PAGE TWO
MedfordWTribune
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By Arthur Perry.
THINGS TO BE THANKFUL
FOR TODAY:
Thanks for as many Thanks
giving Days this year, as Peoria
Bill Gates has Groceterias
Thanks, maybe, before the
day is done, for a Boston crab
hold on the mythical state high
school football title, gained af
ter beating the best of the lot,
and out-yelling most of the re
mainder Thanks, that the nation Is
till out of the war, It couldn't
keep out of, so the bank corner
diplomats predicted
Thanks to the weatherman,
for a day of sunshine, instead of
now, making it possible for the
carver of the festive bird, to do
so, if his wife will let him, in his
ihirt-sleeves
Thanks for pairs of drum
sticks for Allison Moulton's boy,
and many other kids, to feast
upon, with many other things,
no end
Thanks from the Elks tom-cat
to Con DeVore, the butcher, for
11 the tender gizzards, upon
which he gnawed and gnawed
Thanks to Uncle Sam for a
new postoffice, with more doors
for the public to try and open,
and find them locked
Thanks for Rogue River, and
regrets to the inveterate fisher
men, who figured everybody
else would be eating turkey, so
they would have the classic
stream all to themselves. Alasl
Fifty other piscatorial enthusi
asts had it all figured out the
same way
Thanks for a shortage of pol
itics hereabouts, and a drouth
of candidates, next year, if it
can be arranged-
Thanks for the Rose Bowl
dreams of "Old Oregon" and
Oregon State. They were nice
while they lasted
Thanks for the new auto
speedway, all over town
Thanks for the 1,004 meals,
every American hns coming this
year if none have been
missed
Thanks for everything, and as
a poet wrote:
"If you arc grateful for anything
on any particular day.
By the time you wake up next
morning, it's probably been
taken away."
SEAL ROOKERIES
Juneau, Alaska. Nov. 23. tP)
Men who watch the world's
greatest seal herds on the bleak
Pnbilof islands brought here
today a report of a record kill
and story of seasickness to irlnke
the strongest stomach quiver.
Twenty-four passengers on the
V. S. bureau of fisheries boat
Penguin were reported too sea
sick to eat for (52 hours In
rough weather on the trip "out
side" to Seattle.
John Lipkc. government agent
on the islands who is headed
for the stntes on a leave of ab
aencc after three years on the
Tribilofs, reported an all-time
high kill of 00.437 seals for the
1030 season. He estimated the
herd, protected by the United
States, had Increased to 2,500,
000 animals.
.
The census of 1030 showed
102 5 men lo every 100 women
In the United States.
Attend Sportsmen 's Banquet
rXIRECTLY or indirectly, tourist travel benefits ALL who j
live here.
It is also a fact that pleasure-seekers are not attracted to
this section of the coast solely by southern Oregon's unmatched
climate and scenery. Fishing and hunting are the magnets which
draw many of our guests and their important dollars every
reason.
There is no immediate prospect of any sizeable and new
industrial development in Jackson County. It Is likely, in fact,
that this area will depend upon tourist business, along with
horticulture agriculture, timber and mining, for many years to
come.
To preserve and extend our fish and game resources, there
lore, becomes a most important project for the general pros
perity of this locality this year, next year and in the years to
tome. So it behooves us to safeguard and to capitalize on our
very tangible assets in the form of fish, game birds, deer, bear
and other, larger game.
"
IT HAS been a regrettable fact that BOTH the fish in our
streams and lakes, and the game In our fields and forests
nave NOT been conserved in recent years. There has been a
deplorable lack of Interest and foresight in this regard.
These conditions have been obvious;' the need for intelligent
and ORGANIZED action was recognized that is why the Rogue
fllver Sportsmen's Club was established.
Immediately, a far-sighted program was undertaken, with
emphasis upon rehabilitating the fish supply in Rogue River,
-n this, the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce is giving full
cooperation, but It is the sportsmen themselves who deserve
the greatest measure of credit for these accomplishments.
Services of a full time officer to patrol streams and ditches
have been secured through the cooperation of the Oregon State
Hsh and Game Commiojlon. This has resulted in rigid enforce
ment of screening regulations a move so necessary to the con
servation of small fish.
Also, the cooperation of those who maintain hydro-electric
and irrigation dams or. Rogue River has been secured so that
fish ladders will be in operation ALL of the time.
The "racking" of small tributary streams has been under
taken so that fish can be kept IN the river and OUT of small
creeks which dry up In summer months another highly im
portant conservation step.
As another means of improving fishing conditions on the
upper Rogue, a plan is under way to plant non-migratory Rain
bow trout. This will eventually assure a better "catch" for
visiting anglers as well as home devotees of the sport.
All in ail, it is a commendable program and it is most
encouraging to see real progress in practical fish conservation
nere.
TO DOUBLY assure the continuance of this good work, and
to speed it along, t ie Rogue River Sportsmen's Club seeks
the Interest and cooperation of more citizens who recognize the
importance of their program and are willing to lend their in
fluence and personal ef'ort toward its fulfillment.
That is why an invitation has been extended to all people
nere to attend the first annual banquet of this organization next
Tuesday evening, November 28th, at the Hotel Medford.
Representatives from similar groups of Grants Pass, Kerby,
Central Point and Gold Hill will be present; officials of both
the Stale Fish and Game Commission and the Oregon Wild
life Federation will be on hand. The program, which has been
planned for the occasion, will Include motion pictures of wild
life In Oregon a subject certain to appeal to those who attend
the Sportsmen's first annual party.
IT IS to be hoped the banquet hall will be well filled next
Tuesday evening as an Indication of this community's interest
in the worth-while program of the Rogue River Sportsmen's
Club. It will prove an Inspiration to those who have contributed
K- generously of their time and energy and have already accomp
lished so much.
You do not have to be a fisherman or a hunter to take part
'n this first annual banquet of the Rogue River Sportsmen's j
(Jlub; maybj you've never had a rod nor landing net nor shot- J
gun In your hand the one important requirement of admission ;
is a healthy interest in a program that will benefit YOU, and j
all of your neighbors. j
By all means, mark your calendars NOW the day Is Tues- ;
day, November 28th the time,
Medford. H. G.
BY
Los Angeles, Nov. 23. (iT")
Author Theodore Dreiser, he of
the tart comment, isn't even
afraid of the ladles.
He proved it. He stood be
fore 300 members of the Los
Angeles Junior league and
opined:
"Women's clubs are baloneyl"
The Junior leauue is a wom
en's club. Members gasped
"From an Intellectual, social
and economic angle, I say again
that all women's clubs arc ba
loney. There should be more
to a woman's club than Just
planting graves and placing
plaques."
He had something to say about
higher education too.
"You could close every uni
versity in the United States and
it wouldn't make any differ
ence. You can get a degree to
day on the most asinine subjects
you ever heard of most of the
youngsters are sneaking and
cheating their way through
school. None of the schools Is
worth a damn except the tech
nical schools."
What, a hearer asked, ts he
doing at the moment?
"I am writing a book on phil
osophy." "Is It about women?"
"Darling," he retorted, 'with
out women there would be no
need for philosophy."
MEDFORD MAIL
8:30 p. m. the place, the Hotel
DEATH RECOMMENDED
FOR OKLAHOMA BANDIT
Chicago. Nov. 23. .V) A
federal court Jury convicted I
Jack Russell, 30. Oklahoma des-1
perado, of kidnaping and kill- j
ingg William Scott Hamilton. I
23, Arkansas City, Kan., sales
m a n, and recommended the
death penalty.
The Jury reached its verdict
after eight hours and 33 min
utes of deliberation. I
Russell fled from the Okla
homa state prison at McAlester.
where he was serving 10 fears
for robbery, last July 10, and
during the ensuing week kid
naped Hamilton near Pittsburg.
Kan., and killed him, he ad
mitted, near Ringwood. III.,
July 14.
Much Destitution
Claimed in Toledo
Cleveland. Nov. 23. i.Ti A
report of destitution In Toledo
was made public today simul-'
taneously with a suggestion from J
Cleveland's mayor that labor :
leaders "give the devil" to Gov.
John W. Uricker for his disln-1
elinatlon to call a special legis-1
lativc session to appropriate new I
funds for relief. '
The Toledo council of social I
agencies reported 5.193 employ-
able persons and their depend- i
cuts were suffering there from
lack of food, fuel and clothing. I
.
CK'Miv; time for T.o l.tr to Clns
ify Ails is 1:30 p. m. 1
TRIBUNE, MEDFORD,
Personal Health Service
By William
signed letter! perUlnlni lo personal Health and hygiene, not to disease
dluen.ili or treatment, will he answered by Or. Urady If itaniprd self
addressed envelupe It enrlneed tetters ehuuld be brier and written Id ink
Uwlne to the large numher ot letters received only a few can be answered
No reply ran be nude to qurrtea not conforming to Instructions. Addreie
Or. William Brady, tti tl Camlno. Beverly HUH. Calif.
PORTRAIT OF A B
As the scene opens the lady
is confessing to her doctor:
. . . relative staying with me
had been given benzedrine by
tier doctor
you will know
him, one of the
lead ing phy
sicians of . . .
One day by
mistake I pick
ed up the ben
zedrine, think
ing it was my
calcium lactate
(the two tab
lets are about
the same size
and I failed to
notice the cross markings on
the benzedrine tablet.) All day
I had the most marvelous feel
ing of exultation (not knowing
the cause). Whereas I am or
dinarily inactive and without
ambition to do things, that day
I painted the porch furniture,
caught up on garden work long
neglected, rearranged the fur
niture In living room . . . alto
gether feeling for the first time
in years like a colt. I even
tried some of the somersaults
you are always mentioning
but perhaps you are facetious
and not serious about persons
of my age attempting that
sunt , . .
When I found 1 had taken
benzedrine sulphate I asked my
doctor about continuing, as the
thyroid and calcium lactate he
(and you) had advised for my
low or minus metabolism, chilli
ness, etc., seemed to give my
leg ache and some feeling of
flushing possibly that was due
rather to the amniotin (estro
genic hormone) my doctor was
giving me hvDodormlrnllv twn
or three times each month.
The poor man twiddled his
thumbs, as doctors do when
patients beat them tn It nnH
said on account of my B. P.
wnicn is usually around 160,
he feared to let me take benze
drine . . . Well, tn he h
once or twice a day (breakfast
ana luncn time) I slip a benze
drine sulphate tablet under my
tongue (which I have kept in
my cheek all along) and go
aoout acting 39 instead of 35.
Remember Gertrude Lawrence
in the Skyrk when asked her
age replied "Thirty going on
forty." I shall outdo Gertrude.
I shall be forty going on thirty.
Now tell me, please, will the
B.S. kill me? One or two daily
rations of it apparently changes
me in spirit from a forlorn old
lady to a cheerful young wom
The
Capital
Parade
i
By Joseph Alsop
and
Robert Kintner
ReleaseS by The North
American Newspaper
Alliance. Ino
Washington, Nov. 23. If
Paul Vorics McNutt celebrates
Thanksgiving, he will presum
ably eat papier mache turkey,
drink cold tea out of gilded cop
per wine cups, and place no
chairs on the side of the table
facing the audience. At least, af
ter the last fortnight's doings,
it's difficult to conceive of the
brash Hoosier at any but a
strictly theatrical feast.
In a strenuous burst of ac
tivity, the McNutt stagehands
have crowded Washington with
scenery representing "the start
of a bandwagon" a political
drama of unfailing Interest. You
do not have to look very close,
however, to see that the back
drops are Just backdrops, or to
notice the netting between the
leaves of trees, under which the
hero says goodbye to his dear
ones before departing on the
long Journey to the White
House.
There is, for example, the matter
of the by-now famous llttla dinner
at the Comos club, at which candt
d.'ile McNutt ts supposed to have
charmed the now deal hints off their
exclusive bough. The dinner was
arranged by Harper Fowler, an able
teacher of tr law whom McNutt
p:acc1 m Indiana university law
schCMl. When McYutt came to Wash
ington to set up his candidate's
headquarters at the security admin
istration, he brought Fowler along
as a contact man with liberal flrours.
Fowler was the ostensible giver of
the dinner, for which a quantity of
hunnn window-dresslivl was Import
ed, In the persons of the president
of Indiana university, the dean of
Indiana law s-hoot and the acting
:-rcMvlem of I ou'.il.m.t unlv.;s.tv.
Members of the new deal group were
OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1939.
Brady, M O.
ENZEDRINE ADDICT .
an. My doctor says I have no
heart or kidney trouble, blood
pressure no higher than the
average for my age, electrocar
diogram normal, B.M.R. slightly
minus. I neither drink nor
smoke. .
The scene fades out and there
follows the case of the univer
sity student who suddenly be
ban to snore loudly while writ
ing an examination, In a few
minutes he ceased to breathe.
Stimulants and artificial res
piration failed. Never mind de
tails of the autopsy. Investi
gation showed that the student
had taken benzedrine (ampheta
mine) sulphate shortly prior to
death. His roommate said the
young man had been taking
half of a tablet (5 mg.) half
an hour before each examina
tion, but not at night, so far
as the roommate knew. The
victim called them "brain tab
lets." Medicinally one-sixth of a grain
(about 10 milligrams) la the average
dose of benzedrine (amphetamine)
sulphate. Generally two doses dally
are sufficient one in the morning
about breakfast time, the other about
lunch time. It has been used chiefly
In atates of chronlo exhaustion or
depression, it diwiiimi mn .
exhlleratlon and Increased capacity
ior pnymcai ana mental effort, dry
ness of mouth, loquacity, diminution
or loss of appetite. In some Instances
It produces tremor of hands, sweat
ing, Insomnia, palpitation.
Chief value of the drug Is In the
field of mental disturbances, moods
of depression, chronic fatigue, cloud
ed mentality. Introversion, lntrospec
Uon, melancholy.
That's all I know about It. In
common prudence, I should aay. any
one who monkeys with such a drug
had better have benefit of medical
supervision.
QUESTION'S ANDAN8WERS
Honey for Cough
We are Informed you recommended
honey for cough. Please give the date
of the publication of this or send a
copy. (R. A. C.)
Answer I quoted Hippocrates who
recommended I part honey boiled
together with a to 4 parts water.
Hippocrates called this hydromel
and wrote "Hydromel Is moderately
diuretic; It softens the lungs, la
moderately nourishing, expectorant,
laxative, and alleviates a cough: It
lubricates the sputum." Galen, an
other old-timer, satd honey clears out
the air passages ana thus promotes
expectoration. When sputa are thick
and viscid It cuts and thins them.
(Protected by John P. Dllle Co.)
Ed. Note: rersuns wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letter direct to Or
William Brady, M. D.. JUS El
Camlno. Beverly Hills, t'alll.
Invited a long way ahead, and at
tended largely out ot curiosity.
The bright particular star among
those present was Thomas Q. Cor
coran, popularly supposed to be the
ace new dealer of them all. Corcoran
left at 9 p. m., and the others who
stayed heard only desultory conver
sation, punctuated with McNuttlan
professions of new deal faith. Pol
lowing the dinner, the McNut forces
put the story about that the new
dealers, who used to speak unpleas
antly of the "Hoosler Hitler," had
become strongly McNutt-mlnded.
The story was utterly unfounded,
us are the numerous similar stories
ubout the warm feelings entertained
for McNutt -by persons as various
aa Justice Feltx Frankfurter and
John L. Lewis. These stories are
part of the scenery.
I Part of the scenery also was Mc-
Nutt's expedition to Hyde Park, where
he appeared in rather lonely splendor
at the cornerstone laying of the pres
ident's new library. Actually, the
entire cabinet and a Rood many other
local dignitaries were invited to at
tend this chilly ceremony.
As the president intimated that the
Invitations were not meont to be
compelling, everyone else went to a
football game, or found some other
way of passing the autumn after
noon. But not McNutt. He hastened
to Hyde Park, and. sitting on the
rostrum, gave the Impression that
he was the special object of prest
dentlal favor.
All this is smart stuff welt-set
"springes to catch conies." Any pros
pective candidate la Justified, of
course, tn attempting a little coney
catrhlng If he can bring It off suc
cessfully. The trouble -vlth McNutt
is that his springes are not very well
hidden.
Fowler and one or two of his other
friends peddle McNutt as a staunch
liberal, pooh-poohing such Incidents
sa the Terre Haute strike and the
foundation of the 9 per cent clubs
as mere follies of an ardent youth.
The rotund, practical Frank McIIale.
McNutt manager-ln-chlef, simulta
neously offers McNutt to the tough
politicians and the rich fat cau aa
a man after their own peculiar
heart. McNutt Is trying to be all
thine to all ntfn.
Shortly before the Cosmoe club
dinner, he spoke to the Business
Advisory council, and. If the McNutt
supporters art to be credited, he
Impressed the business leaders Just
aa favorably aa the new dealers.
The McNutt candidacy ts enor
mously we'.l-heeled. through the 3
rcr ocnt clubs and In other, more
mysterious ways. Recently Mc.utt
has made a couple of Journalistic
inverts, who will be useful to him.
with Lowell Mellett. head of the
Nitlor-.al Eni.Tjencv council, and one
1 or two other men around the prest-
dent. McNutt baa useful connections.
McHale take admirable care of the
bualneaa end.
There is no doubt at all that
McNutt la a powerful political factor,
and a man to watch. But, between
thie and the assertion of his sup
porters, that "the president has de
cided not to run and chosen McNutt
to succeed htm," there la a tremen
dous gap.
It will be wise to watt and see how
far McNutt seta tn hla presentation
of "the start of a bandwagon." This
capricious playlet has an occasional
habit of turning Into "whipping a
dead horse."
At the
National Capitol
With
John W. Kelly
(Continued from Pago One )
humiliated and have his ears
knocked down was to make an
inquiry concerning a third term.
Now, however, Mr. , Roosevelt
is' making it a game. Surmise
the politicos, even his well
known sense of humor would
not permit him to toy with polit
ical dynamite if he actually
plans to run for another term.
AS FOR McNutt whose man
" ager made a big hit with
certain Democratic leaders in
Washington and Oregon a few
months ago special favors are
being shown him. No other pres
idential aspirant was invited by
Mr. Roosevelt to visit Hyde
Park for the dedication of the
library. Then there was the almost-secret
little dinner of pal
ace favorites at the Cosmos club
(once homesite of famed Dolly
Madison, first to serve Ice cream
at the White House), when Mc
Nutt was given an opportunity
to sell himself to the group who
constantly have the ear of the
president.
Administrator McNutt is re
ported to have convinced the
super-new dealers that new deal
ism is right up his alley. On the
other hand, McNutt recently
had a conference with some "Im
portant people," and satisfied
them that he is and has been
a conservative.
But the one man McNutt has
been unable to make peace with
is Jim Farley, and Jim must
be reckoned with by every pres
idential hopeful.
CALIFORNIA'S Hiram Johnson can
expect no help from the admin
istration In his flijht tor re-election
next year. In 1032 Johnson supported
Roosevelt rather than Hoover and
Mr. Roosevelt waa so appreciative
he offered the post of secretary of
the Interior to the Callfornlan.
Johnson declined and auggested
Harold Ickcs, who had been a John
son supporter In the Bull Moose
days which Is how "Honest Harold"
waa put In right with the new deal.
When Johnson waa up for re-election
In 1034 he waa nominated by the
Republicans and the administration
saw that he had the Democratic
support.
Since then, however, Johnson and
the president have parted; Johnson
haa not been invited to the White
House dinners and all the patronage
in California waa given to William
Glbbs McAdoo (which patronage
lalled to re-elect McAdoo to the
senate). Johnson t opposition to re
peal of the mandatory embargo and
the president's court packing plan
made the breach ider.
The administration Intends taking
Johnson to the cleaners next year
and replacing him with someone
more new deallsh, perhaps George
Creel, who has been holding down
a S10.000 Job representing the federal
government at the recent San Fran
cisco fair.
AUSTRALIA, which Imports about
S9.00O.OOO worth of Douglas fir
and hemlock a year, has decided
"In this time of stress," no foreign
lumber will be bought and Australia
win get along with ita native timber.
Australia was a market for the
lumber export trade of Washington
and Oregon until Great Britain
adopted the preferential tariff rates
and now all but a amall amount
of Douglas fir and hemlock Is shipped
down under" by British Columbia.
IT waa the manager of a depart
ment store In an eastern city who
Induced President Roosevelt to ad
vance the date of Thanksgiving one
week in order to help business. He
was not the manager of the store
where youn? Johnny Roosevelt Is
employed, as one bit of gossip has
it. In his parting message to eongrcss
at the adjournment of the special
session, Mr. Roosevelt expressed the
hope that the members would enjoy
"both" Than&rlvlnga.
The president Is eating his turkey
at Warm Springs, keeping the prom
ise he made last spring that he
would be back at Warm Springs for
Thanksgiving "If we don't have war."
By "we" Mr. Toosevelt meant the
United States, but he would not
particularity at that time.
A Three Days'
Cough is Your
Danger Signal
Creomulslon relieves promptly be
cause It goes right to the seat of th
trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm.
Increase secretion and aid nature to
soothe and heal raw, tender, Inflam
ed bronchial mucous membranes.
No matter how many medicines vou
have tried, tell your druggist to sell
you a bottle of Creomulslon with tha
understanding that you are to Uka
tne way It quickly allays the cough
or you are to have your money back,
CREOMULSION
I for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
In The
Day's
. News "
By Frank Jenkins.
GEORG ELSER, a German, of
Munich, is accused of com
plicity in the Hitler beer hall
bombing, and it Is announced
from Berlin that he has con
fessed "after steadfast denials."
These dictators have a way
about them when it comes to
getting convictions. Witness
Statlln when he had a purge
on.
TTHE CHIEF of the Gestapo
(German secret police)
charges that Otto Strasser, one
time opponent of Hitler, or
ganized the beer hall plot, and
the British Intelligence service
supplied the money.
That MAY be the truth but
cynics can't help pointing out
what a GRAND chance it offers
to get rid of Strasser.
"NE OF the first requisites
of a dictatorship is a secret
police, and in countries that
have a secret police NOBODY
IS SAFE.
AH ATM A GANDHI'S fol
lowers, seeking Independ
ence for India (whether she is
capable of governing herself or
not) are putting pressure on
Britain to give a definite prom
ise of Indian independence in
return for Indian help in the
present war.
If something slips and India
withdraws from the British em
pire and falls into the hands
of Russia or Germany, it will
be a bad day for her. Britain,
taking the bad along with the
good, has been the best admin
istrator of colonies since the
world began.
(With the possible exception
of the Dutch, who also seem to
have a talent for governing
backward peoples.)
IARL and Bernhard Grzebel-
lus, of Silesia (a part of
Germany) are decapitated for
treason, having been convicted
by a German court of selling
state secrets to Poland.
The sale didn't do the pur
chaser much good. It worked
out something like selling sun
burn cure to Eskimos.
TWELVE executions of Czech
1 students in Bohemia-Moravia
(part of former Czecho-Slo-vakia)
have been admitted by
the Germans. How many more
there were, goodness only
knows.
How much good it did is a
question that even the Germans
probably can't answer. Each
execution spreads HATRED of
the conquerors.
When you conquer a country,
your troubles have only begun.
100,000 Children
In California On
Relief, Is Charge
Sacramento, Nov. 23. (P)
A thousand children In Cali
fornia are growing up on
relief, the state relief admin
istration reported to Gover
nor Culbert L. Olson today.
Fifty-one per cent of the
SRA clients, based on the Au
gust case load, were 16 years
of age or younger.
Aged Priest Dies.
Mt. Aneel. Ore Nm, -i
The Rev. Berchtold Durrer, O. I
S. B., who celebrated his gold
en anniversary as a priest last :
summer, died here vesterdav
Funeral services will be held
Friday. He came from Switzer
land in 1887 and was ordained
Angel ou years ago.
retired in 1934.
He
Sugar Magnate Dies
Honolulu, Nov. 23. (IP)
Wallace M. AlevanH.-
wealthy sugar man. riieH hrJ
today after a stroke.
Closing time for Too Late to Clas
sify Ads Is 1:30 p. m.
HERE'S SOMETHING TO
BE THANKFUL FOR!
You Can Buy Good, Efficient
Fuel At Real Bargain Prices
DRY PINE SLABWOOD $6 00
DRY FACTORY BLOCKS $5.50
BUNDLED KINDLING ,..$5.00
Delivered In City Limits
Or fill your ear or trailer at our fuel yard on the
corner of North Central Ave. and McAndrews Road
Timber Products Company
Phon. 7 XDgX
Flight 0' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from tne file of the
Stall TMbuns 10 and to yean
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
November 24, 1929
(It was Sunday)
Gold Beach in path of forest
fire on lower Rogue.
President Hoover urges gov
ernors of nation "to cooperate
in arranging strong business
program."
Crime wave sweeping nation
blamed on unemployment sit
uation. Soviet forces occupying Chi
nese cities.
Theater building at Sixth and
Holly streets planned to be con
structed this winter.
Dr. Emily Bolcom resigns as
county physician.
Rumpus brewing on Univers
ity campus over football coach
John McEwan.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
November 24, 1919
(It was Monday)
German peace envoys leave
Paris in huff, without signing
peace terms.
lution favoring return of death
penalty in this state.
Labor plans to form new poli
tical party in America at Chica
go meeting.
Italy reported on verge of
revolution.
Medford team ready for
Thanksgiving game with Ash
land. Irish Coleman has beeni,
named captain and plays left
end. Jerry Young is left half
back. Seeley Hall will act as
referee.
ONE DEAD, 0NE BLIND
AFTER ALCOHOL PARTY
Astoria, Ore., Nov. 23. IP)
The five survivors of a de
natured alcohol drinking party
aboard the Norwegian freighter
Indra Saturday night were re
covering today but one, Siguard
Flatude, a motorman, had not
regained his sight.
The sixth member of the
party, Hans Laupsa, died Mon
day. Use Mall Tribune want ads.
Helps You Overcome
FALSE TEETH
Looseness and Worry
No longer should any wearer of a
loose dental plate feel 111 at ease be
cause of the embarrassment It causes.
FASTEETH, a pleasant alkaline (non
acid) denture powder, sprinkled on
plates holds them firmer and more
comfortably in place. No gummy,
gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Special
alkaline content allays gum sore
ness and lnflftmatlon due to chafing
of a loose plate or to excessive acid
mouth. Thousands use FASTEETH
and gain greater ease, confidence and
dependability. Get FASTEETH at
any drug store.
SEE AND
HEAR OUR
Talking
Santa CSaus
IN OUR LOBBY
FROM 6:45 to 8:00
Tomorrow Nite
(Chrisimat Opening)
Tell Him What You
Want For Christmas