PAGE TWO
MEDFORD MATT.. TRIBUNE. MErFORD. OREGONT, WEDNESDAY. MAY 22. 1940.
SAVANTS STUDY
T
Hydraulic Miners Asked to
Notify Scientist in Case
Bones. Artifacts Bared.
Grants Pass, May 22. W)
Data from an age-old volcanic
tomb were studied by Univer
sity of Oregon scientists to
day as they checked over notes
on a field trip to the Crater
Lake highway right, of -way
where a second skeleton in 16
years was uncovered earlier
this month.
Dr. L. S. Cressman, profes
sor of anthropology, declined
any statement here Saturday
after his return from the ex
pedition near Prospect where
skeleton was found sitting In
a hole in pumice, deep under
the surface.
"If it should be finally estab
lished," he wrote In notes re
ceived today, however, "that
these Indians were killed by
the hot pumice ejected by the
eruption of Mount Mazama,
then we will have more evi
dence to support that froml
Eastern Oregon showing that
human beings were witnesses
of the formation of Crater
Lake."
Asks Miners' Aid
Dr. Cressman said he believes
wealth of material for anthro
pological and paleontological
study is located in this district
and may be uncovered by hy
draulic placer operations. He
asked that he be notified and
that finds be left untouched If
the large gold-recovery opera
tions bare bones or artifacts. He
aid dispositions of bones and
their location in strata often
means more than the bones
themselves.
Dr. Cressman was aceompan
led by Dr. W. D. Smith, profes
sor of geology, Ray Treasher,
state mine geologist, and James
G. Bromley, engineer, whose
highway maintenance crew un
covered the skeleton.
TIGER MUSICIANS
AT REGION MEET
Bars Drinking
Detroit OJ.fS Every time he
feels the need of "Just a short
one" Frank Borodenko draws
from his pocket legal-looking
piece of paper, reconsiders, and
decides U forego a drink. It's
a court order restraining him
from drinking.
Plan Pilchard Plant
Astoria, May 20. P) The
Pacific Marine Products corpor
ation announced today it would
construct a pilchard cannery
here. It will be Oregon's first
such cannery. The corporation
currently operates a reduction
plant at Warrenton.
k B
1 10 DAYS - I
MORE
Medford high school's band
returned Sunday afternoon
from the regional music con
test held at Spokane, Washing'
ton, with additional informa
tion concerning the competi
tion. Bands from Washington,
Idaho, Montana, and Oregon
participated in the two-day
event.
The local group garnered
three first ratings, three sec
ond ratings and three third rat
ings. In these, the musicians
were Judged in accordance with
certain standards, and not in
comparison with other players.
Standards for the regional
meet, which represents the na
tional finals, were set very high
anil a great deal of skill and
polish is required to merit any
one of the first three ratings.
All of the competing musici
ans were divided into classes,
depending upon total enroll
ment of their school. Class C
bands represented schools with
230 to 400 students: Class B
bands. In which Medford was
included, had enrollments of
400 to 7S0 students; Cass A
bands came from schools with
730, or more pupils.
A further honor was won
by the Medford band when It
received a first rating in the
sight-reading contest, the only
first rating given in this partic
ular phase of the competition.
In this contest the bands are
required to play music un
known to them. However, the
director is given three minutes
to glance through his score; and
then, he and the band together,
have an additional two min
utes to discuss any part of it.
"The Medford high band
school officials said, "under the
splendid direction of Wilson
Wait, certainly deserves much
credit for its outstanding per
formance in this contest, and
throughout the school year, as
well."
has, in fact, "mora Influence
upon the country" than any
other form of writing today.
He said John Steinbeck's
"Grapes of Wrath" has more
Influence upon what congress
and California's governor are
doing than any novel ever pub
lished. Writers are concentrating up
on the American scene, but not
necessarily' through novels, Al
berg said.
"But what Is lost In the way
of immortality of their writing
tney gam In the 'current inv
portance and influence of their
observations . he said.
TURKS ACCEPT
WOMAN TUTOR
AT1SCH00L
Ankara. Turkey (U.R Sablha
Koken, Turkey's foremost wo
man flier, finds it no trick at
all to combine marriage and a
career. In Turkey when woman
Is the superior member of
matrimonial combine she sim
ply takes the front seat. So af
ter only two months of mar
riage, the late Kemal Ataturk's
adopted daughter has relegated
both husband and domesticity
to the back seat In deference
to her Job of instructing 4P0
aviators in the Civil Aviation
college which she heads.
"Since my name had become
well known in Turkey I didn't
want to give It up when I mar
ried, so my husband is changing
his name to mine instead of
vice versa," Sabina revealed in
her first Interview since her
marriage.
Goken, nee Kemal Esiner, Is
attending school for general
staff officers of the air corps.
The school is at Istanbul and
his wife's at Ankara, some 300
miles apart, so they see little
of each other.
With career coming first,
Sabiha has no time for cook
ing, partying and primping.
Only 27 years old and not over
five feet tall, she is in no way
the magazine cover type of
aviatrix. Her eyes are serious,
her nose usually powderless
and her bair brushed man
nishly away from her face. But
she does have the feminine
characteristic of blushing when
asked about her handsome husband.
WALKING HABIT
DECLARED DEAD
Pittsburgh U.R) Unless the
American people begin using
Iheir feet a little more, the citi
zens of this country in a few
fenerations will Just "shuffle
along."
That Is the prediction of two
Pittsburgh men Burnett M.
Roscoe, insurance adjuster of
accident compensation cases for
the Pittsburgh board of public
education and George Clarkson.
secretary-manager of the west
ern Pennsylvania safety council.
Roscoe not only predicted a
shuffling gait in the future but
warned that if people keep off
their feet at the present rate for
a few more generations, their
ankles will become so weak
they will have to walk on "all
fours."
INTKODUCINO THI NtW
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BOOKS OF TODAY
E VITAL BY
TIMELY THEMES
Schenectady, N. Y. (UP)
The man who turned the fed-
rai writers project from a re
lief agency Into a significant
publishing venture believes
writers today have the greatest
opportunity because there are
wider fields to cover.
In a speech at Union college,
Henry G. Alsberg, former na
tional director of the writers'
project, said writers are dealing
mostly with life in cities, slums,
unjust labor conditions in fac
tory, mines and agriculture.
"They are writing vital, dy
namic, Important books." he
said, "widely read when they
come out, yet 'dating' like news
papers, soon after, because the
writers deal so much with spe
cial contemporary conditions."
He suggested that writers are
Influential because they deal
with man' as the victim of his
environment. Writers are not
so much concerned with writing
to achieve Immortality, he said,
but rather with dealing with
current problems facing man.
Alsberg
longer is
SHAFT TO HONOR
WYOMJNG PRIEST
Billings. Mont. U.R) A mon
ument in memory of Father De
Smet, Jesuit priest who followed
pioneer trappers Into the north
western wilderness, will be
erected on the highway 10 miles
north of Buffalo, Wyo.
Father DeSmet is said to have
read the first mass at Rendex
Vous on the Green river about
100 years ago. Dendez Vous was
the outfitting place at that time
for those going west into the
wilderness. J
The tract for the monument Is I
located on Lake DeSmet near I
the highway. Title has been
acquired and turned over to the j
s'.nte of Wyoming, according to '
Dr. William Frackelton, Sheri
dan, a member of the project
committee.
Cute, What?
Akron, O. (P) When four-year-old
Frankie Vance Ignored
his mother's plea to come to din
ner, he explained: "Can't eat
momma, me got a fire upstairs."
After firemen checked the blaze
Frankie confessed: "Me got the
matches from daddy's Sunday
pants. Did the firemen hang up
daddy's pants?"
REAL BEAUTY IS GOOD HEALTH
REAL BEAITT Is MORE thin ikln deep food kealth If reflected In a clear skin, trim
rliure, parkllns petionallt;. There's no better way to achieve the beaut; of HEALTH than
to drink plenty of RAW VEGETABLE Jl'll'ES. Her U the "open anaine" to voulMulneM
and long life!
Give Yourself a Beauty Treatment From
the Inside, Out for Best Results!
DRINK RAW
VEGETABLE JUICES
and LIVE!
PHONE 253 for DAILY DELIVERY to YOUR Home)
MOTHERS!
Doei your child's body need building npT la
fault; posture depriving him of health and vlrorf
Let us correct any health problems this summer,
before school opens In the fall. All eserclies
Intelligently and scientifically planned for every
Individual child.
ft
SOAP LAKE HEALTH Products
A Complete Line Now On Sale at Nissen Institute
Direct from the famous SOAP LAKE in Washington near Grand Coulee where Indians enjoyed the
beneficial effect of its waters. Bath salts, seltzers, for internal use. concentrate for skin infection, poison
oak. etc., ointments and shampoos. Let us tell you more about the famous SOAP LAKE line.
GROUP
CLASSES
In
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Join VOIR friends In
a gymnastic clans
lots of ran and a
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health. Special latea
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FEELING LOGY?
Tone Up With An Electric iiath .
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It's a sure way to get your system back In sl.ape. We have
complete facilities for general conditioning and body build
ingelectric cabinets, showers, massages under experienced,
capable direction.
NISSEN HEALTH INSTITUTE
IS GENEVA AVE.
MEDFORD
PHONE 2S3
Once Meant Labor
Boston. (U.PJ A WPA histori
cal records survey reveals that
in Sudbury, Mass., a situation
existed 261 years ago whereby
the richest men had to do the
most work. Town meeting mem
bers, in planning a new road,
ruled that those who had no
property must work one day on
the new undertaking, but the
ones who owned meadow land
were required to toll one day
for every six acres of land they
owned.
Join Rasing Crew
Butte, Mont. (U.R) Demolition
of 100 old buildings on the site
of the new 223-family Butte
low-cost housing protect was
said "literature" r.o : aided by thieves and vandals.
confined merely to , One resident found it necessarv
novels, poetry, short stories and to put out a
criticism, but has now spread I sleeping here"
Into the non-fictional field and thieves.
sign
to
"I'm
warn
still
off
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The Little Hermits say:
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WHISKIV
ED 77-49.95 -a 7
Not Morse Code, or gibberish, as you might think
but the sales receipt of a satisfied customer. .
One morning, Mrs. Edwards saw something in
her newspaper that she had been waiting for . . . an
advertisement which read: "A few new coats
Specially Priced at $49.95."
Mrs. Edwards went right down town and bought
one. It was exactly what she wanted, at exactly the
price she wished to pay. The transaction w.-s quick,
pleasant, and extremely satisfactory to all concerned.
Mrs. Edwards knows a thing or two about
VALUES.
Furthermore, she knows how to SHOP.
She reads the advertisements in this newspaper
carefully, every day. And then she buys.
That is the way to save time . . . trouble . . .
and money.
I
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