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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1938)
PJCJE SIT MTCDFORP MAIL TTtTBUTTE, MEDFOTIT), OT?EOONT. THURSDAY. JULY K 1938. MEDFORDJ&fcTRDUNZ uBrroM la Month- Ortfaa lUMdt Ih Mall rrlboM." Daily Cirpf Satordar. Publimtd by UKIDIftlRD PRINTING CO. RoBBRI W KUHU Editor. BKNBBT R OILBTRaK ynagw. A.0 lo1pDfUnt Nawtpapcr. Entarad u acon(t-oiaM matter at Mad Cord, Oragoo, untlat of of March I, 117 tfllBSCRI Pi'lON RATES y Mall In A Wane t Dill, ana vaar .......... Daily. ! montha,.,, ITI Dallv. ana month B Carrtar. Id Arlvanoa MedforA. Aah Unit. Jaekannrllle, OintrH Point. Phnaots, Talant, Qold Bill and Dally, on yaar ..M.00 Dally, tli month!... Dally, ooa month All tarma aaah In advance. Official eaiter ol tht City ot Madfard wririaJ rmpm m arama voudij. UESIHKH O" THB AIWOCIATBI I'HEMH Rrralvlni Pill I Lmaad wire aarvira. Tha Aaaoeiatad Praaa ia atflluatvaly an tit lad to tha uaa for publication of all naw dlaoatchaa eraditad to U of othar. wlaa eraditad to thlt pa par, and alto U tha local naw publlanan naratn. - All rlvhia for nubllcatlon of dlapatohaa haraln ara alan raaarvad. MBMBBR OP UNITED PRESS aJEHBBB Of AMDI'l BUREAU UF HIRCULATIONH Advartlaln rtapraaantatli Offices Id Ntw Tors, Ubloaao, Dstrett, 8in rrtnolMO, Los Anaslts. .uttl, rorlUnit. it Loon, Atlanta VanoooTSr, Membt, Or4&lTNYspapembfi(RWi Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. The National Resources Commute, reports the throe Pacltlo coast tto Oregon. Washington and California lead the nation In Intelligence Gracious flattery It Is. However, there be times when righteous candor compels oven the most loyal native eon and ardent Chamber of Com merce secretary to add feelingly such as It Is. . . a A retired educator predion cnu dren may not start to school In 1080 until they are 10 years old. Up to that time a kid should be busy being a kid, he argues. At present they graduate at 14, know all about ancient Greece, but are too light for a blocking halfback. Hopeful Democrats claim their boy wonder from Klamath county, as US, aonatorlal nominee "will puU the rest of the ticket through to victory In November, Inoludlng Mr, Hess for Governor." If the gent can eat enough spinach to do that, way should be found to wed his sur plus energy to Bonneville Dam. Dlray Doan. the most colorful fig ure In baseball, theatens to sue the St.. Louis' Cardinals for 1360.000, on the grounds they ruined his pitch ing arm by overwork, and then sold him to the Chicago Cubs for tl8S,- 000. The arm has been out of whack and Mr, Dean has been on the bench most of the season. A bright lawyer could do something with the Idea, Many a man has strained an arm and lost a thumb-nail pulling on the throttle of a slot-machine. A valley cow has been reported shot, while In a pasture. Autolsta traveling the highways, can't under stand what the cow was doing In a pasture. , Madame Secretary of labor Perkins Informed the British press she was unable to say whether or not the President would run for a third term. Neither does Madame have any Idea when an alien agitator will be shipped back to his native Aus tralia. THBV'I.I. DO IT KVKRY TIMK (Salem Capital-Journal) "The government has not yet finished the landscaping around the new (3(10.000 postoffloe, on which extra funds were expended to make It conform In design and marble finish to the new cnpltol and library when ker plunk, city officials slip back Into their periodical hick-town complex and permit a cheap hurdy-gurdy street carnival to be plunked down right In the middle of this Investment of several million dollars In civic beauty for the edification of several thousand sight -seeing visitors gathered here for a state wide convention." t Three hundred ana fifty workere on strike In Los Angeles, voted to return to work, when relief aid was denied them. Providing relief for strikers Is one of th. main reasons, why there are so msny strikes. It seems to many aa logical aa a bank sharpening a safecracker's drill for him. "When that hesd fiddler hit that Btoney Point Reel, you could see the old boys throw their heeds and swing their feet like a fast harness horse with an over draw." (Sawyer Bar Items In the Yreka (Calif.) Journal) They were a sight. It wss I0S yesterday. Therefore, everybody was asked 105 time. If It was hot enough. A N( ICIIIK II AUKS SOI L "At the suggestion of the old and amiable desk man. General Hugh 'Crackdown' Andrus. here we are again this evening, friends, bring ing you snother of those sterling offerings thst you have no doubt learned to brace yourself for, about every so often. And while we haven't any more Idea than you have about what la going to develop, there Is no point In hoping for anything but the heat while preparing for the hcim In Journalistic effort. l Hsiuld Haynes in Astoria Astorlaa-Budget.) I Why All This Speed? WHE-E-EW, it make one dizzy I . Not ao long ago around the world in 80 dayi was fantastic, fiction. Now around the world in four or five, is a matter of factual news, without even the aid of a reporter's imagination. What will it be nextf Well, when the strathosphere plane is perfected; perhaps 48 hours. Who knows f They may be firing Pullman sleepers out of a gun by that time aiyl the passengers will arrive about the time the folks back home hear the boom 1" WITT this mania for speed, speed, and more speed, what good does it do? Is life, at two or three hundred miles an hour any more desirable or satisfying, than life at eight or tent What have we really gained by this eternal rush, from the stage coach and tea cup times, when the tempo of life was that of the tides of the sea, to today when our tempo is the rat-a tat-tat of the pneumatic drill t THAT question is frequently asked and the frequent answer ia "MnTWTMn" Tn fun thnao mnst. inftlin! in nnlr it fool a deep longing for those old lace and lavender days, when one had time to sit by the side of the shady road, and watch the world go by, like the Catfish river, meandering lazily between its muddy banks, down, and down, and down, to the sea Then there was time to drink slowly from the cup of life and appreciate its savour, but now f what with roaring dragons in the air, dashing V-8 serpents on the ground, the human race like a pack of stampeded sheep running hither and yon, and periodically dashing dver'the abyss to their destruction, there is no time to do anything, but join the senseless scramble, and trust that somoliow one may, for a few short years at least, survive. WHAT good does it all do, this speed, this roaring around tile world in fit) hours, aa votinc Huahea has iust Hone. why not calm down and slow down and enjoy life instead of trying to make a continuous SPEEDWAY out of it. Even if we roach the ultimate, literally annihilate space and time, what then, will life be any the better for it, or will it be con siderably less attractive and amusing, than it is today? Well it doesn't do any good in the moral sense. But when one comes to thnt have morals very much to do with human progress? . And this increased speed does represent progress, a step forward, an ADVANCE and whether we like or don't like it, that's the law of nature and it is GOING ONI It may not make a better world, but it will, and has made, a very different one. And that's what men like Howard Hughes want that's what youth wants and let us not forgot that youth, not old or middle age, rules the world. SO we might as well forget the idea that the purpose of life is peace, quiet and contentment, or that the world is a gymnasium, designed solely to exercise our moral muscles. Just what the purpose of life is and just what the world is this column doesn't know, but we do know what it' isn't, and it isn't made to Hiiit the hopes or desires of any individual. Hut it is going forward, and this young Hughes along with Lindy and others of his generation want to go forward with it. So they take the leadership, in the air, as Christopher Columbus and his contemporaries did 500 years ago on the sea. Ijindy and Hughes don't know any more than did Christo. pher, or than President Roosevelt does today, just WHERE they are going but they do know they are on their way I ' And that, after all is life, and that is living. Those who don't want to keep up with it, and yearn for those good old days, might as well drop out of the procession and be done with it, they are either very old or very, very .tired I Another Legal Farce A SHORT time ago the nation was shocked by another liriltnl If iilnnnnincr t.hiR limp in Minnii Tlnrifln a liltlp boy five or six years old being the pathetic victim. The man guilty of the atrocious crimo was soon arrested, tried and oonvicted. There is no doubt of his guilt, reasonable or unreasonable, for he has confessed. With commendable dispatch the court sentenced the kid tapper to be executed during the week of July 25th. In England under such circumstances, where no doubt of guilt existed, the sentence would be carried out. But not in this country I Personal Health Service By William Brady, M P. signed letters pertaining to, personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self addressed envelope It enclosed Letters should be brief end written In Ink Owing to the Urge number of letters received only a few can be answered No reply can b made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady. S65 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. CONSERVATIVE TREATMENT Or SINUSITIS - In severe acute sinusitis where , caeca of ' chronic sinusitis. X-ray there are symptoms or signs (signs treatment la of questionable value. aji&ifta are symptom elicited by the exam ination of the physician) of auppur- v at ion, .empyema, plua formation, abscesses.- espe cially If there are inoc lated general Indica tions of septice mia or septic poisoning, prompt surgical relief Is the most treatment. But for ordinary acute sinusitis the simpler and milder the local treatment the better, as a rule, ex cept the careful application of med icinal agents by the physician wltu a view to shrinking the swollen mu cous membrane about the opening from the sinus Into the nasal pass age, to restore natural drainage of the mucus pent up In the Inflamed sinus. When this Is successful im mediate and often lasting relief Is obtained. 1 Otherwise the best treatment for acute slnsultls Is the same as Hie treatment for acute crl hot bath, bed, plenty of hot (or cool as you prefer) drinks soup, milk, fruit Juice beverage; or fast 13 to 24 hours If you remain In bed; the fool proof cough medicine as described -earlier; one grain of quinine for every fifty pounds 6f your body weight every four hours rather than any elleged "cold cure" cf the coaltor derivative class; a few drops of VDI (vitamin D inhalant) In each nostril wlto head held back then lowered below the level of chin first on right then on left side for a few moments, ev ery four hours; a dose o. five or ten grains of acetylaslcyllo acid (as pirin), repeated If necessary in two hours, if any pain-killer is used at all, for aspirin Is the least danger ous of the drugs popularly ,-egarded as "harmless" for quickly benumbing sense of pain, acne or other discom fort. Of course no such pain-killer Is a remedy or cure for any disease. Among the resources of the phy sician who treats nose and throat diseases, ultraviolet Irradiation ap plied by special apparatus within the nasal cavity, as well as ultra- :ort wave diathermy or radlothei- my treatment Is efficacious In many tho X-ray negatives aid In the pre cise diagnosis of sinusitis. (Continued Tomorrow) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Large Figures - Having taken for some time from six to a dozen capsules of a haltver oil. preparation dally, I stopped to compute the equivalent cod liver oil. and according to the label twelve capsules would be equivalent to 48 teaspoonfuts of cod liver oil . . 103.000 units of vitamin A, 1.170 units of vitamin D. (Q.B.H.) Answer After all the figures do not mean much. As for vitamin A, that doesn't matter In any case. 1 have taken from 10,000 to 30,000 units of vitamin D dally for many months that Is equivalent to the vl tamln D content of from 38 to 70 teaspoonfuls of cod liver oil a day. Only I prefer economical vitamin D. You apparently prefer the expensive kind. Incompetent Discussion raging tn our family as to U;e merits of a faith healer and we would like your opinion? (Mrs. H. O. J.) Answer Excuse me please. Your own opinion is better than mine would be. My belief Is that every one should have the treatment or the kind of healer he prefers, so long as tho health or welfaro of the com munity Is not endangered. Vitamin B. Deficiency I was struck by the similarity of the symptoms of moderate vitamin B deficiency as described In your ar ticle and my condition I have been examined by various doctors and no cause found, certainly no tubercu losis. My symptoms arc great weak ness, heart palpitation, short breath on slight exertion, indigestion, ane mia, rheumatic pain In legs, and above all fatigue. (Mrs. T.C.S.) Answer Eat four ounces of wheat germ dally and if your suspicion Is correct you should begin to get bet ter In a week and steadily improve until you are perfectly well .again All of the complaints you mention may well be due to prolonged de ficiency of vitamin B. Copyright 1038, John F. Dllle CI. change-over, he Is not loved. Besides the business men and church people, Happy also claims the veterans. To sum up Chandler has a politi cal machine almost matching the fed eral machine In size, and surpassing It In ruthleasneas and efficiency. If Barkley has the federal millions on his side. Chandler la expected to have a big slush fund to spend Just when It will do the most good, on primary day. Among the special interests, the farmers seem to give the advantage to Barkley, while Chandler has the endge as a campaigner. That leaves the great Imponderable the new deal. If the president has really converted Barkley to liberalism, Barkley Is safe. If not, Happy will holy-roll himself Into the senate. There could be no better off-year teat of the president's strength with the people. f d Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should tend letter direct to Dr. William Orady, M. D., 266 El Camlno. Beverlj Hills, Calif. Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson Coanty history from the files of the Mall Tribune to and 20 years ago. E LEFT IN IKE OF 150 Killed, 500 Injured , in Third Successive Day of Japanese Onslaughts Bodies Mixed With Debris TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 14, 1928, (It was Saturday.) Herbert Hoover, O.O.P. presidential nominee, ready to leave capltol for home at Palo Alto, Cal., and visit In mid-west en route. Sand Oreek road In Crater ' Lake National park to be graded. City Engineer Fred Scheffel and Fire Chief Roy Elliott fly home from Portland business trip. Record crop of grain raised on John Thoraen ranch near Central Point. Rum agents plan drive on home brewers. Carl Tengwald and family leave for two-day outing at Crescent City. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 14, 1918. (It was Monday.) Germans cross the Marne In a supreme effort to capture Allied lines. Merchants of Ashland and Medford to hold a Joint picnic next Thursday. Hal McNalr of Ashland la back from the state meet of druggists at Portland. Harry Manning, proprietor of the Wonder store, well-known local sing la married In Minnesota. Forest fire raging on WhtsKay creek In Crater Lake forest defies fire fighters. . TTIIE defendnnt's lawyers have appealed to the Supreme Court nn .niiiA nrnfATt nr ntliitr nnA AraiMitinn ia fltnvn4 until October 31st. Unless all signs fail the sentence will not be carried out then, but there will be more and more delays, and unless cash resources give out, probably a year or two will pass,' before the punishment the law prescribes is carried out. And by that time, practically everyone will have forgotten, what the man did, to deserve such a fate. Wo talk a lot about the law's delay and the growth of crime, but we certainly do precious little about either. And as we see it there is little hope of any change until we put some com mon sense and punch into our antiquated system of juris prudence. . Big Applegate BIO APPlaFOATB. July 14. (8pl. Edwin Arnold of Oak Grove dis trict Is spending some time with his father, Jamrs Arnold, at Tit Qlade guard station. Mr. and Mrs. John 8ohwart7fttr and son of Klamath Falls spent the week-end here with Mr. Schwarta fager'a slstr, Mrs. W. B. Harlow. Mrs. BchwartalaRf. is remaining here tor the week. Keprcstutlng the tper Applrgate Orauge, Bert Harr attended n ag ricultural committee meeting at the county court house Monday evening. Henry fllottlck. Ward's rork min er, was a Medford M'opper early this week. Marie y Hall, who had been serious ly ill at his home on Little Apple gate for the last year, Is convalescing at the home of Mrs. Lou Jaycoi at Medford. Ivan Hlhbsrd of Hokevllle. Ci who Is on a bntnoAs trip south ern Oregon, is a Kmst of his uncle. J. C. Knox Mct'loj, of XUlott creek. Brvln Lewis of Bellvlew. Wash.. Is spending two week here visiting his sister, Mrs. Fred Copple. and other relatives. Additional guests at tie Copple home Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Will Copple and grandchildren of Williams creek, snd Mrs. Laura Dorn Wheeler of San Frjanclsco. who Is spending the summer In Jackson ville with her mother. Mrs. Anna Dorn. Miss Helen Kubli of Portland wss a week-end guest of her grandmoth er, Mrs. Maud Kubll, having spent several days visiting at Klamath Falls. Willis Scott and Ct.as. Dun ford, local stockmen, were salting their cattle on the range In the Wagner Butte section a few day ago. John Byrne. Little Applerate fire guard, has been doing double duty this season. He not only serves the government, but Is obliged to class ify the neighbors fires by telephone as well. His next door neighbor re ported a fire, but John Immediately 1 detected that was In the stove. Mr. ' Byrne Is located in W: CCC pik Man About Manhattan By UUOKOE TUt'KtK NEW YORK Formula for a hot night: (A) Undress leisurely and get under a shower. Remain there for a long time 20 or 30 minutes. (B) Slip Into something cool and thin per haps white linen or a palm bench. (C) Take the elevator down stairs. If one Isn't handy, wait for h. Walking Is unwise. (D) Look around GEOR&C TUCK ior a taxi, but make the cabbie come to you. Never let him wait while you go to him. Climb Inside and sink back In the soft upholstery. Close your eyes for moment and take a deep breatn. w 1 bo ders . . . They leave you In good mood. (L) By this time, you should' be Impervious to the heat and summer weather. But if you aren't, If even the Riviera falls to alleviate your suffering, there's one thing left. You can always go outside and Jump off the cliff. 4 The I Capital Parade (Continued from Page One J (E) Tell him to drive you through the park and out across George Washington Bridge. As you cross the bridge lift your eyes to the Pali sades' heights and look at that pic ture castle, which looks like the glow of a firefly, perched on the very Up of the cliffs. That will be the Riviera. Tell your driver to take you there, through Fort Lee, up to the glittering entrance. (F) Get out. Pay your fare. Stroll casually up the steps and Into the bar. No doubt Benny Davla will be there. Shake hands with him. You know Benny . . . Yes, you do . . . He's the song-writer, the fellow who wrote hundreds of tunes that you've whistled a thousand times . . . 'Mnrgle" for instance ... "I Still Get a Thrill Thinking of You. . . . See. I knew you'd remember htm. (G) After you talk awhile, amble on through the bar and out into the Riviera proper, which Is an oval of soft light and muslo and tables and Sophie Tucker. (H) Insist on a tablo not too near the dance floor say, on the first row against the rail of the elevated rim . . . You're aky hleh then . . Only, your feet are on the ground . Don't be in a hurry . . . Tell your waiter to come back In a little while . . . Let htm do what he's supposed to do wait. (II Give a few minutes to snric Mndragucra's music, for I doubt if you'll find better anywhere . . . And If you have something you want very much to hear, request It . . . He may play it for you. If It doesn't interfere with the program. nearly four more weeks to play the political holy roller all across Ken tucky. Barkley Is not a bid cam paigner, and he works hard, emitting an almost uninterrupted stream of old-fashioned political oratory at three or four stops a day. But, once he gets wound up, he can't resist talking too long. His voice Is crack ing a little, and being a statesman In Washington has not helped him to be a demagogue at home. The fteshpots or the capital have told on him sadly. Aa for Chandler, his energy la In exhaustible, and his technique Is nothing short of marvelous. He re members every name, pats and pump handles every voter, uses every ap peal, and -can speak twice as often as Barkley. He has already visited all but one or two of Kentucky's 120 counties, and expects to visit them all again before the voting Cam paigning will pull Chandler though, If anything does. Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS IJOWARD HUGHES flies from New York to Paris in a little more than 16' hours, which Is slightly under HALF of Lindbergh's time of 33 hours. But keep this in mind: , If Llndy hadn't flown it in 33 hours in 1927, Hughes couldn't have made the trip In 16 hours in 193B. (J) Rest your eyes on the soft stars above the river . . . Shift a little In your chair until you are comfortable, until It fit you . . . And then you may order . . . Call our waiter . . . Tell him what to be. only be certain that It's tall and cool. ( K) After that, I guess the eve ning's pretty fool-proof . . . From there on you can't go wrong . . . Just sit there and have your' din ner and those other things which most people like to have with din ner . . . And enjoy the show . . . By nil means pay particular atten tion ivphie, and to Wtltte snd ramp quarters, wnera ne lb owui'in, Hoasrrt . . . Thev take the r, I weight of the aorld off your shout- In the line-up of special -Interests, the farm vote Is preeminently impor tant, because Kentucky is a thor oughly agricultural state. In his ap peal to It, Chandler relies on his rural roads p roc ram. his nersonat fascination for the "one-gallus fel lers," and the charge that Barkley has sold the Kentucky farmers down the liver. At every "speaklnV Happy and hla merry men shout that the Kentucky tobacco quota is not as high aa tn other states, that the ten nant farmer Is being cheated, and that Barkley has not served his people well. No one can tell whether this talk is believed. Nor can anyone tell Just how labor will stand. The A. F. of L. Is sun- posed to be friendly to Chandler. John L. Lewis and his CI O. have publicly Indorsed Barkley, but Wil liam Bumblazer and other local lead ers of the United Mine Workers are backing Happy, for an anti-deputy sheriffs bill which he rather belatedly paused. Sine the powerful mine owners are 100 per cent Chandler men. It seems possible that he will hare a good majority In Harlan and the other coal counties. Business men are Chandlerites. and Happy also claims church support. With one eye on the preacners. he recently passed a Sunday closing law. and the local dries are whooping It up for him. Barkley was once a paid lecturer of the anti-saloon league. riding the corroded liver and face-on-the-barroom-ttoor circuit. But, when repeal sentiment rose, he allowed discretion to outrun consistent, nnd wss one of tlie first to -sH for n end ' , to prohibition. For this Umely IfUGHES 18 out 10 beat Wiley Post's 1 record of slightly less than 1 days around the world which was a startling modern betterment of Jules Verne's Imaginative clruit of the world In 80 days. As these words are written, Hughes Is nearlng the halfway point of his trip and has been out leas than two days. The world moves, doesn't it? OUT again let us remember that If " Post hadn't flown around the world in 7 days Hughes couldn't have done It In LESS TIME (IF he does. These words are written many hours before they will be read, and predictions are unsafe.) And this thought arises: If Jules Verne hadn't IMAGINED the circuit of the world In 80 days. It Is quite possible that Wiley Post couldn't have circled It In 1 days and Howard Hughes (If he makes It) in less time. Before any feat can be ACHIEVED, It must first be IMAGINED. CANTON. China, July 14. - Japanese aerial blmbs killed probab ly ISO persons and injured 600 oth ers In this south China city today, the third successive day In which Japanese warplanes iiave attacked Eighty-three dead were counted between the East Bund and Honam Island alone as rescue squads pulled mangled bodies of men, women and children from wrecked houses. The dead and wounded for the past three days In the Canton area were expected to total more than 1,600. There were 328 casualties by official count ' yesterday, including 240 killed when a bomb tilt a con cent ration camp at Tseifgcheng In south Kwantung province. Gruesome scenes resembled those of last month's bombings tn which hundreds were killed. - 37 Planes In Raid Thirty-seven Japanese ajr raiders appeared shortly after daynreax, di rectlng their' attacks toward the Pearl river bridge and the old power plant. Near the bridge, on tt:e East Bund, one bomb struck the center ot a crowded vegetable market, and 34 shattered corpses were counted there, The only living thing appeared to be a pet monkey, chained to a tree, Crossing the bridge to Honam, one saw 49 bodies laid out on the side walk. Trucks carried- wounded to hos pitals, where some of the injured died before medical aid could be had. Two 600-pound bombs landed on Honam Island near the ei.iore line, creating havoc among the residents of flimsy dwellings and boats. In Canton hospital, ui-ere Dr. Sun Yat-Sen studied medicine In his youth, surgeons were covered to the elbows with blood. Some vlctima were lifted to the operating table, only to be pronounced dead before a sur geon could pick up his scalpel. Hospitals Jammed Similar scenes were plentiful in the city's five other hospitals. Stretchers were carried up several flights of stairs at one hospital, where falling power stalled elevators. The Associated Press correspondent had to tie a handkerchief across his face to keep out sickening smells In bombed areas. From the ruins of one house there was a cry, then sudden silence, Indicating one more dead. Along the East Bund dismember ed bodies were scattered among the fruits and vegetables of tlie wreck ed stands. A hand lay In the mid dle of the road. There also were arms and legs. Sampans floated near the Pearl river bridge, some of them spotted with blood. Groans of the wounded could be heard everywhere In the bombed area. "1ENTURIES ago. Leonardo da Vlncl imagined the airplane, but he couldn't make an airplane that would fly because no one had as yet even imagined the internal combustion engine. Because the vision of the Internal combustion engine bad not yet dawned upon men's minds, da Vinci's vision of a machine that would fly CHARGE EIGHT HOTELS VIOLATED LABOR LAW PORTLAND, July 14. AP) Oer trude Sweet, secretary of the Joint executive board of six unions .said charges had been filed with the na tional labor relatlona board against eight Portland hotels and the Hotel association. The unions have been on strike against 18 hotels for five weeks, a. h. Patterson, Seattle, regional attor ney for the N.L.R.B., accepted the case and aald It would be Investi gated at once. The association rep resents S3 hotels which the AFT contended Interfered, restrained and coerced employee: discriminated against employes and discouraged un ion membership, and refused to bar gain. JUSTICE TRIAL OF Justice of the Peace William R. Coleman disqualified htmself to bear the case of the Bishop brother! William and Robert of the Saras Valley district, charged with alleged assault and battery upon a state police officer. The case will be trans ferred to the Ashland Justice court. The brothers, both past 21 years of age. are truck gardeners and farmers. The case has been pending, with considerable legal backing and fill ing, since June 33, date of the as serted assault. It was admitted there had been considerable discussion of the case In the presence of the court. Neither state nor defense desired a Jury trial. Justice Coleman declared he had no bias and knew neither of the defendants, but nevertheless. disqualified himself and directed the case be moved to the nearest Justice court, Ashland. The brothers entered a plea ot not guilty. They previously had of fered a plea of guilty, under certain conditions. The complaining witness Is Paul Williams, state policeman. It Is al leged one of the brothers hit the state trooper In the mouth with his fist. After the blow, the other Bishop brother held the officer's arms. Later both fled. According to the report at tha time, the incident occurred when one of the brothers approached tho state policeman In the Sams Valley district, and volunteered the in formation, he knew nothing about air being let out of auto tires. Tha state policeman asked how he knew any tires had been deflated. The blow was then allegedly struck. causing a slight cut on the state trooper's Hp. A dozen or so defense witnesses were in court this morning. The state has two witnesses. The state is represented by Deputy District Attorney George W. Nellson, and the defense by Attorney Charles W, Reames. KING GEORGE UP AFTER ATTACK OF INFLUENZA LONDON, July 14. (API Klnu George VI had recovered enough to day from an attack of gastric Influ enza to leave his bed and It waa believed assured he would be able to make his scheduled visit of state to Prance with Queen Elizabeth next week. The king and queen are scheduled to leave for Paris July 10. DALLES APRICOT CROP 200 TONS UNDER 1937 THE DALLES. July 14. (API With the apricot pick at the midway mam. i. n. Wiley, Columbia Fruit Growers' manager, estimated todav the crop would average 200 tons less than a year ago. nie 1937 yield was 1200 tons. Slnoe no cannery buyers have ap peared n the market this vear. th bulk of the crop has been diverted to Oregon and eastern fresh fruit consumption. The market price has not been definitely established, but dealers said It was conslderablv lm than the 140 per ton last season. Closing time for Too Lata to Claa. slfy Ads la 1:30 p m. was useless time. and WASTED in his fins la the point: Men do not achieve BT THEM SELVES ALONE, but by the aid and tha co-operation of OTHER MEN working with them toward the same objective. llHAT a truly abundant life we " might achieve If,. Instead of FIGHTING each other, men could learn to CO-OPERATE COMPLETELY! ' kl Chevrolet JINGLES Copyrighted Aren't you glad that summer is here? To me it's the finest season of the year! Gorgeous fresh fruits apple peach or pear, Shows what Mother Nature does with tender care ! Summer's sure MY time, never did like the cold ! Don't like red flannels, Ho- hum I'm getting old. Sure, you can get solid com fort on a winter day With a radio and heater in your new Chevrolet! Chevy M Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Main snd Riverside Service Dept. 32 No. Riverside Used Car Lot Riverside at Ith While bu.ilnjc that tender tea It from (iHO(lTi;KlA 1 and 2. he a particular In bujlng your milk! Take home a treat for ALL tltr rnmlty in a bottle of , . . Wing's CL0VERHILL GOLDEN GUERNSEY MILK Medford's Popular Premium Milk! YOU CAN GET More heat for less money in MILL FUELS SLABW00D BL0CKW00D SAWDUST Order now when prompt deliveries are assured Phone 7 Timber Products Com pany End of North Central