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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1938)
PAGE SIX MTCDFORD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFOTtO, OREGON. THURSDAY. .TULT 28. 1938. .Tribune "KvrryoM t tfiiulhera Orri Hwd tftf Mull rrlhan." Dally Eirepl Saturday. UKIiVliRD PRINTING CO ll-tf-li N Kir St. Phone I HUHER'l W HUHk BVIIlor BHNBH1 R aiUflTRAK Uanagai Ao (n1apri1ant Noapapr Bnttrsd wonim-claM nttti at Mid ford, OrnRou. undai Act at Maroh I. ITI BUUdCKIPI ION RATES Alvanr' Dally, on trwr wu Dally. l month! 1" Dally in month . . IC By Carriar. to Advance U art ford. Aih land, fackanitvlll. OlitirH Point Phoenix, raient, OoM HU1 anrt op highway! Hail, am vaar .......... 11.0 Dall. cli month 1. 1ft Daily on month All itrmi eaah In a4ra.BC. OfflrlHl lpei ol th City ol Mwlfnrd Of OH I I'uprt tt larkMto Uouaty U KM II EH OF I'll ft AftflOriAIBU I' K Kith Itctwtrlna Kull l,Md Wlrr ttorvlr. rh Aociail Prae i sctuil u titled o ih on foi publication of all new 'Uapaiche cretHlefl to It or other erlae rodltd to ihl pa par. and I(m If tha ioca,i neera puhllahart haraln. All right for publication nf pclai 4tapich haraln ere ln reaere1. UKMHCH UP UNITED I'RBHS afRUMKH Of AUDI I BURBA M H iTIRl'III.ATtONfl O'flcea to Niw lfork. Ohicego, Datrolt, San Francisco, Lna Angelea, Seattle, for tl an 4. St. Louia. Atlanta, Vancouver, B C. Member. OrpVihrTNewsoaoei 1 1 AUodetio! Ye Smudge Pot lly Arthur Perry. A number of politically-minded round her declare they are 'lib erals.' without knowing what It means, either. a In the excitement of the thundet and shower Wed. pm., one of the Older Olrla picked up a pine-slwd electric fan, In mistake for the tele phone. She hasn't been so scarrd alnoe the last time she saw a mouse. "Invariably s bow-legged person Is courageous." declared a psychol ogist. Courageous or Just desper ate? (Oakland (Calif.) Tribune., Bowlegs nro the worat part of valor a Mr. Hoover announces he will make 'a series of speeches In the midwest, In which he will take apart the plans and policies of Mr. Roosevelt. Every time enthusiasm for republicanism starts to revive. Mr. Hoover can be depended upon to deliver a highly logical, but dampening speech. Even those who vote for Mr. Hoover, be lieve the time haa come, for him to button up his kisser. a a An electrical storm threatened, but outside of considerable grumbling among the clouds to the westward all went well yesterday. The typhoon, J. Kort Hall feared would hit his orchard did not materialize. The Oregon democracy Is still beg ging for harmony in the rank, and. not getting It. Meetings to this ond are being held throughout the state. with duperat smearing of the soft soap, by the candidates most con fer ned. In due course of time, there will be a taffy-pull In these parts. "The delegate took several quick steps toward the two committee mem bers from Alabama and they ad vanced to meet him. The delegate then turned and walked away." (Press dispatch.) Hold me and my coat, ltm. The rural womenfolks are canning fruit and vegetables, might and main, these days against the coming of winter. It Is a sight to see the well filled shelves, and, then listen to the gent who will deplete them, declare If the chipmunks and the manea nlta berries hold out. he will la till spring. NOTHING IN NAMES (Vrrka (Cnllf.) Journal.) , "Mr. Ell Kelley, a well-known Humbug miner, made a trip to Yreka lut evening for supplies. On Saturday evening, Green horn Orange No. 384 held their rrgxilar meeting with Master Fred Caldwell presiding. The regular bUAlnras was taken care of with one member being reinstated." a No. 7 In the Clue us Who content baffles. Nobody la enough of a O man to find out who he la. a SIIKKI'MKHDEH "His only companion are the j ever-patient burro, and the ever-! faithful collie; the only sound that greeta hta ears Is the bleating of tne sncep by day and the mournful wall of the coyote. In his humble, unobtrusive way. he helps to feed the hungry, not with some patent breakfast food of screenings and sawdust, but with nature's mont nourishing and Un der morsel, the spring lamb. He helps to clothe the naked, not with shod dy, but with virgin wool. Aye. and I Imagine he would also give drink to the needy. If one were to meet up with him on the range, when he la carrying anything on the hip. And when the cruel bullet of the cowardly bandit lays him low, the tribute that is paid to him, the benediction that is pronounced upon him, the dirge that la sung for him, the epitaph that la written for him. Is. "It's a good thing It was only a sheep herder.' ( Angora Journal) Australia hi square mile. .B Inhabltanta per The iiwta.'n river la th, moat; Important commercial waterway on the Atlantle coa.t. MEDFO AilTerilaln itpri.t,tlvei Good for Bennett! TPHE bumptious J. E. Bennett, city commissioner of Portland has never appealed to this column. We have often wondered how he could appeal to any community, sufficiently to secure and retain publio office. But in his action against the street carnivals now operating along the "navy-week" waterfront, the commissioner is dead right, and we hope he wins his For these street carnivals demoralizing rackets, as civilized community, as the peep show and the honkey tonk. Like the old time, scalping Indian, there is no such thing as a "GOOD" one. In the judgment of this column street carnivals should be driven out of the Commissioner Bennett may but more power to him in his We only wish there were with his point of view, courage and persistence. As the Twig Is Bent QPEAKIXG of bumptiousness, who can't "understand" reading our "column left" Kintner. These two gentlemen the head, as far as explaining bow wealthy and aristocratic family form, and has spent practically to which he belongs. T goesback to President Roosevelt's youth, his school and college days. Franklin D., as a boy, first was what was then generally known as "fresh", not a very serious defect as life goes, but regarded in certain under graduate circles, in that unsophisticated period, as fatal, at least fatal from the social standpoint. The now boy at school, the Freshman at college, was sup' posed to 'exhibit n certain humility, particularly as far as upper classmen were concerned, and to observe certain respectable undergraduate traditions, in other words to CONFORM. Failure to do this was severely frowned upon and called forth certain penalties. Franklin D., needless to say, refused to conform, went on his self confident, self, assertive way, serenely and literally tweeked his nose at the raised eyebrows from the Gold Coast and the Back Bay. AS a ve a result both at Groton and elt from the Hyde Park became relatively speaking a social outcast. Oh he made plenty of clubs, of course, as a young man 'in his position was bound to do, and was granted certain undergraduate honors he earned. But the real "Brahmins" at Cambridge, Boston and Groton turned him down, and kept him down. The one club a Roose velt, should make, at Havard and Roosevelts up to that time always had, would, for example, have none of him. This experience undoubtedly made a deep impression upou Franklin D. as a young man, and may even have been a deter mining factor in determining the DIRECTION of his later political career. At any rate it made him rather contemptuous of the ruling class in ultra-conservative and ness, bigotry and smugness, and youthful Lincoln was reported first slave market: If I over get a chance to I. am going to hit it hard 1" The experience also reveals vcntionality and democracy of A less adventurous, independent and a weaker type would have quickly sensed what was bridge, and conforming, from would have gono through life, from the standpoint of real accomplishment, a washout and a false alarm. Not so Franklin D. A S far as acute character analysis is concerned, Messrs. Alsop and Kintner, have thus far made a far more valuable contribution, than the President's Emil Ludwig. Are We Kidding Ourselves? XlfK have feared it for some TT convinced the press reports be relied upon, at least the note sound, as far as the progress of All these suggestions that while the Japs are going forward here and there, the victories secured are Phyrrio ones, and they arc hound to be overwhelmed by we have concluded should be "wishful thinking." yilLS view is sustained by a reliable' and impartial source, that to date the Japanese armies have captured eight provincial capitals; control 12 large Chinese provinces, and have, in one year, conquered an area TWICE the size of France and Germany combined! The same source maintains that when Hankow falls and at the present time it looks to be only a matter of a few weeks, perhaps days, the present Chinese government, regardless of what Chiang Kai-shek, does or does not do, will go with it. C'f course at this distance one can't be dogmatic about such tilings. And regardless of the source, reports regarding the future may be entirely unwarranted. Hut this much is certain: While since the war started the press reports have all been to the effect that Japan has bitten off more thau she can chew, an objective analysis of the results achieved, do not sustain i6 this view, in fant they sustain the exaot contrary. Namely that Japan is, and has been winning, all along the line, ami unless there is a revolution at home, or some nation life,, ;ussi jiMS china, the eomiuost of t'hina bv Japan appears .. almost certain in a comparatively short time I single-handed battle. are nothing more than cheap and out-dated in any self respective and country, and made to stay out. be a wind bag and a show off, latest endeavor. more public officials in the state we trust those good people Franklin D. Roosevelt, have been commentators, Messrs. Alsop and other day hit the nail upon the it is that the scion of a very in this country, refused to con his entire life fighting the class at Groton and then at Harvard, Harvard, this "fresh" Roose- branch, was unpopular, in fact plutocratic East, their narrow he may oven have said as the to have said after seeing his hit this system, by the eternal, the essential sturdiness, uneon- the ?ooscvolt character. expected at Groton and Cam the standpoint of self interest as just another "club man", much publicized biographer time. Now we are pretty well from the war in China can't of optimism they constantly the Chinese cause is concerned. the Chinese masses in the end, placed under the heading of report we have received from a Personal Health Service By William Brady, M P. signed inter, pertaining lo personal health ind hygiene, not la disease diagnosis or treatment, nlll be answered by Dr. Itrncly If a .tamped self addressed envelope I. enticed. Letter, ahould be brief and written in Ink. Owing to the large number of letter! received only a few con be amwered. No reply can be made to querlea nut conforming to Instruction.. Address Or. William Brady, 26S El famine), ueverly Hills, Calif. CO AND HKA Can't take tr.e space here to dis cuss the question of contamination or pollution of air with the color less, odorless but deadly carbon mon oxide ga and Its effects on health That la discuss ed In some detail In the booklet "How to Brea the." For a copy send twenty cents coin and stamped envelope .bearing your ad dress. Suffice tc say here that carbon monoxtds la not a true poison It does not Injure the cells or tissues of the body: all of Its ef fects are due to anoxia absence of oxygen, which tr.e carbon monoxide crowds out of the blood and tissues. It must be remembered that some cells cannot survive deprivation of oxygen for even a few seconds. The after-effects of gassing with CO In cases where recovery occurs are due entirely to the damage or destruction of some of the cells, as In the cen tral nervous system, which can nev er be replaced or renewed. Angina pectoris frequently occurs In pernicious anemia, and today the Immediate cause of the attack Is well recognized as anoxia or anox emia. Clinically one of the best emergency remedies for angina pec toris, whether the patient also has pernicious anemia or not. Is oxygen. This may be administered by Inha lation If the attack does not too greatly restrict the breathing; 'or It may be Injected subcutaneously in the flank or under the breast- pure oxygen gas bo Injected Is quickly ab sorbed Into the blood and may give far better results In desperate cases than mere Inhalation. Angina pectoris occurlng In case3 , of pernicious anemia has been re ported In numerous cases unaccom panied with any evident sclerosis or disease of the coronary arteries whldt makes it the more certain thai the attack Is due to anoxia of the myocardium lack of oxygen in the muscle of the heart wall. Drs. Harvey Beck and Oeorge Suter recently reported five coses of an gina pectoris due to CO anoxia. One was that of a farmer and cattle deal er aged 30 years, whose home was heated by burning gas from his own gas well. Gas escaped from a defective heater In his bedroom. When the doctor ordered t):at windows be kept open for protection, and the burner Man About Manhattan By OfcOKOfc lUCKtB NEW YORK. Sometimes In this town you sit down with people and never know that you are gazing upon a prelude to tragedy. You r.ea them casually. you dismiss them from your mind, and perhaps you never think of them again un less, as happen ed to me, yo'i notice a little paragraph In '.he paper next day. This by no means Is an un usual happening In New York. It has happened be fore and will GEORGE IUCKR happen again, so not as news, but as unfortunately hap- I relay It now. something that pens to bo a part of life In this snd any other large metropolitan center. I suppose. There Is a pleasant little bar on a side street on the east side of town. It is a small bar but it is cozy and people like to go there fjr a oulet bit of refreshment befor? wandering off to bed. One night last week I wandered in there with Jimmy Walllngton. the radio announcer who was In New York for a bit of a vacation. It was his last night In the city. As we sat down we noticed a woman at the bar. I imagine she was 0. She was the only girl In the place. We sat and talked for awhile and then a man came In by himself The woman looked up. She looked away quickly and got up and walked down to the end of the bar snd whispered something to the bar tender. The man. meanwhile, order ed a drink. He shot a furtive glance at the woman. He followed this with a brief, though sweeping glance. as If he were "taking In' the pliec He wanted to see who was there. Hp may have been looking for doors arid exits. Meanwhlte the bar captain was mumbling something into a tele phone. Then, casually enough, he sauntered down to where the strang er stood. Terhaps he mixed him a drink; I don't recall. But I remember this: In sbout two minutes two detectives walked into the bar. They walked over to the woman, spoke to her, and Ml three walked out together. Later, we learned that she was afraid of this man. the stranger, for at one time he used to be her hus band. The cops wanted to take hr to the station house, so that nothing would happen to her, but she said she was all rleht now. She woxitd " So they left her nione una ir wrnt nemo aj iipr elf. And that about all anyone- know, of the ntnry. The trmtrie facta of B,1 ,h n" r- whrn 1 Jimmy Waliinston a!n. he ,:d: Remember la.t ntphtf Bemem- RT DISEASE adjusted and proper pipe connecting with the flue Installed to carry pro ducts of combustion out of the house, the patient made a remarkably complete recovery cerebral as well as heart symptoms clearing up com pletely. ' A toll bridge operator had suffer ed from CO anoxia for several years and recently heart attacks. Some 18. 000 autos Idled engines while paus ing at his window to pay toll dally. Vacations spent away from exposure to carbon monoxide brought relief from the heart attacks. Chemical testa of U.e blood show how much carbon monoxide satura tion there may be. The toll bridge man when on duty showed a mon oxide saturation of 37 per cent. QUESTIONS 8i ANSWERS The Test of the Pudding A clipping from your column says that "chronic arsenic poisoning may be a cause of Raynaud's disease, and the use of sodium hyposulphite (thlosulpi ate) as a remedy to aid excretion of the arsenic has brought much relief in some cases." Please give further Information. (M. T.) , Answer First, It Is well to have some evidence or at least a reasonable suspicion that you have been exposed to arsenic. Then the proof of the pudding Is simple take thirty grains of sodium thlosulphate, formerly call ed r.yposulphlte of soda (photograph er's hypo) in sweetened water flavor ed with fruit Juice once dally, after foor. for a month. If you experience definite Improvement, rest a monjth. and then another course of It. Mosquito Repellent Please give the recipe for mosquito dope you recommended some years ago. We used It with much satlsfac-; tlon on vacation. (R. S.) I Answer One-half ounce oil of clt- I ronella (tablespoonful); two tea- spoonfuls spirits of camphor: two teaspoonf u Is cedar wood oil; enugh white petrolatum to make two ounces of salve. Melt the petrolatum, then add other three Ingredients and stir well. Put In Jar and cool rapidly by standing In a closed Jar In cold wat er. Apply a little to exposed skin when needed. Use as brilliantlne on hair If you do not wish to apply lc to face. One application repels the varmints for hours. Copyright 1938, John P. Dllle Co. lid Note: Persons wishing to cummiinlratp n-llh Or. Rradf should send letter direct to Or vYUMnm Brady. M ().. 265 El Cain I no. Beverl Hills, Calif. ber that girl at the bar? And the cops?" "I saw a paragraph In the paper about a man and a woman being Injured In a fight. Were they the ones?" "That's right." replied Walllngton, "but that paragraph didn't go far enough. They are dead. Both of them were, killed with an Icepick." And that's the way It happens. You walk Into a place, you see people who mean nothing at ail to you or to anyono you know, and you walk out again, little realizing that their anonymity Is being fash ioned into headlines for tomorrow. Auto's Rental $1,300 CLEVELAND (UP) How to collect the accumulated rental, about $1,200, on a car iney nired out a year ago is tne problem of officials of a drive n-youTseii company here. The car. never returned, was found recently, and so was the man who rented It In the Indiana state penitentiary. 4 u Cameras Trup Drivers LONDON (UP) Cameras are being used by police forces in northern England to gather evidence against motorists who break the law. Mobile squads of Chesterfield police have had cameras fitted into the wind screen so that photographs may be tanen without stopping the cars, Radio How Divorce MIAMI, Fla. (UP) John M. Loftln liked the radio playing softly. His wife, Deborah, liked it loud and blar ing. He removed a tube so the noise wouldn't be so loud. She smashed the radio. Loftln was granted a divorce. f 4u t S BUCHAREST. BOUND flying are from Rumania, Capt Alex Papana (above) hopes to make solo flight from Floyd Ben Ttt Meld lo Bucharest In "lev in 30 hours." His low-winced i lane Is named "Tralavi Re rcle." or "Long Live the Ring. I J I , W Si ."v; Comment on the Days News By FRANK JENKINS HART mountain again, where the Order of the Antelope Is gatt erlng for Its seventh annual conclave (or whatever you call an affair of this sort; "conclave" Is at least a word that rolls Juclly under the tongue.) From Seattle to Loa Angeles, lov ers of the wide spaces and the far horizons are heading In to this shrine In the desert and slapping each qther on ti:e back and greeting each other In terms that without the Western smile and the Western spirit would be fighting words. Out In the sage brush, converging dust clouds herald other arrivals. THE Order of the Antelope Is a brotherhood like unto none other. Pounded In 1933 by the 30-30 club and the chamber of commerce of Lakevlew for the purpose of building sentiment for the Hart mountain an telope reserve, It has grown and flourished without plowing of the soil or watering of the roots. Like an orchid, It takes Its sustenance from the air In this case, the tangy atr of the short, sage country. . The antelope reserve Is now a real Ity 373,000 acres of solid reality. Ho strings remain to be pulled. No tasks remain to be done. But still, on or about the third Sunday In June, (this year, because of the late, wet spring, It was postponed to the third Sunday in July) plumes of dust be gin to appear In the desert, all point ing toward Hart mountain. The Order of the Antelope Just wouldn't die when Its Job was done W HY Is It that civilized men will their mattresses and springs for the dust and the heat and the ticks and the mosquitoes and the dog-i'alr In the grass not only that, but will look forward yearningly to It for months on end? And why, upon arriving at their dusty destination, do they regard these things NOT as inflictions of the flesh but as a little corner of heaven dropped down from the skies? And why do Wiey regard the rump led, chln-stubbled, altogether disrep utable looking Individuals githeren around them as a little group of God's choicest children? YF you can answer these rambling A and more or less Incoherent ques tions, It will be evidence that you understand why a certain kind of men Is a certain kind of men. You will also be able to under stand why the Order of the Ante lope, with Us Job all done. Just cant be stopped, but goes galloping on Into the future, wltn Its head up and Its tall In the air. Tenth Woman Dies Of Radium Poison OTTAWA. 111., July 28. -(UP) Mrs. Catherine Donohue died today In the gray cottage where since 1034 she dad awaited the destruction oy radium poisoning she knew was In evitable. She was the 10th of the "doomed women of Ottawa" to die. Eleven re mained. Leonard Orossman, the attorney who led her fight for the compensa tion she never received said he would demand that the company wiUch once employed her to paint lumin ous dials on clock faces, be held re sponsible for "murder by radium." Claire Trevor Is " Bride Of Producer HOLLYWOOD, July 38. (UP) Claire Trevor, blonde screen charmer became the bride of Clark Andrews, radio producer, in a single-ring cere mony at All Salsts' church in Bev erly Hills last night. 4 Ameche Recovers AMSTERDAM. July 38. -(UP) Don Ameche, Hollywood actor, today left a Utrecht nursing home where he underwent an appendectomy and departed wli his wife by plane for Paris. Weather Northern California : Fair tonight and Friday, but fog on coast; no chsnge In temperature; gentle north- west wind off coast. Oregon: Generally fair tonight and Friday with fogs on coast and pre ceded by local thunderstorms over mountains of east portion; slightly cooler in northeast portion tonight; moderate northwest wind off coast. Certainly Mothers Prefer to Give RICHER, MORE NOURISHING "GOLDEN GUERNSEY" Premium Milk to their children . . . MORE rich, yellow cream spells MORE energy for growing kid lies . . . Wingi Cloverhill Golden Guernsey Dairv Phone ,123-R-l The Capital Parade (Continued Irom Page On. ) Postmaster-General James A, Farley and the leaders of the Democratic organizations in New York have re peatedly and purposefully snubbed the Labor party. He argues that the Labor party must teach the Demo crats a lesson and how better than by helping to elect a Republican governor? He holds out great hopes of rewards from the Republicans, in congresslonsl seats, Judgeships and the like. Before Dublnsky can carry out his daring project, several obstacles must be surmounted. While the Labor party's Hlllman wing was willing to flout the Democrats In New York City, It would certainly be far more reluctant to do so In the state. And Mayor F. H. LaOuardla, the strongest Individual In the Labor party, loves Tom Dewey Just a little leas than he loves Governor Herbert H. Lehman He would be likely to leave tht res ervation rather noisily. Then, too, there Is the problem of the upstate Republicans. Kenneth Simpson, the New York City leader, has always had the shrewd vision to play up to the Labor party. But the Republicans upstate still flounder in a morass of dank stupidity. They regard the Labor party people as untouchable radicals, and might well prefer defeat to victory with such help. Nevertheless, the pattern Is ther. The organization Democrats, under Jim Farley, have kicked the Labor party around. Once dependable al lies, the Labor party leaders are nov threatening desertion. If they desert, the Democrats will probably be beat en In November. The truth is. It's aoout time for the organization Democrats to tak stock of their position. In their struggle to prevent the president from putting New Dealers In comnl of their party, they have Ignored all sorts of danger signals. Take the problem of the A. F. of L. Because of the A. F. of L. has op posed aggressively New Dealism. C.I O. -sympathizing Democrats in the primaries, the .organization leaders assume the A. F. of L. Is with them Actually, however. Representative Bruoe Barton and one or two other Republicans have been hob-nobbtn? assiduously with A. F. of L. President William Green. They have whispered that the Republicans would love to have the A. F. of L. on their side again. And Bill Green has not been inattentive. Before the organization Democrats pass sentence of exile on their New Deal friends, they will do well r,o ask, "Just who will we have With us?" H int I ncendiarism In Burning of Dock VANCOUVER, B. C, July 28. fUPt Police today investigated the possibil ity Incendiarism was responsible for destruction by fire Wednesday after noon or tne Canadian Pacific Steam- I ship company's pier D at a loss es timated at $3,000,000. Officers said their Investigation was routine. Dut admitted It was prompt ed by the report of Constable G. H. Lake that the blaze started at an un frequented part of the dock. Lake. who turned In the alarm, said smoke came from beneath Oie pier and had an oily smell. Canadian Pacific officials said the floar of the dock had been thorough ly hosed with water three hours be fore the fire broke out. Death By Typhoid Rare Occurrence CHICAGO, July 28. (UP) Less than one person In 100.000 died of typhoid fever In 1837. the Journal of the American Medical association re ported today In publishing results of a survey In 78 major cities. rwo hundred and elghtv Dersons died of typhoid In the 78 cities In which data were available, the Journal said, representing per 100,000 a deatn rate of 0.78 per cent. The 1936 death total was 336. 4 KLAMATH SCHOOL BOARD LANNING CONSTRUCTION KLAMATH PALLS, July 28. OP) Preliminary plans for a M73.000 con struction program to relieve over crowded conditions In some sections of the county were drafted Tuesdpy by the Klamath county unit school board. A 8150.000 bond Issue and a 8123.- 000 PWA grant were considered as means of financing the program. Dss Mall Tribune Want Ada M7 FOR SAVHKfGS Individual accounts up to lV000 arc insured hv the Federal Snvintrs and Loan Insurance Corpo ration JACKSON FEDERAL Savings & Loan Association 126 East Flight o Time Med ford and Jackson County history from tre files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 2U years fEO. TEN VEAKS AGO TODAV July 28, 1038 (It was Saturday) Auto caravan bearing Herbert Hoo ver for fishing trip on Rogue speeds through redwoods. State convention of the American Legion to open here Thursday. Hassan Muhammed and Bull Mon tana to meet In grudge match at the Armory. Prospects bright Col. Lindbergh will fly over city next Thursday, on hop south. Babe Ruth hits 41st homer of sea son. Klan starts campaign to defeat Al Smith for president. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY . July lifl. 1018 . (It was Sunday) Germans fall to halt Allied drive on Western Front, snd great victory predicted ere Christmas. Girl Hikers here on way from Se attle to San Francisco. Report Med ford soldiers stationed at Fort Stevens will depart for France next week. 1 Wheat threshers asked to file ports with county agent. Dr. E. H. Porter seriously 111, due to Infection from a small scratch. SLASHED! Coats snd Suits cut to $10 96 up. Ethelwyn B. Hoffmann. Use Mall Tribune Want Ads Chevrolet JINGLES Copyrighted They predict a shortage of good used cars . . . They mean 'OK Guaranteed' ones, just like ours! They're probably right fewer NEW ones are sold. Buyers have to get cars a year or two old. When this occurs, the law of supply and demand, Will boost the price of all cars on hand ! So NOW'S the time if you need a better bus To drop in and trade the old one to us ! Cbevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolel Main and Riverside Service Depl 33 No Riverside Used Car Lot Riverside at Ith Comfort HOTEL CLARK in Downtown LOS 'ANGELES Convenience u inothei of fering ol thu hotel Whether on ouslnes. ol pleasure bent, the Hotel Cldrt make, an Ideal "base ol operations.' as well w a restful 'blllef at the end of the day. "campaign" Oood rood naturally And modorata chimes u well u tor room accommodations (jive flnsj significance to assuring word COMFORT Slnile Irom 3 5(1 Uouhle from S3.50 Fifth and Hill P. O B MOHRISS. Manager. ROOMS OA I lls 555 YOUR COUNTY Main New T I