Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 17, 1938, Page 6, Image 6

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    PXGE BET
WEBFOTO WATL TTCTBtrNTE, METTFOBD, OTEGO"SV STTNDAY. TTTLY 17. 1938
MEDFORDtf&fctfTBIBUNE
HlfrroM Is other OrM
Dally Bicpt tatarttaf.
Publtintxl by
IIBUiruRO PRINTING CO.
tl-ll-lfl N rtf St. phoa H
RUHBR1 W RUHU 'II tor.
BRNB8T a Q1L3TRAK IUaifr.
' Bourtxl u oonfl-clMt mttr ftt Mad
ford, Oregon. udUi tol at Utrob t, ItTI
tftlBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mi.il Id ArWano!
Daily on rt M-vo
Daily, ill moot hi lit
Dally, on month 0
By Carrier, to Advaoo 114 ford. An.
land, Jackionvtll, Cotrl Point.
Phoanli. TaUnU Oold BUI Md od
, big hwayl
.Oally. on fw M OO
Dally. lt moDtb
Dally, on month 0
All tirmi oaah In ad
Official Paper of tbt City ftf Mrdford
OrrtrlaJ Paper ftf JackMio Ooaotjr.
IIKMUKH O I IIR ASSOCIATED I'KMS
Rcfvlvltn Pull I,umI Wirt tfrlMk
T AMociattwt Pra l iolua11y
titUd to th iin for publication of all
nw llapatchaa erdttd u It w olbr
wis erodltad to tht pajtor. and alao to
th local nw publlsbad tiaraln.
All rlaht for DUbllcatlon of aMelal
aitpatcn nria ara aim riarnn.
MRUBEB 07 UNITED PRB8I
NfRUDBR OP AITDI1 BUREAU
OF 0IR0ULATION8
AtlTrtli1nit rtprnUta
OffiCM la New Tor. Qhleaao, DtrK,
8n rranolMO, Lot An Baattlo,
Portland. St- Loala, Atlanta, Tasaoavar
B. C.
Member
1 1 Associatio!
Y?-Smudge -Pot
Hy Arthuf Perry.
All fear there would be no lum
mer were dispelled the put week,
when the mercury went over the 100
mrk, and wae frowned upon by the
Chamber of Commerce.
Fop Oatea la over the flu, he ahould
have had last winter.
Thurston Danlela haa bought a pr.
of cowboy boots, and haa Joined the
ranks of the equestrians. . ,
Lightning played In the hills Wed
and Thurs. eves, and waa rough about
It, the forest service reports.
The Prospect ball team, headed by
Dewey Kill, will Invade Talent today.
The Prospect team doean't cara who
beats them as long as It Isn't Med-
ford. . ,
Several Paws report their boys have
started wearing their neckties, comb
ing their hair, and acting Jittery In
the presence of certain little blondes
and brunettea.
Elm Chllders, the wood butcher, la
going to a. Pass to build a' movie
palace for Q. Hunt.
Uncle John Griffin, now of Ash
land, has been under the weather,
but la once more feeling hla oata, and
will soon be re-kllllng bears.
Oom-on-the-cob Is now on the
tapis, and Is being tackled by epicur
eans. t
Mowing la rampant In the rural
areas, it takes a mowing machine
cast Iron seat, two hours to cool off.
when left In the snn at noon while
the hands lunch.
Howard Hughes flew around the
world In 3 days and 10 hours. He
went faster than a local speed Idiot
late for a date with a girl In Ashland.
a
All the local Insurance agt are
busier than Jimmy Roosevelt, but not
aa many profitable deals, even when
they are Democrata.
8. Oanton Sherwood, the postal
whlzr. haa adopted th flaunting
shirt-tall mode, so popular with well
dreesed msles.
t
Tracy Boothby of the Red Blanket
country hayed all week, and report
he never saw It so hot In the back
pasture.
t
Older oirla have been canning
fruit, and praying for cooler weather.
t
The Elks tomcat looked like he
had swallowed a canary Prl but It
was a sparrow, he haa been trying
to catch (or three years.
Herb Hoover, rormer high ace of
the nation, visited Republicans Wed.
and there has not been so much local
mystery since the time the passer of
the honorsry president's hat at a
grand assembly disappeared, with
both the hat and the collection.
John Anderson, of C. Pt., who has
been visiting in Sweden, Is liable to
show up again any day now. When
last heard of he waa at the Smear.
gard rjord, a body of water, not en
auto.
The wild blackberries will soon be
ripe on the Applccst. Thev otow
best on rail fences, that are hard to
reacn.
Family of 10 Files
MIAMI. Fla. UP The family of
Camllo Sacni. which numbers 10,
mado a Journey from their home In
Bogota. Colombia, to New York en
tirely by air. Tho S.OOO-mlle trip waa
made In 40 hours.
Thief Takes Bible
STILLWATER. Okla. (UP,) O. C.
Whipple. Stillwater Justice of the
peace, hope, the thief who stole a
Bible from hla office here "will read
the scripture every day. There's a
lot he can learn from the Bible,'
a.MTto Whipple wlioee own dally
sciiptuir reading aa Interrupted by
the theft.
Samuel
'I'HB tragedy of Samuel Insull
too late.
He never belonged to the world-war period, he belonged to
the golden age following the Civil War, along with other
"rugged individualists" like Commodore Yanderbilt, Jay Gould
and Jim Fiske. .
This was the golden age for the individual of ability, force
and ruthlcssness, who didn't care so much what happened to
the country, or the people in it, as long as he had a free field
to get HIS, while the getting
Had Insull been at hiB prime in 1880, instead of 30 years
later, he would not only have amassed his $100,000,000, he
would have been able no doubt to have kept it and perhaps
founded an American dynasty of wealth and power, and had
various art museums and symphony halls named after him,
instead of dying alone and friendless in a foreign land I
IN other words Samuel Insull, able, courageous, publio spirited
in the traditional plutocratio sense, was an anachronism.
He was not inherently a wicked man, or an unscrupulous
one j he merely had the misfortune, to live in one era, and follow
the business code of another.
What was perfectly proper
and orthodox, from 1860 to
moral, from 1900 to 1930, and particularly when thanks to the
industrial collapse of 1929, the people suddenly became aware
of what had been going on, in the public utility field, since the
close of the world war.
IN Samuel Insull 's view, a public utility was first and foremost,
something to exploit for the
a few insiders, just as the Gould-Vanderbilt school believed the
first rule of successful railroading, was to tell the public to go
to hell and charge all the traffic
Wasn't the quality of electric
"dear people" get bigger and
Didn't the utility stock become more valuable, didn't those
who followed his advice, get rich also, and didn't the state of
Illinois and particularly Chicago, profit immeasurably, thanks
to his public spirited generosity
CERTAINLY. All true. And
ethics and social responsibility had not been aroused, all
would have been well, even if the Insull Empire had been
shaken to its foundtaions by the
quake which struck the world,
Mr. Insull might have lost a
have lost the respect and confidence of the people, and with
the latter, and with his extraordinary ability, fortitude and
resourcefulness, he would quickly have recouped his fortunes,
and again become the leading citizen of Chicago and the Mid
west empire, universally honored and admired.
BUT as has been "frequently stated "time and tide waits for
no man" and woo unto him who believes otherwise.
Samuel Insull with all his enterprise and vision had the
misfortuno to be forever looking backward. He could readily
see how everything had changed in the world of science, but he
failed to see how everything had also changed in the world of
business and social responsibility. Practically up to the end,
he r-nnlrl see nothinor wrone in
merely played the game, that Big Business had always played
only he played it more successfully. So a tough, persistent old
bird, he believed to the end, he would live long enough to see
the "good old days" return, and his position vindicated.
BUT such was not to be. The world may do a number of
strange things but it never goes back over the trail it has
taken, days old or new, good or bad, never return.
So Samuel Insull died, an embittered, disillusionad, pathetic
old man. It is easy to condemn him, he was greedy, self
centered, unscrupulous, and scores of poor people suffered tragi
cally because of him. Yet we believe if where he goes there is
anyone to balance up Samuel Insull 'a account, the recording
angel will feel disposed to deal somewhat leniently with him.
For he was unfortunate rather than vicious, outmoded rather
than wicked or depraved,
His supreme tragedy was being born AFTER his time!
Man About
Manhattan
By OBORUE tUCKKB
NEW YORK One of the saddest
commentarlee on New York life la the
dearth of playground facilities tor
little children. I
know the official
guldea list
Imposing number
of parka and re
creatlonal cen
ters, but one haa
only to stroll
thru the streets
to ee how Im
possible condi
tions really are.
I have In mind
those warrens of
street off Tenth
6KK6: luCKM avenue where
thousanda of children are huddled
like rabbits with nothing but the
bsked cement on which to play.
SomeUmea the oops come by and
close oft a street so that the harards
of traffic will be reduced, and then
for three blocks the street becomes a
bedlam of dirty, gleeful little boys
and girls.
The other day I was over that way
and a cop waa paklng to a mother
who seemed old before her time. In
her lap was a on by who through all
that confusion somehow managed to
sleep. "Look." said the cop. "look.
Mrs, Mally, there's your Billy over
there. He's stark naked."
Across the street on the euro stood
a little boy about five. His head
waa a mass of sandy curls. Hla fat
little stomach and chubby cheeks
made him look like a rotund billlkrn.
His mother looked at him and shook
her head helplessly, aa If such mat
ters aa misplaced trousers hardly
mattered any more. Then she called
to a tall girl, about It, ho was sev
eral doort down the utreet. "Sally."
she satd. "go g?t Billy and find out
a list he did with hi pants."
Instill
wag the tragedy of being born
was good.
and moral, entirely respectable
1900, became improper and in
financial benefit of himself and
would bear.
service improved I Didn't the
better electric lights! Certainly.
and his increasing affluence!
if a new standard of business
industrial and financial earth
a decade after the world war.
few millions, but he would not
what he had done. he had
"All right. Ma," the girl answered,
"but you better speak to him. He
won't mind me."
The girl trotted across the street
to where Billy stood on the curb. His
attention waa riveted on two older
boys who were ahobting each other
with make-believe pistols. The cop
said. "Pine boy. Mra. Mally. He looks
more like his old m.an every day. How
la Joe anyway?"
At the sound of Joe's name the
woman brightened. "Oh, tine." she
exclaimed. "He's working regular
now. He's down to the docks."
"Well, now I sure am glad to hear
you aay ao. I must tell Mra. Mc
Clooney. She'll be that pletwed."
The woman spoke happily. "And
his back doesn't hurt him much any
more except on wet days. I think
Joe'a all right. He'a a good man "
"Joe'a one of the best. You tell
him McClooney was asking after him.
And tell him I said for him to bring
you over to see me and the mlaaus
sometime."
"Oh. that'll be nice," Mrs. Mally
replied. She would have said more,
but Just at that moment a shriek
went up and there was little Billy
struggling against the ministrations
of his sister.
"You. Billy." called hla mother,
"you come here this minute. You
do what your elster telle you to.
Sally, make Billy find hi panu."
The last I saw of Billy he was being i
led across the street. . . , The two;
older boys were still shooting each
other with make-believe pistols. . .
The volcea of 500 other children lifted
in a cloud of confused noises that
can be described. It seems to me. In
no other way than simply as the
voice or New York.
ST. LOUIS. July lo. AP) The
board of curators of the University
of - Missouri at Columbia, meeting
here today, appointed Miss The lms
Mills, dean of women at Whitman
col If (v. Walla Walla, Waahn as direc
tor of student affairs for women.
Rlmsky-Korsakov composed his
first symphony while making a tout
of the world as a midshipman In the j
Personal Health Service
By William
Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to dlseas
diagnosis or treatment, will b answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self
addressed envelope la enclosed. Letters should ba brief and written In Ink.
Owing to tba large number of letters received only few can be answered.
No reply can b made to queries not conforming to Instruction. Address
Dr. William Brady, tea El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif.
THE QUACKERY OF ETHICAL DOCTORS
Baffling li this query from a New vitriolic editorial attack by the
York correspondent: "How can Z
know a competent physician from a
quack?"
"A. Name.
I have made
a do sen false
starts on a terse
reply, and every
time X become
Involved In dev
ious explanations
which require
further explana
tion. Without offer
ing a prize
even implying
that I would pay for it, I do say
a terse reply to A. Name's question
would be worth ten bucks to me,
Before you submit your answer
please be sure you understand that
I am not offering a prize, conduct
ing a oontest or promising to
acknowledge any contributions
comments readers may make,
merely place a nominal valuation
upon what would seem to me a
suitable answer to the question
"How can I tell an honest doctor
from a quack?"
Before you compose an answer
you had better consult Webster for
the meaning of quack, ethical and
terse. It would be a help too. to
read the Code of Medical Ethics If
you can get a copy. You will find
It In the American Medical Direc
tory in your publio library.
Sec. fi. Chap. Ill of the code (or
as the politicians controlling the
A.M.A. have recently renamed It,
the principles of medical ethics)
says:
"It Is unprofessional to receive
remuneration from patents for sur
gical Instruments or medicines; to
accept rebates on prescriptions or
surgical appliances or perquisites
from attendants who aid in the
care of patients."
Section 3 of Chap. IV of the code
says:
'Physicians should warn the pub
lic against the devices practiced and
the false pretentions made by char
latans which may cause Injury to
health or loss of lives."
In pursuance of this principle and
out of sympathy (believe It or not)
with many poorer people who haye
to pay an outrageous price for In
sulin because of the patent mon
opoly on Insulin which the A.M.A.
stoutly defends and tries to
Justify, I shot off my mouth about
it In the wretched public prints
recently, and for my pains drew a I
Comment
on the
Days News
By FRANK JENKINS
THIS writer sat the other evening
In a little gathering in Med lord
at which Herbert Hoover was pres
ent. It ww about aa Informal as
could be Imagined, and waa Intensely
Interesting to this scribe, who was
seeing Hoover at close range for the
first time.
Seen at close range, he dlffera rad
loeJly from the picture one forms of
him by reading.
YT waa hot In the room. Outside a
1 thunderstorm waa brewing. "Mug
gy" is the word people use to Ues
crlbe such a condition. In deference
to the only living ex-President of the
United States and one of the great
figures of the world, every man pres
ent wore a coat, but coats were op
pressive. We Southern Oregon lsns
would tie.ve been more comfortable
without them.
Hoover himself wore e coat (the
familiar double-breasted one of his
pictures) but no vest. His coat was
unbuttoned. He wore a starched col
lar, of a conservative shape, and a
black and white white striped tie.
This writer will wager that he
would have liked to remove lite coat.
And he would have seemed PER
FECTLY NATURAL in hla shirt
sleeves, If you get what la meant.
(In a civilised world, coats have a
place. They provide an air of decor
um, and decorum la necessary to civ
lliwd people. But Western men some
how find themselves drawn to an
other man, especially If he la Import
ant whose demeanor Ls sucti as to
make It apparent that he would be
quite AT HOME In his shirt sleeves
on a hot evening. Hoover conveyed
that Impression.)
HE smokes a pile. He lapse easily
Int-A t1lT nf ft .hi no
His language la simple and direct.
Hla performance if for the shorter
rather than the longer word. He nel-
U:er ' talks up nor "talks down" to
his hearers. He haa something to say
and say i it
At moments, when dealing with a
weighty aubject, he la deadly serious
The next moment, as like aa not, he
will offer a shrewd and humorous
sidelight, and tils fact will light up
with an agreeable grin.
When his face lights up In this
way, you don't Just laugh to be po
lite. You feel yourself OENUINELY
IMPELLED to laugh with him.
ALL this was amajing y this wri
ter, who had always thug t of
j Hoover as aloof and a little cold aj
"
j
Brady, M P.
Great Pooh-Bah of the a.m. a. in
hla and I mean his organ, the
Journal of the A.M.A. x
Nevertheless, the patenting of In
sulin, and the strange distortion
of the fundamental principles of
medical ethics, li what I call quack
ery In the grand manner and com
pared with the petty gratifying of
the practitioners who accept rebates
on prescriptions and the like it Is
In - the big money. Not that the
rank and file of the profession, the
fellows , or members of the A.M.A.
get anything out of It personally.
But what does a mere member or
fellow, like myself, know about the
disposal of the big money collected
annually by the A.M.A. What does
anybody know about It exxcept the
gang who run the organization?
I repeat this la not a prize con
test. I shall neither acknowledge
nor return any manuscripts sent In
response to the question. But If I
receive an answer In less than 300
words that seems to me good
enough to print, I'll pay for It. If
two answers are good enough to
print I'll pay for them. If three.
I'll pay for them, $25 for the best.
15 for the second. $10 for the
third In order of merit Of course
I never divulge a correspondent's
identity In print or otherwise with
out his or her express consent. If I
do not think any answer I receive
la good enough to print, we'll Just
forget the whole thing. Send your
answer in a sealed envelope ad
dressed to me, and bearing three
cents postage so that It will be
sure to reach me out of town bo-
fore the end of August.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWEHS
Itemoral of Adhesive Plaster
I Injured a rib and my side is
strapped with adhesive plaster. A
friend tells me this will pull pieces
of skin right off with It when It Is
removed. (P. M.)
Answer Before It is removed sop
It well with plain kerosene of
course avoiding proximity to flame
nd It will roll off without caus
ing discomfort.
Acne
Please repeat the formula you
suggested for removing pimples and
blackheads?
Answer Send stamped envelope
bearing address (three cent stamp)
and ask for monograph on Acne.
Ed Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Or. Brady
should tend letter direct to Dr.
William Brady, M D., 269 El
Camlno, Bevrrlj Hills, Calif.
an INTELLIGENCE, rather than a
personality. The picture of Hoover
that Is conveyed by the printed word,
or even by the more revealing news
reel, isn't a complete picture. It
leaves out aomethlng that in Justice
to him as an individual shouldn't
be left out.
HOOVER, at these little gather
ings, ls seeking grass-roots sen
timent. He wants to know wi:at the
little fellow down at the bottom, aa
well aa the big one at the top, la
thinking. And, If this writer Is any
Judge, he ls clearly aware that what
la genuinely good for enough of the
hard-working, straight-thinking lit
tle fellows down at Uie bottom la the
only thing that can be permanently
good for the bigger one higher up.
Finds Husband Dead
CLEVELAND (UP) Mrs. Lillian
Peters returned from a funeral to
find that her husband, Herman, had
committed suicide by shooting him
self through the right temple.
4
Duck Dinner Costly.
CLEVELAND. (UP) Stephen Kra-
vic'a dog had a "ducky" dinner but
hla master had to pay the check.
Judge Lewis Drucker ordered Kravlc
to pay Mra. Elsie Btxlus 14.90 35
cents per pound for her two ducks
eaten by the dog.
Jellyfish' sting Fatal
DARWIN. North Australia (UP)
Thomas chandler. 11-year-old half
caste, collapsed and died here after
being stung by a huge jellyfish. The
long trallera of the jellyfish wound
themselves bout the boy's body as
ho wa bathing and h waa stung
directly over the heart. .
PARENTS
with . . .
CHILDREN
Who are now taking
Wing's GOLDEN
GUERNSEY MILK
and want to dine out on
Sunday can be assured of
having the SAME FINE
MILK at .
FRANKLIN'S
CAFE
, At Fountain and
with Meals
HEART TAKEN OUT,
AT MAYO CLINIC
ROCHESTER. Minn., July IS. (yP)
Allele Mortimer Watklns, 37, who
travelled 8.000 miles to coma here
for surgical aid, walked out of a
hospital today able to fsel hla heart
beat again after Mayo clinic aurgeona
had cut away a half-Inch casing of
stone from that organ.
when Watklns left Melbourne, Aus
tralia, laat March 17, physician gave
him but six months to live. Today
he I looking 'forward to a normal
life.
Hla father, Allele w. Watkin. told
how a Mayo clinic surgeon worked
at the calcified percardlum.
The heart, with Its hardened cas
ing, was exposed for two hours, and
four rlba wen resected in the opera
tion which took four hours.
Alternately working three minutes
and covering th organ with a worm
cloth for three minutes, th surgeon
lifted the heart out of the chest
cavity part of the time the operation
waa In progress. '
Recovery from the relatively rare
operation was rapid.
AT
USING WPA HELP
SALEM. July 16. V-The Salem
water commission revolted against
th WPA yesterday, declaring It
would discontinue use of wpa iihn-
on pipeline project August 1 unless
the agreement with the government
agency prevented it.
Commissioner J. M. Rlckman aald
It was Impossible for men not on
relief tO Obtain tnha h.nuM
public agencies handed their labor
over to the WPA. Nnn-r1lr m.n h.
said, were forced on relief In a vicious
circle. He envisioned the move aa an
example for similar action by other
public bodies.
Noted Dead
VATICAN CITT, July 16. (P)
Glullo Cardinal Seraflnl, 71. prefect
of the congregation of th council
and considered one of the most
learned membera of the sacred col
lege, died today of uremia after sev
eral days' illnes.
NORWALK. Conn., July 18. tP)
Alexander Ttson, 81, retired New York
attorney, died today at the home of
a son, Paul Tlson. of Injuries received
In a fall here June 18. He resided
at Ladleton, N. Y.
Tlson practiced law in Michigan
and New York and taught for several
years at Imperial university, Tokyo
Japan. He held several .!,.,
decorations for his legal work In the
"rieni Among his survivors 1 a
son. Alexander, Jr., of Klamath .rails.
Ore.
Ghost-Dance Religion Lives.
KLAMATH. Cai. (UP) This city
remain th last stronghold of the
ghost-dance religion formulated by
the Indian ."dream prophet!' Smo
halla. The. Klamath Indian congre
gation ls known as the 'Shaker'
but It has no connection with the
well-known American sect of 3hakers.
Air mall service between the Unit
ed States. Buenos Aires and Monte
vido wa Inaugurated In 1930.
"From J10
to $6000 I
Our savings
have really
- been at work"
A tru life story. At t young
factory worker, he began sav
ing $ 1 0 each week. Soon pro
motions came hit way ... he
began to save more. Earningi
accumulated. Today he ha
responsible job in th main
office, and hit account hat
grown to $000.
Then opportunity come hit
iy to invest in a business of
Jackson County Federal
Savings & Loan Association
126 East Main
The
Capital
Parade
(Continued from Pg On )
themselves. But at least they do not
give up th fight even before it be
gin.
With such an opponent Senator
Robert Bulkley, Taft would look like
a pretty sure thing, if it were cot
that Bulkley wears the new deal
mantle, while Taft'a conservatism,
honest 'and sincere aa It 1, seems a
little too unadulterated for modern
consumption.
And that bring up the other Re,
publican problem, well Illustrated In
the governorship. Unopposed for the
Republican gubernatorial nomination
I Robert Brlcker, a Columbu lawyer
and former etate attorney general
and utilities commissioner. Brlcker
Is a pleassnt, decent sort of man.
without any particular force, whose
politic might be described .as middle
of the road. Yet the large business
men In the state generally dislike him
a too "liberal," and, if Governor
Davey la renominated by the Demo
crats, many large business men will
unquestionably . give Davey secret
support. Davey may be malodorous,
but big business In Ohio loves him
for hi us of troop against the
C.I.O.
Thus It I that th Republicans
confront their beat opportunity.
Their organization 1 poor. Their
candidates, exceut for Robert Taft,
are mediocre. Both In the right and
left wings of the party, there la dis
affection. It can be aeen why the
local betting 1 still on the Demo
crats, although, of course, only an
all-wise providence can nam the
victors at this date.
Communications
Praise for Blockade
To the Editor:
Thanks Mr. Hunt, we are glad
you let the censors and boycott rs
go hang and showed the picture
Blockade." We went to see It last
night and we think as "Show Busi
ness" says In the Elks Msgazlne.
"A timely drama, a film . . . that
wins friends and influences people
(plus a happy, happy ending)"
though we failed to see the happy,
happy ending.
The main trouble with th film
ls that it has a tendency to niake
people think and use their intellect,
and Walter Wanger, the producer,
will never get a degree from any of
our prominent colleges for produc
ing tnat Kind of a play. Degrees
are conferred on men who produce
pictures of fairy stories to make
people forget they have any prob
lema to solve and make them be
lieve they are enjoying care-free
childhood.
This may work on some but as
Thomas Paine said over 180 years
ago, "You may keep a people Ignor
ant out you cannot make them
Ignorant."
CHARITY R. SANDER.
R. 3, Box 595, Medford, Ore., July 18.
Textbooks Not Wanting.
OAKLAND, Cel. (UP) The prog
ress of education in America 1 not
believed to be obstructed by lack
of variety and number of textbook.
A national exhibit of the latter here
brought out 6.800 different textbooks
from 70 different publishing houses
i.
Notice.
We will not be responsible for any
debt Incurred by Norman H Terry.
BULL PROG MINE.
By W. H. Summers.
fm
his own, or when he gets ready m
to build a home, he will hav
the money.
Success comes from profitable
and systematic saving. Begin
today to save your way to suc
cess. Yout savings earn ei.tr
dollars here.
Flight o' Time
Medford nd Jackwi Coonty
History from th rtka of lb
Mall Trtbon 10 ut N Jn
go. ;
TEN YEARS ADO TODAY
July IT, 1MI
(It was Tuesday)
Tex Democrat unit to tight At
Smith, party nomine.
Hoover on tour of low greeted
enthusiastically.
No chance for federal aid tot Ore
gon lrrlgtlon project.
Indiana governor predict Republi
can farm aid plan will sweep mid
west. . . v
Ground to be broken July 39th for
new MS.OOO Cathollo church her.
Exploding home-brew In middle of
night, brlnga report to police of gun
battle.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
fit waa Wednesday)
Oerman casualties exceed 100,000
In three days of futll battling on
western front.
Lt. Quentln Roosevelt, son of for
mer president, killed la sir fight a
San Quentln.
Austria makes peace movea.
Fishermen aroused because no flsn
are able to get over Ament dam la
Rogue river, It la claimed.
Paul Janney attend to business tx,
Grants Psas.
Council grant pay boosts to eltj
workers.
$25,085 TO AID OREGON
WILD LIFE RESTORATION
PORTLAND, July 18. (API T. B.
Murray, biological survey official-
announced yesterday Oregon would
receive 918,810 under the Plttman-
Robertson act for wild life restora
tion. State matching funda will brlnf
the amount to 25.085.
Th compositions of Percy Grain-
ger are based on folk music.
Use Mail Tribune Want Ad.
VmChevrolet
0 v'v?
I JINGLES
Copyrighted
Now that bujinesi ii picking
up so fast,
Looks like that vacation 'i a
thing of the past I
Or maybe I can sneak away
early this fall
After I've sold Cbevrolets to
one and all!
Hate to get fooled when I've
planned a trip,
Gone to all the trouble of
borrowing a grip.
You know YOU can help if
you want to be nice
By buying NOW! Don't
wait for snow and icel
Chevy M. Hurd
Rogue River Chevrolet
Mala and Riverside
Service Dept. St No. Riverside
Used Car Lot Rtvrrslde at Itb
3k
r