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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1938)
PAGE TWO MEDFORD MATL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREOQN, TUESDAY, .TLTLY 5, 1938. Fit L ON COASI JAUNT Remarks Indicate President On Verge Striking Bold New Course May Make j Direct Aid to Backers By JOHV M. IllflHTOWKR WASHINGTON, July 6. (AP) President Roosevelt starts out Thurs day on a Journey to San Francisco which may become the most spec taaular bit of political torch bearing he ever has done. Such evidence of his Intentions as can be gleaned from his own re marks Indicates he Is on the verge of striking a bold new course In politics of venturing personally Into realms which he previously left to his lieutenants. The new course was outlined In his recent radio speech to the nation Its purpose will be to keep In oon- gress those the president conceive? to be "liberals" and to replace with now men so far as possible tf.ose lie conceives to be "conservative." Not From President Administration help for the "lib erals" and opposition to the "conser vatives" is not new. In the Florida Democratic primary this spring. Sen ator Popper had frank administra tion support. But It came from James Roosevelt, the president's son and secretary, not openly from the president himself. Other candidates have had the aid of audi White House lieutenants as Secretary Ickes and WPA adminis trator Hopkins. The president has put In good words personally only for senate leader Barklcy of Kentucky and of i Senators Duffy of Wisconsin and McAdoo of California, Now It ap pears he may give up Indirection In many cases. In his "fireside speech" he said he felt he had "evory right to speak In those few Instances where there may be a clear Issue between candi dates for a Democratic nomination involving" platform principles oi 'Involving a clear misuse of my name." To Decide Friends Wiilch Democratic primaries con stitute such Instances will be a mat ter for the president and his ad visers to decide. Among the latter there Is at present little evidence of agreement. Reports are that the group of whlcii Thomaa G. Corcoran Is the sparkplug wants to force out of their seats or at least attempt It all thoAe senators and - representatives who opposed the administration in any material way. The practical politicians, such aa Postmnstor General Farley, and a few naturally cautious people, on the other hand, are advlMng the president to lay-off all except such outstanding administration critics as Senators Smith of Soutii Caro lina. Oeorge of Qeorgla and Ty dings of Maryland, The forthcoming trip to the west const will Indicate how far Mr. Roosevelt Intends to go In his per sonal intervention in the primaries. To Aid Hnrkley He will make three speeches in Kentucky, In all of which tie Is ex pected to voice c.uarly tils support of Senotor Bnrkley, who ta opposed by Gov. A. B. Chandler. The president will give a pat on the back to Senator Elmer Thomaa (D., Okla.), seeking renomlnatlon against Gov. E. w. Marland and Representative Corner Smith. He probably will express support also of Senator William G. McAdoo (D., Calif.). Whether he will liave anything to say for or against Senator Alva Adams (D., Colo.) during a stop at Pueblo July 13 has not been dis closed. Adams, opposed by Judge Benjamin Hilllard. has supported some administration measures and criticized others. SAWMILL CLOSED FOR UNION NEGOTIATION TCbEuo, July 5. (AP) The big v. u. jonnson Lumber company re mained closed todny whllo It negot iated wage cut proposal with the Industrial Employes union, i The Blleta river camp and a num ber Jt small "Kjrpo" outfits In the Sllets forest win be closed. The company recently rtfered a 15 percent cut aa the altornatlva to partlnl employment. Spokesmen tor nearly too workers first declined the reduction and ti:en agreed to nego- CLIMBER IS RESCUED . FROM HOOD CREVASSE PORTLAND, July H. (API Wil liam Cnmpbell. 20-year old Seattle mountain climber, was rescued from a 20-foot crovosae about aooo feet from the summit of Mount Hood Sunday morning after he had laid In the frigid trap some 20 houri. Campbell attempted to climb the mountain alone on skis. He waa sighted near the summit by a party of forest service men who directed searchers to ti e vicinity whsn It became known the man was lost. DYNAMITE FIRECRACKER PUTS MAN IN HOSPITAL PORTLAND, July t (API Even giant firecrackers tooked "sissy" to Lnnslng Strayer, 34. of Beaverton. He went to the hospital with se vere hsnds, arms and face Injuries after detonating half a stick of dyn amite. (letting rivlllieT AUSTIN, Tri AP) one of Tex as' few remaining frontier! Is yield In to man and gasoline. They're building a 45-ml!e road through the vast King ranch, compr lng all of Kenedy county md bordering the Gulf of Mexico mere are fabulous stories of tangled wilderness and the abundant game and flab tha ranch contains, I HERE'S NUMBER 10 IN THE MAIL TRIBUNE'S GUESS WHO CONTEST i 'jri 'ftp ''''' 't Can You Identify the Prominent Med ford Man Whose Picture Appear a Above? THIS la one of 99 pictures selected from tha Mali Tribune's photo engraving file for use In this newspaper'a "Oueas Who" contest, which tarted June 33. A different picture will be published each Issue (or 39 days. Each will depict some well known Medford resident. A number will appear under each picture. To enter your guess, merely write down the, number of the pictures aa they appear and opposite the number, the name of the person you believe represented. At the end of the contest aend In your guesses, plainly written, together with your own name and address. $8 will be given for the moat accurate list $6 for second best and $2 for third best. The contest is open to all. ' It costs nothing to enter, Btart with picture No. 1 in the June 23 issue and GUESS WHO! HEIRESS RELATES DEATH THREATS IN E (Continued irons Page One.) There also was mention of a letter I belonging to the countess w:ich the ' count hod taken and which "grieved ; him very much." Mitchell added that I the count had studied grounds lor ; divorce In Danish law. j At another point Mi tel. ell accused I the count of "blackmail talk" and : said the county had told him he i made a mistake In signing a "New I York deed," by which he lenounced ; a husband's rights to certain of bis One Look At Wife I Wearing a blue scree suit and blue ' J;lrt and holding- a brief case, the i count, in tne ratsea aoca, constantly wrote notes and passed them to his attorney, Norman Birkett. He looked at , the countess just once. She glanced quickly at the floor as he turned his head and he quickly faced forward ayaln. The countess wore a large oxacx hat and a long fragile veil covered ner face. She came Into court wear ing a huge- stiver fox piece but dis carded it in the stuffy rocm. Thunderclaps shcok the packed courtroom and rain drummed on the skylight as Sir Patrick described the count as a man of "violent and un governable temper." The count snorted and Barbara smiled when Mitchell told how (ie burst Into tears when he read a let ter from her. Mitchell read a letter from the countess which he had given U:e count. In it she said she could not live with him any longer and asked him not to try to see her. Chauffeur Told Mitchell said he had been author ized by the Wool worth heiress to in crease, the proffered "gift" from 9250,000 to a limit of $500,000. Questioned by Birkett he said the count told him he had a letter from a former chauffeur telling him of "happenings" at the countess' Re gent's Park mansion since he left London. I The count, who became the former I Barbara Hutton's second husband, a day after she divorced the late Prince Alexis M Dlvani at Reno, May 13, 1936, left their London home early in June for Paris. Soon thereafter she placed a guard around the mansion and went to court to obtain tt:e summons on which today's hearing was based. j Mitchell testified that 'the only ground on which the countess want ed a divorce was Incompatibility There was no one else concerned at all." he added. Feeding 18 Children Is Tough But Naming Them Is Tougher ADDISON. Wis. (AP) Birth ot the 18th ohlld In the John Hug fam ily presented something of n prob lem but not the kind one mlizht ex pect. The question was not how to feed another mouth but what to name the baby. The Hugs solved tills problem. In a typical manner. Thoy cnlled an elec tion. "Ronald Werner" was the win ning choice. Their 103-acre farm, worked by the father and some of the older of the nine sons, takes care of the food question with hog and cattle, chick ens and an orchard and vegetable gar den. Timber on the farm provides fuel. Two of tho nine daughtera are married. Seven of the children are In school, and two sons work on neighboring farms. Leonard, 33, Is tha eldest. Darlene, 13 months old, la the youngest daughter. An example of thoughtful solution of their affairs Is found In the ques tion of shoea. "We found it waa better to keep them In shoea than to Jet them go barefoot." aaya their father, "because children can cut their feet or bruise thorn a lot on a farm. We didn't want doctors' bills for Infected feet and the like. "When the first ones went to school, we found we had to buy a new pair of shoes for each one every month. That waa pretty ateop. "Wo decided It was cheaper to buy gasoline and take them to school than to have them wear out their ahoes so fast on the concrete highway. Be sides, we felt better when we knew they wcro safe In school and not on the highway where there are ao many cars." Meals, baths, haircuts are taken on schedule. The girls help with the cooking and put up lunches toi themselves and their brothers. Fathoi Hug and one of the older girls are the fnmlly barbers Mrs. Hug. 4S. nd. Hug. 48, were married In 1913. They have lived on the farm since. Closing time for Too Lata to Clas sify Ada la 1:30 p m. Dae Mall Tribune Want Ads. Menus of the Day By Mi's. Alexander Georjte. Medley Meat King Iteclpe. (Dinner serving 3 or 4.) Fresh Fruit Salad French Dressing Medley Meat Ring Creamed Carrots Buttered Beets Bread Grape Conserve Caramel Fluff Pie Coffee Fresh Fruit Snlnd. 1 cup diced fresh plneappale 1 cup diced bananas '4 cup grapefruit Vi cup strawberries 1 tablespoon lemon Julci 13 cup French dressing Mix one tnblespoon of the dressing with the rest of the lnijredlents. Chill. Serve in a bowl lined with cress or other salad green Add rest of dressing. Medley Meat King, cups chopped beef round cup chopped corned beef 1 cup soft bread 3 tablespoons catsup 1 tablespoon chopped parsley HENRY FORD HAS HAD MANY A GOOD IDEA Keeping Ideas in Circulation Is cer tainly n worthy public service for any community. Henry Fard snvs that tne only real security that a man can have In the world is a reserve of knowledge, experience and ability and that hp appreciates tho way The Header's Digest presents a wide range of current thinking. Ho says that nothing in more profitable for nil walks of life than nutritions ideas, The Reader's Digest does give everyone the most stimulating of new Ideas and I certainly recommend it to our readers. THE EDITOR. Adv.) Modern-Type Construction Calls For CEMENT Uc This Dependable Southern Oregon Product "BEAVER BRAND" PORTLAND CEMENT Beaver Portland Cement Co. GOLD HILL, OREGON Sold tn Medford by Medford Concrete Construction Co., Porter Lumbei Co.. rimber Product, Co., Economy Lumber Co Wallace Woods Umber Co . Big Ptner Lumber Co. Medfnrd Lrtmbet Co 'HOLD STILL' British Princess Margaret, 7, might have told Princess Elizabeth; 12, when they and their father (right) and mother (in furred coat) reviewed 1,000 Girl Guides. Elizabeth wears a Guide uniform; Margaret is dressed as a Brownie. 1 tablespoon chopped onions Va teaspoon salt !4 teaspoon paprika 2 eggs cup milk 2 tablespoons butter, melted Mix Ingredients and fill a buttered ring mold. Bake for 35 minutes in moderately slow oven. Unmold and serve hot or cold, cut Into slices. Caramel Fluff Pie. 2 cups rolled graham crackers Vt cup granulated sugar teaspoon salt 13 cup butter, melted Mix Ingredients and pour Into a shallow, buttered baking dlh. Add filling. Filling. 23 cup dark brown sugar hi cup flour It teaspoon aalt 3 egg yolks 1', cups milk 1 teaspoon vanilla M teaspoon almond extract !i cup almonds (optional) 3 egg whites, beaten Cook the sugar, flour, salt, yolks and milk together in a double boiler, stirring frequently. When the mix ture thickens, beat and cool. Fold tn the rest of the Ingredients and pour over the crumbs. Bake for 35 mlnutea In a moderately alow oven. Serve warm or cool. Melius of the Day By Mrs. Alexander George WEDDING BREAKFAST MENU Sen trig Twenty-five Fruit Baskets i Chicken Patties Fresh Peas, Buttered Hot Rolls Butte: Strawberry Preserves Fancy Ice Cream Molds Bride's Cake Coffee Baskets 25 orange cases. ' 3 cups diced fresh pineapples. 3 cups seeded white cherries. 3 cups diced peaches. 3 cups raspberries, cup granulated sugar. , Fashion "baskets" from orange cases or use waxed paper cups and insert "handles" of wire intertwined with greenery. Mix and chill rest of Ingredients and fill the baskets. Place on paper dollies on serving plate sand garnish with fresh flow ers. Chicken Filling Nine-pound olilcken. 8 cups water. 4 celery leaves. 3 tablespoons chopped green pep pers. 3 tablespoons choppen onions. 3 teaspoons salt. Clean chicken thoroughly. Add rest of ingredients. Cover and cook slowly j until cnicKen is very tender about three hours. Remove chicken and strain stock In bowl. Cool and chl'.l. Sauce 2-3 cup chicken fat. , 1 cups flour. Vi teaspoons salt. 14 teaspoan pepper. 1-3 teaspoon paprika. 2 teaspoons minced parsley. teaspoon celery seed. 4 cups chicken stock.- 2 quarts milk. Skim off the fat from too of chicken stock. Melt fat and add flour and seasonings. Mix well. AdH stock and cook slowly for ten min utes. Add milk and cook until the sauce thickensabout 15 minutes. Add chicken which has been diced. Cook for 16 minutes. Serve In home made or commercial .pastry shells. Garni a: with strips of plmlentoa and cress. Two cups of cooked diced mush rooms may be added to the chicken mixture. 7 Shirts; Seven Year SAN J06E. Cal. (UP) Shirts are a criterion for prison sentences. Bill Ruby got seven years In prison one for each of the seven stolen shirts he wore when arrested. Flying Home Dr. and Mra. Paul Sharp of Klamath Falls stopped at Medford municipal airport this morn ing to have their Waco cabin plane refueled. They were returning from from a holiday visit In Laketlde. WEDNESDAY AT SAFEWAY Shoulder VEAL STEAIC 15c POUND SAFETY for Your SAVINGS JACKSON COUNTY FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION 126 EAST MAIN ST. ' The California Oregon Power Company B pi'iiic S AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC WATER HEATER With standard automatic electric waterheater Installa tions selling as high as $100 and more the special price of $69.50 on a genuine WESIX outomotie electric water heater completely Installed in your home offers on exceptional opportunity to obtain perfect hot water service. No longer is it necessory to put up with an obsolete, expensive, unsatisfactory method of heating water. These new automatic electric water heaters are like giant thermos bottles. They use less electricity because practically none of the heat is lost through radiation. It provides an abundance of hot woter ot exactly the right temperoture os constantly as the cold water supply. The new, off peak, metered, woter heating rate is only 8 mills. 4, 5 of one cent per kilowatt hour ! With this new metered rote you pay only for what you use. The overage for the entire company is only $2.20 monthly. Ask for complete details about the new water heaters and the special, off peok, metered rote. AVAILABLE THROUGH ELECTRICAL DEALERS AND PLUMBERS f