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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1938)
PAGE SIX MEDFOIW MATL TRTBUNE, MEDFOBD, OREGON, SUNDAY, JUNE 12. 1938 MEDF0IU!3&kTRIBUNE tally tktrv Saturday. Hubllantd toy UKUKUHD PHINTINO CO. H-Ult N Kti St. Phone ti ROHMHT . RUHU editor. BIINIDBI It OI1J1TRAH Unr. laur4 m Mok matter at Ud (erC OrvH. el nf March I. lITt UPHBCniPriON RATES R Man--Advaneai Dili). v rar . Dally, mi Monlba tTI Dally. -mm nonth C&rrlar. in advanc Mwlford. Amh land, JackaoBvllla. Cant rat point. Phoanis. TalanU Uoltf Mill anil hi l Dally, ona yaar H.00 Dally, all month! Dally, oaa month All larma eaih tn advance. Orfliaai Papr at la City of Bedford Orflrtal Papw f iarfcMm Cooaty HBMHalH llf fHB ABAOriA I BIMKKHP Tb Amlia I'raa i icluaivly o UtlW 't sot for publication of all ntwi mptoh sr4l4 to U or othar wlaa 4lt4 to trtia papar. and alia to tha iMai aava ubllih4 haraln. All rifhta for publication of pacta) aiapaie aarain ara aian rwmmrwn. UBMBBR Or UNITED PR BPS MEMBER or AUDI1 BUREAU .-F MROm,AThNfi A4vrtlatnp rtapracantaU1 Offloaa in Na Hark, '.'bioaau. Oatrolt, 8aa rraoelaea, ! Angalaa. Siattla, rortlaatf. It. bawa, Atlanta, Vaooouw, Member Uregbft iNewspapei t Pi TV ! I Aktociatiol u Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M P. Political 10 Commandments MRS. LEHMAN, wife of the Governor of New York, bus after many years political experience, in the Empire state, mit together the following political Ten Commandments: ..gl"ned Pr"1''i ri.oni health and hygiene, not to disease , . ; i ... j .,, . diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self. we tane pieusure in iiearuiy euuuraing mm aecaiugue ami addressed envelope la encloKd. Letters ahould be brief and written In Ink. hv nil nnlitininns from Wnsh. Owing to the large number of tetteri received only a few can be answered . 6 j a m x rrvn t i No rep,y can b8 made 10 luert conforming to Instructions. Ad drew ingion. u. Kj., io oan uiegu aim irum lonia vo a jubjiiuuk i or. William Brady, 265 El Carol no. Ueverly Mils, Calif. 1. Ten tne trutn. xnn procedure u oniy poaaioie in a aemoc- 4. racy where there la a free and unreglmented presa. 2. Treat all men aa you would wlah to be treated. Observance - of these principles would mean a repudiation of all false laeas of race auperlorlty, or race and class hatred and of group warfare. -g. Respect the a J nee re religious beliefs of every man, even If you don't happen to share them. Thli la basic for all tboae who hold to the democratic Idea on which America la founded. Help those who suffer and who are persecuted because of their beliefs or their racial heritage. Try to preserve the democratic heritage of equal opportunity for all men to learn and to earn. Remember that freedom of opinion lies at the very basis of democracy and human liberty. Distrust all who sow hatred of other men. Respect the law, for It Is the guaranty of your own freedom. Remember that America la not merely a country, It la an Ideal for tha whole world. Remember that the hope of the world lies In peace and In justice to all mankind. WILL Y.OU HAVE SPIN ACH, CANDY OR MILKf Pills for Soldiers Food obsessions are hard to over come. I conceived one about toma toes when I was a kid. Only a few years ago I made up my mind to eat tomatoes at all costs. I fri gan eating toma toes when they were not too high. I have never had any untoward effects from tomatoes . so far as X aim aware. In fact, I'm fond of a dash of catsup on my spaghetti. Still. I feel now that I have done my duty by toma toes. I'm off tomatoes for the rest of my life. I've shown I can take It. Why continue to force myself to at something I shall never learn to like? For that matter, why should any Cheou headline. In the Salem preaa: "MEDFORD BOILS AT D8." Tha burg didn't, but another crack like that and aha will. Generally, when a rain-soaked denizen of tha Wlllametta valley revel, for 38 hra. In the local climate, his folka have to get out extradition papers to make him coma home. ... Oherrlea and atrawberrlea ara ripen ing faat, and the klda and the blue Java are making dally foraya. To date, neither a kid or a bluejay haa brokon anything falling out of a cherry tree. ... Local wearers of the fee have start ad returning from the Los A. meet with their straw hats Intact. ... A local girl who made good In Frisco flew thru Tuea. and smacked Q. (Caaa) Hunt, the maglo lantern Xing, on tha cheek, and departed before he turned the other one.' ... New traffic algna ara being Instal led on tha Main Stem. Thla la a far cry from the days when anybody so minded oould have ahot a box car down that thoroughfare and not hit a thing. Soma of the liberal element thought It would be a good Idea. When the contraptlona atart func tioning, autolsta are expected to use them once, for the novelty, before returning to 8th atreet, where It Is everybody for himself, Kind no me chanical whistle to aggravate, . 0. Wig Aahpole confronts a crisis again. He don't know what he will do with hla hay. Though a rock ribbed Democrat, he needn't think the govt, la going to pay him for feeding it to hla cows. . New cars continue to show up to thumb their front wheela at tha de pression. J. Frank Wortman. the Phpenlx banker-farmer, la back from tha mid west, where tha crops look fine. He mporia learieaaiy tha New Deal la petering out on the prairies. ... Sam Richard aon, '98 guard, la alave on tha new wing to tha llght- ... A Boise, Idaho editor haa discov ered the first lawn mower waa in vented 115 yeara ago. space will not permit publishing the namaa of cltl rena ready to awear they own It. aftr tha little woman haa put her aown. . Leon Hasklna la back on tha coast watching the far horlaon. listening to tha wild wavea. getting aand In his ahoee. and being fanned by the blue Pacific. ... Oladlatora will tangle at tha mili tary base again Mon. eve. The main event will be a no limit affair. In atead of Just the limit. A large con gregation la expected to pour out. SOME years ago the English biologist, Julian Huxley, wrote mi be compelled to eat spinach, aa ... .... ....... . l0ng aa cowa continue to give milk? An nrtinlp nrpninfinor tnflt. the timn ivnnlrl enmft wnpn A I . . -. , nerson who is inded. tired or suffering from mid-afternoon spinach backed right off the table c.: i.i i. l.:.. .i n... . ,n .ui " of-"-". iaiiuu numu icauu imu mn jucncL auu owaiiuw a muau tauivt n no( HOW don't get me wrong. that would stimulate and energize him. If tea and coffee tan i "xe spinach, i go for it when do it and afternoon tea does seem to do it for the English no Mtlact0n from eat'mi, lti ott) why cannot a moderate drug, not habit-forming, accomplish than the pleasure of eating what ll....l...lll one imea. lite oamc icomn ni-. 1. .. ,u . If there was an ansyer to this interesting question, it was source of iron, a good form of rough . I.- . . i i . . , . . "''" "v "" --- - . contributors vitamin C. rich In have discovered the kind of tablet that Mr. Huxley foresaw, vitamin a. as a aourco of calcium A .n.ln( ii.. tl, T,oo f ; . It la far Inferior to milk, " 1""" w. ,.v... ... when wa coma to analvae anlnaeh China, found the Japanese soldiers swallowing "energy tablets" from the nutritional viewpoint, it la rnfc.n wookono.l nAnv nrnlnno Pi.-hfino- lonlr .lo.n nP difficult to seo Why or how It achlev- ...... . B.. t r . . r.nutntlon an a health fnnd fnr enervating heat. The scientific formula for the tablet is not children. Ona auspecta it la good for given. The slowing down of the Japanese advance in China "?n chlefly children . . don't like It. Something like castor might suggest that the new lozenges are not all that advertise- 0n In that respect. An ounce of ni.nl (lnsorilioo thnm tn h ' spinach contalna 1.400 unlta of vita- . . min n bo aoea an ounce or Duuer, i no iti,uiL-umu nuajL' unit an niuiy iiiii uii iia oiuiuncii nn ounce of cheese, half an ounce may in time have to be revised to read that an army fights ot one-fourth of an ounce of . "11 T O ' IVIIIVU.J BICCIUJJ, iVJ UUIlLtO On Its pills. Jt. Ss. of carrot; 1A plnta of milk. But then, who ever auffera from ahortage of vitamin A In thla country? I have been aeeklng convincing evidence of any auch shortage and ao far I have never found any. The apocryphal sugar in America was leas than nine pounda a year for each person. To day It la around 100 pounda a year per person. Sugar la a fine food, but It la now becoming evident that with the me chanization of Induatry and domestic lite, leu work, leas exerclae for every body, hence lowered metabolism (rate of oxidation or combustion), the ex cessive Intake of refined carbohyd rate food (atarchea and sugars) la 'in Important factor of Impaired health and vitality, premature aging, ahort- ened life. I would not take candy, tea cream or other eweeta away from the young sters. But I believe It would be good rule to require that 30 units of vitamin B be Incorporated in eacn 100 caloriea of sugar. Ice cream, cake, white bread or candy or. aay. 50 unlta of vitamin B In each ounce of auch food sold. The Worlds Not So Crazy nn. ,j, , .., f i . . vitamin A la present, according to the HE world s not so crazy; it s the people in it. Life is nutrUlon ln ro " ev!rv. nutrition experts. In ao many every. simple if you just relax." This bit of philosophy is plucked f001 ucn plentiful quantity . r, ... . i .. t. i .it- I-.., inai, it wouio oo cmiicuit 10 aeieci a iruni a i iiinzer prize piny, it is supplemented oy nine uoni- dlet tnat wmlW lead vltamln A ment to the effect that "Life is kind of beautiful if you let it deficiency. f rpi,- t,n,,l,l ,V h.t .... nf ,;ill t M A ccntury K the consumption of ife come .to us. We live at high tension, with nerves straiued to the breaking point, alwaya eager to overtako someone else on the highway, to bent the red light and the traffio cop's whistle, to keep ahead of the Joneses, to crowd twenty-five or twenty-six hours into the day. In other lands, along certain lines, the people are fnr more sensible. The English proceed at a more leisurely gait and take time out for tea during the middle of the afternoon. The French take a bicycle wherever .QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS The B. B. B. B. B. Over a week ago I sent for the "Bigger Better Brady Baby Book" and have not received It. (Mra. B. P.) Answer As soon aa your requiat reachea me the booklet will be mailed you. Provided and I hope thla doesn't apply In .your case provided the request la accompanied with a standard alze stamped envelope bear ing your addreaa. "Local" or "City" Is not the proper addreaa. The Baby Book la free, but only to correspond ents who comply with Instructlone. Scabies or Itrli. There la a regular, epidemic of scabies or the Itch ln our commun ity. It seems to spread most among school' children, who bring It homo and later the whole family catchea It. (M. B. W.) I Answer The management of1 scabies (the Itch) la described in de tail ln booklet "Save Your Skin." For copy send 25 cents coin and a stand ard size 8tamped envelope bearing your address. Corn Collodion. Would like to have your prescrlp tlon for corn cure. (J. K.) Answer Thirty grains of salicylic acid dissolved ln A ounce flexible collodion. Paint corn, wart cr callus with It once a day for a week or ten days. (Copyright, 1938, John F. Dllle Co) Y L STATE IS TOLD (Continued Irom Page Ona.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with nr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. !)., 285 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. Man About Manhattan By OtOIUlB TUCKER NEW YORK There was an aaton Islilng moment In a Brooklyn court ong break at noon. The Dutch are never so the other afternoon, packed with i l,- i,t n, '. t,.l o l'nln -l,,.0,-n,. orama ann realism, a maiay bc uuiiuii iu a nui.j wmi, bui-j unu n ..ntui . they want to go. There is a great deal to support the theory that those who reduce the business of living to simple terms are happiest, As an aid to the cultivation of a more contented stato of mind it might be well to repeat occasionally during the day that the world isn't so crazy; that life is fairly simplo if you relax, and, above all else, life is even beautiful if you will let it eome to you. R. S. O. Smith, the pedagogue leaves this week for the south, whera he will go to acbool. . The political mesa in tha nation la getting too much for a number of valley Democrat even. The Dub Wataon boy got tha worst of an argument with hla bicycle, the lat of tha week, rhe vehicle stopped without notice, and the young man responded to the law ot gravity, exe cuting a neat parbola over the handlebar. ... The Brown Bova of g. Pt. townNl wmr.i time, the past week, en bunch and one at a time. man was to. tes tify before a magistrate and tell what he knew of an at tempt to smugple eleven C h 1 nese Into the United States. But when you testify ln court ln this country. you first take the oath. You awcar to tell tha truch. the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God. And that's where the color and the melodrama of the mystic Orient come ln. For Malaya are Moham- (ill) lay. unable to speak English, was washed up on the shores of Ellis Island, unable to satisfactorily ex plain his presence. Me was fright ened and refused to say anything. But when Dr. Adam walked ln with the sacred krls the man. whose name was Umar Thtr Bin, fell ln a ieop at the doctor's feet, willing and anx ious to tell all. This grls, it seetm Is Inlaid with meteoric Iron, which cornea from the heaven from which they believe their royal rulers descended. Spain s Unending War llORE than two months ago, General Franco in a radio address declared that the Spanish war was won and that there remained onlv the necessity of some moiminir-nn onera- medans and their conception of tie , , . m, dletv dlf frra from oura. And ao an Hons to complete tne tasn or me insurgent, army, mere were oath t0 our Oor-can in no aen.-e fow who surveyed the scene dispassionately to miration his be binding to one of the Moham- statement. The loyalist front had been severed by Franco's m,d,n f"th pentration to the sea. Troops and parts of the civilian popula- But New York is prepared fot tion wero seeking refuge in France. The whole Aragon front thing they did was send for Dr. raa- Capital Parade (Continued from Page One ) had been crushed. Mrmulril , rall VANCOUVER, Waah. June ll. (p, Strangling on a bean. Jackie Clar ence Yankee, 18 months old. died here yesterday after physicians lost a two hour fight to dlalodge the ob ject. The child, playing on a farm aome distance from here, and had attempted to swallow a lima bean he found on t a-oui:" Use Mall Tribune want Ada. Since then further advances have been made 1,110 A1m nl hls M1IKl ""a- ' Dy ine insurgent, lorces. sword, and It waa presented to him Vet frnm Mrlrirl thprr lina I'nmn nn siiUL'estion of vieldinir. ong ago by the Sultan of Java. Dr , . .. Adam always responds when aome be- Mlicenl rncean, recently reuirnea rrom loynnsi territory, says wtidered Malay arrives on these shores, the end is not vet. The spirit of the people is still high; com- "legally or otherwise, for he knows manders and soldiers are confident. And, as if to give substance ,, ,,,,, including Atjek. to his predictions that the conquest of loyalist Spain remains Battak. Bui. Dyak. Lampong. Makas- r, , nrtn,i.t a1 1 mT' nicouar. una even nejnng. ur. IH1- ill Hie lllMllucr, .-..nillll -,,.., .c.i ii.iv.-n no. ............v.. A(am HvM n Broo,,n now ,lt (or the heaviest and most sustained counter offensive since Temp), ao yeara he was chief ethnogoiist to This revival proves there is still spirit and strength in '1(Du,ch OT"nn"nt ,n ,h lovalist Spain. Also, it sustains the theory that the world offers it all atarted several weeks ago no fiercer fighter than the Spaniard. Unhappily, this quality Br"1h tn,M" ln of valor is making of Spain a charnel-house and preparing the board. The captain was immediately ground for exploitation bv acquisitive neighbors and many indicted and with him Hassan Bm n I Ahmrl. vrhn la now rhlf ffriwmmnt years of poverty and misery for the Spanish people. R. S. witness. But to make It legal and binding and to Impress properly upon th imagtnatton of the man Just nn.v serious was the situation. Bin Ahmed had to be thrice sworn In. twice In the Mohammedan way and onee in Ihc orthodox American manner Th: was why Pf. Adam was called in. Tte slRht of a sacred krls Is enough to brin any Mohammedan to respectful attention. Ahmed knelt or ratt.er al l i 1 tn nn a'tttnH nf nriraf rtr CHICAGO. June ll.,The city Art,m tou; council has taken steps to knock ifcntly to hla head. Prayera to Mo. down the site of the collars being hammed were raumhled. And then worn by Chicago beer steins. I tn XrM " Properly opened Alderman William Rowan com- How It will turn out no one knowa plained there waa too much foam DUt the feet remains that 11 chln- and too little beer He wants a stand- were Illegally concealed In the hold ard fixed for tavernkeepera. of a ahlp. They will certainly be "Beer atelna theae days are wear- returned. The cnptaln says ne didn't Ing a collar that cornea up to the know anything about them until he earn." he aald. was at ara. . His suggestion that an ordinance Dr. Adam geta one ot these hurried be drafted to "take the starch out of call about every four yeara. The these collars, to wilt them down" last time. If I am correct, he was waa approved enthusiastically by his nuvxon! bv the officials was -v. colleagues. era I years ago when a bewildered Ma- FRANCE IN PACT PARIS. June 11 (AP- France laid plans today for a mltltnry alliance with turkey to ualn a dominant posi tion In the eastern Mediterranean In case of war. Turkey agreed yesterday to open negotiations for settlement of the long'ttandlng difficulties over the Ssnjak (district) of Alexandretta, a part of France's mandate in Syria where election disorders between Turks and Arabs resulted In martial law. The French hoped an agreement ould clear the way for a military pact which would have two puiposea. ON CHICAGO BEER Since then, nothing has been done. The president's fear of the senator may have been well founded. The fact remains that between the two of them, with the help of railroad management and labor, the conflict ing advisory groups within the ad ministration, the ICC, and pretty nearly everyone else connected with the railroad problem, have brought the country to an impasse where a general railroad collapse seems now nlmost Inevitable. AS EUGENE. June 11. p Don Dav is. 30. of iTlangte Lake, waa being held In the Lane county Jail In lieu of 500 ball after pleading guilty to complicity In a recent Eugene rob bery. Davis, a atudent at the Uni versity of Oregon, allegedly admit ted taking part ln ona of the robber iea for which Clarence Sebastian, an other Oregon atudent. waa arrested in San Joae, Calif., earlier thla week. When arrested by sheriff's officers Friday Davie had part of the loot ob tained ln the robbery of a Eugene sporting goods atore In his possession. He admitted his part In this rob bery, the aherlff aald. It was not known what action waa planned against Davis, according to reporta from the Lane county sher .fr s office today. return per box of pears and apples to growers from four major shippers waa cents ln 1838-37 and 44.6 cents in 1937-38. Out of these re turns. Mr. Deuel emphasised, the grower must deduct all cash outlays in producing tne nun. A. R. Hopfer, assistant secretary- treasurer of the Medford Production Credit asaoclatlon, testified that as sociation books ahowed an average production coat ot 51 cents a box for five representative growers. The average, ne added, waa a fair cross- section of production costs In aen eral ln the valley. He emphasised mat tne oi-cent production cost oer oox waa solely out-of-pocket outlav and did not Includo such Items aa taxea. depredation and obsolescence. - Carlton Testifies Edward W. Carlton, a grower here ainca mio, teatlfled that under nor. mal conditions hla production coat naa run ao centa a box to the har vest and 81 centa to packing house delivery. These figures, he said, in cluded taxea but not denreciation omce i3u, ne atated. he had exoer- ieiicu live yeara of losaea and three yeara of returns aomewhat In excess of production coata. laat year being cDiicuBiiy oaa. The financial status of crowers Is serious and If present conditions continue the fruit lndustrv will fall." Mr. Carlton aald. "In my own case 1 am taking out my apple ulM- " iruit inouatry, ne added, uunvnouiea ai.nso.ooo in wages to vauey annually. racaing plant wanes have a direct eneci, upon orchard waeea at hue. vest time. Mr. Carlton said. If the packing house scale exceeds field wages, dissatisfaction among the u.tuaru worxera results, ha related. Packing plant and orchard pay must o rpt aoout equal, It was lndl cated. . " Harry Hoaenberg of the Bear Creek orchards, stated that on the whole uuwoos tor tnia year was un favorable, probably more unfavorable man n tnia time last year. Cites Acreaae Dron Lyle P. Wilcox, horticulturist for ooutnem Oregon Sales. Inc., said that apple acreage had been reduced from 5.100 acrea ln 1920 to an esti mated 1,000 acrea today.- Pear acre age, he said, has been cut between 500 and 600 acres since 1928, adding that the acreage reduction has been proceeding at an accelerating pace. He attributed the reduction to lack of proflta. Mr. Neff asked if the acreage eliminated were not mar ginal land but Mr. Wilcox said that such was not wholly the case. Eugene Thorndike, manager of the Medford office of the First National Bank of Portland, testified that growers In general were In financial straits. - Testimony of similar nature waa given by Robert K. Norrts, horticul turist of the Pinnacle Packing com pany, Mr. Fitch, a grower, and Alfred S. V. Carpenter, a grower and secretary of S.O.S. W. Q. Bateman, manager of the Apple Orowera as sociation In Hood River, and A. W. Peters, vice president of the asso. elation and a Hood River grower, gave testimony showing that the In ouatry in their district Is ln the same plight pictured for the Rogue vauey oy orcnardlsts here. Asks About Unions Mrs. Margaret Fabrlck, member of the conference board, was anDlauderf by a email group of employes when she asked whether a reduction of the minimum wage would hrlnir labor unlona to Medford. When no answer was forthcoming Mr. Neff asked Mr. Oram If he cared to ronlv to Mrs. Fabrlck's query. Laughingly Mr. Oram aald he would answer the question In an executive session but noi at a public hearing. When Mr. Neff aaked If the em ployee had any oral testimony to present, no one responded. A few moments later, however, Harold A. Blthers, member of the conference board, aald ha would present the employes' ease. Mr. Blthers filed a number of charts, grapha and statistical docu ments on living cost Increases, em ployment, payrolls and family ex pendlturea. He read a newspaper article stating that arower. shippers would benefit thla vear from last eeason's experiences, hav ing learned that certain practices had depresaed the market last year. ri-BKs ror r.mpioycs Mr. Blthers read froii f. Journal article that quoted Profea sor Relrjer aa predicting a more favorable fruit aecson this year. He read and filed an economlo aurvey showing that the avera. .- earning family spends all Its Income on food, shelter and other necessl- In 1938 when fruit rem. better wagea w r h l.h. ... Blthers declared. Indicating 'there waa a direct link between wagea and prosperity. in a prellmlnarv Blthers said It waa an inr,n..,.J time to undertake wage reduction at present when an effort waa being made throughout the country to raise the pay level to a 40 -cent minimum hourly rate. fees cut Aa Plan,. nn industry la oenent to Margaret Fabrlck, representing the public; Raymond R. Rater, Jack Spalding and Leeter Kewbry. for the employers; and Harold Blthers, Mrs. Grace Pankey and Mrs. Harold Waltermlre, for the employea. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS JW. KERNS, describing to a South em Oregon service club the oth er day conditions he observed on a recent trip to Mexico, told of a large fruit plantation taken from Its Amer ican owners by the Mexican govern ment. It represented an Investment of two and a half million dollars, and when It was taken over by the Mex ican government (expropriated Is the polite term used by governments when they do auch things) It was provid ing employment at good wagea for many hundreds of Mexicans. Now It la falling Into ruin, and In two years more it will have gone back to the Jungle. THE former employees have lost their Jobs, and are now barely existing. A prosperous town that had grown up out of the operation is no longer prosperous. The Inhabitants speak of the time when the planta tion waa operating as "back ,in the good old days." Agricultural production has fallen ao low that Mr. Kerns and his party couldn't buy a half-case of eggs ln the whole community. Everyone was living from hand to mouth. PROPRIETORS in the same neigh borhood belonging to prosperous Mexicans had been "expropriated" at the same time. They too were falling into ruin, and their former employees were out of work. TAKING from those who have and ' giving to those who have not has a pleasant sound. AT FIRST, to the have-nots. It has the appearance of something for nothing, and the prospect of getting something for nothing pleases all of us. But In the long run the have-nots find that they suffer along with the haves by the process of confiscation. The Mexicans ln the neighborhood of this formerly prosperous planta tion are finding It out NOW. and are referring to the time when they had Jobs as "those GOOD DAYS." Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 12. 103S (It was Tuesday) Co. A entrains for militia encamp ment at Camp Clatsop. Fears felt wrecked Italian dirigible will drift to open sea before rescue ln Arctic can be made. All democratic candidates for of fice qualify except Wig. Ash pole, commlssloifershlp selection. D. E. Millard to be new KMED announcer. Mall-Tribune cooking school starts. Eight Inches of anow falls aft Crater lake. Rain hits the valley. Andrew Mellon swings Pennsyl vania for Hoover, and G.O.P. pres idential nomination assured him. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 12, 1918 (It was Wednesday) French and American troops halt German offensive along the Alsne. The mercury rose to 100 degrees yesterday, and was the hottest day of the year. Showers followed the heat. Ashland and Medford will cele brate the Fourth of July with a Joint picnic In Llthla park. Small forest Griffin creek. fire breaks out on Heavy rains fall ln the Applceate section. High school graduating exercises at Page tonight. PUBLISHER PATTERSON IS DIVORCED BY WIFE v WAUKEGAN. 111., June ll.upu' Mra. Alice Hlgglnbotham Patterson, wife of Joseph Med 111 Patterson, pub lisher of the New York Dally News, was granted an uncontested divorce today by Circuit Judge Ralph Dady on grounds of desertion. The entire proceeding. Including filing of the bill, the hearlne before Judge Dady and the signing of the decree, took less than 25 minutes. fJOR five years, our own . govern ment has been taking rrom those who have to give to those who have not. The net result is millions of un employed. These unfortunate mil lions, who have to subsist on the bare pittance of relief, are the REAL UFFERERS. It works that way, the world over. Maybe it shouldn't, but it does. The Romana are supposed to nm-s Introduced the art of brewing beer into Britain. . . Spoons For Orads WELLESLEY, Mass., June 11. P) Silver spoons sent to her Wellesley classmates of '17 by Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek, wife of the Chinese gen eralissimo, "to show that a spoon may be licked but China can't." will be used next Saturday at the annual reunlin of the class. China's first railway, 10 miles In length between Shanghai and Woo sung, waa built by foreign enter prise In 1878. After a farmer had been run over and killed, however. It was purchased by the Chinese government and torn up. 'haws.nlT !S IllbllUICl a JINGLES The peak of the touring season is now country wide, When you're out on the high waykeep to YOUR side! You know, wrecks are dan gerous, and very costly, too! Taking1 a chance may mean the hospital for you. What if speed DOES save you an hour a day ..... It won't help a bit if you're wrecked on the way. Try cutting down speed see how SAFE you can drive. You won't be a nervous wreck when you do arrive ! Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Riverside Service Dept 32 No. Riverside I'sed Car Lot Riverside at 4tb Special Kidnap t.uard HARRISBURO, Pa.. June 11. xjf A .peclal squad of 400 detectives was ordered by State Police Commission er Percy W. Foote tod.y to guard i-rnnsyivania against auch crimes aa the ktdnap-slaylng of five-year-old Jamea Bailey Cash In Florida. Reward ror .Missing Man PORTLAND. June 11 iv Clay Brown, executive of tha Ralph Smith Lumber company, said a J00 reward was being posted today for Inlorma tlon that mlgh- lead to the discov ery of the fate of Frlta Burrell, 3. superintendent of the rompsny who dlsappcsred Wednesday. or little or do community unlM. i Pays enough wages to Its workers to enable them to live wltho.it support of others residing m the same community." Mr. Blthers aald He pointed out that fruit work la seasonal and declared that the 'wage effected by the present rate . . will provide no more than suf ficient for the maintenance of work ers while on the Job." "If you disregard even the nec essities ot life in establishing a wace for your employea. you are not mak- ng any Investment ln cltlrenshlp m our community but you 'are building up in your emploves a re sentment that wiu surely bounce back to plague you." Mr. Blthers declared to the applause of tha em P'oye group present. The conference board was com posed of Porter J. Neff. chslrnian the Rev. 8. B. Bartlsm and Mra I As Thrilling As You'll Ever j Want These Two Grand Stars! mill r inniiinn ingfiner: ... in a , l Hi. ,x romantic musical so gay ' ill! I !i ' :'i tne P,cture J"0"'" want to fyyj) jl S(M? 0VPr 8nrt 0VCF nSaln ' MAT I III " 111 mmi SIN EVES Y -