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