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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1938)
PAGE FOUR fEDFOItD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFOTID, OREGON. MONDAY. TUNE 20. 1938. MedfordTbibune "Everyone l HootbrrB Or iMdi h Hall TrlbOM." Daily Eirrpl Saturday. Hublianad bj uMiimmn PRINTINO CO. II. IT. 19 N. Fit Bl. PbOM 1 ROBERT W. BDHU BdHor. RNBBT B OIL8TBAK UaoaiW. Ao ln1pDlnl Niiptpr. a .oiaa matt- at Ud ford. Ortfoo. unrt-f Act ol March I. UTI. UBSL'RIPTION RATE! Bj Mall Id Artvaoeai Dlly. on ytsr Dally. li month .11.00 HI Pally, on monm i a. rPPUr in Advanoa Uadforn. ARn i.nrt Jackionvllla. Ciotril Point. Phoenix. Talent. Ood HIH ana Dally. one yar 2S? Dai it. li month! Pally, on month All term aaah In trivanca. Official PaiiCT ol tb City of Mwiford Official 1'aper ol JackMin Uouoly. UKMDKK Of- I'HB A(OClATBl PHBtli Ket-olvlni Poll Lmivd Wtro HervlM. Th AMOditert Prow l ioluloy on tit tail to the ut for publication of til nw riupiich credited to It or other wlae cradttofl to thla ppr. tort alio to tho local nw ptibilahttl hereto. All rtfhtp foi puhllcatlon ol ipoeltl dtepitohe herein are aloo rA UKMHKR OP UNITED PRESS afEMBBP or AUDI1 BUREAU OF i.'lRCULATIONS OfflcM In N.w Tork. Ohlcgo. Dttrolt, San mnglicA Lo Ani.l.s. Buttle, rortU.d. L Lotus, AUlDUt VeaooovM, n. n. . . Member OtegMNewspapei bfifnVi Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. The American Bible Society last year distributed 7,000,000 ooplee ol Ad vert .in ifenreMntettves the Scriptures, w u nw vv-. In ell the Uncle. From the recital of human orneryness, In the front peg, headlines, the entire output should have been circulated, In any one of three natloni. e The Multnomah county wing of Oregon democracy, long captivated by "Commonwealth Federation," haa been formally captured by that or ganization. It sorvea them right. All the evldenoe Indicate, they ably as sisted In their own kidnaping. . Many of the Older Olrle are allow ing up as tanned aa hay-hands, aa the result of a vlalt to hay-field department of the drugstore. A federal agency has prepared a ' treatise on "woek-ond rests." It la an exhaustive report, almost as much so as some of the week-end rests. I THINGS DON'T CIMNOKI (Yreka (Unlit.) Journal) "Dig up" Is the now slang phraso for those who fall to pay their debts, or are very slow about It. There are several of these non-paying and alowpay lng persona In every community, able to pay their way, who , should "dig out" and Join a community of the same kind. They who have the means and don't "dig up" are just the kind who live In as good, If not bet tor style than those who do pay. and the consequences la they cut a swell on the money belonging to their creditors." (SO year. ago. col.) Politicians were reported aa plen tlful at the State Orange conven tion in Klamath Palla laat week a. "files around a honey - pot." It would have taken the farmer from Hubbard who routed Portland ter rorists with a pitchfork, when the Jurisdictional Issue of who would unload hla apuda aroM. to have shooed, them away. Earwig, are busy. A survey shows If you give them an Inch, they will take a yard. e Candidates are requested by let' ter writer to the metropolitan press to state their position on the sit. down strike. Maybe something can be worked out whereby the csndl dates will sit-down, and the atrlkers run around the state. e , The Prospect ball team bit the dut here again yeaterday. After the nine recovered from the Jitters, due to not being town broke, they am line. . e Scientists are now engaged in pre. paring "formulas for long life." One or these should be not going around me next corner ao fast. "The first sporadic firing of the annual Fourth of July csnnonade Is being heard then dam. tvi iwn. usually starts three or four weeks 01 time and gradually tapers on miring me three or four weeks after the fourth. "(Fiigene News) flams here. mzinci it n.n "But father Is not the same f.l. low. We liked him best when h came home In the evening after 13 hours labor, with sweat on hla brow and callouses on his hands, too tired and too happy to go down on the street and hold curbstone dlsrus.lnns on how to live without work. Maybe after all father Isn't to blame. Mavbe It'a mih., if, she got suffrage she voted father oui 01 nis jod and made lite ao easy for him he doe. n't rare to do any task harder than signing nis name to petitions or dlsruaslng the state of the republic. Be that as It may, we are stuck with father and must make the best of It. or b!m. Bless him for what he has been. Forget he talk, too much." (Red Bluff (Calif.) Newsl. 8GM1-ANNUA1 CLEARANCE Coats - Oreues - Hsu ETHEL WYN B HOFKMANN Uea Mall Tribune Want Ada. What's Wrong in Canada? ' i'wO surprising items in today's news: A No. 1 : 550 jobless men in Vancouver, B. C, took possession of the city's best hotel, post office and art gallery, and refused to vacate same until increased work relief funds were provided. They vacated the hotel when given $500 in cash. They refused to vacate the art gallery and post office be cause nothing was forthcoming, out with gas bombs. In the ensuing melee, two constables and four workers were seriously injured, scores bruised, 23 arrested,' much property destroyed, and more trouble is are fed and pacified. ' TL JELh, well, we thought John Bull had solved this economic crisis and Canada was a wisdom. Our next door neighbor, with less wealth, less natural resources, smaller population ample of what SHOULD have thanks to Roosevelt and his crackpots, WASN'T. Ho hum so it goes! NE of these days it will be plain to ALL, that Franklin D. Roosevelt and his New for the present economic collapse, than for the one during the Hoover administration. They were the cause of nothing. They were the result of a world wide economic revolution and read justment. It will also be plain, that our social and economic problems, now so acute, are not peculiar to this country, but exist to a greater or less extent throughout the world. Canada tried its own New Deal, even adopted in one pro vince a modified Townsend plan, and in another seriously con sidered Upton Sinclair's production-for-use proposal. In Canada, nationally, the New Deal program was abandoned, and it was glibly announced by th,e conservative press that a new era of stability and prosperity had dawned. Doesn't look much like it are nothing to boast about over riots, bloodshed, and threats of are hungry and starving! NO one knows what has happened, precisely what the cause of the world mess has been, nor what is the cure. But everyone knows, or at least all who have seriously studied the problem, that the condition which OOJiS exist is not national but INTERNATIONAL; not political, but economic, and that if the problem is solved for one world power, it will be solved, RELATIVELY speaking for all. 'A Railroad Tragedy SURPRISING item No. 2, is the fatal wreck of the "St. Paul's" crack flyer the "Olympian" with 30 or more dead, and 60 or more seriously injured, the worst railroad wreck in recent years. How comet Tho immediate cause of the catostrophe was the collapse of a railroad bridge near Miles Seven cars of the 11 oar train, were catapulted into space and crashed in the creek bed below, four cars remained on the track, including the diner. There is good reason to believe however, that one must delve a bit deeper beneath the surface to find the fundamental cause. For years the St. Paul railroad has been in receivership. Of late, its financial condition, along with all other American railroads has become even more acute, thanks to the second depression. The road's high quality passenger service, HAS been main tained. But no one will be surprised if it is found, that its general equipment and repair schedule, HASN'T been. And the tragic collapse of this bridge constructed 30 years ago was the result. Whether this proves to be tho cass in this particular instance or not, there is no doubt of this: A majority of the railroads of this country preseut a serious problem, not only financially, but from the standpoint of. the national welfare. Satisfactory and up-to-date railroad service is essential to our economic well being, and it goes without saying, that this service as far as passenger transportation is concerned, must be rendered as safe, as human ingenuity on one hand and human fallibility on the other, make possible Nor is there any qnestion that under conditions which today exist, the safest transportation and tho most comfortable trans portation, for long distance travel, is railroad transportation. So-o-o-o-o- t MAINTAINING a national railroad SYSTEM that supplies the needs of both commerce and travel, at the maximum safety and the minimum cost, becomes a necessity of the public service. If because of the economic situation, there are NON-essential parts of the system, which can't give such service, they should be abandoned. And if for the same reason, there are ESSENTIAL parts of it, which can't give such service, the government should supply the financial assistance needed to make such service possible. For in this problem as in every other, the public welfare must come first. And if the people of this country can ONLY be PROPERLY served by the railroads through federal finan cial assistance then, Bv all means lot's have stu-h federal financial assistance 1 TICKET TO JAIL UVert Twltchell. farmhand, fhnrged with being drunk In public plat, was sentenced to serve ten day in the county Jail, by Justice of the Peace W. R. Coleman this morning It was also ordered that Twltchell serve a 30 day sentence. Imposed ten daya ago, for driving an auto while under the Influence of Intoxtcitlivt l.quor. Twltehell max granted lrnln. . In the auto liquor case, to permit him so the mounties forced them feared, unless over 1000 jobless striking example of his superior has been pointed out as an ex been done in this country, but Deaf were no more responsible in British Columbia! Conditions here, but we have yet to have oivil war, because the masses City, due to a sudden cloudburst. to return to work and earn monuy to pay the fine, and also contrlbuU to the support of relatives. He was ar rested last Saturday night by city police. Raymond George Pierce. 31. of Jack sonville, charged with reckless driving on the Main street of Jack.vn.viUe last Saturday night, was aMward J5 and cost. The youth informed the court he waa "broke." and he wu re manded to the county Jail, to erw out the fine. Parts presented to the court by the state police, showed Pierce seeded up and down the narrow thoroiuhfrvre and "from reports put on quite a show. The state police reported, due to the head-In parking In Jacksonville "cautlnn was necewarv rt all times" I'm Uall mbuns Want Ads. Personal Health Service By William signed letter, pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady If stamped self addressed envelope Is encloeed. Letter, should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Or. William Brady, 28t El (.'amino. Beverly Hills, Calif. . ANY OTHER CLIMATE, Referring to sinusitis (It might as well be chronic bronchitis, chronic rhinitis or "catarrh" or even lung trouble) a read er aays two doc tors advised operation, others advised against o p e r atlon, but the doctor who la treating him now advised him to go to Arizona. The patient, however, has a Job arid a fam ily. So what? I have always and now X am had a suspicion. convinced, that the only advantage of -one climate over another Ilea In the fact that one can wear less clothing and absorb more sunshine ultraviolet light, vitamin D In one climate than In the other. In my Judgment the actual bene fits . Invalids and valetudinarians gain with exchange of climate are (1) more exposure to sunlight, (3) better air-conditioning, and (3) evading or escaping environment which, to the Individual, may be an Important factor of trouble at home. As Illustrating the effect of more exposure to sunlight I cite the ob servation of Dr. W. E. Barron, health officer of the consolidated district, Addison. N. T. He found all of 20 children In one school had large tonsils when examined at the end of a period of two weeks of rainy days. About a year later the same children, with one or two ex ceptions, had small tonsils when examined at the end of a period of three weeks of sunny weather. At the time this observation was made (about 1029) we were still confusing vitamin A with vitamin D (the fat soluble vitamin was called A at first, later divided into vitamin A and vitamin D), so we ascribed the difference to the amount of vitamin A the children absorbed. Now we know It la vitamin D that sunshine generates in the body when it acts on naked skin. The second benefit of chance of rclimate, Is air-eon dltioning. natu ral alr-condlttonlng. less overheat ing of the air. lens aridity or ex cessve drying out. This benefit may be had anywhere by (a) spending more time out of doors or (bl regulating household heating by thermometer or thermostat rather than personal fancy or whim and using any adequate means to evapo rate a reasonable amount of water In the artificially heated air of the building each 24 hours during the season of heating. The third benefit of change of Man About Manhattan Bf OKOKOK TUCKEH NEW YORK The manager of a downtown night club has hit on a novel plan for keeping his floor shows up to the minute. He Is Benito Collada, and Instead of bring ing in a complete new show, as other night clubs do, he simply changes one act at a time. This gives El Chl co a new dash, peps up the other artists on the bill, and permits pa trons who fre quent the place to have some thing new every time they drop In for a late super. Called a Is one of GtORGE TUCKE those off-to-fa r pleces boys. . . Sometimes It ut to Spain and sometimes It Is to Cuba, the Argentine, or Mexico. . . . But he always returns with a load of new talent. . . . His Spanish revues are a melange of Flamenco dancers, guitarists, clicking ceatlnets. Latin comedy, and Spanish music. The current show, under Its pres ent plan, requires about three montns to change. . . . Once about every three weeks a new star Is imported, the latest one being Senorlta Gloria Belmonte, Spanish dancer. Thoj who regard a fine finish to pianos and violins as of the utmost Importance would suffer agonies If they causht a glimpse of a violin owned by Joseph Rlnes. ... On tt haa been scratched the dates of all his Important opening night during the last 30 yeflrs. , . . Originally the violin cost alOO but Rlnes estimates he has spent an additional 1 .000 restrtngtng it and applying new var nish every year. The pea.-h season is swinging along fast in M vnottan. . . . Hurrying for a Hudson river ferryboat last nlht about U. I durked through Cham bers street and peaches were moun tain high on the sidewalks. . . . 1 stopped to count 700 bushel basket before 1 wrnrted and went home. Sometimes at night when It isn't too raw you can see a do7en different colored lights In the harbor red. green, blue, yellow, salmon, etc. but I don't know what they are for. They appear to move slowly, close to the water, and far out towards the Nar rows. They aren't buoy lights and they Aren't on tugs, although vst harci's carrying freight csra some times cross the waterfront when the river traf He is slack, which means between ciusk and daylight, and this mav account for them. I'd like to know what th.-yw lights are for. Walter Fletsohman. the Mother Goose of te Hollywood film lot, writes that the big diversion out there now in pool . . . All the actors are forming teams, and those already addicted include J:n Hall. Robert Taylor. Don Ameche. Pnry Ponds. Oc-ortie Burivv Anthony Qulnn. Clark Oeble, Oeorve Raft, Ernie Orsattl. alSnaei Brady, M P. cllmtte may be illustrated by a specific caae. A woman suffered more or less constantly from asth ma while living In Hamilton, Ont. She went to Southern California one winter and obtained great re lief Immediately upon arrival there, had no trouble for about three months, returned home and suf fered an attack the very next day. A few months later she happened to visit friends In Niagara Falls, N, Y forty miles east of Hamilton. Her breathing was easy and no wheezing occurred during the two weeks she remained 40 miles from home. But within 24 hours after her return home the old wheeze came back. These peculiar reactions aroused her doctor's suspicions. He Investigated her domestic environ ment, discovered a parrot, made a skin test with parrot feather ex tract, obtained a characteristic re action (hive-like swelling around the point where the homeopathic quantity of parrot feather was scratched In) persuaded the pa tient's husband, who was nothing loth, to dispatch the raucous bird (dispatch, to send off). Within the week the asthma cleared up and has never returned. Had the lady made her home In California or In Niagara Palls, N. T. (where no par rot was kept), she might have be come a living testimonial for the climate of either place, as con trasted with the "damp" climate of the place where she recovered her health I Qt'ESTIONS & ANSWERS The Vitamin Content of Foods Can you supply me with the amounts of the different vitamins in ordinary foods? If not, can you inform me where I can get the In formation? J. O. S. Answer Runt, nf TVviiwiti n ernment Printing Office, Washing ton. D. C, wiU sell you (for 15 cents) Agriculture Department bul letin "Vitamin Content of Poods." No Teeth. Man got false teeth six months atro and haa nevor vmm thm during meals. What will be the re- ouiv oi eaung witnout teeth? M. C. B. Answer Insidious development of "stomach trouble," malnutrition, ane mia. Dremature nhvniMi rtuiin. early old age and disability. It would PaV the man tO fttlft(t. rnmnntan. dentist, have teeth made he can wear, ana wear them for eating. (opyngnc, iuaa, John P. Dille Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Or. William Brady, M. D., 266 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. Arthur Lyons, Jack Benny, Ben Blue, Milton Berle, and Tony Martin. . . . The big idea Is to select representa tive teams snd play for a dinner, which in Hollywood, means a fiesta with Blng Crosby crooning an Ha waiian lullaby from an artificial cocoa nut tree. In parts of Manchouquo brides must wesr iron shoes the first six months of married life to keep them from wandering away from home. 1 Communications floesn't I.Ike Editors' Resolution To the Editor: In resdlng the resolution adopted by the convention of Journalists In Modford the past week we find the following remarkable paragraph: "Whereas. In the matter of the unemployment tax. It Is unjust and discriminatory to require the em ployer to pay a tax which la for the sole benefit of the employee, . w wiiiiu me employee con trlbutea nothing." That a body of Intelligent Jour nalists could give publication to such a sweeping condemnation of a law enacted for the benefit of labor Is surpassing strange to many im partial observers. . The employer lias had a profit from the past labor of the workers and expecta a profit from the future labor of employees, and the emolover should do some share In keeping . "n ill condition to earn more profits for him no worker of a horse would think of keeping In 111 condition the animal while Idle through no fault of his own and besides the employer can add to the price of his product a sum sufficient J0HNS-MANVIUE Rock Wool HOME INSULATION Learn bow you can have comfort that pay. (or Itself. J-U Rock Wool Batts keep rooms up to IS cooler In hot weather. Save up to 30 to winter fuel. Insist on the name Johns-Manvilla. Ask for JJCsfrmaf BIG PINES LUMBER CO. IWpendahle Rulldlna Advice Prtrtne I Mh ami "lr Sts COOLER 7 u-'Agi in summer S to rs Unburn himself, sad If he can not do this a loot he can. through combines, trust oompanies, Interlock ing interest, etc put It over Is their own interests; they have al ways been smart enough to do that. Looks like the Journal Uu Just took a one-sided squint at the law and Jumped on It without due conside ration. Moat of us have respect for Journalists and feel that the whack given labor waa Ill-considered and unjustified. : Medford. Oregon, June 30, 38. ! W. W. TRUAX. I O.O.P. Mistake Is Conceded To the Editor: You are dead right about the mistake Republicans are mrfklng In criticizing the administra tion's methods in pauperizing the unemployed and handing out doles to the destitute. Senator Vanden burg's points are all well taken and so are Oregon's senior senator's remarks about the way Roosevelt tt making political capital out of human misery. However, as you say, most people don't use their heads In voting, but their hearts. Anyone who finds fault with relief measures, no matter how glaring are the errors criticized, i la beled an enemy of the poor and down trodden. That's the way it was with Herbert Hoover, who spent most of the best years of his life In caring for the needy and destitute. As you so well state, those of us who favor good government replacing the .Farley-Roosevelt machine poli tics should have more to say about the bigger and better relief we favor, rather than criticizing the mess the administration has made of misery. We favor the good neighbor plan of every community administering Its own relief, because no one knows bet ter about cases of need and how best to help them, than those who reside in the same community. We not only believe In everybody in want be ing adequately cared for, so far as physical needs are concerned, but In leaving no stone unturned to help those help themselves. Instead of encouraging people to make pauperism a profession, as Roosevelt has done, we favor extend ing the greatest assistance to those who are making an honest effort to earn their own living. Be It said to the eternal shame and disgrace of the Roosevelt regime, those who are part ly self-supporting have been permit ted to suffer most, while people who refuse to do any work whatever have been taken care of most liberally. That's what we mean by encouraging people to make pauperism a profes sion. OWEN H. BARNHILL. Ashland, Ore., June 31, ERIES WILL SEEK BIG BARRETTS, CLAIM Court Hall, orchardlst and for many yeara a Bartlett pear purchaser for canneries, said todsy: "From all Indications, canneries will want mostly large size Bartletts this season. Many Bartletts are self thlnned sufficiently, but there will be certain trees and orchards that will need some thinning In order for the grower to get the best possi ble, results for cannery prices and good delivery. . Hall also states, "There was very little late Bartlett bloom this season, which means a better grade of Bart letts. with easier delivery to the canneries." Youth Drowns VALE, Ore.. June 30. OP) Homer Bushby, Jr.. 18. lost his life Sunday when he fell Into an Irrigation canal spillway near here from a footbridge His body later was recovered from a pool at the base of the spillway. . Antonln Dvorak. Bohemian com poser, was the eon of a butcher and Innkeeper. Sii L, a awawaSaa G Current Rate ' of Earnings Jackson County Federal Savings & Loan Association 126 East Main The Capital Parade (Continued from Page One.) era by attending their relatives' funerals. But the Tlnkham avstem la the principal monument of Yankee ingenuity. It has Ita headquarters In an In conspicuous office In the Tlnkham district In Boston, where Miss Ger trude Ryan, a kindly, pleasant-mannered Irish woman, presides over a corps of stenographers snd file-clerks. To this central office of. the system come from sixty to a hundred people a day, all to see Miss Ryan. All of them want something a Job, a favor. Information, help with a pension or simply friendly advice. All of them get what they want, or a full and polite explanation of why they can't get It. Joba are hard to get these days, tor a Republican like Tlnkham. . But Miss Ryan under stands the anti-patronage game, which consists In sending Job-seekers to your already harassed opponents, with expressions of the most mourn ful regret at your Inability to be helpful. Miss Ryan has been with Tlnkham thirty yeara and she knows how to send the voters away satisfied. The name of each satisfied voter is In scribed on a "favor ltst," and, shortly before election, a postcard Is sent to every person on the list. The post card merely says, "we have tried to serve you. If you are satisfied, please help us by getting out the vote for Tlnkham." This Is all there Is to the Tlnkham system, but It works so well that In 1036 the Tlnkham majority wsa the biggest ever. In the old days, there were more refinement to the Tlnkham system. Many Irish live In the Tinkhsm dis trict and when he was less sure of himself he used to please his Irish voters by hauling Bishop Cannon over the coals. For their sskes, he still does make a speech or so at each session, twisting the British lion's tall until It hurts. But, with the help of an efficient Washington branch office, the Tlnk ham system really runs Itself. Ita owner and Inventor Is-left to his own happy devices. He can sit all. day In the corridor of the house, looking a little like the ancient mariner who stoppeth one In three, tossing his beard In .energetic denunciation of the new deal. He can eat his steak and drink his burgundy every eve ning and retire at last to sleep among his trophies, with nothing to trouble his mind. He loves his apartment and clings to It obstinately although the hotel in which It's situated now houses a government agency. He Is proud of his terrifying collection of the skins of large carnivorous animals. He enjoys his dally round of duties. Altogether his life Is a splendid dem onstration of how to be happy. though a congressman. Epidemic: Fenr Wane BANDON. June 20. Iff) Coot county health officer Dr. C. L. Coyln Sunday authorized the return to work of men who have been vaccinated. He believes the danger of a smallpox epi demic has passed. 4 Drowns On Picnic PORTLAND. June 20. Julius Llljeblad. 15, Portland, lost his life In the Sandy river during a Sunday school picnic Sunday. He slipped from a plank projecting from the river bank. Closing time for Too Late to Clas sify Ads is 1:30 p. m. You Can Vacation on Earnings From Savings! 'v" ;i - . 3 Dividends Paid Twice a Year Thether you .go to the lata country, the mountains, or the seashore, you can enjoy i real vacation more if you know that you are vacationing on money your savings earned. If you start today to save in a profitabla account, it won't be long before you can make the trip. Your money accumulates faster where it earns more. Ask about our liberal-earning, fast-growing way to save. Jl opens an account now. Start today to earn morel Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County history from the flies of the Mail Tribune 10 and 20 years ago. ' TEN YEARS AGO TODAY June 20, 1828 (It was Wednesday) Roald Amundsen, famed Norwe gian explorer, missing on piano search for missing Italian dirigible crew. Young Texas governor to lead fight of dry forces against Al Smith In Democratic convention at Hous ton. Medford schools to have a debate coach. George Gates and John Moffatt Journey to Portland by plane. City water bonds sold for prem ium. Pinehurst asks new highway to get produce to market. T. Slater Johnston wins golf mara thon. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 20, 1918. (It was Thursday) George Gates In Paris hospital and broke, according to message received from overseas. Grasshopper plague hits Klamath county. Italians force Austrian back to the Plave. Food riots reported In Vienna, and Berlin. Mercury goes tp 98 degrees yester day. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Newbury leave for Atlantic City, where Mr. New bury Is a delegate to the Elks Grand lodge. Redmond Leader Dies REDMOND, June 30. () Rev. Percy Arkle, Redmond Community church pastor for 12 years and veter an secretary -treasurer of the Red mond chamber of commerce, died Sunday In a Bend hospital. Chevrolet JINGLES Copyrighted. Remember Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, All the deviltry and scrapes that pair got in? They didn't have much of a chance in those days, For that was before there were any Chevrolets. Their operations were re stricted to such a small space, Sorta cramped their style staying in one place. "Hooking" a car when a minute means a mile, ' They could have gotten around done something worth while. Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Mnln and Riverside Servlre nept 3? No. Riverside I'sed Car Lot Riverside at 4th 1