THURSDAY, M(S A lL Y tin tin g iASflltfflTW BETTER. Editor • e r t M O r e e f - .L - t U i : Telephone 89 L CITY ■to (cred at the AshlaiM, Oregon Poetofflcq as Second Class Mali Matter suhsrripti.m Price, Delivered in City One Month -----— .....................................9 Three Months ...... *............................................. 1.96 Six Months . 8.76 m One Y e a r __ ,.___ v .........,.................. ...............-........ ........ -.......‘‘•Bo and Rural Routes One Month ... Three Months Six Months ... One Year — r DISPLAY One insertion a week ----- ............................. ........................... . Two Insertions a week ....... ---------------------- ------- ---------- Dully insertion .........--- ------------------------ ------------- R ates for Legal and M iscellaneous Advertising rst insertlen, per 9 point l i n e ............... ...... ...................— ich subsequent insertion, 8 point line ----------------------- JJxrd of Thanks ■*>« l i A - 'I’ «h 1 kn I s <4* badwsh a4 < ~i iij 11 fi 11 111 i i fiTiA kin Obituaries, per line ................................. .................................... £ t i 5 / i 7± FT ' ' » i WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING I future events, where au admission charge to made or a « taken is Advertising.** ; • 1 i * discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders. DONATIONS , WUlfom X. Huuey. director é ^University of Michigan Ob­ it«/»,. l*ho asserts it is 1m- N r a fo recast weather coo- ly itn o itb s in advance. A One of the Most Important ¡Offices of the Stale is that of Instruction For this position, we unqualifidely indorse BUILDING No donations to charities or otherwise will be made in advert!«- or Job printing — our contributions will be In cash. AFFIDAVIT OF PREJUDICE By a decision of the state supremo court, Oregon’s rejudice law is declared constitutional. This law pro- 1 ides th at any party to a suit, or any attorney in.tlir <*nse, 5i>ay protest against srubnuttiing his cause to the decisioh 5»f a judge who he thinks is prejudiced against hiim. fir in JJthe subject of the controversy. It needs but a filed “ afffc jla v it of prejudice*’ to force any.judgp to step aside and ¡permit another to try the case. lie cannot deny tho pro ' Judice or question the motive of the objector. The law ( Jiractically takes from the judiciary its established power So pass upon its own competency, and sets above the Judge, the final'“ yea and nay ” of the litigant. - Here is another drag upon the courts; another device 1p»r delay, for confusion aud complication of procedure. JSt has long been J,he custom for a judge who felt himself J o r some private reason, disqualified to give‘unprejudic­ e d judgment in a given case, .to request a collengue to ’ -erve in his stead. Under a previous law, contestants who lad reason to doubt the judge’s ability to make a fair de­ cision, might call attention to their reasons for that doubt, Spring is when the boss looks . The Faejsts are setting ui>‘what thdy’ call joirtt ;rol bv employers and workers but wbftt is Bone the a dictatorship of the Facist pprty executives? Both e powerful nations tJirefiteit t<> *hpiet many ■ o f the itional diplomatic ami ixditieal (Cuat^ia, of 1'iurojw.y both B » being! closely wnteliod by, the balance of the w h ffc n e o ld favorite into the bowl o f your jim m y- pipe and turn on all five tubes t . go to it any way yon please . . • slow ob ïâàt, morning to midnightl Yes, sir I P. A . .tk tffe taste-teasingest, tongue-pleasingest tobacco th a t ever tumbled into a briar. Its smoke is the coolest that ever sifted into your system. Its fragrance keeps honeysuckle and your favorite rode ^ghting fo< second place« Put it • » your pad new: now: You’ve Y o u ’ve gqt ^y day with the smoÉi^e tins. D ecortte youttelf with the degree o f P. A ., and get die tughvst degree of pleasure out Of that old pipe. : jr-jto other tobacco ryt f V. V. Mills Ernest A. Woods, M. D. , L. L. Lecdom Louts Dodge F ..» . W hittle • Ila Myers Mrs. Gordon MacCracken Rosa Dodge Galay Mrs. J. A. Ruger, Pres. P. T. A. Mrs. F. D. Wagner Mrs. Emile Piel Mrs. Wm. Aitken Jl. I|. Hedrick Supt. Schools, Medford (Paid Adv.) Classified Ads Bring i THE COMMON DENOMNAITOR * The theory that no common legislative cure-all could 5l,a found for agriculture because its ills are largely local 3or regional ailments and not symptomatic of a general {affliction found expression a t the regional agricultural conference,—the fourth of its kind,—recently held at J'resn o , California, under the joint auspiecR of the local «^ham ber of commerce and the Clmnibrc of Commerce of Jh e United States. Ralph P. Merritt, a director of tho national organ iza- Sion, voiced wliat appeared to he tho common sentiment Sof upward of two hundred delegates, that there is no Seonunon denom inator of agriculltural problems. W hat I t s the case of tlje Kansas corn-grower does not necessarily y TI the case of the*Kansas wheat funner, the Mississippi «cotton planter or the Oregon orchardist. r~ The logical approach to the solution of agricultural Iproblema, said Mr. Merritt, is through an attack *npon «these locally and reaionaily. For, socalled national pi*ob- jeras in agriculture flixai examination reveal themselves ns made up of a m ultitude of problems which can he a t­ tacked at home. These are lx»t solved by collective ac­ tion lotwcen fahners aud other bnsiness men without invoking th magic of legislative cure-alls. r ■ r-, * NEW K IftoS OF STATE8 I 1'he activities of Mussolini aitd the FascistU in ohe «of the tn<}Ut'si^njfi “a y * , ko ■Md." TblrtyrBlne ^eari ago, be said, »0 had in qxgoptionally warm sum- W? SEATTLE, ANN ARMOR. Mich., May 90. UP)—aeattt (U P )— Predictions that the “The story is unmistakably summer of 1994 will be excep­ written in the rocks and ftilMJ ont yards ¿ deserts and fbssll beds of this re-j fgs are 4M tionally cold are ridiculed by a * aSft ! gion," said the archeologist. ‘ Bs and angli i "I have established beyond' ! doubt that 1 have found in Me*; 1 vada the forerunner and orlgld qf foan who evofrrtfc the fisbto ’ the Chinese language. One mlgra-' fcgrviR thap which to prïicfce tton of these first peoples left t » cheap to construct. lust take a bam’^ f»i Southwest and migrated toward' m t it Into sections,*’ h è sài Alaska and across into Asia. The other went southward. Tk4#e< were the parents of a pebpfoj more ‘ ancient than tho cMff- dwellers.” ' Le Baron holds the theory thrft the Southwest is one of the old­ est and most unchanged of areas. The growth o*f the Sferra Nevada's caused the deserts, "he contends, which in, turn caused the primi­ tive peoples to leave, and with, thenf the animals whose ances­ No m atter what you plhn to build, we can give you tors* remains ae often found l# 1 om piete buildihg m aterial service, without the this area. bother of shopping ¿round. *' He points to the discoveries byj scientists of the California cam«* I and other prehistoric beasts as! evidence that animal life had its most ancient origin here. Man, was connected with the first de- velopment of animal life. s ïî. R. Tracks • Phone 20 Single insertion, per inch Political, Displiy, per inch i your lawfe.4 fe night. to the morn-, ng the hollow Diecss win be al- jnost filled with -earwig, Hf -th e » are earwig« about. Then ahake the bug« into a Jar or something dad destroy t t j e t n . ? ’ 7 ' ' ‘ , 1 two eoct|ona of bam- b o o it tttr housp and filled two quart Jar* in two day«.” " bich A r e J m id J i ®f Ashland. The cha was the cradle of the human ran according to Alan Le Baroi ,n> fold' ll, la Inviting to folds into,> epa}l,4ty noted archeologist. tn use. —- Medford 1 Death Valley, the Mojave, tk Owens River country and pari of Nevada and Arizona all hai trace« Indicating thia teM toi evolved the first civilisation, ’ 1 Baron tqid a gathering of «den­ tists here In a dlacloaure on “The 'Antiquity of Man.*' « Business Manager ____ News Editor George Madden Green W. H, Perkin« ....... .. th at both onde of open, qgtto the »di is tihe