PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MATL TRIBUNE. afEDFORD. OftEGpy. TUESDAY. JULY 26. 1938.
CORRIGAN TO TAKE
BEST JOB OFFERED
E
Wrong Way Flier Changes
Mind About Money-Mak
Ing Plans Two Weeks
Tour Before Business
LONDON, July S8. JF Douglas
O. Corrlgnn apparently has changed
his mind about money-malting oners
from the United States.
"Wlien I get back," the young
tranaatlantlo filer aald today, "I am
going to take the beat Job offered
movlea, vaudeville, newspapers, anything."
But he la planning a two weeka'
tour first.
"There win be a. couple of daya In
New York," he aald. "Two daya, be
cause the boys In Brooklyn seem to
want to have a parade aa well aa the
guys In New York: then Boston, then
down south to Baltimore, Philadel
phia and Washington."
He plana also to visit Fort Worth
San Antonio ("where I was atatloned
slv ycara"), Norfolk, Virginia ("If I
can make It"). Oalveaton ("where I
was bom"), the Loe Angeles, San
Pranclsco and "on my way back" Bt.
Louis ("where my plane was built").
.Corrlgan aald he would attend the
Cleveland air races, but not aa a com
petitor.
"No, air," he maintained. "I might
aim at the equator end hit the pole.
Thla He aald with a grin and a ref
erence to hie flight last week from
New York to Dublin which, he as
serted, started out to be a Journey
from New York to California.
Corrlgan waa entertained at lunch
eon by the London Airplane club.
During the afternoon Col. M. F.
Bcanlon, air attache at the United
State embassy, took him on a. tour
of British airplane planta.
Tomorrow Corrlgan will go to Ken
sington musoum to flee., the plane
which Use Wright brothers first flew
at Klttyi'.awk. N. C. He will return
to Dublin tomorrow afternoon.
U.S.1L1ILD
Festival Secretary SHAKESPEARE FETE
SALES CAMPAIGN
GETS GOOD START
Yen -
7
l
V
Si
In rharge of the Mcrlforil of fin of flic Orppon Hhakpspcarcim Festival
association Is (J onion tfavis of Boston, .Mnnii. Ilp ts one of the ninny
out-of-ntatft plnyrrs Inking pnrt In this vrar's wrics of plays scliPilulPd
for August R to 13 In (lie Kllrabct Itan thratrr, Ashland. Imvls Is spph
hero In his rolr of Horatio In Hn inlet. Thr festival office here Is room
212 In (he Medrord ('enter bulliltng and Information reganling Me
Shakespearran fete may be obtained there. The telephone Is 438.
PARKER DEVELOPS
MANILA (UP) Construction of a
$441,000 re side nee -office building for
the U. 8. high commissioner of the
Philippines will begin soon.
A call haa nljtb been luued for bids
on construction of a commissioner's
residence In Bngulo, the Philippine
"mountuln cRpltal" In north central
Luzon lftlnnd. Tills building Is ex
pected to cost taoo.ooo.
The Manila building, three stories
high, will be constructed on 17 acres
of land reclaimed from Manila bay
alongside the city's most beautiful
thoroughfare, palm - lined Dewey
Boulevard.
High Commissioner Paul V. McNutt
has been living In rented houses and
working In a rented office In the Elks
club. One of his successors will
probably, be the first to use the new
buildings.
Congressional appropriation of
760,000 for the two buildings brought
cries of "extravagance" from foes of
Commissioner McNutt and the ad
ministration In spite of Sen. Sherman
Mlnton's explanations McNutt neith
er proposed nor will use the build
ings. Congressmen supporting the con
struction pointed out the Manila
building will Include 30 residential
rooms and 37 rooms In which the
commissioner and his staff will work.
When the Philippines become In
dependent, presumably July 4, 1948,
the building will become a legation
for uho by the United States minister
to the Insular republic.
It is expected to be completed
about Jan. 1, 1840.
Burlier Itrseiits Argument
' ALEXANDRIA. Egypt (UP) Pali my
Mohamed Ibrahim haa Just lenrntd
that It Is better not to argue with
a barber He went to one for a hair
cut and argued over the way his
hair had been cut. Fahmy Is now
In the hospital with half a dozen
razor wounds in the stomach and
the barber is In prison.
By crossing the New Oregon one-
crop strawberry with the Improved
everlasting Mastodon, Archie Parker
of Central Point claims he haa de
veloped a rapid-growing, henvy-bear-
lng berry plant. Mr. Parker said he
would name the strawberry "Oregon's
Magic Wand."
"I crossed the two plants by hand
pollinlzatlon," Mr. Parker stated. "I
have about 100 plants which will
produce many berries and sturdy
runners. The runner plants are pro
ducing fine, largo berries even be
fore the plant has time to take root.
On one mother plant, not Including
the runners, I counted 141 berries."
One of the planta may bo seen by
anyone Interested, at the Jackson
County Chamber of Commerce.
Carroll Volume prized
AUSTIN, Tex. (UP) One of the
most prized volumes In the Stark
library at the University of Toxiwt is
the work of a celebrated English
mathematician, but It doesn't deal
with figures. It Is a facsimile of the
manuscript of "Alice Underground,"
first version of Lewis Carroll's "Allen
in Wonderland."
Mr, and Mrs. John Wlnterhalder
and children have returned from
Sacramento where they attended fu
neral service for Mrs, Wlnterhalder's
brother. Harland H. Ferguson, 28.
who passed away In that city July
21. He had been 111 with heart dis
ease. Mr. Ferguson had lived In Medford
during his early boyhood, but had
since resided In Sacramento where
ho was employed by Safeway Stores,
That the Oregon Shakespearean
Festival membership campaign this
year will top last year's drive by
a wide margin was Indicated today
when first reports from committee
workers showed that In the first day
of the campaign more than half as
many memberships were sold as in
the entire week's drive last season,
Mrs. H. Chandler Egan, chairman
of the Medford membership com
mittee, and Mrs H. M. Schilling,
chslrman of the Ashland group, were
enthusiastic today over the prospects,
Ashland's drive got under way last
week while Medford's started Mon
day, but both groups were confident
of the success of the campaign.
An Imposing list of members was
placed on the Medford roster yes
terday. The list Included Mr. and
Mrs. Mark A. Ooldy, Dr. and Mrs.
Oharles W. Lemery, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank J. Newman, Heath's Drug
store, Seth M. Bullls, Jr., Miss Elea
nor Ames. Mr. and Mrs. Porter J.
Neff, Miss Oertrude Butler. Mr. and
Mrs. D. Ford McCormick. Reinhart 6i
Barker, Mr. and Mrs. Melvln N. Ho
gsn. Mr. and Mrs. Elno Hemmtla,
Mrs. H. D, McCaskey, Mr. and Mrs.
George Robertson.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon D. Brophy,
Mrs. Elizabeth Bowerman, Mr. and
Mrs. Reginald H. Parsons, Mr. and
Mrs. David Rosenberg. A. 8. Rosen
bourn. Mrs. Ralston W. Sleeter, Capt.
and Mrs. C. L. Pierce. Mr. and Mrs.
Richard W. Fry. Glen Huber, Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Thorndike, Mrs. H.
Chandler Egan. Gordon Voorhles,
Rolland Merrifleld. Miss Louis Lee
and Miss Dorothy Lee.
A number of other Medford mem
berships had not been turned in
by the committee workers and will
be announced later.
Additions to the Ashlsnd list were
announced today by Mrs. Schilling.
The new list includes:
Mr. and Mrs. Chester H Putney.
Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Carter, Mr. and
Mrs. Orson F. Carson. Dr. and Mrs.
Walter Rdford. Mrs. Roberta Evert-
son, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Buehllng,
Miss Madge Marean. Mr. William B.
Allen. j
Mrs. Mary A. Harklns, Dr. and ;
Mrs. Ernest A. Woods. Dr. and Mrs.
Marcus B. Woods, Dr. and Mrs.
Harvey A. Woods. Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Van Dyke, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Gilbert, Mr. and Mrs. Hor
ace Badger, Hardy's Cash Hardware.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Knox, Plaza
Cafe, Fortmlller's Department Store,
and Jackson's Cafe.
Oregon Teacher
Victim Of Cupid
While Traveling
DULUTH. Minn., July 26 (AP)
A Pacific coast school teacher
and a youn physician from De
troit culminated an acquaintance
ship as cross-country travelers
yesterday with their marriage In
a tourist bureau.
Mlas Elda Mae Reese, teacher In
the Seaside, Ore., public schools,
was the bride, and Dr. Alexander
Bradfleld, who recently completed
post-graduate study at the Uni
versity of Pennsylvania medical
school, the groom.
The ceremony was performed at
the chamber of commerce visitors
Information bureau by Dr. New
ton E. Mats, pastor of the First
Methodist church.
STOCK EXCHANGE
HEAD SAYS BABS
Truck on 3d Floor
STILLWATER, Oklo. (UP) A two
ton truck atop the third floor of a
partly completed engineering build
ing on Oklahoma A. ft M. college
campus brought so many inquiries
that explanation of its presence was
published. The truck was placed on
the building to power derricks, pul
leys and cables used to put .steel
girders weighing as much as eight
tons In place.
Really Runs Errands
CARLYLB, Sosk. (UP) Jim Maxle,
Cree Indian of the White Bear reserve
near here and a champion long dis
tance runner, combines marital devo
tion with exercise. His wife wanted
a pair of stockings. Maxle -ran the
7i miles to town in 40 minutes and
bought the stockings.
Played Over World
COLUMBUS. O. (UPP) Raymond
Boothe, guard at Ohio state penl-j
tentlory, has tooted a .slide trombone
In 38 nations on the globe. In early
life he Joined the navy and saw ths
world as a bandsman.
Martin Views Five And Ten
Heiress As Bad Influence
On Economic System
Rich Girls Given Panning
By t.TOIA OKAY RHAW
(A, P. Feature Writer.)
NEW YORK. William McChesney
Martin, Jr., the 31-year-old president
of the New York stock exchange, sax
down In his guarded, alr-condltloned
office, hunched his knees against the
desk, and confessed to a weakness
for the simple life.
"I haven't any expensive habits,"
he said. (He neither smokes nor
drinks; doesn't keep a car in New
York.) "I like to go to the theater,
but I go by myself and usually sit
in the balcony. I used to play ten
nis three or four times a week at
Forest Hills. Lately I've been too
busy." I
Martin, the first paid president n'j
the exchange, gets $48,000 a year.
A fiend for work, he doesn't act
like a go-getter. He moves slowly,
speaks slowly, smiles often br.t
slowly. His clothes are commonplace.
A "Regretful" Bachelor.
Social life doesn't Interest him.
but he's being asked around quite
a bit, now that he's in the limelight.
Says he's a "regretful" bachelcr.
doesn't look regretful.
He did say. "I'd like to travel every
day of my life."
At that. ha' dons a pretty good
Job of touring tha United States
has been In every stats out nonas
Last March ha went on a Mediter
ranean cruise. He had been putting
in 20-hour work days helping draft
the exchange's new constitution, he
said; so after it wee over, he went
aboard ship and' spent the first three
days sleeping.
Kept to Himself.
"I didn't speak to anybody for
seven days," he reflected. "I at at
a table my myself. X was pretty
sick of talking to people by then.
One night toward the end of the
'cruise, I asked a girl to dance, then
couldn't get away until 1:30. I was
completely worn down."
It was his second trip abroad. In
1927, after his Junior year at Yale,
he went on a European tour.
Mr. Martin haa never come to con
sider New York home, though he's
been here seven years now ever
since he purchased a membership in
the stock exchange. He lives at the
Yale club, because he likes to think
he's here only temporarily. St, Louis
Is home, but he doesn't get out thnro
more than once a month.
The son of well-to-do parents his
father Is president of the Federal
Reserve bank of St. Louis Mr. Mar
tin says he gives most of his money
away. Sometimes the very rich dis
turb Mr. Martin. -
Rich Girls Disturb Him.
"Barbara Hutton." he aya. "has
done more to destroy American capi
talism than any other individual."
That's pretty heated for an indi
vidual as gentle as Mr. Martin. He
gets cross, too. about rich girls who
take Jobs Just so they can say they're
earning money.
Mr. Martin won't be labeled a lib
eral. Says he's an independent. He
gets annoyed with people who accuse
him of straddling the fence. Though
he tries to be unemotional In his
analysis of economic trends, he says
that doesn't prevent him from hav
ing convictions of his own.
The government, he says, must
lay down the broad general policies
by which the exchange is to func
tion, but the exchange should do
1U own policing Job, and sea ttui
those policies ars carried out.
Only half the age ot most of the
past leaders of the exchange. Mar
tin's In office "as long aa the board
wants me.'
Free LUX
With Your
HOSIERY
Purchases!
Rollins
A popular hose at a pop
ular price! Rollins three,
four and five thread
Silk Hose In all the
wanted Summer shades
and sizes for
PR.
Miss Beatrice Taylor,
Lux Fabric expert, now
In our Hosiery section,
will be glad to explain
to you the best way to
care for your Rollins
Hose, and will give a box
of Lux to every Hosiery
customer.
MANNS
Banker Dies
SHERIDAN, July 28. &) Henry
C, Smith, president of Sheridan's
First National bank since 1925, died
at Portland yesterday. Smith, 30,
wont to Hood River from New York
inc. surviving arc his wile. Elolsc In 1003 and came nPre in 1912 to op-
Dcdgo Ferguson, a daughter, Jonn . erote ft dcpartment store.
Anne: his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. . ,
J. Ferguson, all of Sacramento, and
sister, Anna, of Medford.
Hitch Hikers Safeguarded
OAINSVILLE. Fla. (UP) The Uni
versity of Florida safeguards Its
hltch-hlklng students. Safety zones
have been put Into effect for stu
dents thumbing rides between the
campus and the city.
EMIL'S MARKET
open Mvrnlmjs
Tuck, mitl Wed. Specials
Liver (Beef) Ib. lftr
Uird 2 lbs. inc
Hamburger lb. 10c
Baron (sliced) Ib. Mr
Army Curbs Sports
LONDON (UP) Tho British army,
haa decided to curtail sporting events '
in the future In order to abolish the
"regimental gladiator" and prevent
games from becoming semi -prof es- ,
slonallzcd. The idra. according to
the war office, la to encourage all i
soldiers to take an Interest in sport.
MURPHY'S MART
Will Be Open Every Evening Except Sunday
Wa Will Continue Our sntitlny riming
Specials for Tuesday and Wednesday
Sugar 100 lb. $4.99
Watermelon He lb.
Apricots
Pink Salmon'
Faced
Lugs
Tall
Can
58c
10c
Snow Drop Flour guaranteed 49 lb. $1.19
Tratl. Down Klra
LONDON (UP) Dr. Karl Jordan
famous botanist, onca tracked a fli-a
sojourning on the back of a motw,
from Scotland to Central Europe, ha
revealed at a meeting of tha Lln
nean noclety here. Dr. Jordan's Job
Is to find out where one sub-epecle
meets another.
rVnrtlnn. "Vulgar" In ISM
BARNES VI LLP. o. (UP) Common
fraction are called "vulgar fractions"
In an arithmetic book written by
Alfred Davie, a rural teacher. In
lean. H. E. Davles owns the book
G.B.S. Slowing" Up,
Famed Wit Hushed
On 82nd Birthday
LONDON. July 39. (API
Oeorse Bernard 8haw, S3 yeara
old today, for the first time show
ed some Indication of Blowing up.
The famous wit and writer de
clined to give the world any of
nla enlty advice or even celebrate
his birthday.
lie remained In seclusion at
hi-, country home, ahunnlng the
trlfphone and visitors.
'Why can't they forget about
my birthday?" he asked wearily
when reached by telephone yes
terday. "I shall not have a cake with
BJ candles on It," ha added, "nor
shall I have a party. I wsh people
would .top talking a'wut my
hrthdsv "
COOL OFF
WITH A HEAPING DISH OF REFRESHING
ICE
CREAM!
On a sweltering, sticky day, there's noth
ing quite so cooling and thoroughly re
freshing as ft dish of SNIDER'S ICE
CREAM! . . . Smooth in texture, flavored
JUST RIGHT! If a grand dish for
ALL THE FAMILY ... as dessert and
between meals, Snider ' Ice Cream
ALWAYS scores a hit!
In YOUR Favorite Flavor
Almond Toffee
Hawaiian Delight
Strawberry
Chocolate
Maple Nut
Vanilla
SHERBETS
a-nlrter". sherbets are atatlsnle In lnioit,
Orante and pineapple. . . . ou haien't
ta.ted the IUT unless you've tried
"Snldrr's-
k sour dealer for SMIU'R'S It'E
t'RKVM or get It at our plant 5 North
Hart let t . . . and be sure It's "M1KK'"
SNIDER DAIRY & PRODUCE COMPANY
See the Lux Barbizon Window Display on Central Ave.
Install Your Own
VENETIAN
BLINDS
And Save Almost Half!
The Air Conditioned Store
III V-
Time For
SLACKS
July and August are
play months and play
months mean slack!
Cool, comfortable slacks
of Spun Rayon, Cotton
Tweeds. Palm Springs
Cloth. Twills and Dcnlm.
Colors are Aqua, Malse,
Rust. Blue and Navy.
SIZES 12 TO 20
$ 1 98
SIZES 38 TO 44
$250
Shirts To Match Your
Slacks Or Overalls
$iqo
!
I i WTBffiH T3
Never Before Have Venetian Blinds
of Such Quality Been Sold at This Price
Note These
Window Sizes
When Ordering Orenard
Venetian Blinds, be sure
and have the correct ulre
of Windows to be shaded.
This la very Important m
It helps you greatly In In
stalling your blinds. Hre
sxe the 7 slreA at $3 98
Complete, ready to hung
. . . 23 Inches. 34, 35. 26,
37, 28 and 39.
'1 ill 'IP
OH
Complete
Ready To Hang
Sizes from 30 inches to 36 inches are $4.98
Attractive Cornice Complete with Hardware 29c
These Blinds Exclusive at Mann's
Cool Wash Frocks
For Home, Street or Office
For Summer days we suggest these cool, fast
color wash dresses. Here are Sheers, Voiles and
Prints in gay colorful patterns, stripes and polka
dots trimmed with Crisp Organdie. Sizes 12 to 44.
$198
Fascinating Eyes
and How to Have Them I
Cvi ta..t dictatM that you us rTr makc-tm with
dlsrotten. Hmrr sr autMt you folio the slniDl. atfns
outline by "Kurlash." Consult Kurlssh Rf prrsomstlv
no In our TollHrtu auction irsartllrn th rlclt mat-rlsls
for your particular ryr trpa.
Demonstration All This Week by
Representative of the Kurlash Company
Manns Toiletries Dept.