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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1938)
"MTCPFCRP WAIT TRTBTJNTE, WHFOTIT), iOTfTCOONV TTTSDAY. TTTLT "12; 1938. Medfo: MKvrjruM l Hootlttm Oriioi HMd the MnU rrlbaaa." MBUIPURD PRINTING CO. Il11l N fit BL Phooa H ROHKKl W RUHU CdltOr. BHNBfll R OIWTRAK UtntCM. Ad lD1pnlot Nevapapsr. Bntarail mm a a alto matt? at Msd ford, Oregon. uodt Acl f Mareh I. l1 BIIB8CRIP-riON RATES B Mill In AflvancO! Duly, ont year ........ 11.00 Dally, m months I1 Dally, on month .. . Bi nprtttr. in Advanea MadforA Aah land Jackionlll. OlolrH Point. Photon. Talent, Oold UUI and on hlahwavat Dally, od Mr I t.00 Dally, til montba... l.lt Dally, oat month All term aaah Id artvaaea. Forty million American and their doctors may be wrong. Thirty per cent of the population of Hie coun try are suffering Official Paper ol the City ol Med ford Official Paper ol Jaefcanp County. UEMHKH OB MB AMIOCIATBO PBBM Hri-alvlns roll l,ma wire oarvic. Th AunolilKl Praa la eiolualvely aa (ltle1 to the uae foi publloatlon of all new riliDarehaa eredltert to It or other- wlae cre1!trt to thle paper, and lao to the local new publlahed herein. All rtghtt for publication of apeelai 4 la pa ton nerain are aieo reaerven. in some degree from nutritional deficiency. This does not mean they get Insuf ficient food. It means that the food they get, choose or Insist on having falls to provide the esse n 1 1 a 1 8 re quired for nor mal nutrition, UBMRBR OF UNITED PR BUB etRMBBR OP AUDI'! BURBA!) OF CIRCULATIONS AtlTtrttelnir rt preventative Offices In New fork. Obloago. Detroit, San Prinolsco. Loe Angelee, Seattle, Portland, St. Lenta, Atlanta, Vancouver, Member, Ocegbn iNewspapei OAssocMbol WW Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. ' a multi-millionaire la now en gaged In a hazardous flight around-the-world. Citizen, one Jump ahead of the sheriff and Batan. figure If they had hi, money, tney couia find wave of enjoying life, with both feet on the ground. The deer aeuon open, officially September 30. It won't be long now, until the first movement In the bruah 1 shot, and turna out to be t bunting companion. ... v There are rumora Nacla bund, are In nrocesa of formation In thla atate. No report, have been received aa yet, on the trade-In value of a aacond-hand 1933 Klan night gown, for a ahlrt with a Swastika In the back. ... The second year of the "unde clared" war by Japan agalnit China la underway. At home, polttlclana advise the audience, they will not make a political apeech, and, then make two, If time permlta. 13ubb Watson has returned from a cleaner, convention at Eugene Sunday, where he pressed a pair of panta, one-up and 8 to go, card ing a total wore of 378. "MAN'S BEST FRIEND" lAd London Telegraph) "Fashionable ladle,, why not have your little dog tinted to match your dress for special oc casions? Lady haa discovered process guaranteed harmless to the .most delicate animal, pret tiest pastel shadea Imaginable." Medford defeated Yreka, 18 to 1, Sunday. There I, not much to aay In aelf-derense for Yreka. eicept when she geta licked, she get. Jicseo. The Oregonian Is Right! A FRIENDLY subscriber aski why we don't "call the Ore gonian for PRETENDING it can't understand the Mail Tribune's political editorials. "It can understand them all right, but It can't answer them, so it stirs up this smoke screen of non-comprehension, aa th, easy way out." Very kind, very kind, but it doesn't happen to be true. No, brethren, the esteemed Oregonian really DOESN'T un derstand the Mail Tribune's politics, never has, probably nev er will. It doesn't understand the politics of ANT newspaper, that isn't like itself, 100 partisan, that isn't as it states, "against the whole kit and kaboodle" of ONE party; and bait, hook and sinker for ANOTHER. FOR several years now it has been greatly concerned over the political policies of two papers in Oregon, the Pendleton East-Oregonian and the Mail Tribune. There was a time when it was equally concerned with the political orthodoxy of the Salem Capital-Journal, but since that newspaper executed a flop flop, (at least according to the Ore- health, growth, immunity, vite. un gonian) "changed from 'as ardent an advocate of the New Deal fortunately for the public heaitu, a and its candidates, as any," to one of the most consistent ana titude that people need not worry uncompromising Roosevelt critics; the Oregonian has not only bout mineral,, vitamin, and the . . .." , , i "nc' w set all the minerals ceased its chidings but now holds its Salem contemporary as ,nd vitamina we need in ordinary an example for all the newspapers of the state to follow 1 . ,ood- thh u aa unreasonable an Ana Willie WIS may seem a Dii puz.nng to our mmicmcu WMllll be to aay that all malnutrl. subscriber, here again the Oregonian is entirely sincere, and n is due to insufficient intake of entirely consistent. ..... persons with malnutrition suffer "rn other causes then lack of vlta- l"nR. nlonan nntn this in the Oreconian's tribute to the CaD- nuns. Exposure to various poison, in r. . ... , . ., , , .j .1. Industry or In the home llfe. ciironic ital Journal it places this switch, from one side of the po- infections, focal infections, inade litical fence to the other, on the highest conceivable 'moral iiate ieep ration, or uninviting grounds, in short solely a matter of (quote) "editorial integ- sg, OI tn, teeth which interferes rjtv " ' with proper mastication of food - .1 mmtnn, naln an.nlAAl . ,. And incredible, as it seems, the Oregonian really believes .,, thMe ' ,om. of the cUSfS that, too I of """nutrition. Oh, now and then it has a lucid interval, and gives a faint , nd ,.,,. approximately indication that it has chanced its political character a trifle a.ooo calorie, enough for an adult . ... i, , n . . a i I iuiii, iiKiib worn IU11V z.uuu or tne since Bryan made his cross-of-gold speech. But not for long. ,,, do an ,hould Mm from And particularly not when election day comes around, then it carbohydrates starches and sugars. r ..... I CerenlH en1 p.r..l nmiiw,i r.,.ni.t. is as the Oregonian solemnly maintains, a matter of nothing less most of tno c.rbohvdrst, tlw 0Id than editorial integrity, of honor. All the RIGHT, is on one day, when the entire grain was side, all the wrong on the other. Yes its just as simple as that, ,n' br'ea'thT'peoie tJl the eternal struggle between the hosts of righteousness and fair daily ration of vitamin b, for . , . ,. ., . j Jn.Unfloel c,pic, tuunjr, wnen wneat is re- reciuuae, agaujni mu iuikch ui iin,lu, auu Ua...v, flned and moat of the mnemta na Aa frtr thosn naDers that try to Dick and choose, that see vitamin, removed In the milling wo- good in both, parties, and bad also; who care very little about Vlf J?"' I the party label, but a great deal about party principles; why eraia and vitamina that grew m the they are simply beyond the pale, heretics, bumble dee bugs ph u as far as the Orcgonian's political philosophy is concerned, they tion to return to the living customs uui Biniiupdrcuts. out we can see to It that a fair dally ration of mln. eraia and vitamins u nrnvMprf tn O far be it from us to suggest that tne uregonian, reaiiy isn't as dense, as it pretends to be. It IS. It can no more comprehend how a newspaper can be IN THE MAIN for the principles of the New Deal, and the essential aims of President Roosevelt, and yet opposed to CERTAIN DETAILS; than it can understand, how a newspaper could support a Democrat like Governor Martin in one election, and well, say a Ropub lican like unarioy sprngue in tne next. new York says officer no. 3624, No, in the Oregonian 's ancient and honorable school of pol- New York police department: itics, such things simply aren't DONE. And from the standpoint of the business office we are not at all sure the Oregonian isn't smart. For when political rewards are paid, they are paid on the basis of 100 partisanship; and to support one party, regardless of what it may or may not do, is really so easy, such a satisfactory substitute for THOUGHT 1 Personal Health Service By William Brady, M P. Signed letter perUlnlng to perwnai bealtb and hygiene, not to dlseaae dlagnoila or treatment, will be a tune red by Or. Brad If a tumped self addreaaed totelope la encloaed. Letlfra-ahoulrJ be brief and wrlttrn In Ink Owing to tba large number ol lettera received only a few can be answered No reply can bo made to queries not conforming to inatructlona. Ad dree Dr. WUUt.m Brady, 185 CI Camlno. Beverly HI 11a, Calif. CARBOHYDRATES ARB TOO PURE literally do, PASSETH ALL UNDERSTANDING! supplement the ordinary diet with Its preponderance of pure, refined foods from which the natural vita mins and minerals have been almost entirely removed by - refining pro cesses or will be retimed by cook' lng dissolved In water and thrown away, or oxidized and destroyed by the heat during cooking. As the minerals of most Import ance removed by refining cereal foods are calcium and phosphorus, and milk, eggs and cheese are the best sources of both minerals, it be comes manifest that every one should receive a certain dally minimum of milk, eggs and cheese In bis diet. For a child not less than a quart of milk a day, for an adult not less than a pint of milk a day. An egg may be considered equivalent to Half a pint or mi ik in mineral and vitamin con tent. Any and every kind of cheese la the richest source of calcium and phosphorus. , QUESTIONS AND ANMVKKS Canning Last year I canned over 400 quarts of corn, peas, carrots, beans, tn fact everything I usually can, Including fruits, by closjng the glass tops of glass containers tightly before cook ing. There were no breakages, and my canned food proved far better than It had ever been before. No spoilages either. Of course we farm ers can't tell how much of the vita mins our canned food may preserve. DUt certainly we shall always use this process In future. (Mrs. C. B. F.) Answer If the heating doesn't cause the can to burst, the method is. excellent. However, asme of the vitamin content Is Inevitably lost by cooking and preservation: probably less destruction of vitamins occurs when the food Is Inclosed In brim ful cans, so that no excess air Is in the can. before cooking; ti at Is, her metically sealed cans. Flake White A friend who uses flake white In sists It la safe, but I am certain 1 recall you aatd It csntalns lead and Is therefore not safe to use as a cos metic. (M. H.) Answer Flake white Is bismuth subnitrate, and contains no lead. Tt la safe enough to use as cosmetic. Ed Note: I'e r sons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brad? should end letter direct to Dr William Brady. M D., 2R5 El Camlno. Beverl) Hills, Caltf. Man About Manhattan O; OKOKOE TUCK EH "Anotlwr favorlta Is msda by boll log slowly blarlc birch bark. It tastes Ilka root bwr. Bs careful .to understand your Ingredlenta. aay, Dr. Vlnal. and "if you are a tee totaler, don't let them stand around too long." (Oakland. Calif., Trl bune). mir vrarnlngl ... 8everal Oregon town, have launch ea campalgna to clean up their alleys. In several Instances, they are reporira not a nt place to tell parlor story. ... "There is no reason why Martin supporters anould not vote for me coos me democratic candidate for governor In a Ine countv aneerh There must he loo reasons, for not so doing. Three are outatendlnit vlr: the senator from Nebraska, the secretary of Interior, and the Port. iniio politician, who flew back to wasnington, for hi, revenge. ... "i iimns in me party are wrom at Atiorey William, for tell- iim uie wha hand, to "vote for ineir irienda." Not only was It Im politic: It wss unnecessary." (E. change). They would anyway. Item ... STItONfl, SILENT MKN HAH! "I think men are so cute all of them. They're so light-hearted, so spontsneous. so chlld-llke. Women attack the business of being g,y as If It were a task worthy of their most earnest efforts. On irsuvnity tney wear frothy aresses. maintain a stesdy stream of lauahter. tuck curia Into place with bird-like movement whether menu is needed or not. But the men they put their ties In thetr presets, tnelr costs on a log and In this Instance gamboled about like the lambs they were." (Olive Ber ber In Coo, Bay Time,). Polio Victims Withered Legs Lengthened by New Method 8 AN FRANCISCO (UP) Shorten ed legs of Infantile paralysis vic tims can be lengthened by as much as an Inch and a half by a new method being perfected at the med ical school of the University of Cal ifornia. The same results also can be ob tained In other cases where a with ering disease has affected the lower limbs. Announcement of successful ex periments haa Juat been made by Dr. Roy O. Abbott, professor of orthopedic surgery and Dr. John B. Saunders, chairman of the division of anatomy rt the university. The first preliminary operation for the application afterward of the lengthening process was performed by Dr. Abbott nt the Shrtnera' Hos pital for Crippled Children at St. Louis and with such encouraging results that the method was devel oped further here to Ita present successful state. Included in the new process Is a apeclat apparatus designed by Au gust Kern, brace maker at the medical school. The operation necessary, It Is said together with the lengthening process that follows. Involves none of the haaarda formerly encountered In attempting to reach the results now obtainable. Under fhe new process the leg can be lengthened from l-iotn to "The firemen beat us In the an nual baseball game the otner day, out then the don't havr much to do but si around and think about playing baseball. made a. mistake when I Became a cop ... I should have Joined the fire department and tatcen life easy . . Can you Imagine rid ing around on a b I g truck and getting paid for lt Thsy don"t do much of that, either . . Every m TUCKER time I see a l-8th of an Inch each day without himself In fireman he's sunning rhalr before the sta trie patient suffering any Incon venience. In one case the leg was lengthened one and a half Inches In 30 days. In the various cases handled the legs have nearly all been length ened to their normal length 01 sufficiently near to It to permit of full, normal functioning. Deform lty of the knees and feet also have been overcome and all without In- Jury to the nerves, blood vessels or muscles. When the leg has been lengthened to Ita normal length, or as nearly so as seems desirable, the apparatus la removed and the entire limb from the toes to the groin Is placed In plaster casts until the leg has permanently become stabilised at Its new length. Weight bearing with support Is generally possible In three to five months. Although Drs. Abbott and Saun ders have met with great success in their new method they declare they are not ready to offer final conclusions until atlll further casea have been treated and the results definitely established. Hon door, reading a newspaper . . Boy. what a llfet What a life!" Says Fireman Frank Harris. Cham bera street station: ."Sure, we beat them flatieet . . I ffuejs they don't keep in condition What do they do. anyway? Walk around and swing a stick . . . That must be gravy, pure gravy . . Wish I had that kind of gravy. Just walk lng around and swinging a atlck Personally, my back aches from shining brass on Big Betsy . . . And I ve got the misery in my left knee from chasing fires on winter nights. It makes a man atlff and sore, It takes his appetite . . , It's about the hardest work you can Im agine . . . But them cops . . Whv those lazy bums would turn over and yell Uncle the first day If they had to work the way wo do." WOMAM BURNS ALIVE IN BOARDING HOUSE ANOELS CAMP, Cal.. July IJ (fli A woman wiu burned to teeth and five men Injured, one serious)? when tlainea of umlrtermlned orlftn de stroyed the Melone, boarding house seven miles east of here early today. A Mrs. Bromley (first name un available). 84-year-old cook at the boarding house, trapped In the rear cf the to-story Irsmt building, was burned to death, I ON TRIAL FOB ARSON DALLAS. Ore., July U.-h Hard on the heels of the Roe Mr arson verdict Sunday, the trial of Lisle B. Fore, former president of th Saiem A.F.L. teamsters union, ot under way here yesterday. Foree Is charged with arson In connection with the burning of the West Salem Box factory, tnn crime for which Ros-ter was convicted Foree chose trial without Jury and waa being represented by Ed Good enough, Salem attorney. Bruce Spauldlng represented the tat Circuit Judge Arlle O. Walker, who heard the Rosser rase, wat on the bench. 8LASHFDI Oressea cut tn M OS up. KthelWTB B. Hoffmann. Usa Mall Tribune Want Ada, Says taxi-driver No. 7853, New Tork City "I been swinging this hack ttll I got blisters In my hands, and stitch In my side ... I drive It si long on some days that I get dtrfev in the head, and then I haw to lav off to keep from wrecking the cart and killing somebody . . . But I don't mind the work eo mucn or the long hours, or even the small pav It's them cops that burn me up . . . You can't turn a corner without one of 'em yelling at you And that sarcastic wav they talk to you ... I don't Mke cops. pobtlano. Jul, 7 - me :rWc.-.;, . w L come off yelling at us guys? . . . If. those flatfeet worked half aa hard as we do they couldn't eat their supper, at night ... All it takes to be a cop la the ability to yell COLUMBIA BACKED UP TO AIO SHIP PASSAGE water level of the Columbia river behind Bonneville dam rme today to 68 feet aa United States ungtneers sought to lessen the hasud of a downstream passage of the Charles U Wheeler. Jr first ran-golng loud and bawl fcmelxxlv out Maybe they have to do that to keep yon can find . . . Even when we aren't actually waiting on a cus tomer we have to stand erect and at attention . . . That takes it out of a man . . . You hear a lot about our New York police who have to 'pound beats,' as they say , . . Well, that's all right when you're outside walk ing . . . Then you've got something to take your mind off your Job . You aeo color, life, melodrama . But here, we Just stand . . . It's pretty monotonous ... 1 guess per haps I should have been a police man after all." Comment on the Day's News By FBANK JENKINS nUFUB Wood, publisher of the IXWenatchee (Washington) World. Is known to fame as the man wbo printed Rev. Clarence True Wilson tall tela about th, snake, and the frog, In the early days of the Klsnv ath country. Mr. Wood, passed through south ern Oregon recently on bla way to California and ehuclled ramlnl,. cently over the story and Ita rerer Derations. IN THE early day, (so the Reverend t Mr. Wilson told Rufus) the Klam ath lakes country was over-run by snakes and frogs and at a certain season of th, year these creatures started migrating toward Mount Shasta. They traveled In parallel columns, about six or eight feet apart, and whenever a snake felt the urge of hunger It reached over and picked off a fat and Juicy frog. It looked like a special dispensation of na. ture for the benefit of the snakes Rufus printed the yarn, but cred lted the source. HE w saya, WAS a little doubtful, he saya, especially after he saw It In cold typewriting, so he called up the Reverend Mr. Wilson and read It to him. But he waa assured that the facta were substantially as rep. resented, and that hi. Informant had seen the spectacle with hi, own eyes, so he went ahead and printed It. X-HE ensuing klddlne. Rufua re. 1 lates ruefully, was something to remember, but he endured virtu. ously, sustained by the knowledge that, like Herodotus, he had but told the tale aa 'twaa told to htm. It produced a lot of horse laughs down thla way, but Rufua says he can't help that. rommiiwations R. R. Bridge Not at Fault. To the Editor: I regret that I have not had earlier opportunity to write you about your editorial headed "A Railroad Trag edy." In the Mall Tribune of June 30. The Custer creek accident was a great shock to all of us In the Mil waukee road organization, as we have given safety first consideration In the operation of thts railroad. The fact that we had transported m'lllona of passengers during 20 years prior to last month without a fatality In a passenger train accident, testiflea to the care exercised to protect trav elers on our trains. The bridge destroyed by flood was a steel and concrete structure and had been regularly Inspected and properly matntalned. We shall continue to keep safety our paramount objective and Intend to build up In future an even better record than that Interrupted by the deplorable accident In Montana. H. A. SCANDRETT. C. M. & St. Paul. 874 Union Station. Chicago, 111 July 7, 1038. WAS Rufua Woods who first some 20 years ago) put Into type the drea mof the Grand Coulee. He waa visiting In the little town of Ephrata, and while there a young lawyer sprung on him the scheme of damming the mighty Columbia and using the Impounded waters to produce power and to Irrigate a mil Hon acres of thirsty land. He scoffed at first, but finally consented to go out and take look. His Imagination waa fired - by what he saw, and he printed a glow ing story about It. The kidding about his Grand Coulee yarn, he says, made the snake-and-frog kidding look like mild and gentle persiflage. But now they're actually building the Grand Coulee. RUFUS travels often to Europe. He was In Germany when Hlt ler'a troops goose-stepped Into the Rhlneland, and he waa In Vienna a few weeks ago when the Nazi, took over Auatrla. The lucky bum. He actually DOES IT, while the rest of us take It out In wishing. Fire Engine Rams Trurk. COLTON. Cal.. July 13. (;p) A pedestrian waa killed and two fire men severely Injured when a fire en gine rammed a freight truck at the main Intersection In Colton at mid night. Charles Perry, 34. of Las Vegas. Nev., was killed by the fire engine. vessel to reach behind the Cascades to The Dalles. fttm .,..(,... Ht, The Wheeler mmnl.tMl riliph.m, ... . . ' and atarted downstream In ballast early today. After passing under the Hood Rlver-Whlte Salmon srldge the vessel loafed in the upper river for four hours to await flooding of the Cascade rapids four mllos above Bonneville. The current was cut by the rising atr to five miles an hour, allowing time for the Wheelsr to maneuver i an 8 turn. Mavbe It'a a Maybe It sort of breaks the monotony . . . The Lord knows they haven't anything else to do . . . They don't do no work . . . Boy. what a eaav way to make dough . . , Just walk around and scowl at people and make noise. Them guys haa cot It easy . , almost aa easy aa the firemen. Wslter No. 31. In a Rroadfay res taurant. New York City: "This 1, probably th, hardest work :-'F-l Weather. Northern California: Pair tonight and Wednesday with tog on the coast, little change In temperature; gentle changeable wind off the coast. The Capital Parade (Continued from Pag, On, ) there ain't anyone strong enough ta carry two men on hl coat-tan. They nodded and smiled when he attacked Berkley for seUlng out the people of Kentucky In severs! rather lll-deflned ways, and cheered again when he promised the tobacco lar- mers, "Next year there'll be a little country boy up there who was born In the middle of a tobacco paten, and he'U fix It all up." "I'll do more for you In six year. In Washington than Barkley'a don, In twenty-six," he cried, again and again. That, waa his theme song, and, tn the end, he called the Almighty to witness that he meant every word of It. Then his lieutenants began shouting out, "The line forms on the right to shake hands with the governor," and 80 percent of the audience did shake hands with him. What's more, he called a good half of them by their first names, asked after their dear old mother,, and put names to their children. All of them he patted, on the head. arm or any other .convenient place it didn't aeem to matter. Patting the voters appears to be part of tne Chandler technique. And they appear to enjoy It. The escape from his admirers waa difficult, but, after twenty minutes or patting, and pump-handling, and puaning through a milling, ateam Ing mob of admirers, he got to his car. to go on to a fish frv. helnir held In the very middle of a broil ing July afternoon In the little village of Sadyvllle. He had poured himself out In his speech, and he was so hot that he shut every win dow of the car to avoid catchtnz cold In the draft. But, In spite of an atmosphere which would have shamed a steam-bath, his vitality was not diminished. ' He explained, between ejaculations on every topic .from the state of the tobacco crop to the trnvwranh. of the neighborhood, that.. h.in been making three erjeeche . rf for sixty days, he now planned to step up his schedule to five. He predicted that nothing could beat ii, in. no expanded on h hr knnwiKHo. of Kentucky. rou see that little rnnnin, he aald, pointing to one thJt, the shut car window. "I've been on every little road like that .n over the state. I know Porter and Josephine and Bloody Fork and aU the rest. And Alben don't even know they exist. Thafa one reason wny I n win. And lemme tell you. the one-gallua fellow, are for me they certainly are for me rm .. plain Happy to every one of them "k at that, look at that (point lng to a tumble down farm with a Chandjer sign) look at that sign on that little corner house. The one-gallus fellows certainlv nr fi-tr me." ' Flight o' Time Medford' and Jackson County alitor j from th, file, of the Mall Trlbun, 10 and 20 year, ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July It, 1928. (It was Thursday.) Fire destroy, 300 tons of hay ea Meadowbrook farm near Central Point. president Coolldee In speech urge. people "to exercise a measure of thrift." and deplore, current spend lng spree. Republicans and Democrats la struggle for control of radio during coming campaign. Sudden shift In wind saves Klam ath Fall, from destruction by fire. Lillian Roberts, local Red Cros executive, Is attending meeting In Portland. Dale and Gale Beebe are visiting relative. In Same Valley. Hopkins ditch users decide to form Irrigation district. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ' July 12, 1918. (It wsa Friday.) Willamette valley drafted man clalma his rival In love aeeks to hava him sent to the army. William Gates return from a trip to Salem, where he arranged for the agency for Fordson tractors in Jack son county. Field Marshal Von Hindenburg of Germany reported seriously 111. Mrs. o. O. Alenderfer and Mrs. A B. Cunningham return from two weeks' camping trip at Prospect. Drafted Medford men to oe glvea reception In city park tonight. Fire to Re Recalled BAY CITY, 'Mich. (UP) The great fire of 1892. which swept most of the city from the map, will be commemorated by one of the few old steamer fire engines In the state. It has been reflnlshed by local fire men and will be placed on perma-' nent exhibition. The one-gallua fellowa mav inrt.H be for him, although the wise manev says not. Certainly he has always been succesful before. Born In the poorest circumstances, educated by chance and his own push and in ventiveness, he bounced out of col lege into a law practice, out of the law practice Into politics, and Irre sistibly upwarda In politlca. By now he has a conviction of inrnihiii well fitted to his holy-rolling tech- "'i. naa torn his friends. "The hand of destiny is guiding my foot steps." And even in his calmer mo ments, he says with utter fervm-- "This Is my time. I know if. m time, and I wouldn't let them talk me out of It." Jj Copyrighted Chevrolet JINGLES How I envy a giraffe on a blistering hot day ! When a nice, cold drink goes such a long way , , . But still, I don't know as I care to trade . . . Too much trouble getting my head in the shade And I wouldn't like being penned up in a zoo To be laughed at, stared at by you and you. Nope, guess I'll just stick to Chevrolet biz For I'm enough of a bloomin freak as it is! Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolel Main and Riverside Service Dept. 32 No. Riverside Vsrd Car Lot Riverside at itb Oregon: Pair tonight and Wed nesday, but local fogs on coast, little chance in temperature. gentle changeable wind off the coast. Building Plans. McMINNVILLE, July 13. lVPThe Yamhill rounty court employed an architect to draw preltmlnar plana today and prepared a PWA ippltca tion for a $300,000 courthouse. Other tentative construction with Tcderal aid Included rebuilding the high school, a recreation center, sewer projects tn two sections of McMinn vllle and remodeling the armory. Courtesy for tinest Only SCRANTON. Pa. (UP) Howard Snowden. city treasurer, urged that white courtesy ticket be placed out-of-state cars In parking- meter nones, reading: "Stay as long aa you like." But meanwhile. Mayor Fred J. Huester was fined $1 for parking too long. Divorce Petitioner Is M LONDON (UP) After 60 years of marrlace. Sir Prank AthtlxMn j Swettenham Is seeking a divorce at tne age of 88. His Is one of the first sli petitions brought under the sec tion of the new set providing di vorce on the grounds of Incurable inssnlty. SPINSTERS' HOPE I, pinned on Mln Florence White (above), who told London com mittee about hope of million English women past 5& for pay. men of spinsters pensions. Four (ieneratlons In I'holr SITNCOOK. N-. H I UP) Four generations of the Belleroae tamtly sang In the choir at the Whitsunday I high mass at the Church o St. John I the Baptist. They were Jonathan, 83: ! John. 58: Octave. . and Roger, a years old. i Bine Jay Attacks rootman ! WOODBURY. N. J.IUPI William Sutter, a mailman, was treated tor lacerations of the scalp, suffered when attacked by a blue Jay. He had attempted to pick up two babv Jars lying on tha ground. OUR QUITTING BUSINESS SALE Positively Ends SAT. NIGHT JULY 16 Additional Price Slashes Have been taken to make a SELL-OUT to the BARE WALLS. You cannot afford to miss this opportunity to buy DRESSES . COATS SUITS LINGERIE HOSIERY BLOUSES GOING AT THE LOWEST PRICES IN MEDFORD- REMEMBER! ONLY 4 DAYS LEFT AFTER TODAY