PAGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. JULY 20. 1938.
Medford,
Tribune
"EverruM Id Houthrrn Or tan
RmiJi the Hall rrlhtwe."
Daily Kscepl Sutarftny.
I'uhiianed ta
MHlliniRD PRINTING OO.
It-IT-S N Fit St. phone fl
RUHBRT W RUHL. Bill tor.
BHNB81 R OlbtiTKAK Umipr.
&d (ndpn1nl Nawapapar-
Bolirad aa Mflonn -laa miltit at Mad
ford. Ormgou, undar Acl at March I. lilt
ailHSL'RIPrtON RATE
Bi Mali In 41vanca .
Daily, on rar II.UQ
Dally, als months Ill
Dally on month Sfl
By Carrier, in Artvanea MalforA Ah
lanrl. achannvlMa. OtnirH Point.
Phoauii. Talant. OoM Hill soil an
Daily on Mr ft 00
Daily, ali montha l.St
Dally, on month
All tarma eaah In advance.
Official Pimm of thr CH of Mrdford
Off trial I'aprr of Jarkmo County.
UKMHKH OP IHB AMMiC'IAIKU PHKHK
K-olwlng rail I.MHd Wire Mcrvlra.
fh Awtioiatad Praar la ateluatvaly o
tit lad to tha uaa for puhlioatton of all
nawa dlapatchaa orrtnad to It or othor
wiao oradimd to thia paper, tod t"
tha local nw ptibiiahad haraln,
AM right for public tlnn of apootai
dlapatohoa tiaraln arc alan riHrt.
MBMHKR OP (7NITBD PRBRI
tfBM BBfl OF AtlDI'l HURRAH
OP riRCHI.ATIONH
Altrtlatnf ttnpreaantattVM
Orftcaa lo New Vork. Ohlcasu. Detroit,
San Franclaco, Loa Amelea. ft tat (la,
Portland. St Lout a, Atlanta, Vanoouvar,
U
i
ssociatioi
Will F. D. R. Run Again?
llJIiL Preiident Roosevelt be candidate for a third termt
' This seems to be a lively question at the present writing
with political dopesters pretty well divided between those who
are certain he WILL be, and those who are equally certain he
WON'T.
Both are wrong. For by the nature of things theae can be
nothing certain about it. How can anyone KNOW what the
President will do when he doesn't know himself.
What the President will do in 1940, will depend entirely
upon what the conditions ABE at that time, and there is no
one wise enough or prophetic enough to foresee them.
IF Mr. Roosevelt finds that his choice for the Democratic
nomination can't cut (he mustard, i.e.: has a slim chance
to be the choice of the convention, then in all likelihood he will
step into the breach himself.
For obviously he is determined to retain control of the party,
HIMSELF, or see that his friends, the New Deal faction of
the party retains it.
He will fight to the political death against any other eventu
ality, and no one can blame him! For if the anti-New Dealers,
gain control of the party, that will mean the repudiation of
Roosevelt, all that he has stood for and all that he has tried
to accomplish.
He will never consent to that.
ON the other hand if President Roosevelt can secure the
nnminntlnn nt fh man h uranta nnA tha nlatfitrm h
wants, then there is no doubt he will not be a candidate himself.
That is undoubtedly the resson he has been so active in
recent primaries, has been actually fighting not so much for
the control of congress as the control of the next Democratic
convention.
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M P.
Romance Strikes Rocks
sinned letters pertalnlna to personal health and hygiene, not to disease
diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Or. Brady It a (tamped self
addressed envelope u enclowd. Letter, should be brief and written In Ink.
Owing to the large number of letters received only a few ean be answered.
No reply ran be made to queries not conforming to Instructions, Address
Dr. William Brady, 26A El Camlno, Beverly Mill., Calif.
OO l)T
Ys Smudge Pot
Ky Arthur Perry.
Douglas Corrlgan, aviator, Insists
ha was flying California, while
headed for Ireland, where he eventu
ally landed, to give all creation a
thrill. It la the firat time tne Atlantic
ocean was ever mistaken for the
Mississippi liver.
a
Corn. In many parts of the valley
Is now up high enough to hide a
4d.
e e e
One of our prosperous, but wpn't-
admlt-ltffarmers, has a new span of
store teeth.
e e
The forest flrea rnglng In north
west timber la holding back the
Bourse of normal events. Here it Is
well along In July, and no amateur
mountain-climber, unable to get
down without the assistance of 100
CCC's, under the direction of nine
forest rangers. Woodsmen report the
ability of the type to reach a spot
Where a bear can't find them, Is
uncanny.
a e
The Older Girls are all busy can
ning fruit, and making Jelly. A num
ber of males report thoy will have
plenty to eat next winter, If they
can hold out till then.
e e
The editorial advice to disregard
the heat and keep cool la being fol
lowed by many. To date, they feel
no need for woolen sweaters and
ox, until after sundown.
a e e
Hollywood stars are now pictured
as playing croquet on motorcycles.
Either one Is bad enough without
the other.
e e
A PATRIOT Boil."
(Coos liny Times)
"You are strong on that word
'drfrauded,' but here again you
should have used the word 'de
frost.' What I did say was that
he got $7,000 of his tax can
celled. I had forgotten how It
was done, but you set me right
by stating that It was by mo
tions, demurrers, transfers, refers
and perhaps some cat-furs. ,
"Mr. Taxpayer, if you can get
76 cents cancelled from your tax
by this process, I will not only
eat your old hat but will buy
you a new one."
a
Announcement comes from the
movie capital that Joan Crawford
and Franchot Tone have agreed to
disagree, and both signed the joint
statement. Coming on the heels of
two sensational aerial flight. It Is
expected the American people will
be as brave as possible, and bear up
as best they can.
e e
More clt I tens have adopted the
mode of running around with their
shtrt-tnlls out. The menfolks are
losing their sense of shnme, and
tha practice looks more like the
dickens than some of the women's
hut.
e e
"Under the "trial and error" dis
pensation, the- Administration com
mits the errors and the country
suffers the trials." (Detroit Free
Press) Cut out that logicl
e e
Astoria has adopted an ordinance
closing beer and wine dispensaries
at 10 p.m.. Instead of 1 a.m. This
gives the exuberant three more hours
In which to find an auto accident,
before they get home In time to go
to work.
e e
The bunion marathon Is returning
and a popular national crane In the
late 20 s. H Is the granddaddy of
the wnlknihon. another bit of gsy
nonsense that gripped a number of
Oreffon towns. Including the me
tropolis. During: the same era, runt
golf ( flourished, and communities
grew excited over kids climbing trees
and announcing they would stay
there until attrr school started.
Killed by Train.
SPOKANE. July 20. I AP) -John
Hamilton, 30, of Yowolla, Ore., died
from a fractured skull early txiay.
Pollre said Hamilton hud fallen a
he attempted to board an eaet-bund
Northern Pacific train near the city
lixnlU,
Medford "s Tourist Opportunity
'T'ilE Jackson Comity Chamber of Commerce is taking nggres-
ive leadership in a move to unite the communities of the
great vacation area from Roseburg to Yreka into an organiza
tion for the business-like promotion of tourist travel to this
section. It is a sensible plan, for the tourist industry here,
conservatively estimated to exceed two million dollars annually,
lias graduated into the class of "big business", requiring practi
cal, intelligent direction.
Acting upon the theory that "big game can't be bagged
with a scatter gun the county chamber of commerce is seeking
to COORDINATE the now independent and more or less hap
hazard effort of various communities in this area in a .carefully
planned, ORGANIZED PROGRAM for attracting the tourist
and his important dollars to southern Oregon and northern
California.
The proposed organ izationwill in no way conflict with the
Shasta-Cascade Wonderland Association and the Redwood
Empire'Associntion; instead ita efforts will SUPPLEMENT and
EMPHASIZE the valuable work of these well-established and
highly important agencies..
.Communities affected by this proposal are now being ap
proached) all thus far have heartily endorsed the plan for such
an organization, a fact encouraging to sponsors here.
T'ilE program to be undertaken by the .new organization is
now in a formative stage.- 'Wisely, the united group of
communities will first condupt a comprehensive survey to
detormine the HABITS of tourists; what they prefer in the line
of entertainment; what type ofiaecommodations is most needed
A study of statistics on tourist travel is enlightening. One
fact is obvious. Southern Oregon and adjoining Siskiyou county
are NOT getting their share of vacationing motorists; too many
of California's guests return to their eastern, mid-western or
southern homes WITHOUT entering this vacation area; too
many tourists who enjoy the beauties of the famed Evergreen
Playground to the north MISS the equally-beautiful loop
through southern Oregon.
Whyf
It is hoped that this preliminary survey will give the answer.
HERE are some of the major aims of the new organization:
A nnntvliuatA Mia ovniiiinrt .nil mikltnitv nf f nfi m
of ATjIi communities and private interests into ONE
Intelligently planned, forceful promotional campaign.
Develop the recreational resources of this area;
encourage the establishment of such tourist attractions as
a creditable pioneer museum at Jacksonville; properly
mark historic points and capitalize on the romance of a
land famous for Indian wars and the gold rush of '53.
Provide increased and improved facilities for better
serving the touring public; make it possible for visitors
to enjoy more and varied entertainment; establish more
playgrounds for children in resort areas.
Train all who have contact with the traveling
public in HOW to better serve their guests; achieve for
this area a reputation for HOSPITALITY through fair
and friendly dealings; familiarize business men and
women with ALL vacation attractions of this great play
ground so that the visitor will prolong his stay.
TpiIE American Automotive Association is authority for the
statement that forty-sii and one-half million vacationing
motorists spent a total of FOUR AND A HALF BILLION
DOLLARS last year a tidy slice of the national income! No
type of expenditure flows more quickly through the trade
channels than the tourist dollar. A highly profitable and highly
competitive business I
Twenty million tourists will visit San Francisco next year
for the Golden Gate International Exposition, To get a gener
ous percentage of these visitort to come to southern Oregon is
a big order, but NOT an impossible one.
No vacation area has MORE to offer the pleasure-seeking
public 1 Crater Lake, Oregon Caves, Mt. Shasta, Diamond Lake,
historic Jacksonville, great forest, lakes and rivers teeming
with fish, fine highways BUT
There is MORE to this tourist business than just HAVING
si'onic attractions; people must be TOLD about them; a GOOD
SELLING JOB must be done. A generous number of forty-sit
million vacationing motorists WANT to know about southern
Oregon and her neighboring counties in northern California.
The problem Is, how to tell them.
The heritage of most physicians la
to believe that gout Is almost non
existent today, says a doctor em
ployed In the best advertised clinic
in the country.
Then he cites two
cases of what he
arbitrarily p r re
nounces gout.
The two patients
told him they
had respectively
30 attacks In 16
years and 160
attacks In seven
years, but only
ten of the at
taeka had been
In the great toe,
All the Joints except the aplne had
been affected In one or another at
tack. The patient who boasted 160
attacks In seven years declared
believe it or not I don't that
dozen different doctors had made
dozen different diagnoses, and n
one had ever mentioned gout. -
Personally, I'd rather take my
chances under the treatment of tiny
of the dozen doctors who did NOT
dlagnofie gout than be at the mercy
of the clinic employe who "pro
nounced" It gout.
Two other doctors connected with
another, leas advertised clinic, pub
lish an Imposing report of "Meta
bolic Studies on atlents With Gout'
the comic weekly of American medi
cine, June 11, 1038 the paper dom
inated by the Orest Pooh-Bah. Hie
allegation that the 34 patients hsJ
gout rested on the doubtful obser
vation that they suffered with Joint
Inflammation and two of the seven
women and 13 of the 17 men had
tophi that Is, little lumps or nod
ules somewhere In the soft tissues
under the Akin, as In the edge of
the ear, composed of a deposit of
mono-sodium urate.
For the purpose of the report the
clinic doctors ignore the fact that
thousands of people have such tophi
yet never suffer any twinge or at
tack that could be called gout.
As large a quantity of uric -icid
la found In the blood In other con
ditions as Is found In cases pur
porting to be gout. In the old days
It was sufficient for the eminent
specialist to pronounce It gout. To
day that racket Is cramped by pre
cise chemical tests of the blood.
One pertinent observation msde by
the clinic doctors who conducted this
study of alleged gout wu that
"Clinically there appeared to be
no greater progression of the artlculrr
changes (Joint Inflammation) while
the patient waa receiving a liberal
purine Intake than while he was
In the hospital on a low purine diet.
(Purine la the food material from
which uric acid la chiefly derived
liver, beef, pork, mutton, chicken,
veal, salmon, halibut, sweetbreads).
It la of Interest that during the four
year period of observation the num
ber' of attacks a year and of days
spent In bed during the low pur:ne
regimen was about tenfold that ob
served while the patient was eating
a liberal portion of meat each day.'
Curiously enough, the clinic doc
tors give no Information concerning
the amount of drinking done by the
patients, nor do they give any light
on the amount of work, play or
physical exercise the patients took
daily.
As long as one can get a fair
amount of work, play or exercise
dally, and lead a fairly temperate
life so far as alcohol and eating are
concerned, one need not worry about
uric acid. It Is Just an old medical
notion.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Preparing for Maternity.
If an expectant mother takes nar
cotics all during the time she Is car
rying the baby, will It have any
effect upon the child as It grows
up? (Mrs. C. T. T.)
Answer It la likely to Impair the
physical and mental health of tr.9
child.
Posture for Chronic Bronchitis.
Have had one bronchial cough for
years. Only relief I can get Is taking
exercise lying wtlh my head lower
than my feet. (Mrs. C. P.)
A nswerr-Anyone with chronic win
ter cough, chronic bronchitis, should
practice some such Inversion regu
larly, especially if there la much ex
pectoration. For instance, every
morning on waking. He prone across
bed with forearms and chest and
cheek resting on the floor for five
minutes or so. Repeat this at least
once of twice dally.
Ben Franklin's Air Bath.
Some time ago you referred to
Benjamin Franklin's custom of dry
bathing . . . anxious to know where
you got the Information . . . (T. a.)
Answer If I recollect. It was in
Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography.
Anyway he spent an hour or so nude
In his room every morning, writing.
(Copyright, 1938, John F. Dllle Co.)
lift !"& l&i&t, m3klmW7S.. i - - m.
Franrhol Tone ana Joa'n Crawford (above) have reached the parting
of the ways, a split-up Hollywood has been expecting for several months.
The actress says she Is In no hurry to obtain a divorce and that they are
parting good friends
Ed Note: Person, wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Ur.
IVIIIIam Brady, M. D 268 El
Camlno. Beverl) Hills, Calif.
Comment
on the .
Day's News
Man About
Manhattan
By GEOBUE rilCKEH
NEW YORK The quality of gab
In New York la not atratned. It falleth
aa a cloudburst from Heaven upon
the Broadway atubea beneath. You
have only to
thruat your head
Into a bar and 40
backroom philo
sophers are tun
neling the lateat
gaga Into your
ear. And most of
them are pretty
bad. That'a why
It la so easy to
get pun-drunk.
But you have
to listen. If you
don't the time
may come when
the boys have aomethlng worthwhile
to say, and then they are apt to pass
you by. When this happens, the only
way you find out what la happening
la by reading It In your rival's col
umn.
And so you listen. And maybe
Abner ollb, that bad penny, that old.
Inevitable human stymie, tugs at your
lapel and says. "This la the ellllest
story I ever heard. I got It In Chi
cago. Maybe you know It, out aon i
stop me If you have because I am
going to tell It anyway:
"A man waa walking down 8tate
street leading a little reen dragon.
!t was some sort of fet day and
people were dancing In the street.
Finally a lady paaaed by and her
skirts happened to brush sgalnst the
dragon. That annoyed the dragon
and, turning his head, he emitted a
long stream of fire at her. Smoke
curled out of his nostrils. The lady
was frightened, aa who wouldn't be
frightened. And thl made the man
angry. He tanked on the dragons
leash and spoke very sharply to the
dragon. He said, 'Listen. If you don't
learn how to behave yourself I'm
going to take a bromo-aeltrer snd get
rid of you.' "
Of courae. there are extenuating
circumstances for this story, or rather
for my friend Abner Ollb. At the
time he told It the hour waa well
past midnight. And from the look
In his eye I think he waa seeing lots
of dragons.
For a while I toyed with the Idea
of taking a bromo myself to see If
It would make Abner dlaappear but
about that time an old pal of his
ambled In. and while they were shak
ing hands I slipped out.
It was a night that seemed de
signed for meditation and poet a. The
hot stars were close over the sky
scrapers and back of them lay an
Iridescent field of powdered star-dust.
headed east, walking aimlessly, my
thought a thousand miles away.
Somebody suddenly said, "What In
the world are you doing up at this
hourt"
T seems to us that the Jack son County Chamher of Commerce
has presenter! a aenaihln n.4 timi.lv nlan far talrlinA tha
........ " " I It waa Charlie and Maid and Tag
job. It is to he hoped that their business like prosram may he Rochester. Charlie u the mtnum
launehej without delav. with tha full cooperation of all com. .aireci.v of ihe Lexington hotel Mud
....... . ' Is hla wife. Tag la their Mack and
munities in this ires 111. Q. woi wir.-t.ir tmer.
We talked for a few momenta and
then the Rochester! piled Into their
automobile. They were heading for
Cleveland, Ohio. Mrs. Rochester was
going home for a visit and Charlie,
with Tag too. was going to drive her
That's a 1.000 mile drive from Lex
ington avenue and 48th street, there
and back. Quite a Jaunt for a man
who plana to come right back.
I moved on towards the river.
thought It would be swell to walk
to the river and sit there on the
docks awhile, enjoying the night. But
for tome Inexplicable reason I aud
denly became tired. I crawled Into a
taxi and went home.
20-301DMTS
FINGERPRINT JOB
AS
(Continued troin ra One.)
without anyone knowing who they
are.
Mr. Hamilton aald that It Is the
30 -so club's plan to go Into the
public schools thla fall after a cam
palgn of education and take the
fingerprints of the student and pu
pils. It will be a voluntary matter
and no: one will be fingerprinted
who doea not consent, Mr. Hamilton
..rated.
School Board Approves.
Approval of the project has been
granted by t. H. Hedrlck. city school
superintendent, and the school board.
Mr. Hamilton stated.
Mayor c. C. Pumas pralaed the
20-30 club for Its civic activity, re
calling that the organisation spon
sored the ordinance regulating bi
cyele traffic and asslated In putting
the regulations Into effect.
The club, Mr. Hamilton said, has
two fingerprint expert who will con
duct the project. After the meeting
several councllmen remained to have
their fingerprint, registered.
Ex-Minnesotans To
Picnic On July 31
PORTLAND, July 30. (Spl.l For
mer residents of Minnesota will gath
er Sunday, July si. at historic Cham
poeg, near Newberg. Oregon, for an
ill-day picnic. A large attendance
la In prospect from the thousands
of former residenta of the Gopher
state now residents of Oregon. For
mer Mlnneaotane may bring whatever
guesta they wish, whether or not
qualified for membership. A program
of .porta for younger persons and
entertainment for adults la being
arranged. A number of former
Mlnnesotans who have become prom!,
nent In their new home will be on
the apeaklng program. Major Oeorge
I Sandy. Portland, la president of
the association and Don MacArthur
will be chairman of the forenstc pro
gram.
Those attending are to bring basket
dinners, coffee to be furnished on the
picnic grounds.
Busses leave Yamhill depot every
hour, beginning 7:S0 a.m.
By FRANK JENKINS
HOWARD HUGHES- modest young
millionaire, using the last word
In modern flying equipment, circles
the earth In a little leas than four
days.
Before the reverberations of his
remarkable feat have had time to
die down, 31-year-old Douglas Corrl
gan. flying an ancient, single-motored
American plane (It la nine
years old, which is prehistoric, as
airplanes go) drops down In Dublin
after an unheralded, unlicensed flight
from New York.
I The 1
Capital
j (Continued from Page One.)
THROW up your hat. Let off a
war-whoop. Oo Into the war
dance and kick up a lot of dust.
Then thumb your nose at these
nit-wits who've been proclaiming
dolefully that America's days of
great achievement are over and that
in the future we must content our
selves with a humdrum level of
existence.
America Is still America.!
the organizations, which he la
rather half-heartedly attempting In
his party purge. He can build
successor to the point where the
1940 convention must give in. which
he has tried to do, and failed so far.
Or he can run again himself. It Is
Interesting. If not significant, that
the men around the president be
lieve that he la at least aware of
the third term alternative.
VTOUN0 CORRIOAN first flew his
antiquated crate irom ixmg wacn
to New York without a stop.
Then, knowing that he couldn't
qualify for a trans-Atlantic flight
permit, which Is a complicated af
fair, he tuned up his engine, wired
the pieces of his dilapidated craft
together with baling wire, climbed
above the clouds, pointed Its nose
toward the other side, and set out.
When he came down at Dublin, he
had less than 30 gallons of fuel left.
CRAZY?
Of course he Is craay as a coot.
Veteran flyers figure that he had
about one chance In a hundred. He
took the chance.
He ought to be spsnked, of course.
But where would America be today
but for those who were willing to
take a long chance
DOUOLAS CORRIOAN Is the hero
of the hour. If worried officials.
seeking to prevent disaster by dis
couraging others from taking a 100-to-1
shot at fame, feel It necessary
to administer a mild slap on Corrl-
gan's wrist, we'll all be clamoring
for their heart's blood.
But If he had FAILED If the
angels hadn't hovered their wings
over him and chaperoned him aafely
to a landing against all the proba
bilities we'd be lamenting the crim
inal negligence that permits young
fools to take their lives in their
hands and aa like aa not we'd be
grousing about the cost of a search.
Human nature la funny, isn't lt7
JAPS PROTEST ANEW
ON RUSSIAN ACTION1
TOKYO. July 30. (y Instructions
to make new and stronger protest to
Soviet Russia over allrrw! wiwire of
Manehoukuo territory were telegraph
ed tonight to the Japanese embassy
In Moscow. The action coincided
with a Tokyo demonstration demand
ing war on Russia.
Mamorti fh lire ml tail, Japan's sm-
bassador. was told to carry the pro
test directly to Maxim Litvlnoff, so
viet foreign commbvar.
Japan chsrget that soviet trcx-pa
have occupied territory ef Manehou
kuo. Japsn'a protectorate, near Chani-
kufeng, clone to the Junction of the
boundaries of Manehoukuo. RuAsiar.
Siberia and Jipanese Korea.
The president enjoyed a continu
ous popular ovation from Washing
ton to Los Angeles, yet the cheering
crowds are not likely to affect the
organization Democrats whom the
president and his advisers fear. A
recent, and little understood In
stance of the strength of the organi
zation was the renomlnation of
Senator Frederick C. Van Nuys by
the Indiana Democrats.
Van Nuys had been marked for
destruction, for petty local reasons,
by Indiana's pushing man-on -a-white
horse. Paul V. McNIitt. Van Nuys
fought back, to be sure, and did
accumulate some following In the
state. But the best Information is
that the McNutt machine did not
give In to Van Nuys because he
was too strong for them. The Mc
Nutt machine gave In because Van
Nuys had become a symbol of the
conservative wing of the Democratic
party, and since McNutt cannot ex
pect support from the strict New
Dealers, he hopes to be the middle-of-the-road
candidate In 1940.
McNutt's sacrifice la likely to be
In vain, as he is heartily detested
by Postmaster General James A.
Farley, leader of the middle-of-the-road
group. But It Is a true sign of
the times. Elsewhere, In New York.
Missouri, several New England states.
Kansas, Illinois, New Jersey, there
are roprts that the Democratic or
ganizations are sewed up for a mid
dle-of-the-road candidate.
Cm Mail Tribune Want Ads.
Meanwhile the president Is fright
ening some of hts supporters by
hints at a renewed dependence on
his popular following alone. The
old mood of the court fight, the
mood of "the people are with me.
C know It" seems to have returned In
the west. If .It has returned, the
chances for a third term are all
the stronger. If It has returned, the
New Deal will continue entirely de
pendent on the person of the presi
dent snd that will mean that only
the president can continue the New
Deal.
Pen Guard Knifed
In Break Attempt
COLUMBUS. O., July 20. fPr An
Ohio penitentiary guard was stabbed
today In a frustrated prison break.
One convict was shot and another
badly beaten.
The prisoners tried a daring escape
by kidnaping two guards and a dep
uty warden within the Institution
walla.
Stabbed in the abdomen. Guard
Raymond T. Thornton was In a seri
ous condition.
White huMnc that tender steak
from GROCtTEHU I and 2,
be as particular In buying your
milk!
Take home a treat for ALL the
family In a bottle of . .
Wing's CL0VERHILL
GOLDEN
GUERNSEY
MILK
Mdford' Popular
Premium Milk!
FRANCHOT
PART GOOD FRIENDS
AFTER THREE YEARS
HOLLYWOOD, July SO. (AP)
Joan Crawford, often called "Holly
wood's most amhlttoua woman." la
going to divorce her second husband,
Pranchot Tone, who came to tha
movlea via Cornell university and
the New York stage.
Joan says she's sorry their mar
riage, which lasted almost three
years, had to fall, but they are
parting good friends. She aald she
was In no hurry to obtain a divorce.
She will continue to live In the big
house she built In Brentwood. Tone
has left, taking an apartment.
Behind thla split-up, which Holly
wood has been expecting for several
months, lies a story of divergent as
pirations. Tone Intends to return to
New York and the stage. His wife's
ambition la to win acclaim for her
voice on the operatic stage.
Although Tone Is a hard worker,
he Is easy-going compared to the
driving tireless Joan of vaulting am
bitions. Her rise from obscurity to
stardom la one of Hollywood's glit
tering legends. She had no theater
background, very little education.
She became a top-notch movie per
former by sheer hard work, long
hours of study, strict attention to
health habits that give her Inex
haustible energy. I
Flight o' Time
Medford snd Jackson County
history from ti e flies of the
Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years
ago.
TEN TEARS AGO TODAT
July 20. 1928.
(It was Friday.)
Snider Dairy employes hold annual
picnic.
Greater Medford club unable to
agree on location for proposed new
clubhouse.
Flying schol to be established her.
Fruit packing ready to start In
Eden valley district.
Threshing now in full awing In
WlUow Springs district.
Grass fire Imperils orchard In Gold
Hill section.
Jacksonville Camp Fire Girls re
turn from ten days' sojourn In woods.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
July 20, 1918.
(It was Saturday.)
German troops retreat across the
Marne, pursued by Allies. Thousands
taken prisoner in huge drive.
Ex-Czar of Russia slain by Bolshe
vik! council, Fetrograd reports.
Big league baseball season to close
Sunday, as a war measure. Boston
and Cleveland teams demur.
Because of the Intense Interest In
the Allied drive on the western front,
the Mail Tribune will post bulletins
Sunday.
Darrel Mlnkler enjoyed a furlough
with his aunt. Mrs. Charles Young, a
few weeks ago. He has finished hla
course In the electrical school at
Mar- Wand with a rating of second
clsss electrician.
WINDOW GLASS - We sell window
glass and will replace your broken
windows reasonably Ttowbrldie Cab
met works
Use Mali Tribune Want Ada.
a
y
Chevrolet
?' JINGLES
Copyrighted
Remember, there's an acci
dent waiting for you,
If you don't dfive the way
you ought to! '
Your Chevrolet has eighty
. horses under its hood
Plenty of speed and power
when used for your good.
Engineered by the best
brains in the "game."
But NOT for you to use to
kill and maim,
A thing of beauty, utility
and joy
But SHOULDN'T be used as
a reckless toy!
Chevy M. Hurd
Rogue River Chevrolet
Main and Blversld
Service Dept. 3t No. Blversld
I'sed Car Lot Riverside st (tb
-to""-! as U
"t Tan "ol
-eed
111
f till
in
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