Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 26, 1922, Page 5, Image 5

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    PAGE FTvTU
E
MAY POSMlll.Y 1SK:
a mirror. Milady's handbag In Kng
land has three necessities a pow
dor puff, a mirror and a package of
cigarettes.
It's quite the thing to smoke In : Queer women these, who tolerato
Knglaiid. and if you are a woman I grain fires and clumsily made shoes,
who doesn't smoke you are looked but look upon non-smokers as old
upon ii r an old fashioned prude, i fashioned.
Al'l'OIXTKl) CUNTROLLKIt
THAN PAL, REAL
IS GROWING W
MEDFORT) ilATL . TRIBUNE, .. BEDFORD, OttEOOV, TUESDAY. PEPTKMHER 2(1. 1022
ITS AIDE
ES,
(By International .News Service).
. WASHINGTON. "Laddie Hoy,"
President Harding's pet Airedale, is
more than Just n pal in leisure hours.
"Laddie Boy" is after a fashion the
president's confidant. Every morning,
when the president leaves the man
Blon proper for the executive offices,
"Laddie lioy" prances uesido hiui and
goes with the president into his pri
vate office and perclies himself quietly
on one of the guest chairs beside the
great mahogany table at which the
president sits.
"Laddie Boy" retains this perch
sometimes more than an hour, jump
Jug down and scampering out into the
gardens behind the White House only
when the hour arrives for the presi-l
'dent's first caller, which is usually
about 10 o'clock. While thus esconced
at the presidential sido "Laddie Boy"
finds t. irksnniA ti normit nnv ntlinr
to watchvjLhe -president at work.
Should Seci'Mary Christian or any of
the other suiiluiimieries of the White
Ifjuse staff enter the rosm during the
early hours he Is greeted by a low.
rumbling growl fromV'Laddle Boy",
which is chocked quickly by the ghost
of a gesture from the president.
At the end of the day, . wjjen the
president retires from the 'executive
offices and heads for the mansioiby
way of the garden-house arcade, lie"' Is
greeted outside his office door by
"Laddie Boy," whose joy at seeing the
president often costs the president the
price of having one suit' of clothes
repaired or cleaned.. Few of the presi
dent's friends are believed to enjoy the
friendship that the president bestows
on his dog.
DES MOINES, Iowa, Sept. 26.
Twenty thousand Civil war veterans
here for the 56th annual convention of
the Grand Army of -. the Republic,
joined today In reunions of every
major unit of the Union army in the
Civil war. ,. '
Veterans of the Iron Brigade, sur
vivors of the battle of Shlloh, tho rem
nant of war prisoners, colored troops,
naval veterans and troopers who par
ticipated in any of the engagements of
the war, gathered to fight again in
memory the conflicts in tho Tennessee
wilds, with Farragut at Mobile Bay, or
to recall the tragedies of Anderson
ville. ;, -
lhe Grand Army veterans were
guests of local auxiliaries today at a
lawu and garden party with drills
pageants, bands and fife and drum
corps providing entertainment.
The social phase of the encampment
reaches its peak tonight with a ban
quet and ball at the stato capital, at
which Governor and Mrs. Kendall
assisted by other state officials, will
be hosts.
Tomorrow the Grand Army and uffll-
iated organizations will unite in a
groat parade. -The
registers today showed an at
tendance of more than 20,000 Grand
Army veterans and about 30,000 mem
bers of auxiliary organizations.
EXPLODES, 5 HURT
X.
SHOWING AI PAGE
CHICAGO, Sept. 2G. Five workmen
were Injured, one perhaps fatally, lives
: of forty others were Imperilled and
windows in" neighboring buildings were
shattered by an explosion of air com
pressor in the newUllnols Merchants
Trust bank building early today which
was followed by fire in the debris.
For an hour police ,and firemen
fought blindly in tho smoke and dirt
in tho licOtpf -thjit jlinrltna.. nf -wnrltninn
! would be Found in The wreckage.
Hobert Covert, engineer in charge of
. lhe compressor, was blinded and badly countv cierk who issued the license
' uurneu auu uociurs sum lie piouttui
would die: -
Representative Louis T. MrFadden
of Pennsylvania, chairman of the
banking and curency committee of
tho house, has been mentioned as a
possibility for controller of the Cur
rency in case Controller CiiHslngcr
were named uovcrnor of the Federal
Keservo Doard.
E
I
OF F
, "Is Matrimony a Failure?" the high
ly diverting comedy,, heads the photo
play program at thoj'age tonight for
the last times. The laulcr which is
sued all day Sunday and Monday trom
that playhouse can readily be under
stood from the title and from tk thou
sand and one little household indents
so recognizable to the individual n.m
bers of the audience.
The story hinges upon the efforts
of a bank clerk and the daughter of
bickering parents to elope. The bride
groom goes to the county clerk's office
for a marriage license, while the coun
ty clork himself Is away on a hunting
trip and has delegated hi duties to a
deputy. ' Tho document Is Issued in
due form and the pair steal away while
the girl's parents are entertaining
friends at their wedding anniversary.
When the new9ot tho elopement
'TBaflies".''Jhev party a' lawyer In V the
company declares the wedding is not
legal, for tho reason that the deputy
book and
victim of sonic
complauit. ASjnodern man dreams he
sees a cat walking uci-okh a field
tho
USE X-RAY TO FIND
AGE COLORED YOUTH
(By International News Service)
CINCINNATI. The X-ray was used
Tuesday for the first time in the police
annals of Cincinnati to determine the
ago of a prisoner. Allen Harris, a
negro, who was arrested last week fol
lowing tho attempted robbery of a
local jewelry store, Insisted that he
was only seventeen years old, though
he had the appearance of being much
older. So the juvenile court author
ities ordered X-ray plates made of the
prisoner's hands and other parts of
'his body, and, after comparing these
with similar photographs of various
ages, reported that Harris was no
more than seventeen and possibly no
older than sixteen.
has never been sworn In. ' t.
tJpon her return home tho girl's
mother upbraids her. - Everybody goes
to the county clerk's office to investi
gate tho affair. "Why," declares that
grouchy official, "I've gone on a hunt
ing trip every November for twenty
years and my clerk has always issued
marriage licenses." This starts all
the dissatisfied husbands to thinking,
and the quartet of husbands declare
themselfes free, all having been mar
ried In the eleventh month.
The hilarious, situations which fol
low are full of "blues destroying" mo
ments. The Pago's program is helped by
Larry Seamon In his late comedy,
''The Fall Guy." The Topics of the
Day, a cartoon comedy, and tho music
by "Betty" Brown playing some of the
latest dance and song hits are other
features. :
Mrs. L. J. Foote
Reap the Reward of
Perfect Health
Good I,ooks Follow Good Health
Fresno Calif. "It Is over twenty
years ago since I first heard of Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery.
it tvjm nftnr motherhood and I was
simply a wreck. "My strength was all
gone. I never left my room and
rarely left my bed for six months.
This was my condition, when I heard
of Dr. Pierce's medicines. For seve
ral months I almost lived on the Fa
vorite Prescription and the Golden
Medicnl Discovery. I gradually
gained In strength and spirits. To the
healing and strength-giving qualities
of these remedies, I am sure I owe
mv life and nresent good health. It
is a nlpasure for me to give this en
dorsement and express my gratitude
fop the irood I have received." Mrs.
L. J. Foote. 2615 Merced St.
Dr. Pierce's famous remedies can
he procured of your neighborhood
druggist in tablets or liquid, and you
- fan hnVA rnn fidential medical advice
free hv writing Dr. Pierce's Invalids'
Ilnlel In Buffalo. N. V. Adv.
"Heroes and Husbands" at Rialto
Humor of a subtle order and intense
drama abound in "Heroes and Hus
bands," a First National attraction
starring Katheiino MacDonald, which
closes tonight at the Rialto theatre.
Miss MacDonald has the role of
successful novelist who, In solving her
own love affair finds rm.c!i more diffi
culty than In moving her characters
about in her fictional romances.
"Heroes and Husbands" can safely
be prescribed for any one who cares
for fascinating comedy.
"One Clear Call" Starts Tomorrow
There is one of those kind of pic
tures coming to the Page tomorrow
matinee for a four, days showing that
make theatergoing worth while. It Is
entitled "One Clear Call." That can
be interpreted as one clear call to
womanhood and manhood. Further
more although the capable Milton Sills
has the dominant role, it contains a
cast of principals of sufficient promi
nence that no introductory titles were
required for them.
They all do particularly splendid
work. Here they are: Milton Sills,
Claire Windsor,, Henry B. Walthall,
Irene Rich, Shannon Day, Joseph Dow
ling, Edith Yorke, and that talented
youngster, Stanley Goethals.
By IVIOMAS C. WATSON.
Intel national News Service Stuff
Correspondent.
LONDON, Sept. A famous Brit
ish physician has struck a blow at
the Freudian theory on dreams. Ap
parently the oft-quotod old psycholo
gist has analyzed dreams out of all
proportion to their importance.
That Is tho opinion of Sir Bruce
Bruce-Porter, Knluht of tho British
Umpire and a Commander of the
Vui-T of St. Michael und St, George,
maddition to being one of King
George's private physicians.
"A -modern woman, says Sir Bruce
"dreanVfvof a shipwreck. At once she
reads a pseudo-scientific
imagines ske is
On waking ho ftiphcs to Freud to see
what is the matt with him,
"Nonsense Slle Says.
"All this is nonsentft A dream is
perfectly simple andNiormal act of
the sub-conscious brainX Take the
case of a man playing tholnno. He
does not have to think of evti-y note;
nor has ho to analyze overyV chord.
If it were necessary, piano playing
would be impossible. All this wprk
is done by tho sub-conscious mind,
where as the conscious mind hi
thinking out the actual meaning and
the emotion of what ho is playing.
"So it must bo realized that we
have two minds a sub-conscious one
and a conscious one. When we
dream wei dream with tho sub-con
scious one, and the other one for the
moment, is non-existent. Ordinarily
the sub-conscious mind is directed by
sleep, the conscious mind is at rest,
and therefore tho sub-conscious one
can wander at will.
"What happens? .Images flicker
bv unchecked with tho raniditv of a
moving picturo film. All. the pageant
of life buzzes past, as meaningless as
a futurist picturo. Yet from this
unintelligible hotch-potch pooplo are
foolish enough to linagino they an
discover their innermost soults.
Dreaming More Now.
"We are dreaming more today than
we have ever dreamed In the pnst
The more civilized we become the
wilder become our sleeping sensa
tions. Our grandparents went to bed
in comparative peace. -They had no
movies, no evening sensational news
papers, whereas wo go to bed with
thousand disturbing distractions.
In tho street tho newsboys may be
calling the toll of somo now tragedy.
The telephone may be ringing. In
tho distance there Is the rush and
sound of trains and street cars. In
fact, tho night is packed with my
riad sensations. Our minds are heat
ed and alert. So we dream.
(By International News Service.)
LONDON, Sept. 23. la. tho cig
arette habit threatening the degener
ation of English womanhood? ,
This question is being debated by
medical authorities of England, who
aro becoming alarmed at the start
ling IncrcuBo in the cigarette habit
among women.
Highly emotional women arc be
coming more and more frequent in
England, and many medical experts
blame the cigarette habit. Thoy
theorize that tho absorption of nico
tine produces a condition cf nervous
distress and that from this there pro
ceed palpitations and exhaustion,
with frequent outbursts of emotion.
In rare cases this may lead to mon
tnl dieabllity, the doctors eay, and
they point out that woman's delicate
nervous organization is ne t intended
to endure large do3es of nicotine pois
onng and that tho functions of a
mother must bo interfered with when
the smoking habit is indulged in to
excess.
Custom ill-owing
Tho English woman has taken to
the cigarette with a vengeance, and
smoking among women is genoraly
accepted. In fact. English women
laugh nt American ideas and customs
frowning upon tho femalo smoker.
The war is blamed, as usual, many
women arguing that under tho stress
of war thoy had to find rellof for
their frayed nerves, and they took to
cigarettes. The flual result has been
that English women now smoko in all
public places with perfect propriety.
It Is quite the thing to see a richly
and handsomely gowned woman Bit
ting in a box at the theater sipping
her after dinner cup of coffee and
puffing away furiously at her cigar
ette. Nor is it unusual to see women
strutting up and down fashionable
Piccadilly smoking like a motor-car
that has been over-oiled.
Vso Strong Brands--
No dainty perfumed cigarettes for
tho English woman either. Her
American cousins may take to the
gold-tipped lady ,cigaretto, but not
Miss Britannia.. No, niree; she
smokes male cigarettes, and vile
things they are, too. Straight Vir
ginia tobacco is the favorite cigarette
tobacco- in London, and . green Vir
ginia at that. Cigarettes that are
smoked here would not be tolerated
by discriminating smokers in Amer
ica, for they aro, tpo strong and acrid
in their taste, but. women of England
smoko them in hugo quantities.
Milady's handbag in America has
two necessities a powder puff and
A SWEET LITTLE
BABY BOY
Kidnaped Man Suicides
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 26. (By Associat
ed Press). Jacques Milliard, editor
and language teacher, for whom a
nation-wide search was conducted
when he was kidnaped in Chicago in
December of 1920 and held for ransom
committed suicide today by cutting his
throat.-, ' - '
He was forty years old.
(By International News Service)
CINCINNATI. An owl which flew
into the open window of a law office
on tho ninth floor of the Carcw build
ing gave rise to a burglar alarm
scared a night watchman half to death
and finally. was captured by the "bur
glar hunters" and turned over to the
Zoo. The watchman was making hii
rounds when he heard a noise in thi
closed office and, after summoning aid
opened the door to Investigates He
found the owl perched on top of a pon
derous law book, looking ridiculously
wise considering the foolish predica
ment Into which he had got himself.
Used 'by Three Generations
"I use Foley's Honey and Tar per
sonally, give it to all fciy children and
now to my grandchildren with the
same good results. I tried many kinds
of cough medicines, but never1 want
anything but Foley's Honey and Tar,
writes Mrs. E. K. Olson, Superior,
Wise. Foley s Honey and Tar was
established in 1875 and has stood the
test of time serving three generations.
It quickly relieves colds, coughs and
croup, throat, cheat and' bronchial
Makes a Bright Spot in Every
Home. A Comfort in
Vears to Come
luiiiilllllllllllltlllll
Park Raoids. Minnesota. "I have
taken your medicine Lydla E. Pink-
nam a vegetaoie
Compound when I
was a girl for pains
and before and after
my marriage. I now
have a sweet littlo
baby boy and will
send you his picture
if you wish to publish
it.' My sisters also
take your medicino
and find it a great
help, and 1 recom
mend it to those who
suffer before their babies are born."
Mrs. Wm. Johnsok, Box 165, Park
Rapids, Minn. '
To marry and arrive at middle age
without children is a great disappoint
ment to many women. Think of the joy
and comfort other women have in their
children as they grow older.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound has helped to bring great happi
ness to many families by restoring wo
men to health. Often the childless home
is due to a run down condition of the
wife, which may be helped by Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It
brought health and happiness into the
home of Mrs. Johnson. Why not to
youre ?
Hemstitching,
Pecoting
8c per yard.
Work finished
want it.
when you
THE VANITY SHOP
Cor. Main and Bartlett.
EYE IN
CURTAINS
Med. Tent & Awning Works
Opposite 8. P. Depot
trouble. Sold overywhere.
Adv,
MAIL YOUR FILMS TO
SWEM'S STUDIO
217 E. Main fit , Med ford
40
STORES
THE
SAMPLE STORE
40
STORES
C. J. BREIER CO., operating FORTY STORES in Oregon,
Washington and Idaho, with our own JOBBING HOUSE in
Portland. The LARGEST chain of Retail Stores in the North
west, with these unparallelled advantages, and our buyers visit
ing the best markets in the country, buying in large quantities,
we are able to offer our customers merchandise at the LOWEST
POSSIBLE PRICES.
EXTRA SPECIAL
We have just received a large shipment of Ladies'
Bungalow Aprons and Dresses in Ginghams and Per
cales, bought at a low figure and priced accordingly. ,
For the balance of this month we are going to offer
these at . '
. 10 DISCOUNT
SHOES
Men's Dress Shoes, brown or
black, Goodyear Welt, $4.50
to $6.00
Men's Brown Calf McKay
$3.95
Men's Elk Skin Work Shoes,
$2.49
Men's black Chrome Tan,
heavy work Shoe $4.50
Boys' Dress Shoes
$2.85 to $4.50
Boys' Mule Skin $1.35 to $1.75
SHOES .
Ladies' Shoes, black or brown,
military heel, $3.95 to $5.00
Ladies' Oxfords and Pumps
$2.25 to $6.00
Growing Girls' Shoes
$4.25 to $5.00
Children's Shoes $2.49 to $3.65
.Infants' Shoes and Slippers
50c to $2.00
One lot Ladies' Shoes $1.98
1 lot Ladies' Oxfords $1.98
1 lot Ladies' Shoes $2.69
40
STORES
C. J. BREIER CO.
THE SAMPLE STORE
' 40 .
STORES
n sJf$y ... Plis at
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