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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1938)
PA'GE twelve MEDFOTtD MAIL TRTBUTfE, MEDFOTtD, OREGON'. FRIDAY, JUSTE 3, 1938 K i ru tor wh thi tlM rn tit J ra n tot I MEDFORDwWTRIBUNE "Evrryam Id ttouthtrn Or0B tUttd lb Unit mhUD." Daily Birept Sal unlay. Pubiimad bf MKDfroRLi PRINTINQ CO. tl-S73 N Vlr L Phone f ROBERT W RUHU 01ttor. URN BAT R OILBTRAK Mni-er. A.D InrlapanUnt Nawapapar. Batarad at aaonnt-olaa mat tar at Mad ford. Oragon. uiirif Aot nf March I, 1879 SUBSCRIPTION RATES t llail In Advancat Dally, ona faar t-00 Dally, all month Us Dally ona month. 40 By Carrlar. in Advanca Mad ford. Aah land. Jachionvllla, CintrH Point, phoantx. Talant, Oold Bill and on Daily, ona yaar 14 00 Dally, tlx months,. 1-31 Dally, ona month All tarma caah In advance. OfflclnJ Paper ol the City ot Med ford OffldaJ Taper of JarltMio Count. MEM H KM OP INK AhWIflA TKU I'HBHS Keifilvlng Pull l.raaad Wire Hervlra. Tha Anaoolatad tru i atoluiivaly an tit lad to tha uaa for publication of all Btwi diipaichta c radii art to it or other wlaa oradlted to tbli paper, and alio to tha local mwi publlahed herein. All right for publication of epeelal dlapatohaa herein are alao raaarvad. MEMBER OF UNITED PREBB MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Advertising rte pre ean tUTa Offlcaa la New YnrU, Chtoso. Detroit, San Pranolaco. Loa Anialai, Seattle, Portland, OL Lou la. Atlanta, Vanoouvar, ' . . Member. OrVgotewspapembfei ssociation"V " 1 V m U 1? Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Firry. Tha President plans "an Itinerary that will carry him across country In mid-July Jut as primary cam palgns begin waxing hot," press re norts reveal. Thla will cause the pto pie to be advised for the steentn time, "the White House la taking no part In primary elections." The j.hif executive wants to see with his own eyes. if the railroad have painted the depots, since the last time he maae a non-ponwcai jnuuu through states with elections In the offing. ... The esteemed Boston 'Post' editor lUv aliens this 'air commonwealth, along with the sister state to the north, "constitute the two most radical states in the Union, and where communist Is strongest." Be' llefa like this Incubate when com monwealths rise majestically from a soap-box, as this one did on May 20th. ... On a dark and stormy night last February, the Earl ulrlch cat dl appeared Into the primeval forest and eternal hills, that surround tne Ulrlch ranch, and was given up as ft "goner." It waa figured, even the feline survived the bllKzard, Yarmlnt would be on hand to eat him. lAst week the missing cat re turned, fatter than when he went ftway. In the pink of condition, and atarted at once on the annihilation of the rodenta In the Ulrlch barn. As a special concession In ce!obra tlon of the return, the cat was In vited Into the Ulrlch parlor for .the first time. In his nine lives. PRISON BAND NEEDS "BltEAK" Shadows) "Our much maligned Inmate band la an Inmate activity that takes not one penny out of a prisoner's pants. It is on hand . to furnish muslo at our annual track meet, at the baseball games, and at the fights. The butt of many Jokes, yet the footers would be sorely missed If they ever disbanded. It's not composed of Benny Goodman's. It's made up of Just plain, ordinary cons, making aweet mu slo the best they can. which Is ft damned sight better than Is popularly supposed." (State Prison Magazine). ... Atty a. Newbury has ft stitch In his back, and can hardly raise an arm to wavo at a Jury. ... "WPA Chief Harry Hopkins Is ru mored considering matrimony and Republicans are pleased that Mr. Hopkins Is considering a project on which he will spend his own money. (Boston Transcrlptl. Many reel tne samo way about Secy. Ickea. ft recent bridegroom-elected. ... Candidates remaining contlnn foxy. One was noted Thurs. telling ft voter with a hunting complex, where he saw a fet deer grarlng two aays ago. ... AfTOKlMONLY (Cleveland Plsln Dealer) "The accordion funcllona by snoring. Its worst noise is made by Inhaling; Ita next worst by exhaling. I( you pick It up. It aqueali: If you put It down. It groans: If you caress It, It howls." . The football coach at "Old Ore. gon" Is fretting over the "clash ot colors" brlRht yellow snd green In the gridiron suits. There have been times In past seasons, when practically all of the clashing, was done by the colors. It seemed. ... A LAKY NPEAKS IP "Foolish, too: The man who wast ed much literature and vat amount of correspondence In trving to convert me to Marxism. Never theless. I liked his forthright attack Just let me once at him and what ft battle on world government there will be. It Is a topic on which I am vastly Ignorant. I think he Is. too. That Is why we feel ao equal to dealing with it." (Olive Barton In The Com Bay Times). Closinj time lo: Too Late to du ally Ads U 1 :3D p. nv Amend Wagner Act! CLIGHTLT over a year ago the Wagner Act was upheld by the Supreme Court. At that time there was a considerable demand, particularly in the anti-administration press, that the Act be IMMEDIATE LY amended. As pending Supreme Court given in any sense a thorough column, that while there were the letter of the law, the wiser course would be to see how the Act worked out in practice, before the task of revising it started. Well that period of trial has ended, and so many glaring defects in the measure have been revealed, that in the opinion of this paper it should be amended drastically and the job done at the earliest possible moment, IN fact we would go so far as drawn and the spirit latter, is the chief cause of be one reason for its stubborn Why! Because it is essentially a anti-capital enactment. And under the present labor board, that has been the spirit in which the measure has been adminis tered. IN other words when the great need in this country, has been, less strife and friction between labor and capital, not more ; a better understanding between increased misunderstanding; and persistently contributed to the latter, and until it is radically changed, will continue to do so. In fact we believe any fair the provisions of this measure, explain how it could ever have is, the Act, was a part of organized labor'B time honored offen sive to secure certain rights, never designed to secure fair to not only benefit labor but an entirely selfish and partisan advantage. In short it was a war measure, very much as the treaty of Versailles was a war measure, and while theoretically it was designed to bring peace; as a practical matter, because of its spirit of bigoted one-sidedness, it merely added fuel to the flames cf antagonism and suspicion, and delayed peace in definitely. . . WITHOUT going into detail the Wagner Act, legalizes the legitimate rights of organized labor, and they ARE entirely legitimate, without ot legitimate rights of capital. It that injure the worker; it refuses to define, or even consider. unfair practices that may injure and HAVE injured the employer. And even more serious, the to administer the Act, have as far been personally as prejudiced the mensuro itself. Ohviously such a situation is be continued. In the interest not only of capital and labor but the country itself, the Wagner Act should be amended, and made a document of fair play the earliest possible moment. Football Is THE United States Supreme Court has conourred in an opin ion formulnted long ago by the American public the opinion that, college football has assumed the aspects of a huge business enterprise, one that has only a remote relationship to the intellectual and physical welfare of college and university students. As such, its revenues The decision of the court, granted by the Fifth Oircuit Georgia Tech and the University of Georgia, is one that has its origin in commonsense. Any other conclusion would have involved a serious distortion of the processes of justice. Efforts wore made by the two payment of taxes on receipts from football games on the palp ably specious theory that intercollegiate athletics at state-aided institutions were an essential feature of higher education and therefore of government. Dismissal of this contention, firmance of the right of the federal government to tax incomes of employes of the Port of New York Authority, is given added importance and significance because it reflects a tendency to narrow exemptions against federal tax levies. Never Too Old to Learn ' OLDSTERS who want to learn may gain considerable encour Btrement from the recent findings of one of America's eading psychologists. Professor versity, reports that youth has respect. Age, contrary to the barrier to the pursuit of knowledge. "We have discovered," says people can learn almost anything they want to. Adults are eachahle and plnstio in every old people to learn is nearly the ters of 17 to 19 years." It mav even be. on the basis that intellectual life begins at 40. In any event, there now seems to be no excuse for anyone's using mere age as an excuse when it comes to filling in the gaps of knowledge and keeping pace with the outstanding trends of modern wisdom. R. S. WASCO PEA CROP HALF NORMAL IS FORECAST THE DALLES. June 8. Fred Cyphers, a grower, forecast a 50 per cent crop today In the Wasco county market pea area. The yield normally mounts to about 940,000. He estimated the harvest, completed today, would bring less than one ton per acre on non-lrrlgated land and about a ton and a half on Irrigated sections. Hot Weed lunrnntlne THE DALLES. June 3 (AP) The aeco county court Imposed a strict action, the measure had not been trial, it was suggested in this many obvious imperfections in as to say, that the Wagner Act, it represents, particularly the the present depression, and may persistence. bitterly partisan, pro-labor and the employer and bis men, not the Wagner Act has consistently minded person, who will read will be left completely at sea to passed. The only explanation and like most offensives, it was play or justice, it was designed injuro capital, to gain and hold the same time legalizing equally clearly defines unfair practices members of the Board appointed as we have been able to judge, in favor of organized labor as entirely wrong, and should not and justice to all concerned at a Business are subject to taxation. which sets aside an injunction Court of Appeals in favor of Georgia institutions to escape together with the court s af Thorndyke, of Columbia uni no particular advantage in this popular impression, is not a Dr. Thorndyke, "that mature mental function. The ability of same as the ability of young- of this scientific conclusion, quarantine today on farms where noxious weeds have been discovered County Judge O. O. Shutta said officers would prohibit shipments of hay and grain If they carried weed seeds. Bsby lle In Sleep 8ILVERTON. Ore., June 3. (APt When Mr. and Mrs. Ton-aid rn elde awoke this morning they found their little daughter. Sandra Jane, lifeless in her bed. The baby would have teen a year old June 17. The child had been In good health. Phot' S4J We ll raul atvay jour lefusa. City Sanitary Service. Personal Health Service By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to til tea to diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self addressed envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the larce number of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 265 El Caralno, Beverly Hills. Calif. THE CART Man In the 0 and 10 cent store business writes about doctors' fees. Evidently he has written me be fore, for he In closes a letter I sent In reply to his previous let ter. In my letter I said: If It la a ques tion -of pay. the young man who decides to enter the profession of medicine must relinquish any notion of attain ing wealth. In deed he must be content If be can make a living. Thousands of doctors right now, good men, too. are actu ally In want and without even the prospect of retirement when they grow too old to practice they'll be come objects of charity. Through the depression years the doctors have taken It on the chin without a whimper. People have let the doctor wait (since he' makes so muoh money so easily) and still they have received his services when he knew they could no longer pay any thing. Now this second letter from the 5 and 10 cent storo man reveals the nature of bis business. And he has something Interesting to say: The business I am in la obviously one In which people get a lot for their money. ... Brethren, If we had half the as surance this man hasl when a depression appears, down go our prices and first thing you know we are on the profit side again. A doctor charges a certain price for hts service whether it's a de pression, a boom, a bear or a bull market. People can pay only what they can afford, and if the doctor charged a cash price as we do he wouldn't have so many headaches trying to collect. Probably some of the doctors who will eventually become charges should take a course In 6 and 10 merchandising. A -dime In the hand s worth two In the books. You have a good deal of Influence with the doctors. I believe, and you might persuade them to adjust their prices to the state of the patient's pocket book. . . . went down past hla fold classmate of mine) office the other day, but the place was ao darn busy I couldn't see whether he was still ; there or not. I have my suspicions of the pros perity of my old classmate, too Busy a he may seem to be, I'd be willing to wager he Is not ac cumulating wealth, not unless he has changed a great deal since we were students together, for he was i much too kind and tender-hearted ' Man About Manhattan By OI.OKOE TDCKbR NEW YORK Although thousands of dollars worth of trinkets and mer chandise are thefted from department stores every week in New York, you seldom read of It In the newspa pers. There Is a reason for this, and It hinges on the psychological hunch fostered by the gambling casinos on the Continent. Mer chant believe it Is bad publicity for thefts In their stores to be re ported, Just hS Monte Carlo be fctORGE TUCKR lieves It la bad publicity for ane of ita clients to commit suicide after losing his fortune at roulette. For yenrs It has been the custom at certain European spas, when a des perate loser takes his life, to convey the body some distance from the ca sino and stuff a few thousand franc notes into his pockets. This enables the management to deny that the suicide took his life because of losing his fortune. It la a custom that fictlqn writers have made legendary, and there Is evidence, ao they say. to prove that thla has happened many times. In New York the stores employ their own detectives, most of whom are women, to keep on the lookout for thieves. They pose as shoppers and prowl through the store looking at merchandise and keeping a close eye on suspicious characters- It is said that dozens of arrests dally sre made, but they are usually settled out of court. The stores, exempt In extreme cases, do not like to Involve the police and thereby let themselves In for newspaper comment. Such publicity has been Indisputably prov ed bad. as many people will avoid a store that figures sensationally In the news. The gambling casino ingle. Inci dentally, brines to mind one of Alex ander Woollcott s classic stories. It -vjeaBajsiaBJjjr"r KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS PYTHIAN SISTERS D.0.K.K, and INVITED FRIENDS PICNIC, SUNDAY, JUNE 5 Klamath Falls Junction ... 1:00 p. m. Bring picnic basket . . . own service FREE COFFEE . . LEMONADE . . ICE CREAM ENTERTAINMENT FUN FOR ALL! Tor tramportatlnn, rail Fd (lore or Pari Flrhtn.r. Mret at PithLin Hall U:30 p. m. Sunday Brady, M.P. BEFORE THE HORSE a fellow to be an efficient business man. Not that doctors are more tender-hearted than business men In general, but propinquity, doctors have to live with It, you might say, and doctors are human. However, there Is In the 6 and 10 cent merchant's suggestion some food for thought. Certainly It Is not medical ethics that prevents physician from adjusting hla fees to the present ability of the patient to pay. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS No Savvy U. B. Employees' Compensation Commission In Washington does not authorise and will not pay for In jection treatment of hernia. (H.O.S M.D.) Answer They're a bit out of step Injection treatment of hernia la rec ognised and paid for by state In dustrial commissions In Alabama, Arizona. California, Colorado, Con necticut, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico, New York, Nebraska, New Hamp shire, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Utah. Vermont, Wyom lng and Wisconsin, and probably several other states by this time, The Minnesota commission states that Injection treatment la employed In nearly 00 percent of all Indus trial hernias In Minnesota. No Adhesions Seven months ago had ab. oper ation, and since have had much trouble from adhesions. Now another operation. (M.) Answer Doctor who knowa what the nature of the trouble was and what was done can advise you In telligently. No one can advise what to do about "adhesions." Hernia Husband has had Injection treat ment of hernia as recommended by you, and it has a pparen tiy cured him, but he still wears the truss under the order of the doctor who treated him. Would it be safe for him to leave off the truss so he can undergo a physical examination for a position he la anxious to ob tain? He fears he will be rejected if he reports for examination wear ing a truss. (Mrs. A. S.) Answer Only his physician can advise him whether he may safely go without truss now. Generally It is wise to wear a truss for several months after the Injection treat ment has been given, to give plenty of time for the fibrous pad pro duced about the hernial opening by the treatments, to become well or ganized and preclude giving way and recurrence of the hernia. (Copyright 1938, John E. Dtlle Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to rommunlrate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D., 265 El Cainlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. Is that of the tall, young man who lost heavily at the gaming boards and then wandered out into the night. Suddenly there was a revolver shot. The attendants rushed out to find tha body In the moonlight, a red blur spreading over his shirt-front. Naturally, they were annoyed. But they followed the routine set aside for such situation!. They hurriedly thrust 10.000 francs Into his pockets and telephoned the police. But when the police arrived there was no body. Half an hour later the "body" saun tered casually Into the casino. He began to play with the 10.000 fraDCS which a benevolent providence had dropped Into his pockets, and he re couped all his losses. The red bh:r on his shirt front. It developed, was red ink. Of course there wasn't a thing the management could do but give htm a few Icy stares. But to these the young man was oblivious. People re marked they had seldom seen a young man in such high good humor, de spite his prodigious losses of the last few days. As I recall the story, the last that Alexander Wootlcott heard of him he was still winning . . . and atlU verv much alive. The Sparta Inn, at Sparta, N. J.. Is patterned after Mount Vernon. It la mora than 300 years old. How ever, the proprietor isn't a descend ant of one of Washington's soldiers His name la Teddy Prtngos from Greece. PREHISTORIC SKELETON FOUND NEAR FREEWATER MIX.TON-4FREEWATER, June S (AP) A WPA crew working near the Big Saddle on the Ltncton road yes terday uncovered a full-sized skele ton of a large, unidentified animal, possibly prehistoric. Clay and decoicpoed shale yielded between 300 and 300 pounds of bone. Not all were removed and the crew summoned Dr. H. 8. Brode. curator of the Whitman college museum, to Identify the skeleton. Brode has ex cavated several giant camel and ele phant bones In the southern Inland Empire. Fall Is Fatal PORTLAND. June 3. (AP, Clyde Hall. 33. died yesterday of injuries suffered when he fell three stories down an elevator shaft while carry ing a bundle of lumber. The Capital Parade (Continued from Page One ) dress waa never discussed In the cabi net. No disclosure of tha tart was ever made to Secretary of the Treas ury Henry Morgenthau. Jr.. or Under secretary Rosweli Ma gill, or any of the treasury tax experts. And the leaders of congress were allowed, as usual, to remain In a state of un lllumlnated Ignorance. Herman OUphant, general counsel of the treasury and a left-wing cuckoo In the conservative Morgenthau nest, supplied the bulk of the material for the Arthurdale apeech. After the president had edited the material to suit his own Inclinations. It waa turn ed over to his favorite left-wing ad visers and amanuenses. They pre pared the early drafts, and these were whipped Into final ehape by the presi dent himself. Secretary Moregtbau and Under secretary Maglll were allowed to voice their opinions, to be sure. But once they had spoken their pieces, their only notion of how the wind blew was derived from requests for sta tistical information from the drafters of the speech. Until they read it in the papers, neither secretary nor undersecretary was entirely sure of what the speech contained. The singular history of the Arthur dale speech discloses a basic fact In spite of occasional set-basks, the Influence of the New Deal left wing Is expanding dally into new fields. . The youngish liberal -radical law yers and economists who comprise the left wing tended at first to restrict their operations. Utilities policy, se curities regulation, relief these were their favored provinces. But In the last year or so, they have all but taken over the Justice department, nnd made this anti-trust law division particularly their own. They have merged as practical political adviser?, urging such maneuvers as the presi dent's aggressive fight for New Deal ers In the primaries. Because they are advocates of spending they have increasingly concerned themselves with fiscal and financial policy. And now they have taken over tax policy. The undistributed profits tax was Invented by them, more as a so cial weapon than as an Income pro ducer. Their influence prevailed when the president decided to flht for the "principle of the tax" in spite of bitter opposition In congress and the country. They hope now to write into the tax laws next year a dis tinction between "speculative" and "productive" investment, which would heavily favor the latter at the ex pense of stock market trading. Nor do they confine their efforts to the palace politics of the Whits House. They are constantly alert lor opportunities to put their friends In key positions. For example. Undersecretary Maclll will soon lea the treasury. S EC Commissioner John W. Hanes Is Mated to succeed him. Simultaneously, an asslstsnt secretaryship will fall va cant. And as Hanes la no tax ex pert, the left-wingers plan to make their own man. O. John Rogge. both assistant secretary and tax expert-Inch lef. Rogge. a graduate of the Harvard law school who Is now special coun sel for the S.E.C., Is at the treasury for a two weeks' trial. Unfortunately, Secretary Morgenthau has heard who Rogge's real sponsors are. He nns taken alarm, and the chances are that Rogge will be returned to the 8 F.C. But Rogge or no Rogge. the watch word Is still "leftward ho." IN DRINKING WATER OPENS Saturday, June 41 P.M. Rates For Family Tickets LIFEGUARD-FRANK SCOTT FORMERLY OF TWIN PLUNGES ME v On the Radio Chains STATIONS When to Find Them on the Dial: KKX. Portland, 1180', KF1. 640 Um Anaelrti KOA Mil), gpultanr. KGO. 79U. Ban Francisco; dull 620, Portland; KJR. mo. lieattle. KNX, I0S0, Los Angeles; KOA, 830 Denver; KOIN. 040, Portland. KOMO. 026. Seattle; KPO. 8X0. San Franclsro; RSU 1180, gait Lake. Friday 5 ;00 Hollywood Hotel. KNX, KSL, KOIN; Swarthoufa Orch., KOA, KEX. News, KOO: Callfornlana on Parade, KPO; Oene & Glenn, KFI. 8:30 Armand Olrard, baritone, KGW; Expedition, KPO. 5:48 Your Govt, at Your Service, KPO, KFI: Orphan Annie, KOA. :00 First Nlghter, KPO, KFI, KGW; Song Shop, KNX, KSL, KOIN; Martin's Orch., KOO. 6:30 Hollywood Gossip, KPO, KFI. KOW. - 6:45 March of Progress, KOO, KEX: American Viewpoints, KNX. 7:00 Scattergood Bftlnes. KNX. KOIN: Amos & Andy, KPO, KFI, KOW; Jack Fulton, KSL; Rapp's Orch., KEX; Concert Hall, KGO. 7:1S Uncle Ezra, KPO. KFI, KOW; Lum li Abner. KNX, KSL, KOIN; Rapp'a Orch., KGO, KOA. 7:30 Whlteman'a Orch., KNX, KSL, KOIN; Sketches In Sound, KPO, KGW; Thunder Adama. KOO, KOA. 8:00 Cutlers Orch.. KPO, KGW; Trumbauer's Orch.. KGO; News, KEX, KOA; Arden's Orch.. KSL. 8 :30 Revue, KPO, KEX, KFI. KOA: Crier's Orch., KOA; Sports, KNX. 8:00 Circus. KPO, KFI, KGW; Hutton's Orch.. KJR: Dance Orch.. KNX. KOIN: Norrls' Orch., KOA. 8:30 Crosscuts, KJR; Owens' Orch., KPO: Jelesnlk's Orch., KNX, KSL; Fireside Hour, KGW. 10:00 News, KPO. KFI, KOW; orant's Orch., KJR; News. KNX. 10:15 Grant's Orch., KEX. KOA; Ravazza's Orch., KFI; Book Parade, KPO: Oluskln's Orch., KNX. KOIN. 10:30 Ravazza's Orch.. KPO, KGW; Drelske s Orcn., KGO, .KEX: On the Air, KSL. 11:00 Organlat, KOA: Pasadena Civic Auditorium. KNX. KSL. KOIN: Five Star Final. KGO; Martln'a Orch.. KPO. KFI. Saturday 5:00 Maurice's Orch., KNX. KOIN: Symphony Orch.. KPO, KFI. KEX; Safety First. KGO, KOA, KOW. 5:30 Serenade, KNX, KSL, KOIN; Stars of Tomorrow, KOO. KOA. KGW; Symphony. KPO, KFI. 6:00 Hit Parade. KNX. KSL. KOIN; Concert, KOO: Symphony. KPO, KFI, KOW, KOA. 6:30 Feuilly Party, KPO, KFI. KGW; Dance Orch.. KGO, KOA. KEX 7:00 Barn Dance, KPO, KOW. KFI; Miller's Orch.. KGO, KEX: King's Orch., KNX. KSL. 7:30 Johnny Presents. KNX, KSL. KOIN; Heldt's Orch.. KOO. 8:00 Prof. Quiz. KNX. KSL, KOIN; Garber's Orch., KPO, KFI; Heldts Orch.. KGO. 8:30 Barron's Orch..' KPO, KFI. KOW; Martin's Orch., KEX: Pryor's Orch.. KNX, KOIN; Baseball Game. KOO. 9:0O Voice of Hawaii, KPO. KFI, KGW; Norrls' Orch., KOO. KEX: Kings Orch., KNX; O'Hare'a Orch., KSL. 9:30 Ravazza's Orch., KOO. KEX: watklns' Orch.. KGW. KPO: Jeles nlk's Orch., KOIN, KSL. ! 10:00 Saunders' Orch.. KGO, KEX: i Barn Dance. KNX, KSL; Sudy's Orch., KPO; News, KOA. 10:15 Sudy's Orch., KFI; Barn Dance, KOIN. 10:30 Trumbauer's Orch.. KOO, KOA: Drelskes Orch., KPO. KFI. 10:45 Buddy Rogers' Orch., KNX. KSL. KOIN. 11:00 Five-Star Final, KGO; Or- RRIOK'S ganlst, KOA; Pasadena Community Dance, KNX, KSL. KOIN; Ovens' Orch.. KPO, K?!. . Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County history from the flies of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. TEN YEARS AGO. June 3, 1S28 (It Was Sunday) Parkins; prohibited hereafter Bear creek bridge. Boy Scouts to hold summer camp on Applegate. SOS from Italian dirigible lost la Arctic reported. Miss Mary Parsons arrtvea from Seattle to spend several weeks at the HUIcrest orchards. 8.600 cars predicted crops of valley this year. Hoover held to1 be certain nominee for president of Republican party. Huge forest fire rsglng near Red ding. Calif. TWENTY YEARS AGO. June 3, 1918 (It Was Mondsy) Oermsn drive on western front dwindles. Allied arms atop attacks on all fronts. Postofflce Interior Is given a new coat of paint. Red Cross makes appeal for old clothes for Belgians. Hugh B. Rankin la named super visor of the CrateT Lake national forest. Sells-Floto circus to appear here June 8. Sprlnkllng regulations for summer months are announced, to conserve city water supply. SALEM, June 3. (AP) Mrs. Jean Leonard was . still unconscious at Salem General hospital today fol lowing a fall yesterday at the home of her sister. Mrs. J. Lyman Steed. Salem. Her skull was fractured when she fell on porch steps. t Chevrolet If you got a bad bump and a busted render, You wouldn't have it fixed by a push-cart vender. You'd take it to a shop em ploying expert men, So your car would look just like new again! Do you know OUR shop men are factory trained, To make perfect repairs on cars that are maimed? And after the repairs we can match any paint, Tho it may take the work and patience of a saint. Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Klverslde Service Dept 32 Nn Riverside t'sed ri Lot Riverside it tn