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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1940)
PAGE TEN MEDFORD MAIL TRTBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1940. MedfordTribunb taw MU rrlbaw." IMly Karri mmtmrmp. JIIUruHU PHIKTINO OOl rt4 co4 fflaitsr ( Crl Oregoa Mndr Act ot are . UTS UHACHIKTIUN HATES r Hail l ai no i Dally bd4 Suudar o yar ....III Dll tod ucdF ii tnenltis. . . I Dally aad r tnaniha t Daily aa uodar na montw.. t y "-rr tr I A4vcM.1foifL Uad. Caatral Point, iaekanqvlli. O.-ld RllL 4fua Rlr. Pboaais. TaiaaL nd motor ruutaar Dally and Kmtday ona yaar . , Dally and undar on month... ,TI All larma aaah in advane. Offtrtal Papa mi tbo 4tiy mt Udti4 Orriotel Paprt at Jarkaua Cvoaly MKMHKHUr I HHAWMK MIKM fMfcM . KaMltlaa rH-U Lauard Hlra Brlrv Tna acia(ad Praaa iciuaiai all Had ta lha una foi pubiloatlon of all diapatona araditad ta II ar thr win aralitad ta thia papai. and aiaa ta (a a laaai nvi aubionad naraia. Alt rlfhta far puBhcation of apaalal lapatahaa haraia ara aJae rri IBM HER OP UNITED PHCai Advartialna Rapioaantatltaa WIIT'HOLI.I DA V COMPANY. INC. Oftiaaa la Nw Torn. Ohicaio. Octralt (Ub Pranelaco, Loa Angalaa Baaina, FartlABd. SL Lauia Atlanta. Vaneouar B C Ye Smudge Pot' Bf Arthur Perry. THIRD TERM INTERVIEWS A number of leading citizens, and Juit many who have been trailing tor years, spoKe ineir pieces on the question of the hour, as follows: "Roosevelt is as good as elect ed right now. Nevertheless, the Republicans In their bullheaded ness will Insist on an election. I favor the President's oldest boy, Jimmy, for the fourth, fifth and iixth terms. Democracy should look into the future." The Chicago convention over looked nothing, and even made arrangements for this city to get a new postmaster, in a couple of years. If I am drafted to read your postcards, I will resist the draft Just enough to be polite, and then surrender. "I wish the high school hd a football player, who could kick a football as far as the White House occupant does an Ameri can tradition." "The nomination of FDR. means the continuation of the present prosperity and for the last eight years I have sure en joyed the slump." "I am a Young Democrat. I fell out of my cradle last night. which is why I limp, though the doctor, who is a Republican, ays It Is rheumatism." "I am for a Third Term. I say try anything once. Nothing ven tured, nothing lost." "I have been unable to find anybody opposed to Roosevelt. If anybody does I would like to see the color of their hair." "If I was Mr. Wlllkte. I would quit right now, and go back to work for the power company. He would save a lot of wind." "I predict the country will go eraiy and New Dealic, as in 1932 and 1936." "As a Republican. I feel the third term would be too much of a strain for any man. I doubt If the President, or the country, could stand another." "I will cast my ballot for FDR. The other two times he ran, the weather was nice, and the fish were biting." 'Take Bill. He's a millionaire, and I'm on relief. Why shouldn't I be In his boots." "Us girls are for a Third Term. and Eleanor. We don't stay home much either." "Sen. McNary has had six terms. I don't need any tradi tion to tell me Roosevelt shouldn't have half as many." "I am a lifelong Republican, who generally votes the Demo cratic ticket. I want a lady nec retary of labor, with an alien boy friend, who won't let me ship my pears when they arc ready." "I will vote for Roosevplt until the cows come home, if 1 had any cows. This will cause me to vote against him. no mat ter what I say here in front of the bank." Cattle Tests Salem (U.R The animal dl vl-ion of the state department of agriculture made 22.329 test for Bang's disease and found J47 reactors during the month of May. The division also found 87 reactors to rattle tu berculin tests. Ota stall Tt.uuo (ul ad. Support the Festival FOUR entertainment treats are in store for those who enjoy "Shakespeare Under the Stars," when the sixth annual Shakespearean Festival opens in Ashland August 9th. And those who attended the creditable plays of last year will recall that this festival slogan was liter ally true. It WAS Shakespeare under the stars, with a big moon thrown in for good measure. Players and audience alike might well have borrowed Hippolyta's words: "Well shone, Moon. Truly, the moon shines with a good grace." If the Weather Man is in kindly mood, a crescent moon will shine upon the band of Shakespearean players three weeks from tonight when they present the first of a series of dramas that will include two of last year's favorites, "As You Like It" and "The Comedy of Errors" along with two new plays, "The Merry Wives of Windsor" and "Much Ado About Nothing." THERE are several reasons why these four festival - presentations will be eagerly anticipated by those who know their Shakespeare and those who do not Careful not to lose the rich of the famous plays, watchful that the atmosphere of tne stage in the days of yueen Elizabeth will be re tained, the Ashland producers are taking a few liber ties, with appropriate apologies to Francis Bacon. , I he plays will be streamlinedyes. siree! Given a modem twist brought urao and tedious narrations will be cut from the script, a background of added. And, unless we are mistaken, the famous play wright himself would heartily approve of the changes. The festival group promise that their productions win De thoroughly bhakespearean. It will be a new and interesting experience this MODERN Shakes peare ! T"HE scene of these DODular vearlv festivals is the 1 only outdoor civic Elizabethan theater in the world. Yes, Ashland enjoys this rival of this unioue theater Furthermore, a few communities can boast such a cultural center where drama lovers may enjoy the great works in dramatic literature. Ashland, and for that maftpr all smithem riro. gon, may well be proud of val group. CERTAINLY, these Shakespeareans well deserve nn.nMvnrnmJ f ... It,. HnAn1. C f.Jf 1 1 iiiwuiaciucnv Hum me jjeuyie ui lueuiuru aim all Jackson County. They have brought widespread publicity to Ashland and the Rogue River Valley. This was especially true when they made their 1940 pilgrimage to the Golden Gate Exposition on Treasure Island, where they performed like real troupers and drew top headlines in California newspapers. Another thing. The Shakespearean movement at Ashland has become a genuine summer school for drama, in which young folks of southern Oregon can receive valuable training in acting and diction under the direction of able, pxneripnrprl rlii-prtm-s Thnso who show a certain degree i.1 i i t, me iesuvai piays. It is valuable training that should, by all means, be continued. THERE are two tangible ways in which Ashland's 1 Shakespearean Festival movement can receive the encouragement it deserves so well and needs so much. First, by generous support of the advance ticket sale. Second, by attendance and appreciation of the players' efforts. Even by practicing strict economy the Oregon Shakespearean Festival association finds it difficult to make both ends meet financially. Some new cos tumes are needed every season and they cost money; there are scores of other expenses that can only be de frayed by the sale of tickets. This sale has now started. There should be a goodly number of the "sponsoring membership" tickets purchased at once. So, although the festival will not begin for an other three weeks, don't put off buying YOUR tickets you will encourage a worth-while, cultural movement and at the same time get full value re ceived in really GOOD entertainment. H.G. Editorial Correspondence f'llii.fl (,,, .lllK- l?Vll,l ....... u ............ -, V(, a H'ltifc to put a crimp in such celebrations as were staged for Presideut Roosevelt at the convention IiinI night. For those who listened to the racket over the air got one im .prnxsinn. Those who uot only heard the noise, but saw who were making it, and how, got decidedly another. We do not wish to suggest the celebration wa not loud and long. exceeding in volume ami duration atn thing put on by the ti O P. at Philadelphia, by ut !rt l.S minutes. Hut we would not only suggest, but IHXI.AKK, that the enthusiasm was confined entirely to the delegates, in strikin contrast to the scene at Philadelphia, where the galleries niaiie most of the noise and the delegates im' little, and also tflat th ruthiisiasiii among the delegates was by no means universal, or entirely spontaneous. In fact, while that unearthly racket was going on and on. and on, there were two rouch and tumble fist fights between two factions of Texan delegates, not more than IS feet from where your correspondent sat. And tliere was nothing half hearted about them either. eves were blackened, nose were flattened and two Texas standards were reduce, to scraps of paper ami kindling wood H,n,l Mayor Kelly's ali.mt blue coats not intervened, the enure celebrtimi might have ended lip then and there in a riot. A television view would has kUuwn that dissension in the flavor and original aualitv more to the temno of 1940. music and dance routines distinction. The nearest is the fJlnho in FWlanrl this Shakespearean Festi of talent are given parts in ..laviaii.n ia ,....,1 a. ' Democratic ranks, which we are sure was not suggested over the sound waves. And Texas was not the only delegation that was divided on this "Third Term" stampede, Montana also stood on the side lines and when one of their number started to join the "pee rade," he didn't carry a Roosevelt banner, but one for Senator Wheeler. He didn't last long, however, he lost his banner and most of his shirt. Nor did the radio listeners have 'any idea, perhaps, that throughout the hullabaloo Chairman Farley stood on the plat form with tears in bis eyes, chewing gum sadly as he gazed at the demonstration, refusing, unlike the permanent chairman and speech maker, Senator Barkley, to make the slightest gesture of approval or encouragement. (Barkley, in fact, was not con tent with making the table-thumping speech that started the riot, but whenever the racket threatened to subside, went to the microphone and jelled '.'We want Roosevelt!" even though it was then rapidly nearing midnight.) Also if television had shown the firm and glowing jaw of Senator Tydings as be defended the Maryland standard from rough hands that would have put it in that cataract of Roose velt sound, there would have been a different impression. And there was Senator Clark, too. his face almost as red as Barkley's, fighting against the pro-Roosevelt hordes as he did against the Germans at Chateau Four other delegations refused to jump in the ring, Vir ginia (please page Carter Glass!) Nevada (McCarran perhaps had something to do with that), Louisiana (shades of Huey Long!) and Puerto Rico. So the "joy unconfined" was not unanimous by any means, although'we have an idea that over the air it sounded that wav. But it WAS an enthusiastic demonstration, nevertheless, and while the Tribune this morning tries to make out it was all artificial, -a Kelly machine build-up, through button-holing the state chairmen, and sprinkling Kelly's clacqners through the audience there is no more truth to this than the claim made in Philadelphia that the Willkie enthusiasm was "bought and paid for" and entirely synthetic Of the two that Willkie enthusiasm in the Quaker City was far more genuine, and spontaneous, it also came from the irrass roots, instead of from the administration's workers and the candidate's delegtes on the floor. But the fact remains the delegates to this convention are far more unanimous and more enthusiastic for Roosevelt than the delegates to the Republican cunrrnuun ever were tor vtendell Vtillkie: Willkie won at Philadelphia not because the delegates were for him, but because the people were, the people in the gallerv, the people outside. There is no similar evidence of a popular demand for Roose velt at this convention, nor in the city of Chicago, the en thusiasm proceeds entirely from the delegates themselves. In fact, throughout that long-winded demonstration last night, we kept our field glasses on the gallerv a large share of the time. Aside from the few members of the Kellv machine ini,,;ntf Chicago policemen, who were doing what they could to keep the ball rolling, the people in the galleries were sober and silent, interested in the demonstration for a while and then gradually becoming bored by it. In fact, the gallerv nearest me press noi started to express or ten minutes before it stopped, clapping hands slowlv in unison as the fans do at a prize fight when the bovs in the ring aren't showing the proper stuff. So-o-o-o. Everything is running true to form. precisely as predicted m this department over a week ago, during our'second Wash ington visit. The press boys in the Senate were certainlv correct. "The Great White Father" do so reluctantly if DRAFTED! It would be interesting to country have been fooled by going on nere since .Monday 10 our mind the greatest political farce ever sanctioned and manipulated bv a President of the United States. Everything cut and dried, President, pretending it is all free-wheeling' and' entirely spoil-taneous! That many people ARE haine fooled, and not nil nf tliom nit-wits either, was indicated last night by a certain well-known Illinois newspaper man, sitting next to us, who, when Barklev read that "come on" statement from the Whit. 1ln. k served in all seriousness, that dropped, the President was NOl it took a five-minute argument to ennvinea him hn.;.. he then clicked off on his typewriter should NOT be sent. ine ena u wasn t.j The Man-from-Mnr itnn'i ,,r4AMaJ -ii . - . "u.t.i,iuu ii v it is. an me pre liminary speakers here, (and also at Philadelphia! deplored partisanship at sin-h eritiaat ,,ainj t .u- . . ,. - ........... as this, and then proceeded to nm it, nun 1 1 DTlO t V 1 ,. -",' "..o.-,. unrangues a party convention has ever listened to. All the virtue anil licht in darkness m the other, and no one a rnr,l iiii'iust-nes. Uur only fxnLitiAtinn a hahi. hi..h i. '.".V"..' " " "ui'UMiuie no better than the other in this Mob is on Tvanrtn w A,.n . . . . , . ,F V4,UM 1 Kumiiirni on in Kt? note speeches at Philadelphia, and refuse to do so here. Life is too CLaVItRa"!6 t,me ,P'C' iU ,aki"g Mri0M,.v "omlne Tes, the Oregon delegation lemonstration. as was emiraiv in. v;.. . - u , : i W, J.." f.b""' blU Washington. D. C. July 19. Abysmal ignorance of "exports' on the resources of the Pacific Northwest for national defrnse was revealed at a meeting hrld in the office of Senator Rufus Holman. The expert, one an authority on power, another on transportation, and a third on chemicals, were sent by C. R. Stettinius, Jr., in charge of raw materials for the riefeme pro gram, the white-crested Stettin ius being too busy to attend himself. 3vAt.:ATHi?-"' IgflL Thierry, and winnine. disapprova of the racket, five doesn't rimnsp t t. ,..;n know how manv nennle in the the mumbo-jumbo that has been and vet the bomb shell at last ' had a candidate! Fvim.u mr ci'umrv s nisiory deliver the most bi'ttorlv and ... tin.. noen .11 . 1. - i really believing such twaddle. ;. . i ..hja . .. . "-"-a political! to eraaicate, one partv be ins respect. X S lL joined earlv ia the Roos.velt j - " i'' " ngni. "e num t sre Wi,lis "hy -.' hes "on Th axprt on pow?r hid only hFr notion about Bonnvil: on Grand Caul and nerrr hMrj of th Shasta dam. now under con struction. m.? authority cn trans portation did not know that four tranaeontlnental railroad n? th northwest. UFPlPmnt?d bv water tranportaton to the Atlantic and Oulf poru r:a th Panama canal The expert on chemUal wa un familiar wuh th present of eijht of tha listed 10 trate,te mtneraU ui Orejon and Washington. What tiier dtd know wa that "aomeone crttrrd them to maice a report reoommenduic that congress appropriate ;'3 000 CVO for TV A. of hloh SiySOOOV, m for - SS. I plant and a few million mere for S dro on a creek ahtch is so drv o freq-.jentlT that it neert to se summrr fallowed Mr. etetttniua. himself, issued a blast ajamut con. g-rea because tha money wis not toted before pecewing ftr tie !,. tmc convention; he Jd the mor.e a nredafd In order that ainminuin output can be increased The poer from the :em plant and rim ou'.d not b avai'.iM before liHJ IV Human's office i which a i 1 marb.a fireplace which ia orna Personal Health Service By William Sinr4 Itttm parulnlai to pcraoad lu.lt. and hll. Dot ta dUMM diagnot.lt or treat maot. will M an. wared b? Ur. Brad; II stamped arlf. adlreaaed emelopa la ancloeed. Letter mould be brief and rliun In Ink Oalni to lb large Bombers of let tare received eolj a few can be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, tea el Carol no, Beterlr HUls. Calif. SUNBURN Perhaps some Individuals do burn more readily under expos ure to the sun, and some ac quire a coat of tan with little or no discom fort. These pe culiarities o f comp 1 e x 1 o n and physiol ogy or consti tution are as u n changeable as the color of your eyes or the shape of your head. N o matter what advice or cautions health authorities or physicians may give, thousands of eager vaca tion goers are bound to make the attempt to get a fine coat of tan all in a few weeks of unaccustomed exposure to sun light, and inevitably thousands will suffer painfully and in some instances seriously from sunburn. If your main purpose is to build up health or vite, let me remind you that this is most effectively promoted by moder ation and even restriction in the matter of exposure to sunlight. Action of the ultraviolet rays (invisible, colorless shorter rays) of sunlight on the body is at least partly if not entirely the chemical conversion of ergoster- ol in the skin and superficial tissues into viosterol which is vitamin D. The viosterol or vita min D is then carried in the blood to the cells and organs of the body that need it. Whether this is the entire effect of sunlight on the body I do not know, but it seems suffic ient, in view of our present knowledge of metabolism, to ex plain the beneficial results of exposure of the naked body to sunlight. If the exposure is moderate or at first, if you are not ac customed to it, rather limited in area of surface exposed and in duration of exposure to less than you think you can stand, this chemical or physiological action will proceed favorably and your health and vite will gain consistently. , On the other hand, if you foolishly try to tan in a hurry you are likely to suffer sun burn, and that in itself inter feres with absorption of the ultraviolet (influence, not sub stance) even if it does not com pel you to avoid further expos ure for the remainder of your brief outing. mental but not useful, aa It ha no flue), gathered Oregon's Charley McNary, Representative pierce. Ore gon; Representative Leavy, Washing ton; Senator Bone's secretary and the trio of expert. McNary did most of the talking aa be had made an Intensive study of th report of the expert aa submitted to the house committee on appropriations. Burden of McNary' argument wa that ap propriation for more dam and steam plants for TV A were a wate of government fund when Bonne ville ta In position to furnish far more power than tb TV A ta asking: at lower cost, and Immediately. This wa all news to the power prt. STRESS haa been laid by Stettlnlua that the aluminum industry needs more power to Increaae pro duction. Hte expert gathered in Rolmana office were Ignorant of tha fact that th aluminum company la constructing a large plant en Co lumbia river and Bonneville can furnish power for expanaion th Industry require. The transportation authority raised the objection to shifting Industry from TV A to th Pacific northwest br saving the railroad facilities in tha northwest will be needed for moving troops, therefore will not be available for carrying Industrial materials. McNary explained that the four trans -continental railroad could move all the people and all th cattle tn the northwest to th eaat roast In fl' da;, a. as Illustration of th com plete coverage of carrier in that area. Then the Oregon senator re minded the authority that TV A. a densely populated section. 1 served bv but two roads Incidentally, the reanwho-know-railrcad9 could not throw light on 1 assertion that the northwestern roads will b needed to transport aoldiers. IP Ptettinlu want action, advised McNarv. he should take advantage of th unlimited power now acces sible and encourage production of material In th northwest. The power expert said he utiovrs tends that only a part of Bonneville, power can e sold to private customers and therr is no such limitation at TVA Answer rt this he u tnfo-med thst notwithstanding 50 percent of the raed capacity of Bx.neir.le I re served fr puM'c Utility district e'en :h this reservation the Co lumbia river hdroplant cn still furnish ;i the poner required for lumtnam nd kinared Industrie IMrFts?ICN m the r.slipna! car"' !e that R.eeve!t baa !et lr.Vrest :n Bonre'Ue ard Grand Coie sin.-e the aesth of J D Ro t1 that TV is row Hi "bB: Tr.'p is stir;!v.ited to t. politics: a.-tlttle. of Harold I.ra. secretary of t:e in'eror. who ha been so bust rrocictii i&e Utlre) term l&at ha Brady. M. D. VERSUS TAN People who plan or contem plate a vacation of a week or a month in mid-summer should begin weeks or months before hand daily sunbathing or at least daily exposure of the naked body to skyshine, if not direct sunshine is available. This will not only benefit health and vite but it will enable one to endure more intense sun light in vacation time without l burning. I Some tanning, increased de posit of the natural pigment in the skin, occur along with or following sunburn, but the more 'desirable smooth bronzing of the skin is acquired by strictly limited exposure at first, with gradual increase in the extent and duration of exposure from day to day. No rules can be laid down for the guidance of all, but in brief, never expose the naked skin for more than five minutes at a time to mid-day sunlight in mid-summer, if you are un accustomed to exposure. tJlESTIONS AND jkNSWEM Craving for Liquor Why not print aU the article you have printed about dteomanta or the liquor habit In a booklet? I am aur it would be of Inestimable help both to victims of the drlnH habit and to physician. You have a gift for enlightening public and profession on such problems. ID. S. A., M. D.I Answer Thank you. Doctor. The booklet 1 ready. Olad to send a copy on request to any reader who Incloses a stamped envelope bearing his or her address, and 10c In coin. To phyaldans. that Is. If they are Doctors of Medicine. I am glad to send an abstract of the essentials of the Lambert treatment If they provide a stamped addressed en velope. Flashes For all year or more I had suf fered much from hot flashes. I began taking your lodln Ration. Very shortly afterward the flashes stopped. Once in a whUe I have a very slight one but it doesn't upset me ss before. I am most grateful. (Mrs. C. J. T.) Answer Perhaps you should thsnk Old Dr. Coincidence. Not thst the lodln Ration is not helpful for women past 40. Many women have reported relief by calcium and vita min D. On request, accompanied with stamped envelope bearing your addresa. I'U mall monographa on Menopause and lodln Ration. The former Includes Instructions ' for treatment of hot flashes. (Protected by John F. Dill Co.) Ed. Note. Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send tetter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D., 26S El Camlno. Beverly Hills Calif. ha been permitting TVA to move Into the national defense program to the detriment of the power projects which are under his Jurisdiction. How thla TVA grab ta used politi cally was shown at th Democratic convention when a woman speaker, Mrs. Dorothy McAllister, head of th women's division, charged that the plana for producing airplane were being aabotaged because congress, before the recess, failed to make th appropriation for TVA which appro priation wa needed to produce aluminum for plant. In hla speech. Permanent Chairman ' Dear AJben" Barkley made the same accusation and the president told reporter their editors should play it up. In The' Day's News Br Frank Janklns 1JISTORY tells us that to near ly all solf-Koverned comes at some time the panickv thought that ONLY ONE MAN can solve their troubles. This thought came In lh. Greeks. It came to the Rnm.n. It has come several times to the French. It came fatcfully to the Ger mans when they gave supreme power to Adolf Hitler. IT CAME on Wednesday night to the worried riolraat .... thered at Chicago for the Demo cratic national convention of 1940. It influenced what they did that historic night. COR more than a century and a half, this nation of ours ha? been guided by the belief that every great national cni5 BRINGS FORTH A LEADER FITTED TO MEET IT. Thus far history has Justified thi conviction. Washington arose to met the crisis cf the Revolution. Lincoln came out of the backwoods to meet the cru:s of the Civil War. Let us here be utterly fair. Franklin D. Roosevelt came up from an aristocratic mansion to meet the crisis of the Great American Depression. His FIRST NEW DEAL (as differentiated from the second and third and the fourth New Deals) met that crisis admirably. WASHINGTON retired volun tarily, in the midst of prob lems as grave, then as our pres ent problems are now. Lin In was struck down by an assassin at a moment of national turmoil and peril. In spite of his loss, THE NATION CARRIED ON. It has remained for Franklin D. Roosevelt to lose faith in the ability of the American system to produce a successor. TTHIS nation stands today at a ' fork in the road. If, disre garding the lesson of Washing ton and Lincoln, it ABANDONS the long-accepted conviction that NO ONE MAN is indispensable and that each new crisis will raise up a leader qualified to meet it, we shall be abandoning that which we have known and trusted and striking out into the unknown. pHIS writer still has faith in the century and - a half-old American theory, and believes that Wendell Willkie is the lead er raised up by NATIONAL NEED to meet our present crisis. But this writer is only one Individual. His voice is only one voice. His vote is only one vote. The issue that faces us must be decided by a MAJORITY OF ALL THE PEOPLE. If a majority of all the people decides that this is the time to cast aside tradition and favor able experience and openly ad mit that ONLY ONE MAN is able to save us, we must accept the decision and make the best of it. The principle of rule by the majority, after discussion and honest consideration, is too pres ious to be even questioned. THIS is no time for Jibes. It Is no time for smart cracks. It is no time for political tub thumping. Grave perils sur round us and appear to be com ing closer day by day. About the only way this wri ter seems to be able to express to his own satisfaction what is in his mind is to say that this is a time for prayer and for the thoughtful, earnest contempla tion that comes with prayer. Flight 0' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of tne Mall Tribune 10 and 20 )ear ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 19, 1930 (It was Saturday) Entire nation swelters in un precedented heat wave. Official dedication of Med ford airport set for Sunday, Au gust 3. Eleven motorists arrested and fined for double parking and leaving cars all night In alleys. Salvation army has outing at Shady Cove. Grass fire threatens George Purcell wheat field in Beaglo area. Grass fire sweeps over Roxy Ann. when blow torch iznitpe dry grass. Hillcrest orchard suf. lers slight damage. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 19, 1320 (It was Monday) War near between Russia and allies. Food prices in nation increase, nine percent since January. Paulist Choi appears at Pace and delights local music lovers. Mrs. D. Perrozi of Ashland named on state GOP commit tee. SuDerintenrlent nivannnM signs as head of public schools. Navv blimn f.in f;i!. Atlantic durins the vaoht rn.s. won by U. S. entry "-Resolute."' Drvs lambast hmh r,arti. f. stand on Volstead act. News of4-H q clubs B Alton Guchts Pioneer club of c.rifr, -...u :met at Bonnie Smith's home re cently, called to order hv ih. president. Aftnn rinv,.. Projects revealed in the roll can included: Rimers Maddox, ! chickens; Raymond Madrlnv. Guernsey calf: Barbara Mad dox. pigs; Bonn:e R-nith -. and Afton Ouches. G'lernsey calf ! Mr. Maddnx. our leader, dis cussed our proiects. I. Visitor, were Ralph and Richard Kime and parents of club members. This is the first livestock and poultry club to be orsamzed cn Griffin creek We are all determined to work hard and make it a big success Next : meeting win be at the Maddox I home, the evening 0f July 19.