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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1924)
PAGE FOUR MEPFOTID' MATE TRTBTTNE, IMTCDFORT), ORTCfiOX, FTttDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1924 Medford Mail tribune ' IN'nEI'ENHKNT NFWSI'APER PUBLISHED KVEltY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. BY THE MEUKOKD J'JUSTINU CO. Th lletfford Sunday Morning Sun U furnished ubKJibcrs denting a leveii-uuy amy newspaper. Office Kail Tribune ' Building, Nortb, Fir itreet. Phone 76. A consolidation of the Democratic Times, thi ftfrdford Mail, the Medfonl Tribune, the South, ern Orejronian, The Ashland Tribune. ROBKRT W. IHJHL, Editor. i. SUUPTKR SMITH, Uarutger. HV MAIL In Advance: Pally, with Sunday Sun, year 97.60 iJuilv, with Sunday Hun, month .75 huily. without Sunday bun, yt'ir 8.60 Pa.lv, without Sunday Sun, month 06 Weekly Mull Tribune, one year.., 2.00 HuikIjv Nun, one ytar 2.00 bv X'AltKIKK In Med ford. Awhlund, JacliHon- ville, Central I'olnt. riioenti. Talent ami on Dally, with Sunday Bun, month 75 Pally, without Sunday Sun, month... .06 Daily, without Huuday Run, year...... 7.60 Dull v. with Sunday bun, one year 8.00 AU terme by carrier, caab in advance. Knfcered as second class matter at Med ford, Oregon, under set of Uurtli b, lotv. The only paper beiweer. tntgene. Ore., nd Sacrumetito, Culif., a distance of over 600 miles, having leaned wire Aasoclated Press Service. Sworn dally average circulation for all mouths eliding October 1, U37U, more than iiouble the circulation of any other paper published or circulated In Jackaon county. MEMBERS OK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated 1'rcns is eicluaively entitled to' the uae fur rt-publii-talon of ull news ilia- fiutches credited to it or not otherwise credited n thls pajwr, and alao to the local news pub llalied beri'in. . All rights of repilbllratlou of pedal dlJ- paicnea UL-reiii ur uiu uphku Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry '.'Politics ninkes utrunKo bPtlfelloWB" but the Kepubllcan pnrty of Jackson county, will never reUro with W'ulter M. ;l'lerce nguln. The niRhtn nre ccfttlnt; warm onoiiKh for an exclusively polite nml painfully proper youn man, to talk to u young lady in tho open, with IiIh hat off, und not .contract a cauu of double pnou-monlu. TII13 LADY CAN HIT '(BrmviiHVllliv WwvhI Henry Oarbe, one of HiutIh burK's hiKhly esteemed farmorti, is confined to his home now, hav- lug met with the serious misfor tune a few days back of suffering several broke ribs while engaged. "Who remembers away back, when a lawyer asked a witness at J'ville: "What is your. name'" and the wit ness said, "Hell, don't you know, after living on the same criok with me for 30 years." i . The meddling moralists, who are going to rewrite the llible, should In corporate something like this in the hew psalms: "And, lo! a candidate - for constable came to the temple, and seated himself lit tho front pew, and drank up every word, and his enemies dill, say something else, whan the chance cometli; but tho. race is always to him who getteh to the front door first." ANOTHER OIL VICTIM. Tho economic -conference ought to find a way to get out of inlfklnt;, when tho fish are biting. SO WOIXU YOU , (Sitlcro Statesman) They are going Into filberts In tho Utayton section; gottlng excit ed about it. - Tho dolugo of rum acrosH the Cana dian border, Is' still being checked effectively" by orators, far enough away, to escape all danger of being run over by a bootlegger's truck. Threo votes for Sheriff Torrill nar rowly averted being hurled 37feet south of the watertank on the 14th Inst., by a reckless Iron horse. There never was a tlmo when so Uttlo pep prevailed In local hating, and the courthouse is in no danger of being seized by tho I'ope. t i One of the, Strang boys has an ob noxious growth on his uppor 111), which he thinks Is a mustache. ' It has gono and clouded up, .thwart ing the plans of 'many who planned on gadding ntno meals out. Into the country on tho Sabbath. DOOKTKUIA (Oakland, t'nl.,' Tribune) 1 "In tho hill-hound oratle of a "great southern Kniplre 'of De mocracy, supremely blessed by tho bounties of Nature, where nomad Indians first built their - villages and Franciscan padres founded the Mission that Is tlto mother of Los Angeles, here, be tween that teeming metropolis and the golden valley of the San Gabriel, has been huilded a mighty city, dedicated by the lov ing service of a home-owning community to the happiness and well-being of man. Considering tho fact that so many rdghtshlrts are being used only In boudoirs, and masks only by burglars rand dancers, the Kmperor did well to l:el .the Ku Klux Klan for 14G,0U0. ;! Rev. Varn will come here with a special messago on that evening, ami -a, good congregation is looked, for. (Eugene Keglster). Can you spin anything out of that? Another pioneer landmark has been torn dow n, before it fell dou-n. ' Tho Jlgndler brindle nf Oregon, who swore off cigarettes to smoke a pipe. 1-1-24. ought to bo able 10 imitate a frying egg. with his new weapon, by this tlmo. Mnrrlcd women must be accompan ied .by their husbands. (Albany Her ald). Cruel and unusual. . (, '' Mme. Mary Meadow-Lark executed threo charming vocal numbers on Tom Waterman's fence Thursday nfternoon, to tho groat enjoyment of pne smart dog, and seven cats. T KI.Ij! WEI.l.! We know the oleaginous complex lind gone V. pretty far but we never supposed that a man like Frank A. Vanderlip would full so hard for it. Here is a mini in the prime of lite, only 60 years old, cx-presi- dent of the National City bank of New York, prominent in world af fairs, both from a financial and political standpoint, confessing be fore the multitude that his sensational speech a few nights ago, was based upon nothing but hearsay and gossip. The oil inquiry, has smashed a number of reputations, but none has been so completely riddled, as the New York bankers, hereto fore regarded as a man of at least normal intelligence arid common sense. Mr. Vanderlip not only admits there wasn't tho slightest evidence to support his insinuation that there was something wrong in the -sale of the Marion Star, but he confesses that he didn't even know that Secretary Fall had declined to testify further, because lie feared he would incriminate himself. ' The collapse of the Vanderlip balloon is so complete that one would not be surprised to learn that the senatorial committee had turned him over to aii alienist. That a man in possession of his faculties would publicly repeat what he believed to be slander in the hope of sparing the victims of such slander, is simply too incredible for any sane per son to accept. v The only explanation for Mr. Vanderlip, we can offer, is that he is for the moment insane. This oil business has gone to his head, ns it has gone to the heads of many other prominent citizens. ' The lesson to be learned is the lesson frequently pointed out be fore. In this oil sprinkled world, the wise man picks his way care fully and spreads some sand on the track before he orders full steam ahead. And finally there is this consolation. As Robert Quillen has said. The nobody has one advantage. 'When he makes an ass of himself. the headlines don't tell the world." QUILL POINTS It's a safe bet that he's a fundamentalist if he' calls trousers "britches.". And yet, what dolh it profit a party to be in power if it isn't in control? Money isn't everything. At times it is necessary to have a friend on the jury. Size doesn't matter so much. , The smallest offices may cause the most severe cases of swell head. Toisc is tho quality that keeps you from spitting fire when you see the twin of your $60 overcoat marked down to sjilO.O. " The hard part of reducing faxes' is to do it in some way that jviil got the other party in bad. t , - The modern is so sophisticated tlmt there isn't much left to make him gasp, except asthma. Note to the French: The surest way to make the ball turn this way or that is to put a little more English on it. ' AVhat. tho politicians can't understand is why n mere private citi zen like Bole should try to wish something on the people. Correct this sentence: '.'It's ft genuine .sealskin," boasted the wife, "but I've never asked John what it cost." inKKiuimos Walt Mafon BOTTLED MEDICINE. f ! .1 WHEN aches and ailments come and throttle the pleasure of my day, I long for something in a bottle that tastes like moldy hay; I long for something dark and murky that has n brimstone smell; I feed it to my innards jerky, and it will make mcKvell; ; The modern pills are sweet as honey, you hike ton in a blineli; hut when' I'm ill I spend my money for pills that have a punch. 'When my poor'vitals raise it riot, and to the doc I go, he says, "I'll put you on a diet for seven months or so." He tells me that n good long trot '11 relieve my aching legs, but oh, for some thing in a 'bottle that tastes like last year's eggs! For I grew up among the critters who pinned their faith on yarbs, and they compounded dark green bitters that gripped like fishhook barbs. And when you took nine drops in water you soon forgot your aches and grabbed an ax and went to slaughter your weight in rattlesnakes. " "Try exercise," says Old Hoc Wattle, "walk nine teen miles n day;" but oh, for something in a bottle, with taste of dappled gray 1 Tries Kellogg's Bran restores health after 12 years of intense suffering Mr. Firth writoa that ho Buffered for 12 years from constipation und his friend for 10 yean a total of 2 yours suffering permanently re lieved by Kellogg 'a Bran, cooked and k rumbled. CrntlcmeBt For 11 year I hid ben tronbWd with indUrotion cutd tnoatly by conittpatlon.. Until about a yr so, I wouM miTtr from 4 to SO -wcks at a time. I happened to are your Krutrbled Bran In a store, purchased a pack BP and not almott immediate ro llcf. 1 am still eating the KnambleJ. liran vvery- day. , The most wonderful rwult ob tained with your Krumbled Iran 1 will now relate. A ffentleman : who hat been taking mediein fur gUmt 10 yrt for cvtuUyaltua could not And anything to glv him relief. Three weeki ago I adviied him to try K rumbled Bran, aa I had told him what wonderful results 1 had gotten from it. The gentlo man in question purchased a box, and he told me that for the first time in ten years he Is regular without taking medicine. ; ' Your for sueeer William Firth. Jr., Volan 8W MsrcbantvlUe, N. J. v Eaten regularly, KcIIork's Brnn ia guaranteed to relievo the most ebronio euso of constipation, oryour grocer returns your money. Eat two tublo siKWufuls dally in ehronic eases, with every meal. Tho flavor is delirious. Try it in the recipes on every package,. Mado in. Uuttlq Cm-, &oU by U grocer .. - it. ' Personal Health Service By WILLIAM: BRADY, M. Dr -j .' Noted Phy$ieiah and Author '( - 8lgned 'latter, psrtilnlnn to jrtonai neatth and hyo'ena,' riot to dTuaa. dlignoli:r treatment, will b. answered by Dr. Brady If a etamped. eelf addretted envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in Ink Owlno to the large number of letters received, only a few can be answered here. . No reply can b. made to querist not conforming to Instructions Address Dr. William Brady, In ear. of this newspaper. The Cnuw ct Anemia Absence of minlight Is one pr tTe most Important, causes of anemia, or weak blood. People shut it "out of the home,' b Genu He It fades tho rugs or something or because other people do. .Window Bhadea and shutters ara worn just , because they nre tho fashion and not beca uhu- they are needett. Sunlight is as essen tial' for the produc tion of the coloring mutter of the blood (hemoglobin) as It Is for the production of tho coloring mat ter of plants (ehlor- ophy.) Those whoe occupation keeps them shut In all day allows them to go home only after sundown, and reouires them to be ut work before the sun la high enough to give strong light, are pretty sura to be anemic. . . ,. The general use of donaturlzed bread and ' cereals la certainly an ini-; portant factor of anemia. If you re move the iron containing layer of the wheat and of other cereals, you rob the blood of something it must have. Not merely, iron, but vitamins, life elements; Pale, insipid, tasteless 'bread makes anemic; pale, lifeless people. Whole vh.eat bread, old fashioned oatmeal, cornmeal, unpolished rice,, these things not only feed tho hlood but correct the constipation which is almost a universal ailment of civilized people. Undenatuiized food prevontsi and cures pellagra and beriberi. We have not only economic but also the best of hygienic reasons for going back to tho undenaturized fare of our greatgrandfathers. The excessive' use of cathartics helps to cause anemia. Castor oil, for instance, usually causes blood corpuscles to appear iiv the evacua tions; so does cnlomel. And salts nre notorious for .weakening the blood. Yet lots of people take salts because they have backache which they mis takenly attributo to kidney trouble bnckaoho which spells anemia. internal bleeding hemorrhoids fre quently cause anemia. Toxemia, (poison in the blood) from Insidious diseases like, Brlght's disease, pul monary tuberculosis, syphillis, malaria and local Infections in the gums, teeth, tonsils or elsewhere are com mon factors. - But in women, nt least, a most prolific cause of simple anemia that discouraging sallow complextion and dull heavy cye is insufficient oxygen. Another way of saying this is exces sive carbondioxlde in the blood. Or still a better wny is lack of outdoor exercise.1 A. woman may obtain plenty of exet'cisc at her housework, yet she must get out and take a good walk every day if she wishes to preserve her good looks arid her health. There is- something about the open nir, which we can't exactly describe probably an actinic, chemical influ ence but . something indispensable for good health. For anemia, poor complexion, dull headaches, that tired feeling, nervous depression, poor nppetite and nil the familiar symptoms of anemia, our prescription has never been sur passed by . any other remedy. Two miles of oxygX'n on the hoof at least fluce a day. QUESTION'S AND AXSWEHS Chronic Tuberculosis Are tho symptoms of chronic tuber culosis tho same fts those of acute? Which Is tho more fatal form? Can a vase of chronic tuberculosis be caused In the city?, (D.-T. E.) Answer. Tho symptoms Of a chro nic (which means long enduring) di sease are generally different from those of an acute (which means hav ing a short or sharp course) disease, but I think you -make a mistake in studying symptoms much better for your health to leave that to the doc tor. Chronic tuberculosis is itemg cured in the city all the time. If the patient can have (1) proper medical care, (2) prolonged rest in bed, (3) a sleeping porch or something nkin to it for open air life, (4) proper food. and (5) freedom from unnecessary worry or anxiety which sometimes means merciful consideration from the neighbor, friend or visitor who might feel tempted to offer advice, his chance for recovery In the city is about ns good as It would bo any where. "r Iodln Ration Kindly give some. Information ns to Macaroni At It's Best KITCHEN BOUQUET, a purely vegetable product, is in almost every pantry. Housewives know it is the secret of making good gravies and soups, but KITCHEN BOUQUET is equally good in preparing many other dishes. Try your nextdishof macaroni prepared this way BAKED MACARONI M tMtfriir Mfaraat. ferahaa fiMag I .asupouri f 1 oouti bottin water H cap rraiw A 1 Ueupoan Kit Om nsrareal In bolTW Mft0 water tnrtfl tMxtar, iirkJn and bUnHi with eold watw. I'UeM onv-trii-d U) evoked ni,rnl la fevt terwtj bh;nif twh. dot vtUt butter- klA witttgrnWJ fbaff. thru nxve uarar-Mii. bntWr suxl tiMWM aool dib U full. AAJ Rlt etn Dou.jut lo milk mmJ pour thla r (h ""rail vo nearly wm. rmrt npriBHea uin-Bir who num. pa fo mtraoMl cvm hMT hoar, until n y am amriiat,ty tar dtMt. 1 KITCHEN BOUQUET the use'of lodin for premature aging, gqitre, prevention and that worn, stale, melancholic feeling that comes with grey hah: . (E. H.) 'Answer. Had to cut you off just as you began to become interesting. 'Fraid you'd have ub all hankering for a .little lodin. If you'll repeat your query , up to the point where I inter rupted you. and accompany it with a stamped envelope bearing your name and address.- I'll send you; the infor mation all fixed up.. For the preven tion of goitre in school children a very minute quantity of lodin in one, form or another is sufficient, say a drop of the ordinary tincture of iodin (the. brown liquid everybody uses to paint on minor wounds for first aid disin fection, and nearly, everybody still spells iodine) In not less than a glass-, ful of water once a week all thru the school yeaj will do nicely. In some communities where mass treatment of the school children is being practiced,; they are using a proprietary iodin compound In a candy tablet, but this has no advantnge over plain lodin, I think. A drop of lodin in a. large, glassful or a pint of water Is scarcely appreciable to the taste, A drop of tincture of iodin In a quart of drinking water, allowed to slund 15 minutes, will disinfect the water and render it safe to drink, as regards possible typhoid, pollution. This is a recent suggestion of the United States public health service, for tourists, campers and others who may have to drink questionable water. - , IQ IN TUB THE GREATEST THI ' - " by Laurel Qrav ' ' Neat GlrlV" " Men marry neat girls. Ever notice that most men are neat as a pin? When their necks need it .they use ..Mwa.is.m soap and water lustoad of a hasty, dab with a pow der, puff! This illustration is un questionably vul gar but It is gos uel truth. Many truths are vulgar. A flying button; untidy . footwear; slovenly h a i t these are the flies in tho ointment of' an otherwise 'rosy romanoe. And don't fancy that a girl can fool a man. with makeshift capiouflage! The girl whoso person and apparel denote careful grooming 1s ns conspicuous as a lighthouse. !0 Maybe this is why glngha marry more advantage. some in georgette! m girls nftcn ously than dieAfr iff " What Bits ns Is why a IVlIw llna'H maiTii-d. ' " huI. n st OVCl-'lllllIK, HUlllH t' SK'IICl w nmoli tlmo ti'yin' t' hill" hnlil spot. A wniiuin inny fciisli, hut II don't tnkft hor no tlnii' V l-e- nicnilK-i' II' yon Ell Iiit riil'l'li'il. MANN'SThe'Best Goods1 for the Piice. No Matter What the Price MANN'S Sp ring Suits )''.,' ' i " ; .'( S- '-.'.1 1;- " i . .. - . - JUST ARRIVED One Hundred new Spring Suits received from Rochester, New York, the world's most famous clothing center. Vogue Suits Clothing that makes popu lar prices safe. The latest models and fab rics. Come in and look them over. See them on display in our windows. Prices $35 $40.; $45. SPECIAL! Six Dozen ' New Spring Gaps Sold regularly ' at $2.50 ' " ' ' ' ' i Clean Sweep Sale Price $1.98 Lock these" over. On display in our windows. Don't Forget Our Clean Sweep Sale i i of Overcoats Discounted ', , 33 $20, Coats $13.95 $25 Qoats $18.66, $30 Coats $20.00 $35 .Croats $2333 . .- Discounted, i 25 ' : $35: Coats; $26-25 $40 Coats' $30.00 $45 Coats $33.75 $50 Coats $37.50 Mann's Department Store The Store for Everybody . Medford, Oregon 1