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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1938)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MATT, TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OKEC,ONT. TVEPyESDAY. AUGUST 10. 1938. MEDFORD, .Tribune "ETmoH IP Huuthrra nreoa BMdi the Mall Mbane." Huhiiincd Br UMimiHn PRINTING OO. II1-SI N ril CX Phone t BUHBfU W RUHU Cflllor. HNB8T ft QIIJITRAf. Mtniger. AH Inr1vn1nl Nawppr. Boirl m moodh-ciiu matter at Had for. Or goo. ondai AO I of Uarab . ISIS aiiHHCRipnoN Rates M MailIn Ad vane: Dally, ona iraar ...M.tMf Dally, all monihi., HI Daily ona month . Carrlar. tn Advanoa Mtilford. Aah land. Jackionvllla. C a n t r a i Point. phtianii. Taiant. QM Hill and Dally, ona raar It. 00 Dally, all months. e... t-H Dallr. ona month All lrmi cash In advaJK. Offlrlnl Papr ol the City of Mrdfftrrf orrirlai PapM nf Jikio Uoontj UKMI1KH Of I MR AtWOriAtKD PHEMH Rerlln Pull liMod Wir Harrlr Tha Auoeialad l'raa la aioluatvaly au tit lad to tha oaa for publication of all nawa dlapatehaa aradiiad to It ot othar wlaa oraditad to thla papar, and alaa tr tha local awi puhllahaif harain. All right for pabllcatton of apaoiat allapatchaa harain ara alao raaarad. MBUBBR OF 1NITRD PRfBHS afRMRHlR OF AODI'I BtJBBAIl ttV !IRlMII,ATI'JNS Advarttalrtf rtpraantw Offlaat in Naw Vork. Cbloago, Pitrolt, flan Pranolaco. Loa Angalaa Baattla, Portland. It Voniw, Atlanta, VsneeuvM. AAo.mkahr OtegblTNwspapei Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. A Rebuke for "Yes" Men ""PHE defeat of Senator Pope in Idaho will be proclaimed at a alap in the face for President Roosevelt. Personal Health Service By William Brady. M P. filvn.fl l.f f.r. n rt a 1 nl n ... MrUin.l hMt.h n f. kiiUm nn. .a rfluau Well perhaps it ii. There is no doubt that the issue in that ctunuiis or treatment, win be answered by Dr. Brady u tamped seif- aaaressea envelope u enclosed. Letter, should he brief and written Id '.nk. state was clearly drawn between Pope and Clark, the former boasting of his fealty to the President, the latter frankly ad mitting he would be no "yes" man if he were sent to Wash ington, On the other hand, we note the Townsend plan leader in that state, claims the defeat of Pope was due to his apathy toward the $200 a month boys, and that the victory of Brother Townsend 's candidate D. Worth Clark, was a triumph for the old age pensioners. Who is rightf IF1 the Townsendites had endorsed Senator Pope instead of Clark would the former have been beaten f Did the people of Idaho vote AGAINST P.D.R. or vote FOR 1200 a month when they went to tho polls, and gave their congressional Represents tive the Democratic nomination t Only those who can answer these two questions, can know the real inner significance, of yesterday's results in our neigh boring commonwealth. DUT that is no reason why those who oppose Roosevelt and " the New Deal should not chalk up the result as a great reverse for the present administration and clear indication that the President's popularity is on the wane. Nor is it any reason why the Townsend clubs should not stage their "jubilee picnio" on the banks of the Snake river. It is not what is literally true, for the truth can seldom be determined, it is what one can't prove to be UNTRUE that really counts, where political claims and post-mortens are concerned The Democratic nominee for the us. senate haa started promising wie upstate votcra the moon, tailored to ult the individual iasw mn red either full, new, first quarter or laat quarter, aa each conatltuent wills, Irrespective of what phase tne noon feels if -ehould exninit. ... A aalary slashing bill la apt to onfront the neat legislature. With the deadly accuracy legislature are prone to practise, the measure la apt to wind up aa a aalary raising meas ure. TUB WISEOIACKERS (Eugene News) "Well, here I am at the Home makera' camp here because I had so muoh to do I couldn't oome. I understand some of our men call It, with what they fondly hop. to be humor, the home wreeker'a camp, put on by the home devaatatlon agent. They'd be 'devastated' all right. If they could aee the aweetly devastating young thing now our agent." (Olive Barber's writings.) ... The Elks' torn cat returned Tues scratched up worse than If he had bsen picking wild blackberries on the Applegate. without putting on n armored suit. ... F. Luy of the Applegate oame to town yesterday to deny the gossip lie had been caught on his farm. ... "Too many geese that were sup. posed to lay golden' eggs turned out to be geeas that laid goose eggs." (Arkansaa Qaratte) Vou said some thlngl Both Russia and Japan claim v!o tory In the "hand-to-hand" fighting at Chnngkufeng Hill, a knob of earth In Siberia. The contradictions lndl cat the combatanta pull the trig ger, and then race to the telegraph office. ... Con DeVore, the butcher, and B. ulrlch, the Prospect atockman, met and mingled Tues. They talked cow, Indulged In spirited banter, and agreed there waa nothing to do with their hay but feed It to steers. The youngest son of the President, when home from his honeymoon will go to work as a counter-jumper In a Boston department store. Press dispatches state the amount of the salary has not been decided upon "but an attache of the store ven- tured sn tB-a-week estimate." It la venturrd the attache I. a mean old republican! It Is further ventured son John will make a noise like a sky rocket. He will saunter down to the basement dishpsn section some morn ing, and find himself upstslrs with two glasa-topped desks, and so effic ient he won't have to atay behind either. ten Carpenter, one of the ranch leat of the ranch set. Is still gsddlng in Europe, and Is headed for Athens, Oreece, a postcard from Ytthepaiaa mem save. The place sounds like something that waa after hi pears ... The lntest style hot dog la equip ped with a tipper, which enables any eater to skin the product, with one leu awoop. Ere long the society Items will note the picnic party came home without eating, because the rippers wouldn't work and the bread waa not sliced. ... News from Denmark states the 6 A 10c store heiress has been offic ially aeparsted from Count Hsug-wlte-Reventlow, and approximately 9,000.000. . 'The galley of type for this col umn accidentally waa left standing In the aun for several houra. and It melted. All that Is available Is I the head of the column and the algnsture. remaining over from last week, so that IB all we can use. In the meantime, we hope for cooler weather." (Lathrop 1M0) Kxcelalor) The he.t cvked an althl. Use Mall Tribune Want Ads. Yes, Truth Is, "N the last day of July in Berkeley, California an elderly woman told her three daughters, kneeling by the bed beside her that she had bequeathed her eyes to two blind men, that they might see. Suddenly she murmured "I see Heaven,- how beautiful it is" and with a sigh she sank back on the bed and died. The dead woman's eyes were, removed, and the clear, unim paired corneas were transferred by skillful eye surgeons to eyes of an old man and a younger one, who had not been able to see for several years. Aocording to reports both operations were successful, the blind are now able to see. Put in a dash of romance and what a plot for a movie scenario, only of course all the wise boys would condemn it as hopelessly untrue to life and inexcusably sentimentalized! ' Dear Albert Won 't Do NOW because Senator Barkley's 70,000 majority over "Ttnnnv" fThflnrllat. fca OYinarlnrl llint nt Uim ma.. An.lmla tic supporters, they are touting "Dear Alben," as a dark horse to succeed President Roosevelt. What fools these politicians bel "Dear Alben" doesn't come within four or five feet, of being of presidential stature; moreover, he comes from a state that hasn't produced a President for the-last 100 years, and barring a miracle won 't for the next one hundred. Finally the Senator from Kentucky, is extremely slow witted, and plodding, a good man to carry out orders, but a poor man to think them up or deliver them. What the political situation will be two years hence, rests in the laps of the gods, but this much is certain, Tho party that tries to win with a mediocre, pedestrian candidate is going to find, that when it comes to what the American people expect in a chief executive, the requirements have gone up astonishingly since that bleak day in March, 1933! For the immediate future, and we hope for long thereafter no "second raters" need apply. How News Does Travel rTD you ever notice how a good joke spreads and repeats '"'itself in the newst A classic example was that ancient wheeze which went somewhat as follows: "Who was that. Indy I seen you with last nightt" "That wasn't no lady, that was my wife!" aow we note by the always trustworthy A.P., that an unidentified man slugged Miss Audrey Schnell, 25, of 729 Knst Burnside street, Portland, yesterday and was heard to remark, as he peered at the young lady who fell at his feet: "Sorry, I thought you was my wife!" That this promises to replace the former classic, as a gem of domesticated humor, is indicated by the fact that this is the third time in less than three weeks; that the same incident has been reported in the day's news, the whimsy having travelled from Coney Island to the mouth of the Columbia river! Owing to the large number of letter, received only a few can be answered. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 2SS El t'amtno, ueverly Hills. Calif. COAGULATION OR CLOTTING OF BLOOD The blood of a normal Individual begtna to clot or coagulate In from five to ten mlntitee after bleeding. In certain disease conditions the blood la slow In 4 clotting, for ex- ampto Jaundice; thla maksA oper ation more has ardotu, although the modern phy sician has In hla a r mamentarlum remedlea to pro mote faster clot ting of blood In such elreum atancea. One such remedy U aun- ahlne rltamtn D. Another ti calcium administered medicinally and a high calcium diet. Still another 1a trans fusion of a smalt amount rf blood from a healthy donor. Still another la thromboplastin, prepared from the blood tissue of the ox; cephalln la another name for this, when freshly prepared. I In any esse where the clotting time Is slow, It la good practice to take, say, a Calclwafer after each meal, three times a day, for several weeks prior to an operation. Calcl wafers are as pleasant to eat as after-dinner mints; each wafer con tains 9 grains of calcium phosphate, 6 grains of calcium gluconate and 750 units of sunshine vitamin D, Hemophilia Is an Inherited anomaly transmitted by females who them selves show no sign of the condi tion to males who suffer the effects of the deficiency. The Inherent de flclency la lack of an element or factor In the blood which Is essen tlal for clotting, precisely what ele ment la not known. A male who Is bleeder" (hemophilic) dres not transmit the active bleeder state to his sons or daughters, but his daugh ters may carry the defect In latent form and some of the male children born to them are likely to bo "bleeders." In hemophilia, nerloua or fatal hemorrhages occur after trifling In juries, or spontaneous bleeding may occur from the nkln, mucoue mem brane, viscera or muscles. Hemor rhagic swellings occur from bleeding Into the tissues, especially about the Joints. Not all "bleeders" have the hered ity deficiency; about half of them Are of accidental or casual type, and do not carry any transmlsslblo de fect. Injections of sea water have stop ped uncontrollable bleeding In a number ot cases of true hemophilia. Of course transmission -it small nmounts of normal blood Is the best emergency remedy for uncontrollable bleeding In such a case. To stop such bleeding from a tooth socket or from a tonsillectomy wound, the skillful application of diathermy (electro-deislcatlon) to the bleeding point la afflcaclous when ordinary medicinal and surgical mea sures fall. Injection of clear blood serum (human serum or horse scrum or rabbit serum), or even diphtheria antitoxin, la sometimes beneficial In prolonged bleeding In sporadic (non- familial, non-hereditary hemophilia In one case of u n con ti oil able bleeding from a trifling wound on the head, the bleeding was promptly atopped when a healthy person prick ed his finger with a needle and allowed a few drops of blood to fall into the wound. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Twilight Passes. Hypodermic Injections of a mixture of morphine and scopolamine to pro duce amnesia (forgetfulness) and analgesia (Insensibility) became known -and gained considerable pop ularity years ago aa "twilight sleep." It was effective enough In producing the desirable amnesia and analgesia In the mother, but so often produced asphyxia in the Infant that most physicians did not feel Justified In using it. In a recent report by Dr. W. W. Bell of his experience with 325 cases of scopolamine amnesia and with 316 cases of sodium pento barbital amnesia, for confinement, he concludes that the latter Is as effec tive as scopolam lne and f n r safer for mother and child. Pentobarbital sodium Is otherwise known as so-1 dlum ethyl barbiturate and as nem butal, and la often given prior to anesthesia, or prior to local anes thesia for dental operation. It can be obtained and prescribed or ad ministered only by a physician. ' Question of Color. You claim a child's coloring Is never darker than that of either par ent. Do you ever admit you re wrong? Two of our three children are olive skinned and dark haired and have dark brown eyes, desptte the fact tha tboth my htisMnd and I are fair skinned, light haired and blue eyed. (Mrs. H. E. Answer I did not Intend to say that. What I do say Is that stories telling of the birth of a negro child to white or apparently white parents are myths; that If one parent has fraction of negro blood or any negroid features or a tinge of color In skin, the children will NOT be darker than the darker parent That is, no more negroid In appearance. (Copyright. 1938. John P. Dllle Co.) Comment on the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS . JOHNNY MILLER, of the Red Bluff News, has been reading the In side pages of his psper (or some body else's paper) and la all filled with Inside details of the recent visit of the king and queen of Eng land to France. IT appears from J. O.'a research that the king and queen, in addition to their 50 trunks, took along 87, 500.000 worth of Jewels from the Tower of London, and two Scotland Yard men went along to guard them. The Jewels evidently caused a lot of grief, for they had to be locked up every night In a aafe at the Brit ish embassy In Parla, "HIS writer, worth mentioning la whose only Jewelrl old nickel-case watch that haa been grinding out more or leea accurate time for the past 10 years, would certainly bate to be loaded down with aeven and a half million dol lars worth of Jewels that had to be locked up In aomebody'a safe every night. That looks like a first-class lia bility. A fellow would He awake half the night wondering If the safe was aa good as It ought to be. The Capital Parade (Continued from Page One.) The governor la running aa a new dealer, and hla first gesture waa to get a good grasp on the p-esldent'a coat-tails. "I'm for the new deal ana I'm for Roosevelt," he bellowed, and the farmers and mlll-workera gave him a cheer. He had some more to say about hla own virtues, but It roused very little excitement. , Personalltlea were what tne crowd wanted, and pretty soon the governo" obliged, with a bitter attark on old Cotton Ed Smith By this time, Cot ton Dd had arrived. He didn't hide up on a bale of cotton, the way he used to. but everyone turnea to see him. While the governor celled him "traitor to hla party" and "the man with a moustache like Kaiser Bill," and "the man who said a, worker In our great atate .ould get along on 50 cents a day," everyonu watched Cotton Ed fidget, whenevei he looked especially annoyed, tho farmers nudged one another and grinned. Flight o Time Medford and Jackson County history from H e files ol the Mall Tribune 10 and iu years ago. TEN YEARS AOO TODY August 10, 1928 (It wua Monday) Herbert Hoover atarU work speech of acceptance. Local Democrats annoyed by Liter ary Digest straw vote showing Texa and Virginia will go Republican In November. "Preposterous" declare. Prank Wortman of Phoenix Ed Note. Peron wishing to rnmmunlrate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M D., 2115 El Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. Man About Manhattan By OMIKUa rilCKKB The Wrong Brother rX bad it couldn't have been Charles, instead of Robert Tnft ivlirt irnn tli Rnmililinaii nrlmarv in Ohm They oome from the same family of course, both sons of our former President, William Howard, but Charles has always been a prime favorite with this column and Robert, for some reason, hasn't. ( buries, we have an idea, could beat Senator Btilkley, or eume darned close to it, whereas we fear Kohert wou t et very far beyond first bsse. Moreover Charles is one of the most intelligent and progressive Young Republicans in the land i whereas his older brother has always been disappointingly conventional and stiff. At that if Robert should win in November, he will, coining from Ohio, be a serious contender for the Republican nomination two years hence. If Charles could only be put in his shoes however, he would be the best bet as a winning leader of the Republican party in 1940, that we could mention, at this day and date. Face. Extortion Charge PORTLAND, Au 10. (API Isa dora O. Ankells, Portland lawy-er, waa taken to Spokan. yesterday by v ST) NEW YORK Jasdia Helfetr speak Ing: "This stuff about the cloister' ed artist secure In his Ivory tower Is ail bunk. To be a success nowadays an artist haa to have the nerve of a bullfighter, the digestion of a peasant, the disposition of a nightclub host ess, and ttie sto icism of e Bud dhist monk I" Welt, Helfeta ought to know, He waa In St Petersburg per forming for the Czar when the GEORGE TUCKR revolution broke out. He reached Ireland Just In time to bump Into the Sinn Fein upris ing. When the Japanese earthquake of 1032 made thousands homeless he was tnere, end In Tientsin he was compelled to make his way to the concert hall through roads barricaded with barbed wire. In Bombay he gave a recital the day after Oandhl was Jailed, and It was not safe for a white man to walk the streets. And recently he completed his l.SSO.OOOtii miles of air travel as a tournlng con cent artist. Jsscha, you 'r r a sucker if you don't get one of the big cigarette companies to sign you up, testifying that tobacco alone keeps you from becoming a nervous wreck. cle describing a party game In which the actors portrayed the parts of fa mous lovers. If I didn't think sn much of you. George Tucker, I would be Inclined to ucold you a man of the aeep south who has never heard of charades Don't know for sure whether you deep southerners know about the game but my section of the Blue Ridge mountains In North Carolina retted on charades frequently for an evening's entertain ment." Well, I centainly went off the deep end on that one. Of course I had played charades. But the game, tike an Ed Wynn Jone. has a thousand variations. This seems to be a form of criti cism: Said Bin: Crosby to his son, Gary; "Bob Burns' little girl. Anna, is coning over to play with you. Gary. Won t that be nice?" "Yes." replied Gary, "but If she comes over here dragging one of those tianookas with her 111 make her lis ten to some of your old records. THE celebration in Paris, Johnny discovered, cost a million dollars, and at the end of it King George wrote out his personal check for 3760 for the poor of Paris. Wouldn't it have been better If they had called off the celebration and given the poor the million It cost? AS a special mark of distinction they put the king to sleep in the bed used by Napoleon, and gave the queen the one used by Marie Antlonette. Something to talk about, all right, after they got back home, but here's bettmg they'd have been more com fortable on an American mattress and springs. WHEN kings visit presidents, the etiquette Is something to worry about. Precedence is a word they set a lot of store by on such occa slons, and It means who does what first. The king of England .and the president of France settled It ami nbly by doing the same things at exactly the same tune. Smart guys, those fellows. When hot ones are batted up to them, they know what to do. They ought to come over to America and run for office. The governor had thirty minutes Then it was Cotton Ed's turn Th: elder statesman didn't stop to men tion the issues at all. launvhlng out straightway Into a hair-raising de scription of 'these tw& things who are running against me, and who are an Insult to the people of this fair state." While Cotton Ed waa doing his enemies to a turn, the crowd laughed. But Gaffney was a tough town for the elder statesman, being ndustrlal and therefore pretty angry over his stand agarnst the wage-hour bill. Be fore long they began heck.lng him That made him madder still. He wag ged his finger In the crowd's face. roaring that "Some of yo.i haven't got the sense to know who your friends are." He had to v-ut short his usual remarks about white sup remacy, southern womanhood, and the price of cotton. The iime was getting short, so he ended' "God made me a man before South Carolina made me a senator thirty years ago, and. as God Is my Judge, I'll .ride no man's coat-tall.'' A little girl carried a Junch of flowers up to him H was preparing to go through the children-greeting routine when a heckler yelled, "Do they come from Wall street?" I tell you," yelled Cotton Ed, sharply, "I'll place these flowers on the political graves of Johnston and Brown." Vandsls for third time In fort night, removes mouthpiece of city drinking fountain at Main and Central. Walter Leverette resigns as head of the realty board. Melon crop as good as usual In the Eden valley district. Sams valley starts work on county fair exhibit. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY. Augut-t 10. 1018 (It was Saturday) Allies to continue offensives on Western front until Germany yields. General March announces to nation. "Peace not vet in sight" experts declare. Relatives of soldiers in F-ance. re ceived from three to six letters thla week, as delayed mall arrives. npHESE kings and queens are not 1 stuff, to be sure, but one won ders if sometimes they don t get Just a little tired of being dummies to show off fancy clothes. A little of it would be fun. but a lifetime of It would be frightfully boresome. STUDY COURSES FOR REALTY DEALERS TO BE MADE a deputy United Statea marshal to fae charge in connection with an alleged extortion plot against Thomas and very prov-erir. too: "Hare Just Low. Idaho rancher. I finished reading proof on our am Odd doinas In the news these days . . Major Bjwes loses a finger . , . A rabbi la arrested by police who mis takenly believe he la peddling Ice cream without a license. TVs Major was on his yacht when the accident occurred, and they hur ried to shore. But hy time they reach ed there an ambulance was backed up to the dock, waiting. How did It get there? By marine telephone serv ice. The Majors yacht Is equipped to talk, via telephone, anywhere In the world. And when his thumb was cut off they lifted tha receiver and tele phoned a hospital. As for the rabbi: Every day he goes to a little ice cream factory tn the Bronx. He burs Ice cream and gives it away to the children in Ms district. But recentlT police hare ben on the lookout for peddler operating without licenses. And they pounced on the good rabbi with an armload of frown refreshments. A few mlnvtes later he telephoned the assistant district attorney and explained what had happened. But ther int put you In Jail for that." exc Mmed the attorney. "Oh. cant trey?" cried the rabbi 'I'm talking from Jail.' An Alabama editor bawls us out. NORTH BKND. Aug. 10 (AP Oregon real estate dealers adopted yesterday a state nlgher ca jcatlon! extension program presenteo by Dean Alfred Powera whereby courses will be made available throughout the state. Latest trends In real estate work will be studied In the courses, avail, able to business men and others Realtor will suggest the subject mat ter and experts In state acnools un der Powers win map definite lessons Similar extension courses nave been given In Portland Dean Powers said classes, corres pondence and radio would bi utilized with sponsors seeking to reach every possible community. Basic study In real estate and a course in appraisal- will be Included. The right of realtors to prepare legal papers In connection with real estate transactions was defended by E. R. Miller. Salem, former president of the association. In a speech yesterday. WIDENED TO INCLUDE WASHINGTON. Aug. 10. (AP) The commodity credit corporation announced today the government loan program on wheat will be lib eralized to make lower grades of the grain eligible for loans. Previously wheat grading below No. 3 was ineligible for -ans. Spring wheat of No. 3 grade was eligible only when stored In commercial warehouses or elevators. Loans now will be made on No. 4 grain providing It has all the qual ity of No. 3 except as to weight. The loa n ra te on No. 4 winter wheat will be 8 cents a bushel less thsn the previously announced rates on No. 3 of the same class. The rate on No. 4 spring wheat will be 10 cents a bushel less than established rates on No. 1 wheat of the same class. For example. No. 4 wheat would be eligible for a loan rate of 64 cents a bushel at Kansas City. The No. 2 loan rate there Is ?2 cents a bushel. The rate on No. 4 northern spring would be 71 crnts a bushel at Min neapolis. The No. 1 northern spring rate there Is 81 cents. The rate on wheat stored on fsrms would be the freight charges and 4 cenls handling charges less than the rates at the terminal markers serving the area In which the farm wheat ts stored. The rate on No. a spring wheat stored on the farm will be five cents Iras than the rate on No. I spring wheat stored at the same point. That left Brown, a bold, dignified. conservative looking fellow who Is also running as a new dealer. He too, seized the president's coat-tall, promising to "bring home the bacon that South Carolina la entitled to" And that ended the show. lust what statesmanship gained by it, one could not say. Just what effect it had on the outcome, one could not tell. But at least the politician gave the people their money's worth, which Is more than can be said of them dur ing most of the rest of ;he year. . WOULD BALK VOTE PINBALL BAN SALEM. All. 10. (API J. A. Moore. Marlon county taxpayer, filed suit In circuit court yesterdaj against Earl Snell. secretary of atate. to kees referenda of two pin-ball and alol machine measures off the November general election bsllot. Moore's complaint questioned va. Idlty of the Representative Martin pin-ball act and the Senator Carney slot machine bill, chapters 493 and 310, respectively. Oregon aws 193T The attack was on the grounds of Irregulsrlty of procedure In the 1937 house of representatives. The complaint asserted .'allure o( the house to remove the Martin act from the table after Governor Charles H. Martin vetoed Ita emergency clause left It an unadopted meaaure. It al leged also that house amendmenta the Carney bill were not deleted con trary to a committee ruling, and that It should have gone back to the sen ate for repaasage. NEW RESIDENCE RISING IN GOLD HILL REGION GOLD Him Aug. 10. (Soil The fine nve-room houm. and dcjble rar- agc being built for Bverett Burroi. on acremre recently purchased from Jesse nsn. is well under wey A S Hilton of Riverside, la In charge of j the carpenter work. I Cse Mall Tribune Want Ada DEPENDABLE BUILDING ADVICE at BIG PINES LUMBER COMPANY Phone 1 6th and Fir Bolshevik! rule ended at Moscow, and Lenlne and Trotzky fee. U-boats sink three vessels off east ern coast of . America. Federal hunters coyotes. to wage war on SODIUM PLANT ASSURED FOR BONNEVILLE REGION PORTLAND, Aug. 10. (AP) Con struction of a sodium chlorate plant at Cascade Locks, to cost approxi mately $1,250,000, was assured yes terday, J. D. Rosa. Bonneville dam power administrator, told Mayor G. E. Manchester of Cascade Locks. Tho Chlpman Chemical company of Bound Brook, N. J., has Indi cated It. will contract between 3800 and 5000 kilowatts of power, Ross said. "I do not wish to divulge any private communications of this com pany." Ross told Manchester, "but I understand they will be ready to contract In October." EAGLE POINT GRANGE WILL PRESENT PLAY EAGLE POINT. Aug. 10. (Spl.) A two-act play, The P.ed Lamp," will be given Friday at d p. m in the new Grange hall as part ol an en tertainment program planned for the benefit of the hall building fund - In addition to the highly enter taining play there will be vocal anrt. instrumental numbers and several so . lections by the orchestra. All Grangers and the public are cordially Invited. A nominal admis sion charge will be made . round In Hospital TILLAMOOK, Aug. 10. (AP) Missing since Saturday, Mrs. Everett Cutter, of Portland, was found In a hospital todny. She had no recol lection of how she came here. Chevrolet JINGLES Copyrighted Cheer np, my poor hay-fever friends . . . You'll be o.k. when the sum mer ends! Soon you'll forget your snif fles and sneezes, As soon as we get our cool fall breezes. So in the meantime, here's a good tip . . . Buy a Chevrolet and take a long trip. Hie yourself to a lake or ocean side . . . With OUR car you can't help enjoying the ride ! Chevy M. Hnrd Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Riverside Service Oept S3 No. Riverside Died Car Lot Riverside st 4th 4 FACTS! Investments In the Jackson County Federal have earned 4 dividends, compounded semi annually. Safety of VOI R Individual savlnta Is lSSt'RF.D np to t-vooo by a Federal ajeney. A.k about our Insured Sarin, plan. SAVE Any Amount Any Time SAFETY Vour Saving. Insured np t,o ayoofl JACKSON CO. FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASS'N 126 E. Main 1