . St. Louis Boston . , 75.60 85.60 Twiritt Standard Standard , . 146.70 130.40 Atlanta. ... 117.05 100.75 Cincinnati . . 106.30 90.80 Detroit 107.40 91.10 New Orleans 105.70 90 80 Philadelphia. 139.40 123.10 Washington . 136.60 120.30 TRIPS Touriit Coarh S74.00 $65.00 66.57 58.52 61.95 54.40 61.95 54.40 70.10 61.60 Tountt Coach Coach $106.40 $ 97.40 110.40 101.40 95.30 86.80 84.10 75.60 85.40 76.40 85.55 75.25 106.40 97.40 104.90 95.90 m I M m Creater Comfort, Economy, Pleasure, In Train Travel TICKETS HONORED Standard. In all da.tet of rquirmtnt . Tourlat In tcumt .topinc car. and coach. Tourl.t-St.n,4.l si touri.tJcc.,ns car. to Chnaao. Standard riccp, Ntw dlult Coachea. lateat Mn tourist -lT.n, cry wtvr vSuffUTrS. inC,r- fin Dining Cirt, N-vwvi. Loni return limit. Chari foe ilernrv W priced maali. OS- rcommodjition are additional. "fvitleo-Club.Lounga Cirt. All tickets honored on these famous trains FULLY AIR. -r AIIIAa CONDITIONED IU I, H I IZsM I 1 of OKANE North Coast Limited -.n, .., .oown .no., ar. tn, , h , h.thar Irora year home ...t.on. For d.t.Ua. South. P.cSc Ant. or write R. H. Cro.i.r. O.nara p...,nr A.0t. s. p ri., portU4 o,,,;;1 SPOKANE, PORTLAND t SEATTLE RY. and ST. PAUL Empire Builder